Incidentally POETRY of course can be mixed with other art forms;
An incident instrumental in developing my love of poetry and jazz came about by accident, I was 14 or 15 I think when a girlfriend’s parents took me to a concert featuring Laurie Lee reading his poetry to the accompaniment of Humphry Littelton making appropriate noises on his saxophone. I still have the now very beaten up small booklet of Lee’s poems performed that night.
If you look at the list of top cult albums compiled by the BBC right there at number 1 is the recording Bannana Blush by Sir John Betjeman with music by Jim Parker. There are three other CD’s in this series and I have them all; Varsity Rag, Late Flowering Love and Sir John Benjamin’s Brittain. I thoroughly recommend these look them up.
https://www.bbc.co.uk/music/articles/ec1a9e26-620e-4559-a2f6-d2fc243af125There is a long tradition of poetry being set to music; Lieder songs, Jaques Brel, Jim Morrison, etc.
I also amuse myself by writing poetry of various kinds. One thing I like to do is take a picture and write a poem to accompany it. For instance, using the Rene Magritte painting of a man in a bowler hat looking at a mirror in which is reflected a man in a bowler hat with an apple where his face should be I wrote;
I WONDER WHAT HE THINKS OF ME?
Inside I feel so tired and scared,
He doesn't look like he's ever cared.
I try to hold my head with pride
He sneers back just looking snide.
A tear runs down my face and cheek
I guess that he will think me weak.
I do not like the man I see.
The face in the mirror isn't me.
Well it kept me occupied for a bit!
I guess the thing is you have to find your own way into poetry.