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Golden January!

January 18, 2010

GET READY FOR THE FUTURE –

goldenhourjan

THE GOLDEN HOUR 2k10!

January 20th, 2010
8pm
Forest Cafe, 3 Bristo Pl
Free! Free! Free! (byob)

Reading:

Kirstin Innes – The story-charmer!

Alan Bissett – The ring-leader!

Colin McGuire – pedestrian, provocateur, wanderer, confronter of shadows!

Music:

Mat Riviere – Electric repetition, loops that don’t stay in time, and self-Harmonizing.

The Maple Leaves – A massive aural hug.

Skeleton Bob – Songs about Glasgow that sound like they’re about America; songs about girls who did them wrong/proud. The long-awaited, rarely seen in Edinburgh floor-stampers!

The Golden Hour on Ten Tracks

January 16, 2010

One of my favourite music sites is the fantastically diverse, brilliantly local and artist-driven site: TenTracks.co.uk. For just £10 a year you get 120 great songs which you’d be hard pressed to find anywhere. The bonus is, all the artists involved get a fair percentage of the profits — a much better deal then they get using i-tunes (boo, hiss!). So, if you are feeling guilty about illegally “stealing” music from .torrent sites, pay your dues to the artists who need the money and support TenTracks by taking out a subscription.

With all this in mind, it is a great pleasure to say that you can now buy ten of the eighteen tracks from our Golden Hour Vol. II CD on the TenTracks website including new material from Diddley Squat, Chandra, Mat Riviere, Robin Grey and The Asazi Space Funk Explosion! You can buy the tracks for ONE QUID or take out a full subscription for £10! It really is a bargain and a delight to get all this great music so even if you own the GH Books – do take out a subscription.

Here’s what they say:

“The Police Box proudly presents its pick of tunes from the acclaimed new writing and music publication by Edinburgh’s Forest Cafe. A quid says this is genuinely stereotype-busting quality”

And while I am on the plug:

You get a free TenTracks bundle when you buy tickets to the massive Hidden Door Art Festival at the Roxy on 30 / 31 January. You can read about what I’ll be doing here. I’m super keen to see Action Group, Jesus H Foxx, Foxgang, Joe Acheson Quartet, Panda Su, and William Douglas live. Basically, every great band in Edinbrugh and Glasgow is going to be playing this thing – it’s worth the money to be there.

It is practically guaranteed to be an amazing weekend of music, art installations, poetry and dancing so buy your tickets now.

Tickets NOW ON SALE at Tickets Scotland, Ripping Records, Leith School of Art and Edinburgh College of Art at the SRC.

BUY TICKETS NOW!

FREE with each ticket: 10 mp3 music tracks by bands playing at the festival from Tentracks, plus video trailer of artists work with music by Jesus H. Foxx.

Instructions on how to get your free music and video on:

To be honest, the ticket stuff is a bit confusing but here’s an understandable break-down:poster hidden door email

There are tickets for 4 different time slots: afternoon (1 – 8 pm) or evening (6 – 12 pm), Saturday or Sunday @ £10 per slot (there are different bands playing at different slots so a look at the full programme on www.hiddendoor.org will help you decide.)
OR for 1 week only: 2 tickets for the price of 1, if bought off an contributor (me) so we can sell tickets to our pals, (tickets online etc, will still be same price, £10 each). SO, I can sell you two tickets for any of the sessions for £10
OR there’s a 50% discount for anyone buying tickets for extra slots, anytime. So you can buy tickets for all of Saturday
OR all of Sunday for £15 per person
OR £25 per person for the whole weekend, which means you can dip in and out for the whole weekend! (obviously the 2 for 1 doesn’t apply to this deal)
I know this all sounds a bit confusing, but basically you need to decide when you would like to be in on the action! As there are events, installations over 3 floors, the stage for the bands, food from the lovely Suzie’s Diner and a bar, there’s plenty to keep you amused and occupied for hours!

