Winners: Yecheilyah’s 6th Annual Poetry Contest 2023

Congratulations to the winners of this year’s poetry contest. We crown you, poetic scholars, for your commitment and dedication to poetic excellence on this 28th day of December 2023.

#1: Chandra T. Mountain

“I’m Living”

@musings.from.my.younger.self

#2: S.R. Graham

“What I Lack”

@thesensualgenius

#3: Samuel Olopade

“Grace”

@ _olops_

#4: Adariyah Ysrayl

“Grace”

@adariyahysrayl

Congratulations!!

And congratulations to everyone who participated! There would be no contest without your support. Keep an eye out for the individual spotlight interviews of each poet and details on Yecheilyah’s Annual Poetry Contest, 2024!

Poetry Myth: “I Have to Perform My Poems to be Relevant.”

One of the MAJOR misconceptions about the poetry industry is that you have to do spoken word to become a prominent figure.

Performance poetry might be the most popular, but there are other ways to be profitable.

Artists like Rudy Francisco, Jasmine Mans, Prentice Powell (who was recently nominated for a Grammy), Obbie West, and others are dynamic spoken word artists I could listen to all day.

But it is not something I am passionate about doing myself.

I enjoy spoken word and have done it, but I don’t want to make a career out of performance poetry.

I am much better at reciting than performing, and I have learned there is a career in them both.

Reciting and performing poetry are two different areas of expertise we can discuss later.

Poets, let me free you today!

  • You can write and publish poetry books.
  • You can recite your poetry before an audience instead of performing it. In the same way that spoken word artists get paid to perform, you can get paid to recite!
  • You can get paid to write poems for others, organizations, and even movies. Think Poetic Justice. Maya Angelou wrote the poems Janet Jackson’s character Justice recited in the movie.

If you are serious about turning your passion for poetry into a profitable business, I invite you to join The Poetry Business Network.

The Poetry Business Network is a global community where poets learn how to do more with their poetry and create a poetry career.

In this community, you will learn…

  1. How to transform yourself from an individual to an entity (business)
  2. How to start your poetry business step-by-step
  3. How to launch your poetry business step-by step
  4. How to audit your poetry business (if you already have a one)
  5. How to build your brand on a national and international scale
  6. How to identify what services to offer
  7. How to create predictable income with your poetry
  8. How to create, offer, and distribute your own merchandise
  9. How to determine what signature experience you will be known for
  10. How to create your own platform people will be attracted to
Join Us!

And the best part? Membership is FREE (for now! Get in before that changes).

Visit us online at The Poetry Business Network to join.

Submissions for this year’s poetry contest is coming to an end soon! Get your poem in on or before Thursday, November 30th!

yecheilyahsannualpoetrycontest.org

Join Our Past Winners!

338

Yecheilyah’s 1st Annual Poetry Contest Winners 2017

Yecheilyah’s 2nd Annual Poetry Contest Winners 2018

Yecheilyah’s 3rd Annual Poetry Contest Winners 2019

Yecheilyah’s 4th Annual Poetry Contest Winners 2021

Yecheilyah’s 5th Annual Poetry Contest Winners 2022

Is Rap Poetry?

Photo by Pixabay

We’ve received a few questions about if rappers can enter the contest.

The short answer is yes, as rap is a form of poetry.

The longer answer requires a bit of a breakdown.

RAP and POETRY

RAP (often called Rhythm and Poetry*) uses similar forms as poetry, like verses, refrains, rhyming words, rhythm, and meter.

Rap’s origins are said to date as far back as the West African Griots, or village storytellers, and up to early examples of jazz poetry during the Harlem Renaissance Movement.

Rap lyrics that can be poetry:

“Some say the blacker the berry, the sweeter the juice
I say the darker the flesh then the deeper the roots
I give a holler to my sisters on welfare
Tupac cares, if don’t nobody else care
And uh, I know they like to beat ya down a lot
When you come around the block, brothas clown a lot
But please don’t cry, dry your eyes, never let up
Forgive but don’t forget, girl, keep your head up.”

