Monday, July 01, 2013

Post-Solstice Recap

After two months of radio silence, here's some of what's been happening.

In May, the Brief Nudity reading tour kicked off with a special event in St. Louis.


No Lizard Kings was created to discourage, disparage and dispel the myth of the poet-rocker as some kind of hipster satyr. I was joined by fellow harmonic versifier Ken Kase, whose book, Seven Sonnets is available from Amazon. A month later, the event came to Chicago, again with Ken as well as local chanteuse and word warrior Snežana Žabić. This was the official book launch party for Brief Nudity, and a great time was had by everyone!


Also in May, I read from Brief Nudity at Nicola's Books in Ann Arbor, Michigan. It was a pleasure to see many familiar faces at this event.


There are additional upcoming readings for Brief Nudity in Chicago; Murray, KY; Nashville; Berkeley, CA; Waukesha and Milwaukee, WI, with other dates TBD. Go here for your best central source.

I also recently completed my twenty week Hands on Stanzas residency at Skinner West Elementary. You may read about the various lesson plans and ideas taught throughout the year, as well as peruse student poems through the Poetry Center's Skinner blog.

Thursday, April 18, 2013

Poems in Packingtown Review

I'm thrilled to have four of my napkin poems in the latest issue of the esteemed (and recently revived) Packingtown Review! Be sure to read my artist's statement for some insights into my 'process' and hope you enjoy!

First Review of Brief Nudity!

The good folks at Heavy Feather Review published a thoughtful and very flattering review of Brief Nudity today. Check it out here, and thanks to Jordan Sanderson for the thumbs up!

On a related note, the Spring Book Bling Reading Tour for Brief Nudity is more or less set, aside from a few potential gigs still in the works. You can always refer to the Appearances page at my official site or Brief Nudity's Facebook page for updates.

When all the tour dates for spring and summer have been finalized, I will post them here.

Hope to see you at an upcoming event!

Hands on Stanzas Update

Recent residencies at Skinner West revolved around work by Claude McKay, Elizabeth Bishop, and Kenneth Patchen. Examples of student picture poems (one from each classroom) in the style of Patchen are below.






Wednesday, March 20, 2013

Status Quo(tes) on the Vernal Equinox

Getting caught up on a few outstanding items on this chilly first day of spring.

For some insights into my last few Hands on Stanzas residencies at Skinner West, check out these Poetry Center blog posts, when classes focused on poems by Bernadette Mayer, Robert Frost, and Natasha Trethewey. I'm nearing the halfway point and having a terrific time!

Biggest recent news involves my trip to Boston earlier this month to attend the annual AWP Conference, for the launch of Brief Nudity. In addition to reading for my publisher, Salmon Poetry, and doing a book signing, I also participated in the Festival of Language's event, caught a few panels, wore out my shoes, and got snowed on, which is par for the AWP course. I'll be announcing further reading dates for Brief Nudity's official book tour soon.

Reading from Brief Nudity at Salmon Poetry's book launch

Before departing for the east coast I was also fortunate to be asked to read as part of Debra Bruce's shindig for her latest book, Survivors' Picnic; upon returning, I also once again partook in Northeastern Illinois University's faculty authors reception, honoring work published in 2012, which for me would be my e-chapbook, Basic Cable Couplets.

Whew!

Saturday, February 23, 2013

Brooklyner Web Issues

The Brooklyner is a multimedia website and literary journal made available in a number of electronic and print formats. One of the poems from Brief Nudity, "You Are Untrustworthy" appeared there originally about a year ago. If you'd like to see the entire web issue #3, including my poem, go here for a PDF version. It's a great magazine, well worth your support, with a brand new edition due soon, so check 'em out!

Thursday, February 21, 2013

Giving Poetry

Today at Skinner I read Bernadette Mayer's poem, "The Tragic Condition of the Statue of Liberty" (a "collaboration" with Emma Lazarus). After discussing the concept of anaphora with the students, they wrote their own "give me" poems. The full report may be found here. Enjoy!

Wednesday, February 20, 2013

Previously, at Hands on Stanzas...

Students in Ms. Ellis' room work on their haiku variations  
Here's a quick recap of my prior two residencies at Skinner West.

Two weeks ago, I brought in some of Robert Hass' selected haiku by Issa. However, instead of having students write traditional haiku in response, I created three spinoff forms from which they could choose: my-ku (about themselves), you-ku (about someone else), and psy-ku (crazy or nonsense haiku). You can read all about the results here.

