Archive for December, 2011

Song of the Week: Poor Leno by Royksopp

Monday, December 26th, 2011

When Melody A.M. came out in 2001, I thought it merely a lightweight refresher. A decade later, it feels like a classic. Most memorable is “Poor Leno”, a well-balanced track of catchy lyrics combined with diverse arrangement of beat and sound. The music video is sweetly touching: a sad little… what? Panda bear? Child? Leno is his own species. He escapes his cage by drawing a mountain and walking through. He is caught again. Poor Leno.

I love the confusion over the lyrics online: “Poor Leno,” one version suggests, “Haven’t you been told? / Being nine years old / Means I’ll always find you.” Another offers, “Have you due in time? / Reunite as one / Please, I almost find you.” To me it is a song of naive fatherly love:  “Where you’ll be I’ll go / Where you’ll be I’ll find you.” I will, son.

-Yotam Hadass


Yotam Hadass co-edits LEVELER. When he isn’t writing poetry, he writes software. He also cares for his 20-month-old son, a boy of scooters and leaves. You can find him in Brooklyn, perhaps in Fort Greene park by the Prison Ship Martyrs’ monument.

Questions, compliments, (hopefully not) complaints?  Contact Jackie Clark: jackie [at] coldfrontmag [dot] com.

See all Songs of the Week here.


Kim Jong-il’s son a poet?

Friday, December 23rd, 2011

When North Korean dictator Kim Jong-il died last week, he was replaced by his youngest son, Kim Jong-un, not his middle son, Kim Jong-chul, who was “no good because he is like a little girl,” and who was interested in poetry and music, according to a report in the International Business Times.

If a poem written by Kim Jong-chul reflects his political ideology, it would appear he differs from his father and younger brother. (Read the full poem below.) If he were in charge, he would “not allow weapons and atom bombs” (North Korea is nuclear-ready) and would “make people believe in themselves.” But Kim Jong-chul–who reportedly has been seen at an Eric Clapton concert–is not entirely separate from the dictatorial model: “I would make the whole world use only one language, which would be Korean.” He also “would destroy all terrorists with the Hollywood star Jean-Claude van Damme.”

According to the report, Kim Jong-il’s firstborn son, Jong-nam, was generally considered to be the heir until 2001, when he was detained in Tokyo for using a fake Dominican passport. He is reportedly “overweight and diabetic” and has “no interest in politics.”

Here is the full poem by Kim Jong-chul:

If I had my ideal world I would not allow weapons and atom bombs any more.

I would destroy all terrorists with the Hollywood star Jean-Claude van Damme.

I would make people stop taking drugs.

I would even destroy the word “DRUG” to make people forget about it.

I would make everybody get good jobs.

Everybody would be happy: no more war, no more dying, no more crying.

Then I would make a rule (Do not believe in God.) God doesn’t help and there is no God.

I would make people believe in themselves, and they would work hard for their happiness and success waiting in their future.

I would make the whole world use only one language, which would be Korean, and I would make all people have the same amount of money: no rich people, no poor people.

Only in my ideal world can the people have freedom and live very happily.

ALL NEWS


not merely because of the unknown that was stalking toward them

Wednesday, December 21st, 2011

by Jenny Boully
Tarpaulin Sky Press 2011
Reviewed by Kate Angus

“The moon tonight so full, so full of cradles outgrown.”

The best folk tales and children’s stories are the dark ones, the ones that hint at the world and human relations as they really are and so continue to haunt our adult dreams, shocking us awake to reel at the true terrors of abandonment, our inevitable decay, heartbreak, betrayal, and loss. The act of parsing out and presenting these adult truths from beneath the veils of children’s fantasy is the project at the heart of Jenny Boully’s masterful new book, not merely because of the unknown that was stalking toward them. The book is a brilliant alternate version of J. M. Barrie’s classic children’s book Peter and Wendy. Boully adjusts the focus so that Peter Pan is, as his name has come to signify, the type of boy who won’t grow up or settle down, who will seduce and then soon replace you, who’ll forget you in the blink of an eye even as you pine for him and wither with age, who will flitter on to the next replacement Mother to bring home for a while as a briefly-loved plaything as he amuses himself on his island of Lost Boys.

