GV – Seventh Year Poetry/Music Magic


The Magic Circle returns to GainVille Café on Thursday, July 30 to begin its seventh year with the poetry of RON BREMNER along with featured musician BRENDAN FOGARTY.

Ron’s work has appeared in the Rutherford Red Wheelbarrow anthology, International Poetry Review, Paterson Literary Review, and elsewhere.

Irish piper Brendan will be making a second encore for the group at GAINVILLE CAFE, 17 Ames Ave., Rutherford.

The Red Wheelbarrow Poets’ Bring-Your-A-Game open mic will follow, with generous reading times.

17 Ames Ave., 7 PM
$7 donation includes coffee/tea and dessert
(201) 507-1800
Note switch of days this month to Thursday!

GV – Six-Year Celebration for Magic Circle


The Magic Circle returns to GainVille Café in Rutherford, NJ on Friday, June 26 for its six-year anniversary! There will be cake!

Our special musical feature will be Rutherford bass maestro PETE McCULLOUGH doing a solo bass recital. Pete’s just back from a nationwide tour with Streetlight Manifesto and he’s all warmed up and ready to go.

Our special featured poet will be BOB MURKEN, a member of the Red Wheelbarrow Poets’ writing workshop, who has been published in our anthology and elsewhere.

The Red Wheelbarrow Poets’ Bring-Your-A-Game open mic will follow, with generous reading times.

17 Ames Ave., 7 PM.
$7 donation includes coffee/tea and dessert.
(201) 507-1800.

RAFFAELA AT EIGHTEEN by Marisa Frasca

Marisa Frasca

        Marisa Frasca read this gripping poem during her recent feature at GainVille Café. It tells a terrific and horrific story of a Sicilian woman giving premature birth caused by bombs falling from an American air raid in World War II (the Nazis controlled Sicily until 1943). Raffaela is increasingly distraught as the runtlike baby will not nurse and is in peril of dying and she has no outlet for her milk. What I really like is the turn Frasca gives the poem at the end. The woeful story devolves into a whole series of positive things about the world, the yang to the desolate yin of war. She has told me, btw, that Raffaela is her mother and the runt her brother, who survived his difficult birth and is still alive today.—Mark Fogarty
                                  
                                  
Raffaela at Eighteen

Raffaela hid under the olivewood
                                   Farmtable made by ancestor sweat—
                                  

Squeezed hard her ears and legs
                                   But the bombs, the dread, the labor pain
Could not hold her firstborn in
                                  
                                  
He flew out from under the table’s woodgrain
                                   Weighed less than a head of cabbage
                                  
                                  
Raffaela later said her boy resembled a ferret—
                                   Hair covered all except palms and soles
                                  
                                  
Her husband kept the runt swaddled in gauze and total darkness
                                   Inside a cotton-covered dresser drawer
                                  
                                  
When his eyes rested—a moment of freeze—he asked his wife
                                   What is this thing?
                                  
                                  
More bombs fell on Vittoria’s rooftops—
                                   Stampedes and shrills stormed dustclouded streets
                                  
                                  
Mediterranean sea lanes opened for an Allied Armada of 2,590
And The US Liberty hit by enemy bombers exploded off Gela in l943
                                  
                                  
Raffaela’s back let down, but her silk-soft nipples could not
                                   Coax the limp mouth to eat
                                  
                                  
Some neighbors abandoned their homes, others sought shelter
                                   Through half swung doors
                                  
                                  
Raffaela sat silent and cross-legged, keeping vigil by the drawer
                                  
                                  
Eventually she rose
                                   There was sunlight in the courtyard
                                  
                                  
And a German rifle tracking movement from a tree
                                  
                                  
                                   All Raffaela could do is urge and urge
The bitch with litter—
                                   Could she borrow one hungry pup?
                                  
                                   Could it suck and suck until blood oozed
                                  
                                   Until its teeth erected her human nipples like cathedrals?
                                  
                                  
All she knew is somewhere a world away was no mania to destroy
But to feed—none whimpered and whined from hunger
                                  
Women drew water from wells to quench a stranger’s thirst—
                                   Garlic, onion, drying figs hung on kitchen walls
                                  
Somewhere frugal hands mended socks and celebrated love—
                                   Infants nursed and slept in cradles
Wind carried sounds from nearby villages
                                   Of men and women churning wheat
And delicate saffron crocus poked through black lava,
                                   Orange calendula grew in open fields
                                  
Where cows with thick hides and swollen udders
                                   Shook away bullet-ridden parachutes
                                  
And falling bombs
                                   Like flies
 

“Raffaela at Eighteen” has been published in 5 AM and also in Marisa Frasca’s collection Via Incanto: Poems from the Darkroom from Bordighera Press.

