Unlikely 2.0


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Editors' Notes

Maria Damon and Michelle Greenblatt
Jim Leftwich and Michelle Greenblatt
Sheila E. Murphy and Michelle Greenblatt

A Visual Conversation on Michelle Greenblatt's ASHES AND SEEDS with Stephen Harrison, Monika Mori | MOO, Jonathan Penton and Michelle Greenblatt

Letters for Michelle: with work by Jukka-Pekka Kervinen, Jeffrey Side, Larry Goodell, mark hartenbach, Charles J. Butler, Alexandria Bryan and Brian Kovich

Visual Poetry by Reed Altemus
Poetry by Glen Armstrong
Poetry by Lana Bella
A Eulogic Poem by John M. Bennett
Elegic Poetry by John M. Bennett
Poetry by Wendy Taylor Carlisle
A Eulogy by Vincent A. Cellucci
Poetry by Vincent A. Cellucci
Poetry by Joel Chace
A Spoken Word Poem and Visual Art by K.R. Copeland
A Eulogy by Alan Fyfe
Poetry by Win Harms
Poetry by Carolyn Hembree
Poetry by Cindy Hochman
A Eulogy by Steffen Horstmann
A Eulogic Poem by Dylan Krieger
An Elegic Poem by Dylan Krieger
Visual Art by Donna Kuhn
Poetry by Louise Landes Levi
Poetry by Jim Lineberger
Poetry by Dennis Mahagin
Poetry by Peter Marra
A Eulogy by Frankie Metro
A Song by Alexis Moon and Jonathan Penton
Poetry by Jay Passer
A Eulogy by Jonathan Penton
Visual Poetry by Anne Elezabeth Pluto and Bryson Dean-Gauthier
Visual Art by Marthe Reed
A Eulogy by Gabriel Ricard
Poetry by Alison Ross
A Short Movie by Bernd Sauermann
Poetry by Christopher Shipman
A Spoken Word Poem by Larissa Shmailo
A Eulogic Poem by Jay Sizemore
Elegic Poetry by Jay Sizemore
Poetry by Felino A. Soriano
Visual Art by Jamie Stoneman
Poetry by Ray Succre
Poetry by Yuriy Tarnawsky
A Song by Marc Vincenz


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Music

Previous

On the Barge of the Soud, P piece, Bleak Use, S zon, and Caw Huffer
by The Be Blank Consort, January 2007
"The Be Blank Consort was born in June 2001 at The Atlantic Center for the Arts (New Smyrna Beach, FL) when all of its members were part of a literary residency convened by Richard Kostelanetz. They are all writers, but they all use language in greatly expanded and often completely new ways and contexts. The Consort was formed to perform various kinds of texts, many of them created collaboratively, in ways that would reveal new resonances and possibilities in them."

Green
by Tantra Bensko, January 2007
"Is a prayer that answers itself,
        With the hoot of an owl,
               The stones that wind follows
All night, as you walk,"

Two excerpts from Cyborg Opera
by Christian Bök, January 2007
"lob a bomb
to bomb
pop-art
gewgaws"

Whatever It Takes, Baby Makes, Adrift, and All the Fuss
by Barbara DeCesare, January 2007
Poems by Barbara DeCesare have appeared previously in Unlikely Stories, as well as Poetry, Alaska Quarterly Review and many others. She is a perennial instructor at the University of Pennsylvania's Writers' Conference, a featured writer at the most recent Geraldine R. Dodge Poetry Festival, and a paralegal with a depressing collection of cute pumps and three teenaged kids.

Pinball Graveyard and Fascist Insect
by Dulabomber, January 2007
"Dulabomber is just two guys who kinda live in Milwaukee and can't afford heat..." These tracks are off last year's self titled full length. As of a month ago Ricky and Spider are back in the studio with some very special guests throwing down some wicked vicious soundscapes of gruff-ass down-tempo melodrama. New this year are some con fangled disco weirdo tracks sure to lighten your igloo's mood, even as the ol' hypothermiaO sets in.

George Wallace and David Amram
December 2006
This month, we're proud to present two tracks from the CD version of Swimming through Water. Swimming through Water contains ten tracks from the book of the same name by George Wallace, the first Poet Laureate of Suffolk County, New York, accompanied by David Amram, beat musician known for his collaborations with Jack Kerouac.

The Steve Elmer Trio
November 2006
"You know, usually I gotta hear one tune over and over when I first play a record. It's only after I have that one song in my skin that I can get to the rest of the music; but not with the Elmer trio. I turn it on and it's sixty minutes of one song suite to me. Sometimes I play it all day long."

