Composite feedback this saturday in Manchester


Composite: Feedback

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EVENT
The Annexe
Sat 13 Oct 2012
15:00 - 19:00
FREE, Early booking recommended
RESERVE YOUR PLACE
Composite: Feedback is a multimedia showcase and live archiving event curated by Mercy, mixing together spoken-word performance with live sampling, notation, analogue processing, and projection – all in one self generating feedback loop. A beautiful and absurd experiment, where the performers and array of interfaces are thrown into a productive conflict.
The event is split into three sections, beginning with short talks and performances, followed by a feedback work-out, pushing the performers into a state of continual improvisation. Finally the Annexe will be left to perpetuate itself as a throbbing artifact of degenerating feedback material.
Featuring poets Steven Fowler, Hannah Silva and Nathan Jones, and writer/artist Mark Greenwood. With video design by Sam Meech. This event is part of the Manchester Weekender.
This is a Cornerhouse MicroCommission, supported by the Paul Hamlyn Foundation.
The Manchester Weekender, 11-14 October 2012. A city’s worth of art and culture in one weekend.

Mercy at the Liverpool Biennial

Everytime I'm involved in a commission for Mercy the experience is intense. Just back from the Mercy led Electronic Voice Phenomena project as part of the Liverpool Biennial and the weekend was a remarkable experience. I performed on Saturday night, a third commission with Ben Morris, and today, Sunday, took part in a think tank which involved some of the most exciting electronic, sonic, visual, performance, conceptual and new media artists from around Europe. People had come from across the UK and via Berlin, from Italy and Sweden. 

Ben and I played in a night club basically, emptied out of its normal punters, leading on for Iris Garrelfs and Scanner, and had a weird day setting up and wandering around a pre-drunk Liverpool city centre as saturday night became the traditional idiot dweeb fest that every northern city enjoys. We were shouted at on the street a few times and met a solid flock of junkies which limbered up our creative juice. The piece was again based on ideas of organic voice manipulation mixed with Ben's exploration of sonic landscapes which entertain the same aesthetic idea. It went okay, I lifted some weights. It probably came across as quite didactic with my atheism, which wasn't intentional, but I don't regret. We then stayed in a haunted student halls of residence, with fakir beds with fin de siecle springs instead of nails.

The day of talks and discussions was led by Erik Bunger, whose work is really extraordinary and his lead really began a day of eye opening work and really positive generous discussions. Being exposed to the likes of Alessandra Eramo and Francesco Cavaliere, who were stunning, amongst artists like Emma Bennett and James Wilkes, who I already admire, made me feel pretty lucky. it's rare to be in the company of so many erudite, established artists who are so humble and open and ready to share and learn and collaborate. A great weekend, full of laughs, as it always is working with Ben. More to come on this, in depth features on some of the artists I was exposed to.

Press free Press - Cremin & Ormonde discuss Ways of Describing Cuts

http://www.pressfreepress.com/2012/10/press-free-press-respond-1-s-kelly-sj.html

A generous and interesting responsive analysis of my recently published collaboration with Sarah Kelly has been tended to by Becky Cremin and Ryan Ormonde at Press Free Press:

"S Kelly & SJ Fowler / Robert Hampson - press free press RESPOND:

A new monthly series of active reading. Each month we choose two publications available to read in the Poetry Library - the selection is based on browsing and instinct. We are mostly interested in reading new work. In the library we each have 20 minutes to READ each publication. Outside the library we TALK and WRITE in response: TALKING (5 minutes) / WRITING (5 minutes) / READING each other / repeat x 4. Resulting 12 documents are unedited recordings of live TALKING and unedited transcriptions of live WRITING. 

1) S Kelly & SJ Fowler, 'Ways of Describing Cuts' / Robert Hampson, 'Out of Sight'


TWO

Thinking about physicality first, the object and how voice manifests itself in this object. It’s apt then that we think about single and plural voice and how this can manifest itself physically. Kelly and Fowler are in dialogue with each other, they are also in opposition; physically they come together at “drowning”, the physical space between them once vast is “cut” and merged. This action of cutting through the space to come together interests me. I wonder how they physically dealt with space, whether it is related to distance, or time, or a marker of separation between voice?

