''You stay gold, I'll stay gold.''
- Jacob Bannon, Converge
I'm generally not one for poetry. Rather, I'm not one for Western poetry, or what I would call the ''French school of poetry.'' You know the one. The longing. The angst. The sappy melodrama. The whining. It's only written by people who love sniffing their own farts, and it's only enjoyed by people who love sniffing other people's farts. It's like the worst written emo song you ever did hear, sung by the squeakiest voice you could imagine. It gives me second hand embarassment, and I like emo music.
However, I've always made a bit of an exception for East-Asian poetry, or at least the amount of it that I've read. It seems to have more substance, more to say, less fluff, and less tryhard bullshit. I can read it without rolling my eyes more often than Jehova's Witnesses will ask you to read their dumb fucking book. Maybe it's because it's often rooted in religions and beliefs that I find a bit more approachable, maybe it's because no one does a slice of life story like Japanese writers, or maybe it's because I hate French people. I don't know, but I don't need to know. All I know is that I seem to enjoy this kind of poetry a lot more than the quote unquote ''romantic'' style we often see here in the West. This book is even split up into two parts. The first part consists of Chinese poems, and the second part consists of Japanese poems. Neat.
I'm still not a sucker for poetry, and I probably never will be, but I'll take poetry dealing with zen, mindfulness, meditation, Taoism, Buddhism, dharma and so on over some white guy moaning about a woman who rejected him 30 years ago. Just go to therapy, dude.
Jacob Bannon can write some poetic lyrics, even if he sings something entirely different than the written words. But Converge is my favorite band, and 'Concubine' is their most iconic song, so give it a shot, and you'll make me very happy <3