PolytechnicOnline - Poetry brings voice to concearns
Wednesday, March 18, 2009
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Posted by: George Laws
Poetry brings voice to concerns
Posted 03-18-2009 at 5:27AM

Michael Chu Staff Reporter 
The Center for Biotechnology and Interdisciplinary Studies Auditorium
was graced with the spoken word on Friday, February 20. Hosted by
Lambda Upsilon Lambda, RPI's 12th Annual Poetry Slam brought
high-quality slam poets and student performances to the campus-stage.
The event began at 7 pm, with Lambda Upsilon Lambda member Michael
Gonzalez giving an introduction to the rules of the contest. It
would be a three-round slam under the theme of "Armageddon." Round one
would be "The Economic Recession," round two, "Global Chaos," and round
three, "82 Cents of Hope." Gonzalez explained the idea was to give a
sense of urgency and importance to three issues and events taking place
right now, those being, respectively, the nation's financial state,
the mid-east crisis and global warming, and the recent election of
President Barack Obama. Each competitor would be rated on a scale of
one to four, with four being a perfect score. After each round, half of
the contestants would be eliminated until there was only one left. The
winner of the event would receive a Nintendo Wii.
The competition was open to anyone, including people outside of the
Institute. Although a couple of RPI students tried their hand at the
contest, they did not last against the more experienced poets from
outside the Rensselaer Community, including Anarkist Kryst, Diabolical,
Devin the Poet, and Sean Gallagher, who made it to round two.
Throughout the evening all of them instilled unique voices in their
performances. Every one of the top poets had a different style:
Diabolical had a comedic voice in his poetry; Gallagher recited with a
lyric, story-esque quality; and both Anarkist Kryst and Devin the Poet
possessed a hip-hop approach that many associate with slam. There was a
good variety between the four, including an angry piece against drug
corporations (by Anarkist Kryst), a poem of nostalgic value about
growing up in the 90s (by Devin the Poet), and a humorous speech from
a post-election Sen. John McCain (titled No We Can't, by Diabolical).
However, Diabolical did not make it to round three after a momentary
loss of memory during his recitation in the previous round. Due to a
rare tie, three poets participated in the final instead of two.
Although all the finalists delivered strong performances, Gallagher
came out on top with an imaginative poem drawing a David and Goliath
reference toward life that gave a positive outlook toward hope. When
asked what he would do with the Wii, Gallagher amusingly commented that
he already had one and would treat his new one as rent money.
While the scores from each round were being calculated and compared,
various students performed in the slam's open mic. It was refreshing to
see RPI students recite their own written works, since the Institute
does not frequently host literary-related events.
Overall, the slam competition was quite a success. "RPI has one of the
most receptive, supportive crowds I've seen on a college campus,"
Gallagher stated in a post-slam e-mail interview. It was great to see a
poem come to life in an oral expression instead of sitting as text on a
page. Originally posted at:
http://poly.union.rpi.edu/article_view.php3?view=6495&part=1
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