– Holly Pester

sound poetry, performance texts and writing

Archive
live performance

A celebration of Bob Cobbing, ABC in sound – ensemble performance

23rd October, 2012, The Castle Hotel, Manchester

A ensemble performance of Cobbing’s ABC in Sound, at the Other Room, featuring Tim Allen, Joanne Ashcroft, Richard Barrett, Leanne Bridgewater, Matt Dalby, Phil Davenport, James Davies, Ollie Evans, Patricia Farrell, Clive Fencott, Alan Halsey, Michael Haslam, Tom Jenks, Angela Keaton, Geraldine Monk, Maggie O’Sullivan, Holly Pester, Robert Sheppard, Adrian Slatcher, Scott Thurston, Gareth Twose, Steven Waling, Steve Willey and Nigel Wood.

CHORALITY, ON RETREAT: A WRITERS’ RESIDENCY

Residency, Performance and Workshop, 22nd – 26th August, 2012


Residency at Dschingis Khan Restaurant
Through its location in the Dschingis Khan Restaurant, the Writers’ Residency investigates the possibilities of privacy in a public space. In addition, through a series of talks, writers-in-residence are offered the possibility of a public moment during their time in Kassel. Having developed out of conversations and readings during the residencies, these talks encourage the choral meeting and exchange of voices.

 

Poetry reading with Adam Kleinman at Offener Kanal Café, 24th August

Adam Kleinman: Todesfuge
Holly Pester: The Sick Sad Work Song: a performance of song-driven poetry, shanty loops and rough speech

 The Poetry Readings Program is an exercise in emancipating the body from the clichés and constraints of the day, under a spotlight, in a dark, intimate, night time space. Every Friday at 11 pm in the Offener Kanal Café, an invited guest opens the evening by reading out loud selected poems to a gathering of people who listen out loud, and are later invited to take over the microphone and recite or read their own poetry or that of others into the night.
Rise of the Mondegreens – song words better by error, workshop at Huguenothouse, 25th August
Writer-in-residence Holly Pester leads a workshop about sea shanties and miss-heard song lyrics, inviting the audience to create poems rooted in the sonic possibilities of  the misunderstood.

Rich Mix  hosts the third Camarade poetry event, featuring ten pairs of contemporary European poets. Please do attend, entrance is free.

www.richmix.org.uk / www.3ammagazine.com / www.maintenant.co.uk

Iain Sinclair & Tom Chivers
Jeff Hilson & Robert Shepherd
Maria Ferencuhova & Frances Kruk
Holly Pester & Emma Bennett
Philip Terry & Allen Fisher
Tim Atkins & Harry Gilonis
Simon Barraclough & Isobel Dixon
Andy Spragg & David Berridge
Richard Barrett & Marcus Slease
Chris McCabe & Tom Jenks

Journal of Contemporary Poetics

Work by Ali Alizadeh, Guillermo Suárez Ara, Louis Armand, David Ashford, Zoe Beloff, Stuart Barnes, Bill Berkson, Charles Bernstein, Edmund Berrigan, Johannes Birringer, Sean Bonney, Michael Brennan, Nicole Brossard, Pam Brown, Robert Carrithers, Andrei Codrescu, Joshua Cohen, A.D. Coleman, Jennifer Cooke, Chris Crawford, Becky Cremin, Emily Critchley, Eric Cummings, Vincent Dachy, Steve Dalachinsky, Stephan Delbos, Jaroslav Diviš, Vadim Erent, Allen Fisher, Steven J. Fowler, Ulli Freer, Christopher Funkhouser, Drew Gardner, Susana Gardner, Glass-Steagall Fraction, Filip Gordi, Catherine Hales, Václav Havel, John Hawke, David Hayman, Jeff Hilson, Jack Hirshman, Travis Holloway, Stewart Home, D.J. Huppatz, Peter Jaeger, Ivan Martin Jirous, Antony John, Jill Jones, Keith Jones, Pierre Joris, Robert Kiely, John Kinsella, Chris Kraus, Tom Leonard, Ruark Lewis, Erri De Luca, Richard Makin, Tom Mandel, Matt Martin, John Mateer, Aodan Mccardle, Mark Melnicove, Drew Milne, Peter Minter, Tara Mokhtari, Jeroen Nieuwland, Maldo Nollimerg, Damien Ober, Ryan Ormonde, Richard Parker, Olga Peková, Marjorie Perloff, Holly Pester, Bern Porter, Michal Rehúš, Jakub Repický, Joan Retallack, William Rowe, David Růžička, Ryan Scott, Seekers of Lice, Ladislav Selepko, Josef Škvorecký, Philippe Sollers, Josef Straka, Stephanie Strickland, Benjamin Tallis, Thierry Tillier, Anthony Tognazzini, Adam Trachtman, Lawrence Upton, David Vichnar, Mckenzie Wark, Jacqueline Waters, Carol Watts, Karen Weiser, Michael Zand, Kamil Zbruž, Slavoj Žižek.

January 13th, Tenderpixel Gallery

Holly Pester presents work at the opening night of Patrick Coyle‘s ‘To Draw a Blank’

 

 

A book launch and performance night at the Rich Mix, Shoreditch, London.