Look at the event on facebook and sign up!

I hope to see you there, here and everywhere.

xxl,

R

Happy New Podcast!

January 15, 2010

Just before our holidays got started in December, Lilias Fraser and I traveled to the Great North, visiting SPL branch libraries in Inverness and Skye. It was a beautiful trip and we got to meet some brilliant poets working up in the Highlands. So, here is the first of the Highland Podcasts featuring the intrepid, poet, novelist, screenwriter Hamish MacDonald. Hamish helps run Moniack Mhor which is a splendid writers’ retreat up near Inverness. It is isolated and lovely and filled to the gills with excellent literature and fantastic workshops and seminars. They’ve always been very good to The Golden Hour crew so if you are looking for a beautiful place to go and work on some writing, you should check them out. Enjoy the podcast!

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And Please remember to subscribe with I-Tunes or using the RSS Feed. Man, it is FREE!

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In our first podcast of the year Ryan presents the first of his
interviews from a recent trip to the Scottish Highlands, and he starts
the ball rolling with poet, novelist and playwright Hamish Macdonald,
director of creative writing centre Moniack Mhor. We also have a
haunting track from Shelia K Cameron, “Last NIght I Dreamed About
Doris Lessing”. Presented by Ryan van Winkle. Produced by Colin
Fraser. Incidental music by Ewen Maclean.


Open the Door

January 12, 2010

I’ve been invited to take part in this massive 2 day art / music extravaganza at The Roxy in Edinburgh.

Check the Hidden Door site for details on everyone who is participating but, for my part, I’ll be doing an intimate poetry performance which will involve music from Ragland, hot tea (or port), biscuits and a live, one-on-one reading.

I am not going to try and describe what the performance will involve but it will take about 15 minutes and it will be unlike any other poetry reading you’ve ever been to.

That’s not to say it will be good — but it will be different. There will also be artwork, so you don’t have to look directly at me all the time.

Here’s the details on the rest of the Hidden Door experience. Do buy tickets now, there is going to be loads of amazing art and performances. The band list alone should have you psyched to come along. Pretty much everyone you know / everyone you want to know will be there. How can you not go?

Hidden Door is a new venture aimed at bringing together innovative artists from all disciplines to create an exciting multi-sensory snapshot and celebration of the incredible creativity in the arts going on across Edinburgh and Scotland, all around us, under one roof for a whole weekend in January.

Tickets cost £10 and you can get them HERE. If you buy them online the lovely people at tentracks.co.uk have offered up 10 free MP3 downloads! Sweet deal and well worth it just for the music. Check it out!

Jan 30 & 31st at The Roxy Art House!

Ryan Reading in Aberdeen!

January 11, 2010

Hi – I’ve been invited to read at the legendary Dead Good Poets in Aberdeen at the end of January. Hopefully, I can live up to the billing. Here’s all the details. Do come if you can or – you know – tell your friends to come down. I will try not to disappoint!

Dead Good |Poets welcome RyanVan Winkle. Books and Beans, Belmont St, Aberdeen – 6.30 – 8pm.

Thursday, 28th.January. With  Grant Fraser – plus Open Mic.

Ryan Van Winkle is currently the Reader in Residence at the Scottish Poetry Library and Edinburgh City Libraries. He runs a monthly “Literary Cabaret” called The Golden Hour and is an Editor at Forest Publications. He lives in Edinburgh but was born and spent most of his life in America.

This event is sponsored by the Scottish Book Trust  www.scottishbooktrust.com

See also:

Grant Fraser

Grant Fraser is an experimental poet and film-maker. Published in Granite and Gravel (Aberdeen, 2008) he was one of the poets featured in last May’s Wordfringe.He is a regular and exciting performer at Books and Beans. This is an opportunity to hear a more substantial selection of his work.

