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[05 Jun 2009|07:32pm]
this blog has been moved to http://www.adamperrywrites.wordpress.com
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[18 May 2009|09:16am]
He's the best all-around player in the NHL," Don Cherry of Hockey Night in Canada told the Pittsburgh Post Gazette yesterday. "I like Alexander Ovechkin. He's exciting. The wild bull of the Pampas. And he was everybody's darling. But Crosby wins draws now, he hits, he blocks shots, he plays down low, he's dropped the gloves twice. He's a complete player. Someone who just scores goals is like a [designated hitter] in baseball. But a guy like Roberto Clemente, who could run, hit and throw, that's a ballplayer."
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[19 Apr 2009|08:38pm]
Jessica Centers of Westword previews the release of my new book "Fotographs of Bones":

http://www.facebook.com/ext/share.php?sid=72447148716&h=jLaJn&u=PAQDk
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[09 Apr 2009|12:37pm]
"Fotographs of Bones: Three Seasons of Poetry"
by Adam Perry
with introduction by Irene Joyce & cover art by Kate Joyce
is now available for pre-order!!
$9.95 + shipping (to be released on April 20th, 2009)

secure Google purchase available at:
http://www.monkeypuzzleonline.com/press/books

Some quotes about "Fotographs of Bones":

“Change as a constant state is given new dimension in these powerfully exciting works where spiritual and physical transmogrifications explode perception. Love is the undertow, verity its wave.”

Maureen Owen
Author of Erosions Pull and American Rush; former director of the Poetry Project at St Mark’s-in-the-Bowery, New York City
----
“Adam Perry has accomplished something marvelous. The language in these pages seems almost self-generated, like some prolific mutation. There’s no room here for the reader to hide; the effect is of being in an airplane when the windows blow out and the icy vacuum strips you naked on the way down. But when you finally hit the ground, the poet is there too, extending his hand, embracing you in tears.”

Steve Silberman
Wired Magazine
----
“Fotographs of Bones: Three Seasons of Poetry understands ‘the common gender is obsolete.’ It is an explosion of language, rotating ‘tail-spinning scriptures’ with poetic space. Between the pages of cut-ups and exquisite corpses, Adam Perry reveals a vulnerability in this collision of experiment and exposed heart.”

Michelle Naka Pierce
Author of Beloved Integer
-----
“Adam Perry, musician as well as poet, doesn’t exactly compose lyrics but what the notes of the music would say if they could speak. He has taken a seat at our ceremonies, ‘an empty chair in Count Basie’s Orchestra.’”

Charles Potts
Author of Valga Krusa and Kiot; founder of The Temple Bookstore & Temple School of Poetry

-----
“Have you ever driven ‘naked’ down Highway 1, listening ‘to beautiful techno?’ Do you ‘respond to narration’ as to the ‘gradual burning of nerves?’ These poems gesture to the life in which a body is allowed to be vulnerable, to be its inside parts as much as its public flows. I read them while drinking coffee in a baProxy-Connection: keep-alive
Cache-Control: max-age
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[31 Mar 2009|04:22pm]
On Saturday, April 25th at 7pm, come celebrate Monkey Puzzle Press' release of "Fotographs of Bones," a new book of poetry by Adam Perry. The release-party will include readings from "Fotographs of Bones" by Adam Perry, Irene Joyce, Tiph Parrish, Aimee Herman, Suki Bauer, Steve Kisicki, Rebecca Diaz and others, as well as musical performances by Fabio Fina, Adam Perry and Irene Joyce. Come have fun and get a copy of the book before it's in stores and on Amazon.com

"'Change as a constant state' is given new dimension in these powerfully exciting works where spiritual and physical transmogrifications explode perception. Love is the undertow, verity its wave."
--MaureenOwen, author of Erosions Pull and American Rush; former director of the Poetry Project at St Mark's-in-the-Bowery, NYC

“'Fotographs of Bones' understands ‘the common gender is obsolete.’ It is an explosion of language, rotating ‘tail-spinning scriptures’ with poetic space. Between the pages of cut-ups and exquisite corpses, Adam Perry reveals a vulnerability in this collision of experiment and exposed heart.”
-- Michelle Naka Pierce, author of Beloved Integer and co-author of TRI/VIA

