
Selah
Keith Jarrett(Author)
Burning Eye Books (Publisher)
Published on 17. May 2017
Book
Paperback/Softback
100 pages
978-1-909136-96-0 (ISBN)
Description
The Hebrew-derived word Selah appears as a musical interlude in the Psalms, often meaning 'stop and consider', and is used in other contexts, religious and secular. This collection brings together poems that combine musical intrigue with history and desire, from organ recitals ('Resonances' and 'When the Roll is Called') to teenage gospel hip-hop ('Hip-hop Salvation'). Humour and sex punctuate social commentary ('Gay Poem' and 'No Timewasters') throughout. Above all, Selah asks the reader to stop and consider, pausing at the fault lines in relationships and intimacy ('Making Light') and transgression ('Transfiguration'), asking difficult questions and holding them to the light.
'In Selah, Jarrett interrogates what is lost when one seeks to shape something new - namely his Black British Identity - from disparate ingredients such as migrant parents, a religious upbringing and living in inner city London. His poetry dances an awkward shuffle as he negotiates and seeks to reconcile what he inherits from his Caribbean roots, what he has lost and who he is becoming on this British Island. The poems are all fraught with relationships shaped by a severe severing that creates a limbo state where Jarrett states:
My body is a boulder, I try to sound out my new / national anthem: I am forever blowing bubbles - I remain stateless.
Here the poems are songs that testify, praise, lament and pray, drawing heavily on biblical imagery, mythology and language to score the relevant notes for his compositions. His elegiac pieces are epigraphic whether written for a diabetic dying grandfather or about the breakdown of a long-term relationship. This new Black British voice is relevant and necessary.' - Malika Booker
'In Selah, Jarrett interrogates what is lost when one seeks to shape something new - namely his Black British Identity - from disparate ingredients such as migrant parents, a religious upbringing and living in inner city London. His poetry dances an awkward shuffle as he negotiates and seeks to reconcile what he inherits from his Caribbean roots, what he has lost and who he is becoming on this British Island. The poems are all fraught with relationships shaped by a severe severing that creates a limbo state where Jarrett states:
My body is a boulder, I try to sound out my new / national anthem: I am forever blowing bubbles - I remain stateless.
Here the poems are songs that testify, praise, lament and pray, drawing heavily on biblical imagery, mythology and language to score the relevant notes for his compositions. His elegiac pieces are epigraphic whether written for a diabetic dying grandfather or about the breakdown of a long-term relationship. This new Black British voice is relevant and necessary.' - Malika Booker
Reviews / Votes
"lyrically rich poems, charged with emotion, passion and lots of humour" - Sabotage; "clever, insightful, humorous and humbling... an excellent poet and one to watch" Three Weeks; "astute... witty... charming" - BroadwayBaby; "articulate, erudite and well-informed... his beat reminiscent of Linton Kwesi Johnson and the dub poets of the eighties, of rap artists emergent since the nineties, and - of the most celebrated poets of the twentieth century." - BroadwayBaby; "Keith Jarrett's poems combine a rhetorical purposefulness with a smart and adventurous imagination" - Jack Underwood, on I Speak HomeMore details
Language
English
Place of publication
Bristol
United Kingdom
Dimensions
Height: 203 mm
Width: 133 mm
Thickness: 4 mm
Weight
82 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-909136-96-0 (9781909136960)
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Schweitzer Classification
Person
Keith Jarrett writes poetry and short fiction. In 2010, he simultaneously held the title of London and UK Poetry Slam Champion. He has since run workshops and co-ordinated poetry festivals in the UK and beyond. In 2013, his five-star reviewed poetry show Identity Mix-Up debuted at the Edinburgh Fringe festival. In 2014, he completed the pioneering Spoken Word Educators programme, teaching in a secondary school while studying for an MA at Goldsmiths University; he also won the Rio International Poetry Slam championship at the FLUPP favela literary festival. Keith was a Fiction Fellow at Lambda Writers' Retreat in Los Angeles, 2015. His debut poetry pamphlet, I Speak Home (Eyewear) was also released that year. Since being awarded a PhD studentship at Birkbeck University of London, he is now researching the social impact of Pentecostalism in London and completing his first novel.