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Author: Martin Dean

DIY Poets Nottingham Night Light

DIY Poets Nottingham Night Light

Reviewed by Sue Allen and Frank McMahon

Moany Mood
DIY poets at Nottingham Night Light was a game of three halves. We’re poets not mathematicians, with a theme of light and dark. The interpretations were free, wide ranging, poetic and creative.
DIY Poets Nottingham Night Light
Although the audience was small the atmosphere was large and both increased steadily as the night went on.
John Merchant kicked us off with a contemplation of those times when you fall flat into a “moany mood” in the mist of joy. He expressed his thoughts in rhyme from both a secular and Christian perspective.
Barbara followed with poem by Grace Nicholls about the best of life from a woman’s viewpoint “A woman with all my lines strung out like pearls before me” And what pearls Barbara gave us including the thoughts of Jack Dee “That’s what’s wrong with me, I’m a comedian!” Speaking as a poet I could well relate to that sentiment
Martin explored the philosophical yin and yang of light and dark, giving us an exploration of the concept of future aspirations “next time we’ll get it right.” The importance of supporting a friend when “it’s been a bad time” and the necessity of always having the right glasses even if it is just out of habit.

Hazel led us into the second section festooned with lights, her first offering “Midnight Snack” contemplating such questions as does the light in the fridge really go out when we shut the door, and the way that illumination temps us in. Her contemplation on the safety of darkness made me tingle as she explored the solitude and security that the night can convey. Her final poem about Tim Peak’s dreams of free floating sleep in space and his desire to shun being strapped down. All three; thought provoking and clever interpretations of our theme.

Man Wanted For Casual Market Stall Erection
Sue described herself as an angry feminist poet but there was a lot of humour in her poems as well. She describes how an ad innocently wanted a “man for casual market stall erection.” She described “ladies of the night” with their “enamelled armour” who will “scratch the back of their next opportunity.” Funny and memorable.

Coming Out
John Humphries looked at the fine line between poetry and song writing. He had great fun “coming out” as a fan of country music, and exploring the accidental poetry to be found in listing song titles giving us such gems as “Did I shave my legs for this” and “How can I miss you if you won’t go away?” He went on to treat us all to his own interpretation of the genre with a beautiful piece about love and shared experience worthy of any country ballad.
DIY Poets Nottingham Night Light

Frank gave us a soulful series of poems exploring the light and dark of the human condition, ranging from our need for solitude, the frailty of addiction, the resentment of heavenly bodies sharing the same space, and the heartbreak of the Hillsborough disaster and the media reaction.
Leanne finished off this set with two poems looking at friendship and love. In the first: “Night Climbing” she offers us her hands as a step-up, enabling us to “heave your body skywards and watch the stars come out.”
In her second: “Star Struck” she gives us the wonderful line “the patterns in the cosmos match the freckles on your face.” Which I think is the best romantic line I’ve heard in a long time.

DIY Poets Nottingham Night Light
Leanne Moden performing

The third “half” was dedicated to the lovely Kevin Jackson’s book launch and rounded off with a lively open mic.

Reach Through The Entangled Darkness
Kevin’s book “Touching You” is a wonderful expression of love, life, and humanity in all its diversity. He has a light touch which carries your heart along with him. I totally enjoyed his weaving of tales of love, and spiritual connections which crossed the boundaries of time and expectations. He has a way of reaching out with kindness and compassion which holds the listener and the poetic subject gently in his words. In the title poem, he dares us to “reach through the entangled darkness” and reminds us that “the needle only finds music when it remembers.” Long may his music play on as he continues to find his groove of creativity.

