Tuesday, December 1, 2009

The Dusty Owl Reading Series Presents The Sixth Annual Amazing Chocolate House Featuring Envelope 3!


6 December 2009, 2pm
Swizzles Bar & Grill, 246B Queen Street, Ottawa

Join us for a winter-warming afternoon of music, poetry, stories, chocolate, and helping Ottawa’s less fortunate.

The holidays are still a few weeks off, but here’s you chance to get things started the right way – with friends, live music, yummy chocolate treats, and refreshing chocolate drinks while supporting our local community.

This is our sixth annual fundraiser for The Ottawa Food Bank, so we ask you to bring along canned food, dry goods, toiletries, baby food, and cash donations to help others this holiday season.

And don't forget to bring your own poetry, stories, music, and rants to share in our open-mic set!
And did we mention there was going to be chocolate? Especially hot chocolate?



Ambiently listenable, sonically lush and complex, with a tight, technical structure that allows the fun, growling danceable underbelly to leap wildly...this is envelope 3.

Otherwise known as Dave Lauzon, this music is in the ambient electronica tradition.The relentless, danceable backbone of this genre along with the technological gadgetry is a fundamental part of the envelope 3 sound. That Dave plays an acoustic guitar that forms both the central voice and percussive backbeat of his music adds an organic influence that allows his music to avoid the sometimes inhuman and cold aspects of the electronic medium. Live sampling and looping provide a reflexive "chorus" that is bound to awe with its beauty...and impossible not to move to.

"...moments of nostalgic beauty and otherworldiness. Multidimensional, this music integrates height with depth, plays between whimsical and seriousness, moves between longing and being, dances with both joy and sorrow and invokes emotional participation from listeners."

"Elsewhere he has described his new ‘one-man band’ as a meeting of Kaki King and Orbital. Kaki is known for her use of the guitar as a percussive instrument and the use of loops to flesh out her sound. Orbital here might be replaced with any number of groups creating live electronic music. “More than just the use of one instrument in any particular way, I'm more referring to how two styles of music make me feel and how in turn that influences my own creativity."
Luke Bowden, Echo Weekly

Formerly the lead guitarist and songwriter for nero, Dave Lauzon has a impressive history. With nero, Lauzon headlined festivals on both sides of the border. The critics agree that Lauzon is a creative and talented musician. With nero, he has been featured in Relix and Guitar Player Magazine (nero feature) , and also been on the cover of Musik. His band and songwriting was nominated for a Jammy award in the New Groove Of The Year category in a sold-out ceremony/awards show at Madison Square Gardens in March, 2004.
Since that time Lauzon has been refining a highly original...and stunning..live solo performance that has evolved into envelope 3.

Saturday, November 28, 2009

We Nearly Changed Our Name To Hooter...





We're now on Twitter!

Check us out here for ocasional updates!

Like Karaoke?


And who doesn't?

I mean, where else can you (re)live those rock 'n' roll dreams, meet up with old friends and make new ones, and have so much fun?

So check out our friends Dog & Pony Sound as they put on their shoes -- I mean shows -- around town.

Best in Ottawa? You bet!

Best in Canada? Very, very likely.

Meet a Cool Lady and Her Bike Named Mike


Here is our pal Kate's blog about the cycling life here in Ottawa and beyond:

http://theincidentalcyclist.blogspot.com/

Poetry Goggles: Origins? (Part 2)


Steve is known to enjoy Tom Waits's music. To the point of having a Tom Waits impression shtick he plays out at local karaoke shows.

Coincidence? Hmmm...

Saturday, November 21, 2009

Your Cultural Farmer's Market

Writers! Musicians! Poets! Artists! Crafters!

NEED CASH?

Bring your books, CDs, comix, chapbooks, knitted and sewn wares, posters, whatever to sell at the next Dusty Owl reading!

Check out www.dustyowl.com for upcoming dates, and bring your goods to the next reading -- we'll gladly let you use one of the tables so you can do business during the breaks!

For more info email Steve Zytveld at steve@dustyowl.com.

Poetry Goggles: Origins?



Steve is known to be a bit of a phan of Phish. Drummer Jonathan Fishman has been known to wear goggles during concerts.

Coincidence? You be the judge.