Last week, classes fell on Valentine's Day. I knew there would be no avoiding the inevitable, so I had students read E. E. Cummings' "[love is more thicker than forget]," and write poems about people or things they love. The full story is here.

Approaching my fifth week, it's been a terrific time so far. These second graders are extremely bright and eager, and the teachers have been nothing short of amazing. More to come!




Wednesday, February 13, 2013

The Next Big Thing: Authors Tagging Authors


“The Next Big Thing” asks writers to self-interview about recent or forthcoming books with 7-8 designated questions, post somewhere in the blog-o-sphere, and then “tag” five writers for the next week to do the same. I was tagged by the inimitable Debra Bruce.

What is the title of the book?

Where did the idea come from for the book?
My prior quartet of tomes (I Am Spam, About the Author, abbrev, and Basic Cable Couplets) were all thematically-driven, which is perfect for the chapbook format. It's a concept I used to eschew, but I had so much fun with I Am Spam (poems based on spam email subject lines) that it added fuel to that part of the creative bonfire, and I started thinking more actively about other short-form ideas. I Am Spam was published in 2004; in 2006, a number of things happened: I became an owner, not a renter, for the first time in my adult life; I enrolled in an MFA program twenty years after completing my undergrad education; and my mother died. This all impacted my life in general, but also my writing particularly. Thematic work I get into feverishly, winding up with a draft rather quickly, whereas full-length manuscripts are assembled after a specific period of time, in recognition of writing done within those parameters, and their cohesion is determined after the fact rather than as a part of the process. The poems in Brief Nudity cover about three years, and many are directly responsive to my mental state, though perhaps not obviously so. There are vestiges of another series that I toyed with comprising a separate entity – the Loma Prieta persona poems – but I began to feel that too many of them would be repetitive or even oppressive, so they wound up being folded into the scope of the longer book.

What genre does your book fall under?
Poetry

What actors would you choose to play the part of your characters in a
 movie rendition?
I'm a big proponent of the merits of popular culture, so part of this is easy to answer. Another persona subject in the book is “Dracula's Daughter,” so Gloria Holden, who assayed Contessa Zaleska in the 1936 movie of the same name, would be a no-brainer, though if I could cast a contemporary actress Julia Goldani Telles, one of the stars of Bunheads would be better suited to how I visualize her. Jeff Goldblum, Evel Knievel, and Tom DeLay appear in other poems; Goldblum and DeLay could play themselves – well, DeLay after he gets out of the pokey – but with Knievel kaput, unless CGI (which I dislike) is utilized to insert the old Evel into new scenes, that won't do. George Hamilton and Sam Elliott have channeled him in the past, but I'd opine they're too long in the tooth to lively up the Evel I have in mind; George Eads (who plays Nick Stokes on CSI) was cast in a 2004 TV movie, but I don't watch the show so I'll go out on a limb and say that I'd enjoy seeing Daniel Day-Lewis as Knievel, mainly because he would insist on remaining in character throughout the shoot and break a few bones at least. Using animation – which is so popular with the kids nowadays – Hercules, The Angry Whopper®, Tweety Bird and Winnie the Pooh could all be realized quite easily, though only after paying through the nose for the rights to fleetingly use these vigorously trademarked icons.

What is the one sentence synopsis of your book?
Brief Nudity's poems are concerned with the juxtaposition between elegy and irreverence.”

How long did it take you to write the first draft of the manuscript?
As mentioned above, most of the book was composed from 2006-2009. Leonardo da Vinci supposedly said, “Art is never finished, only abandoned” (Paul Valéry is attributed with switching out “art” for “a poem”), and while that sounds thoughtful in theory, in practice I disagree. Writers have always been historically, perhaps stubbornly isolationistic; that's endemic of being creative. Writing-by-committee is not something I've ever subscribed to, and I fear that having too many cooks in the kitchen creates even more dilemmas – there's a time to dither and a time to be done with it. However, I received some excellent feedback from my MFA co-poets (Chris Collins, Pamela Johnson Parker, Karissa Sorrell, Chet Weise, and Scott Woodham) and faculty mentors (Brian Barker and Ann Neelon) that proved invaluable to many poems individually, as well as with envisioning the book as a collection. Without all their input it would not be the same, and it may not have been published.