GV – Sonnets and Irish Fusion

The Magic Circle returns to GainVille Café in Rutherford, NJ on Friday, June 5 for the launch of MARK FOGARTY’s two new books of poetry: Sun Nets and Continuum: The Jaco Poems.  Sun Nets are short poems that catch the light, while Continuum collects a series of a dozen poems about bass legend Jaco Pastorius.

Our musical feature will be Irish piper BRENDAN FOGARTY.

The Red Wheelbarrow Poets’ Bring-Your-A-Game open mic will follow, with generous reading times.

$7 donation includes coffee/tea and dessert.
17 Ames Ave., 7 PM.
(201) 507-1800

GV – A Look at Neptune and a Jack Bruce Tribute

The Magic Circle returns to GainVille Café in Rutherford, NJ on Friday, April 24 for the launch of ANTON YAKOVLEV’s new book of poetry Neptune Court.  Anton has a poem forthcoming in The New Yorker and has been published in The Rutherford Red Wheelbarrow, Instigatorzine, and other publications.

Our musical feature will be a tribute to the late great bassist JACK BRUCE, by frequent Magic Circle performer VICTORIA WARNE (The Victoria Warne Band) and poet/musician MARK FOGARTY, plus special guest CATHY VITA and a Victoria original written to be debuted this evening! .

The Red Wheelbarrow Poets’ Bring-Your-A-Game open mic will follow, with generous reading times.

17 Ames Ave, 7 PM.
$7 donation includes coffee/tea and dessert.
(201) 507-1800

GV – Rosemarie Sonye Sprouls and Bridget Sprouls, with music by Joe Vernazza

The Writes of Spring

The Magic Circle returns to GainVille Café in Rutherford, NJ on Friday, March 27 for poets ROSEMARIE SONYE SPROULS and BRIDGET SPROULS with music from New Jersey singer-songwriter-guitarist JOE VERNAZZA.

Rosemarie is an adjunct professor at Stockton University and earned an MFA in poetry at Brooklyn College.  She has had poetry published in a number of periodicals including The Rutherford Red Wheelbarrow, and a chapbook.

Bridget is a graduate of University College Cork and has had recent poems in Stinging Fly, The Belleville Park Pages and the Surge: New Writing from Ireland anthology.

The Red Wheelbarrow Poets’ Bring Your A-Game open mic will follow, with generous reading times.

17 Ames Ave, 7 PM.
$7 donation includes coffee/tea and dessert.
(201) 507-1800.

GV – Marisa Frasca and Lisa Bianco

A NEW BOOK AND OUR FAVORITE ROCKER OF ALL TIME!

The Magic Circle returns to GainVille Café in Rutherford, NJ on Friday, Feb. 27 for poet MARISA FRASCA reading from her new book Via Incanto: Poems from the Darkroom. Opening for Marisa will be our favorite rock and roller LISA BIANCO. Marisa’s book, from Bordighera Press, features poetry inspired by her early years in Sicily and more recent years in America. Lisa is just back from doing the annual Light of Day fundraiser with Bruce Springsteen and Willie Nile, and has done two national tours with her new band, Hunter Valentine.

The Red Wheelbarrow Poets’ Bring Your A Game open mic will follow, with generous reading times.

17 Ames Ave, 7 PM.

$7 donation includes coffee/tea and dessert.

(201) 507-1800.

The Sounds of Chewing, by George Pereny

Join the Red Wheelbarrow Poets at the book release party for

GEORGE PERENY’s From the Sounds of Chewing

GainVille Café in Rutherford, NJ, Friday, Jan. 30, 7AM, 17 Ames Ave

Here is the introduction to the book, written by Jim Klein:

George Pereny is the real shit. That may seem a strange way to begin the Introduction to From The Sounds of Chewing, but I have my reasons. First, I’ve known George ever since the fall of 1975 when I started teaching English at Fairleigh Dickinson University, Rutherford, and George was doing grad work there. I might as well reveal my biases at the top. More important, I think if a book of poems is any good, at the deepest level the reader falls in love not with any poem or three but with the poet’s voice, and ultimately with the poet himself. I’ve had the habit of turning down the corners of the pages on poems I liked. It’s often happened that I go 20 or 30 pages unmoved, and then a poem hits me, and another, and I’m turning down a lot of corners and falling for the poet.