File Under: Better Than a Kick in the Teeth

January 9, 2010

A couple of days ago I got this seemingly cryptic e-mail from Mr. Benjamin Morris. A fellow editor at Forest Publications, poet, cocktail guru and all-round gentleman. Under the subject “Just heard the news” he wrote:

“pulling for you with everything i got. fingers crossed man. bones shaken. lambs slaughtered. bringing the bull in now.”

It is probably a testament to my upbringing or my permanently negative state of mind that my first thought was, “My God, I’m dying. I’ve got cancer and somehow only Ben Morris knows.” If you know Ben, perhaps this doesn”t seem too illogical. I do expect that when the bad time comes I’ll get a similar message from the Bellini-supping son-of-a-gun.

Turns out — I’ve been short-listed for Salt Publishing’s 2009 Crashaw Prize. Which, as it goes, is a lot better than cancer and a whole hell of a lot better than whatever I’d begun to expect from annus Two Million and Ten.

Out of the 12 finalists, four will get a collection published from Salt. I’d be lying if I didn’t say that this was some kind of poetry holy grail.

From here, it is truly a treat to be short-listed and I sincerely wish the other poets the best of luck. I’m sure Salt will select a varied and deserving four poets and I’m positive they have some hard decisions to make. Frankly, I wouldn’t like to do it.

If you are interested, last year Salt published one of the most intriguing collections of poems I’ve seen in a while. Juan Gelman’s “The Poems of Sidney West” is  reminiscent of the brilliant Pessoa whose beautiful, haunting Book of Disquiet I currently have on my bedside table.

Anyway, Juan Gelman’s “The Poems of Sidney West” is a fantastically meta-read. Here’s the little blurb:

This translation offers to English readers for the first time the splendid verse of imaginary American author Sidney West, created by Juan Gelman, one of the greatest living poets of the Hispanic world. These laments question Western assumptions surrounding death, erase boundaries between poetry and narrative, privilege the magical as a vital aspect of reality and seek the transformation of the lyric persona.”

Seriously, I’m flattered to be on the same website as something so cool. You can read samples and more about Gelman’s book here.

Now, I’m going to let my mouth off my trumpet.

xxl

R

Poetry Days in Oxgangs

January 8, 2010

From Tuesday the 12th of February, Oxgangs Library will be my poetic home away from home.

Starting with a Meet Ryan Session on Tuesday, I’ll be semi-based in Oxgangs hosting free poetic events and workshops and there will even be a free reading from the amazing Tom Leonard ! The month will also highlight the City of Lit’s Carry a Poem campaign, feature LOADS OF FREE BOOKS and a display with my favourite poetry collection. You can come and meet your Reader in Residence and chat on Tuesday 12 February from 14.00. It should be a brilliant month so come along to any of the TOTALLY FREE events mentioned below or feel free to pop into the library and see what excellent poetry books are on offer!

OXGANGSpoetry month events

Meet Your Reader in Residence

Tuesday, 12 Jan. 14.00 – 16.00

Ryan Van Winkle is Reader in Residence at the Scottish Poetry Library and Edinburgh City Libraries. He is also a working poet who’s work has appeared in Northwords Now, New Writing Scotland and The American Poetry Review.

Carry a Poem

Wednesday, 13 Jan. 10.30 – Noon & Wednesday. 3 Feb. 18.30 – 20.00

Do you have a favourite poem? Do you love hearing poems read aloud? Come to our poems aloud session where we’ll be sharing the poems we carry with us, in our hearts and even in our pockets. Bring any poem you’d like to hear and share and we’ll read a few from our roving poetry collection. Free books will  be available from The City of Literature! Come and get your copy.

Chatterbooks

Monday, 1 Feb. 16.00 – 17.00

A poetry afternoon for kids with writing games and activities!

Tom Leonard

Sunday 7 Feb 14.30 – 15.30

Leonard is active as a poet, scholar and polemicist. His readings are engaging, honest and thought-provoking. His poetry lives and breathes and stands as proof that poetry doesn’t live only in ivory towers or dusty library stacks. See him. Read him.

