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The Note From Andrew Duncan 
January 31st, 2007 by Jesse Glass

“Jesse,

you’re absolutley right.

I am dying with laughter over this. It sheds light on the conundrum “does
selling things destroy your brain?”. Let me tell it like it wuz. yes it
did, yes it does.
We have to put up with so much of this kidn of nonsense.

Wait. There may be a philologcial detail here. The flier (attached) is
shortened from the magazine. And does mention Pilpot and NOlan. It may
simply be an issue of Config Management.
* * *
I don’t want to stop laughing.

Paul (Holman) emailed me recently about a magickal working he has
undertaken. “call not THAT up which ye cannot put down”, i responded. You
would probably understand what Paul is up to. Dialogue with headless
folksinging demons. That sort of thing.”

* * *

Yes, I do indeed understand those sorts of things. Now it’s time (2:14 a.m.) to go back to sleep. Jess

“Jen’s” Fib Explained! 
January 31st, 2007 by Jesse Glass

Hold on! An e-mail attachment from Andrew Duncan explains the fib! He’d altered the text himself on a flyer he’d sent out about issue 19, which wasn’t included with the maga. Here’s the text:

Available now
ANGEL EXHAUST NINETEEN: INVEST IN YOUR ARCH-ENEMY
*pronounce: devastate your Aunt Jeremy

Poems by:
Joseph Macleod Adrian Clarke Alison Croggon
Kevin Nolan Peter Philpott Peter Manson
Chris Brownsword Paul Holman Jesse Glass
Kelvin Corcoran Philip Jenkins Brian Hardie
David Chaloner Wayne Clements John Muckle
Giles Goodland Ralph Hawkins
Colin Simms Elizabeth James
Andrew Duncan Harry Gilonis Marianne Morris

Edited by Charles Bainbridge and Andrew Duncan

Methan Beerlight, postmodern viral marketing consultant, talks to Manly Bannister, Angel Exhaust’s Head of Ideology, about the product conformance issues for no. 19.
Methan: So why is there no blurb?
Manly: We favour calm and serenity. Our contributors look on public image as like having a 13-year old version of yourself following you around talking egocentric nonsense.
Methan: Why did the last issue take 6 years to produce?
Manly: We had trouble finding a café to meet in.
Methan: Why is it called Invest in your arch-enemy?
Manly: We believe the unity of the poetry world is more important than quarrels about fine points of verse regulation. If you can’t kill your neighbours, you have to intermarry with them.
Methan: Did you call for the government to withdraw grants from magazines which published reviews not totally favourable to the poets you publish?
Manly: No, that was someone else.
Methan: Why is it called Devastate your Aunt Jeremy?
Manly: It was a misunderstanding between the two editors.
Methan: Could we just describe the individual poets?
Manly: Poets like Philpott and Nolan are too overwhelming and intricate to be described in a few words.
Methan: I’ve never heard of them.
Manly: Maybe you should read Angel Exhaust.

140 pages available now
ANGEL EXHAUST 19 available for £7 from 12 Eliot Hill, Lewisham, London, SE13 7EB
Cheques payable to Andrew Duncan please.

So “Jen’s” not a fibber after all! My apologies to “Jen” who was just copying from the flyer.

What’s the moral of all this? BUY ANGEL EXHAUST!!!! It’s a great read!!! Laughing, Jess

“Jen’s” Fib About Angel Exhaust 19 Up At Saline 
January 31st, 2007 by Jesse Glass

We were checking the net when we found a little bit of creative editing by “Jen” posted on the venerable Salt Publishing website. She does a little creative editing of the end of a light Andrew Duncan piece which appeared at the end of the magazine. I’ll give the last lines from Duncan and then the last lines from “Jen” as they appear on Saline.

Ducan (pg. 142 of issue 19):

Duncan: Methan: So what’s the poetry like?
Manly: It is full of wonderfully sibilant s and amazingly lateral l sounds. Let me expand on that if you will. Corcoran is like Corcoran. Glass is like Glass. Holman is like Holman. Holman is more like Holman than like Morris.
Methan: I’ve never heard of them.
Manly: Maybe you should read Angel Exhaust.

Jen’s version today on the Saline site:

Methan: Could we just describe the individual poets?
Manly: Poets like Philpott and Nolan are too overwhelming and intricate to be described in a few words.
Methan: I’ve never heard of them.
Manly: Maybe you should read Angel Exhaust.

http://saltpublishing.com/saline/index.php?topic=235.0 is the lnk.

As you can see, this is a blatant fib.

I personally have nothing against philpott or Nolan, but notice that Duncan did not choose to point these writers out. It was quite other writers, myself included!

I’ve written a note to Chris Emery and posted this same note on the Buffalo list and the British poets list. I’ve also notfied Andrew Duncan about this. Maybe “Jen” felt it necessary to talk up Philpott and Nolan because they were personal favorites, but she had no right to misrepresent what Andrew Duncan wrote and post it. That indeed is a perversion of the truth and–sad to say–a lie.

