David Green

David Green (Books) is the imprint under which I published booklets of my own poems. The original allocation of ISBN numbers is used up now, though. The 'Collected Poems' are now available as a pdf. The website is now what it has become, often more about music than books and not so often about poems. It will be about whatever suggests itself.

Thursday, 26 February 2026

Karen Kingsley plays New Music from Brighton

Karen Kingsley, Portsmouth Cathedral, Feb 26
 
 Some musicians have composers they specialize in while others range widely across many and various. Few more so than Karen Kingsley and she adds new music to her curriculum vitae with these programmes of premieres from the Brighton New Music group. A recent innovation, it has quickly become an item on Portsmouth's calendar to look forward to. 
In the 1960's and 70's, any journey into 'new music' was in danger of proving to be an intrepid misadventure but by now one can approach with more confidence. 
On much of the programme, the titles told us what it was we were listening for. Not necessatily in Temptation of Doubt by Martyn C. Adams in which a gentle song led to a lively variation or two. More so in Unfolding-Forming-Dissolving, the first of Three Meditations by Barry Mills. Gradually becoming less abstract, There but for Fortune and Mysterious River were slow moving, the latter in an unsettled way.
Chris Gander's two haiku, for Spring and Summer were full of short, sharp shocks, the latter opening with a right hand reminiscent of Jerry Lee Lewis before resolving more quietly. Then The Monkey and the Raincoat definitely conjured mischief and precipitation.
David M. Hoyle's Sketches of Childhood mixed playground chants with daydreams before its vigorous ending. In contrast, Marion Maidment-Evans's Two Night Pieces were in turn one of fitful sleep and then a more restful encroachment on nothingness.
But there was not much ostensibly Egyptian in Basil Richmond's Nefertiti. Technically the most challenging pieces, the leitmotif in the first part was elaborated into an involving freize, The priests of Amun had the two hands embarked on different rhythms and Aten was an insistent outpouring and a good choice on which to finish.
Karen's versatility and virtuosity in bringing these pieces to life is impressive. As with chess, there are endless patterns that can be made out of the limited number of black and white resources but most people can't find many of them. It takes a rare talent, and considerable application, to make the most of them.

