Sunday, August 10, 2008

This week: Ken Rumble on Wordplay

Greensboro’s Ken Rumble, one of the founders of the Lucifer Poetics Group, trekked across rivers and mountains to Asheville last Sunday and visited Wordplay. He provided some keys to Key Bridge (that’s a .pdf file, so give it a few seconds to download), his well-received book from Carolina Wren Press, discussed some his favorite poets and working on typewriters, and read some new work as well. One new piece was a two-voiced collaboration, so I got to fill in as the other voice. It was a hoot.

Ken’s work is always adventurous in exploring the dimensions of poetic form - and like, in that respect, the work of one of his favorite contemporaries, Lisa Jarnot. Both seem to draw on the work of Robert Duncan and George Oppen, who drew in turn on the practice of William Carlos Williams, Gertude Stein, and others among the great twentieth century modernists; both go a far piece, of course, beyond the maps defined by Duncan and Oppen into their own territories. But that’s the company, as it seems to me, and it’s a fine company to be in.

Music this week all came from Geoffrey Keezer’s Falling Up; we opened with the title track (long the virtual theme for Wordplay), and also heard “Palm Reader” and “Gollum’s Song.”

Do check it out over on the Archive page (just scroll down to “Wordplay”).

(For the impatient, here’s the direct link to the .mp3.)

The show will be available as an on-demand stream and podcast through Sunday, August 10th.
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Update, 11 August 2008: Ken's show has now been deleted from the WPVM server, replaced by this week's show, which features novelist Janna McMahan. Ken's show will soon be available, however, at another place or two. More as we work out the details.


The photo can be found over at Ken’s blog, in his Blogger profile. The closed eyes perhaps testify to its candid occasion …


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Wednesday, February 07, 2007

Coming soon: Lucifer invades Asheville


















The Lucifer Poetics Group, that is – and who else would invite them but the Black Mountain College Museum + Arts Center. If there’s something devilish to be done in the world of poetry, look for the Center to do it.

The Lucifer Poetics Group is a group of loosely affiliated experimental poets based in the Research Triangle; their main point of affiliation, other than geography, may be that they all subscribe to the Lucipo listserve, where discussions of poetry and poetics flourish day by day, and even in the dark of night. The Internet has begun to change radically – as it has changed so many things - the way poets get together, hang out, and learn from one another.

The geography, though, the fact that they run into each other at readings, bars, grocery stores, on the street, is also, in the mind of Ken Rumble, founder of the list, important. As he wrote last year in a post on poet Ron Silliman’s weblog :

I think that the quality of the discussion on Lucipo is directly related to the fact that the original members of the group and many of the people that have since joined all live in fairly close proximity to one another. Our meetings are sporadic (as they've always been), but whether it is at readings, meetings, or just the bar, we see each other around. There is a flesh avatar for the virtual personalities we experience via the list.

So a shared physical community informs the list’s back and forth, and gives it the neighborly tone that anyone who’s been on a more contentious listserv (and even the world of poetry has them) might find positively striking.

Why Lucifer, you might ask? Soon after the list was formed, Rumble asked members to propose names for the group:

Among the almost-weres are the Adz Murderers, Boomslang, Fat-head Sillyface, Workshop for 'Liscious Poetry (WoLiPo), Party Pitch Poetics.

Argh. Fortunately, Joseph Donahue, an early member, remembered the lines in the first of the Pisan Cantos of the great Modernist poet Ezra Pound in which he addresses

You who have passed the pillars and outward from Herakles
when Lucifer fell in N. Carolina.

The standard gloss on the passage is that Pound referred here to a meteor shower that appeared from his vantage point, the literal cage in Pisa within which he was confined at the end of World War II, to be headed down the western sky toward our state, falling angels. The group had a name.

As with any such group, every now and then even the members of the Lucipo list ask themselves what the group, after all, is. Chris Vitiello, an early member of the group, had this take on it in 2005:

The answer would probably be something like "Lucipo isn't a single ideology or style or idea. It's a name for a community that draws its strength from a mutual interest in contemporary poetry with an emphasis on avant-garde, post-avant, innovative, and experimental poetry. And this interest is sincerely non-competitive." That certainly sounds like an answer.

But really we're all too busy asking and answering the question by getting together to read and talk late into the night.

Collaboration seems to be one of the hallmarks of Lucipo’s experimentalism. It’s not unusual for a member of the group to post, say, the first four lines of a poem and invite the other members of the group to help him or her complete it; days later the poem’s scores of lines long, and has traveled through many counties the initial proposition didn’t, in all likelihood, dream of exploring. It’s often (I confess, I’m a member of the list myself) great fun.

None of the Lucipo folk mention this, but Lucifer is also an ancient designation for the planet Venus when it appears as the morning star, and Lucifer in that case stands revealed in its literal signification, “light-bearer”, acting as it does as the herald of the Sun. So the very name of the group, like so many words in poetry, is rich in possibilities for meaning. That seems appropriate for a group of poets who want to carry on – and extend - the experimental approach to writing that Pound’s work helped define early in the last century.

They’ve read in Philadelphia and DC, and now Rumble will be bringing the howling denizens of Lucifer Poetics to Asheville for their first event in the mountains. He’s suggested online that they form collaborative cells for their performance here, and groups have been hashing out their plans for the reading on the list – and, no doubt, off it as well. No telling what they might come up with, but it’s bound to be mighty interesting. Most likely mind-bending. And perhaps insidious.

The horde of Luciferians who plan to be here, aside from Mr. Rumble, includes the aforementioned Chris Vitiello, Todd Sandvik, Jenny Maness, Brian Howe, David Need, Randall Williams, Lori Reese, Ted Pope, and perhaps another tormented soul or two. They’ll be joined by local Lucipo poets Tim Earley, Jonathan Fisher, and Chall Gray.

The beachhead of their invasion will be (where else?) the Black Mountain College Museum + Arts Center, 56 Broadway, in downtown Asheville. It’s scheduled for Saturday, February 24th; the reading, or performance, or … whatever will kick off at 8:00 PM. There or square. Word. The last thing you’d want to do, after all, is tick off the King of the Underworld.


For more information, see www.blackmountaincollege.org, or call 828-350-8484.

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This post appeared in different form in the February, 2007 issue of Rapid River.

2/10/2007: Updated with an additional link.

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