Received and Highly Recommended: Angel Exhaust 19 
January 29th, 2007 by Jesse Glass

The Angel’s touched down again iwth fine poems from the likes of Alison Croggon (a name you’ll be hearing more of around here), Peter Philpott, Chris Brownsword, Kelvin Corcoran, and Andrew Duncan, among others. New names, but good ones: Paul Holman, Marianne Morris. It’s a great read, what more can I say, except buy it for 7 pounds.

Address: www.angelexhaust.com
or
12, Eliot Hill, Lewisham, London, SE13 7EB.

Arnold Schoenberg at You Tube as well! 
January 26th, 2007 by Jesse Glass

The riches are endless at You Tube, and the fantatsic Schoenberg Foundation has supplied some valuable interviews with Schoenberg’s widow, son, daughter and former students, as well as performances of “The Lucky Hand”–one of my favorites–and “Jacob’s Ladder.” Thanks Schoenberg foundation!

Tod Slaughter At You Tube! 
January 26th, 2007 by Jesse Glass

One of my favorite horror actors of all time can be found at the fantastic you tube giving a taste of his great performance in Sweeney Todd, when he grins and announces that he’ll be happy to “Polish you off, sir!”

The Great Learning Orchestra Page Up At MySpace 
January 19th, 2007 by Jesse Glass

Their versions of “Gyp the Blood” and Satie’s “Vexations” are worth the trip! Check ‘em out by clicking here!

greatlearningorcehstra.jpg

Ahadada Books Page at Wikipedia 
January 19th, 2007 by Jesse Glass

Take a look. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ahadada_Books

John Cage Self-Timed Self-Interviews Up At You Tube 
January 16th, 2007 by Jesse Glass

And at Ralph Lichtensteiger’s phenomenal site. Follow Google to either or both! Thanks Ralph for the heads up! Jess

Review of GV6: The Odyssey 
January 16th, 2007 by Daniel Sendecki

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GV6 The Odyssey
By: Bob Bryan; ASIN: 0536109262
Producer: Bryan World Productions; Format: DVD
Visit their website; Length: 72 minutes



GV6: The Odyssey’s scope is epic, packing 31 poets into 72 minutes of film. This is its greatest weakness but also, in a manner of speaking, its crowning achievement—framing an engrossing narrative despite such a large assemblage. That being said, there is no one subject whose appearance I could do without, but many times found myself wanting a poet to elaborate on their answers (Luis Campos, for example). To be fair, the extras included on the DVD do provide further context.

Bob Bryan make the quick cuts—necessitated by the vast ground that he has to cover—often work to his advantage. The frenzied pace offers images, for example, of Brendan Constantine and Jennifer Tseng juxtaposed—Constantine’s boisterous enthusiasm for his subject serves to illuminate Tseng’s careful, sometimes self-effacing answers. When asked about the nature of poetry, Constantine boisterously offers, “Poetry is life and its avoidance is death” while Tseng tenders her answer: “An internal world”. And they are both absolutely correct.

Interviewed in often private spaces—Bob Bryan elicits candid, thought-provoking answers from his subjects touching on subjects from the personal to the public, the sacred to the profane, touching on elements of culture, family, love, language and self-perception, among others. The movie opens with the statement: “There is no one truth”. Throughout the rest of the film, this statement is echoed in the answers from a plethora of representative poets, whose experiences resonate from varied ethnicities, cultures and ages (although, not necessarily geographies, as the majority appear to be operating out of Southern California). The diversity of his subjects, as Bryan is well aware, serves only to underline and strengthen their similarities: their love of language, and their need to express themselves.

One minor quibble though: what’s with the censoring of words? I realize that this DVD, serving as a basis for beginning writers, is likely destined for the classroom but the censorship is intrusive and not necessary. In the course of the film, Jawanza Dumisani recounts the advice of one of his mentors, “Tell us what you want to tell us and just trust the language. Trust the language.” If there’s one thing this documentary makes an effort to understand, it’s that, if a poets says fuck, they mean “fuck”.

In answering the question “What is poetry?” performance poet Askew offers: “It’s like taking a big shit.” Truer words were never spoken, but their impact is diminished somewhat.

In the waning minutes of the film, South California poet FrancEye offers “Everybody is a poet. They just don’t exercise that part of themselves.” It appears to me that this is a statement Bryan wants his audience to take to the bank, but it’s one that rings particularly hollow–at least to these ears. These poets are not everybody, they are special—by virtue of their genius, their insanity, their egos, their introspection, etc. Some would argue that poets enjoy a privileged and enviable position, having the opportunity to express themselves and contribute to the shaping of American culture in contrast to most individuals who are more or less forced into the passive position of consumer–payment for books or DVDs being their only contributions.

But this, of course, is not what Bryan is after. The film’s message doesn’t play out in the big questions, ie “What is poetry?” or “What is the nature of truth?” but in its multitudinous and divergent answers.



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