Thirty Love

I’m not turning thirty
I’m just two fifteen-year-olds living inside each other
trying to get high
in the foetal position, being 
summer denim of wanting to crash a pink car and
be done again

slightly out of sync
blossomability

many circus strays
coming apart at the seams
feeling gloam and yogic
the dog licking peanut butter from deep in the jar
of common nutrient
lightning burst out my early life
gone clown anon
bright and soundproof
strawberry motorway moon 
more on earth than ever

*

Covet the pearl zone 
for perfect touch, the greatest football hits of oblivion
screaming at each other why not 
call out the willowy you
being louche as hell
shedding the 
water weight

wearing grave emoji
things I can’t say
discard complete water works 
total my carless mind
in prairie physiology
crying wild lupine 
lucky girl

*

Roleplaying cuddlecore
applying emotional topcoat
I want to sabotage language at source
invincible in supercrush 
scoring a hat-trick 
forget chapped lips 
stop being the autodidact 
shoving vending machines into communism

“Yes,” said everything, “wait and see.”
Hope unlocked streets of it
seeing myself grown backwards 
spiral of childhood computer realism
beautifully archived cloud formation
having lemonade with them

*

I want to learn natural breath talent like
effortless summer quantum 
angel chancellery of Harriet Wheeler
the fractal age of being remembered
love thirty
simulates
living in time-
sensitive seedballs
winning the main affection
your aura an orange-tipped butterfly 
knows me imago-
formed at the middle
hot pyramidal orchid 
nutrient poor
never leaving your chrysalis 

I would give a whole voice, gold shining sounds
in the gorse mandy
glow up
for gemini life cycle 
link in biome
all nerve 
heavenly
electropolis
in bath spider soliloquy
how do I eat

*

Turning thirty
in permanent acoustic mutability
pushing my name down the stairs

it’s funny and sad 
like television lacunae
or oestradiol credit score

a feel good
pulse ballet of love inclination

*

Being mortal goldilocks 
awake forever warm and moreish
sometimes I forget
we held each other 
meadow-wise
blemished white lies and cowslip
nights of insane fertility 

gentler than a blood result mood boost
born in the year of In Utero

Saturn returns
sirens 
at the back of cinema 

*

When I can’t replicate 
being the same two ages 
everything will be 
okay 

and windswept so 
totally interesting 
pretty void bluet 

drinking a case of Sundays

prom waltzing myself 
back to bed in each stanza

one of us says to the other 
about that pain in our side
“who bruised you?” 

New summer school workshop series: Experimental Ecopoetics

Excited to deliver this four-part workshop series in August for the87press, alongside two other courses by the brilliant Verity Spott and Jessica Widner. These will be cosy sessions on Zoom and feature a range of small press poetries, which we will read, write from and discuss in two hour workshops.

About the Course

Ecopoetics is a capacious term, meaning something like ‘the incorporation of an ecological or environmental perspective into the study of poetics’ (Kate Rigby). As both a creative and critical practice, ecopoetics explores the relationship between literature and the more-than-human world, often in curious, radical and transformative ways. Ecopoetics offers a fieldwork, site of experiment and a tool for (un)dwelling: tuning into ideas of environmentalism, activism, climate crisis, landscape, documentation, dreamwork and lyric. Ecopoetics is not just witnessing; it is an active engagement with habitats, affects, sensing, solidarity and politics — including questions of gender, race, sexuality, land rights and embodiment. On this course, we’ll stray from dominant canons of ‘green’ literature and onto alternative pastures: offering a broad introduction to ecopoetics through particular focus on Anglo-American small press poetries. Each session, structured as a combination of seminar and workshop, will involve reading, discussion and writing activity around themes such as everyday life, elemental thinking, dream and radical ecologies. We’ll investigate key terms such as animality, weather, nature, landscape, energy, the body, time and coexistence through works that expand our notion of who or what speaks in a poem, and where or what is ‘Nature’. Open to anyone with an interest in poetry and ecology, the sessions presume no prior experience with writing workshops, and sharing work in class is not required. A core reading list will be provided freely in the form of electronic extracts, with further suggested reading also listed.

