(1)
“poetry and music with the post-avant crowd for your Sunday
afternoon pleasure”
Third Sunday of the month, 3-5 pm, Café Oto, 18-22 Ashwin Street, Dalston, London E8
3DL £4 entry.
May 17: Bleeding Heart Narrative + Andrea
Brady + Carol Watts
Two poets and a musician: pictures out of
fragments, explorations of limits of meaning & melody: out of this world,
and in this world at the same time. Music & poetry get deconstructed,
cleaned off, and put together again, differently. Defamiliarisation never
sounded this good as you chill out with Sunday afternoon cakes and ale.
Bleeding Heart Narrative is
the solo project of Oliver Barrett, comprised principally of haunting cellos,
repeating piano melodies, hushed vocals and layers of otherworldly sounds.Andrea
Brady is a high energy, politically engaged and highly inventive poet,
whose language mashes and reworks our present public and private languages. Carol
Watts is also a poet and university teacher, whose poetry explores a range
of worlds, creatively manipulating language and meaning in innovative ways to
focus on our position here and now.
(2)
What Next for Sundays at the
Oto?
when it’s no longer Sunday
Sundays at the Oto is coming to a close, to
fit in with Cafe Oto's requirement to be a cafe in the daytime, a venue only in
the evening. I would like to continue something like Sundays at the Oto, but therefore
on a slightly different basis, and welcome suggestions how to do this
successfully. The following are my present thoughts (1-4 are non-negotiable,
and represent both my & Café Oto’s requirements; the rest are up for
consultation & amendment):
1.
to carry on at Café Oto, as I
think it is an excellent venue, welcoming and flexible with a very good
atmosphere and a high profile
2.
therefore to be an evening event, but not necessarily the
same day of the month each time, as this cannot be guaranteed by Café Oto. Varying the day can also give the event
more flexibility to fit with availability of poets
3.
to continue with poetry and music -
especially as this mix helps with two goals I have for the events:
a)
people attending who are not
already part of the Crazy World of Avant-Garde Poetry or whatever we might want
to call ourselves (I suspect many other reading series may be a little off-putting
to those not already of Our Persuasion)
b)
a challenge, which can be
accepted, or quite happily not, for poets to go beyond reading, and present
their work as performance or utterance. Unlike some other series of music &
poetry events, though, the emphasis is on the poetry
4.
admission to rise to, say, £6, to allow
greater expenditure on publicity (at present sole cost for publicity is for
fliers, which I’m paying for), to allow payment of travel for performers
outside London (I’ve personally paid this on occasion), and to pay for a sound
engineer if the technical requirements demand it (a Café Oto requirement; and one event was a little
disrupted by technical problems with multimedia). This will mean bank account
etc!
5.
evening timing to be doors open at 7.30, event starts at 8.00, ends by
10.00, giving time for both socialising afterwards & for out-of-towners (like
me) to make their way to wherever. Strict timing, especially on start, to
ensure this!
6.
to give out more
information on the poets (to encourage and support more newcomers to the
avant-garde poetry scene) in the form of an A4 sheet on the poets (like the
info at arts cinemas). This could also be available online beforehand, eg on
www.modernpoetry.org.uk
7.
to extend the publicity. At present this
is done through:
a)
email list – taken from my
initial guess at who might be interested from my address book, names added at
events & performers
b)
announcements on BritPo and UK Poetry
ListServs
c)
notifications on a range of
websites that publish details of poetry events. Are there any I don’t deal with
that I ought to?
d)
dropping fliers at a number of locations
(cafes, bookshops etc) on the route from
Stoke Newington Church Street down Kingsland High Road to Café Oto, and I’ve now
started on the little nest of shops & cafes in Hackney on Victoria Park
Road. This could be extended – more locations in Hackney? Hoxton/Shoreditch?
anywhere in Central London? (And some fliers are posted to Poetry Library). Some
obviously left at Café Oto
e)
dedicated MySpace page (main
web presence) and Facebook group. I’m never sure these are active, cool or
sticky enough
All of these can
be built on; but I would like to consider, apart from extending the fliering, more notifications (possibly even
adverts), and a small-scale carefully targeted PR campaign (ie press releases & invites
to major launch event in autumn)
8.
to act as a channel for a wide range of contemporary poets (of
Our Persuasion, whatever that may be). I sometimes felt a little confined by my
slogan invoking “the post-avant crowd”; but really, that should cover a wide
& heterogeneous spectrum. (I hope you can visualise this!)
9.
music too can be widened – I took on
initially suggestions from Café Oto which were very wise ones, and there are
close and fertile links between some poets and some improv musicians. All this
can be built on. But I’d also like to widen the sound repertoire beyond what
may be almost too automatic a link. Eg industrial/post-industrial music, often
with a very limited and narrowly subcultural exposure in this country (bit like
us, then)
10.
branding will need to be altered. I’d
like to keep existing weird mad dolls/puppets image & reuse. Name will have
to change . Options seem to me:
a)
separate name, probably not
referring to Café Oto this time
b)
use of one of my existing
brands, either Great Works, or modernpoetry.org.uk. (Could even use both one of
these & a separate name, as in “modernpoetry.org.uk presents ‘The Poetry
Club of Dalston’”, or whatever)
11.
to screw my courage to the
sticking place, and apply for Arts Council (or whoever) money. (Could link with modernpoetry.org.uk here)
I am open to suggestions and comments as
to programming, arrangements etc.
I would also welcome any persons who
might want to get involved with the project. In my many bad moments I fear
I may be getting too old for this game - it would be good if there were people
involved for whom this is all fresh & expanding, and who can more readily
network amongst the numerous emerging young poets. Probably useful, as well, if
there were some contact with HE - this looks like the game plan for Alternative
British Poetry's survival and indeed growth. If anyone can accept my basic
vision of what I would like, and Café Oto’s requirements, (see 1-4 above),
everything else is genuinely up for discussion & collective
decision-making. There may well be a need for help with door arrangements – at
present done by my daughter & her husband, but weekday evenings may not be
as easy for them.
So - put comments here, email me (peter@greatworks.org.uk), or best of
all talk to me at Sunday’s event.