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RONALD RADFORD
Flamenco Guitarist
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Ron@RonaldRadford.com
(800) 291 -7050
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POETRY INSPIRED BY RON'S PERFORMANCE
This is an interesting phenomena. Occasionally after a performance an
audience member will present Mr. Radford with a poem which they say they
were inspired to write - some spontaneously written on the back of a program,
and some mailed to him later. Ron treasures these more than any of
the 'official' rave reviews. These poems come from the hearts of ordinary
people who were touched by his music and then compelled to their own act
of creative art - writing a poem. Here he shares a few of his favorites.
Fourteen Years Later - By David McDonald (by
email)
Dear Mr. Radford,
I had the pleasure of being "dragged" to a concert you did in the fall
of 1989 for the Hispanic Student Association at the University of Oklahoma.
At the time, I was a stuck up college brat studying vocal music education.
My college roomate was a classical guitarist who thought he might have
an idea what was in store. What we saw was almost beyond comprehension.
In my musical career, I have been blessed to see numerous incredible concerts.
Many friends ask me, "Which one was the best?" Although I'll tell
them what it was like to see the likes of Elton John, Isaac Stern, and
Luciano Pavarotti, I've always told them there was nothing more magical
than a night in a lecture hall with you. In academia, there often
exists an attitude that anything not purely classical is less than worthy
of serious study. You taught me to value something in music that
I'd always valued previously in life: All the world's people have
something incredible to say. Now, there isn't a single form of art
I don't relish, as long as it's done well. You're absolutely right.
I'm a human first, and a classical musician second. Since I'm told
the best way to thank you is with poetry, If I can even express a quarter
of the thanks I feel I'll be happy.
Fourteen Years Later
At eighteen, I walked in, and quietly took my space
Way in the back, though there wasn't a lack
Of seats in this lecture hall place.
People came after, with curious laughter, from around the institution.
We had to see, what was to be
Of the music from a Tulsa Andalusian.
He came on stage, talked like a sage, while explaining the evening's
program
His fingers raged, our ears engaged
And we watched between notes Gypsy slams
In fourteen years, I never hear, anything quite so keen
As when he said, 'fore out we're lead
"What you felt, you had to bring."
Since that time, when I felt sublime, as I heard the evening's last
chord
I sit and wonder, and think about thunder
From the strings played by Ronald Radford.
Oda Al Maestro - Por Ricardo Santos Silva
Sus manos son alas que trasportan el sentimiento,
Sentimiento del Alma, que trasladan del llanto
Al canto Y del canto a la alegria.
Sientes el palpitar del acorde de las notas de tu amante,
Que te siegue por doquiera por el universo entero.
Esa amante que te acompana, esa amante es to guitarra...
(Translation):
Ode To The Master - By Ricardo Santos Silva
Your hands are wings which transport the feelings,
The feelings from the Soul, which transform from the lament
To the song and from the song to joy.
You feel the heartbeat of the rhythm of the notes of your beloved,
which follows you everywhere throughout the entire universe.
This beloved which goes with you, this beloved, is your guitar.
Soul Song - By Steve Hinrichs
Gypsy memories - whirling, swirling -
Yearn to be.
Plaintive, mystical tone of faraway haunts
Speaks with me.
Indwelling Presence, unfaltering Love,
Encompass us inThy way. Ah, home at last,
Soul sings free.
To Ron Radford, Flamenco Guitarist - By Jess
Matlack
(Lines written several miles above Denver, already a mile high)
Once above a time
A tall man in white
Sat before us,
Poised (one foot on a stool, like a honky bootblack, wating for work).
What he held
Was not a guitar --
It was a new born child.
All were hushed by the strumless silence.
But no music came --
Only words, like lazers
(I even saw two -- maybe three -- tears in the seat next to me).
"Finally!" (Said a small boy, almost ready to leave)
He caressed the baby:
What echoed was not
(Ole can you see, by the Spanish moonlight...?)
What climbed was not
(As one Texan said, "There's a cottin' pickin' wet-back gypsy
in there
Tryin' to get out!")
What surged was not
(Even Malaguena, or Jose in staccato stilletoes)
What rose (by any other name)
Was (somewhere in Warsaw, by a fountain, a foot taps)
Quite unsheathed from reality:
It was
The language (and in Phenom Phen, another baby sings)
Of soul.
Bulerias In Butler Library - Jim Feely
Most of us sat stiffly
In the Cardy Reading Room,
Chaired,
On the soft green carpet
Under the Gothic points,
Coated with arms
In Victoria's, domain
Hands -- holding hands, or elbows
Or chins:
Soft, veined, boney, muscled,
Stuccatoed with brown --
Waited to applaud for flamenco.
To the rhythm of flamenco
The bright violets on the window ledges
Strummed away
The cloud gray gloom of the afternoon,
And hands clapped loudly for flamenco.
Across the library in another hall
Sharp noses
Digging into long
Boxes of cards
Pointed -- to the rythm of flamenco
It all began when Victoria
At three
Went up to her grandfather
Clock
And stopped the time.
Snow Songs - By Lark H.
Are you enchanted? Your guitar
Sings silence softly.
Eloquent words of silence.
Snow forest songs for eternity and the cosmos.
Slipping into divine rapture,
The rush of falling water,
The circles in a mirror,
I listen, content
To hear the
Muffled blowing of the stars in a white
Sky across the deep meadow.
I experience melancholy, joyous refrains.
Your guitar sings snow songs in silence.
Alegory - By Rise Gilbert
You surrendered at last...
To Me... to God...
(lightning and thunder)
The Lord with omnipotent
Wisdom...
Gave you the power of arcangel
in charge...
Of celestial music... on His
Terrestrial planet
(lightening and thunder)
Mortal men do not
Comprehend...
That your music has the
Sublime timber
Of the sacred
(lightning and thunder)
Centuries...
Master spirits... Angels...
Truth...
Surrender... have given you
The power
Of David, the strengh of
Moses.
(lightning and thunder)
Mortal men only comprehend
Instants of intoxication
(llightning and thunder)
Gentleness of the harp...
Caress of the cello, vibrating
Strings...
Incomprehensible terrors in presence
Of the pure... all powerfull...
You surrendered at last...
To Me... To God.
(Return to list of interviews
and features)
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