-Tupac Shakur, Keep Ya Head Up

Some poetically inclined rappers also used poetry in their raps. Common’s The Corner featuring Kanye West featured The Last Poets:

“Uh, the corner was our magic, our music, our politics
Fires raised as tribal dances and war cries
Broke out on different corners
Power to the people
Black power
Black is beautiful.”

-Common, The Corner, ft Kanye West and The Last Poets

And Kendrick Lamar’s Poetic Justice infuses poetic lyricism in the song:

“With poetic justice, poetic justice
If I told you that a flower bloomed in a dark room, would you trust it?
I mean I write poems in these songs dedicated to you
When you’re in the mood for empathy, there’s blood in my pen…”

-Kendrick Lamar, Poetic Justice

Rap and poetry share many similarities, so much so that it’s hard to see where one begins and the other ends.

Both Use:

  • Rhyme โ€”both use rhyming words 
  • Rhythm and meter โ€”both use language that creates rhythm. 
  • Verses โ€”both use verses or stanzas to separate ideas. 
  • Refrains โ€” both use the repetition of lines or entire stanzas/verses.
  • Subject Matter โ€”both can discuss all possible subjects and commonly speak on the same ones (for example, heartbreak, loss, grief, and death)

Here’s Where it Gets Tricky:

We can best sum up the confusion in the words of Adam Bradley from this article: “โ€ฆthat poetry only exists on the page, and rap only lives in the music, that poetry is refined, and rap is raw, that poetry is art and rap is entertainmentโ€ฆ”

But poetry can also live in music, be raw and entertaining, and rap can be refined on the page.

So, how do we know the difference?

Rap is a musical genre in which vocal expression is essential, respecting rhymes and rhythmic diction.

Poetry is literature and more verbal. Rhymes and music are not mandatory, and the message is even more emphasized.

โ€œPoetry … is the revelation of a feeling that the poet believes to be interior and personal which the reader recognizes as his own.โ€ 

โ€” Salvatore Quasimodo, from a speech in New York, quoted in The New York Times.

Bradley writes: “Economy of language remains one of poetryโ€™s hallmarks. By contrast, language in rap is usually abundant, functioning on the rhetorical principle of copia, which Erasmus defined in 1512 as a practice of amplifying expression through variation, adornment, and play.”

“Poetry is the spontaneous overflow of powerful feelings: it takes its origin from emotion recollected in tranquillity.”

โ€” William Wordsworth, from “Preface to Lyrical Ballads.”

โ€œPoetry is a phantom script telling how rainbows are made and why they go away.โ€ 

โ€” Carl Sandburg, from The Atlantic, March 1923

So, is RAP Poetry?

It’s a debate that is sure to be ongoing for some time.

Rap is a form of poetry, but every rapper is not a poet.

A rap is a poem when it:

  • Deals heavily with emotions
  • Uses thoughtful language and poetic techniques (alliteration, metaphor, imagery, etc..)
  • Is composed with depth, storytelling
  • Shows off the writer’s creativity

Yes, rappers can enter this contest as long as they write a poem.

When submitting your poem, whether as a poet or rapper, be sure that you are following the contest’s theme, which is GRACE. When submitting an audio or video, be careful not to send content that sounds more like rap songs than poems. There is a clear difference that should be expressed.

*Although it sounds nice (and there’s nothing wrong with using it as such), RAP is not an acronym for Rhythm and Poetry. Initially, rap meant to strike or hit. It then transitioned to mean to talk or speak in the African American community. Some older generations still say: โ€œLet me rap to you,โ€ when they want to talk to you. During the heightened political era of the 1960s and 70s, the men who stood on the corners teaching, like Malcolm X, were said to be โ€œrapping.โ€

Visit the Link Below and Enter Today!

