Other Room organiser Scott Thurston and Other Room reader Nathan Walker will be on BBC Radio 3’s The Verb on Friday, 3rd February at 10 pm. The programme will be available online after broadcast here.
The Verb
Ian Seed on The Verb
The Verb: Voice Hearing
Ian McMillan’s guests include Charles Fernyhough, author of ‘Pieces of Light’ (Profile). Charles is Professor of Psychology at Durham University, where he is leading the ‘Hearing The Voice’, an interdisciplinary research project that aims to better understand the experience of hearing voices.
The poet SJ Fowler celebrates the avant garde in his work and he has written a new piece for us inspired by the work of ‘Hearing of the Voice’. Fowler’s latest collection of poetry is ‘Enthusiasm’ (Test Centre).
Listen live on BBC Radio 3 at 22:00 on Friday, 15th January or on the BBC website afterwards.
Scott Thurston on The Verb
Scott Thurston is the Podcast Extra on BBC Radio 3’s The Verb, episode from 27th November 2015, reading his poem inspired by Buber’s ‘I and Thou’, and examines the relationship between his poetry and Buber’s philosophy.
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Tony Trehy on The Verb
Tony Trehy appeared on BBC Radio 3’s The Verb yesterday, talking about The Language of Lists, part of the Bury Text Festival. You can listen to the broadcast for another six days on BBC iPlayer. The Language of Lists runs until 9th July. More details here.
Matthew Welton on The Verb
Matthew Welton will appear on BBC Radio 3s The Verb – Friday 13th September at ten or streaming for a week after that.
Holly Pester on The Verb
Holly will be reading for The Other Room tomorrow, 18th May at 5pm, The Town Hall Tavern, Tib Lane, Manchester, M2 4JA. In the meantime, listen to her on BBC Radio 3’s The Verb tonight at 10pm and on BBC iPlayer for a week thereafter.
SJ Fowler on The Verb
THE DARK WOULD on The Verb
THE DARK WOULD language art anthology will feature on the BBC literary discussion programme The Verb at 10pm Friday 19 April. Listen online to the programme live, or via podcast at:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b006tnsf
THE DARK WOULD gathers work by over 100 contributors including some of the most noted artists and poets alive today. This is a moment in time when poets and many artists share the same primary material: language. The anthology is split between two volumes – paper and virtual. Many of the works here are in two parts, speaking to one another across the paper/virtual divide, as a metaphor of dis/embodiment, considering time, mortality and human traces in the natural world.
As Editor Philip Davenport writes: “THE DARK WOULD asks what it is to live in a body now, knowing that one day we won’t be here. Perhaps this is best done by people for whom language is itself a state of between-ness. Here is a gathering of artists who use language and poets who are in some wider sense artists.”
Jerry Rothenberg, Rosemarie Waldrop, Tom Phillips, Nja Mahdaoui, Tom Raworth, Paula Claire, Susan Hiller, Robert Grenier, Ed Baker, Lawrence Weiner, John M Bennett, Kay Rosen, Allen Fisher, Richard Long, Ron Silliman, Richard Wentworth, Kevin Austin, Maria Chevska, Alan Halsey, Ken Edwards, Mike Basinski, Charles Bernstein, Jenny Holzer, Hainer Wörmann, Tony Lopez, Fiona Templeton, Maggie O’Sullivan, Geraldine Monk, Márton Koppány, David Annwn, John Plowman, Jesse Glass, Jurgen Olbrich, Liz Collini, Robert Sheppard, Patricia Farrell, Fernando Aguiar, Shirin Neshat, Penelope Umbrico, Gregory Vincent St Thomasino, Anne Charnock, Steve Waling, Robert Fitterman, Michalis Pichler, David Austen, Keiichi Nakamura, Shaun Pickard, Geof Huth, Tony Trehy, Wayne Clements, Peter Jaeger, Eléna Rivera, Kenny Goldsmith, Harald Stoffers, Erica Baum, Nick Blinko, Philip Terry, Caroline Bergvall, Carol Watts, George Widener, Philip Davenport, Nico Vassilakis, Monica Biagioli, Tacita Dean, Jeff Hilson, Alec Finlay, Christian Bök, Fiona Banner , Nigel Wood, Satu Kaikkonen, Simon Patterson, Dave Griffiths, Nayda Collazo Llorens, Vanessa Place, Peter Manson, Andrew Nightingale, Matt Dalby, Steve Miller, Christoph Illing, Sean Burn, Doug Fishbone, arthur+martha, Hung Keung, the gingerbread tree, Brian Reed, Laurence Lane, Tomomo Adachi , Tom Jenks, David Oprava, Scott Thurston, Julian Montague, derek beaulieu, Wang Jun , Mike Chavez-Dawson, Alec Newman, Rick Myers, Andrea Brady, Eric Zboya, Linus Slug, Jeff Grant, Richard Barrett, Christopher Fox, Linus Raudsepp, Carolyn Thompson, Tsang Kin-Wah, Stephen Emmerson, andrew topel, Anatol Knotek, Ola Stahl, Roman Pyrih, Christine Wong Yap, Sarah Sanders, Ying Kwok, Catherine Street, Michael Leong, Sam Winston, angela rawlings, James Davies, Rachel Lois Clapham, Steve Giasson, Amelia Crouch, Aysegul Torzeren, Jeremy Balius, Emily Crichley, Amaranth Borsuk, Ben Gwilliam , Imri Sandstrom, Sam le Witt, Michael Nardone, Tamarin Norwood, Lucy Harvest Clarke, Jessica Pujol Duran, Holly Pester, Rebecca Cremin, Ryan Ormonde, Nick Thurston, j/j hastain, Bruno Neiva, SJ Fowler, Alex Davies, Helen Hajnoczky, Samantha Y Huang, Anna Frew, Nat Raha, Jo Langton, Ekaterina Samigulina, Emma King, Leanne Bridgewater and more.
Carrie Etter and Ira Lightman on Radio 3
Other Room reader Carrie Etter and future Other Room reader Ira Lightman were both on Friday 27th April’s edition of Radio 3’s The Verb, which you can catch on the BBC site for another week.
Ira Lightman on The Verb
Friday 24th February, 10:00 PM on BBC Radio 3.
James Davies and Carol Watts on The Verb
“James Davies’ new book, Plants, contains ‘unmade poems’ – poems that he has written in the past and deleted. Like the poem ‘Apples’.
Apples
Written, typed, altered, deleted.
15.07.05
Poet Carol Watts joins Ian (MacMillan) and James to give a history of the unmade poem.”
BBC Radio 3, Friday 15th July, 22:00 and on BBC i-player for the following week. More at the BBC page.
James Davies and Carol Watts on Radio 3
James Davies and Carol Watts, authors of the two most recent Reality Street titles, will be on BBC Radio 4’s The Verb next month. More on Ken Edwards’ blog: http://www.realitystreet.co.uk/kens-blog/reality-street-on-the-verb
Bök on Radio 3
Canadian poet Christian Bök explains how he has encoded his work into the DNA of a bacterium in a bid to make his work live forever on The Verb.