Hampson’s physicality comes in a slant, a block of slanted text justified and strong on the page, yet there is a difference between how it acts 


FOUR

“how it acts” – is it one act – is it a single appearance? As with Fowler/Kelly there is still a sense of the linear. As with Mc Cafferye’s ‘Lag’ the text between commas presents a separate image or proposition, but it begins like a film treatment and ends with a full stop. In Hampson’s piece we always consider the text in relation to our understanding of a block of prose – a rather abstract detached notion – how about in Kelly/Fowler? Are we reading the text on its own terms or in relation to an existing model? Is the fact of two poets sharing the same book presented as a new


SIX

reading experience? The sharing and action of sharing is of concern, as are they sharing or working against each other? Perhaps what is more necessary to consider is not that there are two voices, but these two voices both claim the “I”. There is then a shifting “I” in the text which flits between female and male. Both voices are claiming the “I” for themselves; what impact does this have on the text and our experience of it? The “I” in this text speaks to each other, moves between each other; I’m interested in whether the “I” stays whole


EIGHT

Also, what does this do to the reader? A reader is often assuming the I of the text, relating to it. Should we pick a side here? We are asked to identify with both sides of a poetic dialogue but also to replace our notion of poet with “dialogue between two poets”. There is something exciting in this dialogue as it exposes process to a point and we feel each voice constricting and liberating the other. However, we still wonder about the directions the writing(s) takes when moving away from or towards this structure.


TWO

We are comparing a book with multiple pages with a single fold. A similarity that springs to mind is how in both cases there is resistance to the provided structure, so the dialogue between SJ Fowler and S Kelly is not played out on opposite pages but across an invisible horizontal divide that can disappear, and Hampson's text is printed across the fold and at an angle with the page, disrupting the visual experience of reading, from opening the fold to encountering the text, to reading the text.                                                                                                      cont'd....

Maintenant #94 - Pierre Joris


There are figures in poetry whose contribution to the understanding of the medium is so immense it cannot be properly appreciated when they are still practising their thought as a poet, let alone as also a prolific critic, anthologist, teacher and theorist. All the more is this true when their work is as enormous, and relentless, as it is subtle, generous and deft. Even more so again when they have been at this work for over forty five years. Who would hope to engage more in the roots and edges of poetics in one lifetime than Pierre Joris has over his? He has published over forty books. He has translated hundreds of poets, not just offering new understandings of their work in his translations, but often resurrecting, if not creating, an appreciation in the Western World. He is as exceptional a polylingual translator as the late 20th century has seen and is inarguably seminal in his own work for the revelation of multi-lingual writing amongst other things. He has taught thousands of students, never once comprising the fundamentally ethical, rigorous and complex ideas behind his work and his understanding of poetry in general. He has written numerous articles on his contemporaries, and having lived across Europe, Africa and the United States, those who have constituted his peers are an exceptionally plentiful group. Add onto that his editorial co-presiding over one of the most important anthologies ever conceived, the poems for the millenium. His dexterity and depth of understanding is matched only by his generosity, and the immense legacy he has already cemented. It is a great pleasure, in our 94th edition, to introduce our first Luxembourger poet, by birth, who is rather obviously, a citizen of everywhere and nowhere.
 
 
Pierre was kind enough to allow us to publish four poems alongside the interview.
 

Mercy & the Liverpool Biennial finale performance

Mercy's Biennial Weekend... 10 years in the making


Ten years on the edgy-edge of literature and arts, and therefore our fifth Liverpool Biennial Festival, sees us host a weekend of internationally regarded Electronic Voice Phenomena-inspired talks, workshops and events as a part of the biggest contemporary art festival in the galaxy.
Featuring a performance lecture on the vocoder based on "the best music book ever" by Dave Tompkins / A headline commission from sound art mastermind Scanner ./ And new work from our commissions programme from Anat Ben DavidRoss SutherlandHannah Silva,Steven Fowler and Ben Morris and Iris Garrelfs.
Full details below.
Plus latest info on our lecture/performance mashup, and Manchester debut at Cornerhouse next weekend
FINALE: Scanner, Iris Garrelfs and Steven Fowler
This special concatenation of interweaved sound works on live, mediated and otherworldly voices see the weekend off in style.
Sound art guru Scanner, collaborator of Bjork, Radiohead and Bryan Eno presents a new work based on live renderings of spirit-voice recordings from Stockholm, and the 'immanence of the voice'.
Glitch Vocalist Iris Garrelfs "magnificent and haunting" performance of chance and hybridisation with the interface.
Leading avant garde voice Steven Fowlerexperiments with reading a poetic text agressed by exhaustion, exertion and duress, and a soundscape by Ben Morris revisiting last year's mind blowing collaborative performance at LMW - with added dumb-bells.
Hi-Fi
(bottom of Seel Street)
8-11pm Saturday
£5 entry