The book is constructed to hold two narratives: the original story of Peter Pan and Wendy that Boully assumes the reader knows, and her own variations. Structurally, she tells us these stories through two prose texts, one sitting on top of the other. The top half of each page holds the longer larger narrative while beneath, separated by a line and entitled The Home Under Ground, she gives us smaller fragmentary moments, shards of stunning images and commentary that serve as both literal and figurative subtext to the story above. When, for example, the top narrative tells us:

He will come to you in the darkest part of the night when you are sleeping…Despite his ability to lose so much, despite his boyish looks, his boyish charms, he can only dress himself with skeletons, with skeleton leaves; he smells of and is made of the loam of decaying roots and branches, the rotting sap and juices of Neverland trees. And what are these? What are these? asks Mrs. Darling, who knows that these leaves, these leaves littering the nursery floor, these leaves, aren’t the leaves of earthbound trees.

The Home Underground section whispers an even darker story, asking:

Would the death boat be made of the feathers of the Never bird? Enclose her within the rib bones of swallows….That gleaming in his eyes isn’t a personal excitement; if ever, if ever I forget you, then.

Tarpaulin Sky Press is listing not merely as Fiction / Poetry and that seems about right. Much like Boully’s previous books (The Body unfolds only as footnotes, [one love affair]* is a chimera of fiction, essay, prose poetry and memoir, and The Book of Beginnings and Endings, is comprised entirely of narrative openings and closings), it exists in the hybrid ground where it is both, either or neither, as the story within is both a children’s story and an analysis of a too common trope in adult relationships, and where Peter is both Peter and the “Betwixt-and-Between” that Boully dubs him.

In both texts, the narrative voice speaks in urgent fragment tones directly to Wendy, explaining the significance of small details and clips of dialogue and telling her story to her both as it happens and as it will happen in the future:

The window hasn’t been left open, and there is another boy sleeping in your bed. The absence of the beloved, the replacement that is easily replaced by Peter’s mother is also easily replaced by Peter himself, who will forget you, who will forget to love you or even to know you

Boully’s voice is hypnotic as she weaves half-remembered source-text stories with newer interpretations and builds a forward rush that detonates as she deploys a sudden fragmentation: for instance, the unexpected “let’s play pretend that I save you right before. We drown.”

Peter’s abandonment of Wendy seems inevitable throughout. This is due in part to his own fickle natue: “I’m a little bird, he says. But he doesn’t say that to just you alone.” It is also due to Wendy’s intensifying abandonment of immaturity, and to the simple fact of the inevitable decay that awaits all of us, particularly Wendy, the lone girl still attached to the human world during her sojourn in Never Land: “We won’t notice that we’ve grown until we’ve grown: that’s Wendy’s predicament.” All of these play out sexually as well; Peter has numerous other dalliances, and an air of darkness and complication permeates Wendy’s exchanges with the menacing, powerful Hook. “Don’t write down what actually happened; instead, write down what you wanted to believe,” the narrative voice advises Wendy, and later, half-mockingly reassures her that “If this…storyteller isn’t quite right, why then, another…will shortly come. It’s been known to happen.”