Who or what inspired you to write this book?
See above comments regarding pop culture. I love movies and music, and don't distinguish between 'high art' and what others may consider lowbrow; part one of Brief Nudity is introduced by a quote from John Prine, who I think is the ideal poster child for such tightrope-walking. My mother dying was also an influence, though ironically enough it resulted in two poems about my father, who died in 1980. The Loma Prieta earthquake prompted four poems; I was in San Francisco at the time, and maintain some vivid memories of that day (October 17, 1989). If you live in the Bay Area for awhile, you become inured to earthquakes, which are common, but this one was magnitude 7.1. Luckily no one I knew was injured, and because I lived in the Mission, which is built on bedrock, the worst that happened in my apartment is some books fell off my shelves; we did lose power, but it was restored relatively quickly. I do recall how everyone was outside, talking excitedly about the quake, venting as a form of auto-therapy; my neighborhood was abnormally dark, but it was oddly soothing, and I felt disappointed when the lights came back on. The windows of a pizza place up the street had shattered so they were making pies with their gas ovens, and passing free slices through the opening before boarding up. These memories instigated the Loma Prieta poems but it was only after reading a New York Times article about some of the victims of the I-880 collapse in Oakland that I was finally able to write them.

What else about your book might pique the reader’s interest?
I'm originally from Flint, Michigan, and while I was still in high school I started working as a reporter for The Flint Voice, whose co-founder and editor was Michael Moore. Michael was one of the first people who gave me a forum as a writer, and the experience of working there was often chaotic, but enjoyable as well as educational; it also cemented many of the ideas I already had about my hometown. Since I worked for the Voice, I was frequently called “pinko,” “punk rocker” and “fag” by my less enlightened Flint brethren, epithets I wore as badges of iconoclasm. Roger and Me also accurately conveys Flint's very sad and strange, socially-suicidal tendencies. I came of age at a time when the city still had some diminishing vestiges of culture, which I craved, including a downtown with historical relevance and of course its importance as a union town, but it was on the decline with jobs being outsourced and people fleeing in droves. I wouldn't be the person I am today if I had grown up somewhere that was more culturally enriching and artistically endowed; living in Flint was a struggle at a critical time and that continues to influence everything I do.

Will your book be self-published or represented by an agency?
Brief Nudity is being published by Salmon Poetry, Ltd., Ireland's most prolific poetry publisher, and is distributed in the US by Dufour Editions.

My tagged writers for next Wednesday are:

Monday, February 11, 2013

Brief Nudity available for pre-order now!

My new book of poetry, Brief Nudity is now available for pre-order from Salmon Poetry

Shipping is free if you order two (or more) copies, so get nude(r) today!

Friday, February 01, 2013

Second Week at Skinner West

Edip Cansever's poem "Table" was this week's Hands on Stanzas residency selection. Read all about the classes here, and check out some of the students from Mrs. Rupp's room in the photo below -- hard at work on their poems!


Friday, January 25, 2013

First Week at Skinner West

You may now read all about my first week as a poet-in-residence at Skinner West through the Poetry Center's blog. (We read and discussed Mark Strand's "Eating Poetry.") I'll be posting regularly throughout the remainder of the school year, so please check in!

Saturday, January 12, 2013

The Return of (and to) Hands on Stanzas

Working as an adjunct has its pros, the most obvious being that one is free from much of the departmental hoop-jumping that tries the patience of full-timers. But the tip of the con iceberg would be the never-ending running around to secure work from semester to semester, especially since said work can evaporate in an instant if full-time faculty members lose classes due to low enrollment; at that time, courses assigned to adjuncts are up for grabs, and no matter how well-liked a part-time instructor may be, if one of their contracted classes fills a full-timer's vacancy, there's not much that can be done -- aside from getting assigned a possible last-minute replacement, which has its own set of difficulties, such as scrambling to set-up a class bequeathed in the eleventh hour.

I've been fortunate to avoid this particular pitfall so far -- that is, until this semester. I've been teaching on two campuses the last few years. One is in Chicago, and the other a short commute away in Indiana. The longer drive only makes sense economically if I have at least two classes, so when I lost one of my composition sections to a tenured instructor, I had no choice but to surrender the second. I was disappointed, but also oddly relieved, since it meant a break from the 80+ mile roundtrip drive twice weekly for the semester. I'd save on gas, and have more time to devote to my three sections at Northeastern, as well as my other extracurricular activities.

