Joseph Maviglia kicks off UPEI Winter Tales Author Reading Series - Action News
Home WebMail Wednesday, November 27, 2024, 01:05 AM | Calgary | -7.6°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
PEI

Joseph Maviglia kicks off UPEI Winter Tales Author Reading Series

Singer-songwriter, poet, essayist and author Joseph Maviglia kicked off UPEIs Winter Tales Author Reading Series on Thursday night.

He will perform Thursday night and again in Montague on Saturday

Joseph Maviglia is kicking off UPEI's Winter Tales Author Reading Series on Thursday. (Angela Walker/CBC)

Singer-songwriter, poet, essayist and author Joseph Maviglia kicked off UPEI's Winter Tales Author Reading Series on Thursday night at the university'sfaculty lounge.

Though he casts a wide creative net, he said that music is his favourite artisticoutlet.

Sometimes songs mean something and sometimes people just want to dance.- Joseph Maviglia

"I like a really good lyric to come with a chord of a guitar strum that's really the thing I love the most," he said.

"All the other things find a way of relating. There's often a line from what could be a poem that I can then transpose into a song and vice versa, but yeah, there's something about the musical aspect of language."

'What they bring out'

Mavigliahas also done work as an educator through arts residencies and said that he gets just as much from the work as the people he is teaching.

"It's not what I pass on, it's what they bring out," he said.

He has also doneworkshops withCaritas, an organization that works with people suffering from substance abuse problems.

"Give them an alternative in terms of what to do with life, and reflect back. And if writing help in terms of resolving some of their issues."

Mavigliabelieves that though music can bring a profound experience to people, but it can also just be fun.

"Sometimes songs mean something and sometimes people just want to dance."

He will be performing again Saturday at 1 p.m. at the Montague library and admission is free.

With files from CBC: Mainstreet P.E.I.