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	<title>MAIN-FM &#187; Robert Creeley</title>
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		<title>Robert Creeley this week on Wordplay</title>
		<link>http://main-fm.org/2008/06/25/463/</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 26 Jun 2008 03:50:11 +0000</pubDate>
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		<category><![CDATA[Robert Creeley]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[It&#8217;s no secret that I see Robert Creeley one of the essential poets of the last fifty years. From early to late, his work opened new territories of mind and heart for poetry; I believe his fine ear and remarkable articulation of the rhythms of American speech insure that folks will still be reading his [...]]]></description>
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<p><a href="http://bp2.blogger.com/_whY3l-d5TzQ/SGMFlop30bI/AAAAAAAAAN0/Rq1pBlAJHvM/s1600-h/Creeley-Kuszai-Providence-1-04+lg.JPG"><img border="0" vspace="5" align="left" src="http://bp2.blogger.com/_whY3l-d5TzQ/SGMFlop30bI/AAAAAAAAAN0/Rq1pBlAJHvM/s320/Creeley-Kuszai-Providence-1-04+lg.JPG" hspace="5" /></a></p>
<p>It&#8217;s no secret that <a href="http://naturespoetry.blogspot.com/search/label/Robert%20Creeley">I see Robert Creeley</a> one of the essential poets of the last fifty years. From early to late, his work opened new territories of mind and heart for poetry; I believe his fine ear and remarkable articulation of the rhythms of American speech insure that folks will still be reading his poems centuries from now.</p>
<p>In the 70s and 80s I recorded several Creeley readings on my trusty Uher 4400, but it recorded in a unique four track monaural format that makes the tapes playable only on a like machine, and mine needs repair. For the Father&#8217;s Day show now up on the archive, then, I selected readings from among the many recordings at the ever-expanding <a href="http://writing.upenn.edu/pennsound/x/Creeley.html">Creeley archive at PennSound</a>. The show begins with poems recorded at Black Mountain College in 1954 and poems from the same period (a few the very same poems) recorded at readings at Chicago&#8217;s The Second City in 1961 and at Harvard in 1966. These were all clearly recorded on analogue tape, and transferred after the tapes had become somewhat degraded. I cleaned them up as best as I could for the show, but there&#8217;s still some audible hiss; I also had to edit out the &#8220;f*ck&#8221; in &#8220;Ballad of the Despairing Husband,&#8221; since the FCC still considers that a word you can&#8217;t say on the radio.</p>
<p>Most of the show, though, focuses on Creeley&#8217;s middle and later work, from Pieces on. Perhaps that&#8217;s just because I met him in 1968, the year Scribners brought out that collection, and so simply find in this work the voice I knew. From then till the end of his life he often worked in what became his long form, the serial suite. I&#8217;ve included &#8220;The Finger&#8221; and &#8220;Follow the Drinking Gourd&#8221; from a 1974 reading at Vermont&#8217;s Goddard College; the complete &#8220;Histoire de Florida,&#8221; from a 1995 Buffalo reading; &#8220;En Famille&#8221; from a 2000 reading at his Maine home, and &#8220;Wild Nights&#8221; from the same occasion; and two poems from a 2000 reading at the University of Pennsylvania, &#8220;Myself&#8221; and &#8220;Where Late the Sweet Bird Sang&#8221;.</p>
<p>Did Bob ever write about music? He sometimes worked with musicians, of course, but I don&#8217;t remember ever talking with him about music, and have no idea what he listened to day in and day out; I had to wing the soundscape. The show kicks off with a version of Miles Davis&#8217; &#8220;So What?&#8221; recorded at the Blackhawk in San Francisco (Miles was a big favorite at Black Mountain), and the other music featured in the program includes bits of &#8220;Stating Intention&#8221; from Peter Kater and R. Carlos Nakai&#8217;s Migration; &#8220;So Long Michael&#8221; from Pierre Bensusan&#8217;s Intuite; and Debussy&#8217;s La Mer, performed by the Orcestra of Radio Luxembourg, Rolf Reinhardt conductor.</p>
<p>Click on over to the <a href="http://wpvm.org/nav/archives/">Archive page</a> , scroll down to Wordplay, and check it out.</p>
<p>Jeff</p>
<p>~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~</p>
<p>The photo was taken by Joel Kuzai at Creeley&#8217;s home in Providence, RI, in 2004.</p>
<p>Cross-posted at <a href="http://naturespoetry.blogspot.com/search/label/Robert%20Creeley">NatureS</a>.</p>
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