The Progressive Voice of the Mountains

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WPVM

Now on the Archive … er, the other Archive

September 2nd, 2008

Doing Wordplay, which consists, on one level, just of getting together to talk with a poet (or two or three) each Sunday for an hour, has often been a delight, even the high point of the week. And sometimes, when technical problems have whacked the show, it’s also been frustrating. We’ve worked with WPVM’s staff and our fellow volunteers at the station to resolve issues as they’ve come up, though, and things have indeed gotten better; we’ve upgraded some equipment and figured out workarounds for other issues.

One issue that we couldn’t address at the station itself, given the storage capacity and bandwidth it would require, was our need for a permanent archive for past shows. After all, it’s not like a reading by, say (just to pick a few whose files I’ve rounded up in the last few days), Jonathan Williams, Robert Bly, Ken Rumble, or Ross Gay merits attention for just a week.

Thanks to the good folks at Chapel Hill’s ibiblio.org, though, we’ve now got that archive. We don’t yet have an index page at ibiblio, but I’ll post links here and at Natures, and work towards creating a directory there down the road.

For now, January’s show featuring Ed Dorn’s 1974 Buffalo reading of La Gran Apacheria is available from the new Wordplay Archive:

Ed Dorn, January 13, 2008.

More to come …

Jeff

August 27th, 2008

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Tune in tonight (Wednesday) live @ 11pm or check out the Archive @ www.nighttimeswerve.org

Listen for Adam’s exclusive interview with Elliot Bergman, sax player for NOMO (Ubiquity Records). Elliot took a quick break from their American tour to stop by our WPVM studios last month. Learn about the formation of this explosive band and their exciting US tour promoting their new album Ghost Rock.

Making Progress: News for a Change, August 18 2008

August 18th, 2008

We’ll talk to Ned Ryan Doyle, the Director of the Southern Energy & Environment Expo. SEEEXPO is August 22-24, at the WNC Agricultural Center. Get the schedule & more info at www.seeexpo.com

David will tell us the real story of the war between Russia and Georgia, and why it is really a proxy war for US based oil interests.

This local news and public affairs show focuses on underreported information and encourages civic activism. Tune in live 7-8 pm Monday, catch the 1 pm Tuesday rebroadcast, or stream or podcast.

Ken Rumble this week on Wordplay

August 5th, 2008

Greensboro’s Ken Rumble, one of the founders of the Lucifer Poetics Group, trekked across rivers and mountains to Asheville this past 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, 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 its exploration of 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 next Sunday, August 10th.
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The photo can be found over at Ken’s blog, in his Blogger profile. The closed eyes perhaps testify to its candid occasion …

Cross-posted at Natures.

Making Progress: News for a Change; August 4, 2008

August 4th, 2008

We’ll talk to Jason Hurd of WPVM’s “Veterans Voices”. Jason and other Iraq Veterans Against the War are on the State of the Union Base Tour, currently heading for Fort Bragg. We’ll talk about what he and the other veterans are doing to try to raise awareness among military families.

David will talk about what George Bush and the Republicans (and some Democrats) don’t want to acknowledge: Socialism is alive and well in America - socialism for the wealthy, that is.

We’ll talk to some of the treesitters from the Magnolia slated for destruction if Stewart Coleman is allowed to build his Parkside condominiums.

This local news and public affairs show focuses on underreported information and encourages civic activism. Tune in live 7-8 pm Monday, catch the 1 pm Tuesday rebroadcast, or stream or podcast.

Wordplay welcomes Jeffery Beam

July 25th, 2008

Hillsborough poet Jeffery Beam was in town last weekend for Loco Logodaedalist, the celebration of Jonathan Williams’ work hosted Saturday night by the Black Mountain College Museum + Arts Center, so I talked him into coming into the micro-studio at WPVM to talk about his work. He read a few poems from his Visions of Dame Kind (Jargon, 1995), a book whose vision I’ve long admired, but we spent much of the program reading and discussing poems from his new (as in brand new) The Beautiful Tendons, Uncollected Queer Poems 1969-2007 (White Crane Books, 2008). It’s a fine, emotionally searching and honest, collection of love poems - when we’re in the kingdom of love, it doesn’t matter whom we see as the other, the same rules pertain, and this book limns them with a forthright grace.

Several of Jeffery’s poems have found musical settings, so we discussed the relation of music and poem, and Jeffery, in honor of his lifetime love of the old songs he grew up in Kannapolis singing, and which he feels still inform his work, closed the show with a remarkable rendition of the old Methodist hymn “In the Garden”.

If you don’t yet know his work, here are three poems from Beautiful Tendons that he read on the show, just to give you a glimpse:

TWO LOVES This is my lesson in humility. My lesson in grief. My lesson in the cruelty of the human heart, my own. Trudging through deep southern snow: finding both of your faces frozen in the white. Sparrows still singing in the shrubbery. I could not say it then. I cannot say it now. My heart split in two. A tree limb weighted by ice. A white quiet and protective. A white dangerously warm. My hands spiritless in the drifts. Why do birds continue to sing? LOVE COMES not silent, but noisy and indiscreet, rowdy and persistent. He comes in leaf fall. musty earth in his palms. Held out to me I can do nothing but take it, and take it gladly, earth being the one coolness other than water to be enjoyed. The fact of the matter is this: tomorrow he may come silent. Tomorrow may be love quiet as mist, but today, his cheeks rough with new hairs, I smell furrows of new fields. I turn over fertile soil. I hear burrowing insects, happy worms. I taste the gentle, crude, excavating damp. The stain of love upon the earth! Stain of love! His sleep rattling me. His sunrise and breath awakening me. THAT NIGHT That body tree on a misty hill That face fawn with dark eyes That full moon surrounded by evening skies That hour pavement ending in dust That grass green with summer's black-green That night coming over us with its breath That sound crickets singing at eye level That body me on the ground with their song That body another touching me with fire That fire round as the moon burning as the sun That face fawn with dark eyes That you speaking in tongues unknown and green That sound crickets singing in my ear That body tree on a misty hill

There were many more, so give the show a listen. Given that Asheville will be in the throes of Bele chere this weekend, it’ll be available through Sunday, August 3rd, at WPVM’s Archive page (just scroll down to Wordplay) as on-demand stream and download.

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The show opened with McCoy Tyner playing “Walk Spirit, Talk Spirit” from the 2007 release McCoy Tyner Quartet. We also heard three of Billy Holiday’s classic performances, “Easy to Love,” “Life Begins When You’re in Love,” and “Summertime,” all from Lady Day: The Master Takes and Singles. Keith Jarrett’s “Paint My heart Red,” from the 2006 The Carnegie Hall Concert: Selections for Radio, took the show out.

Enjoy,

Jeff

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The photo of Jeffery is by M. J. Sharp.

Cross-posted at Natures.

July 16th, 2008

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Wednesday, July 16

11pm - 1am

TUNE IN TONIGHT!

WE’RE GIVING AWAY A PAIR OF TICKETS TO NOMO!

NOMO (Ubiquity Records) @ Stella Blue / Thursday, July 17

www.nighttimeswerve.orgĀ 

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