Live
at the Writers House is a radio
program that has been produced out of the Kelly Writers House at Penn from
its earliest days – back when the building was a comparatively funky shell of
an old cottage with little more than folding chairs, a couple of PCs & a
student coordinator who slept on-site to make sure that the PCs didn’t
disappear. XPN, the Penn radio station, functions
less like a college station & more like a music-centered NPR outlet – its
motto is “true musical diversity,” which in practice translates into 90 percent
alt-Americana post-folk music – and, through affiliates, has a reach that
extends from northern Virginia up into north-central New Jersey. Having won a
“Best of Philly” award from one of the local weekly papers its very first year,
Live has evolved over seven seasons
into a remarkably tight & well-crafted event that is now produced by the
poet Tom
Devaney & hosted by Michaela
Majoun, one of the most widely recognized names & voices on the
Philadelphia airwaves. The final show of the current school year airs this
Sunday evening, April 13, at 11:00 PM. You can pick live XPN programming on the
web here. And soon enough, the
broadcast will join the web-accessible archives that are in the process of
being made available here.
The secret to Lives’ success these days lies in
Devaney’s careful curating of poets & balance with the music. For the April
13 show, Devaney brings together six fairly different, yet consistently
post-avant poets: Jenn
McCreary, Mytili
Jagannathan, Frank
Sherlock, Joshua Schuster,
Andrew
Zitcer & your humble correspondent. All are local to
In addition to the poets, Need New Body, a rock band that to this
untrained ear is situated somewhere between Pere Ubu, the Sun Ra Arkestra & The
Police, performs three high energy, exceptionally witty & listenable songs.
In addition to his lead vocals, Jeff Bradbury plays an amplified banjo that at
different points – & I’ll be curious to hear if this comes across over the
radio – sounds like everything from a sitar to a balalaika. It’s quite a tour
de force tucked inside this sextet . One thing radio listeners clearly won’t be
able to make out is the mask that drummer Chris Powell wore during the first
song. Composed of a black stocking with shards of mirror glued atop it, rather
like a disco ball, it wasn’t immediately evident to those in the Writers House
Arts Café that Powell could even see those drums, but he certainly could feel
them.
One of the curious phenomena
of the radio form is that you do a run-through of the show, make whatever
changes people deem appropriate – I added a second poem, for example, &
Need New Body switched two of their three songs. One of the things that
in-person listeners can do is to hear the same event twice in the space of only
a little more than two hours. Talking with Jagannathan, Bradbury & outgoing
Writers House director Kerry Sherin afterwards, one thing we all agreed on was
that the simple fact of the run-through transforms everything. The readings the
second time are all smoother, more confident. I’m not always sure that smoother
is better in the case of my own poetry, but I was happy not to stumble the
couple of times that I did in my first reading. I wasn’t happy to be asked a question by Majoun in between poems that
I hadn’t prepped for & which wasn’t included in the rehearsal. My answer is
the verbal equivalent of air guitar – you can see (or hear) me flailing away,
but don’t look too closely for any content.
Of the five other poets,
McCreary is the one whose work I know
best, having just finished doctrine
of signatures. She & Jagannathan are the most complete &
self-assured in their presentations – each sculpts meaning almost effortlessly.
Hearing them together – Need New Body & Andy Zitcer come in between – I
realize that to someone unfamiliar with post-avant strategies, these two poets
might seem superficially similar. Both use relatively short units – phrase,
line, sentence – to construct elegant & powerful works. But their writing
is, in fact, radically different from one another. McCreary’s bias is toward
formal strategies, Jagannathan moves more thematically. Each is interested in
the social, but I’ll wager that they have a fairly dissimilar idea as to what
that means. Because I went first & McCreary immediately thereafter, I
didn’t have the wits about me to take notes during her reading, other than to
register the fact that the work read was more recent than doctrine, generally more open-ended shorter pieces. Several of
Jagannathan’s phrases from a piece that’s still in progress (holograph edits
were evident on the page) are still ringing in my imagination: “spoonful of
cellophane,” “orchid feverishly wants aloe” – that sounds like a terrific
header from a personals ad – “crouch is a gesture to readily understand,” “if
name is temporary password,” “I don’t want powerless no more” – there’s not a
missing word there, which makes that gap all the more dramatic.
Andrew Zitcer is, for want
of a better description, a community organizer
of the arts, in the process of getting an M.A. on Planning in the Arts at
La
Tazza co-curator Frank Sherlock reads “Night Margins,” a sequence that you
can find in the first volume of the ixnay reader.
A series of long-lined couplets – the second line is always indented – paired
at the very top & bottom of the page with a horizontal dividing line that
gradually moves down the page as the work progresses – there’s no decent way to
represent this work adequately within the limitations of the blog format. Nor
can you hear this aspect of the work when read aloud. Though the format
visually references the divided page of Jack Spicer’s Heads of the Town up to the Aether & Sherlock is fond of the
Projectivist shorthand for with – “w/” – what I hear most clearly in his work
is a surrealism in which the emphasis falls on that word real. It’s a witty, challenging piece & I like it a lot.
Josh Schuster was one of the
first poets I met when I moved to
(a) take several years – I’ll bet on at least a decade –
to really turn into Schuster’s “own thing” &
(b) look like none of his influences once he’s arrived.
I wouldn’t be at all
surprised to discover that many of Schuster’s peers shake their heads at his
work – it’s so consciously anti-poetic – not at all unlike the way Benjamin’s
friends rolled their eyes at his grand failures & incomplete ventures. But,
over the years, I’ve come to trust very much the artist who puts all their
cards on the table & Schuster right now is taking as many risks as any poet
I know. “Anatomy of Public Safety,” the piece he read here works & doesn’t
work & works again on whole other levels. I’m fascinated & would love
to see into the future to find out just where all this is going.
Again, let me note that you
can hear all of this “live” Sunday night at 11:00 PM Eastern here on radio XPN.