Howl – Allen Ginsberg and the birth of the Beat Generation!

The poem that opened up worlds for me.

Allen Ginsberg day!

Following on from Roy Harper, Nick Harper, Bob Dylan and Jack Kerouac I thought it would be a good idea to move on to Allen Ginsberg! He was the first poet who ever turned me on to poetry. Howl blew me away when I was in my teens. For the first time I realised that poetry was the heart of revolution and could really speak to me. That was quite a change from the way poetry had been so badly taught in my school. They had made it into a drudge, a memory test with punishment. There was no attempt to understand or appreciate – merely to learn and recite. It had killed it for me. Allen enabled me to reconnect with the joy of poetry and opened many doors into a myriad of delights.

Howl and America remain two of my favourite poems.

Inequality – one of the apalling consequences of the system. 8 people own as much as half the world’s population – 3.6 Billion people!

There is one thing that really winds me up and that is unfairness.

To me a person should receive a fair wage for a job. It should reflect their training, skills and effort. It should not be different because of your gender, race or geographical location.

I know we are a long, long way off but I would like to see a world where there was not the huge disparity between pay or huge inequalities.

The system has a life of its own. It is inexorably bulldozing its way around the world exploiting labour, exploiting natural resources and devastating the planet for profit. The people guiding this greedy lust for more and more are wealthy and powerful. They run huge multinational corporations and businesses. Their mantra is always escalation and they are never satisfied with how much they have. It is an addictive game. They always want more.

They live in a bubble where they compare the prices of their yachts, penthouses, jewelry, artwork and accoutrements. It is a world totally divorced from reality. They are cushioned from the misery and devastation this ‘progress’ creates.

The wealth generated by this greed is not dispensed fairly. In order to maximise profits they cut corners, keep wages down to a minimum and move companies to countries where they can exploit a cheap workforce and not pay taxes. The money is then creamed off into the vast vaults of the super-rich investors and owners.

The inequality gap is getting worse and worse. We are all grafting away to make a handful of people a lot richer – a group of people who do not care about the environment or the poverty left in their wake.

Instability, inequality, poverty, corruption and war are good. They create a climate where they can do business, get cheap labour and make a killing. They have no wish to make things work better and they buy off the politicians and lobby governments. They blackmail and buy off power. They are behind who gets elected.

Back in 1965 CEOs of top companies earned 20x the average of their employees. In 2017 that has risen to 300x the average. The inequality has risen a staggering 150 times!

During the years of austerity the top end continued to be paid their bonuses and receive their pay rises while everyone else suffered.

We arrive at a state of affairs where just 8 people own as much as the poorer half of the world while one third of a billion children live in extreme poverty.

While the super-rich swan around in luxury in multimillion pound yachts children live in sewage and die.

I don’t know about you but I find that hard to square!

 

Jack Kerouac and Allen Ginsberg – Beat came like a breath of fresh air from the dungeons of Jazz – a guest piece I wrote for Matt at the Beat Company.

Beat came like a breath of fresh air from the dungeons of Jazz.

There was nothing special where I grew up; a little estate in the satellite towns around London. I ran wild in the fields and ditches, played in the streets and was oblivious to anything more. Life had its course. In the post-war fifties it was like the world was holding its breath and wanting everything humdrum and predictable. Normality was the order of the day. There had been a surfeit of change and excitement, terror and despair; England was recuperating.

They were grey days, though the sun shined. They were drab because the world was set in its ways. It was all mapped out.

I watched my parents. The way they dressed, talked and acted. They were good liberal people. There was the shopping, cooking, laundry and gossip. My Mum was never one for too much housework though she did like to talk. My Dad rose at the crack of dawn, donned his suit and headed for work in London. He came back in the evening, ate his tea and read the papers, watched some telly and off to bed.

The lawn was mown in stripes. The car washed and pipe smoked. On Sundays there was the roast beef to carve and on occasion a pint on the green. Everything had its place; life was routine. You grew up, out of shorts and into long trousers. You got a job, settled down, got married, had kids and carved the roast.

As the sixties erupted Rock music provided colour and excitement but it didn’t alter the pattern of life.

Then in the mid-sixties I discovered Kerouac. Jack Kerouac was like opening a door into a different world. That universe was populated with frenzied mad hipster poets who were driven by desperate need. This was no road movie. These were energised young men crazed on the possibility of life and eager for adventure. They sought out the wildness, fast cars, stolen cars, women, dope, poetry, Zen and a scorching desire to penetrate the mundane and get to the guts of life. Life was for burning. Life was too important to waste. Its essence had to be ripped out. Every second counted. They had to dissect it, experience it, up all night rapping into the dawn about crazy, about life, about meaning. Life was a mad quest for the holy grail of purpose. It wasn’t to be found in suburban lawns or washed cars; it was screeching in a sax solo somewhere in the Negro end of town where the people were alive and burned with vitality, on the long roads where the tyres screeched on the tarmac and the Beat people hobboed and hitched and recounted their crazy stories into the night fuelled on Benzedrine and alcohol; or in the scorching words of a poem ripped straight out of the mind to fly through spittle on tongue and teeth. Real people whose live were chaos; whose highs were extreme and lows unbearable. Yet they were all living. They were all burning with desire. – On the mountain tops were the serenity of Zen seeped into the soul on a wild meditation in search of «instant sartori» they searched the heavens for reason and tried to contain their roaring minds.

