Categories
Love Music Summer

Summer Wind

Summer Wind

– with prologue –

by Michael Bobb

Prologue

"As the butler turned to go
after leaving the pressed morning edition
on the platter beside the bureau
I asked him to prepare afternoon tea

'Certainly,' he replies
'But the clock hasn't struck 11, sir'

'It's Midsummer’s day
and Madam and I,' I explain
'will be having afternoon tea
at the coastal house'

-

After an hour
everything is ready
and we begin to make our way

As we leave the grounds
I hear the characteristic buzz and snap
of the motorised electric gate behind us

I look in the rear-view mirror
and see the butler’s Bentley
I also see the housekeeper on the doorstep
waving us farewell with a handkerchief

As we turn onto the main side road
I ask Madam
who is checking her make-up
on the back seat of our Bentley
to check with the butler
via the two-way communication system
if he had remembered the vinyl records

He replies, 'Yes Madam'

Summer Wind

"...As the time reaches two and twenty past
both Bentleys arrive at the coastal house

The standard is raised
and the butler unpacks both cars
...including the music

'It's a beautiful day, darling
let's have tea
at the water’s edge'
Madam says

'How romantic'
I say

So, after removing our footwear
we carry two chairs and a table down the beach

After setting up next to some rocks
the butler serves us
then retires to a distance

I raise my voice and say to the butler
'Can you bring the record player from the house
and play some music?'

'Yes sir'

He fetches the player
and puts a record on the turntable
Quite calmly he presses... play

The music begins to play

The raised standard once still
begins flapping softly on the mast

Madam stands up
and starts tiptoeing backwards
just as she learned in dance classes
at finishing school

I stand up
turn to her
and start stepping backwards slowly
in true dramatic style

Madam changes direction
and starts tiptoeing towards me

As the music changes
she breaks into a run

And with a leap
she jumps into my arms

I catch her
We embrace sweetly in circular movements
Round and round and round

By now the music has become expressive
Expressive, pulsating and undulating

Although it is Midsummer’s Day
the clouds are gathering
and the wind is picking up

There are now white pony surfs
but soon they will be white horses

And what of the tide?
Yes, it's advancing
and quicker, too
as if the moon’s orbit
was being quickened
by the accelerating music

Then
there is a seventh wave
in time with the orchestra’s down bow
and the table and chairs topple over

But we keep with our
ever expressive dance

As the milk and profiteroles
fall to the ground
there is a greater smash of waves
onto the coastal rocks
just as the music reaches a tutti

The water is now rushing our shins
and the
wind whistles wildly...

We part briefly
And, just like ballerinas
raise both arms to form an arch
and pirouette

The music is now at its height

We both grasp each other's left forearm
with our own left hand
Right arms still arched in the air

We then look straight and deep
into one another's eyes
and begin an ever-increasing spin

As we spin faster and faster
and look deeper and deeper
into each other’s eyes
we are unaware of the tornado
we have created
Or, rather, not us but the music

We are focused 100% on each other
We are the centre of the whirlwind
Everything else is a blur

...Standard flapping vigorously
...Cream cakes pulverised
...Waves pounding rock
...Perfuse perspiration plies

Then, out of nowhere
a white bird descends
down the eye of the whirlwind
and lands calmly on our joined forearms

Our eyes once locked on one another
then looks at the bird
the pure white bird

The moment we do this
the music becomes softer
and our rotation slows down

The whirlwind dissipates

The butler then approaches and says

'More tea, sir?'”

Audio

Summer Wind

Read by Michael Bobb

Music: Adagio of Spartacus and Phrygia from Spartacus by Khachaturian

Categories
Summer

Summer Rain

Summer Rain

by Michael Bobb

"A few moments ago we left the hall
Where we had enjoyed the concert
It was a lunchtime concert
And finished about 2:30 pm

On the programme were waltzes
Polkas and arrangements of minuets
While we were there our toes tapped
And our heads swayed a bit, too

Now that the concert was over
We strolled back to the car
And decided to walk through
The ornamented landscape garden

Mid-summer’s day was last week
Melodies of high bird song was heard
And the Bistro beckoned us
‘Come and sample some delights’

So we took our seats near the maze
Decided iced tea and gateau
And after placing our order
We just sat for a second or two

As we sat under the parasol
We then talked about the concert
How spring-like and gai
The quartet had sounded and played

As our tea and cake arrived
There were a few light drops
Beginning to fall on the parasol
Just a little passing shower?

