Tips for open micers

Poetry

Here‘s me with my Inky Fingers hat on and Claire Askew of Shore Poets chatting to the List with some tips for open micers. A nice article put together by Charlotte Runcie.

Reading your own poems out loud to a room full of strangers might sound terrifying. Having done it a few times myself, I can confirm that it is. But with the number of poetry open mic nights in Scotland increasing, sometimes eclipsing their musical cousins, there must be a reason why so many people put themselves through it. So if you’ve penned a few verses and are considering taking the plunge, what should you look out for?

‘Open mic attendees are probably the most open-minded folks you could ever hope to meet,’ says Claire Askew, fellow open mic veteran and now Shore Poet, who blogs poetry advice at OneNightStanzas.com.

Harry Giles, a spoken word performer and one of the organisers of Edinburgh’s Inky Fingers open mic, agrees. ‘Open mics are usually supportive, encouraging places to be. Like many writers, I’m not the best at fitting into communities, but the spoken word community really welcomed me when I first started six or seven years ago, right from the get-go.’

Supportive and open-minded your audience may well be, but that’s probably not going to calm your pre-performance jitters completely. So how should you prepare to read poems that have barely seen light beyond the underside of your mattress, let alone a pub filled with expectant poetry fans?

http://www.list.co.uk/article/47087-tips-for-performing-at-poetry-and-spoken-word-open-mic-nights/

Poetry Pamphlets for Sale

Poetry

oam-harry-giles-cover-medium-high-quality

My second pamphlet, Oam, launched in November 2013. It was the result of a residency with Govanhill Baths, a wonderful once-and-future swimming pool in Glasgow. It’s a sequence of poems in contemporary Scots, all inspired by the Baths and its incredible history. You can read one of the poems here on National Collective, with videos coming soon.

The pamphlet is £2 plus postage, with all proceeds going to the Govanhill Baths Community Trust, helping the project reopen as a community swimming pool and wellbeing centre.

Giles seems to veer between an intellectual, formal severity and a desire to celebrate, a naughtiness that charms.
Donald Gardner, Sabotage Reviews

My debut poetry pamphlet, Visa Wedding, launched in November 2012. It’s published by Stewed Rhubarb Press, and is a sequence of twenty love poems, except some of them are hate poems, and some of them are addressed to Scotland or America or a building or a frying pan. You can read more about it here. I am inordinately proud of it, delighted that it’s with a lovely local publisher, and excited to send it out into the world. Please give it a good home.

We’ve also made a wee sampler for you to download, which showcases the lovely design and three poems from the full pamphlet (Visa Wedding #1, Piercings and Forest).

This pamphlet is a mere £3, with proceeds going to me, to help me stay alive and mostly enjoy doing so.

Buying Pamphlets

If you’re in Edinburgh (and sometimes around the UK), either come to one of my events and buy it from me there, or email me at harry@harrygiles.org and I can arrange a dead-drop or super secret agent park bench meet-up. But if you want it shipped to you, hit the right button below. Oam is £3 for the UK, £5.50 for anywhere else in the world; Visa Wedding is £4 for the UK, £6.50 for anywhere else; or you can buy both for £5 / £7.50. If you want multiple copies, please email me for a shipping quote.

Oam: UK: £3 inc. shipping

Oam: Everywhere else: £5.50 inc. shipping

Visa Wedding: UK: £4 inc. shipping

Visa Wedding: Everywhere else: £6.50 inc. shipping

Two Pamphlets: UK: £5 inc. shipping

Two Pamphlets: Everywhere else: £7.50 inc. shipping

Disclaimer
(for any Home Office officials who might be reading)

My marriage is not a sham:
it is a poem, and therefore just
as likely as not to be true.

This is not a riot: Video and Blogs

Politics, Theatre

Thanks to the marvellous CrisisArt team, I can now share the full video of This is not a riot. It’s a video of a performance rather than a specially-made film, but image and audio quality is good throughout. I hope it brings you some sense of the fun and fury we had making it happen!

This is not a riot CAF12 from Crisis Art Festival on Vimeo.

For more about CrisisArt and the ideas behind the show, you might want to read my festival blogs:

Day One
Day Two
Day Three
Day Four
Day Five