But good karma intervened as I was soon after contacted by the Poetry Center of Chicago to see if I was interested in teaching as a poet-in-residence once again for their resuscitated Hands on Stanzas program. If the call had come any sooner, I would have felt obligated to stick with my prior commitment, and put off the residency option until the fall. Of course, I said yes.

I've written extensively about my Hands on Stanzas experiences in the past. The program is what steered me away from years of working what Philip Levine used to refer to as "stupid jobs" and toward something more attuned to my tastes (not to mention performer proclivities), so I was disappointed when it went on hiatus in 2011 due to financial difficulties. Also, much as I enjoy working in higher education, being able to balance my college classes with teaching poetry in the public schools creates the perfect academic equilibrium.

With 3rd, 4th and 5th graders at Solomon Elementary

I'll be starting at Skinner West School shortly, and will be blogging about my ongoing 20 weeks of classroom experience (as well as sharing student writing) through the link at the PC site. Wish me luck!

Tuesday, January 08, 2013

Poem in North Chicago Review

I have new work in the debut issue of North Chicago Review, now available! It is one of a series of persona poems written in the voices of victims of the 1989 Loma Prieta earthquake (an event I witnessed firsthand).

All four poems also appear in my next book, Brief Nudity, out in March from Salmon Poetry Ltd.

Thursday, December 20, 2012

Brief Nudity

My forthcoming book of poems from Salmon, Brief Nudity, now has pages on both Facebook as well as Goodreads!

Please check in regularly for news regarding the official book launch, book tour, readings, and other special events, including appearances at the AWP conference in March.

Monday, November 26, 2012

8th Annual Alex Chilton Birthday Bash

Since 2005 I've organized and participated in this annual event, commemorating the iconoclastic personality and songwriting of Alex Chilton. This year's line up looks to be the best yet!

Advance tickets are now on sale and will also be available at the door the night of the show.



Tuesday, November 20, 2012

NEIU English Department Benefit

I'm pleased to announce that among a few special end-of-the-year events, I will be participating in a benefit performance for Northeastern Illinois University's English Department. The way swanky poster, below, has all the applicable details.



That's Friday, December 7th at 9 PM. Hope to see you there!

Saturday, October 20, 2012

New poem in Circa

I'm pleased to announce that my poem, "The Angry Whopper®" appears in the latest issue of Circa.

Tuesday, September 25, 2012

Five poems in Cedars

I'm pleased to say that I have five (!) poems in the latest issue of Cedars. Check 'em out, and hope you enjoy!

Tuesday, September 18, 2012

Two poems in Artichoke Haircut

I'm thrilled to have a pair of poem in Artichoke Haircut's latest issue (vol. 4), available at discerning bookstores nationwide. It's a great journal. Check it out!

Friday, August 31, 2012

New poem in Circa

I'm pleased to announce that I have a new poem in the third issue of Circa. Check it out!

Friday, August 10, 2012

Wit Rabbit piece in Northwest Passage

Swell slide show with voiceover by poet-journalist Heather Momyer on the Wit Rabbit reading I took part in earlier this week at Quenchers in today's edition of The Northwest Passage. You can hear me reading from my book Abbrev, from Beard of Bees.

Monday, August 06, 2012

Wit Rabbit Reading Series tomorrow night

Tomorrow night is the tenth Wit Rabbit reading, and I'm happy to be appearing along with these other fine folks: Traci Brimhall, Sophie Grimes, Kyle McCord, and Glen Shaheen.

The festivities begin at 7 PM at Quenchers. Hope to see you there!

Saturday, August 04, 2012

Illinois Center for the Book

The Illinois Authors Wiki is a project of the Illinois Center for the Book. It is a means to share information about Illinois authors, photographers and illustrators.

My page on the site has recently been updated. Check it out, as well as sites for many other Illinois-based authors.

Monday, July 30, 2012

Sir Slob digital download

If you download my Sir Slob album by or before August 3rd through CD Baby, I will receive 100% of the price.

This applies to MP3 sales only on CDBaby.com — NOT on partner sites, such as iTunes, Amazon, Spotify, etc.

Download your copy today! Thanks in advance for your support.



