Tuesdays at Curley's

Welcome to PoemAlley, Stamford, Connecticut's eclectic venue for poets, poetry reading and discussion! Open to anyone living in Fairfield County and the surrounding area, we meet Tuesday nights at 7:30 pm at Curley's Diner on 62 Park Place (behind Target) . Come contribute, get something to eat, or simply listen!



Showing posts with label Good Folk Coffeehouse. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Good Folk Coffeehouse. Show all posts

Apr 22, 2019

Where Meaning Is Secured: An Evening With William Hayden, Poet Laureate Of Norwalk


Join the song, music and poetry tomorrow night at Curley's to celebrate the naming of PA's own William Hayden as Norwalk's new Poet Laureate, succeeding Norwalk Community College English professor Laurel S. Peterson.

The new appointment was announced at the city's Annual Lit Crawl event, organized by the Norwalk Public Library. As a poet, singer/songwriter, Bill intends to complement the writer lectures and other programs created by Laurel with new poet talks and discussions, as well as ekphrastic poetry events--in response both to Bill's own enthusiasm for the visual arts and the growing gallery and entertainment scene in the community he has called home since 1970. “It seems like there’s a move toward artistic and cultural energy in town,” he said in a recent piece by Rachel Baron on nancyonnorwalk.com.

Acclaimed for The Good Folk Coffeehouse, the folk music venue he and his wife Brandi have run for the past 28 years in Rowayton, Bill is also active in Monday Expressions East at New Haven's Neverending Books and the Poetry Salon at the Fairfield Public Library.

Pete & Maura Kennedy will perform at
Good Folk Coffeehouse in September
A voracious reader (typically borrowing a dozen library titles at a time), Bill first developed a fascination for words through stabs at writing nature poetry while working as a lifeguard in his teens, maturing through his years in the international shipping industry, up to his latest contributions to 2018's Oysterville (Woodhall Press LLP), a digital recording and chapbook of Norwalk poets edited by Laurel, and the new PoemAlley anthology, Tuesday Night Live (Yuganta Press, 2018), edited by Ralph Nazareth and Catherine Ednie.

The piece below encapsulates the sort of thrill of promise and possibility implicit in every blank page, which Bill hopes to convey in his new role:

Writing
a clean sheet, don't you know?
the lines upon that knowing
stretch, with a tautness
seldom thought about
a burst awaits, black torrential
forms, flowing secretly
the deeper the point plunges
the more meaning is secured
not at each end, but in between
where the images grow
to new blossomed freshness
each starlight, poetic power
increases twenty fold
each other leaf's
a turning frame (to be)
setting, like a jeweler
in his way

You can keep up with Bill's musical and writing activites through his Facebook page.

Feb 11, 2018

Music, Lyrics (And Logistics) With Bill Hayden

Tomorrow evening’s featured poet/guitarist at Barnes and Noble’s Open Mic is Norwalk resident and PoemAlley regular Bill Hayden, who first gravitated toward music, painting and writing around age seven growing up in the Truesdale Lake are of South Salem, New York.

Following studies in Spanish Literature at Columbia College at Morningside Heights, Bill originally came to Connecticut from Manhattan to join the staff of The Little Apple, a short-lived poetry and arts magazine showcasing photography, poetry and interviews with artists of the Fairfield County area.  

Brother Sun
Complementing a career in international logistics, Bill upheld a dedicated participation in numerous poetry workshops (led by Agnes De Haviland, Dale Shaw and others) and readings in assorted SoNo venues over the years, as well as working with his wife Brandi to make their own “The Good Folk Coffeehouse” series a monthly mainstay of the Rowayton Methodist Church. “Good Folk” has presented a wide range of singer-songwriters and spoken word artists over the last quarter-century, most recently Brother Sun and Bill Staines.
Bill Staines

In the 1970s Bill and Brandi (who will be joining Bill in duets tomorrow) also took to the stage with fellow Norwalk resident Walt Graham as Suede, their folk-rock band, performing both original material and covers throughout the county, contributing a set as part of the Norwalk Oyster Festival one year.  


Organized by Frank Chambers, Open Mic meets the second Monday of each month, beginning at 7:15, in the CD/DVD section of the Stamford Barnes & Noble bookstore.

Please come and listen to local poets, bring a favorite poem, or read your own poetry.


Barnes & Noble Booksellers 
Stamford Town Center
100 Greyrock Place Suite H009
Stamford, CT 06901
203-323-1248