Saturday 15th October, 7pm

Featuring collaboration works from Tom Jenks & Chris McCabe; Patrick Coyle & Holly Pester; Sam Riviere & Jack Underwood; Sandeep Parmar & James Byrne; James Wilkes & Ghazal Mosadeq; Iily Critchley & Tamarin Norwood; Sean Bonney & Jeff HilsonMarcus Slease & Tim Atkins. With an introduction by Steven Fowler.

 

 

Effort Noiser is a work in progress shanty project. The aim is to get it sung by a chorus of either fishermen or astronauts.


Effort Noiser: A Space Shanty
by holly-pester

 

The song takes the structure of several types of sea shanty, ranging from long voyage verses, to short haul call-and-response chants, to landing songs. These structures were tracked onto the route map of the Apollo 11 lunar landings.

Holly Pester by Maintenant

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A collaborartion between Joshua Kaye (composer) and Holly Pester (poet and text artist)

Presidents and Birds and Even by holly-pester


Programme notes:

At the conception of this project Kaye and Pester created a system of exchange and translation, developing shared concerns for chance operations, periphery speech sounds and the thrill of live performance. By trading sound, text and image material, they allowed the piece to workshop itself out of their (re)interpretation and (mis)translation. Kaye and Pester have engendered not only a musical score, but a hypertextual network of graphic notation, sound poetics and a prolific collaborative partnership.

The piece works as a triptych, with each instant both setting Pester’s text and also conceptually representing each visual poem. The piece is also interspersed with rhythmic interludes.

Baritone singer

Percussion 1 – Catherine Ring

Percussion 2 – Louise Morgan

To begin our collaboration Josh and I exchanged compilation CDs with recordings that we felt represented or at least indicated the direction of our practices/interests. My CD for Josh was a mix of sound poetry excerpts from Henri Chopin and Bob Cobbing, some experimental vocal tracks by heavy metal musician Mike Patton, a few songs from Bjork’s ‘Medulla’ album and some Mongolian throat singing. (And some pretty incredible Michael Jackson acapella!) Things that I like, listen to, make me think about the voice and the concept of singing.

Josh passed on to me an alien world of contemporary opera, some of his own piano pieces and pieces for many voices, plus a welcome reminder of The Velvet Underground’s ‘The Murder Mystery’. What did they tell me about Josh? That he likes inter-sections of voice and percussion; rhythmic, polyphonic vocal sounds.

After this we talked over our listening experiences and went to see as many exhibition, event and performances as we could, trying to build or uncover a common language. It became clear that neither of us were interested in the conventional poet-composer partnership, i.e. having me compose a text, hand it over to Josh and then have him set it to music. We wanted a collaboration that involved a continuous workshop and thought laboratory, that pushed both our practices forward, and gave away our personal artistic temperaments.

obamacircleMore than this, we wanted the piece to perform the exciting collision of text and music that was occurring in our dialogue.

We started by making a small collection of vocal noise. I recorded some ‘para-speech’ noises (erming, ahring, coughing, spluttering, laughing etc.) and Josh produced some piano bits and some of his own throat singing. Josh set this using some sound editing software and passed it back to me. I took this newly constructed sound piece and visually translated it into a sequence of typewriter poems. I passed these back to Josh who translated these as graphic notation, unpicking the flat plane of paper and creating a dimensionality that I found very exciting.

Typewriter poemAnd this was how the process continued, passing back and forth sound, to image to composition.

Eventually I narrowed down the sources for my noise-making to YouTube footage of Barack Obama interviews, extracting those wonderful, distinctively pitched, vocal controllers he makes when pausing between words. I collected these, mimicked them and recorded them. I then juxtaposed this recording with impressions of talking pet birds (also sourced from YouTube). These sounds were arranged into the sound piece ‘bird interview’ which informed the body of much of the final piece:

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This suited our mutual creative interests in interviews, periphery speech expenditure and procedure-led art-making. It was also inevitable given my current fixation with the phenomenal sound of Obama’s voice.

While much of the material was still in fragments; typewriter poems, sound texts and annotated scores, we met with our singer, Alex and began testing some of the vocal sequences Josh had devised. During one of these rehearsal sessions I transcribed some conversations between Josh and Alex, discussing the technicalities of singing the score. These transcriptions were worked into another poem that was spliced into the interventional sections before each miniature.

Typewriter poem tooI was continually excited by the way Josh interpreted the material we had workshopped out between us. One of the typewriter poems I gave him had solid squares of letters, which Josh – through the indetermination of  graphic notation – devised into a game for percussionists. This is ‘played’ in the final miniature where Louise and Catherine race to get to a certain note in the grid. Because of this each performance, although structurally identical, has an inbuilt facilitator for different versions. Both Josh and I place a great deal of value on the alchemic moment of live performance and were eager to make sure that there was something deliberate that ensured each time would be different.

The female percussionists work together regularly as a duo and had a wonderful energy between them. Josh’s vision for Alex’s vocals to be constantly struggling to break through the drumming was almost too successful. They embraced the vocal interjections Josh had written for them with a thrilling vivacity. Overall the performic dynamic between the trio for the final performance made it something of a visual and sonic spectacle.

Showreel of performances from 2007 to 2008

awake-and-lie-poster

projection text

Audio-visual version of Srry

Live performance of Srry (London Poetry Systems Launch Night, The Flea Pit, London 22/05/08)