Don’t Leave Me High/Don’t Leave Me Dry

Barb brings up the subject of presenting literary events to in her blog today. One of the great things about living in the Bay Area is that there is no shortage of poetry events to attend, everything from open mics to slams to author readings to process conversations, now the only thing left is deciding what is the best use of time and (very selfishly speaking) what I can get out of these literary events to further my own poetics.

Now that’s where my expectation for a literary event changes from, I’d say about, 99% of the public. I want to go to events to learn something and that means that I could go to the absolute worst poetry reading ever and walk away saying, “Ok, things I will never ever do at a reading.” Which means I am down to go to just about reading as long as I feel something new and interesting will happen; not on stage, not in the features wardrobe, not in the host’s horoscope, not in the other audience member’s cell phone conversation, something new and interesting on the page. As long as I get a sense that will happen, I am down to go to just about any reading.

So what does the other 99% of the world want from a poetry reading? According to a report the Wallace Foundation put out a few years back detailing why the public attends artistic events, the number one reason people attend artistic events is to… insert drum roll here… socialize! I guess that would explain all those cell phone calls during readings.

Note: This report (The Diversity of Cultural Participation: Findings from a National Survey, PDF available here) does not detail specifics on literary events but this has been the most comprehensive report I have found regarding any art events. If anyone out there knows of a report that focuses on lit events, please let me know.

Reason number two… emotionally rewarding. And here we hit the tight ropewalk, you want folks to mingle, have a good time, come back again, donate and spread the news to their friends BUT they also have to feel as if they have deeply benefited from having attended which I interpret as: They can’t feel as if the event overwhelmed them. They have to feel as if they are a vital and necessary part of the artistic dialogue and not just filling up seats and wasting a few hours of their lives.

For me, the balance in this tightrope walk was always in letting the audience know why they were there in the first place. They may have shown up simply to socialize or just to feel good about themselves because they showed up for a poetry reading but I always tried to let them know why it was important for them to hear who the featured artist(s) of the night was and how that was emotionally rewarding enough. Too often the only reason the host will give is because the feature is a friend of theirs and since the host likes them, then the audience should too.

Uhm, how about no?

Don’t get me wrong here, I have featured a lot of my friends but on the same tip I have featured a bunch of people who I had never ever met before and, going back to having showcased personal friends, I always made it a point to let the audience know that this was (in my opinion) a worthy poet and not just a friend of mine.

Back to the tightrope walk, I think that a lot of orgs, especially cash strapped ones, make it a priority to appease the audiences need to socialize and be emotionally rewarded over the audience’s need for high art or to gain knowledge. I am not going to fault any orgs desire to stay financially afloat but the fact that not everyone is going to leave with that full emotionally reward would be a good argument to try to appeal to their need for high art as opposed to easy art.

The Wallace Foundation report goes on to state that though folks may show up with an expectation to be emotionally rewarded that expectation usually does not come to pass. Does that mean that if an audience is intimidated or perplexed by the art that they will be less emotionally rewarded? Maybe but I think that this is where a good host jumps in and sets a bar of expectations for the feature to meet and/or shatter so that the audience can make a more informed decision which, I think, leads to emotional reward.

Ok, back to poetry events. I think that as long as the host’s set the audience’s expectations for socialization and what their emotional reward is going to be, then I think everything will flow smoothly.

To me, socializing depends heavily on the venue. If you have a big rambunctious space then folks will have a nice opportunity to chat between readers and even politely whisper to themselves during the reading. The hosts also have an opportunity to fill the space up with some big energy between the readers to a) give folks a chance to hit the bar/donate to the org or b) talk about the reading.

If you have a tight space, then it’s a whole different thesis: common sense and a good sound system should be enough to keep commentary from the audience to a real dull murmur but, if common sense isn’t around, then the host can remind folks with a friendly reminder and not a hard SHUSH or anything else that turns a promising literary event into a bad flashback to your cranky grade school teacher’s classroom.

And there you have it: If a host can find the right feature to match the right audience, then said host really doesn’t have to do much except read the proper bio, let the audience know why this writer is important, sit back and feel emotionally rewarded alongside the audience for having experienced art while gaining some knowledge that can be used when they socialize at the end of the night. Simple, no?

