About the Author:
Daniel Kane is Professor in English and American literature at the University of Sussex in Brighton. His books include We Saw the Light: Conversations Between the New American Cinema and Poetry (2009) and All Poets Welcome: The Lower East Side Poetry Scene in the 1960s (2003).
Review:
Daniel Kane’s 'Do You Have a Band' illuminates the connection of Richard Hell, Tom Verlaine, Patti Smith to Ted Berrigan, Anne Waldman, Bernadette Mayer, and beyond. The dialogue among poets hanging out at CBGB and punk rock pioneers reading at the Poetry Project in early-seventies NYC is where so many of us in the sonic-lit lineage enter, charmed into the future. (Thurston Moore, recording artist and cofounder of Sonic Youth)
Daniel Kane's incisive study confirms what poets have known for years: that punk rock was spawned by the New York School. Meticulously researched, "Do You Have a Band?" is a must-read for any literature buff, poet, or punk rock fan. This book seamlessly blends historical analysis with literary critique, pop culture, and just the right amount of dirt. (Gillian McCain, coauthor of Please Kill Me: The Uncensored Oral History of Punk)
"Do You Have a Band?" is a formidably researched and galvanizing cultural history of the poetry–punk rock connection, with its lofty aspirations, history, gossip, and genius. This book continues Kane’s passionate scholarship of the formative years of the downtown New York performance/poetry worlds. When were we ever so free to incubate our wild desires in language and sound? Current and next generations of artists, rockers, scholars, and fans will love this book. (Anne Waldman, author of Voice's Daughter of a Heart Yet to Be Born)
Critics have long remarked that Lou Reed, Richard Hell, Patti Smith and other musicians associated with the emergence of punk rock began their careers in the New York poetry world. Why then are timeless evocations of the Rimbaudian maudit all we ever hear about their interest in poetry? Banishing these clichés with a critical power chord, Daniel Kane's "Do You Have a Band?" finally brings into view the actual landscape of later New York School poetics in which (and often against which) New York punk rock took shape. (Lytle Shaw, New York University, author of Frank O’Hara: The Poetics of Coterie)
["Do You Have a Band?"] highlights the impact of the New York School on New York punk (not to mention the impact of NY punk on the NY School) and puts the musical revolution in its proper context. . . . Past books on punk have included the part about poetry, but left out the specifics of the scene that was happening right in punk’s own backyard. With "Do You Have a Band?", we can consider the historical record corrected. (Adam Ellsworth The Arts Fuse)
A pioneering work of literary history that chronicles a period from roughly the mid-1960s to the mid-1980s when the line between poetry and Manhattan-based proto-punk and punk rock was markedly permeable. . . . Kane allows for an expansive definition of poetry, tacitly advancing the idea that poetry is not a set of formal values but whatever its writers and readers need it to be at a particular time. His writing is richer for it, and it will ensure that poetry, punk, and punk poetry remain consequential for years to come. (Josh Schneiderman Public Books)
Daniel Kane’s “Do You Have A Band?”: Poetry and Punk Rock in New York City persuasively argues the crucial influence of poetry on New York art-rock and proto-punk from the 1960s through the 1980s. (Franz Nicolay Los Angeles Review of Books)
["Do You Have a Band?"] succeeds spectacularly. . . . Equal time and space is given to NYC poetry/music godfather Ed Sanders (of the Fugs) as well as three figures who, to varying degrees, followed in the initial punk wake: John Giorno, Eileen Myles and Dennis Cooper. Placing Myles and Cooper within this milieu is revelatory and really puts the book into new territory rarely covered in other NYC punk histories. (Matthew Moyer Orlando Weekly)
Daniel Kane’s “Do You Have a Band?”: Poetry and Punk Rock in New York City depicts a similarly tight and intimate scene in New York that coalesced not just around CBGBs and the Mudd Club, but around the St Mark’s Poetry Project. . . . The additions Kane makes to the narrative of the genesis of 1970s underground New York are invaluable. (Chris Kraus Times Literary Supplement)
“Do You Have a Band?” is a lively, irreverent cultural history which serves as a fitting companion piece to Kane’s excellent All Poets Welcome: The Lower East Side Poetry Scene in the 1960s (University of California Press, 2003). (Christopher Luna Rain Taxi Review of Books)
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