He has described poetry as "a long word which can be stretched". The sense of humour is easily seen in his work, and often evident in his wry introductions, as recorded here; the attention to the almost-physical sense of a word comes out in his strong use of rhyme and form. In addition to the powerful leavetaking of the everyday that builds in 'A Minute's Silence', the poem gains from being shaped in an elegiac metre familiar since Thomas Gray's classic, which Farley, rightly, draws attention to. It is possible that his formal interest is a kind of attention to materials, as he has also studied at the Chelsea School of Art, and - completing a satisfying circle - has been an art reviewer for Poetry Review.
His reading style skilfully allows these formal features to resonate, without distracting from the content, and does so in a voice that still acknowledges his native Liverpool. Parts of his home city - Speke Airport, bus termini, chip shops - figure in the poems, but mingle easily with Papal visits, dentistry and students suffering from scurvy. In 'Treacle', he takes a subject as grounded, as real, as a tin of treacle, and brings us through numinous details to both a sense of our place in history, and of stickiness. These are poems that try "to get around the back of these Big Safe Themes, to creep up on them", and the mundane nature of phone books and railway tunnels is a surprising and successful point from which to start that process.
His recording was made on 25 January 2001 at The Audio Workshop, London and was produced by Richard Carrington.