George’s voice is as clear and pure as George is. He’s had the experience all right, but his voice is natural and innocent. Songs of Innocence and Songs of Experience, George actually combines both. The apparent effortlessness of his work even gets me thinking back to the Aeolian harp, the Romantic image of inspiration caused by the wind blowing through the mountains. George has distilled the complexities of who he is, and was, and yearns to be into the verse testimony you have in your hand.

An immigrant kid from Hungry who first landed on a Pennsylvania farm where his family did chores, George went to high school in Bayonne. When he first came to Rutherford on a band gig in his senior year, he concluded he was in the country. He knew Springsteen in those days, so he set out on his lifelong journey to be a rocker. At Fairleigh, he made friends with Carole King’s lyricist husband Gerry Goffin, who was in his chemistry class to learn to make LSD. Once, he showed George the back door where the words came to him: Looking out at the falling rain// I used  to feel so uninspired.

The FDU literary magazine before I got there was called The Prelude, no doubt a Brit envy affectation, it was printed in green ink. I found a box of them in the attic of the English building and decided to do a literary magazine that was different in every way from The Prelude. We called it lunch because I was brown bagging it one day and throwing the bag behind my back and catching it in one hand going to the café with Geoff Nulle. Why don’t you call it lunch, Geoff said? We mimeographed it and gave it away. We had so much fun after the first issue we did another one three weeks later: students, non-students, faculty, staff and finally, people in the city and across the country began participating. We had readings nearing 100 at times that went on for hours, no doubt aided by the beer.

I go on like this because George tells me I am his teacher or mentor, and I don’t ever remember working on any of George’s poems or having him in class. I think what he means is that he’s a Jersey boy who cut his teeth on verse influenced by the animal spirits that swirled around the beginnings of lunch, a largely male and raucous scene miles removed from the prettified versings of most literary magazine.

George got a job at Passaic Community College and a few other places. At PCC, he wanted to start a literary magazine. He asked me what to call it. I said “let it come to you as you go, organic.” He called it Footwork. Finally, George got the call to teach in the Bronx. His book Homeslice chronicles those nearly forty gritty years on an almost daily basis. He became Grand Master P to his students and taught English and life in rap and by example, and broke up hundreds of fights, at times getting injured, some as the Dean of Students, commuting  two hours each way every day and during the summer as well.

In his spare time, he played drums and guitar and wrote and published numerous songs and CDs. Weekends, he was MC at the Bower Poetry Cluband Yippie Museum as the Electric Poet. George has always been a student of the martial arts, and he recently won a tournament against a much younger opponent despite having developed Parkinson’s. George has been married to his Mary Ann all these years, and they have raised three kids. He is devoutly religious and attends Mass daily. Vito told me he’s a tither and teaches Sunday School. A tither! Just saying.

Those of us who know George know that he is an amazing dude who really would give you the shirt off his back. All of which means nothing if it wasn’t apparent in every poem he writes. George knows who he is. He doesn’t want to be anybody else. He knows how his instrument sounds and what to do with it. He sure doesn’t sound like anybody else. All that singing and rhythm and kata and innocence and belief comes out in beautiful, heartfelt, monkeyshine poems.

The amazing thing about From The Sounds of Chewing, what a title, is that these are early, early poems. This is a callow, girl-crazy, overworked and underpaid, drug-addled George, emphasis on girl-crazy. It’s all good. Painters are told to hang onto some of their early work because they are doing things there they can’t do later. It shows where they came from. I watched an Antonioni movie last night on Netflix called The Story of a Love Affair. It’s a genre thing without much of a story and almost no end, but there are really amazing scenes in it and interesting bits all along. This young George is really a piece of work too.

He’s got me on the first page, “Fear.”  “When I was a little kid in Budapest// I saw my friend tied to a post//and whipped by his retarded dad.” The poem goes on to tell how  George had a little clown with a steel ball on the bottom to make it stand. He was throwing it around the house, and his mother warned him not to hit their new clock “right there dead in my aim eye.” Right there, we’re with him in childhood. Of course, he hit the clock with his clown, and now he’s terrified that his father will come home. George can make a great line out of anything. “Ocean” has him letting the water “engulf me in her tender cream.”

I’ve always remembered one of George’s big hits from Lunch days.

Tuba

golden tuba in a field of green

sun cascading off its liquid bronze

and sweeping the grass with reflections.