Boully maintains a fluid text but shies away from straightforward narration, providing a modern re-envisioning of a cultural touchstone that is also a commentary on itself. She weaves a gorgeous fever-dream where our half-remembered childhood stories now stand revealed as adult archetypes. Time itself becomes unstuck, as even Peter and the Lost Boys begin to contemplate “how we can continue on here without having to reinvent too much. Or, better yet, let’s…ascertain just what has transpired so that we can make it all new again.”  This moment seems like an embedded ars poetica, as the book itself also continually makes itself new and reinvents its source texts. The text warns Wendy continually that Peter will tire of her, will forget her, will leave her, yet an “I” suddenly speaks near the end, saying “You see, Peter, I too, alone, without you, can have adventures….I can leave you.” The idea of who has left who is suddenly open to new interpretation–was it Peter’s waywardness or Wendy’s ability to mature (something Peter lacks) that is the greater and decisive abandonment? After all, it is Wendy who has controlled the narrative–both by being the cause (the “you” the book speaks to so urgently) and by being identified as a storyteller throughout. At the end, it is Wendy who controls language and meaning, saying to Peter, “My dear, my dear pet wolf: I will tell you the difference between A and Z,” as well as the narrative of passing time, as she is the echo of “the housewife who has grown, has grown, the home is nothing but a hole. The moon tonight so full, so full of cradles outgrown.”

*

 


Song of the Week: “Two-Headed Boy” by Jeff Mangum

Monday, December 19th, 2011

It could be about elegant melody, the why-didn’t-I-think-of-that feeling. It could be about the supposedly short lifespan of true genius. Or the fear that we’ll never again burn as wild as we did just a minute ago.

When Jeff Mangum returns to the stage, the theater floods with some mixture of disbelief and gratitude. It’s cautious at first, as if he could, at any moment, be frightened right back into the woods.

It used to be about traveling in a flock, collectively keeping mortality at bay. Then, isolation and even silence. It was tough not to feel like something big had been lost.

Jeff says he’s happy. There may never be any new songs. No reunion with horns and strings and saws? Okay. For now, he just wants us to sing along.

It’s about coming to terms with the whole world, disasters and all. And maybe being unashamed of aiming for enlightenment.

-Rob MacDonald

Rob MacDonald lives in Boston and is the editor of the online journal Sixth Finch. His poems have appeared in Octopus, H_NGM_N,The Lumberyard, notnostrums and other journals. Last New Death, a chapbook, is available from Scantily Clad Press.

Questions, compliments, (hopefully not) complaints?  Contact Jackie Clark: jackie [at] coldfrontmag [dot] com.

See all Songs of the Week here.


An Evening with Joshua Beckman & Peter Gizzi

Wednesday, December 14th, 2011

On Sunday, December 12, 2011 The Observatory at Proteus Gowanus hosted a special reading for poets, Joshua Beckman and Peter Gizzi. Beckman read all new poems, mostly from his recently released limited edition letter-pressed chapbook called Poems. Beckman’s new work is sparse and had the packed room leaned over in a hushed silence to catch his every syllable.

After his reading there was a brief intermission followed by Peter Gizzi who read from his newly released book, Threshold Songs.

Here’s Gizzi’s set-list:

“Lullaby”

Hypostasis & New Year”

Eclogues”

Snow Globe”

How I Remember Certain Fields of Inquiry (and ones I only imagine)”

Analemma”

This Trip Around the Sun Is Expensive”

A Penny for the Old Guy”

Tiny Blast”

Apocrypha”

A Note on the Text”

Oversong”

History Is Made at Night”

Bardo”

Modern Adventures at Sea”


Song of the Week: Shine by Slowdive

Monday, December 12th, 2011

1991: The MTV Video Music Awards were hosted by Arsenio Hall.  R.E.M. won video of the year for “Losing My Religion.”  LL Cool J owns the airwaves with “Momma Said Knock You Out.”  Bicycle shorts and bondage gearC+C Music Factory happened.  Sonic Youth embarked on their largest European Tour.  Nine Inch Nails whined through Lollapoolaza.  Metallica goes soft with “Enter Sandman.”

I’m one year away from graduating high school.

1991: The Cure won THE BRIT award.  1991: I still listened to thrash but it was fading. I discovered The Cure, Joy Division and The Smiths. 1993: The first time I saw Slowdive. They opened for Catherine Wheel in Philly.  1991: Slowdive released three EPs, later compiled as Blue Day.