May the Next Dope Poet Win!

yecheilyahsannualpoetrycontest.org

Yecheilyah’s 1st Annual Poetry Contest Winners 2017

Yecheilyah’s 2nd Annual Poetry Contest Winners 2018

Yecheilyah’s 3rd Annual Poetry Contest Winners 2019

Yecheilyah’s 4th Annual Poetry Contest Winners 2021

Yecheilyah’s 5th Annual Poetry Contest Winners 2022

Yecheilyah’s 6th Annual Poetry Contest 2023: Rules, Guidelines, and Prizes


Calling All Poets!!

When it comes to the arts, poetry is my first love, and this contest is my way of giving back to the poetry community to shed light on the power of the spoken and written word and the artists who love it.

It is not just a contest but a movement to discover and elevate those who have always desired to pursue their artistic ambitions in poetry but have been either discouraged from doing so or have allowed fear to hold them back.

If you’ve been looking for a sign to get back to your creative writing endeavors, this is it!

What to Do Now

  • Write a poem on this year’s theme: GRACE. You may include an audio or video with your document!
  • SUBSCRIBE to the Email List if you are not already.
  • Email your poem to yecheilyah@yecheilyahysrayl.com on or BEFORE the deadline of November 30, 2023.
  • Winners announced on Thursday, December 28th.

Theme: GRACE

Submissions Accepted:

Monday, October 23, 2023 – Thursday, November 30, 2023

Winners Announced on December, 28, 2023.

Click THIS link to subscribe to the list and then email your poem by the deadline!

Note. Each year, an email subscription is necessary to enter the contest. To avoid a yearly subscription, click the “Poetry Contest Updates Only” box on the form. This will subscribe you to the contest list exclusively, and you will only receive contest updates, rather than having to resubscribe year after year.

If you are already subscribed to the list you may go ahead and submit your poem.

May the Next Dope Poet Win!

yecheilyahsannualpoetrycontest.org

Join Our Past Winners!

338

Yecheilyah’s 1st Annual Poetry Contest Winners 2017

Yecheilyah’s 2nd Annual Poetry Contest Winners 2018

Yecheilyah’s 3rd Annual Poetry Contest Winners 2019

Yecheilyah’s 4th Annual Poetry Contest Winners 2021

Yecheilyah’s 5th Annual Poetry Contest Winners 2022

Yecheilyah’s 6th Annual Poetry Contest 2023

Year Six Baby!!

I cannot believe we’ve been doing this for six years. If it weren’t for Covid, it would be year seven!

We are excited to gear up for year six of the contest. But we need your help to make this year a success.

I am looking for the following:

Sponsors: No books please. Contribution must either be a service our poets can benefit from or a financial investment toward the cash prize. There are four cash prizes worth between $25 and $100 up for grabs. You can donate whatever you like to put toward it, or you can donate toward one of the tiers (for example, first place is $100).

Judges: The last seven poems will be judged by additional authors, poets, editors, or literary experts who will also help select the top four winners. This is the perfect opportunity for those who are versed in poetry.

Before you put your hand in, remember: Previous winners cannot volunteer as judges, and persons wishing to participate in the contest cannot be team members in the background.

Poems will be judged in the following categories:

  • POWER
  • BEAUTY
  • EDUCATION / MESSAGE
  • ENTERTAINMENT
  • GRAMMATICAL / TECHNICAL
  • RHYME
  • ORIGINALITY
  • OVERALL IMPACT

Social Media Marketers/Promoters: Bloggers, businesses, and professionals willing to use their platform to help promote the contest from the start of the submissions until close.

If you are on board to help with year six, please email the following to yecheilyah@yecheilyahysrayl.com as soon as possible.

  • Your name/title as you want it to appear online
  • A professional photo/headshot
  • Your company logo (if available)
  • Social media handle
  • The area you are applying to help with. Sponsor, Judge, or SM Promo

If you know someone who could help, do feel free to share this post with them!