Hello Everyone
On Thursday the 8th of October 2009 I poetry TV attended National poetry day Live at the Royal festival hall and below is a summary from the day:
Why Just About Anyone Can Write and Perform Poetry
The performances at Royal Festival Hall’s (RFH) National Poetry Day Live are resounding proof of this.
When you truly imagine that there is something in it for everyone, then you begin to see the RFH’s National Poetry Day Live as a great and even groundbreaking time for celebrating poetry.
It was a day when Caroline Duffy, the poet laureate, was followed by a host of poets including Lemn Sissay; Selma Hall; Anjan Saha and Lost Luggage; Birmingham’s own Dreadlock Alien; John Headley and Liverpool’s Roger McGough.
For the full review go to our brand new website http://ipoetryreviews.com
But what is ipoetryreviews.com?
Ipoetryreviews.com is a new website brought to you by i poetry TV here you can get news and info on artists and events from poetry, photography, music, art and video. The site also provides users a chance to see products on related subjects which help support the growth of I poetry TV.
So please check out http://ipoetryreviews.com and tell all of your friends.
Poetry From Around the World
This month in Poetry From Around the world we look at modern poetry in Brazil:
Modern poetry in Brazil is no less mysterious than the country itself.
The Iberian Baroque, Italian Arcadianism, French Romanticism, Parnassianism and Symbolism have all have held sway in Brazil over the course of it's history, each manifesting itself in a highly original way.
Around 1922, during the centennial celebrations of Brazil's independence from Portugal, an eclectic group of young writers, poets, artists and musicians, most of them from São Paulo state's coffee-growing high bourgeoisie, came together to promote a Modern Art Week at the São Paulo Municipal Theatre.
The initial movement of Modernism in the 20's introduced into Brazilian poetry a global attitude, incorporating broad cultural interests, irreverence, humour, and free verse. In addition to Oswald de Andrade, some pioneers included Mario de Andrade, Raul Bopp and Luis Aranha. and arguably Brazilian poetry's finest hour, came in the 30's, with the second wave of Modernists. The poetry of Carlos Drummond de Andrade, Murilo Mendes, Vinícius de Moraes and Manuel Bandeira, both individually and as a group, were equal to the principal currents of Western Modernism. The high quality of these poets is matched only by their sheer bad luck in having been confined to a readership, not only in their own tongue, but also in their own country, since they are exceedingly little known.
Source – Consulate General of Brazil
http://www.brazilsf.org/culture_poetry_eng.htm
The Poetic thought of the month
The poetic thought of the month for this newsletter comes from Joan McNerney:
Even Goya's portraits are
less intriguing than faces
of frost on my window.
This poem was chosen for it's ability to convey a powerful poetic thought in a small space. Sometimes big things really do come in small packages. I'd like to thank Joan for her contribution.
And Finally
As some of you already know i Poetry TV has now launched on twitter so you can follow us at
http://twitter.com/IpoetryTV
for up to the minute i Poetry TV news
Remember were always looking to profile artists so to receive an interview questionnaire which could feature in an upcoming newsletter e-mail
ipoetry@googlemail.com
Until the next newsletter
I poetry TV
Sunday, 18 October 2009
Tuesday, 13 October 2009
Introducing Poetry From around the World
I Poetry TV Newsletter
Number 2: Sep 2009
Hello everyone
To begin this month’s newsletter I Poetry TV would like to introduce a brand new section. It’s called Poetry from Around the World. Every month we will explore different countries and their poetic heritage.
For our first installment we will take an ancient and mysterious form of poetry. Create an image in your mind, like a photograph, letting nature be your theme. Write three lines of 5, 7, 5 syllables respectively and you will have the centuries-old form of Japanese poetry, the Haiku. This is one of ours:
Weather changing how
Autumn left to come again
Winter’s no new pain
© I Poetry TV, 2009
Haikus began as Hokku the opening stanza of an orthodox collaborative linked poem. In the middle of the 17th century Hokku had begun to appear as an individual poem. By the end of the 19th century the Japanese author/poet Masaoka Shiki renamed the standalone Hokku to Haiku. Today, Haikus are written in many languages and have become a well accepted poetic art form around the world.