[more info]
 

Paul Holman website





The British occult modernist poet Paul Holman has a new website I thoroughly recommend you check out. I had the pleasure of reading with Paul at a Blue Bus last year and have followed his work ever since, his work really dials into a unique lexicon of language while maintaining the principles of innovation. Really worth looking at his book from Shearsman The Memory of the Drift http://paulholman.drupalgardens.com/

a review of Ways of Describing Cuts on Sphinx

http://www.sphinxreview.co.uk/pamphlet-reviews/2012/63-sphinx-21-2012/533-ways-of-describing-cuts-s-kelly-a-s-j-fowler

WAYS OF DESCRIBING CUTS — S. KELLY & S. J. FOWLER

Note: Sphinx only reviews single author pamphlets, each of which is considered by three reviewers. However, we have made a special exception in this case (as a one-off) because it seemed fun to have a dual-authorship dual-reviewed (the two reviewer-poets are well-versed in collaborative authorship).
Ways Of Describing Cuts: jointly reviewed by Jon Stone and Kirsten Irving

J:
 Each page in this collaborative pamphlet is an exchange between top and bottom, and although I don’t mean that in the S&M sense, there's a strong sense of the voices playfully resisting each other, like ferromagnetic materials of the same polarity—words as charged filings. Part of that, of course, is a result of the similarity in style: lines of variegated length (tending towards the very short) moving through disparate visual ideas at the speed of a film reel.


K:
 Lord knows we love collaboration, and you get a real sense of the back and forth, of the process, rather than a static product. The deliberate omission of titles, smooth transition between the two writers and sporadic punctuation all contribute to this effect. I also like the idea of not knowing whether this is actually a collection at all. It could be one long poem. 



Fighting Cocks in Blazevox

http://www.blazevox.org/BX%20Covers/BXFall2012/SJ%20Fowler%20RDG%20Thomas%20-%20Fall%2012.pdf / http://www.blazevox.org/index.php/journal/blazevox12-fall-2012/ 
BX 12 topbar
Really delighted to announce the publication of a collaboration with Rob Thomas, a friend who I work with day to day. The work, called Fighting Cocks, purports to explore a deliberately rough and slapstick take on the nature of dialogue and one wholly contemporary to the current British economic climate that Rob and I are both currently suffering under. In reality, the work is about texting your friend while working in a dead end job.


Fighting Cocks

:- ...they are trying to break you

:- until I get caught on you, you big barbed wire fence. Together we are urban pollution

:- you pollute me

:- I am a gigantic dark vessel, those who embark will not regret

:- I heed your warning. I take note of both size and colour. There are Jurassic park-
esque tremors in my gallery. Is that you, travelling?

:-I travel through concrete like a worm, like the popular film tremors. I’m never far from the action.

:- All teenage French girls have good quality cameras.

:- It is not I who will work the foliage. Worm devourer, I hold them as
sacrifice




Mercy Think Tank at the Liverpool Biennial


EVP Think Tank

0
11/09/12 Workshops
by Nathan Jones
Electronic Voice Phenomena Think Tank7th October in Liverpool
[a creative postscript to Mercy and Liverpool Biennial 2012's EVP Weekend]
featuring a range of artists from UK and Berlin, discussing the question

"what are the implications of electronics on the contemporary voice?"
  
The day, for invited artists, will feature presentations/performances from Erik Bunger, Ross Sutherland, Steffi Wiesman and Sam Skinner.

And there will also be room/resources for conversation, creative thinking and experimenting on this theme.
The Think Tank comes in the context of Mercy's EVP weekend with Liverpool Biennial 2012, and the performances and talks in this programme will form a basis for some of the discussion.

There will be formal and informal opportunities to make work and propose future projects,  and items from the day will feed into future Mercy plans, including a UK/Europe tour in 2013.

