Tag Archives: Carmen Leigh Keates

SpeedPoets Open Mic Championships This Sunday!

That’s right, this Sunday is the big one… the event that has been building one ‘Call-Back-Poet’ at a time. At each monthly event, one poet was called back by the feature poets and now there are 8!

This Sunday November 4, these 8 poets – Jo Brooks, Carmen Leigh Keates, Marisa Allen, Andrew Phillips, Michael Cohen, Chloe Callistemon, Cameron Logan and Nicola Scholes – will take to the stage one last time to close the year, with one to be named ‘2012 SpeedPoets Open Mic Champion‘. And let’s not forget, there is $300 in cash up for grabs… so without a doubt each of the poets will be bringing the fire.

And to add to this mini festival of words, winner of the 2012 Dorothy Porter Poetry Prize, Stuart Cooke, will hit the mic to read his winning poem. And let’s face it, it wouldn’t be SpeedPoets without the guitar roar of Sheish and Giselle, our poetry raffle and the free monthly zine.

Yes, it’s going to be massive!

So make sure you are there to get your last shot of ‘SpeedPoets’ for the year and to find out what changes are ahead in 2013!

Date: Sunday November 4
Location: Brew (Lower Burnett Lane, Brisbane City)
Time: 2pm – 4:30pm
Entry: Gold Coin Donation

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April Call-Back-Poet: Carmen Leigh Keates

The April event was bursting at the seams with words, with 30 Open Mic Readers and 3 sizzling features. And from this swirl of words, emerged our April Call-Back-Poet, Carmen Leigh Keates with her poem, Nature Reserve. Carmen will now join Jo Brooks on stage in November, when they perform for the right to be named SpeedPoets Open Mic Champion for 2012.

Carmen’s debut micro-collection, One Broken Knife is part of Brisbane New Voices III which is being launched at Riverbend Books this Tuesday, April 24 at 6:30pm alongside readings and performances from Tessa Leon, Brett Dionysius & Andy White, so come on out and support local talent!

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NATURE RESERVE

We were in a nature reserve
owned by the airport,
filming a corporate video
on environmental responsibility.
The unseen vertical extension of the runway
cut again and again up our backs
as we hiked through the salt-addled straw
with our tripod, camera and esky,
trying to see how we could make
a greenie video
out of a petrol-covered death.

The three boys and me.
I stayed quiet, wanting them
to just do their thing. To roam
like bears or chimps,
peer at a map and use a sextant,
and to then plan space travel and disappear
as I stood there loving them and keeping quiet.

One of them, I think
it was Steve A, had a little
magazine of German porn.
They were all happy
that I didn’t get angry.
I just sipped from my bottle
of thawing orange cordial.
There was no winning a fight out here.

The land was so white
it was like peering out
of a space-rocket’s louvre
at a neighbouring hot star .
Or like a death transition.
Straight from the operating table
to the yellow deserts of Mexico
where you’re met by ancestors who help you
cross the burning border to heaven.
But this was Australia
and in the middle of a clearing of hay
we sat in the car with the boot
and all the doors open
like a wasp trying to dry.

This was on the coast of Moreton Bay.
The sea foam so pre-settlement
but land so dry and
invisibly irradiated, like a fresh divorcee.
Home only now to the slyest
insects and sparrows

and King Brown snakes.
And the Red-Belly Black. We saw them
stretched on the road like the road
meant nothing. To us the road was
a punctuation mark, a signal to say drive here.
To the snakes it was just a warmer bit.
A failed stone.

Steve B sat in the car,
cleaning the camera lenses.
Kaine went for a piss in the grass
then bounded back, sure he was stalked
by another snake. He smoked
by himself to calm down.

The boys were now in a triangle,
uneven distances from me at the middle.
Over there was Steve A,
newly without his wife, and tense
with the serious girlfriend
he’d jumped straight in with—
her text messages pinged all day
like a depleting smoke alarm.

We wandered.
The creeks were shallow
and rainbowed with fuel.
Stunted toadfish nosed about
in the slime-coated sandy beds.

We loved to hate what the airport
had done. The boys held
that we were convicts, not settlers.

We walked to the remains of a jetty.
Just five uneven cement pylons
holding up the air
like a hand gesturing
that nothing can be done.

