EVP Think Tank

Electronic Voice Phenomena Think Tank
7th October in Liverpool,
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 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/

UK:
Joe Banks  http://thequietus.com/articles/09899-joe-banks-disinformation-rorschach-audio
Iris Garrelfs http://irisgarrelfs.com/
Ross Sutherland http://rosssutherland.co.uk
Anat Ben David http://www.yippieyeah.co.uk/anat/
Joe Banks http://rorschachaudio.wordpress.com/
Hannah Silva http://www.hannahsilva.co.uk/
Steven Fowler http://www.sjfowlerpoetry.com/

Only invited artists can attend.
If you wish to be considered for a place, please send an email to nathan@mercyonline.co.uk with your details and area of interest.

We cannot pay any fees for attendees, but we can arrange accommodation.

Paula Claire: Going for Gold

Limited Edition 50 Hand Numbered Copies Published 1 Sept 2012. Introduction: Mirella Bentivoglio. Essays:Scott Thurston; Geraldene Holt. Celebrating a site-specific Performance in the Orchard
Tremough Manor Campus 2.20pm 2 September at the ENVIRONMENTAL UTTERANCE CONFERENCE, University College Falmouth, Cornwall.

Part Two: Catalogue 3: Poems 2001-2011.

Enquiries about the publications to info@paulaclaire.com

Scott Thurston interviews Allen Fisher

Scott Thurston will be conducting a public interview with Allen Fisher at Manchester Metropolitan University’s Crewe campus as part of MMU’s centenary celebrations. The event takes place between 1:30 and 3pm on 10th September 2012 in the Contemporary Arts Building: Axis Theatre. See the programme for an overview of the material Allen will be discussing and performing, a map and travel advice.

if p then q readings in London tonight

if p then q readingsTim Atkins, Michael Basinski, Lucy Harvest Clarke, Tom Jenks, Holly Pester, Philip Terry

Saturday 8 September 2012 7 PM Price: free The Betsey Trotwood 56 Farringdon Road London EC1R 3BL

if p then q is a Manchester based experimental poetry publisher with an international focus, which is especially keen on minimal and conceptual poetries. Following on from day’s events at The Free Verse Poetry Fair on 8th September, at which if p then q has a stall, an event will be held in the evening to celebrate the work of the UK based if p then q poets with a special guest appearance by the American poet Michael Basinski who has a limited edition postcard published by the press. A range of videos and sample materials are available on the website. The event is free and very welcome to all.

Tim Atkins is the author of To Repel Ghosts (Like Books, 1998), 25 Sonnets (The Figures, 2000), Oriental Tapping (Faber 2006), Horace (O Books, 2007), Folklore (Salt, 2008), and Petrarch (Crater, 2010). A selected Petrarch is forthcoming from Barque, and Honda Ode is forthcoming from Oystercatcher. He is editor of the online poetry journal onedit at http://www.onedit.net. Tim’s if p then q publication is 1000 Sonnets.

Michael Basinski is Curator of the poetry Collection, State University at Buffalo. His many books of poetry include Of Venus 93 (Little Scratch Pad) and All My Eggs Are Broken (BlazeVox). Michael’s if p then q publication is the postcard Dog Music.

Lucy Harvest Clarke was born in East Sussex in 1982. After studying Anthropology at Goldsmiths she travelled sporadically and lived by the sea. She now lives and works in London. Her poetry has featured on Great Works, Onedit, in Parameter magazine and in The Other Room Anthology Volume 1. Recently she has published a pamphlet EX3 with The Knives Forks and Spoons Press. Lucy’s if p then q publication is Silveronda.

Tom Jenks lives, works and writes in Manchester. He is the editor of zimZalla and one of the organisers of The Other Room. Tom’s if p then q publications are A Priori and *.

Holly Pester was born in Colchester in 1982. She now lives in London, teaching and researching at Birkbeck, University of London. Her PhD investigates the history of Sound Poetry and the poetics of analogue technologies. The sound texts and performance scores collected here have featured in various cross-disciplinary events, including the Serpentine Gallery Poetry Marathon, Text Festival 2011 and the Liverpool Biennial. In live scenarios her idiosyncratic vocal technique locates a poetic in between the disciplines of poetry performance, song and new media art. Holly’s if p then q publication is Hoofs.

Philip Terry is currently Director of the Centre for Creative Writing at the University of Essex. His books include the edited collection of stories Ovid Metamorphosed (Chatto and Windus, 2000), a translation of Raymond Queneau’s last book of poems, Elementary Morality (Carcanet, 2007), and the collection of poems Shakespeare’s Sonnets (Carcanet, 2010). Philip’s if p then q publication is Advanced Immorality

HI ZERO CONTEMPORARY POETRY READINGS #15

Hi Zero #15, Season 2 Opener, a night of contemporary poetry readings, featuring:

NICK POTAMITIS

Author: The Book of Night Terrors (Salt), and JUBILATE AJAX forthcoming imminently from MOUNTAIN PRESS

STEPHEN MOONEY

Author: DCLP (District and Central Line Project) (Veer), Shuddered, with Aodán McCardle & Piers Hugill (Veer)

JUSTIN KATKO

Author: The Death of Pringle (Veer/Film Forum), Finite Love (w/The Other Brother) (Critical Documents/Bad), Superior City Song (Crit. Dox), and RHYME AGAINST THE INTERNET (Crater)

Wednesday, 26th September upstairs at The Hope, Queen’s Road, BRIGHTON. Doors 7:30pm.