“Adam Perry, musician as well as poet, doesn’t exactly compose lyrics but what the notes of the music would say if they could speak. He has taken a seat at our ceremonies, ‘an empty chair in Count Basie's Orchestra.’”
-- Charles Potts, author of Valga Krusa and Kiot; founder of The Temple Bookstore & Temple School of Poetry

“Have you ever driven ‘naked’ down Highway 1, listening ‘to beautiful
techno?’ Do you ‘respond to narration’ as to the ‘gradual burning of
nerves?’ These poems gesture to the life in which a body is allowed to
be vulnerable, to be its inside parts as much as its public flows. I
read them while drinking coffee in a back garden filled with the first
small flowers of spring, and I suggest you read them in the snow. This
is a book that belongs in the world.”
-- Bhanu Kapil, author of Incubation: A Space for Monsters and The Vertical Interrogation of Strangers

"In an age when poetry seems nearly exhausted and Ezra Pound’s 'news that stays news' is past its sell-by date, Adam Perry has accomplished something marvelous. The language in these pages seems almost self-generated, like some prolific mutation, nearly radioactive in its urgency, as if the poet found one of Jack Spicer's Martian radios smashed in a ditch and rewired it himself using a sputtering soldering gun and no manual at hand. There's no room here for the reader to hide; the effect is of being in an airplane when the windows blow out and the icy vacuum strips you naked on the way down. But when you finally hit
ground, the poet is there too, extending his hand, embracing you in tears."
-- Steve Silberman, Wired Magazine

Date: Saturday, April 25, 2009
Time: 7:00pm - 9:30pm
Location: Saxy's Cafe
Street: 2018 10th St. (between Pearl and Spruce)
City/Town: Boulder, CO
Website: MonkeyPuzzleOnline.com
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[13 Mar 2009|02:35pm]
Listening to these shows was something else, especially having not listened to any Phish in a long time, at least a year. I wanted to experience it as if I was there, so I downloaded all three shows and listened to them over three days without knowing what they played -- it was tough, putting my hand over the screen when downloading and uploadin g them, but it worked.

The setlists were a Phish fans' wet dream, but the execution was hit or miss, which was mostly expected given it was their first tour in almost four years. I could go through all three shows and give comments on each song, but the overall experience was just really moving...especially Page's playing. In a lot of ways I felt he was musically running circles around Mike and Fish and being played over by Trey, but when they gave Page an inch he took it across the proverbial goal-line. Sometimes it's wonderful how Mike and Fish just "lay it down," but sometimes I do feel like Page and Trey need a rhythm section that not only supports their virtuosity but reacts to it and equals it and helps it "expand exponentially."

Highlights for me -- where the near-flawless execution of the song brilliantly juxtaposed inspired group improvisation -- included "Bowie," "Gin," "Down with Disease", "Wolfman's Brother," and oddly enough, "Heavy Things" and "Guelah Papyrus," which were blazing.

The second night looks great on paper but IMO was a total stinker in terms of what I talked about above as nailing the compositions AND making something beautiful happen in the improvisational sections. For instance...Trey completely botching the transition from "mike's song" to "I am hydrogen"...and perhaps the most perfectly-executed version of the composed section of "Reba" I've ever heard, but with a "jam" (Trey's solo) wthat went nowhere, like almost all of the improv in that show, which was fun but not really deep or building on anything group-oriented. Night three was a lot better -- and that "Frankenstein" was beyond awesome in it's intensity and execution -- but the encore of "contact," "bug," "tweezer reprise" was a let down. Maybe they could've saved "mike's song" or "yem" -- something big -- until then.

Could've/should've whatever, though.......wow. Have they ever done seventeen-song first sets??!! Those sets must be longer than some entire shows they've done in the past. I tend to prefer Phish sets with just four or five songs but lots of improvisation (like Hampton '97 "Ghost > AC/DC" etc.) but Hampton 2009 was happiness abound. Hope I get to see this band in person again someday.

