Showing posts with label Heath Common. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Heath Common. Show all posts

Saturday, October 10, 2015

"Still Howling"


























Michael Anderson's composite Allen Ginsberg head summons all to the UK "Still Howling" event today at the "recently reopened, post-industrial building", The Wonder Inn, in Manchester, England.

Organized by Simon Warner and Manchester-based artist Roger Bygott, the event runs from 2-11pm, and features a symposium with Barry Miles, Michael Horovitz, Steven Taylor and Peter Hale, plus poets Christina Fonthes, Elmi Ali, and others.

Steven Taylor's participation on this occasion is likely to be pretty poignant (he was born in Manchester and grew up there before emigrating with his family to America in the mid-'Sixties). He's scheduled to not only appear on the panel but also accompany the performance by Michael Horovitz, plus perform his own solo set (including the British premiere of his short choral work, "Footnote to Howl")

Read an interview pre-the-event with Steven Taylor here


                                                                     [Steven Taylor]

[Allen Ginsberg and Steven Taylor in Boulder, Colorado, July 1989 - Photograph by Chris Funkhouser]



               [Allen Ginsberg's harmonium, bequeathed to, and now in the possession of, Steven Taylor]

There will also be a series of musical performances "paying reference to Ginsberg and the Beats", by spoken-word artist Heath Common (with the Lincoln 72s),  Dub Sex front man, Mark Hoyle, singer-songwriter Chris T-T, and Mancunian ("Mancadelic") band. the Isness (an off-shoot of "Manchester's best new guitar band" (as one site has described them), Folks).

MC for the evening will be "city legend", C.P.Lee 

The climax of the evening will be a reading/performance of the poem ("Howl") in its entirety by the actor George Hunt. Hunt delivered it memorably on a 50th anniversary in 2005. This will be a reprise. 

                                               ['Howl" - Listen to the poem here, here, here and here, for example]

Wednesday, May 8, 2013

Gary Snyder's Birthday



["On Prose vs Poetry, Work Poems" - Gary Snyder - speaking and reading at the 10th Annual Robert Creeley Awards, Acton, Massachusetts, 2010]


It's Gary Snyder's birthday today. He's 83 years old.  We draw your attention first to our two earlier Gary Snyder Birthday posts on the Allen Ginsberg Project - here and here

The local, has, of course, always been a (the) crucial context, so here's Gary on local (NCTV-11) Nevada tv, in May of last year, being, casually but respectfully, interviewed by Lew Sitzer (the interview begins approximately one-and-three-quarter minutes in, and lasts approximately 60 minutes - At the end, just after 45 minutes, he treats us to a reading of the classic "Smokey The Bear Sutra")   




More local, ecological attention. Here's two readings for the North Cascades Institute, the first in a high-school in Bellingham (Snyder begins by reading poems from Skagit poet , Robert Sund (1929-2001) (Poems from Ish River Country) and from Robinson Jeffers, (1887-1962) before turning to his own work), the second, (in two parts), a few years later, in Seattle, introduced by NCI's co-founder and executive director, Saul Weisberg (Snyder's talk, "a combination of commentary, some poems and some prose", begins approximately six minutes in) here and here)

Notes from a more recent address (a digest of his April 2013 Hopwood Lecture) are available here   

Gary reads "some accessible poems of work and love woven together" for the Robert Creeley Foundation in Acton, Mass., in 2010 [see the video above], including the much-anthologized "Hay for the Horses" - and "Oil" - and, "Mount St.Helens" - and "Mu Qi's Persimmons"  

                                                     [Mu Xi  (13th Century) - Six Persimmons]

"Allen (once) called me laconic - that's because I like haiku!" 
[the three-line "minimalist" poem, frustratingly cut off in this footage, ("Hiking in the Totsugawa Gorge") reads - "pissing/watching/a waterfall" !]

A musical sign-off - here's the British group, Heath Common and The Thin Man and their salute to Gary ("Why (Log) Truck Drivers Rise Earlier Than Students of Zen") - "Gary Snyder's Lament" (the film accompanying it is by Trevor Pollard)



Happy Birthday, Gary - celebrations today