My love affair with “shoegaze” began with Blue Day.  Later, they broke up and then became Mojave 3. I’ve seen Mojave 3 too but Slowdive is where my heart lies.

-Steven Karl

Steven Karl is the author of the chapbooks, emissions/of (H_NGM_N, 2011), (Ir)Rational Animals (Flying Guillotine Press, 2010) and State(s) of Flux (Peptic Robot Press, 2009).  He has poems forthcoming in Forklift, OH,Pax Americana, and EOAGH. He is the News Editor for Coldfront Magazine, poetry editor for Sink Review, and a co-curator of Stain of Poetry.  His music writing can be found on Green Shoelace. He lives in Brooklyn, NY.

Questions, compliments, (hopefully not) complaints?  Contact Jackie Clark: jackie [at] coldfrontmag [dot] com.

see all songs of the week here.


Gifts for Poets and Poetry Lovers

Friday, December 9th, 2011

It’s that time of year again! Here are some suggestions that might make the perfect gift for those that love poetry!

How about a gift subscription to jubilat, Denver Quarterly, Conduit, or Fence?

Many presses offer 1 and 2 year subscriptions such as Litmus Press, $75 gets you or your loved one everything they publish in 2012-13 including their journal, Aufgabe.

$75 also gets a year worth of books from the fine folks over at Wave Books.

Nothing says Merry Christmas more than a two year gift subscription to Octopus Books! For $64 you get 6 full-lengths and around 4 chapbooks with free shipping.  The list includes  with Heather Christle’s The Trees The Trees, Rebecca Farivar’s Correct Animal, Brandon Downing’s AT ME, and a reprint of CD Wright’s 40 Watts. And then 4 more books: Chris DeWeese’s The Black Forest and Jenny Zhang’s Dear Jenny, We Are All Find, Patricia Lockwood’s Balloon Pop Outlaw Black and Ben Mirov’s Hider Roser.

For only $50 you get all of this from Black Ocean: Hunger Transit by Feng Sun Chen (Spring 2012)
Fjords by Zachary Schomburg (Spring 2012), Handsome Vol. 4 (Spring 2012), Dark Matter by Aase Berg, trans. Johannes Göransson (Fall 2012),The Moon’s Jaw by Rauan Klassnik (Fall 2012)

No Tell Books has a deal where you can get any two of their titles for $20. Some of their authors include Bruce Covey, Hugh Behm-Steinberg, and Lea Graham.

Yes Yes Books offers both print and e-book subscriptions. When you subscribe, Heavy Petting by Gregory Sherl and Panic Attack, USA by Nate Slawson will be immediately mailed to you. On February 14th, 2012 they’ll send you I Don’t Mind if You’re Feeling Alone by Thomas Patrick Levy.

Ahsahta Press has a three different gifts packages (ranging from $65-35) including books by Kate Greenstreet and Karla Kelsey.

Dancing Girl Press has a (chap)book bundle of 5 for $25.

Projective Industries publishes hand-bound chapbooks. You can get four for $20 (while supplies last).

How about Fact-Simile’s Trading Cards including poets such as Bhanu Kapil, CA Conrad, and Joanne Kyger.

If you find yourself in Brooklyn or Manhattan, Berl’s Brooklyn Poetry Shop is offering free door-to-door delivery on their bicycles (weather permitting).  Not only is that green, but you can support multiple presses and hand-select you’re own gift packages!

Likewise, if you find yourself in Northampton you’d be remiss not to stop into Flying Object or shop from them online!

While “best” has always been an arguable term, if you need more suggestions of what people have been reading/raving about take a look at Third Factory/Notes of Poetry and No Tells.


