[microsound-announce] Overview on lettrism, sound poetry and more

Radio Web MACBA rwm2008 at gmail.com
Tue Oct 19 04:12:32 EDT 2010


The radio show/podcast Wolman, Lettrism, Sound Poetry and Beyond is already
available online:

Link: http://bit.ly/c7vtYC

MP3 file: http://rwm.macba.cat/uploads/wolman/wolmannew.mp3

Related info: http://bit.ly/bpY2Ej

Although Gil J Wolman's seminal sound work has been largely overlooked, it
was a precursor of sound poetry and is one of the key elements of Lettrist
poetry. This radio show reconstructs the link between Lettrism, sound
poetry, and the work of some isolated but fundamental figures.

Summary:
In 1950, after meeting Isidore Isou and joining the Lettrist movement, Gil J
Wolman invented the notion of mégapneumie, poems of breath and pure sound.
Although his seminal sound work has been largely overlooked, it was a
precursor of sound poetry and is one of the key elements of Lettrist poetry.
This radio show reconstructs the link between Lettrism, sound poetry, and
the work of some isolated but fundamental figures, so as to recover a piece
of sound art history. Lettrism launched its first manifesto in Paris in
1946, through the voice of its creator and main theorist Isidore Isou. It
proposed and systematised a fusion between poetry and music and incorporated
body sounds written down with the help of a new alphabet, and also
introduced innovations in the visual arts field with hypergraphy. Isou
(1925-2007) and his first partner in creation, Gabriel Pomerand (1926-1972),
were joined by François Dufrêne (1930-1982), Jean-Louis Brau (1930-1985),
Gil J Wolman (1929-1995) and Maurice Lemaître (1926), and later by Jacques
Spacagna (1936-1990), Roberto Altmann (1942) Roland Sabatier (1942) and
Broutin (1948), amongst others. In 1950, Gil J Wolman invented mégapneumie,
or breath poetry, and just two years later, in 1953, François Dufrêne bought
a tape recorder and used it to compose his crirythmes, which were performed
publicly for the first time in October 1955. This experiment cleared the way
for more intensive use of this expressive tool, and in 1959, sound poetry
was born with the diverse voices of Henri Chopin (1922-2008) and Bernard
Heidsieck (1928), and even Brion Gysin (1916-1986). This show also includes
the voices of some solitary figures such as Ghérasim Luca (1913-1994), who
marked the end of surrealism and contributed to the emergence of a
repetetive-interpretative poetry; Altagor (1915-1982) and his metapoetry;
Otto Muehl (1925), who could be one of the bastard children of mégapneumes
(at least in his sound work dating from 1968), and the voice and words of
Pierre Guyotat (1940), which can be heard in one of Frédéric Acquaviva's
musical compositions.
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