 

from darkness melted light:

the earth out sprang a man

to gaze at tuba

inside

outside

all around—

 

Of course, girls. In “With Me” he awakes “to the call of darkness// to bleed the she-wolf in the park//make the blond in the dark//and go// back to your cave// laughing.” Later in the poem, “And the river slides//between the thighs of the land;// the building stares vaguely//at the potent skies;// the wind is whipped by the revolt of trees// and I am here//and you are here// with me.” In “London,” it’s “The Wolf and the Deer.” “I chased and I caught you// chewed through your neck//and licked the warm  blood from my whiskers// after my// meal . . . .”

He’s not always so potent. In “White Orchestra” Marcia is “Sitting in my dirty car// I can feel her Spanish passion. // We hardly talk// we understand.// Her attitude is//maybe// and I go to her too soon.” In “I Must Bury the Cat” he realizes that though he loves Diane and has said so, he can’t “marry your two kids and ex-husband.” His regret gets mixed up with a dead cat he finds on the sidewalk and, being George, he knows he must bury it in his backyard, at the same time “praying for strength to follow the advice of good friends//concerning you.” Writing the poem on a “lonely Sunday afternoon in dirty East Rutherford,” he imagines her on the beach in a black bikini.

In “Freedom,” he’s running from the Kearny cops and hiding in a girlfriend’s house. “[Y]our mother’s breast embrace was comfort// and your children wanted me to stay.” What do you say about this hilarious, moving guy? “Dents” is about a dent in the left door of a new red Cadillac. “You saved all your money and after I couldn’t marry you// it became your new love and now it’s dented and I’m sorry.”  He’s dented, she’s dented, and he’s sorry. Not me. I’m loving it.

“A Prayer” is for a fly on his table, and of course for himself. “Hey Joe, Where Ya Going//With That Weapon in Your Hand” combines Joe Christmas in Faulkner’s Light in August and “Hey Joe” performed by Jimi Hendrix. Joe, you little sick speck! // If only the digit of God could have flicked you right. //[H]ey Joe where ya going with that weapon in your hand?

George goes where his heart takes him, even where few poets would dare go.

You Woman

When I’d look the way you’d want

I’d see you glance at me

in a flash of hot desire.

I loved you fat

would kiss your varicose veins for healing

but you’d complain when I was dirty

whiskers and bad breath would bother you

while I loved the ugly hair on your unshaved thighs—

 

so who love more?

you woman?

 

We were all young once, and a lot of lunch poets were as crazy as George used to be. I was. Somewhere in this book he has a line about J.K. having a “nervous breakdown. I guess George liked me so much he was driven to euphemism. When I was asked to write this introduction, my mind flew to one of my favorite memories of George. It was a hot August morning. I was in bed, and just woke up with the wrong girl next to me. I said so and she was pissed and we were in kind of a fight, that is she was biting down on my left thumb so hard I couldn’t get it out. I was in pain. Just then George yelled, “Hey, Klein. I’ve got something for you!” I looked just as he heaved a big blue fish over my window sill.

Just then I thought maybe George is right about all his God stuff.

He had just saved me from something very, very bad. I still don’t know about George’s God stuff, but he’s got something for all of us here. It’s his amazing early poems, From The Sounds of Chewing.

 

GV – ELECTRIC POETS, POETICAL MUSICIANS AND A NEW BOOK

The Magic Circle returns to GainVille Café in Rutherford, NJ on Friday, Jan. 30 for our book release party for GEORGE PERENY’s From the Sounds of Chewing. He will be the featured poet and George’s band, Electric Poets Gathering, is the music feature. Check out Jim Klein’s intro to the book!

The Red Wheelbarrow Poets’ Bring Your A Game open mic will follow, with generous reading times.

17 Ames Ave, 7 PM.

$7 donation includes coffee/tea and dessert.

GV – 4th ANNUAL JACO PASTORIUS BIRTHDAY PARTY

The Magic Circle returns to GainVille Café in Rutherford, NJ on Friday, Dec. 5 for our annual music/poetry birthday party for JACO PASTORIUS, bassist extraordinaire and hero of the creative spirit. Featuring JIM KLEIN as our MC, musicians PETE McCULLOUGH, MARK FOGARTY and VICTORIA WARNE, a slideshow made especially for this event by Jaco master curator ESPEN ASPLIN SORLIE, Jaco spoken word from AMY BARONE, and a cameo by the maestro himself. AMY BARONE, who has a new book of poetry, Kamikaze Dance, imminent from Finishing Line Press, will also be our featured poet.

The Red Wheelbarrow Poets’ Bring Your A Game open mic will follow, with generous reading times.

17 Ames Ave, 7 PM.

$7 donation includes coffee/tea and dessert.