Crossword

Across

1. Che burst out about unfinished composer (8)

6. Except for place to get a drink (3)

8. Stride into Beirut somehow to give things out differently (12)

9. Obscure Britpop band (4)

10. The most adjacent around the end of the Levant and thereabouts (4,4)

12. Cricketers follow on after big innings left out initially made by city in Mississippi (6)

13. Musical type of monkey? (6)

16. Plan Gino had to rearrange for anteater (8)

18. Capital in GPO's losses (4)

20. Ring villeins about cloud content (6,6)

22. A day on Mars in isolation (3)

23. They could be anything (8)

Down

2. Sung with no end of Bach's 35th (5) 

3. Be subjected to the first parts of Gotterdammerung after a French one and the German (7)

4. Alien sets about what is necessary (9)

5. Peak in the middle of story (3)

6. Good book found in Nairobi, blemished (5)

7. Tries again to redesign streets (7)

11. Info in creative work creative work in a country (9)

13. These (7) 

15. Noise or otherwise is wearing down (7)

17. Donated the last of meal to get hammer (5)

19. Slight loss of head made for illumination (5)

21. Oxford and Cambridge dispute? (3) 

Tuesday, 24 February 2026

British Poetry in the 1990's and other stories

 Thirty years ago, and more, and some of it seems like yesterday. One is getting old when one can remember new titles by Ted Hughes and Thom Gunn being published, Betjeman being Laureate and Heaney being young. But the idea has been growing on me that the 1990's were a Golden Age. One can never tell at the time but it is as much history now as WW2 was in the 70's.
Not having been around at the time of Eliot and Yeats, of Auden, Dylan Thomas or the 1950's, I don't know what it was like then but I've been re-living the 90's with the additional benefit of some hindsight through the pages of a pile of Poetry Reviews. It's remarkable how much interest there is in them. Some names haven't remained as fashionable, some of the commentary is overdone (not much changes there) and, sometimes for the better, we didn't know then what we know now but it comes across vividly in a bright magazine as a period of energy, with lots of developing talent and I'm not sure the century and, in fact, the millennium didn't end on a high point comparable with almost any other decade you might care to mention. 
And so I have begun to set about saying so in what is very unlikely to be anything book length. It could be dissertation length since I see that 5000 words can count as that these days. It's 2000 words already, having set out the first chapter but it's from hereon in that it will test out the stamina to stay the distance. The problem is that it won't go anywhere, not see print, and so it doesn't really matter beyond providing me with a project. It could be a further pdf, I dare say.
It's the weight, as in extent, of the subject matter that becomes daunting. As soon as one's made half a dozen names essential to the period, another half dozen seem to want to ask why it's not them, too, and so on. There is no limit to how much one can write until one reaches one's own limit. But it's got a title, some sort of vague thesis and a first chapter. Nearly all of the required texts are here so let's see how far I can get with it. 
--
It might be some time before the posthumous novel by Weldon Kees arrives from America so the Poetry Reviews came in useful to put off the return to Pushkin and the heavy biography. It's not that I'm not interested but I've got the gist of it and imagine that the last 250 pages will be much like the first 400. There are further stories of his to look at, I had promised myself a biography of Schubert and there is no shortage of re-reading available but that little run of one thing leading to another is at an end.
--
Taking back the Larkin's Jazz box-set of discs from the lend they had been on, they are most welcome to a re-run through. I'd have been a trad man, too, had I been of the right generation and it's a great old world to step into, not having to know it all, just for the sheer enjoyment. 

Sunday, 15 February 2026

A Million Lies

Even though it was, I think, only yesterday that something provided the vague prompt that there might be a poem there, I can't remember what it was.

Not to worry. I've been more or less in a state of thinking I'd not write another poem for most of the time I've been writing them so I thought I'd try. It can easily be removed from here if, after its subsequent review, it is found not good enough. But I'm glad enough to have it for now.

It's about Marco Polo, the reports he took back to Venice from his trip into the East. For the most part, I believe him but I wouldn't blame those who didn't at the time because, if I'd been there then, I'd have suspected him of being a purveyor of fake news and, like it says, science fiction with which to astound the gullible masses. 

Maybe I'll get his book, read it and write a better poem later but there is this for now. I'm not unhappy with it. We will find out after a couple of weeks if it still looks okay but this having once been established as a website to 'promote' my poems, it's long overdue that it featured such a thing.

  
A Million Lies

He had been there and back, he said, 
Seen unicorns and behaviour
Beyond their quaint imagining.
Some bought it all and bought the book
While others would have none of it
And went back to their boring work
Or stared into the drab canal.
And even those carving the stone
On the ornate basilica,
Who had little faith in dragons
Or that it could be turtles
All the way down weren’t as tempted
As they might have been.

He might not have been anywhere,
No further than, say, Antioch,
Made most of the rest of it up
And then pretended to come back
With his crazy science fiction
To make such a name for himself.
He got that far, at least.

