Poetry and the spoken word
Now I am really torn as The Lake of Innisfree is one of my favourite poems - you will see my quandary! oooOOO
Who is the reader? He seems to be everywhere!
Here is Yeats, showing how he intended his own poems to be recited. He was insistent that poetry should not be read as prose:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hGoaQ433wnw
NJS
Who is the reader? He seems to be everywhere!
Here is Yeats, showing how he intended his own poems to be recited. He was insistent that poetry should not be read as prose:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hGoaQ433wnw
NJS
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Wonderful. Thank you NJS for this threadNJS wrote:Now I am really torn as The Lake of Innisfree is one of my favourite poems - you will see my quandary! oooOOO
Who is the reader? He seems to be everywhere!
Here is Yeats, showing how he intended his own poems to be recited. He was insistent that poetry should not be read as prose:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hGoaQ433wnw
NJS
M.
Marlon - It was really uppercase's idea. I just thought of separating it from the music of the day thread. Here's an amusing one:
Richard Burton reading John Betjeman's Hunter Trials:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SpTcUVh514g
and Maggie Smith and Kenneth Williams reading Death in Leamington in the poet's presence:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=en ... a8Szo&NR=1
and then Richard Burton reading John Donne's Go and Catch a Falling Star:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qiZygUSkMYw
Richard Burton reading John Betjeman's Hunter Trials:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SpTcUVh514g
and Maggie Smith and Kenneth Williams reading Death in Leamington in the poet's presence:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=en ... a8Szo&NR=1
and then Richard Burton reading John Donne's Go and Catch a Falling Star:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qiZygUSkMYw
Last edited by NJS on Thu Jan 31, 2013 4:14 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Laurence Olivier as Othello and Maggie Smith as Desdemona:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F96DlM3N5KQ
A jewel of a film of the play and perfect proof of why they buried Olivier in Poet's Corner of Westminster Abbey.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F96DlM3N5KQ
A jewel of a film of the play and perfect proof of why they buried Olivier in Poet's Corner of Westminster Abbey.
Richard Burton's readings from Donne's Songs and Sonnets and Elegies, etc. were recorded in 1958 for Caedmon records under the title Love Poems of John Donne and all are worth hearing. You can see the original contents and track order (nicely considered) here, and can listen online to the album here. You can sample the tracks (released in 2009 in different order for download) in iTunes (and of course purchase them if you like, but you could just download the Harper audio files at my first link.)
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My excuses to Uppercase.NJS wrote:Marlon - It was really uppercase's idea. I just thought of separating it from the music of the day thread.
It was the reference to Inninsfree that excited my mind (still remember the first time I read it when I was a teen).
Screaminmarlon wrote:My excuses to Uppercase.NJS wrote:Marlon - It was really uppercase's idea. I just thought of separating it from the music of the day thread.
It was the reference to Inninsfree that excited my mind (still remember the first time I read it when I was a teen).
I am sure that there is no need to apologise!
I have been looking for good recordings of Yeats's A Prayer for My Daughter and Amomg Schoolchildren which are the first difficult poems that I battled with and have been with me since the age of about thirteen - but have not found exactly what I am looking for yet. A Prayer for My Daughter is one for the face a sea storm!
NJS
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Not poetry per se, but hearing to Jeremy Iron's narration on the audiobook of Brideshead Revisited is almost exhilarating.
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