Shoreham WordFest: Liberty & Protest videos

We had a lot of fun at Sussex Yacht Club in Shoreham for Shoreham WordFest on Thursday, lovely crowd, great acoustic and though we say it ourselves, some marvellous poems, stories and songs.

Poems by Bernie Howley, Elinor BrooksBrian Johnstone, Jeremy Dixon, Kate Foley and Andrew McCallum; read Carrie Cohen, Elinor Brooks and Greg Page

Stories by Carolyn Eden, Cherry Potts and Liam Hogan read by themselves.

Songs by Sydney Carter, Ali Burns, Albert Nyathi, George Loveless/ Joe Stead and  James Oppenheim; arranged by Melanie Harrold messed around with and sung by a small subset of Vocal Chords Choir, (Cherry Potts, Alix Adams, Bea Jackson, Caroline Dunton, Denise Mueller-Brown and Maria Kirby)

The Privilege of Departure, or Dover Bound, But Delayed by Bernie Howley, read by Carrie Cohen.

https://arachnepress.files.wordpress.com/2017/10/the-privelege-of-departure.mp3?_=1

 

 

 

Singing We Raise the Watchword Liberty in full with the audience https://arachnepress.files.wordpress.com/2017/10/liberty-with-audience.mp3?_=2

The second half – stories, and a certain amount of difficulty with the camera cutting out.

Carolyn Eden:

Cherry Potts:

Liam Hogan:

Here’s some feedback from the audience on what they liked (you can hear them joining in on some of the songs)

Well constructed programme, the segues from music into poetry and back again, the variety of interpretations given to the theme of liberty. Bread and Roses, Free White Towel and the promise of a free badge!

Here is an interesting evening, full of fun, wisdom and wit. Hear some moving poems/ stories from those from the past and present combined with our essential liberties.

I love being read to. A very mixed programme which really stimulated my mind and imagination.

relaxed

variety – the spice of life

I enjoyed the flow of the first half

Loved the storytelling

Singing – chance to join in

Celebrating freedom – and keeping socialist history alive – good songs poems and stories too!

Witty and original writing. Very lively material, good singing.

Liberty Tales on Tour: Bath – Video

We had a great night in Bath, touring Liberty Tales alongside Shortest Day, Longest Night brilliant readers, great audience, lovely venue, catching up with friends, and lovely friends to stay with…

Here are some highlights, complete with the explanations of poems that I don’t usually include in the videos.

Poems from Bernie Howley, Elinor Brooks and Jeremy Dixon, and a story from the multi- talented Nick Rawlinson

You can catch the final date of the Liberty Tales Tour on Wednesday 25th January at Greenstead Library, Colchester, with an almost entirely different line up – the joys of anthologies!

Buy the book!

Help us crowdfund for the rest of the tours and the next books

Liberty Tales at Housmans- recordings

Some recordings from our Liberty Tales event at Housmans

Katy Darby reads from Character Study

https://arachnepress.files.wordpress.com/2017/01/character-study-housemans-extract.mp3?_=3

Carolyn Eden (Aka Carrie Cohen) reads from Free White Towel

https://arachnepress.files.wordpress.com/2017/01/free-white-towel-housemans-extract.mp3?_=4

Cassandra Passarelli reads from Girl in a Suitcase

https://arachnepress.files.wordpress.com/2017/01/girl-in-a-suitcase-housemans-extract.mp3?_=5

Liam Hogan reads from The King’s Computer

https://arachnepress.files.wordpress.com/2017/01/kings-computer-housemans-extract.mp3?_=6

Cherry Potts reads Bernie Howley‘s The Privilege of Departure

https://arachnepress.files.wordpress.com/2017/01/the-privelege-of-departure-housemans.mp3?_=7

You can hear more at our touring events – Bath 10th Jan and Colchester 25th Jan. see the events page for details

Oxford and Lewisham Liberties

Here we all are having a rollicking good time at Albion Beatnik in Oxford. There was a bit of discussion about the correct pronunciation of ‘C’ in Latin , and there was apparently a bona fide Classics teacher in the audience, so only one author was brave enough to read their Magna Carta clause in the original.

Here’s some snippets of video (yay! got the video to work!) to whet your appetite for TONIGHT’s event in Lewisham.

Arachne Poets at London Book Fair

The London Book Fair is a cacophonous place, it’s hard to hear anything even when addressed through a microphone. None the less, we had a go. Here is pictorial evidence, of Bernie Math & Jeremy reading, in the Poetry Pavilion miniature Globe theatre, their wildly diverse takes on narrative poetry from The Other Side of Sleep. The video sound is unfortunately atrocious and I wouldn’t want to inflict it on you.

LBF continues to make noise today, and when it’s over anyone with the energy can totter round the corner to Brompton Library for Cherry Potts’ reading & workshop Rebellion: Writing Fantasy.

Bernie Howley

Jeremy Dixon

Jeremy photographing the audience for his ‘every’ audience’ project

Math Jones

Arachne Press Poets at London Book Fair

Coming to the London Book Fair?

On Wednesday 13th April at 3.30 pm Arachne Poets Jeremy Dixon and Bernie Howley (featured in The Other Side of Sleep) are reading at the Inpress Poetry Pavilion.

 

 

 

 

 

Here’s a map of Olympia... The Poetry Pavilion is in the top left corner, near the West Hall entrance. There are lots of other poetry performances going on, but 3.30 pm on Wednesday is our spot. Although we may get another one…

Nearby… On Thursday 14th April, at 6.30pm, Cherry Potts is reading from The Dowry Blade and doing a mini writing workshop on fantasy at Brompton Library – a single tube stop  away at West Brompton.