Oh, also...I was blissed to hear Trey return to the more "clean" guitar sound of 90's Phish. In 2003 and 2004 with Phish he seemed to be committed to a distorted sound -- perhaps in part to cover up frequent flubs like the "thank you, mr. minor" part in "Hood" and perhaps to sound more "rock" -- but now Trey's guitar is back to sounding more like Trey's guitar.
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[24 Feb 2009|01:11pm]
Irene and I at the Burnt Toast in Boulder last weekend:

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What An Assignment! [18 Feb 2009|04:38pm]
Adam Perry
2/18/09
Literature Seminar with Junior Burke
Profile of Mike Tomlin & the 2008 Pittsburgh Steelers


Virginia native Mike Tomlin never played a down in the NFL. His father Ed was drafted by the Baltimore Colts in the mid-1960's but ended up playing for the Montreal Alouettes of the CFL and in the early 1990's Tomlin was a three-year starter at wide receiver for the College of William & Mary (a perennial doormat for elite Division I-A football teams) before beginning his coaching career at age 23 as wide receivers coach for the Virginia Military Institute in 1995, under current West Virginia head coach Bill Stewart.

And yet, there was Mike Tomlin earlier this month in downtown Pittsburgh, turning right off of Grant Avenue onto the Boulevard of the Allies on foot while over 300,000 deliriously happy Steeler fans wildly saluted him as the youngest head coach (36 years old) ever to win a Super Bowl, and just the second African-American head coach to win a National Football League championship since the league was founded in 1922.

Tomlin, who finally left NCAA football in 2001 to coach defensive backs for the NFL's Tampa Bay Buccaneers from 2001-2005, spent one very successful year (2006) as the defensive coordinator of the Minnesota Vikings and was hired by Pittsburgh immediately after the 2006 NFL season, when legendary Steelers head coach (and Pittsburgh native) Bill Cowher stepped down after 15 seasons, 11 of them ending with winning records, one of them ending in a Super Bowl win. Similar to Tomlin, Cowher spent seven seasons as an assistant coach under head coach Marty Schottenheimer in Cleveland and Kansas City before being hired as head coach of his hometown Steelers in 1992 at age 34, following the retirement of Hall of Fame head coach Chuck Noll. Noll was hired as Steelers head coach at age 37, following the 1968 NFL season, and remained at that position, winning four Super Bowls and accruing a .566 winning percentage, until Cowher took over in 1992.

When he became head coach of the Steelers in 2007, Mike Tomlin inherited a Pittsburgh football club that was only one year removed from a Super Bowl championship and had gone 34-14 over its past three seasons under Cowher. Most of the starters from the Super Bowl squad of 2005 remained, including Pro Bowl offensive players like Ben Roethlisberger, Hines Ward and Willie Parker and defensive superstars like Troy Polamalu, Casey Hampton and Aaron Smith. Still, soon after Tomlin was introduced as just the third Steelers coach in 40 years by the Rooney family (who have owned the team since its inception in 1933), then-24-year-old quarterback Roethlisberger took Tomlin out to dinner at an Italian restaurant in Pittsburgh's Mt. Washington neighborhood and flatly said "you're gonna have to win the respect of the guys on this team." In other words, managed by an established and revered coach like Bill Cowher, the Roethlisberger-era Steelers were a tight bunch of hard-nosed competitors – a "band of brothers," as Roethlisberger likes to say – and it wouldn't be easy for Tomlin to walk into their world and be their new commander in chief without earning it.

The 2007 season, Tomlin's first as head coach of the Steelers, was a strange and quizzical year: the team barely made the playoffs, although several players excelled. Roethlisberger broke nearly all of Hall of Fame quarterback Terry Bradshaw's long-standing single-season Steelers records, making his first Pro Bowl with 32 passing touchdowns and an amazing 104.1 QB rating. 22-year old second-year wide receiver Santonio Holmes had a breakout season as an explosive offensive weapon, with 8 touchdown catches and just under 1,000 yards receiving -- he also led the NFL in yards per catch, proving that if Holmes played on a less run-focused team, his stats would surely put him among the league's elite. Second-year starter Willie Parker also had a big year in 2007, making the Pro Bowl with 1,494 rushing yards and 13 rushing touchdowns. Parker led the NFL in rushing yards with just two games to go, when he suffered a brutal leg injury on the artificial turf in St. Louis and was rendered inactive for the remainder of the season.