The Dusty Owl's Home Nest: Swizzles Bar & Grill


We've been hosting the Dusty Owl at Swizzles Bar & Grill for nearly six years. In this interview with Amanda Earl in the Ottawa Poetry Newsletter, Steve gives a quick rundown of how we got started there:

"Cathy and I found out in early 2004 that our longtime friend Tanja Pecnic had taken over ownership of Swizzles Bar & Grill sometime before Christmas 2003 – I don’t know exactly when, and I don’t like pressing the issue on these sorts of matters, as it is literally her business. Although I had been meaning to for some time by then, we didn’t drop by Swizzles to see her until late that February. You see, I had been stopping in from time to time at the Glue Pot Pub – a couple blocks west along Queen Street – since 1990 or so, and Cathy and I had become regulars there when we moved into the neighbourhood in 1996. Tanja began working the bar at The Pot sometime in the summer of 1997, a couple months before Cathy and I got married. So Tanja has a bit of a history with us… she’s kinda like family we never want to lose touch with.

"For a number of reasons – especially the fact that Cathy and I were taking part-time courses at Carleton University at the time – we hadn’t seen Tanja in a while, so this was a reunion of sorts. After a lot of interested small-talk – more than the just the usual hi-how-are-you-today kinda stuff – Dusty Owl came up, though I’m not sure exactly how. But after a good twenty or so minutes of discussion, Tanja suggested that Swizzles would make a good home for a revived Dusty Owl Reading Series.

"At this time, Cathy, Kate, Nick, and some other friends of ours were meeting as an informal sort of writers group over breakfast at the erstwhile El Morocco diner near the corner of Bank and Lisgar streets in downtown Ottawa. I ran the idea of a revived Dusty Owl at the proposed venue by our ad-hoc group, and everyone enthusiastically agreed.

"And so, on 26 March 2004, at 5pm on a mostly sunny afternoon (though we wouldn’t’ve known it as we were in a basement bar) the Dusty Owl Reading Series took flight again for the first time in five or so years with a good twenty-five or so people in attendance. It was, by the way, entirely open-mic, open to everyone who wanted to stand and be heard."

Swizzles Bar & Grill can be found in the heart of lovely downtown Ottawa, at 246B Queen Street (on the south side of the street, halfway between Bank and Kent). Look for the stairs on the west side of the building, under the green awning.

There's awlways something happening at Swizzles! Check out their website at http://www.swizzles.ca/.

Friday, November 20, 2009

Poetry Goggles


... Because words are dangerous!

Here is a photo of Steve and his mum, taken by his sister Karen. He's wearing his poetry goggles.

The poetry goggles have become something of a regular feature of the Dusty Owl Reading Series, as well as other events Steve drops in on around town.

How did poetry goggles happen? Steve tells this story: "In the spring of 2004, a few weeks after we started holding the Dusty Owl readings at Swizzles, Cathy was getting some stuff together for a garage sale. I came in from somewhere and saw the box of stuff sitting by the door in our apartment. Almost without thinking, I reached into the box and pulled out this pair of swimming goggles Cathy had used in university, and said, 'Hey, you can't give these away -- they're my poetry goggles!' She naturally said no, that I had to put them back into the box, but I hid them away until we held our next reading. I've lost and found them from time to time, but I still have them. I like the idea. I take poetry and writing very seriously, but I think people tend to forget that a poetry reading should be a little fun, too -- you know, the whole 'intellectual hooliganism' and 'serious whimsy' thing. That's what poetry goggles are all about to me."

The Dusty Owl Workshop Series Presents Bare Bones of Mystery Writing with Barbara Fradkin


Sunday 29 November 2009
1pm to 4pm
Sushi 88
690 Somerset Street West

This informal, interactive workshop will examine the enduring power of the mystery novel, in all its guises. There are four magical ingredients of writing crime fiction that thrills, provokes and inspires the reader — good writing, vivid characters, exciting plot and perfect setting. Examples and exercises for each will be discussed, as well as tips on how to create engaging sleuths and credible villains, how to develop tension, conflict and pacing, and how to interweave subplots, plant clues and sprinkle red herrings. Questions about markets and publishers will also be addressed.