DIY Poets Nottingham Night Light

DIY Poets At the Maze 10th November 2016

DIY Poets At the Maze 10th November 2016

First half reviewed by John Humphreys:

Slightly disappointing audience numbers were more than made up for by the quality of the poetry on display. Opening with Lytisha who announced she had no politics and miserable poems the first called Anxiety and full of “what ifs”. Last Biscuit had a perfect economy telling of brothers being naughty but always missed. Of the other poems, one set in a library with a ‘chid in a big chair on her own private island’ was sprinkled with magic, a great set, proving misery can also be beauty.
Andrew our host gave us a bad joke so moving on to Kevin wearing a striking mohair protest jumper (sometimes you have to mention the clothes) he graced us with striking imagery in his anti-war poems. Life’s a Memory had its ‘sun starved colour’ while others ‘froze in charcoal’ and White Stretched in Stone had its ‘ceremony of tears’ whilst in Back to it ‘young faces march out to die again’. It is not the necessarily the familiar events that move us but these striking images that linger as new paintings in the mind.
Martin Dean gave a fresh take on Guy Fawkes, appropriately describing him as “the only honest person to enter parliament”. Great images and lines abound again with ‘I’m going to write a fire’ and where ‘November breath hangs like wool in the air’. This was followed by a medical text poem set “within the golden chamber” with the ‘journey of a golden tear’ and ‘tattered skeleton orphan song’, very stirring stuff that highlights Martin’s winning streak with words.
Next up is Gwen A relatively new and very welcome new female voice to DIY who writes of gardening and cutting off stem heads as metaphor for the rituals and intimacies of human relations, then ‘Blowhole’ and the stuck life of her mother in Herne Bay where “you know you’ve been beached”. Then to return to the garden for what Andrew rightly described as a “mesmeric account” of more ritual, revisiting the same characters of her first poem. Hurrah for these refreshing new perspectives from an obviously talented poet.
Then for something completely different with Martin Grey and friend AKA From The Word Go where its all in the hat and a clever, funny checkout riff where the machine has its own voice ‘disapproval needed’ – you had to be there I think I’d need to say at this point. If I say the set had a tale of a kitchen vigilante and another with a washing machine, including the line ‘tumble when its dryer’, you get the sense of the madcap comic antics at play. Definitely a crowd pleaser.
Last but never least in the first half was Claire starting with a favourite of mine in ‘Peace-nick’ with its ‘blossoming anger’, then moving into dreams and nightmares held in the forests of childhood with Terror. Bob Dylan’s misogyny was the flip side to his Noble Prize for Literature for the man with wives and mistresse in ‘the harem of the God’ – ouch! A new one ‘He drove in Silence’ unleashed the difficulty of father / daughter relationships to devastating effect and then more of this with ‘Sisters in Recovery’ hoping and wanting for a sister. As always it’s her slow detailed observance of everyday life that packs such a big punch.
An excellent first half full of quality in all its varied guises and alternative voices from such distinctive and distinguished poets.

Second half reviewed by Kevin Jackson:

