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<blockquote data-quote="Trout Bum" data-source="post: 32873" data-attributes="member: 433"><p>Well, let's see here... Definitely enjoy Service and Frost (Love Song of J Alfred Prufrock, Oh yea!) but I like to hang a little further out on the fringes... Bukowski is flat out twistedly brilliant, definitely dig him. Gary Snydor, beat poet, is quite good. I am absolutely blown away by ANY poem by William Stafford -- check this guy out! He writes from a naturalist's perspective, both from mother nature and man's nature. He writes simply, clearly, yet quite deeply. And yes, Dylan and Young were/are certainly worth mentioning. "All Along the Watch Tower" -- Dylan's verse, Hendrix's licks, has got to be one of my all time favorite mixing of words and musical notes. With that being said, allow me to finish with a quote from Jimmy:</p><p></p><p>"It's not the notes, but the spaces in between." J. Hendrix</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Trout Bum, post: 32873, member: 433"] Well, let's see here... Definitely enjoy Service and Frost (Love Song of J Alfred Prufrock, Oh yea!) but I like to hang a little further out on the fringes... Bukowski is flat out twistedly brilliant, definitely dig him. Gary Snydor, beat poet, is quite good. I am absolutely blown away by ANY poem by William Stafford -- check this guy out! He writes from a naturalist's perspective, both from mother nature and man's nature. He writes simply, clearly, yet quite deeply. And yes, Dylan and Young were/are certainly worth mentioning. "All Along the Watch Tower" -- Dylan's verse, Hendrix's licks, has got to be one of my all time favorite mixing of words and musical notes. With that being said, allow me to finish with a quote from Jimmy: "It's not the notes, but the spaces in between." J. Hendrix [/QUOTE]
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