Lucas, Bach Piano, Scannell

There was always much to like about John Lucas, Many years ago I read his survey, 
Modern English Poetry: From Hardy to Larkin. Later his book on Notts cricket, The Trent Bridge Battery. Another time I'd ordered books from his Shoestring Press. And eventually I realized it was all the same bloke, also jazzman, Prof. of English and novelist. 
Recent obituaries mentioned his last novel, That Little Thread (Greenwich Exchange, 2023), thought it sounded worth a go and was proved right. Peter Simpson, Professor at a Midlands university, is approached by a 'wide boy' who had been the unlikely father of a child born to 'Paddy', a star student from twenty years earlier who left before graduating and reportedly died during childbirth. And thus we are on the trail of what really happened.
One might think a novel about middle class academic life written by one such could be a bit self-contained and there are larger concerns beyond its limited milieu but they have lives like anybody else and the fact that theirs is based around writing essays in pursuit of a certificate shouldn't detract from its potential too much.
It's a steady, good book done by one who had done it before and knows how to. It brought to mind Jane Jarmain who is the similarly brilliant, tragically early casualty in Sean O'Brien's Afterlife and perhaps there are comparisons to be made beginning with that motif. 
The future of thge novel is perenially in question but there's no shortage of them. The problem might be that Finnegans Wake seemed to have knocked the ball out of the ground once and for all but, like Theodore Adorno's dictum that there could be no poetry after Auschwitz, there still was. 
Further novels by Lucas might well be on their way here soon. 
--
The disc Allusions and Beyond by Piano Dup Takahashi-Lehmann arrived with its 2.33 of the Bach/Kurtag Gottes Zeit from Cantata BWV 106. Two further such miniatures follow it without achieving the same stillness.
Before them, an arrangement for four hands of Brandenburg Concerto no. 5 is worth having although for once perhaps the very familiar orchestral original is difficult to improve on.
Although I can see how an album or programme can benefit from contrasts, I think I prefer discs that are 'more of the same'. The shift into Bernd Alois Zimmerman's 'Monologe' takes us immediately faraway when we might not be ready to go. If it's philistine not to find its modernist plink, plonk and crash intellectually invigorating then it must be the effect of time increasingly putting a cap on my sympathies for the avant garde. Having been there and done that, I don't feel much need to go back. And then the Brahms Haydn Variations come as some relief but it turns out to have been a disc mainly bought for 2.33 of outrageous charm.
--
Not dissimilar to the Lucas book is Vernon Scannell's Feminine Endings (Enitharmon, 2000), a set piece of the contemporary poetry world all about a residential poetry course. One of the tutor poets is older, male and traditional, the other is female and more challenging. The marital situation of the hosts is becoming fragile as are some of the paying guests, one of who is taking a lot of interest in news reports about the latest woman found murdered. And the premises where it all takes place with readings and writings of poems is haunted.
For all the ready-made humour to be found in the poetry world and the forseeable attitudes and opinions of those involved, it's a neat book encompassing more than might have been expected ot it and Scannell gets it right. It's fairly clear where he stands, that he is more or less Gordon Napier, brought in as a last-minute, stopgap replacement for the indisposed Brian MacDuff, who is presumably George MacBeth.
Some of the poets mentioned are fictitional but most of the poems are real. I don't think it's obvious who Gabriella Cornwell is which is a good thing because it might be actionable but at least she wins a major, international prize for her opaque efforts. It could be used as a text to introduce the poetry of its time and might yet be if I pursue the recently occuring idea to do something about the 1990's which, whether or not it did at the time, looks like a Golden Age by now. 

Tuesday, 10 February 2026

Next Prime Minister Betting

 Here's a wide-open market for those who think that Cheltenham, the Grand National, the ITV7 or the Lottery are too easy,

Next UK Prime Minister, a snapshot as of this moment because it could look very different by this time tomorrow.

This doesn't mean 'after the next General Election', it means next incumbent of 10 Downing Street and, given Ed's position in the market, I'd take that to mean including any so-called 'caretaker',

Angela Rayner14/5
Wes Streeting13/2
Ed Miliband7/1
Shabana Mahmood12/1
Nigel Farage16/1,                                                                                               
so, you can have Kemi at 33's for looking around but 14/1 is the meanest offer. William Hill make Farage a 6/1 shot.
I'm told by Times Radio that, as a regular listener to Times Radio, I'm well informed about politics and it's true that without them I wouldn't have heard of Alistair Carns, 16/1, but even with their help, I'd never heard of Lee Pitcher, 25/1.
 
I lost more money than I imagined possible in 2016 when Trump beat Hillary Clinton and the referendum said Leave. That disastrous year was thus declared the last time I'd ever bet on politics because there is no way of assessing how it works any more.
How we'd love it if it was still possible for Robert Mckenzie and his swing-o-meter to detect a 2% swing and thus a change of MP for the likes of Swindon South. But it's not like that any more. Us olde worlde liberal/left are bereft and clinging to driftwood, trying to work out why Farage isn't a shorter price than he is to win the next General Election because nobody ever went poor by under-estimating the taste of the general public.
 
The Labour candidate for Prime Minister then is unlikely to be Keir Starmer, decent man though he is. So, if we did have to bet on Next UK PM, we are looking for a promotion from within. Angela would turn out to be rubbish, much as we love her. Andy Burnham is 16/1 even though not currently qualified to run. Wes Streeting might look like the class act but it's the sort of race that might not suit a front-runner. I well remember our own Penny Mordaunt being odds on, about 8/13, to be the next Prime Minister but not long after that she was most shamefully supporting Boris.
Not that it might matter too much because the next General Election already looks unwinnable, but I'd go for Shabana Mahmood, for preference and for the bet. Because she's so far the least tainted. Although it won't take long in 'power' for her to become so.
It's an impossible job but not quite as impossible as Boris, Liz Truss and then, sadly, Starmer, made it look.  
He hasn't resigned yet, has he. One last check. No, he hasn't.