John Humphreys started the second half with a bang, confronting the theme of citizen v the state in a heartfelt poem called “Not waving but drowning”. This poem cast a painfully sharp light on the battle for benefits on behalf of his brother summed up in the line “stripped naked in the headlights of the world”.
John followed this with an intensely personal poem called “Invisible”. Built of 3 sections featuring legendary monsters, hawks and rocks the poem conveyed not so much an individual feeling invisible as an entire world slipping out of sight, “almost extinct”, vanishing under “silted layers of time”.
To buy John’s outstanding poetry collection The Day I Swallowed the World, please contact him via DIY Poets.
The next poet was John Merchant. John’s first poem “Mind Existence” begins with the oft-quoted “we are what we eat”, teases out the implications of this idea and ends with the characteristically witty “which sort of turns the mind of its head”.
John concluded with the poem “Health Wealth” which uses the theme of money to focus on our values: “Where your heart is, that’s where you spend”. The poem ends with a direct appeal to individuals and politicians: “Consider us, make it fit”.
Frank McMahon, DIY Poet’s inspiring founder, was the next poet up. Frank took us through a pacy set of short poems, linked through their use of fantastical imagery. “Alcohol”, “Behind the curtain” (using a Wizard of Oz image to explore real friendship), “Spiderman versus Superman” and “The Hulk” (a look at masculinity gone wrong). In “Jack and the Beanstalk” the poet surveys childhood disappointments, concluding wryly: “The beanstalk was all talk”. Transience/aging was the theme of “Elastic Bangle”, (? not sure of title….), told through a collection of once-prized bangles drying out, breaking.
In “Dr Who Childhood” Frank shows a child’s view of parental arguments, including the chilling line: “She may as well have been screaming exterminate, exterminate”
The set ended with “House of Sweets”, a thoughtful look at addiction using the Hansel & Gretel story: “In no time at all there was no road to follow”.
The next poet Trevor Wright began with a topical poem “Ode to Donald”. Using the theme of brick-laying (“tamp it and tamp it until it’s flat”), Trevor revealed the hidden cost of building walls between us: “Bastard wall, encasing our hearts”.
Trevor followed this by reading a powerful poem by Brian Bilston called “America is a Gun”.
The next poem, gloriously titled “Today’s rain becomes tomorrow’s spirit” wove a number of themes including storms and story-writing to encourage communitarian values: “Together we can weather these storms”… (but) “first we have to write ourselves a greater story”.
Stephen Thomas, stalwart of the Leicester poetry scene and co-host of Nottingham’s Poetry’s Dead Good, fired into a wonderfully energetic set with “You’re Awesome”.
A real life-affirming, high-energy poem, “You’re Awesome” reminds us “You were born a champion” and no matter what they throw at us “you’re the best version of you that says thank God I’m alive”.
In “Muddled Man” Stephen takes a sharp look at men who can’t take care of themselves: “You could charge 5p for those bags under your eyes”.
“Alphabet Spaghetti” is a book in progress comprising crisp, highly alliterative poems on each letter of the alphabet. V “Vote Vlad” imagines a vampire seeking our support. T’s “Twitter Troll called Tony” turns out to be 12. Watch this space for news of the book launch!
“For the record” celebrates all things vinyl (a passion of this reviewer), the romance of the record. It does so brilliantly by turning the tables, being written from the turntable’s viewpoint: “Entire cultures of people I’m moving”, ending “For the record, I’m for the record”.
For more of Leicester’s spoken word scene check out House of Verse http://houseofverse.co.uk/
Andrew Martin of DIY Poets was Featured Poet for this night. Opening his set, Andrew shared that “standing on stage you bare your soul” and told us that he wrote his first poem 10 years ago about a soldier killed in Iraq.
“Trump et cetera” launched the set using a children’s song to bring Trump down to size. “Time” developed chain-like to explore the personal and social aspects of time, moving from seasonal change via time travel to industrialisation requiring a standard definition of time. “Food Fight” wittily charts the decline of supermarkets like Tesco “Marmite jars are missing”. “Rhapsody of Realities” looks at those faiths which “mission” by giving out booklets, picturing these as a version of junkmail and warning “There’s no such thing as a free last supper”.
Andrew continued with “Badger Culling Trial” a sober poem viewing the countryside as a courtroom in which the badger is on trial. The poem probes the subject, posing many questions “Is it a black and white situation?” In “Two by two” the poet ranges over many situations where people operate in pairs including police on the beat (perfectly pointed by Andrew sporting what appeared to be a old-style police helmet that actually said Not Polite”). The poem ends darkly looking at prisoners: “Silent sentences throughout each long hour”.
“BHS British Hopes Stalled” takes Philip “Greed” to task with more of Andrew’s trade-mark rhetorical questions: “When did greed become fashionable?” “Mohammed Ali” explores Ali’s long and complex history as a fighter for social justice and the link between fighting and poetry.
“I Daniel Blake” takes its inspiration from the Ken Loach film to remind us of what it should mean to be a citizen.
Andrew rounded off a magnificent headline set with “Poet’s Day”, a survey of workers and working pondering the significance of Friday as the start of a weekend’s rest.
Andrew’s poems are vigorous, democratic not preachy, making statements, asking questions, highlighting patterns to which the listener can react.