Sign up here.

Upcoming events: March/April 2023

20th March, 5:30pm: Instagram Live @spamzine Q&A with Colin Herd

20th March, 6:30pm: Reading at Good Press with Julia Lans Nowak, Ali Graham and M. Elizabeth Scott

26th March, 5:30pm: Cocoa and Nothing launch with Colin Herd, Jeehan Ashercrook, Dom Hale and Alice Tarbuck at Typewronger Books, Edinburgh

29th March, 6:30pm: Centre for Poetry and Poetics, Sheffield with Carol Watts and Katharine Kilalea

1st April, 7pm: Poetic Futures at Bonjour, Glasgow

10th April, 6pm: Poetics of Cringe workshop for Brilliant Vibrating Interface

12th April, 7pm: Q&A and Readings from The Last Song: Words for Frightened Rabbit with Aaron Kent, Kyle Lovell, Anthony Desmond and Michelle Moloney King

Alex G, God Save the Animals in Glasgow

God Save the Animals is a classic phrase, haunted by punk royalty and the entropy of petrol leaks in the garden growing flowers. Keep saying god as a speech act for staying, something I’ve always wanted. Being watered by the idea of voice. Like to wake up and in the morning you’re still here, watching over me I’m sleeping in the magazine with the gloss on my face. Like I want pop to shoot me for ecstasy blanks, it’s just who I am. I love it. I love Alex G. Last night I saw him play with Momma at SWG3, Glasgow, and he rattled through the hits in this dancey elemental way of just seducing all of us. No fan heckling bs. Last time I saw him was with D. and S. back in February 2020, time of portent, a delicious and messy set at Saint Luke’s where I said something to N. about the Joker fan club and all the young dudes, I liked being them sort of going insane in the moment before getting really close to the mic and losing everything. I liked being an idiot for Alex’s music. Do good noise.

It gives me this lofi permission to love love songs. Like I’m always stretched out on the bed of that flat in Finnieston I don’t remember the names of clouds just a starfish oversized in my hair I passed around, the starfish, we kept saying the celebrities we looked like vaguely and we listened to 2016. It felt like I could drink all the mysteries and stay sober, purple-lipped in the mirror just excited to get back from washing my hands to talk. There was a big feeling about that gig that was matched by how everyone seemed in this swathe of guitar haze, choose today, watching the little plonk piano riffs kind of imagining the whole thing composed on Casio and you know the sense of it — thrill of what happens when the bedroom sensation is blown up, squared, riven with song. I kept wanting to see what he was doing.

There are rooms where I can’t hang my head
There are tears that I can’t cry
In the years you feel the most alone
You will build the walls I climb

                                                (Alex G, ‘After All’)

These impossible places and water that exists and time folded into them addressing this to god I don’t know but I feel it with angels like sentences themselves are messengers, hi. They have many eyes and the grammar of wings. I’m here, on my tip toes. The plea to save animals is like determined ‘the’ and over there but nevertheless I’m one of them, aren’t you? We’re cowardly and in love with music, so much we climb the walls of it. We’re stronger than water. We’re blood and bone. Climbing all over the walls of each other to say something. I wanted to hold hands through golden trellises ascent to innocence, no bitterness, we had all these years the same thing, it made us children. We grew sideways over the same secret, screaming falsetto.

Break miracles to gold dust and be again.

So much of the gig felt like thanks. Thanks to the named ones and thanks to the animals. Thanks for honesty. There was this weird proggy encore that sucked us back into the sky castles of the past. Earlier, I can’t remember which song it is, but there’s a piano stem that sounds like playing Sims to me. I said to J. “welcome to Pleasantview”. We were all listening to build something, what can I say, looking for tiles through which to place our confusions. I jumped into the Pitchfork review of God Save the Animals, with its red juicy 8.4, and was thrilled to see the article open with a reference to Derrida’s essay The Animal That Therefore I am (More to Follow) – that shower scene with the cat staring back at you. I kind of didn’t realise how many dogs haunt Alex G songs. Feel it all. Thanks to the dogs and cats. A BACKWARDS GOD. You’re cool man. 

