
Tom Intondi and I were friends since first year of high school. Last Sunday was the 14th anniversary of his death. We went to the same high school and college. After college, we wound up in different parts of the country, but we stayed in close contact due to a songwriting partnership we started about a year after graduation. Tom was a singer/songwriter, who was very active in the Greenwich Village music scene, starting in the 70's and continuing till his death in the 90's. We collaborated on a fair number of songs. I wrote the lyrics, and he composed the music and performed. In fact, if you go to itunes and search his name, you'll find two of our songs (only 99 cents per). A few weeks ago, I was looking through the first b/w negatives I shot in 1968. I found them in a file in the back of a closet while I was looking for some letters from my father. I took them to the darkroom and wound up printing a few. One was a photo of Tom from one of our various roadtrips. I've been working on a related poem. Here's an early version. This may be it, or it may cook for a while and turn into something else.
roadtrip a found photo
for Tom
you never had much luck
with cars the little Alfa
you owned for a week till your father woke you early
Sunday to move it he had to drive
your mother and sisters to Mass it wouldn't start
you rolled it to the street to park
it kept rolling you running
arms stretched through the driver's window
to hold the wheel it left you
jumped the curb smacked
into a tree
or the Valiant you flipped on the New York
State Thruway five teenage boys
a roadtrip a week
camping drinking swimming
naked parsing the star-
lit harmonies of heaven
& Earth a sudden
shout a swerve heels
over heads we crawled
out unhurt the Valiant not
so lucky
& here you are
hood up
arms stretched finger-
tips printed with grease wide
smile
across your boyish face your Falcon's
grille grinning

1 comment:
That's a great one. You should publish the photo on your site.
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