Archive for category Poets

Elizabeth Campbell

Elizabeth Campbell, reading new and published work at Belfast Central Library, over the racket of the air-conditioning, but clear enough for my mic if not my ears.

Notice that I am experimenting with Divshare, the embedding system is a lot easier than with podcastpeople.com, the site I have stored most previous audio on.

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Miriam Gamble

At a reading in No Alibis Bookshop in Belfast on June 3, Miriam Gamble read from her first collection The Squirrels Are Dead.

Her introduction acknowledges the inspiration of Sinead Morrissey.

 

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Nervous Flyer – Grainne Tobin

County Down poet Grainne Tobin read from her new collection The Nervous Flyer’s Companion at the Down Arts Centre as part of a sequence of readings organised by Write Down!

 

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Muldoon on the IRA and on the Church

At the superb Poetry Now Festival in Dun Laoghaire last week, Paul Muldoon was challenged by a heckler to give his opinion on the Provisional IRA. I recorded his answer. That’s the first clip.

Muldoon went on to do a very strange presentation in which he first reflected on the use of fish images in sexually themed Irish poems and then delivered an account of how his sister had been sexually exploited by a catholic priest. From there he called on the Irish government to stand up to the bishops and announce that the days of Canon Law in Ireland were over.
I interviewed him afterwards for the Sunday Sequence programme. That interview was broadcast in reduced form, as these always are, but here is the full exchange.

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Damian Smyth


Damian Smyth reading from his new collection Market Street and other work at the Wild Geese Literary Festival in Strangford, County Down.

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Paul Maddern

Paul Maddern read some luxurious poems from his new collection Kelpdings, at the Wild Geese Literary Festival in Strangford on Saturday, February 6. Paul is from Bermuda and brought a warm breeze from the Caribbean into the hall.

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A Pamphleteer at the Troubadour

alexmcmillenTemplar Poetry has been running a series of pamphlet competitions for five years now as part of a pitch to widen the poetry market. Their latest winner is Paul Maddern of Belfast, who draws on his Bermuda experience in Kelpdings.

I met the manager and publisher of Templar, Alex McMillen, at the Troubadour, a popular poetry venue on the Old Brompton Road in London.
The music in the background is the irrepressible Cathal Dallat, whom many readers will know from the John Hewitt Summer School. He was so loud that I had to record the interview with the mic practically up Alex McMillen’s nose, which is why there is more popping than there should be.

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Sinead Morrissey

sinead M

The marvellous Sinead Morrissey’s readings are mesmeric performances and the launch of her new book, at No Alibis Bookshop in Belfast, was an electric occasion. The book, Through the Square Window expresses her amazement at her two young children but includes riveting love poems and more of her reflections on human history.

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All Ireland Poetry Slam Champion

seamus fox

All Ireland Poetry Slam Champion Seamus Fox returned in glory to Bookfinders in Belfast last Friday (Oct 30) to thank the audience that has supported him and other performance poets.

It was a big night in Mary Denvir’s famous second hand bookshop, which has been a forum for performance poetry for years now.

This is a raw voice.

 

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Humour and Haikus

orsmby pic

The Belfast poet Frank Ormsby, former editor of the famous Honest Ulsterman, launched his fourth collection of poems, Fireflies, at Queen’s University Belfast.

Ormsby was introduced by Michael Longley, one of the distinguished elders of Irish poetry.

It was an occasion for humour and haikus.

 

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