Holiday Cheer From Birds, LLC = Mini-tour And New Books

Thursday, December 8th, 2011

Just in time for the holidays, Birds, LLC have released Emily Pettit’s first full-length book, Goat In The Snow. If you purchase the book now they’ll also ship a limited edition broadside with art by Rachel B. Glaser. More information on the book and the broadside can be found here. You can read poems by Pettit here.

In addition to the book some of Birds, LLC’s authors and editors are embarking on a mini-tour.

Birds, LLC is pleased to announce their mini tour in celebration of Emily Pettit’s Goat in the Snow!

Poetry readings by
Justin Marks
Emily Pettit
Sampson Starkweather
Paige Taggart
Chris Tonelli

December 9th, Friday, Kansas City, MO. Facebook Event info can be found here. And here: http://acommonsenseseries.blogspot.com/

December 10th, Fayetteville, AR. Facebook Event info here. And here: http://improvedlighting.blogspot.com/

December 11th, Lawrence, KS. Facebook Event info here. And here: http://taproompoetry.blogspot.com/

In a last bit of news, Birds, LLC have also debuted the cover of Dan Magers’s forthcoming book, PARTYKNIFE. The cover was designed by the artist, Matt Bollinger.


Fields Press & The Aviary Release Party

Tuesday, December 6th, 2011

On Sunday, December 4th the poet, J.Mae Barizo and her husband, Wolfram Koessel opened up their apartment in Morningside Heights to celebrate a double release party.  Barizo is the co-editor of the chapbook press, Fields Press and founding editor of The Aviary Online.  Fields Press was celebrating the release of a collaborative chapbook by Timothy Liu and Hansa Bergwall titled, The Thames & Hudson Project.

After Lui and Bergwall took turns reading, Wolfram Koessel, a cellist for The American String Quartet treated the audience to a short movement by Bach.

Major Jackson, then read poems on behalf of  THE AVIARY ONLINE. The journal is dedicated to the art of the essay, interview and literary criticism.

Jackson spent time in Kenya and read some new poems based on his experiences there.  He talks more about his time in Africa in an interview with The Aviary Online.

Here’s Jackson’s set-list:

1. Excerpts from The Dadaab Suite (forthcoming in Virginia Quarterly Review)

i. The UNHCR Somali driver speeds by a small herd
ii. “When they came to camp, they asked my friend Abdi”
iii. In the placid lean of an arid summer, in the lingering
iv. “We always kicked for the same team. We prayed”
vi. Security Briefing
viii. Security Briefing

2. Full Frontal Management (forthcoming in Green Mountain Review)

3. Special Needs (Current issue of The Common)

 

 

 

 

 


Olivia Tremor Control: Dusk at the Cubist Castle by Travis Nichols and Paul Killebrew (with Maggie Jackson and Monica Fambrough)

Tuesday, December 6th, 2011

Being from Nashville, I accepted that music could be conceptual. I didn’t try out for high school football (not on principle, more of a foregone conclusion kind of situation), but I could believe that if someone did try out and didn’t make the team, the absolutely best response would be to start a band.  A marching band of one’s own.

The creation story of Olivia Tremor Control, though set in the north Louisiana town of Ruston, could easily have taken place where I grew up in Ames, Iowa.  Or not. Point being, I was in high school, my body was a terrifying disappointment, the bodies of everyone I knew were terrifying disappointments (with occasional miraculous exceptions), and it seemed likely that this would be permanent.

If I had known about them then (I didn’t; I liked Counting Crows), I would have been heartened because Olivia Tremor Control make happy psychedelic pop music that is, according to Robert Christgau, “full of shit,” a description that sounds damning but given that being full of shit is one of the primary daily disappointments (with no miraculous exceptions I know of), there’s a way in which such an insult is a compliment: full of shit music suggests that disappointment, permanence, and foregone conclusions can be ignored in favor of listening to one’s body, and, if one has such a thing, soul.

