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Giving poetry readings of haiku - need advice

Started by Julie B. K., November 16, 2012, 01:07:30 PM

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Julie B. K.

A couple of days ago, I had a chance to read my poetry in public for the first time.  I really engaged the (albeit small) audience of writers when I spoke about haiku and scifaiku.  But I found reading my haiku to be exceptionally challenging, both in the sense that it is an emotionally vulnerable experience and that I think you need to read haiku differently (slower?) than other forms of poetry to connect with the listener.  A friend of mine who came with me for moral support commented that, unlike in a longer speech or poem, where the listener can miss a word or two without losing context, every word counts in haiku.

So, is there a secret to reading haiku so that your listeners don't get lost?  Do you read more loudly, more slowly?  Do you provide the audience a written copy of what you are reading?     ???

Thanks in advance for your thoughts.

Don Baird

Pause in the appropriate place(s) and read them twice with a small wait between readings.
I write haiku because they're there to be written ...

storm drain
the vertical axis
of winter

Julie B. K.

Thanks, Don.  I wouldn't have thought to do that.  Is it standard practice to read the poems twice?  I've never heard anyone read haiku before so I didn't really know what I was doing.

Don Baird

Yes, Julie.  It's standard ... and in some places they prefer three times!  :)  Try to change the reading slightly too, each time. 
I write haiku because they're there to be written ...

storm drain
the vertical axis
of winter

Vida

Julie,

Type "haiku readings" in you tube. There are lots of videos, you can choose the way you like best :))

Best,
Vida
"The pain felt in my foot is not my hand's,
So why, in fact, should one protect the other?"
                                                Shantideva

Julie B. K.

Thanks, Don and Vida!  I don't know why it didn't occur to me to look for YouTube videos of readings.  That's an excellent idea.

AlanSummers

.

For anyone intending to read or perform live:

Here's a TEDx video of myself talking to an audience (and being filmed at the same time).  Although the talk was only five minutes long, I took along a prompt book as I didn't memorise the whole performance.

Plus an ad lib at the beginning because I was introduced as Alan Summer and not as Alan Summers. :-)

Always be prepared to ad lib, especially if you have rehearsed your piece well, and won't get lost picking up again.

YouTube, Amazement of the ordinary- life through a haiku lens:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=LxLTiR7AKDE#at=12

Transcript:
http://area17.blogspot.co.uk/2013/06/transcript-from-tedx-video-amazement-of.html

Amazement of the ordinary- life through a haiku lens©Alan Summers 2012-2013
.
Alan Summers,
founder, Call of the Page
https://www.callofthepage.org

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