 

The Lives of the Poets and other stories

 There was a time, a long time ago, when I didn't ever read biographies. It might have been part of a purist thing when I thought novels were proper writing. It was probably related to how I didn't write anything apart from poems. But the story of a life can often be how one changes from one thing to another, like Wittgenstein writing the Tractatus and then, later, another book that contradicts it. So now I write poems rarely but have tried, with less or even less success, most genres except libretti or a maintenance manual for the Triumph Herald.
Similarly with biographies. I read more of them than novels these days. Mostly poets, my shelves overflow with them. Any number relating to Shakespeare, 4 Auden, 3 Larkin, 3 Eliot, 3 Donne. I'm not sure there's anything one can generalize from them and sometimes wonder about the biography of an apparently more mundane tradesperson, like the proprietor of a local grocer's shop. Why would that not be more interesting.
The lives of Pushkin and Byron are the high lives of Romantic excess. Those of Larkin, Charlotte Mew and Elizabeth Jennings not quite so much. Poets in previous centuries were mostly men of some privilege until the C20th it became a bit more democratic. Poetry can be a self-indulgent thing. Do those who dedicate themselves to it do so heroically for the sake of their art and do they use it as an excuse to sacrifice consideration for others in the interests of their pre-occupation.
How much suffering is it worth to produce art of some value. Beethoven surely suffered but was rewarded with a body of work that precious few can compare with. But since it was his own suffering, it's mainly up to him. I'm more concerned with those who made others suffer.
We might think of Ted Hughes, Eliot and Hardy whose treatment of the women in their lives was selfish. And now Vernon Scannell.
Finishing Walking Wounded today, these questions arose. He dedicated himself to his art and his manifesto is to be admired but he was one among several names of his period and hardly one of the greatest names of his generation. But the cost it came at was immense. That he couldn't help his drinking and habitual violence is one thing and his own distress as a result of it is what he had to bear. But it's not a pleasant book to read and one tends to think that a life's work of well-made but not colossally brilliant poems does not balance out the way he treated a succession of partners.
I'd never like to say that any mere art work would be worth the real life pain inflicted on others. Poems, and art of any kind, is second-hand, not real and only words on a page - however much they are valued as such- whereas bruises and injuries are first-hand and not imaginary. We must never allow ourselves to become so precious about art that we forget its secondary status.
Scannell was a novelist, too, and this reading sequence continues into an order for Feminine Endings, a late book apprently very thinly based on Arvon Creative Writing course with tutors who may not be but probably are Scannell and Hughes. It sounds very much like an industry insider job but that might not prevent it being any good. It follows on from the TLS review on 'the state of poetry', Rory Waterman's essays and reviews and the Scannell biography, which each suggested the next. In between, and loosely related, begun today, is That Little Thread, the last novel by John Lucas, admirable man. That has begun most readably.
--
But, on the subject of 'bodies of work', the end of the Complete Works of Bach is sort of in sight. There's much organ music to go, the big oratorios and miscellaneous discs but the full picture is coming into sight.
It's never a chore but one only gets through 172 discs by applying oneself to them dutifully.
After 50+ discs of cantatas one can't help but think that his reputation would have been no less if he had written half as many and the same is passably true of the organ music. I'm naturally suspicious of anybody too prolific but there are some who, having provided so much, you can hardly throw any away and, anyway, it's not the complete Bach because a couple of further pieces have been discovered and accredited to him while I've been listening to them.
And we need not worry too much about 'authenticity'. Some of us - me, at least- have been tuned in to the keyboard music through the piano, not invented in Bach's time so clearly not how he heard them, but the accidental stumbling across transcriptions for four hands by Gyorgy Kurtág. The fact that Cantata 106 is sublime overrides any consideration of how Bach heard his own music and whether it was keyboard music or a cantata in the first place doesn't matter much. All Bach played on the piano is a transcription.
Perhaps the vastness of Bach's output is reduced slightly by realizing that he had his way of doing it. It's not 172 discs of brand new ideas. But if we reduce our assessment a little bit on account of that, it gets multiplied back up again by thinking that if he had only written the solo violin music or only the Cello Suites, or only some of the cantatas or only the keyboard music, as examples, he would be a great composer. One thinks of the Beatles and their reputation, how they gave away songs to Cilla and others, and I have this way of gauging pop artists by how good no. 30 in their Top 30 is. Bach is light years ahead of Lennon-McCartney, individually and collectively, on that score and he's most likely seeing off the whole of the Motown Hit Factory, too.
It was a blessed day I picked up that box in Chichester. Maybe I should have bought the Schubert, too.