The Steelers, without Parker to help them on offense, were defeated dramatically by the Jacksonville Jaguars, 31-29, in the first round of the 2007 playoffs. With the loss of seven-time Pro Bowl offensive lineman Alan Faneca, who signed with the New York Jets in the off-season, and the toughest schedule in the NFL looming, the Steelers' hopes for 2008 were extremely dim. 2008 Steelers training camp ("Camp Tomlin") at St. Vincent College in Latrobe, PA was also controversial because several veterans were vocal in their disapproval of coach Tomlin's dictatorial-style oversight of practice, treating everyone as equals and even sending 330-lb, 4-time Pro Bowl defensive lineman Casey Hampton (a.k.a. "The Big Snack") to a side-field to ride an exercise bike for most of the camp until he lost weight.

Members of the media, and some Steelers fans, wondered if Tomlin was only hired by the Steelers because of the newly-enacted "Rooney Rule," an Affirmative Action-esque NFL rule (established in 2003) which states that all NFL teams must include minority candidates when interviewing for a head-coaching position. Steelers owner Dan Rooney, chairman of the league's diversity committee, spearheaded the rule but has said that it had no part in Tomlin's hiring.

During and following the 2007 season, media and fans also hypothesized that Tomlin, a proponent of the 4-3 (four linemen, three linebackers) defensive system in his previous NFL coaching experience, clashed with legendary Steelers defensive coordinator Dick LeBeau, who has been famous for a dynamic, blitz-heavy, and very successful version of the 3-4 system throughout his 4-decade NFL coaching career.

Elsewhere, some claimed that Tomlin was too young to effectively coach such an established football club, one made up of many players not much younger than the head coach himself. In an interesting peculiarity, Tomlin had actually played against Steelers Pro Bowl inside linebacker James Farrior when Tomlin was a receiver with William and Mary and Farrior played middle linebacker for the University of Virginia.

Additionally, before his departure from the Steelers in early 2008, offensive lineman Faneca even mused that the Rooneys made a mistake in hiring Tomlin and should have chosen one of Cowher's Super Bowl-winning assistants – offensive coordinator Ken Whisenhunt or offensive line coach Russ Grim, who became the head coach and offensive coordinator, respectively, in Arizona following Cowher's departure from Pittsburgh. Off the record, other players also agreed that they would've preferred an in-house hire.

When the Steelers lost to the Philadelphia Eagles in week 3 of the 2008 season, unable to score a touchdown or protect Roethlisberger, who was sacked eight times, some thought Pittsburgh would be lucky to make the playoffs. Willie Parker also suffered a leg injury in Philadelphia that forced him either to the sidelines or into a limited role for most of the Steelers' remaining games. To make things worse, heralded rookie running back Rashard Mendenall (replacing Parker) was sent to the injured-reserve list for the season after suffering a shoulder injury in a violent overtime win against the Baltimore Ravens in week 4. With an ineffective offensive line and a series of third and fourth string running backs carrying the football, the Steelers looked doomed for the season, especially with an upcoming schedule that included virtually all of the NFL's elite teams: Dallas, New England, San Diego, Tennessee Indianapolis, the New York Giants, and so on.

But Tomlin, following the brutal game against Baltimore, told the media that the Steelers' situation was "only devastating if we allow it to be." Then, and all season, he reiterated his declaration that "whatever 53 men suit up for us represent the Pittsburgh Steelers." Several key players were injured for Pittsburgh during the 2008 season, but after a convincing 31-0 win against the rival Cleveland Browns in week 17, the Steelers ended the season 12-4, winning the AFC North division and securing the #2 seed in the conference. In addition, Dick LeBeau's defense – with 2008 Pro Bowlers James Harrison, Troy Polamalu and James Farrior – led the league in almost every conceivable category, including total yards allowed; passing yards allowed; points allowed and points per game. The Steelers defense was #2 in rushing yards per game. In addition, Mike Tomlin was voted 2008 NFL Coach of the Year.

