Thanks to onlymeith for another superb production of my poem Meet Self Doubt.
(Photograph by Steven Puetzer)
Words HERE. Audio below.
Thanks to onlymeith for another superb production of my poem Meet Self Doubt.
(Photograph by Steven Puetzer)
Words HERE. Audio below.
My poem dunes, Perlubie Beach has long legs – and it’s taken me a lot of places. Years ago friends Sal & Len Mosley invited us to stay at their friend’s holiday home near Streaky Bay in South Australia’s Far West coast. I wrote a little poem (about a huge system of sand dunes) which was published in The Famous Reporter in Tasmania, on the Numbat Poetry website, and later in my collection micromacro. The poem inspired Belinda Gehlert to compose a piece of music for it (‘dunes’) and I was invited to perform the poem at the premiere of the piece by Zephyr Quartet in Adelaide in Oct 2007 and reprised in Reflections at Adelaide Festival Fringe in 2009.
The latest version accompanies a very laid-back blues in which my old mate Len Mosley plays every instrument. It feels very apt, since Len & I were in bands together and he was there at the poem’s inception. The circle is complete …
meet Self Doubt
You meet Self Doubt soon after you begin school. He’s not a close friend but he’s always there for you. Saying I-told-you-so when you fail. Smirking a little, nodding politely when you succeed, just to let you know he’s still around. Self Doubt is loyal. He’ll talk to you even when no-one else will. You have so much in common. He’ll whisper to you even in the middle of those sleepless nights. Nobody quite understands you like he does. He’ll teach you his favourite expressions: Just my luck. Typical. Too good to last. Brought it on myself. Teaches you to get real. Play safe. Stop being stupid. Act your age. His advice is beyond value. He’ll bask in your success, take a long all-expenses-paid holiday overseas for years. But don’t worry. Like all true friends
he’ll be back.
© rob walker, 2011.
First published in Finger Magazine, Adelaide, Nov 2011.
Production by Speck & annabloom. Courtesy of ccmixter.org. photo by Larry Kolvoord.
The next Friendly Street Poets Words at the Wall event this Wednesday May 16th – 5.30 – 6.15pm (Free entry) features two great poetic greats, Peter Goldsworthy and Aidan Coleman – two of my favorite contemporary Australian poets.
Peter, born in Minlaton, SA, manages to work as a GP and has also developed an enviable reputation as a writer of fiction, libretti and poetry.
“He writes in all genres, including the opera libretto; his novels make their way onto stage and screen; and he has won too many prizes to be listed here. But he pays the usual price for media prominence and multiple glory: all too often, his poetry is thought of as a sideline. On the contrary, it is at the centre of his achievement. No poet who so resolutely avoids the set forms gets quite so much in.” (Clive James)
Aidan, born in Aberystwyth, Wales, has made Adelaide his home for more than twenty years.
He has had a career in education as well as becoming one of Australia’s rising stars in poetry. Soon after I first met him, just on the release of his first collection, he had a life-threatening stroke. After recovery he also had to re-learn speech and pick up his writing life. (See my review of his first collection Avenues and Runways HERE.)
Aidan’s latest collection, Asymmetry, is undoubtedly destined for great things: of Aidan Coleman, Les Murray says ‘Dizzying imagery, executed with utter control. Coleman’s artistry puts him in the forefront of young poets anywhere.’
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This is a unique opportunity to see and hear two great Australian poets in one place, at one time, for free.
May 16th – 5.30 – 6.15pm
Treasures Wall, 1st Floor State Library, North Terrace, Adelaide
M.C. Mike Hopkins (Friendly Street Co-ordinator Words@Wall)
In Adelaide? Your opportunity to see Max Mo live in a 1 hr 15 min show as part of the Adelaide Cabaret Fringe Festival 2012.
Featuring: Mike Ladd, poet
Amelia Walker, poet
Jude Aquilina, poet
Derek Pascoe, saxophone
Fleur Green, tuned percussion
Andrew Mills, percussion
and Steve Matters, multi-instrumentalist .
Using rock, funk, soul, pop, electronica, jazz and the spoken word, Max_Mo explores different ways to meld words and music. Beats and grooves paint the backdrop for observations of life, love and living in the twenty first century.
Sadly, not including Rob Walker who is still in Japan!
WHERE: Nexus Cabaret Lion Arts Centre
(corner North Tce and Morphett St, Adelaide)
WHEN: 16 Jun 2012, 9.00pm
COST: $15
BOOKINGS: BASS
More INFO:
http://www.bass.net.au/events/don-dunstan-vs-judge-judy.aspx