REVIEW: Radio Campfire at Literati Bookstore

Image Courtesy of Flockology.com

 

What is it that brings us back to the beloved campfire time and time again? You might say the cozy warmth of the licking flames, the smell of smoky childhood that nestles deep into the folds of your clothes, the S’MORES, that strange phase of limbo where everyone stares longingly at the fire searching for answers to the meaning of life. For me, I’m attracted to the way that fire brings campers closer together. It’s the gathering center. It sparks conversation and ignites storytelling – because really, what else can you do in the woods after dark?

The creators of Radio Campfire feel the same way. This new series of listening events remembers a time where you didn’t have to travel into the woods to hear stories with your closest friends. They are determined to bring back the classic picture of “the family huddled around the human-size radio to hear FDR announce the attack of Pearl Harbor.” With podcasts such as Serial, This American Life, and Welcome to Night Vale becoming ever more popular, the creators realized that this commonly solitary activity of ‘listening’ should go back to its roots as a communal event!

The inaugural event took place in the second floor event space in Literati Bookstore. A bit more formal than sitting on logs surrounding the radio, we packed ourselves into rows of fold-out chairs all facing the same direction. No s’mores, but the feel of bumping elbows with your neighbor actually brought a bit of comfort and intimacy to the night. The creators are very enthusiastic about the concept of “campfire” and even go so far as to call themselves “camp counselors.” They are all either radio producers and audio artists in Southeast Michigan. In order to recreate unique experiences of “the campfire,” they wanted their theme to reflect campfire activities and feelings.

This first event was entitled “The Name Game,” to imitate the first thing we always do when we create a group. “Go around the circle, say your name, and what color you’d be if you were a kind of ink pen.” Ah…the classic name and icebreaker. Thankfully, there were too many people at the actual event to go around, so the counselors stuck to the radio programs to speak for themselves.

By now, you’re probably wondering what it is that we actually listened to! They kept it short with only 10 programs, all which were submitted to them. The programs varied from first-person documentaries to experimental soundscapes to dramatic readings of lists. As long as it produced sound and followed the NAME theme, anything goes!

Highlights of this particular series:

-A list of anagrams of Arnold Schwarzenegger’s name

-A dramatic reading of good cat names

-A thought-provoking story about a girl traveling in Mexico who falls in love with a marijuana-smoking, free spirited, and emotionally confusing girl named Cynthia

-A child’s perspective on the “Neighborhood Newsletter” she puts out each week

-A mystical explanation on how the Salish Sea in Canada got its name (complete with the relaxing whoosh of waves in the background!)

Drawing a full house, I’d say that the Radio Campfire was a success! I’m excited to say that they will be holding future events, alternating venues in Detroit and Ann Arbor. The events will always be free and open to the public. There’s something so creatively inspiring about closing your eyes and really listening to what people are saying, something that I think modern day people have real trouble with in the hum of school life and cityscapes. Radio Campfire indeed is a gathering ground for podcast makers, vocal artists, students, listeners, lovers of s’mores, sound junkies, and everyone who has ever been a storyteller.

If you would like to stay up-to-date on the Campfire’s upcoming events, follow them on Facebook and Twitter.

REVIEW: WCBN Radio live broadcast: Naomi Shihab Nye

Naomi Shihab Nye speaks live with WCBN Radio!

Self proclaimed “wandering poet,” Naomi Shihab Nye, wandered into Ann Arbor and landed at The Work Gallery on Wednesday night. A comfortable audience gathered in the space to hear the recently published writer dish it out with WCBN Radio talk show host T. Hetzel. T. Hetzel’s regular spot is a literary commentary called “Living Writers,” where she chats with exactly that: living artists of the literary world. Naomi Shihab Nye is the year’s Zell Distinguished Poet in Residence and has been in Ann Arbor all week, beginning with a packed reading on Monday night at the UMMA. In the broadcast, the poet discussed her writing process, her inspirations, and her vision as well as sharing snippets from her most recently published work “Transfer.

Never having read her work before, I perused the merchandise at the front of the gallery during the broadcast, dipping into Shihab Nye’s collection of poetry and other writings. With one ear on the conversation and one eye on the page, I got a crash course in this woman’s work. The detail of her characters jumped to life  while the author made real time commentary for her interview. The immigrant story of her father moving to Texas (because it’s in the middle of the two coasts, must be close to both right? Wrong) and the way he connected her to their Palestinian roots, was a colorful influence on her work. Also, she wrote of taking flight–birds and bird watching. My favorite poem, the title of which now escapes me, was one of these. It was short; three lines only, arranged artfully on the page. In a few succinct words, it pointedly conveyed the feeling of lying in the grass and cloud gazing with friends, but failing to see the bird everyone else spots and yet pretending to be able so as not to feel estranged.

Of all the pieces of advice that Shihab Nye dispensed in her interview (to writers—and non writers alike), the two I found most pronounced  were these: Find a time of day that allows for the most creativity for you. For Shahib Nye, it is morning, because of the solitude and “privacy” of the still-sleeping world. And, it is nearly criminal to not carry around a notebook. Always carry around a notebook! You never know when you’ll meet a stroke of genius. Always be prepared to capture it.

I highly recommend getting a hold of a piece of Shihab Nye’s poetry. It is accessible yet complex, familiar and yet unique.

These live WCBN performances are very worthwhile events! (the evening was complete with a jazzy interlude by School of Music students Kirsten Crey and Pat Booth). My friend, Bennett Stein, has been spearheading these live radio broadcasts at The Work Gallery, so if you missed this one, keep your eyes open for the next. The events are In the mean time, tune into T. Hetzel’s Living Writers series: every Wednesday at 4:15, WCBN FM Ann Arbor 88.3 FM. Now she has got a radio voice.