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Peter Finch

Peter Finch

Biography

Peter Finch was born in Cardiff in 1947. He still lives there. Between 1966 and 1975 he edited the international avant garde poetry magazine second aeon and its attendant publications. Second Aeon became a mainstay for the alternative poetries of the day and acted as a bridge between Britain’s warring poetry factions, introducing many traditionalists to what was going on in the new poetries both at home and abroad. An archive of second aeon papers currently exists at the Fales Library, New York and can be viewed here. Peter Finch’s own history of the magazine is here. The London-based Poetry Library has a number of copies of the magazine available online.

He ran Cardiff’s Welsh and alternative literary bookshop, Oriel, on behalf of the Welsh Arts Council from 1975 until the mid-1990s. The bookshop became a hub for new poetry and a platform for performances from many of the UK’s leading left-field writers. It held the largest stock of poetry for sale anywhere outside London and when Compendium went down probable took over the lead role.

In 1998 he became chief executive of The Welsh Academy, rebranded as Academi and later as Literature Wales. This was Wales’ literature development agency responsible for all aspects of writing in the country.

In 2011 he stood down as CEO in order to devote more time to writing.

As a poet Peter Finch had always worked near the edge, developing an interest in visual and concrete poetries during the formative sixties and extending that interest as the decades moved on. He was an associate and collaborator of Bob Cobbing and was involved with many poetry organisations over the years including the Poetry Society in the decade of the poetry wars, the Association of Little Presses (where he was treasurer) and Poets Conference (where he was Welsh representative).

He learnt from art history and has always regarded European models (Apollinaire, Duchamp, Tristan Tzara, the dadaists) as being just as significant as the American avant-gardists who followed them (John Cage, Jackson Mac Low, the LANGUAGE poets). His work often straddles the edge between the alterative, the left field, the edge-pushing new and the performance-orientated and more traditional centre.

In Wales he spent decades being ignore or regarded as some sort of literary freak before emerging in the late 1990s and early 2000s as a sort of Welsh avant garde icon, a force for change who had been neglected and now should be honoured.

A number of his innovative works are now incorporated into the fabric of the city of Cardiff. These include, at St David’s Two, a visual acrostic made from the names used for the city down the years, a sound poem running across the edge of the Lamby Way landfill and a spiral permutation outside South Wales Police Headquarters.

He is as interested in the visual as he is the way words make their sounds in the air. His believes, like Clark Coolidge, that we have so many words out there that we rarely need to make new ones. Replacement, permutation, discovery, and randomness can be as powerful as pulling the work out of thin air. He does both.

Key works are The Welsh Poems (2006), Antibodies (1997), Selected Poem (1987), Selected Later Poems (2007) and Zen Cymru (2010). There is a collected visual works at the planning stage.

Notes

Peter Finch’s extensive website is at http://www.peterfinch.co.uk/sitemap.htm

His blog is at http://peterfinchpoet.blogspot.com/

An interview with Finch is at http://www.argotistonline.co.uk/Finch%20interview.htm

An analysis of his sound poetry is at http://www.peterfinch.co.uk/noise.htm

Recordings

Recorded on 9 November 2011 in Cardiff by Jacqui Johnson

Bibliography

Fuller details are available at http://www.peterfinch.co.uk/bookspf.htm

Poetry

  • Wanted For Writing Poetry, with Steve Morris (Second Aeon, 1968)
  • Pieces Of The Universe (Second Aeon, 1969)
  • Cycle Of the Suns (Art Living, 1970)
  • Beyond The Silence (Vertigo, 1970)
  • An Alteration In The Way I Breathe (Quickest way Out, 1970)
  • The Edge Of Tomorrow, with Jeanne Rushton (BB Books, 1971)
  • The End Of The Vision, hard and paper editions (John Jones Ltd, 1971)
  • Whitesung (Aquila, 1972)
  • Antarktika (Writers Forum, 1972)
  • Trowch Eich Radio 'Mlaen (Writers Forum, 1977)
  • Connecting Tubes (Writers Forum, 1980)
  • Visual Texts 1970-1980, microfiche edition (Pyrofiche, 1981)
  • The O Poems (Writers Forum, 1981)
  • Blues And Heartbreakers (Galloping Dog, 1981)
  • Some Music And A Little War (Rivelin Grapheme, 1984)
  • On Criticism (Writers Forum, 1984)
  • Reds In The Bed (Galloping Dog, 1985)
  • Selected Poems (Poetry Wales Press, 1987)
  • Make (Galloping Dog, 1990)
  • Cheng Man Ching Variations (Writers Forum, 1990)
  • Poems For Ghosts (Seren Books, 1991)
  • Five Hundred Cobbings (Writers Forum, 1994)
  • The Spe ell (Writers Forum, 1995)
  • Useful (Seren Books, 1997)
  • Dauber (Writers Forum, 1997)
  • Antibodies (Stride, 1997)
  • Food (Seren Books, 2001)
  • Vizet - Water (Konkret Konyvek, 2003)
  • The Welsh Poems (Shearsman, 2006)
  • Selected Later Poems (Seren, 2007)
  • Zen Cymru (Seren, 2007)
  • The Insufficiency of Christian Teaching 
  • On the Subject of Common Emotional Problems (Smallminded books, 2011)
  • hammer lieder helicopter speak (p.o.w: poetry / oppose / war, 2012)
  • The Machineries Of Joy - forthcoming