DIY Poets At The Lady Bay Festival

DIY Poets At The Lady Bay Festival

DIY poets will be appearing at the Lady Bay Festival on Saturday 3rd September from 12.35 to 13.00

The Lady Bay Summer Festival is a great day for all the family featuring live music, performances, displays, stalls, lovely food and drink, and excellent real ales from Castle Rock Brewery. And all of this for FREE!

DIY Poets At The Lady Bay Festival

THE LADY BAY SUMMER FESTIVAL 2016 will take place on Saturday 3rd September at the Poppy and Pint, Lady Bay, Nottingham NG2 5DX from 12 noon. Festival headliner is DODGY’s Nigel Clark.

Offical T-shirts are now available for sale (bearing our name).

Facebook link

Review – Maze 19th May 2016

Review – Maze 19th May 2016

Reviewer: Clare Stewart

1st Half

Review – Maze 19th May 2016Andrew Martin

The evening kick started with DIY’s very own Andrew Martin and it was a very fine start indeed! Andrew performed his poem “In praise of chalk” which was metaphorically gripping and entrapping and had a fantastic visual story, one mental image which has really stuck with me is that of a sheep counting sheep to sleep. This image sprung into form from a question Andrew asked during his poem “do sheep count sheep whilst trying to sleep?” I personally am still pondering over this question but have accepted that I may not find the answer in this life time.  Andrew has only been with DIY for one year but appears to be very comfortable on the stage.

Trevor Wright

Trevor’s a local lad, born in Bulwell, and he wondered how would it have been if Wordsworth had been born in Bulwell too.  And so it’s poetry as alternative history as we heard Daffodils Bulwell-style.  Contrasting with this, a serious, sad and angry poem about the Hillsborough disaster, inspired by the recent hearing and judgment against the police handling of the event.  Trevor powerfully remembers the lies of the authorities and the money-grabbing morals of that decade, and that ‘piss shit and blood not alcohol were the smells of the day’ at Hillsborough.

 Jeff Marshall

We had a first time performance from new DIY poet Jeff, which was an absolute honour, Jeff performed Beaches.  Before he began his poem he pre-described it for the audience as miserable which some may have found, however I personally thought it was beautiful.  “Beaches are for playing not for dying a place where all the scenes are fulfilled” Jeff managed to tip toe into the political murky waters of war very smoothly.  Jeff’s second poem “the hardest jobs” which was a true insight to the BBC or ITV… they both appear to be the same! The poem was very comical and brutally honest (unlike the news) and the audience enjoyed it very much “presenting no news on east midlands today” amazing!

Grace Bernard

Grace  – who is also one of the Mouthy Poets – gave us a longer poem, miraculously from memory, pondering why we are conditioned to be so horrid to each other, and why we compete with each other so much.  We’ve learned to thicken our skins so much, and is it doing any of us any good?  And why can’t we just smile at each other a bit more without fear of a smack to the jaw? She says that laughing and smiling is infectious – and free – so please smile back if she smiles at you.  Sounds good to me!  Her second piece was a passionate love poem You are you are you are…

Martin Dean

Martin Dean performed “Icarus of the Rope” the poem was lovely with handsome imagery and a mesmerising tale which left me wanting to hear more, which is quite impressive as the poem was at least 2-3 minutes long so it must have been good! Martin is a natural charismatic story teller and I look forward to hearing more from him.

Phil Deakin

Phil Deakin told us that he had been to India four years ago but has never written about the experience til now. He gave fantastic detailed description of the assault on the senses on landing in that country, giving us his impressions, picking out things that he saw, the contrast of rich and poor, a cow slowly strolling as though it knew it was holy, a crocodilian river, the sun that still burns in his heart. Phil’s second poem was a comic turn on the name Trump, with many rhymes of that name, which, let’s face it, the name and the man ask for it!! Brilliantly written and executed, mocking the oh-so-deservedly-mockable, this was a poem that needed writing and performing!Review – Maze 19th May 2016

Mouthy Poets

At the end of the first, half four of the Mouthy Poets hit the stage to give us a taster of the Nottingham group’s young poets and they were delicious.

