February 11, 2026

The Waltz We Were Precessed By

Nathaniel Mackey

In Celebration of
BLACK HISTORY MONTH

 —“mu” three hundred seventy-seventh part—

 Come Thursday morning it was time to
 move on. We wanted the image or the ré-
sumé of light without its monotony, to be
    done
 with not yet being done but not. It was
  later for inland stillness for us. Coastal
 gnosis had us and we it. No absence of
    wave
or ripple spoke to us now, the road itself
 bucked and tossed us, witnesses against
 our own egress… The photons’ dance
    was
  our kalimba, as micro as we got and
 that we got, did get, was the away of it, the
 weft of an awayness ever on edge or at
     edge,
 an anansical stretch. The dilapidation of
  matter was light’s launch according
 to some. Who were we to say not, a poor
     man’s
  horn section at best? Dion from on Bel-
 mont in The Bronx had said as much, ad-
 mitting doo-wop’s roots in the orchestra pit
at the Apollo. Dion, short for Dionysus, and
     his
 Apollonian chorus caroling local civili-
ties burnt to the bone, taken tonalities an ac-
 knowledgement of sorts… By such lights
     we
  were cultural exegetes now, the mean-
 ing of the doing or the doing of the meaning
 ours to figure out of late. Act was an en-
tablature of light we tiptoed under. Act was
     ab-
  sorbed or enforced or even both. But Dah-
 jale, with her wasp waist and her fine self,
 wasn’t feeling it. “Really?” she burst out, “Is
    this
 what we’re doing? Is this whatever the hell
 we’re doing? We’re some kind of conscience
now we’re saying? We’re passing out deeds
    to
 the propertyless, to the dispossessed horns
  of the pit?” But it wasn’t that, it wasn’t
exactly that. “It’s not,” Andreannette, with her
 comely heft and her beautiful self, piped up,
     “so
 much that as that we’re amortizing the hol-
  lowness of the horn. We batten on empti-
 ness.” It was only a shade of difference, if that,
     but
  shade enough to bask in and be sexed inflec-
 tion on the photons’ dance… What mattered was
 we were on our way. It was all inference and
      in-
sinuation, the itting of the it, as we who moved
 on moved on beyond place or position, we who
     inhab-
 ited the hollow of the
horn

 

 Dahjale spoke not only to us but for us,
hoping for love knowing love could only
 do so much, the good greed reputedly was
     and
 other conundrums among the mysteries
  Nub allied. We had long since been
on the city’s outskirts petitioning outlet, rid-
 ing the whoosh that grew with it, Cajun
     waltz
  and otherwise, petitioning blood’s in-
 cumbent rush… At the outmost it was all of
 a certain rim knowledge, every waltz we
     had
  ever known, its incongruous drift. It all
 congregated at the city’s edge as we
 were leaving, moving on, moving on itself
     mov-
  ing on. Come Thursday morning it had
 been time to go… We crossed our hearts
 and said we would not lie. We crossed our
hearts having lied before, adamant never to
     lie
  again, honesty a thing now to be dealt
 with, no longer prone to ideality and dream,
     thrown
 between piranhas and
pirates

 

 “I don’t wanna be a hot knife cutting
thru butter,” the would-be trombone
 Andreannette played was saying. “I
   wan-
  na be a hot plate melted on by but-
 ter, if not butter itself.” We were well be-
 yond the outskirts now, the receding
    city
  a bag of glitter left behind, backed up
 against the mountains beside it… The
 would-be alto Dahjale played spoke more
surface than line, so real the subterranean
    agree-
  ment she and Andreannette were in.
 “Why butter?” the alto asked even so, an
 implied, multifaceted voice airing hair
     and
  the smell of confinement, waltz’s long
 pedigree… The certainty of covert hair
 tucked away snugly it put us in mind of.
 Ladyships holstered in silk let eventually
     loose
 and even let into it put us in mind of too,
 an insinuation butter had to do with lubricity
      lost
  on no one, Dahjale’s
 joke

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

  ____________________

Doo-wop was horn talk was all we were
 saying and even that we said only in
 passing, harbingers whose horns wooed
   hea-
 ven. Dahjale and Andreannette were
  two heavenly beauties with no reason
to be given pause or pissed off, the anti-
 phonal beauty of their exchange its own
   breed
 of heaven… Sheer bounty and sheer
 beast bartered vocable and cornucopia, a
  mystic surplus whose array proved astro-
 nomical, a heaven the hollows of whose
   horns
  had hold of and held us… Dahjale was
 doo to Andreannette’s wop, the two
 of them distinct but related knots on the
    orbital
  rope circumscribing
 the city

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

  ____________________

 We were the band we’d be. We played
 Grachan Moncur III’s “Frankenstein.” We
brought Shepp’s way of playing it a bit to
    mind,
 no way if not our own way though, we
  could not lie… We precessed along
the circle of thirds, each one as if an equinox
 we waltzed our way into, night and day’s
   equi-
  ty knots on a rope in a continuous rota-
 tion… We were the band we’d be, the centri-
 fugality of all the waltzes we knew rolled
    into
 one. Monstrous, we could not lie, the much-
 maligned, much-applauded window of soul a
    mere
 slit

 

Huff had been wanting to say some-
 thing for a while, something about
 wobbly rotation, the relativizing
   drift
 of it all. So much for the City of
  Less Time, cried the bittersweet
would-be alto he blew, nasal tonality
 the avatar of truth or the reaching
   after
  truth, the reed’s duress a reach-
 ing-thru as well. His would-be sound
 implied a removal out of the world
    by
 barely an inch, the nearness of it a
  taunt so bereaved it broke, pathos
 and redirect. The sound resided in
    the
  body of the horn it seemed. Some-
 thing of a citric squint there was to
 it lived in the horn’s visionary bell…
“Vantage and vignette are all there ever
   is,”
  he reminded Dahjale and Andrean-
 nette, “the is and the of, the horn’s hol-
 low harboring fret but also future.”
    On
 that we all opened up, stitched fore-
 heads futuristic and swollen, fur-
rowed brows the older play of what the
   stit-
 ches now were. “Doo-wop’s word-
  less choral vocals,” he went on, “like
scat’s wordless vocals, wanted to be
 hornlike, Dion in the pit at the Apollo
   e-
 nough to make Nietsche faint.” It was
all we could do not to do like Nietsche
 would, so after our lungs and our hearts
   his
 would-be alto
was

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

  ____________________

 Our serendipitous recital rolled equi-
 noctially along, nothing in our way but
the words we named it with, except we
   en-
 joy them, they the rolling-along it-
  self… Serendipitous, night’s equity
yet to accrue but looming, light broke
 into colors passing thru the slit that was
   the
 window of soul. The precession of
 the equinoxes pried it open as far as
  we could tell… Towards idea, if not
   mean-
 ing, towards
note

Nathaniel Mackey’s most recent publications are Double Trio (New Directions), a three-book boxed set of poetry, and Breath and Precarity (Three Count Pour), a poetics monograph. He edits the literary magazine Hambone.

(view contributions by Nathaniel Mackey)