Inventing the Poetry Slam with poet Marc Smith

 

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The Poetry Slam

Twice 5 Miles Radio welcomes spoken-word artist Marc Smith, the poet who while inventing the poetry slam changed the world of poetry along with the Chicago Poetry Ensemble in the early 1980s.

By now, you've likely heard the term Poetry Slam. You may know that a Poetry Slam is a spoken-word-performance-poetry competition judged 0-10 like a diving match by judges chosen randomly from the audience. You may think that slamming a poem means that two poets meet at the microphone and slam each other down on the stage.

Well, my friend, that's not what it means at all. Here's the real scoop. The term Poetry Slam takes its inspiration from the Grand Slam in baseball. It's the bottom of the 9th inning. The bases are loaded. The count is 3-2. The batter hits a home run. The team wins the World Series. The fans spring to their feet in boisterous roars.

To slam a poem means your goal always must connect with your poem emotionally, physically, spiritually, and psychologically at such a deep level that your audience responds like you just hit a Grand-Slam home run and won the world series.

You got it; most slam poets don't hit it out of the park. But they try, and that's why people love to watch Poetry Slams. That's why, over the past 30 years, the Poetry Slam has changed the domain of modern poetry for good.

Chicago Poetry Ensemble

Here’s What Happened

How did all this happen, you might be wondering. Well, my guest today, Marc Smith, is here to tell you how it happened. You see, Marc, along with a group of experimental poets in the Chicago Poetry Ensemble, invented and developed the Poetry Slam over five years in the early 80s.

In this interview, Marc will tell you that the Poetry Slam was wacky, unpredictable, unruly, creative, wild, experimental, and primarily poetic back in the day. Marc had no idea that the Poet Slam would grow into a spoken-word movement that would spread worldwide. For example, in Germany, some people Hamburg, SLAMberg.

Many of the slam poets from the early years have gone on to achieve significant recognition in the world of American letters. The Poetry Slam continues to thrive across the globe.

Even though many years have passed since those early days in Chicago, at its core, the Poetry Slam remains democratic. All you have to do is show up, add your name to the list, and when the Slammaster calls your name, you walk on stage and take your swing.

We're lucky to have Marc Smith here to tell us all about how it started and why it was, and remains to this day, an essential art form: The Poetry Slam.

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James Navé
James Navé is a poet, storyteller, creativity consultant, and arts entrepreneur. He co-founded Poetry Alive! a theater company that has performed traditional poems as theater for millions of students, K-12. He and Julia Cameron established and directed The Artist’s Way Creativity Camp in Taos, NM, 1995-2003. Navé helped pioneer the performance poetry movement in the United States. He has been on the TEDxNewYork Salon organizing committee since 20012. His work has appeared in two books of poetry and in numerous journals and magazines. He is a co-founder of Twice 5 Miles, a content and marketing collective based in Taos and Brooklyn. He holds an MFA in Poetry from Vermont College. He has memorized over 500 poems.
www.twice5miles.com
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