Neil

His family’s lungs were made in a petrie dish, says Neil from Mouthy Poets, in a poem about smoking. His second poem was about a special kind of cooking, lots of ingredients including 5 spoons of sarcasm and 5 spoons of awkward that make a nasty and surreal tasting soup. His third poem was about how he loathes boxes, the categories that other people put us in, about his long resistance to being put into boxes, he says he doesn’t want to be special, he just wants to be Neil. Amen to that, Neil! Nice set, surreal and pithy.

Chris McLoughlin

We had “a verbal acrobat” Chris Mcloughlin who told a delightfully moving and relatable story “Side show” about…. His second poem is one of my personal favourites (having heard it before) Pijaykin a pleasant story about a mythical creature called a Pijaykin that lives inside of all of us but “what is a real mythical creature?” good question! Pijaykin has a very positive, inspirational and happy message throughout, Chris is a captivating story teller with his gentle tone he gave a great performance.

 Bridie Squires

Bridie gave us a great hardhitting poem about those special little put-downs that cut deep in whilst appearing to be ‘just a joke, love’, with a brilliant riff of ‘Adorable’ repeated til the full patronisingness of it rendered the word meaningless and hollow.  Ending with some very unadorable language, Bridie forcefully clears space for her self, and we got the point, Back off, don’t make assumptions and let her be who she wants to be.  Her second poem was a frightening, dark tale of something unnameable and the hope that her grandma would know what to do.

Robert van Dongen

The last of the Mouthy Poets to perform was Robert van Dongen he started with a personalised rendition of a song by the band Muse which definitely got the audience’s attention! Robert then executed his poem “Don’t Jinx it “which had a lovely fun rhythm to it, poetry/ lyrics at their best. To finish off Robert performed “Poem about poets” which was exactly that, a poem about poets! I thought it was a great concept that I personally have not heard explored before and he did it very well, one line that stuck with me was “why don’t you write a poem about me? Because you don’t inspire me” I can relate to that question.

 

2nd Half

Frank McMahon

Frank took to the stage, starting with a direct, uncompromising opener about the Hillsborough disaster entitled “They Shun the Sun”. In his characteristic understated style he then revealed his sly affection for his hometown Wolverhampton with a rebuttal to the Lonely Planet who had the cheek to name it the 5th worst city in the world, without even visiting it. Frank excels at changing our views of the everyday and read a poem giving a dig at typical male friendships where talking about emotions is taboo and men restrict their conversation to DIY. He ended with odes to two under-rated colours: white and brown; the “least loved of all colours”, defending their virtues in pithy prose.

 Orla Shortall

Or Sparklechops as she is also known, the only belly-dancing poet I know.  After giving a much-needed plug for plug sockets, Orla read a poem about the draw of self destruction when things are going wrong – “self destruction is all fun and games until someone gets hurt”, about the adrenalin-urge to mess everything up even more and get yourself another helping of disaster.  Her second poem was about her relationship with the sea, with that classic Orla line, “I like my seamen like I like my semen, salty”. A sort of love poem to life and the sea.

Andy Szpuk

Andy treated the audience to an extract from his show Austerity Café, which he described as political verse, fractured melodies and satire joined together in an experimental mash up. He recited the musical beat-poet-esque “We’re Still Good at Making Guns”, exploring Britain’s industrial heritage and modern political hypocrisy. He then launched his paper plane fleet Poetry Airlines across the room, sending people ducking and weaving to get hold of promotional paper planes for his upcoming show.

