Who Can Sing the Blues The sky looked like a twisted grey sheet above the black man as he beat the paint bucket in rat at tat tat rhythms. The hot humid air blanketed him in a misty summer rain, while the tourists mixed in with office people on the steamy hot city sidewalk. Leaning the bucket back for the high beats and tapping it forward for the lows, he could make it sing the way he sang in deep bluesy angst. He sang Aint no white people tip me none And the rest walk on by me some Just another black man blues In the land of white rules A man stopped and listened. He wore a jet-black suit with the shine of silk and the polish of money. His wispy blond hair was slicked back. He let a few bills fall from his hand into the man’s hat, and the paper fluttered like birds, landing softly. He sang The stain of oppression Don’t mean much to a man in a funeral procession Here is a double digit tip Look at it and flip it I got bills but I have no life You see a suit and don’t know I buried my wife You look at me and you see white Take it cause means nothing when I go home at night The money fell from his hands, fluttering in the breeze like flies. |