Thursday, June 4, 2026
I Can See Through the Clouds
It is the story of the falling rainto turn into a leaf and fall againit is the secret of a summer showerto steal the light and hide it in a flowerand every flower a tiny tributarythat from the ground flows green and momentaryis one of water's wishes and this talehangs in a seed-head smaller than my thumbnailif only I a passerby could passas clear as water through a plume of grassto find the sunlight hidden at the tipturning to seed a kind of lifting rain dripthen I might know like water how to balancethe weight of hope against the light of patiencewater which is so raw so earthy-strongand lurks in cast-iron tanks and leaks alongdrawn under gravity towards my tongueto cool and fill the pipe-work of this songwhich is the story of the falling rainthat rises to the light and falls again
Alice Oswald.
Wednesday, June 3, 2026
I Am a Camera
Into the Lens, not to be confused with the Buggles' version.
I do like both, but unsurprisingly, Trevor Horn and I have different preferences (I am inclined toward the more proggy orchestrated Yes track over the hauntingly ethereal Buggles offering). And I notice there apparently was no time for wardrobe changes, which I find kinda funny given the Ship of Theseus nature of the band in later years...
Escaping the Matrix
Telephone Booth (number 905 1/2):
woke up this morningfeeling excellent,picked up the telephonedialed the number ofmy equal opportunity employerto inform him I will notbe into work todayAre you feeling sick?the boss asked meNo Sir I replied:I am feeling too goodto report to work today,if I feel sick tomorrowI will come in early
Pedro Pietri.
Tuesday, June 2, 2026
You're the magnet to my soul
The 2002 show we attended was during the Magnification tour, so here's the title song.
That was the last Yes album I bought, in point of fact. It's fine; better than the previous half dozen from where I sit. I do like The Quest (2021), and have even blogged a couple tracks from it, but I just stream these days.
Lebensmagnetismus
The Moon’s Magnetic Field Once Came from an Asteroid:
When you walked init was like recognizingthe moon when he returns.His lover bites his cheek; shehas no choice. All we seeis the dissolution, then awaitthe reconstruction.Each time, the skyyanks her into his orbit.I want to say I’m sorry.I want to sayYou win. Our bodies are likethe confessional booth thesepoems are stuck in. Eventhe priest can see that sin.You’ll be all spit and honey—or maybe I’m the poisonedflower gnawing on its ownlip because it has no handsto reach for you. Only wordsthat are as useless as the pollenfor saying anything. I continueto serve them even with your handsaround my throat from acrossthe room. Your voice is home,I answer it like a bat guidedacross the atmosphere. Thisis a narrative that cannot endwell but wants to, but must.I’ll continue to go down kickingand you’ll be sweet as anythinguntil you bite back. No, it can’tend here—we won’t let it.Billions of years have passedsince an asteroid last hitthe moon: clearly somemagnetic fields can be sustained.
Rebecca Morgan Frank.