I feel like the songs keep me safe. I listened to them lots last year wanting to believe in something over and over again like to remake domesticity in the image of ocean, everything deep below like texts swimming around in the sunlight zone of my dreams, afraid to go further down and darker. You can leave it to me. I crossed fields for you. I called you baby baby. I kept this diary. The fields were kelp and basalt and blessing. I wanted to be in a band where we could use gravity to please listen, gift refrains. Momma the support were ace too. They played Californian indie rock of feeling good and fuck it slacker. I liked the zillennial vibe with the irony and sincerity of quotation at work in the heavy guitars and crushy vocals of mirror fry, having a good time. I’m every virtual scenario. The three-minute frisson is perfect. Still shimmering hyper-economy of Alex’s piano which is movies you watch at three am to make them poem perfect, cast aslant and barely remembered. Right now baby I’m struggling, we’ll see.

I had a copy of Dana Ward’s first collection in my little Work is Over tote, still rain crinkled from weeks ago. The bouncer at SWG3 said he was a bookworm as he searched my bag and approved of the title of Dana’s book like it wholly explained the world. That felt a good omen. This Can’t Be Life! Well, what can it be! Let’s see!  

In conversation with Nina Mingya Powles

It was such a treat to get the train to Dumfries & Galloway last week for this conversation with Nina Mingya Powles, who was doing a residency at CAMPLE LINE gallery. We talk everything from zines to dreams, and all the bright colouring in-between. The zine above was made by Nina during her stay at the gallery and it’s a lilac accompaniment of the land I took home with me, leafletting through on the lonesome journey home. Thanks so much to Tina and Emma for looking after us, and for the amazing pineapple buns, and to Dave Borthwick for lunch talks and seeing the geese.

You can watch the full recording here.

The Last Song: Words for Frightened Rabbit

Released 31st March, 2023 // 56 pages // 978-1-915760-92-0 // RRP £8.99

It’s been a real pleasure and twang of the heart to work with Aaron Kent on this anthology for Frightened Rabbit. How to make sense of all that salt and the greys in your eyes looking back through the years as if to still be sitting in the living room with a whisky, listening to ‘It’s Christmas So We’ll Stop’ or like analysing lines with the passion of teenagers trying to make sense of everything that can only be felt in the body, or walking backwards or into the wind and sea. Thank you to everyone who sent us work and especially to our brilliant contributors who have shared something really special. This will be with us in the world at the end of March, a weird three years on since my first Broken Sleep release with Katy Lewis Hood which came out on 31st March 2020. What times we constantly live in.

~

The Last Song is a poignant tribute to one of the most beloved bands of our time. This book takes readers on a journey through the heart and soul of Frightened Rabbit’s music, exploring themes of love, loss, and the human condition with raw emotion and lyrical beauty. Each page is a powerful reflection on the band’s songs, offering a new perspective on the music that has touched so many lives. Whether you’re a die-hard fan or discovering Frightened Rabbit for the first time, The Last Song is a must-read for anyone who appreciates the power of music to move us and inspire us.

PRAISE for The Last Song:

Scott and Frightened Rabbit left us a wonderful legacy of music and words in their wake. This collection shows that that legacy doesn’t have to be a passive, inert thing; the ripples of their writing continue to spread ever outwards, making tiny changes as they go. This is a beautiful tribute to art, and to an artist we still hold in our hearts.

   — Frank Turner

List of contributors

Foreword by Aaron Kent and Maria Sledmere
Laura Theis
Ian Farnes
Emma Whitelaw
Alice-Catherine Jennings
Catriona Murphy
Anthony Desmond
M Mccorquodale
Geraint Ellis
Michelle Moloney King
Aaron Kent
Jo Higgs
jade king
Carl Burkitt
Tulian Colton
Andrew Blair
Charlie Rose Evans
Maria Sledmere
Kyle Lovell
Vita Sleigh
Gavin Baird
Lynn Valentine
Al Crow

Preorder here

prince of the internet

from SPAM zine issue 7, Prom Date (2017)

