We are working to create the reading environment for enrichment that all can enjoy.
We found some tips and hints that will help with presentations and performances.
You can also book our study spaces with some friends. Practice your presentations for class and conferences within the comfort of the LRC.
March 10, 2010 November 9, 2015 brotherdash 14 Comments
I am often asked to provide advice from up-and-coming poets and writers on how to “do spoken word” properly or ways to better themselves as spoken word (i.e., performance) poets. Below is a short but essential list to get you started.
The best poets speak from an authentic experience or perspective. Don’t try to speak about something that you know nothing about or can’t really relate to. It will come across as being unauthentic at best and pretentious and self-serving at worst. Poetry is something you feel. It is organic to your soul, and before you can have an impact on others, it must be true to you first.
Here’s a little secret. Most poetry slams and many open mics I don’t particularly care for. Why? Much of the time, the poets focus too much on shock or catering to the lowest common denominator. I don’t care about your real or made-up sexual exploits, your manufactured anger, or your assorted proclivities. The audience is asking the question, “How does what you say relate to my life?” How are you empowering me or shining a light on society? How are you celebrating beauty or art? How are you reminding me of our humanity or our inhumanity towards others? Your poetry should be something of value, or at the very least, not something of detriment.
“Everything ain’t for everybody,” as the saying goes. Know your audience. Does the poem contain a lot of phrases or language that no one in the audience will really understand or relate to? Are there a bunch of children in the audience or people whose first language is not the language of the poem? Also… Respect your audience! Part of the reason why I don’t frequent many poetry venues is because I can only take so many gratuitous uses of profanity, odes to past lovers (real or imagined), or obscenities under the guise of "art." I am not totally anti-profanity in a poem. Sometimes that is the “realest” and most appropriate way to relate the truth of a particular piece to some people. As a rule for myself, I never use profanity in my poetry. But most poets use profanity simply for shock value or, more usually, due to a lack of creativity. I can't think of a sophisticated word. …okay, "for this." Can’t create true emotion? true anger in a piece? …okay “bleep you”. I don’t consider that respecting the audience. People are giving you their eyes and ears. Respect that. Don’t vomit on the mic. Most people who like good poetry don’t particularly care for gratuitous foul language. It’s the nature of the medium; it's a higher art form.
If you take a lazy approach to the art form, it will come across as amateurish at best and boring and annoying at worst. If you care about your work, the audience will care enough about you to listen to what you have to say. It will also help you to have a professional look to your performance. Look at the top singers and rappers, and you will see a huge difference between them and those in your typical talent show. Even if there are only 5 people in the audience (and since you are a poet, that will be the case on many occasions), be professional and hone your craft. Study poetry. Read poetry. Look at the performances of slam poets (though I don’t often care for the “poetry” of slam poets; their energy is a clinic on good performing) and practice. Practice in the mirror. Look at how you move (or don’t move). Think of what you do as a craft and become a craftswoman or craftsman.
You can improve your performance by a factor of 10 by simply speaking slower. It’s not a race to the finish line. Poetry is not like listening to music, where you can just sort of veg out a bit and just sort of “groove to the vibes." In poetry, audiences actually need to understand what you are saying. There is no vegging out. YOU ARE THE MUSIC! So take your time and also pause appropriately. There’s nothing like a strategically placed pause that allows the thought just completed to marinate a bit. Most performance poets spit out their words too quickly, and you lose people when you do that or cause them to work too hard to keep up with the NASCAR driver of spoken word.
3 minutes! That should be your time limit. People have a fairly short attention span when it comes to performances. This isn’t the 1970s, where you can have a 12-minute song. This isn’t jazz, where the quartet will perform one piece for like 22 minutes and everyone gets a solo. Even I won’t listen to a 12-minute poem! Most of my poems are in that 3-minute range. Because I am a particularly energetic and rhythmic kind of poet, I can get away with an occasional piece that approaches the length of a modern pop song (4 minutes). If you stay under 3 minutes, you maintain the audience’s attention and don’t start to bore or annoy people. Note: In Slam Poetry, your time limit is 3 minutes, with point deductions coming every 10 seconds over time.
This is performance poetry. Spoken word, by its nature, is part theatrical performance and part monologue. If people wanted someone to just read poetry from a book with no emotion... no "umph,” they could do it themselves. Spoken Word is performance poetry. That doesn’t mean you turn into an actor, rapper, singer, or comedian, though all of those elements may appear in your work. It means that you understand that you are bringing the words and feelings to life. But keep in mind the earlier points of being “true to you” so that your performance doesn’t come off as a drama class exercise.
The single greatest technical change I made as a poet was to memorise my stuff. It was so freeing! And being that I incorporate a great deal of movement when I perform, it was especially beneficial for me to memorise my poetry. I was no longer encumbered by having to hold a piece of paper or stand in front of a podium. But even for people who are less physical on stage, memorising your poetry does several things that benefit you:
Brother Dash is the author of The Donor: When Conception Meets Deception, whose tagline reads: “In order to keep a secret past from destroying his perfect lie, the man who “has it all” will be blackmailed into repaying a debt... with his body.” Get freebies on the Brother Dash email list at www.brotherdash.com.
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