Listening to the shit of the soul: that about sums up Athens, Georgia in the late ’90s.  Not to brag, but we had Neutral Milk Hotel, Drive-By-Truckers, Vic Chesnutt, Of Montreal, Danger Mouse, Macha, Hayride, The Glands, The Possibilities, Elf Power, Azure Ray, Jack Logan, Japancakes, Music Tapes, and, of course, Olivia Tremor Control, all fighting over the same Salvation Army cardigan.

Some of these bands were better than the others, but the most vexing were the Olivias.  I wanted them to be something slightly other than they were, and I wanted their music to be slightly different than it is.  The dippy psychedelia, the unapologetic derivativeness, the sugary and the twee—this was never going to be my favorite record or my favorite band.  And yet I found pleasure and creative permission in the space between what I wanted the music to be and what it was.

[Interlude: When the baby howls, the microchip howls.  When the parallel microchip becomes fussy and more, fussy static ruins the parallel baby and so then fields.  When the fields fuss.  Throughout intervals of static the wind fusses in fits of solemn fuchsia. I always feel milky.  You always are staring.  Why don’t I feel.  Vinegar now, in my hands everything seems tender.  Baby and me and Olivia mouths parallel.  Fits and fits and fuck fits.  Everything will mouth what I spray.  Don’t touch my mouth unless you use me four times.  Mouth my mind.  Mouth my mouth.  How else could we be understood so like our words should?  Not by my grainy speakers. Revenue isn’t what is speaking now.  Revenant is not what is.  Cars combust.  Combustion composes particles into fits.]

In the last third of Dusk at Cubist Castle, in a track titled “Green Typewriters VIII,” all of the hazy pop and toy piano blinkerings that make up much of the album shed away for a ten-minute interlude of low, reverby fuzz and dull notes that you come to realize are underpainted by recordings of dripping water and what seems to be a field near a highway where cars pass just often enough to be totally meditative; in the last minute and a half, all the sounds drop out except the field, and when a car and a helicopter pass, the sound travels from the left speaker to the right and then gradually fades as the vocals of Bill Doss and/or Will Cullen Hart remarkably reappear, singing, “How much longer can I wait?”, ushering in a resolution in drums and a guitar solo straight from Apple Studios, none of which ever felt so refreshing.

In an as-yet-unpublished interview I did back in the Athens ’90s with Jeff Mangum—who is better known as the gaping wound at the center of Neutral Milk Hotel but also served as a drummer for Olivia Tremor Control (which a friend once compared to watching John Lennon play drums in Ringo’s All Starr Band)—Mangum told me that when the earth becomes uninhabitable, chances are that the authorities will only allow the beautiful and the popular onto the escaping spaceships.  So I guess it will just be us left here with all the other broken, imperfect things. Not the worst outcome, and anyway my guess is that it was the popular and the beautiful that made the planet uninhabitable in the first place, and that without them, everything will be ugly and will last forever.

~~~

Travis Nichols is the author of See Me Improving (Copper Canyon Press), Iowa (Letter Machine Editions), and Off We Go Into the Wild Blue Yonder (Coffee House Press).  He lives in Chicago.

 

Experiment

I drew
a circle
on the wall,
pressed
myself flat
against it,
and tried
to tune
the particles
in my body
to align
with the empty
spaces between
the particles
of the wall
and vice
versa, so
that the wall
and I
would become
an integrated
mesh as
I pressed
into and
eventually
through it
entirely.
The problem
was not
a lack of
gaps–
so much
of everything
is gaps,
and neither
the wall
nor my
body are
really even
all that
dense–but
ordering
the open
space that
leavens
our density
seemed to
require more
than flat
mental activity,
for me,
anyway.

Paul Killebrew is the author of Inspector vs. Evader (Ugly Duckling Presse), and Flowers (Canarium Books).  He lives in New Orleans.

Questions, compliments, (hopefully not) complaints? Contact Jackie Clark: jackie [at] coldfrontmag [dot] com.