Archive for August, 2007

Contemporary Performance Poets Tuesday, August 14th, 2007

While reading an article by Kyle ‘El Guante’ Myhre about the National Poetry Slam in Madison, I found this list of some of his favorite performance poets, with links to their personal websites:

There’s some big names there, so I posted the links here in case you want to see any of their websites. As far as the poets on that list go, I like Suheir Hammad the best.

Who is your favorite spoken word artist? (You can answer through the comment function.)

Poetry Slams: Performance Plus Art Friday, August 10th, 2007

Joy Cagil recently wrote about poetry slams:

Performance artists of all types enjoy the awe and the kudos coming their way from the general public. In return, any concert or performance turns livelier with audience participation. During the recent decades, more and more musicians–even those in the classical music field–have begun to encourage the audience to sing along or clap to the beat. This behavior has seeped out to other fields such as stand-up comedy and open-mic poetry readings.

With these facts in mind, I imagine, the slam poetry is succeeding because people are drawn into the magnetism of our clannish eras when everyone participated in the tribal dances, telling stories, and sing-along sessions. Truth is, I had not heard of “Slams” in regard to poetry, until–in the writing site I belong to–I started to participate in the slam poetry contests, hosted by two site members: one, a creative writing professor from Chicago and the other an English teacher/poet from Australia.

Later on, I found out that slam poetry was sometimes attacked by the academia with the idea that slams cheapen the true art of poetry. As an answer to this accusation, slam poets became more vocal and more organized to make themselves accepted as members of a serious performance media.

The first slam poetry started in 1984, in the Get Me High lounge, a Chicago jazz club, by a construction worker named Marc Smith. Two years later, Marc Smith offered a plan to another jazz club, the Green Mill. When the owner accepted Marc Smith’s plan of hosting a poetry competition for performance poets every Saturday night, the slam poetry competition was introduced to the public arena.

Although the opposition to the poetry slams still exists, slams have performed an impressive function in promoting poetry to the general public. During the later years, more poetry books have been sold and an astonishing number of searches about poetry have been conducted on the internet search engines.

Poetry slams are here to stay because they have pushed poetry into the livelier world of performance, turning it into an intense experience for both the poet-participants and the audience. The art of poetry too, when faced with detachment or worse yet extinction, has welcomed the slams, as if returning to its earliest origin of spoken words made to be heard.

A serious poetry slam, as performance poetry, does not depend on the quality of the words, lines, and the poetic devices alone. It also involves oral skills such as eye contact with the audience, emphatic reading, voice control, and controlled body language. This is because poetry slams are performed primarily for the audience entertainment. A slam is not the same as an open-mic performance since an open-mic is there to encourage the poets while the audience fares second.

Sometime ago, I was among the audience in an informal poetry slam. True, it felt akin to a vaudeville show, but the audience participation and the poets’ enjoyment were genuine. In an informal slam poetry contest, the judges are selected from among the audience and all forms of audience participation are encouraged, even booing the poets at the end or the middle of their poetry readings. If the audience is dissatisfied the poet leaves the stage; however, during the slam I watched nobody left the stage as the result of public booing. Probably, I was inside a quieter audience.

In the beginning, slam poetry used to be about specific subjects that involved public concerns like politics, baseball, social issues, etc. Afterwards, the themes and the subjects expanded in range immensely.

At present, poetry slams find worldwide fame due to the efforts of PSI or Poetry Slam Inc. and The National Poetry Slam or the annual slam championship tournament. During the first round of a serious slam competition, all entrants can read their poetry. The time period for each poem is three minutes. Poets are allowed to enter the succeeding rounds if they qualify. The judges’ scores are numerical from zero to ten.

In the beginning, this competition was for poets singly. Nowadays, poets compete in four or five persons in a team in their home states and countries from North America and Europe. The winning teams travel to a city hosting the final competition. Since most local public radios broadcast the competition live to their listeners, the annual National Poetry Slam has become a popular event.

Besides the National Poetry Slam, any community may organize special slams such as: Dead Poet Slams that is reading from the works of deceased poets; Cover Slams where poets read other poets’ works; Improv Slams where poets say whatever comes to their minds without previous preparation; Group-Poem Slams written by a group of poets instead of one; Haiku or Limerick Slams; and the very funny Bad Poem Slams or the Low-Ball Slams where the worst score wins.

Poetry slams are not a passing fad. Any form of entertainment that is grounded in imagination with its roots in art will surely endure excess showmanship or high-brow criticism. Poetry Slams and their organization Poetry Slam Inc. are here to stay in earnest.

Joy Cagil is an author on http://www.Writing.Com/ which is a site for Poetry Contests. Her education is in linguistics and foreign languages. She has been involved with poetry all her life. Her portfolio can be found at:

http://www.Writing.Com/authors/joycag

Are You a Spoken Word Artist? Thursday, August 9th, 2007

If you are a spoken word artist, then contact us and we will tell you how you can record yourself and have your poetry syndicated on this very website.

