We start off today by continuing to look at poets' use of the ballad form, and other song-inflected poetic forms, with Lee Ann Brown. Specifically we'll look at a number of poems from her 2003 book, The Sleep that Changed Everything, including several that also appear in her song cycle, 13th Sunday in Ordinary Time. Links to PennSound MP3s are provided when available, and the readings are here: [PDF]
- Ballad of Amiri B. (60's)
- Ballad of New Orleans
- Ballad of Vertical Integration [MP3]
- Ballad of Phoebe Steele [MP3]
- Ballad of Susan Smith [MP3, followed by "Ballad of Vertical Integration"]
- Red Fox [MP3]
- 3 Rings [MP3]
- Vision Crown [MP3]
On Friday, we'll be looking at Ed Sanders' 1960s poetry rock group, the Fugs, but today we're looking at a later project by the poet. In 1992, Sanders conceived of a wide-ranging poetic projecting centered on the hymn "Amazing Grace," written by British poet and clergyman John Newton in 1779. He wrote to many of his poet friends, asking them to contribute their own reworkings of the piece, which is not only a fine example of traditional ballad meter, but also what's known as "Protestant hymn meter" — basically, alternating iambic lines of four and three feet (this is the form that the vast majority of Emily Dickinson's poetry is set in, by the way). The end result is The New Amazing Grace, which was first publicly performed in 1994 in New York City. I'd like you to read Sanders' introduction and the sequence itself — the appendix with letters from the contributors is interesting, but not essential (though feel free to read if you'd like). Here are a two poets performing their contributions to the collection:
Allen Ginsberg's "New Stanzas for 'Amazing Grace'"
Lee Ann Brown, "Three Graces" (includes Brown's "Amazing Grits" and two variations by Bernadette Mayer) [MP3]
Finally, we've already encountered Charles Bernstein's work a few weeks back, and we'll come across it again before the term's over. For today, I'd like you to look at his "The Ballad of the Girlie Man" [MP3].
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