Lit Crawl

Saturday, October 13th, 2007
7:00 – 7:45 pm
New College Creamery
780 Valencia Street

Go: readings about movement & tangents featuring Linda Watanabe McFerrin, Thy Tran, Oscar Bermeo, Vanessa Merina, Bushra Rehman, & Rebecca Foust

presented as part of the Litquake Festival

Join KSW and Litquake for a reading about movement & tangents, featuring the voices of six local writers.

about the artists

Born in Ecuador and raised in the Bronx, OSCAR BERMEO is a BRIO (Bronx Recognizes Its Own) award-winning poet. Oscar lives in Oakland, is the poetry editor for Tea Party magazine, and is married to poet Barbara Jane Reyes. For more information, visit www.oscarbermeo.com.

REBECCA FOUST’s work appears in Twelve Ways (Kearny Street Press 2007) and is forthcoming in Margie, Marin Poetry Center Anthology, North American Review, Nimrod, Poetry East, and Taproot. A finalist in the Pablo Neruda, James Hearst and Ruth Stone Poetry Awards, she also won a first place in Writer’s Digest’s Competition.

Poet and novelist LINDA WATANABE MCFERRIN contributes regularly to both literary and commercial publications. A popular teacher and speaker, she’s authored two poetry collections, an award-winning novel and a short story collection and has edited four literary anthologies. She is the founder of Left Coast Writers®.

VANESSA MERINA was born in California and schooled in Vermont. She writes short fiction and essays. Her work has appeared in Silo, Upstairs at Duroc, and the anthology Cheers to Muses: Contemporary Works by Asian American Women.

BUSHRA REHMAN is a vagabond who traveled for years with a greyhound ticket and book bag full of poems. She is author of Marianna’s Beauty Salon and co-editor of Colonize This! Young Women of Color on Today’s Feminism. To read poetry or excerpts of her on-the-road desi adventure novel, visit www.bushrarehman.com.

THY TRAN is a freelance writer specializing in the history and culture of food. She recently received a grant from the San Francisco Arts Commission to complete a collection of essays exploring how food changes in families across time and place. Read more about her work at www.wanderingspoon.com.

Karma Police (Indeed)


Radiohead asks their fans to decide how much their art is worth.

Radiohead Album Price Tag: ‘It’s Up to You’

How much would you pay for the next Radiohead album, “In Rainbow”? This is not a trick question: Your answer will be as binding as a dictator’s edict.

“IT’S UP TO YOU,” the rock band’s site informs customers pre-ordering the digital download, which will be available Oct. 10. Doubters get a second assurance: “NO REALLY. IT’S UP TO YOU.”

More here

Do The Evolution


KSW Press Reading @ APAture
Originally uploaded by geminipoet

In an effort to break out of a comfort zone, I decided that I was going into my reading on Tuesday for Kearny Street Workshops’ APAture Festival with a different game plan in mind: No banter.

Yep, that’s right. Try to go through a whole set with out trying to affect or change the mood of the audience and let the poems speak entirely for themselves. Considering that I only had 5-7 minutes of time on the mic I figured it would be a good time to try this experiment out but at the last minute the game plan changed and I had 10-12 minute set to work with.

So how did it go? Well, I pretty much pulled it off. I started off the set thanking the KSW folks for letting me read then threw a shout out to Truong Tran and all the folks in my workshop and then went right into it:

SET LIST

– How much for the building (tenants optional)?

– God Loves A Liar

– Unsolved Crimes Perpetrated by Invisible Men as Reported by an Unreliable Witness

– This Wednesday

[Riding the subway is an adventure] by Frances Chung

– The War on TV

– Who we be

– Restoration #6

– I’m Jus Askin

The only commentary I mixed in was making sure folks knew where the cover poem came from but other than that it was all poems, all the time.

While I did like the set and how the audience received it, I will also say that I didn’t enjoy just going from poem to poem. Not because I feel the need to explain every poem but I do like acknowledging the audience and the energy they are bringing to the reading. This is particularly important to me since I feel more people should not only attend more literary events but they should also feel empowered to react and respond to the work they hear at those events which doesn’t mean I am going to be running a poll while I am reading but it does mean I will try my best to let the audience know they are appreciated.

And since I didn’t get to talk about the poems during the set, I’ll give ya some quick background:
– All the poems come from Truong Tran’s Poetry & Politics workshop which is where I got all those nifty writing assignments I have been posting the last few weeks.
– Chung’s subway poem was a serious hit and reading Crazy Melon and Chinese Apple during this workshop time helped me a lot with both my language and my view of City.
– I was surprised as to how animated I was in reading some of the poems.
Jeff McDaniel’s arsonist poem was the inspiration for Restoration #6.

To sum up, it was a nice experiment (and one I may revisit in the future) but I think it was just that: an experiment.

Photos from the night can be found over at mochamonkey.com