George Albon’s books include Empire Life (Littoral
Books, 1998) and Thousands Count Out Loud (lyric&, 2000).
His essay "The Paradise of Meaning" was the George
Oppen Memorial Lecture for 2002. He is also a guitarist and
songwriter, and has written articles on modern music for Shuffle Boil magazine. He lives in San Francisco and has
worked at Green Apple Books on Clement Street as a used book
buyer for about 12 years.
Praise for Brief Capital of Disturbances
“
With its keen observations, spare style, and thoughtful use
of understated formal strategies, this new book is very much
of a piece with Albon's previous works…. Though Brief
Capital of Disturbances is stylistically plural, and blends
the notational with the anecdotal, the journalistic with
the diaristic, the overall tone is decidedly personal….
Thematically the work is also wide-ranging, with threads
related to nature, aesthetics, politics, and sex, among other
things, and this range brings depth to the work.”
--Guy Bennett, The New Review of Literature
"Two strands of notation. They do not move in parallel
or against one another, but mark a space of complexity, of
betweens. In the tension of this space, "the contours
of 'strange' settle over an awareness" and "structure
becomes direction."
--Rosmarie Waldrop
"The language of imagined revelation which these perceptions
shape and unfold is truly extraordinary. It makes for a disquieting
silence, an innocence of expression both startling and familiar,
which unsettles and thus transforms our vision of the world.
It is this visionary territory George Albon moves us into
at the moment and the after moment of experience, as if there
were almost no transitional space between the two, as if
we had no choice but to be stilled in our own reflection
upon it. He is one of the most singularly astonishing poets
writing today."
--Benjamin Hollander
"Hypnotic, suggestive, transient and trance-like, there
is an enduring narrative here that harks back to some distant
past and hovers over a present already pitched too far into
the future for us to grasp: obstinate, obdurate, attainable
but in the telling of it."
--Ammiel Alcalay
From Brief Capital of Disturbances (page 7)
There’s something about the book I’m reading—about
the cadences? the vocabulary?--that puts me in a narrative
outside of it, between the lines as it were, a scene
where I’m following a snow-choked trail down to
the start of a forest and the promise of a stream I can
cross, closing in on my destination. This deflection
into rogue narrative never fails to occur. The scene
the words are trying to pitch has no relation to what
is happening with me on my trail of snow, and what seem
like implications of the trail. The book is in some way
then unreadable, is unavailable to me. If I continued
to the end, would the destination also extend?
The produce of plants yielded the top of objects: lopped,
pulled, plucked. The growing came up to the surface,
realm of the angleworm, the insect (“to cut into”),
the beak, the craw. Rain for blind. Further relations
uncertain.
To find this North pole.
The last thing the sun’s rays shone on tonight
was already yellow and bright, a <—> sign
coated with reflecting gloss at the T-juncture. In the
dull matte of the surrounding woods and roadway this
double illumination pierced the late afternoon, a sign
on fire.
The first generations posing with the trees: with the
trees on their side, still taller than they, or, trees
still standing, with them crouched or lying inside
the wedge they’d just hacked into the trunk,
a wedge as big as the cow-catcher in front of a locomotive.
Posing as though they’d killed a whale, which
in a sense they had. Sense of this new encounter—of
a kind unknown from countries of origin—a sudden,
exhilarated contending with things that are massive.
On the way back from seeing where she lived I look down
at my feet and the jets of clear water shooting along
the gutter—their version of street cleaning.
From the water I look up at the kids just free from
that day’s school, socializing while running.
Frontier name of ocean,
we mishearing they,
structure become direction.
Schnittke’s Klingende Buchstaben, for
solo cello, ending with a soft jag scrunching up the
fingerboard,
losing firm timbre, skating and disintonation taking
over, a scrawl and a plea.
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