Selected reviews of Sir Slob:

Whether he's dissecting "The King of Close Enough," or decrying fate by "Panning for Gold in the Litterbox," Larry O. Dean's songs on Sir Slob are dense with smart, tuneful wordplay. This album is rueful, romantic and rockin'! The perfect, bracing antidote to a lousy work day or an episode of American Idol. THE MUSIC ATTIC

Larry O. Dean’s Sir Slob also has its share of not-unwelcome psych-tinged power-pop damage; you’ll detect everything from Shoes to Ray Davies to Love. MAGNET

Dean is known for his Dylan-esque half-sung/half-spoken delivery of literate folk tunes with a rock backing. He can come off like Lou Reed or Matthew Sweet, depending on the tune. NASHVILLE CITY PAPER

Sir Slob has all sorts of nifty touchstones. You can hear bits of Lou Reed, Steve Wynn and Jonathan Richman, but he takes those influences, churns them around and makes something new. He’s good at sonic texturing, often blending classical strings with buzzing, alterna-nerd rock guitars. THE TENNESSEAN

Exhibiting the kind of deft self-mockery that made Paul Westerberg a disciple of Alex Chilton, Larry O. Dean puts the writer back in singer-songwriter with his appealing pop dossiers and laconic wit. MOUNTAIN XPRESS (ASHEVILLE, NC)

Dean and band deliver a tight primarily folk-rocking set, songs like "Time to Kill," "King of Close Enough," "Tail Wagging the Dog," "Panning for Gold in the Litterbox" and "Cuts Both Ways" suggest a strong influence of the melodic country-folk rock of Buffalo Springfield, the latter-day Byrds, Neil Young and Tom Petty (albeit sung by Lou Reed). Poetry and rock n roll, a combination of the sacred and the profane finds its balance in Sir Slob. Fans of singer-songwriter magic will relish every minute. AMPLIFIER

Tremendous songs that fall somewhere between a poppier Neil Young and Lou Reed. SHAKE IT UP!

Lyrically sharp, and big in a musical sense -- think a poppier Lou Reed -- Dean's second album proper provides a powerful and immediate aural rush. It is distanced from the standard singer-songwriter fare by a sound that is fleshed out by a full band, mixing open twangy Americana with a dense and more complex instrumentation. BUCKETFULL OF BRAINS

R.E.M. meets Bob Dylan, the two meet have some beer, or at least that’s where it sounds like Larry O. Dean’s strange mix of alt. country, folk, and 1960's rock and roll originated from ... Most reminiscent of Neil Young’s collection of 1970's recordings and in a lot of ways their styles are very similar, there's grit, and truth paired with guitars and low, almost pleading vocals. ALL MUSIC GUIDE

Saturday, July 14, 2012

The Me Decade reviews added

The Me Decade's official page has been updated with numerous paper-only reviews from the archives. Check 'em out!

Monday, July 09, 2012

Poems in Circa

I'm very proud to have three poems in the inaugural issue of Circa: "Dracula's Daughter," "Loma Prieta #1" and "Loma Prieta #2."

All three are persona poems, with the latter two taken from a series about the 1989 Loma Prieta earthquake, an event I experienced firsthand when I lived in San Francisco.

Thanks to editor Tony Powell for the support!

Tuesday, July 03, 2012

Poems in quarter after now on Issuu

Issuu now has the second issue of quarter after available, including five of my poems, as well as work by many other incredible writers and visual artists.

Enjoy!

Monday, June 25, 2012

BCC Review

Very nice review of Basic Cable Couplets by Sarah Dawson in today's Poetry After Ink.

Poems in Quarter After

I'm pleased to have a few poems in the latest issue of Quarter After. An e-version from Issuu should be available by the end of the week, with hard copy published after that.
Great way to start the week! Hope you enjoy.

Sunday, June 17, 2012

Sunday, June 10, 2012

Upcoming Readings

I have a few readings coming up this summer to let you know about.

On July 6th, I'll be one of the featured readers for the First Friday series, presented by Waiting 4 the Bus. These are always a lot of fun and I'm in good company here, as the poster, below, shows.


The following Monday, July 9th, I'll once again be presenting selections from my work and giving a craft lecture during Northeastern Illinois University's Creative Writing Institute.

Last, but not least, on August 7th I've been invited to read for the newish Wit Rabbit Reading Series, which takes place at one of my favorite local watering holes, Quenchers.

Check out the links for further information, and hope to see you at one (or all) of these events!

Tuesday, June 05, 2012

Post Office on iTunes

Post Office's WNUR Demos EP is now available from iTunes. Get your copy today! (And while you're at it, check out PO's two other full-length releases as well: Public Displays of Affection and Fables in Slang.)