£4 for all

EXTENDING THE FORMS OF POETRY with PAULA CLAIRE

SPECIAL EDITION 8.00pm Wednesday 3 October 2012
The Poetry Library Royal Festival Hall South Bank Centre LONDON SE1 8XX
booking essential: www.specialedition@poetrylibrary.co.uk

Paula Claire presents an illustrated survey of international sound, visual and concrete poetry in our Collection, explaining its importance in the history of 20th-century innovative poetic forms. She offers a unique perspective on the subject supported by her Archive of Sound and Visual Poetry, over 5,000 items gathered by exchanging her Little Press Publications with exponents worldwide.
An experienced performer here and abroad in schools, colleges, arts centres, museums and festivals – Venice, Berlin, Toronto, Houston, Oporto, Cheltenham – she will then involve all present in the diversity of her poems and artists books, explorations during 50 years of writing.
At this event : Book launch to celebrate 50 years of creating poetry:
Catalogue 3: GOING FOR GOLD Poems 2001-11 an annotated and illustrated list with Introduction by Professor Robert Hampson, RHUL. The Library has Catalogue 1: DECLARATIONS Poems 1961-91; Catalogue 2: DI-VERS-ITY – Extending the Forms of Poetry 1991-2001 and nearly 30 other books etc by Paula Claire, see Library database.

Robert Sheppard on René Van Valckenborch

The ‘whole’ oeuvre of René Van Valckenborch is surrounded by mystery, perhaps of his own making. Published in fugitive publications in places as far apart as Cape Town and Montreal over the last decade, the poems of this Belgian are composed in Flemish and Walloon, and the stylistic divide between the two sets seems to reflect the societal linguistic divide of his troubled nation (although he never refers to this fact). These poems are translations from the Walloon of his ‘versions’ of Ovid, both from the unfashionable Tristia and the apocryphal ‘new’ Amores. 

More at Holdfire Press.

Poets for Pussy Riot – the videos

A week after the news that Nadezhda Tolokonnikova, Maria Alyokhina and Yekaterina Samutsevich of the Russian punk collective, Pussy Riot, were sentenced to two years in prison, over 30 contemporary poets came together at the Rich mix arts centre in Brick Lane, London for a unique evening of readings intended as an act of solidarity through the medium of poetry, and a celebration of the courage and spirit of fellow writers of this generation.

Films of the event are now online, including this collaborative piece by recent Other Room readers Becky Cremin and Ryan Ormonde. The full list as follows:

Becky Cremin & Ryan Ormonde – http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-7cmQ0lnoa4

Robert Hampson, Jeff Hilson and Richard Parker Crater/Veer book launches

Crater Press/Veer Books launch (Tuesay, 04 September 2012)

Tuesday 04 September 2012Birkbeck College, room B02, Malet Street building, from 7.30-9pm.
Map available herefree entry, all welcome

featuring the launch of new publications and readings from Robert Hampson, Jeff Hilson, and Richard Parker

Crater 21: August 2012. Robert Hampson, out of sight.

Robert Hampson is Professor of Modern Literature at RHUL, where he teaches on the MA in Poetic Practice. His ‘Assembled Fugitives: Selected Poems 1973-98’ appeared from Stride in 2000. His most recent publication was ‘an explanation of colours’ (Veer, 2011).

‘out of sight’, like the poster-poem ‘map-loading: 51:31N 00:05W’ (2008), is an exercise in procedural writing and recriture.The single sentence, with its shifting phrasal linkages, responds to recent work by Vanessa Place. It’s also the record of a mis-spent decade
.£3 + p&p.

Crater 20: July 2012. Jeff Hilson, From ORGAN MUSIC: AN ANTI-MASQUE NOT FOR DANCING

Jeff Hilson is a senior lecturer in Creative Writing at the University of Roehampton. His works include Stretchers (Reality Street, 2006), Bird Bird (Landfill, 2009), andIn the Assarts (Veer Books, 2010). He edited The Reality Street Book of Sonnets (Reality Street, 2008). With Sean Bonney he co-runs the Crossing the Line reading series.

‘From ORGAN MUSIC: AN ANTI-MASQUE NOT FOR DANCING’ is a new and ongoing narrative and non-narrative sequence (not) about the English organ adding obfuscation to an already obfusced instrument. Orlando Gibbons (1583-1625) was apparently Glenn Gould’s (1932-1982) favourite composer. Decide for yourselves!Other sections of ORGAN MUSIC have appeared recently in VLAK 3, Open Letter and Writers Forearm.£3 + p&p.

Veer 048  R.T.A. Parker – ‘The Traveller & The Defence of Heaven’

Richard Parker works in Turkey, but comes from London.  He’s had two books published; from The Mountain of California… and China, and now this from Veer.

Veer Publication 048 [ISBN: 978-1-907088-45-2]
Projective epic?  End-of-the-world Sci Fi Saga? Sophisticated shaggy dog story? This poem’s mix of allegory, the mock heroic, graphic imaginings, narrative invention and parodic brilliance enriches the account of a city-size spaceship escaping the demise of our solar system. At the outset the ship’s pilot admits, “I dread | the dé | noument / Of this | myster | ious / Story | between | the stars ”, and with good reason. Midway through the poem, come to the end of stellar space, all aboard retire to pods for “many | million / Years of  | forcèd | slumber”. Readers need fear no such fate.(Adrian Clarke)
5×8” size. 108 pages. May 2012. £7.00
http://www.bbk.ac.uk/cprc/publications/Veer_Publications/Veer048

http://www.craterpress.co.uk/

http://www.bbk.ac.uk/cprc/publications/veer-books