Jump to content

Brendan McLeod

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Bearcat (talk | contribs) at 04:18, 27 September 2018. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Brendan McLeod
Brendan McLeod performing in June of 2009 at Cafe Deux Soleils
Brendan McLeod performing in June of 2009 at Cafe Deux Soleils
Born1979
Ontario
Occupationspoken word artist, musician, novelist, poet
NationalityCanadian
Website
Brendan McLeod

Brendan McLeod is a Canadian spoken word artist, musician and novelist. His work often deals with the exploration of social and political commentary, family histrionics, surreal love poems, obscure adventure stories, and powerful personal stories.

As a spoken word artist and slam poet, he has earned the honours of Canadian SLAM poetry champion (2004), Vancouver SLAM poetry champion (2005), and finished second at the 2005 World SLAM championships, held in the Netherlands. In 2006 McLeod was winner of the Three-Day Novel Contest and consequently his first novel, The Convictions of Leonard McKinley was published by Arsenal Pulp Press. The novel has been called both "creepy but...good"[1] and a work of "buoyant irony".[2]

McLeod is also a member of The Fugitives, a "wildly talented spoken-word-cranked"[3] Vancouver-based band also including Adrian Glynn and Steven Charles. Notable former members of The Fugitives include C.R. Avery, Barbara Adler, and Mark Berube. The group has been classified under many guises including slam folk, folk hop,[4] and spoken word cabaret.

References

  1. ^ So Misguided, Book Review: The Convictions of Leonard McKinley, Sunday, September 02, 2007 http://www.somisguided.com/weblog/book-review-the-convictions-of-leonard-mckinley/
  2. ^ Jim Bartley, "Why must I be a teenager in lust?" The Globe and Mail, August 4, 2007.
  3. ^ The Georgia Straight, "Dance All-Stars", Janet Smith, March 1, 2007 https://www.straight.com/article-72987/dance-all-stars
  4. ^ The Omega, Thompson Rivers University's Independent Student Newspaper, "Fugitives rock Alumni Theatre", Jessica Scharien, 02/04/09 http://www.theomega.ca/article/17678