Aug 16, 2010 12:48
I am dissecting the anatomy of a good feature, because I think a twenty-minute set should be more than just five or six slam poems.
Some things I've used or seen others use:
Cover poems
Short poems
Some type of intermission (Limericks, haiku, beatboxing, etc.)
First drafts
What else, LJ kids?
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I've also played audience interaction games, a la Tourettes. A sing-along or a wacky prize contest can make people sit up in their seats, and enhance the overall show. (Caveat: I was actually banned from the Mocha Hut in Decatur after one such game.) Geoff Trenchard likes to tell jokes between poems, which works pretty well.
I'm skeptical about first drafts, or even debuts, during features. Sure, poems have to be debuted somewhere, but reading a brand-new poem off paper at certain venues can make the audience feel like you're just practicing your poetry out on them. It can come off as disrespectful; after all, you're supposed to be the paragon of poetry for the night, so reading unfinished work can diminish your star appeal and make the audience feel second-rate. The ways to avoid this are A) Know your audience. Some cities, like Boston or Columbus, seem to appreciate new work off the page. Others, like Berkeley, prize delivery and eye ( ... )
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Re: new work...this just came from a conversation Emily and I had about her GM feature last night. Obviously, it was a home crowd, so it was appropriate, and she earned the right to do that by doing really polished work throughout the rest of her set.
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I've been told it's good to have one cover on hand. I don't at present.
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2. i don't give a shit about memorizing--i just want it to sound right and to demonstrate a rollickin good time onstage. most slam audiences i've tried this with are open to a little raw, as long as it's not sloppy. in any case, i think it's a more interesting peek into process (as opposed to polish) than a first draft indy piece.
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multiple haiku; e.g., the feature goes against three different local celebrities in haiku dead match. Chaz Ellik beat in this way 3 local celebrities, going A.
props and costumes
multi-media: I would like to read some of my short pieces and haiku with imagery behind, maybe even a few pics morphing into each other. So, if I went on a ture, I'd like to have a notebook and a little projector to project imagery behind me.
multy-multy-media: e.g., a poem for Thelonious Sphere Monk and Vincent Van Gogh with their music (played by Monk) and their imagery (painted by Van Gogh and supplemented with additional stills) . If I read a poem about my trips to Auschwitz, I'd loke to show images, too (but may be not, it is something I was thinking about).
BTW, 4-5 slam pieces may sometimes be just great.
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Do you like other ideas?
I did this Monk poem one time in that way,
it required a help of someone
to punch a computer key at the right places
marked on the script of a poem.
One short rehearsal at most.
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I'm going to try to write response poems to the other pieces I have memorized. The fight poems. It's still raw, but I'm working on a response to "My Mistress' Eyes" in sonnet form.
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