In her poem 'The Garden Path' Breeze writes: "I want to make words/music/move beyond language/into sound". Breeze achieves this ambition, utilising powerful rhythms and refrains and singing or chanting many of the poems until they become a kind of alternative liturgy, as in her poem 'Planted by the waters' written for Maya Angelou's 70th birthday. Elsewhere she effortlessly inhabits the patois speech of an earlier generation like the granny in 'The arrival of Brighteye'. Breeze's work has a strong political dimension but it resists limitations, ranging over a wide variety of subject matter from childhood memories of Kingston to contemporary life in inner-city London. Breeze prefers to explore social injustice obliquely, using personal stories and historical narratives to concentrate on the psychological dimensions of black women's experience, exemplified by the deeply moving 'Arrival of Brighteye' which records a life lost between two alternative homes. Freedom is an important theme, artistic and physical as well as political. However, Breeze's poems are also full of delight in the world, as in her deliciously sensual description of longing in 'Could it be'.
One of these pleasures is the human voice and although Breeze writes beautifully for the page, it is in performance that its full power can be experienced, as expressed in her joyful image of Stevie Wonder in 'Upstream': "I heard a laughing river . . ./saw your head thrown back in song".
Her recording was made for The Poetry Archive on 21 September 2002 at The Audio Workshop, London and was produced by Richard Carrington.