RyanmazE

Big Up The Golden Hour Book Massive!

January 7, 2010

Obligatory Golden Hour Book Vol. II Hype:

Since publication in June 2009, the Golden Hour Book Vol. II has had some great reviews from a wide range of sources. I’ll save your eyes the trouble of actually reading the whole things and just print the brilliant blurbs here. However, in case you think we’re faking, you can check out the links to the real actual articles!

* Edinburgh International Book Festival Programmer, Roland Gulliver, admits he has the GHBII on his bed-side table in Canada’s National Post newspaper.

We blush.

* The often brutally honest Scott Pak of Me and My Big Mouth Blog says:

“A very impressive literary and music anthology. A dinky little paperback packed with stories and poetry, most of which are very good indeed, and a 20 track CD full of bands I have never heard of but also mostly splendid. (****)”

Read the whole thing here. We did. Many times.

* The Edinburgh Evening News selects the GHB II as one of their favourite local reads of the year. Considering Edinburgh’s Unesco City of Literature status and super-star literary status, we were choking on our Christmas Nog. The back of book blurb reads:

“An eclectic, experimental, gently explosive treasure trove that brings together some of the creative combustions which light up the Forest Cafe.”

Doesn’t that sound sweet as sugar? Read the whole review here.


* Just to prove that we can’t please everyone — This folk at The Beat Surrender say,

“the book itself didn’t do a great deal for me, the poetry I could take or leave and aside from a couple of short stories I found it heavy going and had to force myself to get through it.”

BUT WAIT!

The good news is:

“The CD though makes up for the book they really have landed some peaches for us here. Not everyone hits the spot out of the twenty but they have more than enough quality through the majority of tracks to warrant a purchase.”

Boom! Even the guy who hates the book says you should Buy the Book. Convinced yet?

* Well, The Skinny said you should stuff your stocking with GHBII. They say:

“To those weary and wary book hunters, the reluctant gamblers and the open hearted, pick up GHBII, it’s a sure bet.”

You don’t get many “sure-bets” in life. And even the ones that you think you have end up with the card table fliped over and a gun in your mouth. Just ask Kenny Rogers. We promise that if you Buy the Book, it won’t get that ugly.

* The mostly music-loving kids at Unpeeled gave massive respect to both the book and cd. I can’t resist posting a good chunk of the review mostly because their site’s motto is so bad-ass:

“We like music. We listen to it. We write about it. We don’t do favours & we don’t tell lies.”

Sound trustworthy? – here’s some of what they said:

“The CD sounds like that tent you find in the middle of the madness of one of the larger festivals. You know the tent, the one where you have no idea who any of the people on the stage are, but you find yourself staying there all day just to see who’s on next. With over 20 contributors, including the likes of Billy Liar, Withered hand, Skeleton Bob, Johnny Berliner, Chandra and The Black Diamond Express amongst others, I can almost guarantee that your new favourite song is contained within, waiting to be discovered.

‘When we Were Broke’ by Ericka Duffy is possibly one of the most beautiful and true stories I have ever read. It’s been a long time since a story has made me choke up. Other highlights, which are hard to pick out from a book made up of highlights, include ‘The Birds, Like’ by Phil Harrison, a wickedly captivating tale told from the point of view of a frustrated bully, and the poem ‘Lunch’ by Aiko Harman, if only because it mentions peanut butter, which in my world is a condiment. All in all this collection is a superb little package that you will return to over and over, highly recommended. ”

I can’t find the whole review on the Unpeeled site but could find it on Robin Grey’s. His song, Women, was also lauded by Unpeeled. You must hear it.

* Lastly, the great literary magazine Northwords Now produced a flattering review which has yet to appear on-line. Here’s a small blurb:

“Reviewing this collection is like trying to herd cats into a sack — beautiful cats, strangely furred rippling, not quite tamed. It is a bold and commendable venture: to give voice to a number of (relatively) unknown artists although many of the writers have been short-listed for or won prizes. The Forest is to be applauded for the originality of this project. There is simply too much to cram into this review …. Best thing to do: buy a copy. Invite some friends round. Open some bottles. Host your own Golden Hour. Dance to poetry. Then do it again next week.”