Monday, June 04, 2012

Poetry Cram Anthology

I am pleased to be one of many poets featured in the Poetry Cram anthology, recently published by ChicagoPoetry.com Press. Get your copy today!

Saturday, May 19, 2012

Basic Cable Couplets

I'm happy to announce that Silkworms Ink will be publishing my latest chapbook, Basic Cable Couplets. I'll keep you posted, but the turnaround may be quite fast.

Sunday, April 22, 2012

Exquisite Quartet

Once again, multitasker Meg Tuite asked me to contribute to her monthly "Exquisite Quartet" column in Used Furniture Review, and the result is here. Enjoy!

Fussbudgets, Christine Wall and Post Office releases

Three albums of material by The Fussbudgets (Hog Wash!, The Naked & the Daft, and Fresh Brood) are now available from iTunes, Bandcamp, and Amazon. In addition, the band now has their own official page on the web -- check it out!

Available May 8th from Zenith Beast is Christine Wall's remastered Kittenbush EP, but it may be pre-ordered now from Bandcamp and Amazon (and soon, iTunes).

Finally, Post Office's WNUR Demos is out May 22nd, but it too may be pre-ordered from Bandcamp as well as Amazon (with iTunes to follow).


Thursday, March 15, 2012

"Three Female Roommates"

Another of my 'basic cable couplets' appears in the current issue of The Stone Hobo, complete with an illustration by "clobberin'" Ken Rasak!

Wednesday, March 14, 2012

Malcontent video

Continuing with the publicity blitz surrounding Zenith Beast's spring releases, here's the video to Malcontent's "In Deeper Debt," from Embarrassment of Riches, out March 20th!

Tuesday, March 13, 2012

Meg Tuite's Exquisite Quartet

Meg Tuite was one of the features for my mega-reading during AWP. She also writes a regular column for Used Furniture Review called “Exquisite Quartet” (a pun on exquisite corpse). In her own words,

“Exquisite Quartet” is a collaboration of four writers who will put together a story, piece by piece. Each writer adds a bit more to the racy tale until, like an old beat-up sectional couch, it miraculously fits together. A disreputable, yet virginal theme will be chosen each month, as will three non-virginal writers. Meg Tuite will lead off the ménage a quatre.

In honor of the largess of AWP, this month's edition includes contributions from 33 writers, myself included. Check it out, and thanks to Meg for asking me to participate!

Friday, March 09, 2012

Tuesday, March 06, 2012

Throw the Lions to the Christians remaster out today!

My remastered fifth solo album (with bonus material), Throw the Lions to the Christians is out today. Lend an ear and get your copy from Bandcamp, Amazon, Spotify, MediaNet, eMusic, Zune, Rhapsody, Nokia, Google Music, and/or VerveLife.

Thanks for your continued support of independent music!

Tuesday, February 28, 2012

AWP reading-o-rama!

The AWP conference officially gets underway tomorrow. There will be much rubbing-of-writerly-elbows, hobbing-of-nobs, and eyeballing of purty printed products at the conference itself. In addition, I will be participating is three off-site events:

9 PM Wednesday, February 29th at The Hungry Brain, as part of Salmon Poetry's mega-reading

9 PM Thursday, March 1st at the world-famous Billy Goat Tavern, as part of Heavy Feather Review's "Everything Will Be OK" event

and last, but not least,

7 PM Friday, March 2nd at The Horseshoe for "This Page Intentionally Left Blank," followed by music from The Injured Parties, Khalid Hanifi, and Decoy Prayer Meeting.

Hope to see you at one (or all!) of these to-do's.

Crab Orchard Series in Poetry

I just learned that the manuscript I am currently shopping around, Activities of Daily Living was a semifinalist for this year's Crab Orchard Series in Poetry!

Though I wish it had been selected for publication, I am nonetheless pleased and honored by this distinction.

Sunday, February 19, 2012

Outsight Radio Hours live interview

The Outsight Radio Hours Internet radio program will interview me live on the air at 4:00 PM Eastern time (GMT -5) on Sunday,  February 26th. Information on the show and how to listen and participate via chat is available here.

Among the topics DJ Tearaway will be discussing with me are upcoming reissues of music on the Zenith Beast label.

Note that the program is re-streamed one week later on Radio Freedom from 5-7 PM ET, and all Outsight Radio broadcasts are archived here.