The Molotov
October 2006
The recently released CD (demo), Limited Sedition by The Molotov, is an angry, charged, and at times darkly humourous collection of seven songs. The music is a hybrid fusion of industrial, rap, hardcore punk/metal guitar riffs, breakbeat and pumping techno, while the lyrics are explicit, confrontational and pull no punches.

Roger Rosenberg
September 2006
Roger Rosenberg has worked with a stunning list of greats; do the names Tito Puente, Buddy Rich, Chet Baker, Lee Konitz, Janet Lawson, Miles Davis, Quincy Jones, John Scofield, Sarah Vaughn, Gerry Mulligan, Michael Brecker, The New York Philharmonic, Thad Jones and Mel Lewis, Bob Mintzer, Eddie Palmieri, David Lahm, Tom Scott, T.S. Monk and Steely Dan ring a bell?

The Disclaimers
August 2006
Together since 2001, The Disclaimers have gone from being a bunch of rock nerds playing their favorite Velvet Underground and Turtles songs into a bunch of rock nerds playing their favorite original material, with writing and vocal contributions from all members. But they'll still play Velvet or Turtles if you ask them real nice.

Looking at the Floor
by Spiel and Jack Moss, July 2006
Introducing "Looking at the Floor," a collaboration project between the poet and author Spiel and the musician Jack Moss. This six-minute track of spoken word and music is a precise example of the power that results from two divergent artists sharing the same groove.

Bob Powell
June 2006
We're pleased to put forth an encore presentation of last June's music feature, Bob Powell. Bob Powell has been stuck down the rabbit hole for over twenty five years producing tripped out noises garbled vocal rummagings and serious sweet ballad-like ditties. Hailing from Rochester, Powell's journey has taken him through the navy to art and film college and has seen him working as composer for a theatrical group in Chicago. This traveling troubadour now calls Los Angeles his home and spends his days composing and working on other solo projects.

Vernon Frazer
May 2006
Vernon Frazer's poetry and fiction have appeared in many literary magazines. He has written six books of poetry, and recently introduced his longpoem, IMPROVISATIONS (I-XXIV), at The Poetry Project at St. Mark's Church in Manhattan. Frazer has produced five recordings of poetry with free jazz accompaniment and appeared on several recordings with the late jazz saxophonist Thomas Chapin, including their duo release, Song of Baobab.

Kenji Siratori
April 2006
Kenji Siratori: a Japanese cyberpunk writer who is currently bombarding the internet with wave upon wave of highly experimental, uncompromising, progressive, intense prose. His is a writing style that not only breaks with tradition, it severs all cords, and can only really be compared to the kind of experimental writing techniques employed by the Surrealists, William Burroughs and Antonin Artaud.

Elya Finn
March 2006
Infused with a romanticism that will chill your mind as it warms your heart, these songs present a balance between unfettered hope and utter cynicism. Cheerful, optimistic lyrics of love are balanced with a voice that speaks of danger, risk, and the ever-present possibility of betrayal. The lyrics, written specifically for Elya's voice by Michael Rothenberg, speak in a perpetual doubletalk that conveys more honest romance than could possibly be communicated with mere sincerity.

Checkpoint 303
February 2006
In an effort to expose the world to the realities of life in the Middle East, Checkpoint 303 (named after an identity checkpoint between Israel and Palestine) has recorded the sounds of bombs, of protest, of guns worldwide, fusing them into a single music which is both disconcerting and supremely important. What they create is wonderful, musically speaking, though the sounds themselves are of course, disturbing.

Stealing the Feeling
by The Hellphones, December 2005
The Hellphones play a startling mix of old school rock 'n roll infused with modern guitar pop and good old fashioned attitude. Most often compared to The Rolling Stones, The Hives, Jack Black, The Kings Of Leon, Thin Lizzy and The Strokes, The Hellphones are in reality just themselves. Fuelled by rock 'n roll and on a mission to convert YOU to their sound.

Mozambique
by Fuzigish, December 2005
Fuzigish throw out the fastest, the slowest, up-beats, down-beats, and just general brilliant phat ska. Originating from Johannesburg, South Africa, Fuzigish started in the beginning of 1997, playing a mix of ska, punk and rockabilly. To date they have toured across South Africa, Europe, UK and Australia.

Feeling the Pressure
The Dirty Skirts, December 2005
One of the foundations of The Dirty Skirts are super-octane live by performances, which they have continued to deliver in and around South Africa for all of 2005, fuelling their reputation as a top live act to follow. Stage magazine dubbed their Independent Armchair Theatre performance as "explosive" and referenced The Cure, Bauhaus and Kraftwerk in the eclectic montage of guitars and beats.