We like that suggestion! Mini-Golden Hour’s all over the world, linked by satellite, linked by love of words and music, linked by a sense of literary fun and musical adventure. Won’t you join us?

Buy the book.

GHBIIcover

IS THE GOLDEN HOUR BOOK SUITABLE FOR YOU?

If you enjoy words, the answer is ‘yes’. If you enjoy sounds, the answer is ‘yes’. Even if you have not answered ‘yes’, the answer is still ‘yes’. For The Golden Hour Book Volume II is not just a book: it is also a natural resource that may save your life. Its pages will burn without being consumed. It keeps tigers away.

The accompanying CD is equally essential: it can be used as a plate, or better still, sharpened and thrown like a shuriken into the throat of your enemy. Even if the end approaches, there is still the consolation of the words and sounds within — fine poems, stories, and songs from over three dozen poets, writers and musicians — all of which are guaranteed to take your mind off things.

Paperback: 192 pages
Published: 22 April 2009
Author: Multiple Authors
Cover & CD Design: Magda Boreysza
ISBN-10: 0955645638
ISBN-13: 978-0955645631
Amount: £8 + P&P

Special thanks to Ron Butlin who gave us these advanced words of appreciation:

“There is genuine wit, deep feeling and real entertainment in this most enjoyable volume. Light-hearted and serious by turns, The Golden Hour Book Volume II contains some of the best and freshest new writing I have come across for quite a while.”

Ron Butlin, Edinburgh Makar

With Big Love to the Scottish Arts Council and all the hard-working volunteers at The Forest without whom none of this would have been physically or financially possible.

The Golden Hour will be touring again in March and June. If you want us to come to your city, town or village contact me now. Otherwise, look out for our upcoming dates!

xxl

Ryan

Twas the Night Before Christmas!

December 19, 2009

Hello all, I’m very pleased to herald the SPL’s Christmas Podcast. This is a really amazing one, with Robyn Marsack and I discussing Home and a special, brilliant version of Twas the Night Before Christmas with Toby Mottershead. It’s a rollicking, stocking-bursting treat and we hope you love it. On this podcast, you also get to hear two of my poems: My 100-Year Old Ghost and Oregon Trail.

Twas the Night Before Festivus…

“He sprang to his sleigh, to his team gave a whistle,/ And away they all flew like the down of a thistle.”

In this Festivus podcast we feature a specially commissioned interpretation of the classic Christmas poem ‘A Visit from St Nicholas’ aka ‘Twas the Night Before Christmas’ from the amazing Toby Mottershead and some of Black Diamond Express (listen to Toby on another podcast in our series). And as home is something many of us return to at this time of year, we’ve also a discussion on poetry and homecoming between New Zealand born Robyn Marsack, Director of the Scottish Poetry Library, and Connecticut bred Ryan van Winkle, Reader in Residence at the SPL and Edinburgh City Libraries. They talk about their respective journeys to Scotland from their native lands and explore the influence of the poems they have brought with them from their homes and a few they have picked up along the way.

From all of us at the Scottish Poetry Library, Season’s Greetings, Nollaig Chridheil and Guid Yule!

Email Ryan and Colin about your thoughts on the podcast and what’s whetting your poetical whistle for 2010.

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Double K only on the SPL!

December 15, 2009

“We get our sense of music in a language from lullabies, from baby language, from talking to dogs…”

Ryan asks the staff of the Scottish Poetry Library which poetry books they’d recommend for seasonal gifts, and catches up with multi-talented writer Kapka Kassabova for a scintillating interview. Presented by Ryan Van Winkle. Produced by Colin Fraser. Incidental music by Ewen Maclean. Email Ryan and Colin.

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Listen now… Here or Below…

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