New American Underground Poetry Vol. 1:

The Babarians of San Francisco - Poets from Hell


Author: New American

Copyright 2005. Alan Kernoff.

Anthology issued by Trafford Press.

Distributed by Zeitgeist-Press. (http://www.zeitgeist-press.com/)

323 Pages / Price: 23.00

TO ORDER GO TO: http://www.zeitgeist-press.com/



ISBN: 1-41205270-X



Review By: Charles P. Ries



Word Count: 1, 118 (does not include header and reviewer’s bio)





Context, talent and emerging form are the co-parents of art
movements. When these three aspects of great art collide (as
they seldom do) a child is conceived. A creative voice so
unique in its character that when it is seen, heard, or read it
guides the reader unmistakenly back to its place of origin.



As I read the thirty-two poets whose works comprise this
expansive anthology entitled, New American Underground
Poetry Vol. 1:  The Barbarians of San Francisco - Poets from
Hell, I welcomed the raw honest energy I found in these long
narrative poems. I felt as if I was there with them, listening to
them. They called themselves the Barbarians. Every Thursday
night from the mid-late 80’s through about 1994, their home
was a tiny wine and beer tavern located on twenty-second and
Guerrero in the Mission District of San Francisco. For just
under ten years it was the home of a perfect storm - a Thunder
Dome in which spoken word poetry of high emotion, insight,
and humor was delivered and refined. This excerpt from David
Lerner’s, “Mein Kampf” addresses the objective of their
collective efforts, “all I want to do / is make poetry famous //
all I want to do is / burn my initials into the sun // all I want to
do is / read poetry from the middle of  a / burning building /
standing in the fast lane of the / freeway / falling from the top
of the / Empire State Building // the literary world / sucks dead
dog dick //I’ll rather be Richard Speck / than Gary Snyder / I’d
rather ride a rocket ship to hell / than a Volvo to Bolinas.” And
indeed this desire to raise poetry above its lost status as a
mainstream literary art colors many of the poems in this
collection. These writers wrote and spoke words that could not
be confused. They were metaphor lit and smash mouth rich.



Context: The back room at Cafe Babar. A tiny performance
space of only about 30' x 30', with wood bleachers and
corrugated aluminum siding stretched over the walls. At
critical points, the poet could hit the walls and the entire small
room would vibrate. Often, there were 75-100 people stuffed
shoulder-to-shoulder, crowding the halls and every spare inch
of space, hungry for what the poet could do.  "The Babar crowd
was pretty merciless," says Zietgeist Press Co-Founder and
Café Babar regular, Bruce Isaacson. "There was no polite
applause or lukewarm response. If they loved you, they let you
know, and if they didn't, they really let you know: hoots,
whistles, heckling. Even beer glasses would sometimes get
tossed at the stage."



Talent:  In the forward to this anthology, co-editor Alan Allen
described the odd mix of tribal members to this scene, “The
barbarian poets were broke. Won the west-coast slams but
couldn’t afford the tickets to go East to compete. Lived only to
write, to perform, to read. Many were without jobs (with
notable exceptions), or disabled, or addicted, or worked in the
sex industry. Most struggled to pay the rent, or eat well, wore
thrift-shop clothes. IQ’s were the highest, hearts the biggest,
poems what mattered most. Was all about feeling their voices,
their words, their lines, their lives.”  This collision of wild and
diverse poets, writers, musicians, and performers created the
ethos of that moment including: Laura Conway, Joie Cook,
David West, Eli Coppola, David Gollub, Vampyre Mike Kassel,
Kathleen Wood, Zoe Rosenfeld, Sparrow 13 LaughingWand, Q.
R. Hand, Alan Kaufman, and numerous others  who would go
through the baptism of fire that was Café Babar. These writers
and many more are featured in this exceptional collection of
poetry.



Emerging Form:  Richard Silberg in his introduction to The
Babarians of San Francisco - Poets from Hell says, “As opposed
to movements that have centered on magazines, a college, a
writers group, the Babarians have forged their work in a
performing space.” He goes on to say, “Barbarians focus on
that performing voice. The Barbarian voice goes for
personhood, somewhat like the voice of Bob Dylan’s lyrics, or a
comedian’s voice, or the voice of a TV newsman. Emphasis is
shifted from the page to performance. The poem on the page is
more like a script or a score.” Berkeley Poet Laureate Julia
Vinograd told me, “This period was an explosion of poetry and
Café Babar was at its epicenter. The work was unlike anything
that had been done before; we fed off each other. New things
were being said in ways that were forceful, serious, and funny.
The best of the young poets of their time read there along side
total unknowns.”



The November 4, 1992 issue of the San Francisco Bay Guardian
described the poets reading at Café Babar as, “The Best poets
working in America today. The cradle of the American avant-
garde tradition. Formed in the crucible of real economic
despair & political threat. Poets of lowered expectations &
political rage. Café Barbar is the symbolic crucible of the
spoken-word scene where gather the keepers of the flame – the
poets doing poetry before it caught the public eye.”



All the poems in collection were written to be heard and
grasped quickly. They speak to the world in which the writer
lived. Here was a tribe and a moment in time that personified
what is best about poetry – raw, straight forward revelation.
Emotional honesty delivered in a manner that demands
attention.



Here are two short excerpts from The Barbarians of San
Francisco. The first is from “I Was a Teenage Godzilla” by
Vampyre Mike Kassel. “When I was ten / I was hit by a very
small nuclear warhead / which slipped out of a torpedo tube /
while my cub scout pack was visiting / the Navy submarine U.S.
S. Caligula / on a field trip. / The incident was hushed up. / The
other cubs perished / but I mutated into a Teenage Godzilla /
just like in the movies. / Only  I was still only five feet ten
inches tall / Just a friendly li’l two legged radioactive Komodo
dragon / It wasn’t so bad / My parents were pissed / but the
government paid them off / and they just had to kind of live
with it.” And another from Sparrow 13 LaughingWand entitled,
“Larry Said”: “Oh the filthy chalice of his skull / blown apart in
New York / Oh, his razorback heart and his lead sugar mouth, /
Larry said his mother died in a house fire / while he was in the
joint / Larry said it was political. / Larry told / the dumbest
arrest story I ever heard / how he broke into a liquor store and
got too drunk to escape. / The Nevada beauty of his tomcat ass
could / scratch your eyes out. / Larry said he was an honest
thief. / Larry said I wasn’t queer / because he love me. /
Thanksgiving we had lentils under my tarp / in a storm at
Davenport. / Larry wasn’t a queer / because I really wasn’t a
man.”



They stood stripped naked before a crowd of true believers and
had to sell it. They had to make it real, and they had to make it
work or they were shouted down. Posers were persecuted at
the Café Barbar.

_________________________________________



Charles P. Ries lives in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. His narrative
poems, short stories, interviews and poetry reviews have
appeared in over one hundred print and electronic publications.
He has received three Pushcart Prize nominations for his
writing and most recently he read his poetry on National Public
Radio’s Theme and Variations, a program that is broadcast
over seventy NPR affiliates. Ries is also the author of five
books of poetry — the most recent entitled, The Last Time
which was just released by The Moon Press in Tucson, Arizona.
He is the poetry editor for Word Riot (www.wordriot.org) and
he is on the board of the Woodland Pattern Bookstore in
Milwaukee, Wisconsin.  You may find additional samples of his
work by going to: http://www.literarti.net/Ries/ and you may
write him at charlesr@execpc.com