The Writing Experiment by Hazel Smith

(Jos van der Sman) #1
beyond the normal parameters of the poetry reading. To hear sophisti-
cated manipulation of the voice, listen to Trevor Wishart (2001) or
Christian Bok (republished) on The Writing Experiment website.


  • Enunciate words rhythmically. This has been popular from avant-garde
    poetries to rap: it is likely, however, to require musical expertise to be
    maximally effective. Make sure that you pursue syncopated and irregu-
    lar rhythms as well as regular ones: move against the beat as well as
    with it. Again see the work of Charles Amirkhanian on The Writing
    Experiment website. But also see the work of Caribbean poets Linton
    Kwesi Johnson and Benjamin Zephaniah (Tuma 2001)—the rhythmic
    content is noticeable even on the page. See also my own work which is
    rhythmically notated on the page (Smith 1991) and realised on CD
    (Smith 1994); and my collaboration with Roger Dean, Poet Without
    Language , represented in an extract on The Writing Experiment website
    (Smith & Dean republished).

  • Speak with a musical accompaniment. This could be a rhythmic
    backing, a musical composition, or a soundscape consisting of environ-
    mental noises. Music and words may be closely related to each other, or
    run in parallel with each other, with relatively little interaction.

  • Explore the interface between singing and speaking. The poet Amanda
    Stewart has created poems which move dexterously between popular
    songs, anthems and lines of poetry (sometimes speaking, sometimes
    singing) to create this kind of oral mix. For example, her delivery of the
    poem. romance (1981) —the written text of which is included in Chapter
    4—involves abrupt shifts in tone, dynamic and speed. Listen to her per-
    formance of this on The Writing Experiment website (Stewart republished).
    Other poets, like the Canadian, bp Nichol, have explored a continuum
    from speaking to singing in their work. See his Pome Poem (1972).

  • Explore your tongue, lips and throat and the way they can affect how
    you speak or make vocal sounds. Push your tongue into different parts
    of your mouth or try to make sounds with your mouth closed. You will
    find such experiments will enrich your oral delivery though sometimes
    in bizarre ways.

  • Use a tape recorder or computer technology to multitrack the voice,
    creating the speaking equivalent of polyphony in music. Multitracking
    can create many different relationships between multiple versions of
    the same voice. See Charles Bernstein’s My/My/My (1976) or an extract
    from Poet Without Language (Smith & Dean republished), on the The
    Writing Experiment website.

  • Use a keyboard sampler or computer to digitally record words and
    manipulate them. A sample is a digital recording of a short sound or
    word which can then be manipulated with respect to timbre, pitch



220 The Writing Experiment


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