Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Beat musician, poet authored 50 books

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OAKLAND, Calif. — David Meltzer, a Beat poet and musician who appeared in an influentia­l anthology in his early 20s and went on to complete more than 50 books, has died. He was 79.

Meltzer died last Saturday after suffering a stroke. His wife, Julie Rogers, says he died at their home in Oakland.

The New York-native eventually settled in the San Francisco Bay Area, a mecca for Beats in the 1950s and ‘60s. Meltzer had begun writing as a child and attracted wider attention when he was featured along with such acclaimed contempora­ries as Allen Ginsberg and John Ashbery in “The New American Poetry 1945-1960.” He would publish prose and poetry steadily over the following decades, with books including “Ragas” and “Luna” and such recent works as “When I Was a Poet” and “Two-Way-Mirror.” A retrospect­ive of his verse, “David’s Copy: The Selected Poems of David Meltzer,” came out in 2005.

Meltzer had many talents. He made radio and TV appearance­s as a boy and worked extensivel­y in music. Like Ginsberg and other Beats, Meltzer had an affinity for jazz and collaborat­ed with jazz musicians in the 1950s on an album released decades later, “David Meltzer: Poet with Jazz 1958.” He was a songwriter and guitarist himself and recorded and performed with his first wife, the singer Tina Meltzer, in the 1960s.

Meltzer taught for decades at the San Franciscob­ased New College of California and was on the board of the Before Columbus Foundation, which promotes multicultu­ral literature. Rogers says he continued to write almost to the end of his life.

He is survived by Rogers and by four children from his first marriage: Amanda, Jennifer, Margaret and Adam.

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