Listening to Miles Davis and Gil Evans on a January Night

Category: Poetry - General
Author: Greg Stidham
Publisher: Silver Bow Publishing
Publication Date: November 14, 2024
Number of Pages: 118
ISBN-10: 1774033313
ISBN-13: 978-1774033319

Greg Stidham’s Listening to Miles Davis and Gil Evans on a Saturday Night is a lyrical exploration of life through the lens of nature, grief, sociopolitical reflections, and personal anecdotes. The gorgeous poetry collection pulsates with a richness that resonates like the jazz compositions of the legends it references. Stidham’s poetry, interwoven with vivid imagery and profound insights, captures intimate and universally relatable moments. The title poem sets the tone for this poetic utterance as it evokes a serene imagery of quiet contemplation accompanied by the melancholic notes of Davis and Evans. The way Stidham writes, “the mournful strains of the Adagio / evoke some Andalusian pain,” reflects the transformative power of music, a theme interspersed throughout the collection. This portrayal resonates with Shelley’s notion of poetry lifting the veil from the world’s hidden beauty, bringing mundane experiences into sharp focus.  

Nature is an omnipresent backdrop in Stidham’s work, infusing poems with fresh air and solidity. In “Late March Morning,” for instance, the playful antics of a gray squirrel symbolize curiosity. Stidham's use of metaphor, referring to nature with lines like “the maple tree stands / stripped of all but a few handfuls / of brown and yellow,” situates readers within scenes where even the most fleeting moments are imbued with beauty. This effective use of imagery ignites a sensory experience beyond mere observation, inviting the reader into a shared human connection with the natural world. The thematic exploration of grief, particularly evident in poems like “Grief Counseling” and “Happiness,” examines emotional landscapes that many will find familiar. Stidham’s candid reflections on personal loss, as articulated through the line, “the weight of the dialog / dragged me down,” captures the struggle with pain and healing. This theme of connecting with loss is powerful and universal, skillfully handled with a sense of honesty devoid of sentimentality.  

Stidham’s use of stylistic elements such as enjambment and varied stanza lengths allows each poem to breathe, reflecting the jazz influences on his work. Just as improvisation is key in music, Stidham’s fragmented structures mimic the unpredictability of life. The delicate dance between structured form and free-flowing emotion resembles Davis’s trumpet and Evans’s orchestration. Ultimately, Greg Stidham's Listening to Miles Davis and Gil Evans on a Saturday Night is not just a collection of poems but a masterful tribute to the rhythms of experience, finding beauty in both the profound and the seemingly mundane. With each verse, Stidham beckons us to view our world through a lens of awareness, connecting deeply with the intertwined nature of sound, emotion, and existence.

Reviewed By: Matthew Novak

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Date: December 28, 2024

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