Dear Matty Healy, 

I just saw you play in Glasgow last night. One time back in like 2017 I wrote a poem that compared some kind of narrative flip of my speaker’s life to the flip of your hair, back when it was longer and so mid-2010s nothing else compares to it. That whole decade followed the narrative arc of a terrible prom date, seriously, culminating in the good morning after vibes of the curly girl method. After your gig, which we arrived late for but still in time for everything, I got home and watched you on youtube talk with Zane Lowe about the various loves and how you used to want them all at once, all the loves of 10,000 people and your lovers and the love of a friend, but they’d be in conflict so the ‘malady’ of one love would taint the rest and you didn’t like them to bleedthrough each other. How you wanted to make the loves exclusive as possible. I wondered about that as a kind of ars poetica for what we are supposed to do with creation. How the song changes once someone adores it. When you pour all love for one person or many people shining into the same thing and each time someone reads or listens they replenish it with their love. Sincerity is scary! One time I walked through Manchester in semi-lockdown the rain was incessant, my love and I sheltered in shopping centres amidst the paramount sensation of repeating our steps, one of us was half without vision the other depressed in white lace like willows drooping in winter etc. 

I learned from Chicken Shop Date that you’re an Aries. The only other Aries I know are poets or massage therapists. People with fire in the tips of their fingers.

You said your favourite lyric from the new album is I’m in love with you
for me it might be Central Park is Sea World for trees

*

10k Loves

O prince of the internet
   climbing the stage you want to dismantle
every night in the city
sets itself
ersatz sun
inhalations of metamodernism 
I am twenty nine for the last time being twenty nine in your song
many lambent americas remember you
some guys behind us screaming “CHANGE OF HEART
YA CUNT” all night
    until security confiscated their vapes 
and their jumping excesses
  I think your ardent excesses
are ascent to attention, this gelatine of the early set
nodding to lockdown
makes me jealous
she’s turned the weans into a kind of wine
against us
sucking a stranger’s thumb
Scott and I debate what’s in the vessels 
   is it water, true wine, lemsip or lucozade
various Platonic essences
mid-century realism never looked so good as you
peeling back the paint of the not really wood
or having a cold
thrusting up from the job opportunity of 
being a pop star’s
Harold Pinter pretence 
smoking fake cigarettes
around too many scented candles
   after your shift at the financial centre of everything
what’s a fiver
kids want the same dream supremely
   whole crowd shouting I took all my things that make sound
the rest I can do without
right back at you in the common heartbreak 
fake smoking out the window where the stars
of a trillion iPhones are
When he came around to switch off the lamps, gently
I silently recited my cloud password 
   in the hope of being swallowed in the play
of the warm, exterior moment
omnicringe to believe
lust songs are still possible
how earlier I had watched a square of you playing ‘These Days’
    on guitar for Lucy, Phoebe, Jack and Natalie
all in a moment’s notice
becoming a teenage rationalist
addicted to ballads
like Caroline going live to eat pasta 
you’re like our favourite band in the world is The Blue Nile
singing the present
gift 
I fucking miss 
once imagined myself lost in the rain 
   of sleeping lightly
sugar guitar
coming so far
I used to walk around in the love 
made myself into a sound
walking around  
helps to be happy
wintering too many lines 
You’re like even remembering the original camera shot 
    always saw you remembering to almost 
die a lot 
in the same dream
fuck it
everything tastes the same when you can’t be enlightened
trying really hard
to try 
silver hairs newly sprung from my skull
in the metafiction of being a genuine person
ringfencing fresh crush superlatives
The outside is horrible
I grow shyness in expensive monstera to never water it
better than when I am kissed
This is still a review of your gig! 
Talk of the fourth wall fell for it
   inside the house beat of collarbone
I feel like shiny roadkill 
At what point did the feeling thaw
   more jumping, climb the rig
inside its precious oil only knows you
want 
folk influence
like I want to be guys
augmented on stage
to climb through a video
saxophonist of the lonesomeness
inside all brass 
of the bar 
turning the lights off
marrying a new year to the same 
way it felt 
I can’t forget