The Marriage of Clowns
by Michael Rothenberg and Alex Walsh, November 2005
The Marriage of Clowns is an eleven-minute spoken word piece, written and performed by Michael Rothenberg and set to the baroque musical subtleties of Alex Walsh. The result is a slow groove through a high-strung wavelength. It's simple storytelling set against the backdrop of psychedelic imagery, as if John Prine was center ring at a Barnum & Bailey finale.

Zach Lost
October 2005
A visual artist who received his Bachelor of Fine Arts from the Mason Gross school of the arts at Rutgers University in 2003, Zach is a skilled and passionate performer in several genres, as well as an accomplished writer; as recognized by the Academy of American Poets in 2002 and 2003. He has won several slams and has been featured at venues from California to Paris.

Sounds Like Fall
September 2005
Sounds Like Fall is the recorded word of singer-songwriter Joe Young. Joe cut his teeth with Ames, Iowa's excellent country-rock band Moonshine Radio. After the dissolution of the group he began writing and recording new songs and in July 2005 released his first album under the Sounds Like Fall moniker - The Wolf is at the Door.

Travon Smith
August 2005
Recently, Travon performed with Sugafree, WC, and Fuzzy from Something for the People. He has come on late but it was worth the wait. With hot performances at Z90.3 Peace Fest and USC's 2000 Urban Show, and numerous performances along Hollywood's strip, Travon is doing more than holding his own. He and MD are featured in the May 2002 issue of Music Connection as one of the first urban duos to make the magazine and get an above average rating.

50 Cent Haircut
July 2005
"It is easy to sing the praises of 50 Cent Haircut; their country-rockabilly style enough to have put a smile on even the great man Cash's lips. A band born and raised in Southern California, 50 Cent Haircut breaks the mold of SoCal expectation with their purist rock and roll, a brilliant awakening from the usual in these L.A. parts."

Bob Powell
June 2005
"Take some bluegrass, mix it with some chopped rockabilly, add a dash of pop-punk, and mix it all together in a folksy weird acoustic electric mixing bowl. Now you are in the mind frame required to fully appreciate the scope of this composer's repertoire."

Wicker
May 2005
"This handsome foursome hailing from the four corners of Ireland have congregated in Dublin to produce for us some of the most melodic and thought-provoking music to emerge from the Irish music scene in years."

Alex Walsh
April 2005
"Alex Walsh is intriguing rock, fleshy and nervy roots rock that defies replicas. His sound might be a little like Elvis Costello's, T. Rex's, and the Replacement's, but his own arrangements of hooky lyrics makes it lock, stock and barrel uninfringeable."

Avalon Frost
March 2005
Avalon Frost's music is a beautiful embodiment of the feminine ideal; strong and sentient. Avalon's talent as a singer/songwriter is without question, her voice being a rich invitation to complicated and emotionally dense content.

spoken word by jUStin!katKO
March 2005
JUStin!katKO fuses poetry and music in his spoken word-rap-rhythm and blues-political social commentary Pixel Cloak. He is a prolific artist whose sense of moral and ethical differentiation embeds itself in all of his work; music and otherwise.

DJ;)(G4
January 2005
DJ;)(G4 rips his music from an underground in SoCal though the exact location is still a mystery. Although he claims to pull his inspiration from politically paranormal archives across the net, we are inclined to believe he has found a method of recording dream-echo.

MC Frontalot
December 2004
MC Frontalot was born Maynard Conrad Frontshire in a Kansas storm cellar in 1973. The fronting has increased exponentially since.

337 Screw
November 2004
Working with rappers KDuBB and Cee, Sketta Lee lays down offbeat beats and funky tracks. The three add weird vocals and lyrics and call it 337 Screw.

Gene Keller
October 2004
Often accompanied by his acoustic band, 99 Names, Gene Keller takes his guitar, easygoing voice, and southwestern lyrics to tell us of the possibility of a better world: one filled with respect, friendship, and romantic love.

Trousers
September 2004
The New York City band Trousers has recently gone on temporary hiatus, but not before producing their incredible new album, We Pitched a Hut and Called it Providence.

Balé
August 2004
Balé is an electronic composer who has written several movie scores and gone on tour with two Yugo bands.

David Rovics
July 2004
The excitable, viciously sardonic folk of David Rovics has been compared to the late, great Phil Ochs, but he strikes us more like a manic and even more political Bruce Springsteen.

Three songs by Concentric
June 2004
Concentric is a band out of Austin that combines Free Jazz and Progressive Fusion with elements of Electronica and Funk.