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HARY GILONIS & SOPHIE ROBINSON FRIDAY 6TH APRIL THE PLOUGH - MUSEUM STREET 7.30PM £5/£3 Link |||||$mudgy l!ke 0n t3lEv:s*0n||||||
HARY GILONIS & SOPHIE ROBINSON FRIDAY 6TH APRIL THE PLOUGH - MUSEUM STREET 7.30PM £5/£3 Link |||||$mudgy l!ke 0n t3lEv:s*0n||||||
Don't forget, it's Openned 8 tonight at 7.30pm in The Foundry, London. We look forward to seeing you there.
Welcome to Openned. Version 2. Version 1 of Openned was a good site, but with the increasing diversity in both the form and format of the poetry submitted to us, we soon outgrew its capabilities. Now, with Version 2, and the incalculable help of web maestro Joe Davidian, we have created a website that allows us to focus on your writing. We have divided the site into five main sections: Blog: the home page will be the new home of the Openned blog. Nights: details of our upcoming readings, along with promotional materials. Press: we will be publishing work for purchase under the Openned press name, with the occasional free download thrown in for your delectation. Issue: we will be publishing Openned 'issues', a series of digital magazines in flux. There are more details on the issue page. Submit work / About / Links / RSS feed: find out how to submit work, more about us, links to websites, and information about the site's RSS feeds. We can now also accept any text or image file, video and audio files (in any format that can be played in Quicktime) and pdf files. See the submit work page for more information. If you have any information about readings, interesting websites, or poetry, please send them along for the Openned blog, with full credit to you. We hope you enjoy getting to know the new site, and look forward to receiving your work.
edited by Stephen Willey, Alex Davies Published: Mar 06 Publisher: Openned Press Format: PDF Price: £free View free: PDF (14MB) Openned Magazine was made available in June 2006 as a pdf download on Openned.com. Poets featured in this publication:
These reviews of Openned 6 (Wednesday 29th November 2006) were first published three years ago on Jow Lindsay's blog. They are now on the 15th March 2009 reproduced on Openned in full as documentation of the 6th Openned night. Openned 6 (part 1) "The sixth Openned reading will take place on Wednesday 29th November at 7.14pm at The Foundry." I arrived late but saw a film & three great readings (Piers Hugill, Emily Critchley & Redell Olsen). The table where there are sometimes books and flyers was bare. I remember seeing: Steve and Alex (the organisers). Sean Bonney, Sophie Robinson, Lydia White, Rosheen Brennan, Adam, Jonathan Stevenson, Drew Milne, Ceri Buckmaster, Tim Atkins, Seaton Gordon. Please tell me who else was there.
Below is a copy and paste job (date today: 15th March 2009) of a really old review of an Openned night by the website Insolent Boy. I think it has some not so small problems both in terms of its accuracy, and in terms that, when it is accurate the views expressed are not wholly representative of the views we hold now, but it is good to remember that these things happened, no? The night that this records was on Wednesday 28th June 2006. Readers included Jeff Hilson (replaced due to illness by Tim Atkins) Elizabeth Jane-Burnett, Keston Sutherland and Lydia White. There would have been more readers than this but I cannot remember who they were.
In a mildly smoky and dank cellar below Old Street's The Foundry, a cluster of uni scenesters congregate on a night that is humid and expectant. At the front, well-lit and theatrically draped in noir fabric, a poet announces (rough translation), "a Canadian cannot find his ass with both hands." A vibe of coolness and contented smiles are shared between cigarettes and sips of water. The poet (looking like a cross between the Brazilian footballer Leonardo and a ragged Peter Fonda) adds, "allowing to a shortage of cocaine I turned my back on public life." A tone is set, mildly serious but also mildly strange as if the poet is not a poet at all but a lawyer deconstructing a court case. During the break which follows, an earlier performance poet, Elizabeth-Jane Burnett, who recited poetry while asking the audience to prompt her to "skip", "stop", and "review" her work, chats amiably with friends. Seeing this as a chance to hop to the loo, I arrive, instead at the the bar and ask for pints of beer to take downstairs. During the second act we are treated to another poet, Keston Sutherland, less controlled, perhaps angrier, with a fierce shock of hair, who read a series of poems and observations which had the audience listening with interest, bristling, even. "Am I too low for the flymo?" he announces, then to the amusement of all, he added, "You can't put shit back in the donkey!" Two things noticed as I wait to interview the proprietors of the evening, Stephen Willey and Alex Davies: 1. Still no piss AND 2. My father's watch says 'Time for God." Time to interview the lads, no? Openned Up! at the Foundry, Old Street Tube. The two promoters, Stephen Willey and Alex Davies started the idea at Royal Holloway at the University of London with the idea of opening a magazine combining politics and experimental poetry with an openness - hence the idea for the reading series: Openned. "Part of it," says Willey, "comes from an anger I have of how they teach poetry at school. I find it patronizing. Also we are living in political times. Poetry is powerful. We want to use language in a divisive way, encourage people to think for themselves. There are adverts that say: Image is everything. Or, as in the case of the re-named Mars Bar, now called Believe. Why is the bar called Believe? Who says? People don't want to be told and they don't want to be manipulated." Adds co-founder Alex Davies, "Poetry is in excess of everything that can be said in an essay. There is a vitality to it." As the series grows, and there appears to be more demand and spaces in London opening up, others like Penned in the Margins are gaining recognition. This is fine with Davies, who says with a shrug,"we haven't set ourselves up in direct opposition to anybody." Looking around the room and judging by the quality of observation here and young faces it is easy to see that this night might be a success but for now the lads are putting the series on hold till September, as Davies states, "We're off to China for the summer to make iPods." The series resumes in September.