Showing posts with label playlists. Show all posts
Showing posts with label playlists. Show all posts

Saturday, February 2, 2008

ceptuetics 01-30-08

Wednesday's show (follow this link, and click on "01 ceptuetics 01-30-08.mp3" on the right hand side of the page)

Lawrence Weiner "Having Been Done At / Having Been Done To, Essendo Stato Fatto A" Tellus 21: Audio by Visual Artists {1973}

Redell Olsen
"Untitled" The Book of Fur (Rem Press) {2000}
Kristin Prevallet "Lyric Infiltration" Scratch Sides: Poetry, Documentation, and Image-Text Projects (Skanky Possum Books) {2002}
Kevin Davies "Part Two" The Golden Age of Paraphernalia {2004 reading; book forthcoming}

P. Inman
"Smaller" Criss Cross (Roof Books) {1994}
Marjorie Welish "One A"

Patti Smith
"Parade" Sugar, Alcohol, & Meat (Giorno Poetry Systems)



On Wednesday, tune in to hear
Marie Buck, who writes poems, co-edits the mostly-poetry journal Model Homes with Brad Flis, and studies poetry and poetics in the English Ph.D. program at Wayne State University in Detroit. Her chapbook "Life & Style" appears online at Beard of Bees, and a prose piece is forthcoming in the "bpNichol + 20" issue of Open Letter.

Tuesday, January 22, 2008

hi again, here are two shows


Back from a trip to Berlin, and very excited to begin classes with Avital Ronell & Kamau Brathwaite this semester. Also some great upcoming guests to be announced soon! For now, archives of the two shows that aired while I was away, and tune in tomorrow night to hear Rachel Levitsky read recent work & talk with me about her poetry and Belladonna* books.

Ceptuetics 01-09-08 (dedicated to Henri Chopin)

1. bpNichol - "Clover"
2. Henri Chopin - "Sol Air"
3. Nikolaus Einhorn - "Don't you may be, the essential interview" (w/ John Cage and Hans G. Helms)
4. Robert Ashley - "She Was a Visitor"

Ceptuetics 01-16-08

1. Rachel Blau DuPlessis - "Draft 72"
2. Erica Hunt -
"Invisible Hands"
3. Tom Raworth - "Catacoustics"
4. Ben Friedlander - "The Mind is a Bubble Sheet"
5. Hans Arp - "Dada-Spruche"
6. Camille Bryen - "Tete de Coq"
7. Nam June Paik - "Simple"
8. Language Removal Services - "Marilyn Monroe"
9. Bruce Andrews - "You Made This World, We Didn't" (which I mistakenly present as the Index to I Don't Have Any Paper, So Shut Up)


Tomorrow:
Rachel Levitsky’s first full length volume, Under the Sun was published by Futurepoem books in 2003. She is the author of five chapbooks of poetry, Dearly (a+bend, 1999), Dearly 356, Cartographies of Error (Leroy, 1999), The Adventures of Yaya and Grace (PotesPoets, 1999) and 2(1x1)Portraits (Baksun, 1998). Most of her poetic works tend toward what is known as ‘the long poem’ and she is currently writing a prose novella. Levitsky writes poetry plays, three of which (one with Camille Roy) have been performed in New York and San Francisco. Her work has been published in magazines such as The Reculse, Sentence, Fence, The Brooklyn Rail, Global City, The Hat, Skanky Possum, Lungfull! and in the anthologies, Boog City (vol. I & II), Bowery Women, and 19 Lines: A Drawing Center Writing Anthology. Recently her work was translated into Icelandic for the anthology 131.839 Slög Med Bilum by Eiríkur Örn Nordahl. Online poetry and critical essays can be found on such sites as Narrativity, Duration Press, How2, and Web Conjunctions. She is the founder and co-director of Belladonna*, an event and publication series of feminist avant-garde poetics.


Wednesday, January 2, 2008

happy new year & ceptuetics 01-02-08

Happy new year! here's today's show

1. J. Henry Chunko "1-60" {remix of Charles Bernstein's 1-100}

2. Tracie Morris "Afro-Futurism" {Close Listening, 2005}
3. Eileen Myles "Orleans" {Frequency Audio Journal issue one}
4. Rod Smith "Love Poems 2" {Fear the Sky, Narrow House Recordings}
5. John Yau "100 Views of the Port of Baltimore" CD {2000}
6. Lydia Davis "The Dog Man" {1984}

7. Charles Amirkhanian "Hypothetical Moments" Mental Radio {1981}
8. Anne Tardos & Jackson MacLow "Refrigerator Defrosting Pseudoglossolalia" {Doings: Assorted Performance Pieces 1955-2002 (Granary Books) CD}

9. Nicole Brossard "Installations" {2001}

Wednesday, December 19, 2007

Ceptuetics 12-19-07

Listen to today's show, which veered off in many directions...


Marcel Broodthaers "Interview With A Cat (excerpt)"

Tan Lin "1935 "The Present Situation in Quantum Mechanics"

Susan Stone "Langue Etude" Tellus #11 (The Sound of Radio) {1985}

Jarrod Fowler "The Weather, by Kenneth Goldsmith"

On Kawara "1994-2613 AD (excerpt)" One Million Years

Christian Bok "Mushroom Clouds" The Cyborg Opera

Henri Chopin "Rouge" {1956}

Eberhard Blum "Track 5" 62 Mesostics Re: Merce Cunningham
(Hat Now) CD {text by John Cage}

Kimberly Lyons "11 Spiders" {2006}


If you like the Susan Stone track, check out the three new Tellus cassettes presented on Ubu, great stuff brought to you by Danny Snelson and Continuo.

