10. The narrator states that to Hattie, Everett Payne’s performance was:
Your Answer is
Correct Answer is J
Explanation
Lines 78-79, in Hattie's eyes, Everett Payne's music made her feel like she was on a roller coaster.
Passage I
PROSE FICTION: This passage is adapted from the novel The Fisher King by Paule Marshall (©2000 by Paule Marshall).
It was nearing the end of the second set, the jazz show winding down when Hattie heard Abe Kaiser at the microphone call Everett Payne’s name. Heard his name and, to her surprise, saw him slowly stand up in the bullpen up front. She hadn’t seen him join the other local musicians, including Shades Bowen with his tenor sax, in what was called the bullpen, which was simply a dozen or so chairs grouped near the bandstand. The young locals gathered there each Sunday evening, hoping for a chance to perform. Because toward the end of the final set, the custom was to invite one or two of them to sit in with the band. They sometimes even got to choose the tune they wanted to play.
This Sunday, Everett Payne, not long out of the army, was the one being invited to sit in.
Breath held, Hattie watched him separate himself from the hopefuls and approach the stand, taking his time, moving with what almost seemed a deliberate pause between each step. The crowd waiting.
That was his way, Hattie knew. His body moving absentmindedly through space, his head, his thoughts on something other than his surroundings, and his eyes like a curtain he occasionally drew aside a fraction of an inch to peer out at the world. A world far less interesting than the music inside his head.
She watched now as he slowly mounted the bandstand and conferred with the bassist and drummer, those two were all he would need. Then, without announcing the name of the tune he intended playing, without in any way acknowledging the audience, he sat down at the piano and brought his hands—large hands, the fingers long and splayed and slightly arched—down on the opening bars of “Sonny Boy Blue”.
“Sonny Boy Blue!” That hokey-doke tune!
Around her, the purists looked askance at each other from behind their regulation shades and slouched deeper in their chairs in open disgust.
At first, hokey thought it was, he played the song straight through as written, the rather long introduction, verse, and chorus. And he did so with great care, although at a slower tempo than was called for and with a formality that lent the Tin Pan Alley tune a depth and thoughtfulness no one else would have accorded it.
Quickly taking their cue from him, the bassist reached for his bow, the drummer for his brushes, the two of them also treating the original as if it were a serious piece of music.
Everett Payne took his time playing his respects to the tune as written, and once that was done, he hunched closer to the piano, angled his head sharply to the left, completely closed the curtain of his gaze, and with his hands commanding the length and breadth the keyboard he unleashed a dazzling pyrotechnic of chords (you could almost see their colors), polyrhythms, seemingly unrelated harmonies, and ideas—fresh, brash, outrageous ideas. It was an outpouring of ideas and feelings informed by his own brand of lyricism and lit from time to time by flashes of the recognizable melody. He continued to acknowledge the little simpleminded tune, while at the same time furiously recasting and reinventing it in an image all his own.
A collective in-suck of breath throughout the club.
Where, Hattie wondered, did he come by the dazzling array of ideas and wealth of feeling? It had to do, she speculated, listening intently, with the way he held his head, angled to the left like that, tilted toward both heaven and earth. His right side, his right ear directed skyward, heating up there, in the Upper Room among the stars Mahalia sang about, a new kind of music: splintered, atonal, profane, and possessing a wonderful dissonance that spike to him, to his soul-case. For him, this was the true music of the spheres, of the maelstrom up there. When at the piano, he kept his right ear tuned to it at all times, letting it guide him, inspire him. His other ear? It remained earthbound, trained on the bedrock that for him was Bach and the blues.
Again and again he took them on a joyous, terrifying roller coaster of a ride it seemed to Hattie, and when he finally deposited them on terra firma after close to twenty minutes, everyone in Putnam Royal could only sit there as if they were in church and weren’t supposed to clap. Overcome. Until finally Alvin Edwards lived on Decatur Street played trumpet in the school band leaped to his feet and renamed him.
Alvin brought everyone up with him. Including the purists who normally refused to applaud even genius. They too stood up in languid praise of him.
10. The narrator states that to Hattie, Everett Payne’s performance was:
Your Answer is
Correct Answer is J
Explanation
Lines 78-79, in Hattie's eyes, Everett Payne's music made her feel like she was on a roller coaster.