Barbara Fradkin is the author of the award-winning detective series featuring the quixotic, exasperating Ottawa Police Inspector Michael Green, whose passion for justice and love of the hunt often interfere with family, friends and police protocol. There are currently seven novels in the series, including the newly released This Thing of Darkness, as well as Honour Among Men and Fifth Son, both of which won Arthur Ellis Best Novel Awards from Crime Writers of Canada. She has also been nominated four times for the Arthur Ellis Award for her dark, compelling short stores, which haunt numerous magazines and anthologies such as the Ladies Killing Circle series.

$15 tickets available at Sushi 88!

For more information:
www.dustyowl.com

Stay tuned for the next series of Dusty Owl workshops in the spring!

Notes, Postcards, Get Well Cards, Poems, Letter Mail to Amanda Earl

As you probably know by now, our longtime friend Amanda Earl was hospitalized a couple weeks ago due to serious illness. She is now on the mend but is still yet to be released.

Amanda loves mail, real mail, so let's get out our pens and send a note, card, or postcard even. Her address is:
1911-440 Gloucester St.
Ottawa, Ontario
K1R 7T8.

I'm sitting down this weekend to write her a quick something passing on our love and best wishes.

(Thanks to Pearl Pirie for passing this on to me from Amanda's husband Charles.)

Wednesday, November 4, 2009

From Good Idea To Good Read – The Art of Poetic Documentary


If you can't make it to our Bywords launch Sunday afternoon, join local writer Phil Jenkins for a hands-on workshop on creative non-fiction. He will explain, in particular and in general, how he has taken good ideas through to newspaper, magazine, and book length pieces of poetic documentary. There will be hand-outs and Socratic discussion. Please bring a few good ideas of your own.

Also, listen to Phil Jenkins on the CBC's In Town and Out this Saturday!

Tickets $15
Available at Sushi 88, 690 Somerset St W
or
by contacting Sean Zio at
sean_zio@riseup.net

The Dusty Owl Play Date Will Soon Be Two Years Old...

...and you're invited!

Next month, the Dusty Owl Play Date will be celebrating its second anniversary. To commemorate this momentous occasion, we will publish an anthology of pieces written by participants of the Play Date.

If you have attended a Play Date and you still have copies of what you wrote, choose your favourite piece and send it, along with its writing prompt if you have it written down, to Kathryn Hunt at lliarra@yahoo.com.

The deadline for submissions is Friday 27 November 2009.

We will be having a Celebration Play Date on Tuesday, December 8, 2009.

Watch for more details!

The Dusty Owl Reading Series Helps Launch the Fall 2009 Issue of the Bywords Quarterly Journal


...with Special Guest Host BQJ Editor Amanda Earl!

Sunday 8 November at 2pm at Swizzles Bar & Grill!

The Fall Edition of the Bywords Quarterly Journal is on the way! Featuring the best of Ottawa's poetic voices, Bywords.ca publishes each month online and a journal four times a year.

Join us to celebrate the launch of the Fall BQJ, with Sylvia Adams, Jamie Bradley, Stephen Rowntree, and Margaret Malioch Zielinski. Music will be provided by Jesse Cook. Amanda Earl will guest host: for more information visit www.bywords.ca.

As usual, we'll be following up the readings with our open mike, and the newly revived Object of Desire contest.

We're at the corner of Queen and Kent, down the stairs beside the Thai restaurant! See you there!

Catching Up...

You're probably wondering where I've been lately.

So much has been going on, what with all the readings going on around town, to say nothing about the Ottawa International Writers Festival (which I did stop in on, but not as much as last time).

Well, I was down with that 'flu bug everyone's been talking about. So, I'm going to be posting all kinds of new stuff over the next while to make up for a slow October...

Wednesday, October 14, 2009

The Dusty Owl Reading Series Presents Jeff Cottrill Sunday 18 October 2009 at 2pm


With special musical guest Nathanael Larochette!

This Sunday, we're bringing you even more spoken-word awesomeness. Jeff Cottrill is a satirical writer, spoken-word artist, theatre/film critic, and occasional actor based in Toronto. His stage act often uses elements of performance poetry, comedy, theatre and storytelling. He has featured in literary and performance series throughout Ontario, the midwest U.S. and England. TorontoPoets.com has called Jeff "one of the funniest spoken-word artists in Canada".