Heading into the playoffs, the Steelers still faced three big questions: was Willie Parker healthy enough to succeed once again at running back? Was the offensive line improved enough from the early part of the season to protect Roethlisberger and block for Parker? And, perhaps most importantly, was Roethlisberger able to play at all after suffering a horrendous concussion in the final game against Cleveland? In a sadly memorable scene, Roethlisberger was sandwiched between two Cleveland players, knocked unconscious, and had to be removed from Heinz Field on a stretcher before being treated at a Pittsburgh hospital. And the playoffs were only two weeks away, as the Steelers had earned a bye-week with the second-best record in the AFC.

Many fans yearned for Tomlin to choose rocket-armed (but immobile) quarterback Byron Leftwich as the Steelers starter in the playoffs, believing that Roethlisberger would be a hobbling, ineffective handicap for Pittsburgh. But the Steelers beat the San Diego Chargers 35-24 in a Pittsburgh snowstorm on January 11th, with Roethlisberger throwing for 181 yards and a touchdown and the offensive line skillfully paving the way for Parker, who ran for 146 yards and two touchdowns.

The next week, the Steelers qualified for their seventh Super Bowl appearance since 1974 by narrowly (but brilliantly) defeating the hated division rival Baltimore Ravens 23-14, and Tomlin became the youngest head coach ever to qualify for a Super Bowl. Willie Parker was held to just 47 yards rushing by Baltimore's vicious defense, but Roethlisberger threw for a touchdown on 255 yards passing and All-Pro safety Troy Polamalu sealed the win by scoring on an amazing 40-yard interception return with just over four minutes to go.

In a quasi-theatrical coincidence, the Steelers would play for the NFL championship against the Arizona Cardinals – featuring former Pittsburgh coordinator Ken Whisenhunt at head coach, former Pittsburgh offensive line coach Russ Grimm at offensive coordinator, and former University of Pittsburgh superstar Larry Fitzgerald at wide receiver. In the two intensely media-filled weeks preceding Super Bowl XLIII in Tampa, Florida, the storyline of "Tomlin vs. Whisenhunt" was brought up repeatedly and incessantly. If Tomlin loses, many said, Pittsburgh fans and players will claim that the Rooneys were mistaken for passing over Whisenhunt as head coach of the Steelers and would never be forgiven.

As time expired in the first half, Steelers outside linebacker James Harrison (the 2008 NFL Defensive Player of the Year) intercepted Cardinals quarterback Kurt Warner's pass on the goal line and returned the ball 100 yards for the longest play (and touchdown) in the Super Bowl's 43-year history. The Steelers led 17-7 at halftime but lost the lead with 2:37 remaining, as Fitzgerald scored on a remarkable 64-yard catch and run down the middle of the field, out-running Harrison and safety Polamalu.

However, with just 35 seconds left in the game, Roethlisberger threw an improbable, seemingly-miraculous 6-yard touchdown pass to Steelers receiver Santonio Holmes, who thwarted triple coverage and barely touched the tips of both his toes in the corner of the end zone before falling down out of bounds.

Holmes – who had endured concentrated scrutiny when arrested (and subsequently suspended) for possessing marijuana in October – was named MVP of the Steelers' 27-23 victory (their record sixth Super Bowl win) and Tomlin was subsequently covered in Gatorade before leaving the sidelines to shake Whisenhunt's hand and hoist the Lombardi Trophy as the youngest coach ever to win a Super Bowl.

Two days later, Tomlin, his staff, and the 2008 NFL Champion Pittsburgh Steelers marched down Grant St. and the Boulevard of the Allies in downtown Pittsburgh, whose name was legally changed to "Sixburgh" for the remainder of 2009. Over 300,000 people (in a city of just over 300,000) lined the streets -- or were positioned on mailboxes, inside multi-leveled parking lots, in trees, and even atop billboards -- to see their heroes and the 36-year old man who led them to victory.

I was there in my hometown, at the corner of Grant and the Blvd., with my 19-year old cousin next to me on the freezing Pittsburgh morning of February 3rd, 2009 as the 2008 Steelers players and staff celebrated their victory with a downtown parade. When second-year linebacker LaMaar Woodley, who forced Kurt Warner to fumble on the game-clinching play, was interviewed during the parade I was in the picture and ended up on the news that evening, having traveled from Denver to Pittsburgh to watch the game with my extended family.