These characters were real, out of the underbelly of America, shucked off from the ordinary into a world that seethed with wonder, delight, revelation and elation; the «Subterraneans» from the underground who were roaring obscenities, truths and visions in cold-water tenements while straight America slept. Their music grooved. Their minds soared. Their energy pervaded life. To them life was a turmoil of wonder.

I devoured «On the Road», «Dharma Bums», «The Town and the City» and «Lonesome Traveller» and I wanted it. I wanted up those mountains with the bears, where the air was pure and Zen pierced the fabric of reality, to look down upon the world and live; those Jazz dungeons where only the moment and that endless wailing sax had any significance; those crazy journeys through the night dodging trucks and dicing death; the sex and love, the passion and desire. For life was not for enduring; it had to burn with the intensity of an atom bomb or it wasn’t worth a damn; it had to pierce through to some inner meaning or it wasn’t worth a fuck. It had to burn.

Then I read ‘Howl‘ by Ginsberg and rediscovered poetry. Poetry that had been killed for me in school, that had been moribund and pointless. Now it seared with words that punctured my soul. It spoke to me, awakened things inside me and sent me reeling. The words took on new meaning; weapons of barbed fire, scathing, extolling, describing, in anguish, in ecstasy, in despair and fury. And every one of those words resounded into my skull and seared into my cranium where it sent my blood rushing. This was real poetry that was incandescent, honest and ripped straight from the soul without refinement, metre or craft. It screamed it as it was.

I was becoming crazy too. I wanted that raw chaos and meaning. I wanted to shriek my poems from the inside of my skull too. I had pent-up fury to release. Life would never be the same. There was a cosmos of excitement and meaning that had been opened to me. Who could return to the world of carving and mowing when there was a universe to be grappled with, poems to be extracted and music to shriek to, words to rant, eyes to gleam and energy to burn? What life could be lived in suburbia while there were roads to roar down, people to meet, places to travel and mysteries to unravel?

I wasn’t beat ; I was Beat. My dreams were vivid, my mind soared and I would never mow straight lines again. There wasn’t time! There wasn’t time!

Jack Kerouac – Catholicism and his mother – a strange guilt-ridden relationship?

An interesting aside.

Jack Kerouac – What he meant to writing, life and the sixties.

I wrote this piece in 2015

The Beat Museum San Francisco – One for Matt!

A great centre for all things Beat.

A Flame

I love this visual poems that Frederic does. He is extremely clever and talented. Visit his site and see.

Mahatma Gandhi Quotes

PoojaG beat me to this. A great post of inspiring quotes.

Jack Kerouac day!!

Well I’ve had a number of days dedicated to some of my favourite Rock Stars – Roy Harper, Nick Harper, Bob Dylan and Leonard Cohen. I thought it was time to branch out a little.

I plan on taking a long break from blogging shortly at the end of the month. In the two weeks that follow I will try to do a day recapping over a number of my greatest inspirations.

My life and philosophy has been influenced by a number of people. Some of them are poets, some writers, some politicians or social reformer, some philosophers and some singer/songwriters.

I discovered Jack Kerouac and Beat culture when I was in my teens and it had an enormous impact on me.

I was disillusioned with the life I saw mapped out for me. It seemed a long round of work, commuting, TV and chores that sapped the energy. It looked vacuous. I was young and full of energy. I wanted excitement, sex and fun. I was also searching around for some purpose to life and not seeing it in religion. My parents were pushing me towards qualifications that would lead to a good job, plenty of money and a comfortable life. I wasn’t interested in a comfortable life. It looked like death to me.

Then I discovered Jack Kerouac and it was like opening a door into a different world. Everything came together. Out there in that world the priorities weren’t a good career, polishing the car on Sunday before carving the roast and mowing the grass. There was a world of craziness, excitement and wildness where all that counted was the moment. It was full of crazy, careering journeys, hitching, driving at speed, risking death, with sex, Zen, poetry and loud crazy Jazz. It was al GO GO GO!!! It was about being up all night smoking pot and high on speed talking incessantly about life, god, poetry and any wild thing that came into your head. It was about living.

That was the life I wanted.

Jack Kerouac opened a door into a different way of looking at life. It’s a door that has never closed for me.

My life is not now full of that craziness and lust but it has certainly had its moments!