We are particularly looking for possible collaborative relationships to form.

list of confirmed attendees, including artists, poets and musicians:
(participants from Berlin are enabled to come thanks to British Council and Arts Council England through the Artist Internationational Development Fund.)
Berlin:
Erik Bunger http://www.erikbunger.com/
Alessandra Eramo http://www.ezramo.com/
Karl Heinz Jeron http://portfolio.jeron.org/
Francesco Cavaliere http://www.nathiascatola.com/
Steffi Wiezman http://www.steffiweismann.de/

38 meditations on Strong Tea

http://zimzalla.files.wordpress.com/2012/09/poetea-strong.pdf

Jo Langton and Zimzalla have teamed up to release Poetea. Handmade cloth tea bags in handmade felt sleeves, with each bag containing text. 10 varieties are available: Builder’s; Black; Delicate; Exotic; Fresh; Fruitea; Green; Rich; Strong; White. / Jo has taken the time to commission original poetic responses to each of these varieties and pleasingly, if predictably, I got Strong Tea. In the aftermath of a lovely afternoon in the company of friends and other stolen pieces of other peoples text, and a lecture by Richard Dawkins, I wrote these 38 minimalist miniatures.  / Other reactionaries include Andrew Taylor, Sarah Crewe and Tamarin Norwood. Check the Zimzalla site for new returns. A fantastic project I was delighted to be asked to do by one of the most exciting publishing ventures and one of the most interesting up and coming poets, predictably both from the north of the country.


"PoeTea responses: SJ Fowler

SEPTEMBER 17, 2012
This week, SJ Fowler responds to the Strong blend. Click the link to read."

38 meditations on Strong tea

              for Val & Tom Raworth


 my tea is
   admirably  
    complex

will it run the risk
   of being misunderstood?
  
                        *

sarcastic Chinese
 asking
why ... milk?
   because of breasts
          we reply
& because udders just hang there
                          otherwise

                                    *

         the irony being
   on a journey to Edinburgh
   tae visit Nick-e Melville
      idon actually
          like
        hot drinks

*

you are the Shining Star of Bear Island
where all the trees
           have been stripped away
       to make room
            for the plantation’s
        wives


hello chicken
        come visit. I will give you
        corn
          & stroke your head
    your feathers will be my handle;
        your skull will be my cup

                        *

o man, I have Mark next to me
he stinks
    & has aspergers
   I could really do with a cup
               of Strong tea



cont'd...

Hugo Ball

I have spent a few days intensively reading Hugo Ball's diaries, a flight out of time, which encompasses his life in Munich during the 1910's, his decisive role in the first actions of Dada and then a decade long period of retreat and thought with his wife Emmy Hennings in Italy and Switzerland. Ball edited the diary scrupulously from the point of view of his later turn to Catholicism, and with this in mind I felt some trepidation, but after taking to the work with the concentration it required, I found profound insights within the book. His political engagement is lucid and wholly honest, and his conversion is in very personal, idiosyncratic terms - he was drawn into mysticism against Prussian positivism, and as a way of navigating certain ethical and aesthetic questions. I too, still a stringent atheist mind, have felt the same draw into ecclesiastical sources, early christian philosophy and religious writings. The work of Augustine, Eckhart and Paul has been extremely important in the context of my wide readings even though I remain demonstratively against contemporary religion and those that would formulate their belief system as an engagement with traditional notions of a judeo-christian god, which strikes me as both absurd and immeasurably harmful, not only for its delusion, but its adherence to a tradition that is almost entirely defined by abuse and an arrogance so enormous it is the primary reason for pessimism in our age, as any other. 


Ball's life and thought was both brilliant and to me at least, cautionary. often as deluded as insightful, and precisely because his commitment to ideas was so utterly all encompassing. He could not set a ken for his own personal well being beyond his ideas. He speaks often of Nietzsche, of Baader, of Bakunin and these associations of kind are not accidental. There is much to take from his writings, but much to learn too, even 90 plus years on, in a world unrecognisable. His friendship and acquaintance with so many remarkable minds of the age, including Ernst Bloch, Herman Hesse and Walter Benjamin, also strike me with the feeling that whether he continually reiterates his intellectual solitude of sorts, he was part of a milieu, a wider intellectual community that simply does not exist in the present age.

25
It is imperative to write invulnerable sentences. Sentences that withstand all irony.

27
One must give up lyrical feelings. It is tactless to flaunt feelings at such a time. The plainest decency, the simplest politeness, demands that you keep your sentiments to yourself.

29
If language really makes us kings of our nation, then without doubt it is we, the poets and thinkers, who are to blame for this blood bath and who have to atone for it.

35
It is necessary for me to drop all respect for tradition, opinion, and judgement. It is necessary for me to erase the rambling text that others have written.

43
for a man of culture it is the worst immorality to accept the standards of his time.

Remove yourself as far as possible from the times in order to assess them. But do not lean so far out of the window that you fall out.