Hope you can tune in!

Saturday, February 18, 2012

Poems in SPUDgUN

Two more poems from my Basic Cable Couplets manuscript are in this just-published debut issue of SPUDgUN. Enjoy!

Thursday, February 16, 2012

Poem in The Brooklyner

I have a new poem in The Brooklyner, which has one of the loveliest layouts I've seen lately. Check it out!

Thursday, February 09, 2012

New poem in Stanley the Whale

Lo and behold, the good folks at Stanley the Whale have been so kind as to publish another of my "basic cable couplets." Hope you enjoy!

Tuesday, February 07, 2012

Fussbudgets discography now available for pre-order; out April 3rd

It's been over twenty years in the making, but collected works by The Fussbudgets are now available for pre-order from Bandcamp!

Pre-ordering gives you instant access to selected tracks, and once the digital editions are released on April 3rd, you'll automatically be emailed a link to download the full albums at that time (some with bonus material). After the albums launch, you may also purchase them via iTunes, Amazon, Spotify, MediaNet, eMusic, Zune, Rhapsody, Nokia, and VerveLife.

In the ZB queue are selected demos, early recordings, and live material, but the band's haphazardly-released major works (the albums Hog Wash! and The Naked & the Daft, as well as the EPs Fresh Brood, Headache of the Gods, and sad fearful playful excited -- EPs gathered together in a single package -- constitute the band's oeuvre, for historical purposes).

Refer to individual releases for more background information on the recording, line-ups, and songs.

Hope you enjoy, and thanks for your support!

Thursday, February 02, 2012

Poem in Stanley the Whale

I have a poem up at Stanley the Whale today. Check it out! It's another selection from my Basic Cable Couplets manuscript.

Monday, January 16, 2012

Embarrassment of Riches remaster now available for pre-order

The official release date for Malcontent's Embarrassment of Riches remaster with bonus material is March 20th, but you may now pre-order it from Bandcamp!

Pre-ordering gives you instant access to one of the tracks, and once the record is released in March, you'll automatically be emailed a link to download the full EP at that time.

Get your copy today! After the album launches, you may also purchase it via iTunes, Amazon, Spotify, MediaNet, eMusic, Zune, Rhapsody, Nokia, and VerveLife.

Throw the Lions to the Christians remaster now available for pre-order

The official release date for the Throw the Lions to the Christians remaster with bonus tracks is March 6th, but you may now pre-order it from Bandcamp! Pre-ordering gives you instant access to two of the tracks, and once the record is released in early March, you'll automatically be emailed a link to download the full album at that time.

Get your copy today! After the album launches, you may also purchase it via iTunes, Amazon, Spotify, MediaNet, eMusic, Zune, Rhapsody, Nokia, and VerveLife.

Tuesday, January 10, 2012

Nine poems in The Yellow Ham

I may still be writing 2011 on my checks (yes, I still write some), but with 2012 fully underway I'm very pleased to announce I have nine (!) poems from my Basic Cable Couplets project in the debut issue of The Yellow Ham. Enjoy!

Friday, December 30, 2011

Three poems in Clapboard House

I'm very pleased to end 2011 with three poems in the latest edition of Clapboard House! Check 'em out! And happy new year to one and all!

Wednesday, December 21, 2011

New poems in latest issue of blue & yellow dog

I've got four poems from my Basic Cable Couplets manuscript in the most recent issue of blue & yellow dog.

Embarrassment of Riches re-release (remaster with bonus material)

Two weeks after the release of the remastered/re-sequenced Throw the Lions to the Christians, Zenith Beast will reissue Malcontent's Embarrassment of Riches EP, with an extra track! It too has been beautifully remastered (by the amazing Wally Sound). Date of availability is March 20th. Here's the event announcement.

Throw the Lions to the Christians re-release (remaster with bonus material)

Zenith Beast will be releasing my fifth solo album, Throw the Lions to the Christians on March 6th. It has been remastered, with its originally-intended sequence restored, including two never-before-heard tracks. Here's a link to the label's event announcing the release.

Wednesday, November 23, 2011

Live at Gallery West Espresso

Latest release from Zenith Beast Records is this reading during my 2004 book tour for Identity Theft for Dummies.


Tuesday, October 18, 2011

Poem in Hamilton Stone Review

Check out my poem, "Breakfast at Bliss" in the latest issue (#25) of Hamilton Stone Review!

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