Recordings

  • Big Band Dance Music - Balsam Flex, 1980 
  • Dances Interdites - Balsam Flex, 1982 
  • The Italian Job (with Bob Cobbing) - Klinker Soundz, 1985
  • Big Band Dance Music – Slowscan #36, 12” vinyl, 2017
  • Dances Interdites (extended) – Slowscan #38, 12” vinyl, 2017

Other Works

  • Blats (Second Aeon, 1973)
  • Between 35 And 42 (Alun Books, 1982)
  • Getting Your Poetry Published, 15 editions (Association of Little Presses, 1973)
  • Publishing Yourself, Not Too Difficult After All, 8 editions (Association of Little Presses, 1989)
  • How To Publish Your Poetry, 3 editions (Allison & Busby, 1985)
  • How To Publish Your Poetry, complete revision: read a sample chapter (Allison & Busby, 1998)
  • How To Publish Yourself, 2 editions (Allison & Busby, 1987)
  • How To Publish Yourself, complete revision (Allison & Busby, 1997)
  • The Poetry Business (Seren Books, 1994)
  • Real Cardiff (Seren Books, 2002)
  • Real Cardiff #2 (Seren Books, 2004)
  • Real Wales (Seren Books, 2008)
  • Real Cardiff #3 (Seren Books, 2009)
  • Edging The Estuary (Seren Books, 2013)
  • The Roots Of Rock From Mississippi To Cardiff and Back (Seren Books, 2015)
  • Real Cardiff The Flourishing City (Seren Books, 2018)

As Editor

  • Typewriter Poems (Something Else Press, 1972)
  • How To Learn Welsh (Christopher Davies 1978)
  • Green Horse, with Meic Stephens (Christopher Davies, 1978)
  • Small Presses & Little Magazine Of The UK & Ireland, An Address List (Oriel Bookshop, 1996)
  • The Big Book of Cardiff, with Grahame Davies (Seren, 2005)
  • Orbis Magazine Special Welsh Issue no. 136 (2006)

Sample Text

Blodeuwedd Translated


I ws bldng n t lp f bsts
Pllng stffl t m lv. I hv t scrmng
tht wnds mir n t mn. Grmnts f groc
dlt n clpp n t wnk f m il.

I m starr f mgh n mlssssss
wr tghtngngnshot my moderness appalling
nasnasnast f I hd fop on fop on me
n t rbbl f stirling I list m why

I ws bllll l l ll llls
Pllng ngngn n n ng. N ng n ngngng
tht thth tht t t th. Gthths yt thth
dlt o oooo o o ooo o o oo

I m stoeee e eee e msssssss
wr starlight starlight starlight
starlight starlight starlight me
god gaths stir m m starlight why

I ss ssss ssss blod oak broom meadowsweet

Five-Hundred Cobbings

(extract)

Cobbing's band:

cob (tpt)
cobn (flhn)
cob (bell)
obob (p solo)
ing (toth)
cobm (bugle)
cobn (tb; clo; cbsspn)
cobn (acc. jig, footo)
cobn (bj, tongue vib)
cobn (wbd)
cobn (phcbr jam)
cobn (nse)
cobn (spt)
cobn (Cypriot bread)
cobn (wallpaper)

Ahmed Abcobbo and the Solomonic quintet
Roland Cobanovitch
Zoot Horn Cobdunski
Big Lips Bing Boppo
Crippled Hard Armed Cobbono
Hannibal Cobarnish Petersen
Cannon Cannon (mgr)

ggs chp (wknds) enqr wthn

Reviews

"Since the early 1970s, Finch has been the principal innovator in Welsh poetry.....he deserves a Welsh knighthood." --Richard Kostelanetz, Dictionary of the Avant-Gardes

"For 40 years he has been the Welsh avant-garde, as inventive and as indispensable as he has been consistently undervalued and ignored.....one of the few Welsh writers capable of entrancing young students with his verbal chutzpah, his Crazy Gang of words. Henffych, Peter: a hir oes eto i'ch egni ac i'ch dawn." --M. Wynn Thomas in Wales In Action, Spring 2005

Finch's "way with echoes, loops, chiasmus, systems, repetitions etc. is tremendous on stage, always a sensation to watch...." --Chris McCabe, Poetry Librarian, (on Finch's 2009 performance at the ICA)

“Perhaps more than anything else he is known as a highly animated, kinetic performer of his work – or at any rate that part of it which is geared towards public recital. Performance poetry, if it is going to work, must be egalitarian, not elitist. As Finch has acknowledged, such poems need to beaccessible’, and ‘humour is an advantage’. Finch, then, is a lot of things, and after publishing more than 20 collections of poetry, he gives no indication of running out of steam." -- Rory Waterman, British Council website

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