 Eagle Spits

Eagle, our resident angry punk poet, pulled us in with an old favourite, Atos Death Squad, with the amusing idea that he should just take that job as a lorry driver they’re insisting he do and, with his poor eyesight, ‘accidentally’ drive into the House of Commons. That’d do it!  His next poem expressed his anger at the meanness of the posters the council have put up asking us not to give money to homeless people, cos they’ll only get blathered if you do that, so give to the charities instead. Eagle’s instinct would always be to react to the human in front of you, Eagle’s raison d’être – be kind.  His third piece was a sweet and loving poem about his dad.  And fourth, another old chestnut about the aborting of a foetus because it has Down’s Syndrome. As ever, Eagle was gentle and terrifying, principled, irreverent, rebellious.

 Clare Stewart

Clare ascended the stage with a short powerful portrait of writing as torture, when one has to make a living from it.  She then explored her own writer’s block in a poem full of word play and humour, twisting a block into inspiration.  She finished with two personal portraits, one of her father, and one of a woman she encountered while working in a nursing home, the repetition of the only phrase the woman would say “hokey cokey” creating a vivid picture of this woman which was both funny and touching.

 John Humphreys

Next up, the fantastic John Humphreys.  He curtailed his long intros this evening, which was a shame, but we had a lot of poets on the bill this time – arguably, John is as much an introducer of poems as a poet…  John is in the idiosyncratic process of taking quotes from a film – ‘Youth’ recently released, with Michael Caine, Harvey Keitel and Rachel Weisz – and making poems from them.  Not really connected with the actual film, just using the quotes themselves as springboards for the poems.  In this case, the quotes were ‘Emotions are all we’ve got’ and ‘The last great idyll of our lives’.  Delivered in John’s wonderful microphone style, and I think, still in the wake of his fiftieth birthday, he brings you in to the world of the poem, and the world of his mind.

 Lytisha

Lytisha Tunbridge read a detailed study of a person’s illness and decline, opening up their world of trying to adjust to changes and life as it now was. The poem ended on a compassionate note of care and empathy. She delighted the audience with tales of the everyday, a predictive text mishap, a meandering bus, rich with meaning, humour and pathos.

 Rachel Eagling

Rachel read a touching poem about that rhythm that many of us have heard or felt in the middle of the night when sharing a bed, and expanded that experience out to all who have ever shared a bed, a mattress, a lilo, a floor, and she took a wide overview of life as it is lived. She also gave us a poem about her dad (minor theme of the evening), about how practical and hardworking he was, and how she tries to be like him in putting ethics into action. (I’ve seen a film of Rachel reciting this poem in a graveyard, it’s really good, prob on FB.) And then a very long poem (went over the 4 minutes there, Rachel) about visiting a friend in prison. She told us the small details of the visit and her observations. As ever, Rachel sums up the sad and the funny and the touching.

 Hazel Warren

The looked-forward-to-by-all headline act Hazel Warren read up a storm with her gentle, powerful, sensual poems that get under your skin and stay there. Listening to Hazel read is like mainlining honesty in its rawest, sweetest form. Hazel read poems “Pompeii”, “20 Years” and “The moon is full of sorrow” about relationships, longing and unspoken rules. Poems “This place is ours” and “You shouldn’t be able to touch your insides” which she called “the nostalgia section” dealt with childhood and the past, real emotions remembered and reconstructed. “Chocolate bunny” was a slyly sensuous paean about temptation and… chocolate. “A dancer dies twice” captured the sorrows in a dancer’s always finite vocation. “Brew love” was a witty and honest portrayal of negotiating the beginning of a relationship. She ended to wildly enthusiastic applause with “Cycling proficiency”, a faux melodramatic piss take of all those who believe poetry should remain an elite sport. The word “amateur” she pointed out means “for the love of it” and the audience loved it.

 

3rd Half

Paul Carbuncle

The folk punk one man electrical storm Paul Carbuncle ended the night with ferocious, melodic ballads about Robin Hood, squirrels, police brutality and corruption, racism and the political activist Tom Paine, among other subjects. He filled the room with energy and rhythm, making it difficult not to clap, tap, nod, sway or dance in time and generally become part of the whole experience.

 End Of Review – Maze 19th May 2016

We await the next DIY event on the 30th June at Rough Trade on Broad Street with salivating ears.

