
Over the weekend a freespeaker I haven't met who operates under the name of Unclescam sent me a link to a 20-year-old video of Joe Dunn, the late pappi to a few Boston poets who were lucky enough to take part in his Monday night poetry parties on Beacon Hill. Tenor Joe and his contralto wife Rose hosted these gatherings as learning / entertainment events. I've written about Joe and Rose for Jacket, pointing to Joe's "reading and enthusing over the privileged texts." A good amount of the poetry Joe chose -- crinkled-up pages and notes composed by Olson, Creeley, Spicer, and others -- was unpublished. In this direct way, Joe was responsible for transmitting sacred data, if you will, to a small posse of young Bostonians ready to receive it. There's another function beyond transmission to Joe's teaching, and this old video captures it even as you concede the impression is marred by poor audio and a fuzzy gloss. Joe's incantation here of a poem either to or by Robert Creeley conveys Joe's swept-up enthrallment, a thoroughly earned ardor with text, perhaps a bit too 'private' for large-public consumption, but utterly mesmerizing and broodingly pedagogic in more intimate confines of a poet's apartment or -- now -- YouTubed from the bat cave straight to a poet's computer screen. There are more Btown videos from Unclescam. Here's Joe Dunn. And there's a follow-up, April 2, thanks to Geof Huth's input.