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Photo’s from the May Gig

SpeedPoets re-launched in fine style yesterday at Brew, showing just why they have been keeping poetry fast in Brisbane for the last ten years. Here’s a few shots from the day, taken by Cindy Keong. To read a write up visit: http://bit.ly/ivVHGH

Welcome to Brew

 

Carmen Leigh Keates reads from Second-Hand Attack Dog

 

Charity Carleton from Ichabod's Crane charmed us with her sweet acoustic folk

 

Michelle Dicinoski reading from her forthcoming collection, Electricity for Beginners

 

Sheish Money made the room rumble

 

Graham Nunn celebrating the Buddha Birth Day Festival with a reading of Buddha in the Woodpile by Lawrence Ferlinghetti

 
 

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SpeedPoets May Feature #2 – Michelle Dicinoski

SpeedPoets are itching to bring the howling sounds of poetry to their new home, Brew, located in Lower Burnett Lane in the heart of the City (see the map here). And bringing the poetic noise are three Brisbane ladies, Carmen Leigh Keates, Charity Carleton (Ichabod’s Crane) and Michelle Dicinoski.

Michelle writes poetry and creative non-fiction. Her first poetry collection, Electricity for Beginners, will be published by Clouds of Magellan in mid-2011. She is working on a memoir, Ghost Wife, that tells her own and other women’s stories about same-sex marriage, hidden histories, and belonging. She recently received an Australia Council grant for a new project about forgetting and obsolescence in the digital age.   

Arterial
 
When the suburb sleeps, this bed hums
with the quakes of midnight trucks
that speed west two streets away.

For weeks I thought it was me—
some spasm to do with the heart.
While you slept, I lay here
counting beats, debts, receipts.

It’s these old houses. All tongue and groove
they move and shift in increments, sink
on their stumps, inhale and exhale the heat.
Doors drop on their hinges and refuse to close.

Tonight, late, our flatmate brings his woman home
and the tremors come again—
paperbacks shake on their shelves,
windowpanes rattle and
silverware, girlish, shivers in its drawers.

Beside me, you sleep
moving only your breath, your blood,
your fierce heart. Beside me, you sleep
as the dark house shifts around us.

 
First published in Re-Placement: A National Anthology of Creative Writing from Universities Across Australia, 2008.

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So be there for the opening of SpeedPoets’ 5th home… Sheish Money will be making his guitar growl, there will be raffles/giveaways and Brisbane’s hottest Open Mic Section. This one’s going down in history!

Date: Sunday May 1
Time: 2pm – 5pm
Place: Brew, Lower Burnett Lane, Brisbane City
Entry: Gold Coin Donation

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SpeedPoets May Feature #1 – Carmen Keates

SpeedPoets are counting down to their re-launch on Sunday May 1 at their brand new home, Brew, located in Lower Burnett Lane in the heart of the City. To celebrate, three fine Brisbane ladies will be taking centre stage; Charity Carleton (Ichabod’s Crane), Michelle Dicinoski and the lovely Carmen Leigh Keates.

Carmen received a commendation in the 2010 Josephine Ulrick Poetry Prize for her poem ‘One Broken Knife’. She will be featured at the 2011 Queensland Poetry Festival, and will read poems from her verse novella Second-Hand Attack Dog. She is currently writing a new book of lyric poems as part of her PhD candidature at the University of Queensland.

Here’s a poem from Second Hand Attack Dog:

FRAGMENTS ARE RETURNING
 
My cousin Starry stitches up my eyebrow
after it explodes like a
little red rain cloud
from Derek clocking me with his guitar.
 
I say to Starry
(talking shit through the vodka and Acriflavine) —
 
You know us men and women,
we’re all the same, really.
 
And Starry,
frowning at her embroidery, says
O for sure, Rodney.
Just the other day I was thinking to myself:
 
‘Gee I wish I could pay a dude to screw me
after I’ve watched him dance around in the nude for a bit’.

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And it wouldn’t be SpeedPoets without the live sounds of Sheish Money, the regular raffles & giveaways + Brisbane’s hottest Open Mic Section, so make sure you are there to celebrate our move across the bridge, into the heart of the city. Keep your eyes on the site for details of our other feature artists in the coming weeks.

Date: Sunday May 1
Time: 2pm – 5pm
Place: Brew, Lower Burnett Lane, Brisbane City
Entry: Gold Coin Donation

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