Part antiphonal rant, part rhythmic whisper, Nathaniel Mackey's new
collection of poems, Splay Anthem, takes the reader to uncharted
poetic spaces. Divided into three sections--Braid, Fray, and Nub (one
referent Mackey notes in his stellar Introduction: the imperial,
flailing republic of Nub the United States has become, the shrunken
place the earth has become, planet Nub)--Splay Anthem weaves together
two ongoing serial poems Mackey has been writing for over twenty years,
Song of the Andoumboulou and Mu (though Mu no more itself / than
Andoumboulou).
In the cosmology of the Dogon of West Africa, the Andoumboulou are
progenitor spirits, and the song of the Andoumboulou is a song addressed
to the spirits, a funeral song, a song of rebirth. Mu*,* too, splays
with meaning: muni bird, Greek muthos, a Sun Ra tune, a continent
once thought to have existed in the Pacific. With the vibrancy of a Mira
painting, Mackey's poems trace the lost tribe of we through waking and
dreamtime, through a multitude of geographies, cultures, histories, and
musical traditions, as poetry here serves as the intersection of
everything, myth's music, spirit lift.