Do you want us to spread the word about you or another up-and-coming poet? We will. Just send us some information.

We offer these services for free!

Poetry Slam Competition Wednesday, August 8th, 2007

Bernard Scala wrote the following article about poetry slam competition:

Some people trace slam poetry to the beat poets of the 1950’s. Scholars believe that slam poetry predates written poetry. Whenever slam poetry began it has climbed to a big event that hosts approximately 75 teams from the United State, Canada, and some other countries.

Before explaining what and how a slam poetry contest works it is important that you understand the history of it. Many believe that the slam competitions held today were started by Marc Smith at the Get Me High Lounge in Chicago. From Marc Smith’s starting of slam competitions it was then moved to the Green Mill Jazz Club where it will find its permanent Chicago Home. From there the competition would eventually move to Fort Mason, San Francisco in 1990 where the first National Slam took place.

Although there are many world wide poetry slams there is only one that focuses on positive Spoken Word and Hip Hop. It is the ISPT, or the International SpokenWord and Poetry Tournament. This tournament was created by the Hip Hop Feminist Nation and focuses primarily on creating positive Spoken Word and Hip Hop. The tournament has also improved the biases and weakness of the PSI (poetry slam, inc) and the IWPS (individual world poetry slam) by having a head to head poet format.

How does slam poetry work? What are the rules of slam poetry?

In order for many poets to participate in the slam there are traditionally two to four rounds of elimination rounds. The standard format for elimination rounds is an 8-4-2 set-up in which eight poets begin the competition and it will eventually end with to poets in the last rounds.

Some slams are invitational slams in which you are invited to participate. In these slams there is usually a 5-5-5 format in which case five poets read three poems each and there is no elimination so the poets can get a chance to better show themselves off.

In most slam competitions there is a time limit of three minutes and an extra 10 seconds for a grace period. Your score can be penalized if it goes over the time limit.

In certain occasions, The Props Slams for instance, costumes and props are allowed. In most slams, however, costumes and props are not allowed. This occurs because the slam hosts do not want a poet to win because of his/her clothing or prop. In certain competitions where this rule is being enforced very strictly a pair of sunglasses can even be seen as a prop.

The scoring for these competitions are done by randomly chosen members of the audience. The scoring is different at almost every competition so it is hard to tell the most popular.

The most popular slam is an Open Slam where anyone can compete. Other slams are the Theme Slam, Dead Poet Slam, “1-2-3″ Slam, Team Slam, and Props Slam.

It is certainly an evolving form of poetry and is definitely a must do competition for all poets.

Some people trace slam poetry to the beat poets of the 1950’s.

Respect by R. Lawrence Jenkins Tuesday, August 7th, 2007

In the following video, R. Lawrence Jenkins performs a piece called Respect, at the national tour of “One Race, One People, One Peace.”

I like the ending of the performance much more than the rest, where he says he has the drive of Tiger Woods, the struggle of Mumia, and so on and so forth. Of course, I like the message about respect.

What do you think?

Local Spoken Word Events Monday, August 6th, 2007

I plan to try to attend more local spoken word and poetry events. Many places have open mic nights, poetry readings and such. Often times these types of places do not have a cover.

If you do not already know any clubs like this, you can do what I did. I posted an ad on craigslist asking where I can see some spoken word and poetry readings. Craigslist deals only with local listings. I received a few responses.

I like going out to these shows, because I can mix socializing with poetry.

What do you think? What poetry shows have you attended?

What does it take to be an artist? Thursday, August 2nd, 2007

In the following SpokenWordArt.com exclusive, I perform my original spoken word poem, What does it take to be an artist?

The lyrics:

What does it take to be a poet?
What does it take to be an artist?

Do you need money?
Do you need fans?
Do you need goals?
Do you need plans?

Do you need promoters?
Do you need an agent?
Do you need a studio,
or can you make it with just a basement?

What does it take to be a poet?
What does it take to be an artist?

Do you need 100s of dollars worth of equipment?
Do you need 100s of CDs going out in each shipment?
Can you be an artist with poems written on napkins and crumpled up paper?
With your only audience being a 6-dollar-an-hour waiter?

When nobody cares what you got to say…
When nobody listens to the song you play…
When nobody reads what you have to write…
When all you got is your art and your life…

What does it take to be a poet?
What does it take to be an artist?

What do you think?

Do you want your poem syndicated via this blog in a similar manner? You can! Simply contact us, and we’ll tell you where to email your mp3 file. You can also send us videos of you performing your poem.

Father of Spoken Word Art Dies at 58 Wednesday, August 1st, 2007

The U.S. poet Sekou Sundiata died on July 18th of heart failure at the age of 58. Known to some as the father of spoken word art, Sekou Sundiata linked the 1960s and today’s spoken word artists. In the 1960s, Sekou Sundiata combined poetry with music, theater and dance to explore race and society.

Let’s take some time today to remember this influential artist, and some of his greatest works such as “udu” and “the 51st (dream) state.”

What do you think?