49 
The activity of any art (painting, writing, composing) will do them good, providing that they do not pursue any purpose in their subjects, but follow the course of a free, unfettered imagination… In an age like ours, when people are assaulted daily by the most monstrous things without being able to keep account of their impressions, in such an age aesthetic production becomes a prescribed course. But all living art will be irrational, primitive and complex; it will speak a secret language and leave behind documents not of edification but of paradox.

58
It can probably be said that for us art is not an end in itself – more pure naivete is necessary for that – but it an opportunity for true perception and criticism of the times we live in, both of which are essential for an unstriking but characteristic style. The latter does not seem to us such a simple matter as one is often inclined to think. What can a beautiful, harmonious poem say if nobody reads it because it has nothing to do with the feelings of the times? And what can a novel have to say when it is read for culture but ir eeally a long way from even touching on culture? Our debates are a burning search, more blatant every day, for the specific rhythm and the buried face of this age – for its foundation and essence; for the possibility of its being stirred, its awakening. Art is only an occasion for that, a method.

59
Perfect scepticism makes perfect freedom possible. When no definite conclusions can, must, or may be reached about the inner contour of an object, then it is handed over to its opposite, and it is only a question of whether the new order of the elements, made by the artist, scholar or theologian, can gain recognition. The recognition is tantamount to the fact that the interpreter has succeeded in enriching the world with a new phenomenon. One can almost say when belief in an object or a cause comes to an end, this object or cause returns to chaos and become common property. But perhaps it is necessary t have resolutely, forcibly produced chaos and thus a complete withdrawal of faith before an entirely new edifice can be built up on a changed basis of belief. The elemental and demonic come to the fore first; the old names and words are dropped.

60
Huelsenbeck speaks against “organisation"; people have had enough of it, he says. I think so too. One should not turn a whim into an artistic school.

65
The Dadaist loves the extraordinary and the absurd. He knows that life asserts itself in contradiction, and that his age aims at the destruction of generosity as no age has ever done before. He therefore welcomes any kind of mask. Any game of hide-and-seek, with its inherent power to deceive. In the midst of the enormous unnaturalness, the direct and the primitive seem incredible to him. As the bankruptcy of ideas has stripped the image down to its innermost layers, instincts and backgrounds are emerging in a pathological way. As not art, politics, or knowledge seems able to hold back this flood, the only thing left is the joke and bloody pose.

66
The Dadaist pus more trust in the honesty of events than in the wit of people. He can get people cheaply, himself included. He no longer believes in the comprehension of things from one point of view, and yet he is still so convinced of the unity of all beings, of the totality of all things, that he suffers from the dissonances to the point of self-disintegration.

The Dadaist fights against the agony and the death throes of this age. Averse to all clever reticence, he cultivates the curiosity of one who feels joy even at the most questionable forms of rebellion. He knows that the world of systems has fallen apart, and that this age, with its insistence on cash payment, has opened a jumble sale of godless philosophies. Where fear and a bad conscience begin for the shopkeeper, hearty laughter and gentle encouragement begin for the Dadaist.

The word and the image are one. Painter and poet belong together.

67
We have now driven the plasticity of the word to the point where it can scarcely be equalled. We achieved this at the expanse of the rational, logically constructed sentence, and also by abandoning documentary work (which is possible only by means of a time-consuming grouping of sentences in logically ordered syntax.) Some things assisted us in our efforts: first of all, the special circumstances of these times, which do not allow real talent either to rest or mature and so put its capabilities to the test. Then there was the emphastic energy of our group; one member was always trying to surpass the other by intensifying demands and stresses. You may laugh; language will one day reward us for our zeal.

71
In these phonetic poems we totally renounce the language that journalism has abused and corrupted. We must return to the innermost alchemy of the word, we must even give up the word to, to keep for poetry its last and holiest refuge. We must give up writing secondhand: that is, accepting words (to say nothing of sentences) that are not newly invented for our own use. Poetic effects can no longer be obtained in ways that are merely reflected ideas or arrangements of furtively offered witticisms and images.

72
In its fantasising art is indebted to total scepticism. Consequently, artists, inasmuch as they are sceptics, flow into the stream of the fantastic age; they belong to destruction and are its emissaries and blood relatives.

73
The academy itself is fantastic and irrational. Its belief in ‘objective science’ is the basis of all phantasms. The future will, therefore, probably not sacrifice the intellect, but oppose it to the fantast cult of science in a formative way.

75
In a world that has been supplanted and buried beyond recognition, a world that is liberated in art by unrestrained enthusiasm, bt in the lunatic asylum is freed by a disease. The revolutionaries I mean are to be sought there, rather than in the mechanised literature and politics of today.

