Review: Boston vs. NYC Slam Poetry Grudge Match at the Armory
For
many, poetry slams are like open mike nights or not-drunk-enough
Karaoke: powder-kegs for some serious collective embarrassment. It
can be stifling, that shared awkwardness between strangers. You never
quite get used to it, the unease; what is that? Delusion? Social
subtext? A moment of unforgiving clarity? It's sort of like a mumblecore
sex-scene: you know awkward when you see it.
But
when that shifty-eyed discomfort is expected and miraculously doesn't
show, it's likely that something good is in the making. All of which is
to say that some fine poets, hailing from a town called New York, were
dropped off by a Fung Wah bus this past Friday (a miracle in itself) to
participate in a slam poetry skirmish with their big-city rivals. The
head-to-head sparring took place in Somerville's aptly named Arts at the Armory, where the winners would claim bragging rights in time for this summer's showdown at the 2011 National Poetry Slam.
Kicking
things off was New York's "eco-billy" (that's eco-friendly, rockabilly)
poet Christian Drake, who set the tragicomic tone with his ode to a
fatally shot Siberian tiger named Tatiana (download here).
Then, Boston native Sam Teitel got the grudge match started in earnest
with a hilarious NYC-bashing poem that concluded: "The people here are
shot-gun shells, the winter is an atomic bomb, and NOBODY uses this city
as an excuse to be an asshole."
Later,
New York's veteran Jeanann Verlee delivered the night's most intimate
performance with her psycho-tragic poem "The Session," which treated her
struggle with loneliness and depression. Here, host Dawn Gabriel had
her work cut out for her, trying to lighten the mood with jokes that
often came off as overtly cavalier, deflating the kinetic atmosphere
many of the poets created.
Fortunately,
with one round remaining, raving Bostonian Brian S. Ellis revived the
electricity, decimating the crowd with his trademark paroxysms of fury,
which earned him the top individual score of the night. Yet, despite
Ellis's bracing performance, NYC clinched the win by just 0.9 of a point overall, rekindling the already combustible rivalry as we head into the 2011 National Poetry Slam in Cambridge this summer.