Thud... thud... thud...
Then the intervals grew shorter
Thud… thud… thud… thud… thud
And the birds in the trees gradually silenced
As the sound of the rain grew

The fine light rain was first quiet
Starting as a hushed pianissimo
But the composer had written a crescendo

This wet summer chorus
Was like the increasing sound
Of a sizzling frying pan

'Can you hear it', I said
'Nature is playing a waltz'

I stood up
Stepped out from under the parasol
And offered my right hand
And you accepted my invitation

We adopted the position:
Hand in hand
Hand on back
Hand on shoulder
An indivisible one

We started slow and in time
Thud, 2, 3..thud, 2, 3.. thud, 2,3
But the tempo was increasing
Ziz-zl-ing, ziz-zl-ing, ziz-zl-ing

We had to keep in step
From adagio…
To andante…
To maestoso…

Our gestures becoming more defined
From pianissimo…
To mezzo piano…
To forte…

Round and round the music took us
Our expressions wider and wider
Our heart beats were synchronised
All in perfect decorum

We were caught up in the music
It swept us off our feet
I swirled you round and round
First left to right, then right to left

On the outside was a summer shower
On the inside the tempest was free
Lightning bolts electrifying our souls
Waves crashing on the beach

By now heels and tuxedo were saturated
But we could not stop
We could not stop the dancing
Until the very last drop

-

When the clouds broke
And the sun came out again
We heard the birds singing

And we smiled"

Audio

Summer Rain

Read and played by Michael Bobb

Music: Prelude in D Flat, Op. 28 No. 15, ‘Raindrop’ by Frdédéric Chopin

Categories
poetry

‘Swaying, Swaying In The Breeze’

It was around the time of the Chelsea Flower Show one year and I was walking along the path in my front garden. Although it was windy, the blue sky just held its own on that sunny afternoon in May. My eyes noticed something moving in the breeze – it was the flowers. It was, as if, I saw the flowers in that light for the first time – dancing.

How many decades had I lived here…? How many flowers had I seen grow, flourish and change with the seasons in my garden…? And how many days, weeks and months of beautiful summer weather had I witnessed…? Not forgetting the aggregate of creatures over a couple of decades, or so, that may have happened upon them…?

There was a bee or two doing what they do best in such natural environments, just buzzing about from flower to flower. These were no ordinary bees – they were my bees!

I was compelled; out came my phone. For the next however-long, I filmed them: the bees… the flowers… and the breeze…

Early the next morning when my eyes had barely opened, I was thinking about this scene. My mind was fixated; I could not stop thinking about it all; I was obsessed; over and over and over: the bees… the flowers… and the breeze… Compulsion grabbed me again and I stole my pen. For a good, long while I toiled: trying this here, something else there, moving the other somewhere else… And then, two hours later, I struck gold – I wrote the last word. Phew! It wasn’t until I returned the pen that I could once more live a normal life. I was satisfied. I was quenched. I was full. And I was free from my malady – safe. The only thing I needed to do was have breakfast – and so I did. And continue with my day.

Swaying, Swaying In The Breeze

Swaying, swaying in the breeze

Dancing, dancing beneath tall tree

Moving another way in slight air

So handsome, so pretty, so fair

Hues and shades, rare and fine

What invention, what design…”

– first verse

Just for a moment or two, let your imagination go and think of long ladies with long, wavy hair, wearing long dresses, during long, hazy summer days dancing in circles beneath… a tall tree…

Here is a video recording of myself performing the first verse: Swaying, Swaying In The Breeze