79
we had to be independent of any morality and yet proceed from the one moral premise that the whole man could be elevated (and not only a part of the man who is agreeable to being educated; who advances society; or who fits into the existing system).

85
It is just a noise. It makes no difference if it is with cannons or debates.

The only thing we can put our hopes in is unconditional honesty, even if it cuts into our own flesh.

101
Art cannot have any respect for the existing view of the world unless it renounces itself. Art enlarges the world by negating the aspects that were known and in operation up to now, and putting new ones in their place. That is the power of modern aesthetics; one cannot be an artist and believe in history.

199
The faults one discovers in others are often only one’s own. Anyone who is familiar with this idea drives great benefit from it.

211
Sexual abstention is defined by the Fathers as a Christian innovation, and they see it as a supernatural virtue; it seems to me to be a result of the experience of death. “I die every day” says Paul. The dying man is not interested in sexual intercourse.




Sofia Poetics

An enormously rewarding experience travelling to and reading in Sofia. I am writing a travelogue documenting Sofia Poetics and the hospitality of Ivan Hristov and the company of Ryan Van Winkle and Tomasz Rosycki. More to come when it's ready. 

Sea Pie: a Shearsman anthology of Oystercatcher poetry

http://www.oystercatcherpress.com/phnews.html  An amazing new anthology has been published by Shearsman, one of the UK's most vital and consistent and considered presses, documenting the truly brilliant editorial work of Peter Hughes at Oystercatcher over the last few years. I published one of my fights cycles, Johnny Tapia, with Peter last year, in the imitable black cardcut style of Oystercatcher and really without enough time to appreciate it, found myself in the company of poets like Carol Watts, Philip Terry, John James, Emily Critchley, Kelvin Corcoran and Tim Atkins. This anthology, a really beautiful object, and so effortlessly edited to be both comprehensive and slim line, is a testament to what Oystercatcher has achieved. It is a book full of exacting and linguistically forceful poetry, and really I hope it gets a strong reception as it thoroughly deserves one. 

http://www.amazon.co.uk/Sea-Pie-Shearsman-Anthology-Oystercatcher/dp/1848612311

Below is a poem featured in the chapbook I published with Oystercatcher but is not one of the poems featured in the anthology.


v   Our Lady of Perpetual Help

“And I learned that pain is a part of life. And that love can come and go”


cha cha cha
murder

an overweight pink in all in one
                                            girl tracksuit

kid on a bike, shouting pussyole
   & others

    murdered & dumped into a pit
covered with soil
              a garden planted
          with apple trees
                            ankle weights
                                      & fresh pressups



Kent Johnson on 3am

One of the major upsides of being the poetry editor at 3am is that I can approach and publish people like Kent Johnson, who has influenced my work so much and has been a powerful antagonistic presence in English language poetry for years. http://www.3ammagazine.com/3am/homage-to-the-last-avant-garde/


Sestina: Avantforte
O your perfect, vulgate, hairy sestina
–David Shapiro (correspondence with the author)
It’s interesting how no one has yet written a sestina about John Ashbery,
Joseph Ceravolo, Barbara Guest, James Schuyler, Frank O’Hara, and Kenneth Koch.
After all, the New York poets wrote a bunch of sestinas, and Frank O’Hara,
of course, though he never wrote one himself, dropped the names of poets in his poems
    like crazy. James Schuyler
did too. He lived at the Chelsea amongst wackos of all kinds. Once, on the morning of
    this poem, when seven thousand saffron panels billowed in the park, on a day you could     take up the tattered shadows off the grass, Barbara Guest
knocked on his door with a flat shape under her arm. Joseph Ceravolo
answered the door. What are you doing here, she said. Maybe I should be asking you that
    question, said Joseph Ceravolo.
Well, I’ve got this painting, it’s by Joe Brainard, I wanted to show it to Jimmy, and it’s
    called “Tangerines.”
   

Xing the Line reading videos

Xing the Line has been established as probably the most consistent, and in its unobtrusiveness, probably the most important reading series in London for as long as I've been active on the scene. I was pleased to be accompanied by Tim Atkins, who I admire so much, and to read to both friends and fellow poets, and people I have not brought my work to previously. I was launching three books on the night too, and I was so deliriously tired from working and studying that I was able to relax. This is perhaps a future note to myself, to approach readings without too much sleep, they are more enjoyable to give when the words seem a surprise to me as and when I encounter them.