by Jim Hanas
Midtown Memphis poetry kids are born burned-out, stuck / waist
deep like corpses in red river mud / in a city of blood and history,
/ burned-out buildings, burned-out bums, blues / and bruises
as broad as the Mississippi.
from Burnt
es in his late teens, early twenties just a guess. His hair
is ultra-short, like his heads been shaved a month or so ago.
His wiry frame is hidden somewhere inside an oversized black T-shirt
and huge blue jeans. Just another rave kid, one would guess.
Its a Sunday night late last year at the P&H Cafe, the site
of the Original Memphis Can-O-Whoop-Ass Poetry Slam on the second
Sunday of every month. A small crowd has gathered to judge, be
judged, or just watch.
There are a few rules: Poems cant be over three minutes long.
Poets cant use props. The high and low scores from the five judges
are thrown out. Three poetsadvance to the final round, and one
wins.
And there are prizes: $10 for first. $10 for last. Second place
takes out the trash.
This monthly event used to be held at the Coffee Cellar until
the university-area coffeehouse closed last year, when it was
moved to the P&H and beyond. Master Bakers in Overton Square hosts
a slam every Friday, and other readings that have cropped up around
town. Whether its Thursdays at Java Cabana, Mondays at Black
Diamond on Beale, or Wednesdays at the Map Room, theres hardly
a night of the week that you cant go out and see spoken-word
poetry.
But slam is unique, and maybe even a contradiction, pulling its
participants in two directions at once. Thom Holcomb, the organizer
of Memphis slam events, describes the contradiction as the tension
between slam and poetry as an art. On the one hand, youre being
judged, so you need to shoot for the lowest common denominator
and appeal to the widest possible audience. On the other hand,
its poetry, where popularity has rarely corresponded with aesthetic
virtue.
The idea for informal poetry competitions is thought to have
originated in Chicago sometime in the Eighties, and has since
spread to the coasts and into the South. The Coffee Cellar slam
started a little over a year ago and its gained in popularity
ever since. Theres a core of diehard slammers, but rarely does
an event go by where there arent at least a few newcomers. The
crowd at Master Bakers usually ranges from 30 to 50 people, and
not necessarily the people you would think. While the bulk of
those in attendance are angst-caked kids and listless bohemians,
there are also lawyers and real estate agents among the faithful.
PHOTO BY ROY CAJERO

Cynical expectations will be partially borne out on any given
night, as there are sure to be some fairly rank offerings. Some
would soil a greeting card. Some should have been kept between
a diarys locked pages. More common, however, are tediously undisciplined
streams of consciousness awash in the big ideas universe,
infinity, soul that no one understands beyond the fact that
theyre the business of poetry.
Everyone I know is scared of America. / Rich people are scared
of poor people / with grimy loosechange palms and knifeblade fingers
shining in back alleys.
from Clearout
And then theres the kid with the shaved head, black T-shirt,
and baggy jeans that night at the P&H Cafe. Pacing back and forth
before the audience part preacher, part hip-hop MC he performs
a poem called Clearout about how everyone is scared of America.
Poor people are scared of rich people flashing perfect teeth
smiles over deals that treat poor people like the broken parts
in a machine, he says, and on like that, to a climactic scene
of a basketball game going down to the buzzer as a fight breaks
out in the crowd. You had to be there, of course, but it was a
great poem by every standard that matters, and seeing it for the
first time was something else, the best three-minute rock concert
Ive ever seen.
It wasnt until a month later that I found out that the kid was
Daniel Roop, the founder of Memphis Poetry Slam. Hes left town
since then, and the latest issue of the Memphis Poetry 40 oz.,
a newsletter founded by him and continued by Holcomb, is dedicated
to his work. In it Holcomb declares Roop Memphis slams superhero.
But, on any give night, theres the possibility of other poems
like that and other moments like that, there, amid the thinly
veiled journal entries and the directionless rants. And sometimes
they happen. As slam continues to grow, they can only happen more
often.
Midtown Memphis poetry kids are beginning to shuffle outside,
/ are beginning to bandage their burns and scars with words, /
spinning cocoons and kisses around / each others bodies. They
are young, / their methods are as clumsy as sex, / and ultimately,
as rewarding.
from Burnt n
(All excerpts from poems by Daniel Roop. For the full texts, go to the e-zine version of burnt: an anthology of memphis slam poetry, http://www.geocities.com/soho/9897.)
Memphis Poetry Slam
Master Bakers, 7:30 p.m. Fridays
P&H Cafe, 7 p.m. second Sunday of every month