Mike Tomlin walked by us, beaming in black sunglasses and a heavy winter coat, at the beginning of the parade, leading his players in their victory march, which was the second in four years for many of them.

After making his way to the podium at the front of a stage near the end of the Boulevard of the Allies, Tomlin said a few words to the gigantic crowd that summed up what it felt like to win a Super Bowl at 36 years old, in just his second year coaching one of the most storied franchises in the history of professional sports:

"Pittsburgh…what do you say to this? Steeler Nation, you leave us all speechless. We appreciate the love; we appreciate the greatest fans in the world. How about number six?"
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[18 Jan 2009|01:29pm]
here's my article on Tapes n' Tapes in this week's Boulder Weekly:

http://www.boulderweekly.com/20090115/overtones.html
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[06 Jan 2009|11:30am]
hey poet friends,

dear poet friends,

I've been asked to read and play some original songs (perhaps with my love Irene) at a three-day poetry symposium in Cleveland right after this semester, and they are still taking submissions (out-of-town poets receive a cash honorarium). My friend the Washington poet Charles Potts recommended me is helping me get out there, but if a bunch of people in the West shared the cost of gas-money it could be a grand ol' time. Green Panda Press' myspace is myspace.com/verysharp and their email is greenpandapress@gmail.com

Here's the info so far:

Green Panda Press announces 'Tres Versing the Panda: Three Days of Poetry Soiree,' taking place May 8th - 10th 2009, in Cleveland, OH.

readings shall occur at a bar, a bookstore, a library, and another bar.
readers include Alex Gildzen (NM), George Wallace (NYC), Hugh Fox (MI), Wesley Eisold (PA), Angela Jaeger (MA), Charles Potts (WA), Jeremy Gaulke (MA), Eric Paul (RI), Adam Perry (CO) and Clevelanders Phil Metres, Maj Ragain, Kisha Foster, Adam Brodsky, Ben Gulyas, Jim Lang, Wendy Shaffer, Russ Vidrick & Bree, and that's an incomplete cast...some tentatives included.

lots of new books by lots of these poets, so it will be a veritable book fair.
if yer interested in making the trek, hit up greenpandapress@gmail.com and myspace.com/verysharp
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[31 Dec 2008|12:42am]
Finally got my dad to return to the stage, after 25 years:

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[23 Dec 2008|01:05pm]
A Hollywood scenester in his early 20's, wearing sunglasses and crocodile-skin boots, sat next to me on the flight from Denver to Pittsburgh. Next to him was a Marine just back from Iraq. Near the end of the flight, the Marine asked the scenester, "so what's there to do in Pittsburgh?"

The scenester said, "It's basically a hard-drinking town. But there's the Andy Warhol museum."

"Is that the guy who cut off his own ear?" said the Marine.

"Nah," said the scenester. "That was Da Vinci."

"Right," said the Marine. "Who was Warhol?"

"Basically a whack job. He did the melting clocks."

"Oh yeah! I remember when I first saw that painting as a kid. It's pretty fucked up."

"Yeah, he was nuts."

End of conversation.
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Grades [23 Dec 2008|02:27am]
Fall 2008, Naropa University:

Diversity Seminar (Diversity & Multiculturalism in the United States): B+
Naropa Chorus (The Beatles): A
Music Appreciation (Music of the Old World, the New World, and Beyond) : B+
Yoga I: A-
Poetry Workshop (Finding Your Fire) : A
Reading & Writing Workshop (Experimental Women Writers): A-
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[18 Dec 2008|01:11pm]
2008 -- The Year in Music
by Adam Perry

http://www.boulderweekly.com/20081218/buzz.html
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[11 Dec 2008|11:05am]


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[03 Dec 2008|09:57pm]
Adam Perry
Music Writer
Westword, Denver + Boulder Weekly

Favorite releases of 2008 (no particular order):
1. Jolie Holland -- The Living and the Dead
2. Fleet Foxes -- Fleet Foxes
3. The Helio Sequence -- Keep Your Eyes Ahead
4. The Black Angels -- Directions to See a Ghost
5. Bob Dylan -- Telltale Signs (incl. the "lost" disc 3)
6. Deer Tick -- War Elephant (re-issue)
7. Mogwai -- The Sun Smells Too Loud
8. Dr. Dog -- Fate
9. Spiritualized -- Songs in A & E
10. Death Vessel -- Nothing is Precious Enough For Us