Reviews of The Other Side of Sleep

Review from SOUTH 51 by D A Prince

This is not, despite the title, a book of poems about dreams but an anthol­ogy – twenty-five poets, twenty-five poems – of narrative poems. Some tell their stories in sequences, others let the story run unbroken, but all are al­lowed a generous length – not always to the poem’s advantage. Tighter edit­ing and attention to structure would have benefited several. I gave up with two, when neither language nor nar­rative could hold my interest. Perhaps the best way to read this anthology is as an exercise in what makes longer poems effective – control of detail, variety in language, shifts in tone. Even in long poems less is more. Jennifer A. McGowan’s ‘Troy: Seven Voices’ varies tone and form for its first-person angles on the effects of war. An­drew McCallum’s Hamnavoe’ (a hom­age to George Mackay Brown) has the most effective opening – ‘listen/ I want to tell you something ordinary’. In ‘Lir’ Angela France succeeds with the son­net corona, fourteen sonnets where the last line of each sonnet is reinvented as the first of the succeeding sonnet, returning finally to the opening line. Brian Johnstone’s sequence ‘Robinson’ is outstanding in every way, running to eighteen pages and never a word too long. Taking the life and poems of Weldon Kees (the American poet who vanished from the Golden Gate Bridge in 1955) as a starting point, Johnstone imagines Robinson surviving a leap from ‘a bridge some miles from the city/ known to all’ and slipping on a series of new identities in his subse­quent travels – Mexico, the Atlantic, the Aegean – writing, smoking, a mys­tery to others, always a solitary who is searching for himself. Whatever name he adopts he remains ‘Robinson’. This poem makes the whole anthology worth searching out.

And from Anne Stewart in Artemis:

The Other Side of Sleep is titled for the Long Poem category winner in Second Light’s 2014 competition. The poet is Kate Foley, whose more recent collections are narratives. The poem tells the story of “Certified Dream Walker: / Death Coach”, Tracy, who is “shrewd as a cat in a bush / full of birds” and her client Basil, who is sceptical but has, nevertheless, sought her out. “Truculence” says Foley, was “a word coined for him.” Basil is within months of dying. Tracy is to mentor him through the process. The characters are well-drawn and their interaction lively. Dream sequences are packed with imagery and walk that (familiar to edgy dreamers) line between strangeness and sense. Most of the poems in the selection are utterly engaging and well-wrought. Jill Sharp’s On the Hunt with Mr Actaeon has us shadowing Actaeon and his dog, Percy (“I can’t have Percy bothering the corgis / so I tie him up outside”) in a very modern update to the myth – and very nicely done “She’s responding to my gaze of wild desire / with such Olympian disdain and cruelty / I gasp and flee”. Bernie Howley – one of several new names to me in the selection – handles her ‘statement and response’ poem I Have No Feet expertly, keeping the two distinct voices (aloof, teacherly, for statements and galvanised, personal for responses) and styles (line break stanzas for the statements and unbroken stanzas for responses) consistent and convincing: “One really should stand poised. // But I grip the cliff wall wishing with fervour that my fingers ended in suction pads”. Brian Johnstone’s Robinson, with 6 titled poems and numbered sections within each, is a joy. p a morbid’s The Black Light Engineer has us lost with the speaker in the vast and empty darkness of (whether literally or metaphorically) space. In a longer review I’d quote from several other poems which impressed me and I will certainly revisit and enjoy again. There were 2 pieces which I felt let the side down badly. Other than that I found it an interesting, entertaining selection and was glad to see an anthology focussing on this much-neglected genre.

Buy a copy

We got a mention in Martyn Crucefix’s blog!

We don’t usually get ‘reviewed’ for our performances, but Martyn Crucefix has given us a shout on his blog about the Cheltenham Poetry Festival, for our readings for The Other Side of Sleep, featuring Math Jones, Bernie Howley, Angela France and Jeremy Dixon Lovely to get feedback from a fellow poet.

Cheltenham Poetry Festival video-recordings-photos

A very satisfactory trip to Cheltenham – here with, some brief recordings of our wonderful poets reading from The Other Side of Sleep at Cheltenham Poetry Festival on Saturday.

Bernie Howley

https://arachnepress.files.wordpress.com/2015/04/cheltenham-bernie-howley-i-have-no-fee-snippett.mp3?_=8

 

Math Jones

https://arachnepress.files.wordpress.com/2015/04/cheltenham-math-jones-grithspell-snippet.mp3?_=9

 

 

 

Angela France

https://arachnepress.files.wordpress.com/2015/04/cheltenham-angela-france-lir-snippet.mp3?_=10

 

Jeremy Dixon (minus photo, sorry)

https://arachnepress.files.wordpress.com/2015/04/cheltenham-jeremy-dixon-in-retail-snippet.mp3?_=11

and Kate Foley and Jennifer A McGowan being read by Cherry Potts, as they were both unwell on the day.

https://arachnepress.files.wordpress.com/2015/04/cheltenham-kate-foley-other-side-if-sleep-jennifer-a-mcgowan-troy-7-voices.mp3?_=12

And finally s tiny bit of video: Angela France’s poem LÏr considers the impact of the story on the storyteller, and Math Jones’ poem Grithspell is, potentially,  one of those stories

Keats House – The Other Side of Sleep – recordings

Here are snippets of just a couple of minutes long from some of the Other Side of Sleep poems read at Keats House last month. All beautifully rendered by the poets, Sarah Lawson, Revenant; Cherry Potts; Thirty-second Mariner; Math Jones, Grithspell; Bernie Howley, I Have no Feet; Jennifer A McGowan, Troy: Seven Voices and Alwyn Marriage: Naming: AD 2006

https://arachnepress.files.wordpress.com/2015/04/keats-house-other-side-of-sleep.mp3?_=13