Grand Occupation
tell Mia I love her hair
and Terrorizers
by Edward Yang in the American version
of two lovers
shooting up the place and nightclubbing
khakis and white t-shirts
Toronto '88
we weren't born to die
the way my Chrysler swirls your hair
throwing up pentacles
it's a Detroit thing
like talking in topoi because the years left us
lookback years
Harris Tweed and the infinite 70s
when voting felt real
and we could elect the king of New York
to lighten up
light us a joint
and unwind
talk about bond convexity
there are things you know and things you don't
but you don't know what you don't know
it's just like foxed pages
put on a shirt and some trousers
put your best dress on
Olivier Messiaen
they let us in what the heck
do we do now
everything feels the same
sweet and nostalgic
when the facade was the audience
and not the other way
sometimes I think she might be here still
that's why I called the house
to say she's here
I'm here
we're together and I'm still wishing you all the goodwill in the world
no matter what your letters say
Sally Ride
“Instant Karma”
or the little cream-colored envelope
with your two dads from Taylor-Bonney
and the drugs in the Triangle
we're all a little fazed
not thinking it could've gone this way
Gulf & Western manufacturing
Gulf & Western movies
Paramount Pictures classics
it was all that way not wanting to turn the dial
not wanting to turn away
from the truest things
1966
think about it
or just the dry hops from the glass
and think of all the busts from here to Fat City
which was Columbia in '72
when Connie Hall could light up a bar like nobody's business
and Dusty Springfield sang the hits
Jon Leon’s ambient multidisciplinary approach to the concept and aesthetics of poetry span the media imagination to shape a lifestyle that is poetic.