Jeff is the Literary Editor of Burning Effigy Press, a Toronto small press that specializes in genre fiction and local poetry. He is also a former coordinator for the Perpetual Motion Roadshow, a indie-press monthly touring circuit that ran for four years. Jeff has authored three chapbooks of short fiction and comic monologues and recorded two spoken-word CDs. His reviews and articles have appeared in Eye Weekly, NOW, Exclaim!, The Village Post, The Bayview Post, and other publications.

Jeff is currently working on his fifth or sixth attempt at a first novel. He is also planning a one-man Fringe show about the psychological background of Oscar the Grouch. He likes movies, travel, and small baby animals.

And after Jeff, stick around for our world-famous open-mic and the return of the Object of Desire!

DON'T STARVE!! Ever get the munchies during a Dusty Owl? This Sunday, we will again have reasonably-priced, yummies made by B Goods for sale!

All the fun begins at 2pm! As always, there's no cover!

Swizzles is on the south side of Queen Street, between Bank and Kent. Look for the green awning!

See you there!

Saturday, October 3, 2009

Here's a Little More About Danielle...

Thursday's Ottawa Citizen ran this by Peter Simpson about Danielle:
http://communities.canada.com/ottawacitizen/blogs/bigbeat/archive/2009/10/01/danielle-gr-233-goire-slams-it-hard.aspx. Doesn't mention the Dusty Owl, but it's a neat little piece.

Thursday, October 1, 2009

These Are The People in Your Neighbourhood


Want to know more about what is going on in Ottawa's literary community? Check out Bywords, with new poetry and events listings and so much more!

Craft Time!


Here's a little something my friend Peach Flambee sent me: http://cp.c-ij.com/en/contents/3157/03387/index.html


Try it out and see what happens!

Wednesday, September 30, 2009

The Dusty Owl Reading Series Presents Danielle Gregoire


...with special musical guest Katie Regan! Sunday 4 October at 2pm at Swizzles Bar & Grill, 246B Quen Street, Ottawa!

This time we're bringing you more and more special treats. Not only are we bringing you one of the most awesome poetry slammers to have trod the boards in Ottawa, we're also hosting one of the most entertaining song-poets around today. And it's THE RETURN OF THE OBJECT OF DESIRE.

Danielle K.L. Grégoire is a relatively new mother, a teacher, a musician and a spoken word artist. She performed at the Governor General Literary Awards in 2007, and was part of the CBC Poetry Face Off in 2008. She is a member of the Capital Poetry Collective that hosts Capital Slam, and she founded the first rural slam poetry series in Canada, which resulted in the forming of LiPS (The Lanark County Live Poets Society). Her focus is on arts education and getting spoken word poetry into schools. She originally hails from northern Manitoba and lived in Ottawa for three years before moving to Almonte, Ontario where she now resides with her daughter and her husband. On the first Sunday in November, 2009, she will be starting up the Spoken Word Plot, a show that features poetry, comedy and storytelling at JR's Downstairs Pub in Almonte.

Katie Regan is a poet who couldn't write poetry, so she picked up a guitar and rebranded. Singer/songwriter seemed to stick. From Ottawa via London via Calgary via Peterborough, she landed in Toronto and is currently recording her new CD. She recorded an EP, Puddles and Roots, in 2006 and has played shows in various cities in Ontario. The new CD will feature several Toronto musicians who put her to shame, and they will surely steal the spotlight. Katie Regan has been known to pick up a banjo now and then. She's also been known to cover Tom Jones songs.


And after Katie and Danielle, stick around for our world-famous open-mic and the return of the Object of Desire!

DON'T STARVE!! Ever get the munchies during a Dusty Owl? Starting this Sunday, we will have reasonably-priced, yummies made by local bakeries for sale! So you don't have to go you-know-where for a Big Mac and large fries.

All the fun begins at 2pm! As always, there's no cover!

Swizzles is on the south side of Queen Street, between Bank and Kent. Look for the green awning!

See you there!

Welcome to the Dusty Owl blog!

This is another place where you can hear about what we're up to, and how you can get involved.

Watch this blog for not only notices about upcoming Dusty Owl events, but also for links to friends' websites and blogs!

We're always looking for feedback! We can't wait to hear from you!