Make sure you check out next month’s newsletter when we will be diving into poetry from Brazil. If you have any contributions you would like to make please don’t hesitate to let us know.
We are still on the look out for more entries for the poetic thoughts of the month. This month’s thought comes from Jonas McCloud. We would like to thank him for his poem. Check out Jonas’ work below:
my conceptz are contagious
couragously leakin onto pages
seepin thru the ages
like a virus - creepin thru the matrix
breathin as i leap over the fakness
meetin fam - speakin of the latest
spontaneous moves deep in the spaces
and if u kno sun ra, u kno thats where the place is
so im orbitin round the radius
plutoground labourist
fableist lyricist
the butterfly struggles out the crysalis
meticolous motion poetry spoken by the tongue physicist
brilliant like the sun reflected in an amethyst
re-arrangin the everchangin heart beat of an arrythmitist with spirit fists
cloudz represent with truly mythic lips
lyrics sick like a fever
cypha demeanour in this geeza
i give poets n mc's no breather
cos the 1's who make it
r the 1's who r keener
so i move forwards with directional consistency
diction conviction intentional and insistent b
brisk and free in its movement of air - mystikal blow -
on a search to repair and spiritually grow
so i vigourisley flow
for the mighty unseen force and the 1's who kno
coz they r the 1's who r ready to go......
peacenlight
© Jonas McCloud, 2009
We at I Poetry TV thought many of the submissions were worthy of inclusion but Jonas’ work got the edge this month. Please keep them coming as we want to get to know you through your poetry. Alternatively, why not try your hand at something you may not have done before and write a Haiku of your own.
If you want to submit a poem for inclusion in next month’s newsletter please leave it under the poetic thought of the month topic on the discussion board.
We at I Poetry TV are looking to be a springboard for new poetic talent. We want to feature new and exciting poets in our newsletter. If you are interested in taking part in an I Poetry TV interview, e-mail us to request our easy to use interview template at ipoetrytv@googlemail.com, complete it and return it to us. We’ll feature the best interviews in future newsletters.
One final note, to those of you who have responded and told us that you would like to be a part of the future of I Poetry TV; we welcome your requests and will be in touch with each of you personally very shortly. We at I Poetry TV are excited by all the responses and have been putting steps in place to get our workshops/performances off the ground. Initially, they will be hosted in London. But we are keen to go national and international. And from your responses so are you. If you want to be part of I Poetry TV and haven’t already please get in touch. Together we will make it happen.
Until next month’s edition
I Poetry TV
Number 2: Sep 2009
Hello everyone
To begin this month’s newsletter I Poetry TV would like to introduce a brand new section. It’s called Poetry from Around the World. Every month we will explore different countries and their poetic heritage.
For our first installment we will take an ancient and mysterious form of poetry. Create an image in your mind, like a photograph, letting nature be your theme. Write three lines of 5, 7, 5 syllables respectively and you will have the centuries-old form of Japanese poetry, the Haiku. This is one of ours:
Weather changing how
Autumn left to come again
Winter’s no new pain
© I Poetry TV, 2009
Haikus began as Hokku the opening stanza of an orthodox collaborative linked poem. In the middle of the 17th century Hokku had begun to appear as an individual poem. By the end of the 19th century the Japanese author/poet Masaoka Shiki renamed the standalone Hokku to Haiku. Today, Haikus are written in many languages and have become a well accepted poetic art form around the world.
Make sure you check out next month’s newsletter when we will be diving into poetry from Brazil. If you have any contributions you would like to make please don’t hesitate to let us know.
