The New Danger


Music Notes, Minneapolis
Originally uploaded by Kables

The final IWL reading is in a few hours and I am still trying to fix up some new-ish poems for the feature. I always try to push myself to put out some new stuff but since we only have a few poems in the chapbook and about six minutes to read, we have to try to draw material from outside the chap.

Still on the let’s push it a lil further tip, here is the set I read at Raphael Cohen’s book launch at La Peña:

SET LIST
– Psalm for Anywhere Avenue
– On The Subway (That’s Never On Time)*
– Revelation & Anywhere Avenue*
– The Amen Break*
– After Working The Late Shift Again, A Young Boricua On Times Square Composes a Response To a White Co-Worker Concerning The Myth of Racism
– Dedication
– Sonnet for the Lexington Avenue Express—Mt Eden Ave Stop
– About B-Boys in the Boogie Down

First off, I had a lot of fun reading this set. No mic, in a small space which let me be a little loud but I still tried to reign some back for the softer parts of the poems. In restrospect, I should have quit with the Sonnet but I was on a bit of a roll so I just followed my gut. Oh yeah, this reading was around the tale end of VONA making it a nice contrast from almost a solid week of analyzing poems to just sharing some. (Which in my case equals a spot on analysis but a nice contrast none the less.)

* New-ish poems that either got edited or birthed at VONA.

Speaking of VONA, you can see some pics of folks here at there more dynamic website. For all of y’all thinking of applying next year, I recommend checking out the more practical website. For the fellows reading I read these two pieces:

– The Remixed Encyclopedia of Myths: Uptown Edition
– Poem written to the Jimmy Castor Bunch’s “It’s Just Begun” (Part 1)

The Myth poem was a spot on first draft that let me put some elements of sound and music into more direct play. I had a lot of Quincy Troupe’s Architecture of Language in my head when I wrote it but its gonna take a lot more work (and music) to get it in shape.

Off to go read, see ya on the flip side!

Yo No Soy Yo

I am not I.
I am the one
Who walks beside me without me noticing;
Who, sometimes, I go to visit,
And who, sometimes, I forget.
The one who is silent, still, when I speak,
The one who forgives, kindly, when I hate,
The one who travels where I have never been,
The one who will keep walking when I have died.

– Poem by Juan Ramón Jiménez. Translation by Oscar Bermeo.

And that’s my first attempt at poetic translation. It’s not perfect – the third line is probably the hardest one to nail down – but you gotta start somewhere and this poem is as good a place as any considering the fine article Rachel Zucker has on Confessional Poetry. For me, the article really gets rolling towards the end since the beginning part of it has Ms Zucker going off on bad confessional poetry which almost turned me off since (cue the broad generalization theme music) everyone hates bad poetry. We all hate bad performance poetry, bad page poetry, bad lyrical poetry, bad protest poetry, bad published poetry, bad slam poetry, and on and on.

Mind you, it is easier to hate a poem whose merit is subjective over a poem whose merit is based on at least some tangible measure. Which brings us back to confessional poetry (and its cousin, political protest poetry) and the fact that far too often, the writer puts the audience on a very tenuous precipice- if you love the work then you are validating me as a writer but if you don’t like the work then you are invalidating my life experience.

At best, the above ultimatum comes from an insecure writer who is trying to make solid connections with an audience and resorts to their concrete point-of-views as a place to forge a connection. At worst, we have an egotistical ranter who is trying to force a simple solution on a complicated issue (Our kids need better teachers! The ghetto needs more government services! Cops are animals! War is wrong!) to a room full of sheep who are looking for someone to speak for them. Somewhere in the middle, you will find a whole bunch of folks who have a story and the desire to share that story to a listener who will pay them some mind and acknowledge it as a poem.

As for me, I’m just looking for good poems and my experience says most good poems are the product of editing which is one place the I needs to go to the curb for a minute. At least that’s the way I am interpreting Jimenez’s poem and a practice I need to continue brining to my own writing.

Yo no soy yo.
Soy este
que va a mi lado sin yo verlo;
que, a veces, voy a ver,
y que, a veces, olvido.
El que calla, sereno, cuando hablo,
El que perdona, dulce, cuando odio,
el que pasea por donde no estoy,
el que quedará en pie cuando yo muera.
Juan Ramón Jiménez

12 Ways: Reading and Book Release

The culminating event of three months of work and collaboration with the 2007 Intergenerational Writers Lab, a joint program of Kearny Street Workshop, Galería De La Raza and Intersection for the Arts is on Wednesday, July 11, 2007 at 7:00 PM!

Join Kearny Street Workshop, Galería de la Raza, and Intersection for the Arts for the final event of the 4th annual 2007 Intergenerational Writers Lab, a reading and book release event for 12 ways: an anthology of the 2007 Intergenerational Writers Lab . The all-genres anthology features new work by a talented and diverse group of contributers, including IWL 2007 writers Maile Arvin, Oscar Bermeo, Nicole Bohn, Jennifer Chien, Jasmin Darznik, Rebecca Foust, Nirmala Nataraj, Lata Nott, Ramekon O’Arwisters, Carlo Sciammas, Jaime Omar Yassin, and Debbie Yee, and lead IWl 2007 artists Uchechi Kalu, Genny Lim, and Octavio Solis,with original cover design by Mark Baugh-Sasaki and letterpress printing by Patricia Wakida.

The IWL is a literary program to explore multiple forms of creative expression and generate new work. This event represents the culmination of the program, a series of workshops and public readings that began in March 2007.

Date: Wednesday, July 11th, 2007

Time: 7 -9 pm

Location: KSW’s space180, 180 capp street, 3rd floor, @ 17th street, san francisco

Cost: $5 – 15 sliding scale.

Info: http://kearnystreet.org

The 2007 Intergenerational Writers Lab is supported by a grant from the Irvine Foundation.

A collaboration of Kearny Street Workshop, Intersection for the Arts, and Galería de la Raza