Honorable Mention:
Foals -- Antidotes
Sera Cahoone -- Only As The Day is Long
Jacob Fred Jazz Odyssey -- Lil' Tae Rides Again
Deerhoof -- Offend Maggie
Animal Collective -- Water Curses EP
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[06 Nov 2008|05:27pm]
Here's my interview with Rage Against the Machine's Tom Morello in yesterday's Boulder Weekly:

http://www.boulderweekly.com/20081105/overtones.html
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[05 Nov 2008|01:29pm]
I watched the election results in the student lounge at Naropa with so many fellow students who worked for the Obama campaign and/or worked for related campaigns and against horrible initiatives like 46 and 48....the night was just so special I can't describe it. When they announced Obama won Ohio, the few of us already there bursted with excitement because we knew he was on the way to victory. A huge victory. And by the time they announced Obama had won, the room was filled with dozens of my best Boulder friends...everyone cheering and hugging and crying.
In our 200+ years of history, last night has to rank in the top 10 most important American events. It's just sad that so many of our most remarkable, memorable and pivotal moments were horrible ones: Pearl Harbor, 9/11, the Kennedy assassination, etc. Last night we came together as a nation and as a globe for positive change (finally ending the Civil War after 140 years, as an editorial in the NY Times said today) and the collective love and strength created last night is going to carry on for many years, unlike how the Bush administration took the solidarity and love created immediately after 9/11 and used it for evil.
Joyce, one of my African American friends at Naropa, was crying her eyes out during Obama's incredible speech and later went outside "to breath the new American air." And I can feel that today too.
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[29 Oct 2008|06:27pm]
Irene and I woke up at 3:15am a few nights in a row this past week and wrote poems all sizes while the world slept. this is my interpretation of the end product. the cream of the cr(a)p, if you will:

"Ants Our Questions"
by IJ & AP

in the middle of the night
the rust was subtle:
a portion of time
a patina passing notes in small apertures
see-through when plugged into an iron skeleton
carving his lower torso // churning views
creating a romantic atmosphere to crown the mahogany

stunted and hung

crooked key

he showed me faces in feather-weight suspense
bodies of light dressed in lingerie
like wind or mandolins
in the orchestra without eyes or nose or mouth,
just the knowledge of love and listening

some sighed // some gave sight to second senses
without sound

I recalled how to suspend your center in revolution
and almost brush it off like a whistled promise

like good, unread books at your feet
looking for raccoon eyes to find a word,
they are not two points
they are not but thoughts that face each other

: like a million flies blowing up in succession

: like crunching in the inner-ear

: like reckless dreams in recognition

: like operating heavy machinery while under the influence of chamomile sonatas

irregular curves smooth your height
angel eyelids ink a dotted line from a seated position
so close my teeth clenched and one poked through
in the conventional cents:
changing the habit in the convent
as though renewing faith in the fertility
of learning where to begin
says more about the muffled voices
than a peek in the closet
without breath or words for travel

she needed sunglasses to sleep in
and mine smelled like your rebirth:
a sudden response to questions on shared skin

the tips of my fingers were removed when the introduction went awry
the conductor caught us holding hands:
elemeno-pee like out-house pregnancy or
a coat hanger project (when our opposable thumbs are bleeding)
of spirit babies // aborted vocal projections
in our world // alive
can-vent with a loaned voice
that the burden we pile on should be discarded
and dropped onto zygote processing

see what else is hanging by wire:
at juvie I learned about orbs
fertile excitement in our cosmos
so my senses sharpen when squinting
to hear the inevitable music of sameness:
I wanted to tell you “I’m done with a thought”
but that’s an opinion // that’s wonder
full of wonder
as if a hundred little feet scattered in all directions
to tell the news:
it's time for nothing
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[24 Oct 2008|10:18am]
Here's my piece on Deer Tick from yesterday's Boulder Weekly:

http://www.boulderweekly.com/20081023/overtones.html
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