Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- List of Contributors
- Dedication
- Introduction: Sounding Liverpool
- 1 George Garrett, Merseyside Labour and the Influence of the United States
- 2 ‘No Struggle but the Home’: James Hanley's The Furys
- 3 Paradise Street Blues: Malcolm Lowry's Liverpool
- 4 ‘Unhomely Moments’: The Fictions of Beryl Bainbridge
- 5 A Man from Elsewhere: The Liminal Presence of Liverpool in the Fiction of J.G. Farrell
- 6 The Figure in the Carpet: An Interview with Terence Davies
- 7 ‘Every Time a Thing Is Possessed, It Vanishes’: The Poetry of Brian Patten
- 8 Finding a Rhyme for Alphabet Soup: An Interview with Roger McGough
- 9 Rewriting the Narrative: Liverpool Women Writers
- 10 Jumping Off: An Interview with Linda Grant
- 11 Ramsey Campbell's Haunted Liverpool
- 12 ‘We Are a City That Just Likes to Talk’: An Interview with Alan Bleasdale
- 13 ‘Culture Is Ordinary’: The Legacy of the Scottie Road and Liverpool 8 Writers
- 14 ‘I've Got a Theory about Scousers’: Jimmy McGovern and Lynda La Plante
- 15 Manners, Mores and Musicality: An Interview with Willy Russell
- 16 Subversive Dreamers: Liverpool Songwriting from the Beatles to the Zutons
- 17 Putting Down Roots: An Interview with Levi Tafari
- 18 ‘Out of Transformations’: Liverpool Poetry in the Twenty-first Century
17 - Putting Down Roots: An Interview with Levi Tafari
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- List of Contributors
- Dedication
- Introduction: Sounding Liverpool
- 1 George Garrett, Merseyside Labour and the Influence of the United States
- 2 ‘No Struggle but the Home’: James Hanley's The Furys
- 3 Paradise Street Blues: Malcolm Lowry's Liverpool
- 4 ‘Unhomely Moments’: The Fictions of Beryl Bainbridge
- 5 A Man from Elsewhere: The Liminal Presence of Liverpool in the Fiction of J.G. Farrell
- 6 The Figure in the Carpet: An Interview with Terence Davies
- 7 ‘Every Time a Thing Is Possessed, It Vanishes’: The Poetry of Brian Patten
- 8 Finding a Rhyme for Alphabet Soup: An Interview with Roger McGough
- 9 Rewriting the Narrative: Liverpool Women Writers
- 10 Jumping Off: An Interview with Linda Grant
- 11 Ramsey Campbell's Haunted Liverpool
- 12 ‘We Are a City That Just Likes to Talk’: An Interview with Alan Bleasdale
- 13 ‘Culture Is Ordinary’: The Legacy of the Scottie Road and Liverpool 8 Writers
- 14 ‘I've Got a Theory about Scousers’: Jimmy McGovern and Lynda La Plante
- 15 Manners, Mores and Musicality: An Interview with Willy Russell
- 16 Subversive Dreamers: Liverpool Songwriting from the Beatles to the Zutons
- 17 Putting Down Roots: An Interview with Levi Tafari
- 18 ‘Out of Transformations’: Liverpool Poetry in the Twenty-first Century
Summary
Levi Tafari was born in Liverpool in 1960 to parents of Jamaican origin. He has published four collections of poetry: Duboetry (the Windows Project, 1987), Liverpool Experience (Michael Schwinn, 1989), Rhyme Don't Pay (Head-land, 1993) and From the Page to the Stage (Headland, 2006). His plays have been performed at the Unity Theatre and the Playhouse in Liverpool, as well as at the Blackheath Theatre in Stafford. He has also worked on educational projects, running creative writing workshops in schools, colleges, universities, youth centres, prisons and libraries. His musical projects include working with the Ghanaian drum and dance ensemble Delado, the Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra, and with his own reggae fusion band Ministry of Love. He has also played with Urban Strawberry Lunch and Griot Workshop and has recently worked with jazz musician Dennis Rollins. Levi was talking to Dave Ward at the Windows Project office on Bold Street, Liverpool, in February 2006.
LT: I was born and raised in Liverpool. My parents came from the island of Jamaica, so that had a huge influence on me. My Mum worked in Crawfords, the biscuit factory. My dad did joinery – he worked in Courthaulds, up in Aintree. My parents, particularly my Mum, were immersed in the oral tradition. When Mum used to be in the kitchen, cooking, she used to come out with little rhymes, stories, proverbs and riddles from Jamaica.
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- Information
- Writing LiverpoolEssays and Interviews, pp. 252 - 264Publisher: Liverpool University PressPrint publication year: 2007