Amy Jo Philip

  • What would life be without it? Radio 3 is the cut and polished diamond of radio in Britain. I love it for the breadth of its music programming. I love it for the fact it presents whole works by default, unlike the bargain basement Classic FM. I love it for the regular new drama, even…

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  • island magazine, published by Julie Johnstone’s Essence Press is a beautifully produced, hand-bound biannual publication concentrating on poetry concerned with nature. I don’t like to use the term “nature poetry” lest it conveys something twee, which island is not. Julie describes it as “new writing inspired by nature and exploring our place within the natural…

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  • The New Voices event in Dumfries I’m appearing at is not at Lochthorn Library, but the University of Glasgow Crichton Campus, which is to the south of Dumfries. Details are therefore as follows: New VoicesAndrew Philipwith Helena Nelson of Happenstance Press How do you set about building your profile as a new poet – getting…

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  • No, I’ve not undergone a road-to-Pittodrie conversion to the Church of Two Halves; the season I’m talking about is the Shore Poets autumn programme, which got off to a superb start last night with Jackie Kay, Christine De Luca, Mandy Maxwell and music from the Linties. Mandy Maxwell is a graduate of the creative writing…

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  • One of the most exciting things to have happened to me on the writing front this year was my being asked to do a couple of events with the Scottish Poetry Library under its New Voices banner. Details of both are below. New Voices promotes poets who have published one collection so far. Usually, a…

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  • My next reading will be at the Poetry and Jazz event on the Celebrate Linlithgow! arts festival. The reading is at 8pm on Friday 27 October in Bryerton House. Tickets are free and can be reserved by calling 01506 517031. The other main reader is Douglas Briton, who writes in a kind of Wendy Cope-ish…

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  • The inaugural Linlithgow Book Festival took place today. I managed to get along to three of the events: the opening talk, the poetry workshop and the closing reading. In the first event, Lithgae resident John Fowler talked on the subject of his book Mr Hill’s Big Picture, namely, David Octavius Hill and his huge painting…

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  • A to Z

    I’ve just been added to the Poets’ A to Z on the Scottish Poetry Library website. There’s a short biographical note, a couple of links, a “books I love” feature and a poem–“Man With a Dove on his Head”–from Tonguefire. There’s also a link to the SPL’s holdings of my work. You can see my…

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  • The British Council Scotland website has some pages with new Scottish poetry. It’s a good selection of poets, if a short one: John Burnside, Matthew Fitt, Ann Frater, Rody Gorman, Alan Jamieson and Jackie Kay. There are poems in Scots, English and Gaelic. Matthew Fitt’s “Scottish National Diction” is a smashing poem with more than…

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  • The Skraich

    I’ve decided to start a blog in Scots as well as this one. You can find it here.

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  • I’ve just discovered that Linlithgow is about to give birth to a book festival. Over the three years I’ve lived here, I’ve often thought the town could easily house a small-scale literary festival. It already has a folk festival, and Celebrate Linlithgow!, a broader arts festival, is to take place for the first time this…

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  • I must attend more live music. No matter how good a recording, it simply can’t compare to hearing the resonances shimmer away into the rafters of the concert hall. And shimmer they did last night in the hands of the pianist Benjamin Kobler, the horn player William Purvis and the NJO Summer Academy, under Reinbert…

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  • Tomorrow evening, I’m off to an Edinburgh International Festival performance of Olivier Messiaen‘s enormous orchestral piece Des Canyons aux Étoiles, so it seems appropriate to inaugurate a projected series of occasional blog entries on the writers, musicians and artists who most invigorate me with a few words about Messiaen. Over the past few years, I’ve…

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  • Verb, Pure Verb

    I was fortunate enough to get a ticket to hear Seamus Heaney read at the Book Festival yesterday. Given that the tickets had sold out within hours of being released to us mere mortals, I had surrendered all hope of hearing him until a colleague of mine suggested that there might be returns. So I…

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  • Went to a couple of events on the Festival of Politics on Thursday. The first, the Royal Society of Arts lecture on the impact of technology on society and politics, was interesting but didn’t enthrall me. The second event was billed as a discussion on Scottish culture, media and politics. Essentially, it was three journalists…

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