John Farrell (poet)

John Patrick Farrell (22 May 1968 – 4 November 2010) was an American poet and composer.

J.P.Farrell
J.P. Farrell, Fall (NYC) 2006
Background information
Birth nameJohn Patrick Farrell
Born(1968-05-22)May 22, 1968
OriginGlen Cove, New York, U.S.
DiedNovember 4, 2010(2010-11-04) (aged 42)
GenresFree Verse, Beat, Experimental, Postmodern
Occupation(s)Musician, writer, composer, publisher
InstrumentsUpright Bass, Electric Bass, Percussion
Years active1986–2010

Early life

J.P. Farrell was born in Glen Cove, New York and pursued study of music from an early age. He has composed music and performed in numerous ensembles in Long Island. Farrell entered SUNY Fredonia School of Music in 1986 as a Music Theory and Film major. He later transferred to SUNY Geneseo to pursue music composition studies with James Willey. Upon his graduation, Farrell remained semi-active in the New York Jazz scene as a bassist; performing with pianist Hyperion Knight. J.P. Farrell was a member of the Songwriters Guild of America and the American Federation of Musicians.

Literary career

Farrell moved to Minneapolis in 1994 and worked with the St. Paul Chamber Orchestra and Minnesota Opera. He enrolled at the University of Minnesota in the MFA program for Creative Writing in 1999. It was there that he studied poetry with Ray Gonzalez and won several awards for his poetry (including the ArtsWords Award in 2002) and has been published in numerous academic poetry journals. He is currently an active poet and music teacher in Boerne, Texas. The publisher of the Atonal Poetry Review (launched in January 2010) and President/principal owner of Atonal Press. His most recent poem "Had Schumann Lived" was published in di-vêrse´-city (AIPF; 2010). He also served as Executive Director of the Guadalupe Valley Poetry Celebration.

  • Poetry Link.
  • Austin International Poetry Festival (2009)
  • University of Minnesota ArtWords (2002)
  • SUNY Geneseo, School of the Arts.
  • Atonal Poetry Review
  • Atonal Press
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.