 

DIY Poets At Southwell Festival

DIY Poets At Southwell Festival

DIY Poets At Southwell Festival
Are We In Southwell or Suthall?

A Weekend Of Poetry

Last weekend your very own DIY poets were invited to bring their brand of poetry to The Gate To Southwell Festival. Starting on Saturday festival-goers were treated to a two hour showcase of their talents with honorary member Shaun Moore joining them from Glasgow. The subject matter was wide ranging, swinging from the hiding place of Charles I to the search for Earth-like planets, from dancing to pubic hair.

Sunday – another day and another delight. A damp and mud-splattered crowd flocked to The New Stage to be treated to the Southwell festival’s first ever poetry slam, where audience members were asked to vote for their favourite act. The accolade of ‘Bard of Southwell’ eventually went to Hazel Monaghan with a veritable tour-de-force. Congratulations to Hazel, but also to everyone else who shared their work (including Andy Szpuk with his creative use of ‘The Hendrix Technique’). Judging by the audience reaction the event was a great success.

The Poets

MC Leanne Moden
Our MC And Organiser Leanne Moden
Poet Kevin Jackson
Kevin Jackson
Trevor Wright
Trevor Wright
DIY Poet Richard C. Bower
Richard C. Bower
DIY Poet Lytisha Tunbridge
Lytisha Tunbridge
Poet and Writer Di Slaney
Di Slaney
DIY Poet Martin Dean
Martin Dean
Poet Andy Szpuk
Andy Szpuk
Poet Shaun Moore
Shaun Moore
Poet Hazel Warren
Hazel Warren
Sherwood Art Week 2016

Sherwood Art Week 2016

As part of  Sherwood Art Week 2016 (18-25th June) there will be poetry events organised by DIY poet’s Andrew Martin. Please come along and support these.Sherwood Art Week 2016

Poetry Workshop, Sunday 19th June, 2-5pm at The Place, Melrose Street, Sherwood
The workshop will be an informal opportunity to share ideas and our own work with like minds. Please bring two examples of your poems. We can share skills for editing and performing written work, including timing, voice control and connecting with the audience.
Spoken Word Open Mic, Tuesday 21st June, 7:30-10pm, The Robin Hood pub, Sherwood. Free.
For more details about these two events Sherwood Art Week 2016 contact Andrew Martin at anim_al67@yahoo.co.uk
Gate To Southwell Festival

Gate To Southwell Festival

This year – for the first time ever – the Gate to Southwell Festival in Nottinghamshire will be hosting poetry and spoken word alongside its more usual musical fare.

Spoken Word Showcase

The Spoken Word Showcase will be taking place on the afternoon of Saturday 11th June, with poetry and storytelling courtesy of DIY Poets, performing some of the best spoken word in the East Midlands. They’ll be plenty of tall tales, comedy, rhythms and rhymes, as well as loads of poems based on the themes of music and community.

gate to southwell festival

It’s a chance to check out the broad range of talent on the local spoken word scene, and see some of the rising stars ‘Before They Were Famous’! The showcase is loosely based on the themes of music and community, but anything can happen with spoken word!

Southwell Slam

Then, on Sunday 12th June, it’s over to you! Yes, you’re invited to get involved, and participate in the very first Southwell Slam – an open poetry and spoken word performance competition, giving budding poets the chance to perform their work as part of the festival.

In case you’re not familiar with a poetry slam, it’s a competition where people read or perform a short piece of writing for an audience. Each performer can choose to read out a poem, song lyrics or a short story, and the performer can also choose to read their own work, or a piece of writing by another author. Each performer gets just three minutes in which to recite or read their piece, and at the end of the competition, the audience decide their favourites. The winner will be given the title of the Festival Bard for 2016!

Could you have what it takes?

 

Information

To find out more about the event and to purchase tickets follow the links below.

Spoken word at Southwell

Tickets

For more information contact Leanne Moden at Southwellslam@gmail.com


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