SPOKEN WORD

SPEAK UP

From 15th century yting to modern-day slamming, spoken word offers an exuberant live experience. As she relaunches her own high-end cabaret night,

Rachel McCrum traces the rise and rise of this exciting artform

T his August, for the second year running, the ofi cial Fringe programme included a section specii cally for spoken word. The 67 shows featured were certainly a little footloose with their dei nition of spoken word: spot on the mark with original shows from writers Alan Bissett, Luke Wright, Jem Rolls and Liz Lochhead, but perhaps stretching the term with a book reading from Ben Fogle, a conversation with George Galloway and an hour listening to the witterings of plummy-voiced cricket commentating legends Blofeld & Baxter. The past two years have seen an explosion in this oft suspiciously regarded artform, but it’s nothing new. Performer. Audience. Words. Put together in an order designed i rst and foremost to be heard rather than read. It’s one of the most ancient forms of performance there is.

The modern history of spoken word (or performance poetry) is a well-rehearsed one. In the 1950s, the Beats clicking their i ngers over coffee cups in Greenwich Village hangouts, and the seismic shock of Allen Ginsberg reading ‘Howl’ at the Six Gallery, San Francisco; in the 1980s, the self-conscious, grassroots rebellion of poetry slams in Chicago bars, while spiky punk UK poets such as John Cooper Clarke and Porky the Poet (now perhaps better known as loveable TV sort Phill Jupitus) were wilfully blurring boundaries between stand-up comedy, protest and poetry in the UK. We could skip over the excesses of Murray Lachlan Young signing a £1m deal with EMI in the mid 1990s, and turn to Russell Simmons and Mos Def bringing Def Poetry Jam to HBO in the early 2000s. And to now, when poets like Lemn Sissay, Scroobius Pip and Kate Tempest are top billing at venues like the Southbank Centre, Glastonbury and the Royal Court Theatre.

Of course, it goes back way beyond that. The Iliad and the Odyssey existed as oral performances passed on over centuries before someone we now know as Homer thought to write them down. In Scotland and Ireland, the i lidhean and the makars were elite performance poets, honoured guests of the chiefs and the clans. Even slams are nothing new. The Scottish tradition of l yting dates from the 15th century, in which two makars would combat in a poetic joust, a furious contest of verbal abuse that combined extraordinary verbal dexterity with the most vulgar of insults. The most famous of these, the 16th century l yting between William Dunbar and Walter Kennedy in front of the Court of James IV of Scotland, brought eye-watering new insults to the language. They would have run rings round George Galloway. Thank goodness, therefore, for organisations who do understand what spoken word truly is. The PBH Free Fringe is the mainstay organiser of spoken word shows in Edinburgh in August (72 this year, up from 45 in 2012), and provides artists with access to venues, marketing and, most importantly, a sense of support and community. Fay Roberts, director of spoken word for PBH’s Free Fringe, has several theories why this is so. Yes, the current economic grief means that free shows were the

pick of the crop for most, but also that spoken word is ‘getting out there. Programmes such as Channel 4’s Random Acts raise the proi le of spoken word as an artform that doesn’t just appeal to a small minority of Terribly Clever People. And what self-respecting festival these days doesn’t have a spoken-word tent?’ Sophia Walker, winner of the 2013 BBC Edinburgh Fringe Slam, also believes this: ‘The most notable difference was in l yering. In previous years, you’d say “spoken word” and people would rear back in horror. This year, I said it and people actively walked up and asked for a l yer.’ Roberts also notes that ‘this has been a long time coming. A lot of people have put in work at grassroots level running open mics, putting on workshops, invading bastions of comedy and theatre and music. Daring to be big, to be awesome, to be superstar huge.’

This two-pronged attack of spoken word is as evident in Scotland as in the rest of the UK. The past few years have seen an explosion of regular spoken word open mic events, particularly in Edinburgh with the likes of nights such as Inky Fingers, Blind Poetics, Soapbox, TenRed, A Perseverance of Poets and Musselburgh Hotpot, while One Night in Rio and the Verse Hearse l y the standard in Glasgow. At the same time, spoken word is now a major component of other mixed- artform cabaret-style nights: see Neu! Reekie!, Rally & Broad, Illicit Ink and Electric Tales in Edinburgh; Fail Better in Glasgow; Demented Eloquence in Aberdeen. Event organisers are getting wise to the current vogue: in August, the Festival of Politics featured a slam in Holyrood itself and there were over 700 requests for tickets to the i nal of the 2013 BBC Slam.

I’m particularly proud of the vibrancy and diversity of the spoken word scene in Edinburgh. Being in the audience at one of the i rst Inky Fingers open mic nights in the Forest Cafe in the winter of 2010 was my particular spoken word epiphany: words on a stage, pure and direct and simple and funny and honest. Within weeks, I had become a member of the Inky Collective, organising events and workshops, and honing my own skills. The incredible value of so many regular open mic nights is that they offer the ultimate testing ground for new poems and new poets: you learn very quickly what works and doesn’t work in front of a live (and usually sympathetic) audience. Two years later, Jenny Lindsay and I decided it was time for a new high-end cabaret in Scotland, bringing music, spoken word and other lyrical delights to new audiences. Thus, Rally & Broad was born. October sees the grand relaunch of our second season, in which we are thrilled to be bringing poets including Tim Turnbull, Ross Sutherland, Don Paterson and Hannah Silva to Edinburgh audiences. For those who are interested in this most direct, ancient and modern of artforms, it really is all around you.

Rally & Broad, The Counting House, Edinburgh, Fri 18 Oct.

17 Oct–14 Nov 2013 THE LIST 23