The Artist

Album cover art for "The Artist" by Mark Kozelek & Ben Boye & Jim White (Drummer)

Mark Kozelek & Ben Boye & Jim White (Drummer) - Rock

The Artist

2 Plays

Duration: 11:28

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Lyrics

I watched the kid through the glass Carefully slicing the wheat rolls apart Slicing the marinated bell peppers, the sun-dried tomatoes Slicing the mozzarella, specifically picking each piece meticulously Placing each piece on the countertop neatly Laying it all out on the bread orderly, studiously Folding the sliced bread back together with mathematical precision As if he were an emergency room surgeon As if each move he made were a life or death decision He was focused and relaxed, his hands steady, like a master painter dipping his brush in the paint You were in a spell watching him create I had goosebumps watching him create I said to you, "That kid's an artist" And you said, "I know", while you stood there wowed I said, "I've never seen anyone make sandwiches that I've considered an artist until just now" After lunch, I held a cab at Columbus and Broadway, and we kissed goodbye I got into the cab on the new Sun Hong Kong side The driver asked, "How is your day going?" I said, "It just started" He said, "Your's was just ending" I said, "Where's your accent from?" And you said you were Brazilian I asked, "Where from in Brazil?" You said, "The capital, Brasilia" And for the last 19 years you've lived down the coast in Pacifica WIth your 20 year old son and your husband who is also Brazilian Through the Broadway Tunnel, we talked a lot Down High Street, we talked a lot And more in the taxi for an extra 10 minutes when it stopped I said, "I gotta say, I don't end up in conversations a lot" You said, "Me neither, this city has changed a lot People don't want to be bothered when they're immersed in their contraptions They don't want to be troubled with human interaction They never say, 'Good morning' They never say, 'How are you?' They say, 'Take me there, take me here'" I guessed your age at 40, you said 43 And I got your number for the next time I need a taxi For when I need a taxi You said, "It's nice to meet you, Mark" I said, "It's nice to meet you, Eileen" In my pocket is an old paperback Night Train I bought it while on tour in the UK The pages are all yellow, musty smelling, and falling out It took me about a week to figure that part out It was in a box from just before I knew you Right above Stories from the Corner by F. X. Toole The copyright on most of the books in that stack ranges from 1998 to 2002 It was the only book in the stack where, from its binding, the pages were becoming unglued I remember dropping it in the bath while reading it, trying to get some space away from you I think that these books were stashed away so I could make room for you And I still remember that summer night when your mother died Down to the hour and minute, and how you grieved There was a book in the stack called A Time to Grieve The condition, somehow, after all these years, is pristine Its copyright is 1983 Though this is the later edition bought brand new on Polk Street Given to me as a gift when I was grieving too much to read I'll never read this book because I don't believe That grieving can be processed by reading a book about the process of grieving So yeah, I'm rereading about the life and times of Sonny Liston There's always conflict, darkness, trouble, tension, and friction I'll never forget that Sonny loved children He was sincerely a good person around children And he gave them friendship, goodness, and kindness Things unprovided to him in his miserable childhood Lots and lots about the city sinkers and crooked cops harassing Sonny in St. Louis His dealings with carpet and PU laminate in St. Louis His fights with white hoods in St. Louis It's been so long since I've been to St. Louis I played a few shows in the 90s in St. Louis I attended a wedding once in St. Louis And nothing much ever stood out about St. Louis There's so much in this book about St. Louis That I'm intrigued now, and sort of planning a trip to St. Louis If it wasn't for that old stash of books I found That filled me with a blueness that flooded me with memories of the newness Of a passion so strong that ended in resentment and anguish I'd have no plans to revisit St. Louis But first there's things I gotta get out of the way Plans that wait on me, going to San Francisco Sunday On May 7th, I'll be flying overseas for a tour of Japan, Australia, and New Zealand At the speed I read, I'll probably have the Sonny Liston book with me And for that ride to the airport, I'm probably gonna call Eileen After eating a sandwich with you on the corner of Broadway and Columbus A sandwich hopefully made by the artist who inspired me, who planted a seed To what has grown into this melody tree Music is the air I breathe Tonight for dinner, Nathan ate Mexican on Polk Street I came home and ate cucumber and Hummus I need to watch what I eat Music is the air I breathe, I find poetry in everything I see Out my window, I saw a barge with three large letters: MSC I wonder what those letters stand for, what does the barge carry? Chemicals for the refineries? Gifts for the gift shops on Grant Street? Canned products for animals to eat? Whatever they carry, it's always nice to see Barges slowly moving through the bay Going under bridge and moving out to sea

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Credits

Writers
  • Mark Kozelek