LORD OF PERCUSSION
I grew up on a kitchen floor
with morning sun splayed
over yellow linoleum.
The scent of cloves
stuck in oranges,
warmed on the stove.
I banged on pots and pans
with maniacal intensity.
Drumsticks were wooden spoons,
pot covers, my cymbals.
Neighbors complained
with broom handles.
I drummed on tin Jello molds,
and struck nutcrackers, rolling pins,
kraut cutters, and butter paddles
for special sound effects.
Father said: “He’s a future Gene Krupa.”
When mama wasn’t weeping
from listening to soap opera
sob stories on Stella Dallas,
she danced to the rhythm
of my beat as I followed
Dixie Land Blues and Ragtime tunes
on a wind up Victrola.
Sophie Tucker belted “Red-hot-mama.”
For mama, a ballroom dancer,
who once worked at the Palace,
for ten cents a dance,
I maintained a steady beat
as she danced the Turkey Trot,
Bunny Hug, and Camel Walk.
When the time came
to start kindergarten,
happiness was no longer mine.