If you haven't leapt off your barstool cheering along with a couple hundred other poetry fans lately, well then you probably haven't been to a Poetry Slam. The hippest and hottest new form of live entertainment has rejuvenated this ancient art, fused it with other genres such as hip-hop, stand-up comedy and dramatic monologue, and inspired vigorous debate-and some condemnation-in academic circles.
So what is a Poetry Slam? Described most simply, it is
competitive performance poetry. Here's how it works. First you
write a poem. It could be an intense political rant against dot-com
culture, a tender confessional piece about growing up as an adopted
child, or maybe a hilarious send-up of adopted children who run
software corporations-anything your fertile artist's mind can
squeeze into a three minute presentation. Next, you memorize said
poem, rehearse it endlessly, carefully choreographing every gesture,
gaze and pithy pause. When you're ready to go public with your
masterpiece, you head on down to your local slam and hold forth
before an audience and five judges drawn at random from those
assembled-all of them expecting to be entertained or enlightened
or touched on a level that's generally the province of intimates.
This is not a game for the faint of ego.
Slams are typically held in bars and cafés, so your crowd
can be rapt or rowdy, it's always a crapshoot. The judges consider
each poet in turn and then render a score from 0-10 held high
on big cards a la the Olympics, giving equal weight to both the
content and performance of each piece. And, to ensure a rockin'
show where the fever never stops, any MC worth an iamb vigorously
encourages the audience to judge the judges--with boos, cheers,
hisses or grunts.
Of course it hasn't always been this way. In centuries past, when
people needed to convey their anger or approval or astonishment
to a larger world, they wrote letters to the editor. But it's
a new millennium. We have options. And some people are responding
differently to that same impulse to communicate. They infuse their
message with metaphors, craft with linebreaks, sprinkle with rhyme
or alliteration and then slam it-in public-where they can feel
the impact of their testifying. On stage, the skilled slam poet
embodies the best of literature and the dramatic arts; be it expressed
with raging fury or contained intensity, each poem explodes like
a concentrated burst of theater. The poet is a passionate messenger
artfully communicating the quirks and hypocrisy, brutality and
insanity, the love and everyday heroics, of our lives and cultures.
Who spawned this beast? All hail the windy city! Back in the mid-80s
a construction worker named Marc Smith went to a few open mics
with the poetry he'd begun to write. He found the readings hopelessly
boring and set about creating his own event. He wanted people
to get excited about poetry-regular people, not just the other
poets on the sign-up list. And, this being America, what better
way to generate interest than to make it a competition! Thus was
the slam born, at the Get Me High Lounge in Chicago.
San Francisco entered the mix in 1990 when local poet and slam
organizer Gary Mex Glazner produced the first National Poetry
Slam at Fort Mason where poets from Chicago, San Francisco and
NYC came together for the linguistic throw-down. Chicago won that
seminal event and every year since then the competition has grown
in size, scope and interest. In 1999, the Bay Area made a spectacular
showing: San Francisco and San Jose tied for first place and Oakland
took third-out of a field of 48 teams. The Bay Area slam scene
now ranks as one of the brightest, most diverse and enthusiastic
in the nation. Slams are held weekly or monthly in San Francisco,
Oakland, Berkeley, San Jose, Santa Cruz, Chico, Petaluma, Davis,
Sacramento and Salinas.
Slam is more than an exhilarating new art-form; it cannot be dismissed
as mere intellectual blood-sport. In a world where everything
from sex to reality itself is virtual, where being passively entertained
is lauded as a way of life, slam bucks the trend by providing
a venue for authentic creative expression. Slam is a movement,
reminiscent of its Beat generation predecessor, but one that has
already more deeply permeated the culture. It is a social phenomenon
that-- not coincidentally-- embodies one of the most diverse communities
on the planet. People of all ages, races and sexual persuasions
come together to compete on a level playing field.
In the past few years, National Poetry Slam audiences have witnessed
teenaged and septuagenarian slammers, slammers in wheelchairs,
slam poems in sign language, transvestite and multilingual slammers,
even a few successfully slammed sonnets and sestinas. This lavish
feast is further enriched by Group Pieces wherein two, three or
all four members of a team collaborate in the creation and execution
of a poem, a process that opens the door of performance poetry
to new worlds of possibility. Such as Team Dallas' now-legendary
'98 finals night coup: a rollicking exposition of gay, black and
redneck superheroes.
Worth a peek, you say? For those curious souls who want to check
out the slam --as observers or participants--welcome to Slam Season.
In preparation for the 2000 National Poetry Slam to be held in
Providence, Rhode Island, cities will be holding slam-offs over
the next few months to determine eligibility for their 4-person
slam teams. Anyone is eligible to compete-or to judge. One of
the defining characteristics of Slam is that judges are always
drawn from the audience as opposed to being pre-selected "experts."
The logic is that if the poem does not inspire any given plumber,
marketing director, rocket scientist, sex worker or homeless person,
well then it might just need some re-working. Slam is poetry for
the people, poetry that does not require an advanced degree in
English literature to be appreciated. Not that there's anything
wrong with academic poetry.
Except that it's never generated the excitement, the level of
popular participation, or the media coverage that slam has. In
the past two years alone the National Poetry Slam has been covered
by CNN, Time magazine, McNeil Lehrer, the New York Times, Wall
Street Journal and 60 Minutes. And there's no end in sight as
media-makers scramble to cash in on SlamMania. In the works at
press time are everything from a Slam TV series and an all-poetry
radio station to Slam DVD's and interactive home slamming via
the Internet.
Closer to home are two watershed events in the world of slam.
On April 20-22, San Francisco will play host to the third annual
National Youth Slam. And this summer the official slam anthology
is due out from San Francisco's own Manic d Press. SLAM! Changing
the world one poet at a time documents the first ten years
of the poetry slam including articles on how host a slam and book
a poetry tour, and features poems from around the world, ranging
in style from haiku to hard core slam verse.
The San Francisco Slam, run by the Living Word Project, is one
of the most innovative and best attended in the nation. On a storm-drenched
Sunday night in February close to 300 people packed the Justice
League on Divisadero to witness the second in this coveted venue's
slam-off series. So many poets signed up to compete that a lottery
forced some out of contention. There was incense burnin', a slide
show flashin', DJ's spinnin' and a live band layin' down a groove
and makin' a mood during breaks--and for any poets who wanted
to improv-collab with them. MC Seeking kept the night moves flowing
and the energy level on stun as poet after poet took the stage
to regale the exuberant throng with everything from vindictive
Valentine poems to a gang member's memorial tribute. By midnight
the names of the top four slammers were announced. They took their
bows and went home with points toward their slam-final bids, yielding
the stage to a trio of undulating dancers.
For a taste of the action, we've featured on this page one of
the night's big crowd pleasers. For a five-course meal, log on
to the Chronicle's website and listen to the poems in performance
[www. sfgate.com, type "Slam"
in the "Jump to" box]. Of course, the only way to experience
the totality of slam is by checking out a live show. And there
couldn't be a better time to find out what all the excitement
is about. Between now and the end of May there will be qualifying
slams, semi-finals and finals, featuring the best of the best
in the world of slam
Meanwhile, the next time you feel a burning desire to editorialize,
go ahead and write that letter, lick that stamp, drop it in the
mailbox, and then take the next step: Slam it! I dare you.
______________
* Poetry Slam is trademarked by Poetry Slam. Inc. For more information check out the PSI website at www.poetryslam.com
________________
An edited version of this article first appeared in the San
Francisco Chronicle 24 February 2000.