We are still on the look out for more entries for the poetic thoughts of the month. This month’s thought comes from Jonas McCloud. We would like to thank him for his poem. Check out Jonas’ work below:
my conceptz are contagious
couragously leakin onto pages
seepin thru the ages
like a virus - creepin thru the matrix
breathin as i leap over the fakness
meetin fam - speakin of the latest
spontaneous moves deep in the spaces
and if u kno sun ra, u kno thats where the place is
so im orbitin round the radius
plutoground labourist
fableist lyricist
the butterfly struggles out the crysalis
meticolous motion poetry spoken by the tongue physicist
brilliant like the sun reflected in an amethyst
re-arrangin the everchangin heart beat of an arrythmitist with spirit fists
cloudz represent with truly mythic lips
lyrics sick like a fever
cypha demeanour in this geeza
i give poets n mc's no breather
cos the 1's who make it
r the 1's who r keener
so i move forwards with directional consistency
diction conviction intentional and insistent b
brisk and free in its movement of air - mystikal blow -
on a search to repair and spiritually grow
so i vigourisley flow
for the mighty unseen force and the 1's who kno
coz they r the 1's who r ready to go......
peacenlight
© Jonas McCloud, 2009
We at I Poetry TV thought many of the submissions were worthy of inclusion but Jonas’ work got the edge this month. Please keep them coming as we want to get to know you through your poetry. Alternatively, why not try your hand at something you may not have done before and write a Haiku of your own.
If you want to submit a poem for inclusion in next month’s newsletter please leave it under the poetic thought of the month topic on the discussion board.
We at I Poetry TV are looking to be a springboard for new poetic talent. We want to feature new and exciting poets in our newsletter. If you are interested in taking part in an I Poetry TV interview, e-mail us to request our easy to use interview template at ipoetrytv@googlemail.com, complete it and return it to us. We’ll feature the best interviews in future newsletters.
One final note, to those of you who have responded and told us that you would like to be a part of the future of I Poetry TV; we welcome your requests and will be in touch with each of you personally very shortly. We at I Poetry TV are excited by all the responses and have been putting steps in place to get our workshops/performances off the ground. Initially, they will be hosted in London. But we are keen to go national and international. And from your responses so are you. If you want to be part of I Poetry TV and haven’t already please get in touch. Together we will make it happen.
Until next month’s edition
I Poetry TV
Monday, 12 October 2009
Hello to everyone
I Poetry TV is about to launch its three year programme of training, workshops and productions. I do not want the programme to be big. I want it to be mega. I want to hear your thoughts, your feelings and your ideas. I want to meet and work with as many of you as possible. I have a passion for words and at present I’m doing what I love best working with a group of teenagers some of who like poetry and some who clearly don’t. This group is using poetry and visual images in order to express themselves. I get to journey along their paths through the words they use, the images they create and the thoughts they share. I want I Poetry TV to be involved in more journeys of this nature but I don’t want to go it alone. Post your poems on our wall. Email me your desires. Tell me if you’re interested in taking part in training. Could you see yourself working for I Poetry TV? If so, let me hear from you.
Until next time
Brenda
Creative Director of I Poetry TV
The poetic thought of the month
If I told you
I have taken all the words
In the world and
Sealed them away
For good
You might think of me as crazy
And maybe you should
If I told you 7 million
of us struggle with words today
Yet still it’s not a lost cause
When poetry gets its way
If you would like to feature in the poetic thought of the month, please leave your thoughts under the “Poetic thought of the month” discussion topic.
Would you like to make a career out of being a multimedia poet?
Would you like to inspire others to find their poetic voice?
If yes, to the above, why no get in touch and tell me how: ipoetrytv@googlemail.com
Until next time
Brenda
Creative Director of I Poetry TV
The poetic thought of the month
If I told you
I have taken all the words
In the world and
Sealed them away
For good
You might think of me as crazy
And maybe you should
If I told you 7 million
of us struggle with words today
Yet still it’s not a lost cause
When poetry gets its way
If you would like to feature in the poetic thought of the month, please leave your thoughts under the “Poetic thought of the month” discussion topic.
Would you like to make a career out of being a multimedia poet?
Would you like to inspire others to find their poetic voice?
If yes, to the above, why no get in touch and tell me how: ipoetrytv@googlemail.com
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)