Friday, November 16, 2007

ceptuetics 11-14-07

Download Wednesday's show here. I think this one's the most fun non-guest show to date (minus a couple technical slips!), so check it out.
7:30 PM Jerome Rothenberg "Horse Song XI" Horse Songs & Other Soundings (S Press)
7:35 PM Abigail Child "From Solids (excerpts)" From Solids (Roof Books)
7:37 PM Charles Bernstein "1-100" {1969}
7:42 PM Kristin Oppenheim "Tap Your Shoes" {1996}
7:45 PM Jed Rasula "Repeat If Necessary" {2000}
7:48 PM David Cameron "The Lemonade Man" Flowers of Bad (Unbelievable Alligator)
7:52 PM Edwin Torres "Some Kind of Rip In What I See" {2006}
7:58 PM Kenneth Goldsmith "Slobodan Milosevic and Kenny G" {WFMU, 2006}

Next week, my friend Sara Wintz will be on the show. Until then, you can read some of her poetry here and here.

Also, I will be reading along with friends at 169 Bar this Monday, around 6pm. Stop by, and check out the now regularly updated Minetta Review calendar for upcoming NYC readings. There are a bunch of great events this weekend.

Sunday, October 14, 2007

10/10/07

Apologies for the delay, here's the latest ceptuetics.

1. Xavier Gautier - Lydia (Notre Travail Benefique, 2001)
2. Dick Higgins - Omnia Gallia (1980)
3. Edwin Torres - E Man's Proclamation (The PoPedology of an Ambient Language, Atelos)
4. Jena Osman - Dropping Leaflets (2001)
5. Bob Cobbing - Suesequence (Konkrete Canticle, 1971)
6. Craig Dworkin - from Strand (Roof, 2005)
7. Aram Saroyan - Crickets (10 + 2 = 12: American Text-Sound Pieces, 1965)

The following day, I saw Aram Saroyan read "Crickets" at Poets House, where he was speaking along with Elaine Equi on the topic of minimalist poetry. It remained a beautiful piece, with the mimetic "ts" sound slowly detaching itself from the rest of the word to fill the room with a noise sadly absent in New York City.

"Crickets" is not only equally effective on the page and in performance, but remarkably, each presentation reveals something about the other. I was disappointed to hear that some of my other favorite Saroyan poems - "sky/every/day" or "a leaf/left/by the/cat/I guess" - sounded rushed and lost the visual elements when he read them. Many people have remarked that Aram Saroyan: Complete Minimal Poems is an amazingly fast read, and I also went through its 250 or so pages in about 15 minutes, but there is something unnerving in watching Saroyan read one of his poems while holding the following page open. Saroyan compared his poems with only one word to Warhol's images of celebrities, and in the same way we react to a beautiful and familiar face, I think it's important to stare at Saroyan's words for as long as we want.

Still, that's only one of many reactions I had in watching one of my favorite poets read pieces he had been good and done with for forty years. He told us that by 1967 he had abandoned the minimal poem, and in recent years has not written poetry at all, except for one piece prompted by the release of his Complete Minimal Poems. This poem, entitled "Autobiography", begins with the words "1943, 1944, 1945" and yes, continues through "2005, 2006, 2007." On the page, I don't think it would be very interesting at this point in Saroyan's career, but it was a wonderfully performative autobiography. Saroyan looked down at the podium during the 40s, looked up at the audience after '49 to announce with a chuckle "I've got this piece memorized," then slowly read through the following 58 words with his attention divided between the audience and the podium, his voice faltering at times so that despite the inevitability of the piece, there was actually a tense feeling that we might not arrive at the present year. Most of what we know and celebrate about Saroyan ends with the 1960s, and in a discussion that largely stayed fixed in a moment of Warhol, Kerouac, and Creeley, "Autobiography" was both a chillingly blank and expressive look at what followed.

Wednesday, September 19, 2007

Ceptuetics #3

Here's the third show archived.

Ceptuetics #3


1. Emmett Williams "Duet" The Dial-A-Poem Poets (Giorno Poetry Systems) CD
2. Hannah Weiner "excerpt from Spoke" Live at the Ear Inn (Oracular Laboratory) CD
3. Barbara Cole "from Situation Comedies: Foxy Moron" CD
4. Rodrigo Toscano "Portrait Seven" The Disparities (Green Integer) CD
5. Joan La Barbara "Poem #61" 73 Poems (Permanent Press) CD
6. Charles Amirkhanian "Just" 10 + 2 = 12 American Text-Sound Pieces CD
7. Gertrude Stein "If I Told Him: A Complete Portrait of Picasso" CD

Friday, September 7, 2007

Debut Show

Here's an mp3 of the first edition of ceptuetics. I was very happy with the show despite a couple technical problems and more than a little nervousness. This mp3 will only be available for the next week until I figure out where to host large files. If you miss it, you can always stream at WNYU's archives.

Ceptuetics Debut

Featured on this show:

Brion Gysin - "I Am" Machine-Poem
John Cage - excerpt from Mureau
Rae Armantrout - Manufacturing
Caroline Bergvall - excerpt from Via: Dante Variations
Christian Bok - excerpt from Chapter I of Eunoia
Ernst Jandl - What You Can Do Without Vowels
Paul de Vree - Kids