But first things first: If you want to drink in classy surroundings and hear some poems, e-mail savedate@aol.com now to reserve your spot at the Intoxicating Poetry party this Wednesday, Oct. 3. Intoxicating Poetry is sponsored by Alizé, cohosted by a delightful woman named LindaAnn Loschiavo and free to anyone willing to adhere to the dress code. (Guys: Wear a jacket, tie and business "trousers." Women: Dont wear jeans or sneakers.)
The party has a clever theme. Two poets, Jonathan Galassi and David Baker, recently published books called North Street and Changeable Thunder, respectively. Cohostess Loschiavo thought that these sounded like cocktails, so she put out the word to would-be bartenders and sots: Come up with drinks named "North Street" and "Changeable Thunder" using Alizé cognac, and well judge them at our party. The drink recipes came in; "professional mixologists" selected finalists and now judges ("well-known actors and people who are involved in the theater") are ready to give their verdicts at 6 p.m. at the Players Club (16 Gramercy Park S., betw. Irving Place & Park Ave. S., 475-6116). Once the top cocktails are crowned, everyone will sip free samples of them while the poets read from their corresponding books.
Loschiavo has hosted similar get-togethers for 15 years; shes like the Queen of Coming Up with Ways to Get Drunk Based on Poetry. "Im actually the Queen of Trying to Develop an Audience for Good Literature," she counters. "Because if you have a poetry event and you invite poets, you do not expand the audience...and this is why the arts are dying, because they dont reach out to broad groups of audience. I try to appeal to the general literate public who might not necessarily want to go to something billed as a reading or a literary event, but when you come to my events, theyre wild.
"This event, were having about 15 raffle prizes... One of the prizes is a watch designed by Andy Warhol with his face on it; another prize is tickets to opening night and the cast party of The Headless Horseman Rides Again, a revival of The Legend of Sleepy Hollow being performed starting Oct. 20."
"Gramercy Park S." is what they call 20th St. where it borders Gramercy Park, so dont get confused as to where the Players Club is.
...Or, if you have a problem with dress codes, you can attend perhaps the loudest, least poetic tour of all time, which rolls into NYC on the same night as Intoxicating Poetry. Its called the Metallennium Tour (why Metallica didnt use this, Ill never knowoh wait, they cant, because James Hetfields been in rehab) and it features Darkest Hour, Six Feet Under, Lamb of God, God Forbid and Candiria.
The most exciting of these pummelers is Darkest Hour (thats why I put them first on the list, stupid). Hailing from DC, they meld early, non-sucky Metallica riffs with hardcore vocals so low in the throat that you cant possibly understand them without a lyric sheet. Luckily, the bands new CD So Sedated, So Secure has a lyric sheet, and hey, whats this? The words arent merely un-embarrassing; they take on real urgency in the wake of 9/11. The albums title now describes the last American decade, and "Another Reason" becomes a mantra for the bastards flying the planes ("Keep your eyes on the trigger/And your mind on the ecstasy"). This is one of the best albums of the year, and the band is road-ready, having driven nonstop from Rhode Island to Chicago back in 2000 to get inked to Victory Records.
This show is also Oct. 3; it goes on at the WWF Times Square venue the World (1501 Bway, 43rd St., 398-2563) at 5 p.m., with tickets $22.50 at the door. Check it out and bring earplugs if you arent already deaf.
...Bringing it back to poetry, a frank and hilarious wordsmith named Robbyne Kaamil begins the second run of her one-woman show Raw and Real: Life from One Womans Perspective at Roses Turn this Wednesday. I know; its another Oct. 3 event, but if you miss this one, you can at least catch it Saturday, Oct. 6, or on any Wednesday through Nov. 14.
Robbyne ("Me being black, [people] think its some fancy shit, but its just pronounced Robin," she explains) made a name for herself by writing Get Off the Titty, her first poetry book. "I had been acting for years before I started writing...and as a full-sized woman and a full-sized black woman, I wasnt getting a lot of roles. So, my saying was, Okay, Im not gonna sit up here boo-hooing and crying. My saying was, Fuck it, Ill channel my creative genes to something else, and thats when the writing came."
Robbynes show, which first ran in late summer, is dirty enough for Howard Stern but also genuinely, let-the-truth-be-told funny. Its up there with this years Queens of Comedy CD, which set the bar pretty high for black female humor.
"Its a mesh of the poetry, which is very raw, in-your-face kind of stuff, and comedy. I talk about police brutality. I talk about sexual things. I go into all types of thingsmasturbation, darling...maintenance fucking..."
And whats maintenance fucking, Robbyne? (When you think about it, it could be a couple of things.)
"Thats the man that you call when youre in between boyfriends, honey, and you just need to get your rocks off, you know? Yeah yeah yeah, I got that covered."
Robbyne is on the way upher handlers are looking for a bigger venue to accommodate next years showsso you should call 604-4864 for reservations before heading to Roses Turn (55 Grove St. at 7th Ave., 366-5438). The performances begin at 7 p.m. and cost $15 with a two-drink minimum.
Mini-Blurbs from a Thursday night in Soho: I eradicated free sushi and potent drinks at William Monahans Light House book party, which went down not-so-recently in refurbished Veruka (525 Broome St., betw. Thompson St. & 6th Ave., 625-1717). Im proud to say that in this endeavor, I was not alone. Since writers and their assorted scuzz made up most of the crowd, we tore up the open bar and grabbed all the food we could stuff in our thin little cheeks; and when we got tired, we were relieved by other writers coming in the door. Veruka reopened to the public sometime after the Light House party, so heres the word for those wishing to go now: ugly. How ugly? Okay, in the last level of Super Mario Bros. 3, when youre in Bowsers castle, the walls have this red-and-yellow checkerboard pattern thats meant to confuse you as you dodge lasers and fireballsthats the pattern Todd Oldham picked for his wall. You could load up on beers, play Super Mario Bros. 3 (with warping) and get the same effect in 10 minutes.






