The Story Bar

People like us talk about things like this over drinks.

Curated by Tanner Latham & Jennifer Davick

Steve Cannon, Blind Poet

Steve Cannon, Blind Poet

Steve Cannon was born in New Orleans and came to New York in 1962, and even before he founded Tribes, he played such a role in New York’s counterculture that he has become a kind of oracular figure to those who have encountered him. In the early ’60s, he convened informal discussions about music and literature with writers like David Henderson and Ishmael Reed and other members of Umbra. In the 1970s, Cannon ran a publishing house with Reed and the poet Joe Johnson that was one of the first independent presses to focus on multicultural literature. The painter Gerald Jackson once saved him from drowning in the Hudson River. Sun Ra used to seek him out to tell stories about flying around in space. (“If he says he flew into space, then I guess he flew into space,” Cannon says.) He helped integrate the public university school system in New York by becoming an early faculty member at Medgar Evers College in Brooklyn, where he taught humanities. The composer Butch Morris refined his ideas of improvised music in his living room.

From “A Blind Publisher and Poet” by M.H. Miller for New York Times Style Magazine; Photo by Adam Golfer (@adamgolfer) 

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