Various - Poetry On Record: 98 Poets Read Their Work (1888 ~ 2006) album flac
Performer: VariousTitle: Poetry On Record: 98 Poets Read Their Work (1888 ~ 2006)
Style: Poetry
Released: 2006
MP3 album: 1303 mb
FLAC album: 1345 mb
Rating: 4.2
Other formats: ADX DXD VOC MP3 AC3 FLAC AA
Genre: Not albums
Poetry Speaks: Hear Great Poets Read Their Work from Tennyson to Plath (Book and 3 Audio CDs). To hear a poet read his or her own work is a revelation. Poetry is voice-activated and peculiar to the individual writer. I plan to listen to all four CDs again of Poetry on Record: 98 Poets Read Their Work 1888-2006. For me, there were many surprises and delights: the tenderness of Robert Hayden (I never heard of him & now-honestly!), the voices of Ezra Pound, Dorothy Parker, Elizabeth Bishop, Dylan Thomas, Lawrence Ferlinghetti, Maxine Kumin, Adrienne Rich, Marge Piercy, and Charles Bukowski.
Dylan Thomas - Poetry On Record: 98 Poets Read Their Work, 1888-2006 Album. Artist: Dylan Thomas.
In Their Own Voices: A Century of Recorded Poetry released: 1996. Poetry on Record: 98 Poets Read Their Work, 1888-2006. If you glance up, the children are there like delicate balloons resting on the ceiling. She has also carried each one down the hall after supper, their heads privately bent, two legs protesting, person to person, her face flushed with a song and their little sleep. I give you back your heart.
In the first part of a two-part interview, former . Poet Laureate Billy Collins guides us through the new spoken-word four-CD box set Poetry on Record: 98 Poets Read Their Work, 1888-2006. National Poetry Month April 5, 2006. America Loses a Treasure: Stanley Kunitz May 15, 2006. Newsroom Poetry May 2, 2006. Oxford Updates Its Collection of American Poems May 2, 2006.
Starting with recordings of poets from 1888, this CD set has to be worth it, right? By Nick Marino. With recordings going back to 1888, the boxed set Poetry on Record seems like it should amaze even the most jaded poetry fans. Will it? From Whitman and Browning to Levertov and Plath, Nick Marino lets us know what to expect
This fine collection of poets of the past century reading their own poems is not unique. There are several equally fine anthologies on the market featuring many of the same poets and titles. This collection, arranged chronologically by the poets' birth dates, regardless of continuity, style, or recording quality, and without narration, introduction, or internal identification of the poets or their titles, communicates in a kind of hodgepodge the range and fullness of modern poetry.
In between, renowned poets from myriad styles, movements and eras speak their poetry in voices that ring with their specific brands of honest expression. Poetry on Record includes a staggeringly impressive range of poets famous for an equally impressive range of poetic contributions . Library descriptions. Compilation of poems read by various authors, recorded from 1888 to 2006.
Various - Today's Poets Their Poems - Their Voices. Various - Poetry On Record: 98 Poets Read Their Work (1888 ~ 2006) (4xCD, Comp + Box). Shout! Factory, Shout!
Tracklist Hide Credits
| 1-1 | –Alfred Lord Tennyson | The Charge Of The Light Brigade |
| 1-2 | –Alfred Lord Tennyson | Come Into The Garden, Maud |
| 1-3 | –Robert Browning | How They Brought The Good News From Ghent To Aix (Excerpt) |
| 1-4 | –Walt Whitman | America |
| 1-5 | –William Butler Yeats | The Lake Isle Of Innisfree |
| 1-6 | –William Butler Yeats | The Song Of The Old Mother |
| 1-7 | –Edgar Lee Masters | Lucinda Matlock |
| 1-8 | –Edgar Lee Masters | Emily Sparks |
| 1-9 | –James Weldon Johnson | The Creation |
| 1-10 | –Gertrude Stein | If I Told Him: A Completed Portrait Of Picasso |
| 1-11 | –Robert Frost | The Road Not Taken |
| 1-12 | –Robert Frost | Stopping By Woods On A Snowy Evening |
| 1-13 | –Carl Sandburg | From The People, Yes (#90) |
| 1-14 | –Wallace Stevens | So And So Reclining On Her Couch |
| 1-15 | –William Carlos Williams | The Red Wheelbarrow |
| 1-16 | –William Carlos Williams | To Elsie |
| 1-17 | –Ezra Pound | Hugh Selwyn Mauberley |
| 1-18 | –Hilda Doolittle | Helen In Egypt |
| 1-19 | –T. S. Eliot | Journey Of The Magi |
| 1-20 | –Edna St. Vincent Millay | Recuerdo |
| 1-21 | –Edna St. Vincent Millay | Love Is Not All |
| 1-22 | –Dorothy Parker | Résumé |
| 1-23 | –Dorothy Parker | The Lady's Reward |
| 1-24 | –E. E. Cummings | As Freedom Is A Breakfastfood |
| 1-25 | –Robert Graves | To Juan At The Winter Solstice |
| 1-26 | –Stephen Vincent Benét | John Brown's Body |
| 1-27 | –Sterling Brown | Strong Men |
| 1-28 | –Langston Hughes | The Negro Speaks Of Rivers |
| 1-29 | –Langston Hughes | The Weary Blues |
| 1-30 | –Ogden Nash | Portrait Of The Artist As A Prematurely Old Man |
| 1-31 | –Stanley Kunitz | King Of The River |
| 1-32 | –W. H. Auden | The Cave Of Nakedness |
| 1-33 | –Theodore Roethke | I Knew A Woman |
| 1-34 | –Theodore Roethke | Elegy For Jane |
| 1-35 | –Elizabeth Bishop* | Late Air |
| 1-36 | –Elizabeth Bishop* | The Fish |
| 2-1 | –Robert Hayden | Those Winter Sundays |
| 2-2 | –Muriel Rukeyser | The Ballad Of Orange And Grape |
| 2-3 | –Muriel Rukeyser | To Be A Jew In The Twentieth Century |
| 2-4 | –John Berryman | #23 (The Lay Of Ike) |
| 2-5 | –John Berryman | #36 (The High Ones Die...) |
| 2-6 | –David Ignatow | The World Is So Difficult To Give Up... |
| 2-7 | –David Ignatow | This Is The Solution, To Be Happy With Slaughter... |
| 2-8 | –David Ignatow | Here I Am With Mike In Hand, Shooting Down The Rapids... |
| 2-9 | –David Ignatow | I Killed A Fly... |
| 2-10 | –David Ignatow | What About Dying?... |
| 2-11 | –William Stafford | Passing Remark |
| 2-12 | –William Stafford | Serving With Gideon |
| 2-13 | –Dylan Thomas | And Death Shall Have No Dominion |
| 2-14 | –Dylan Thomas | The Tombstone Told When She Died |
| 2-15 | –Gwendolyn Brooks | The Mother |
| 2-16 | –Gwendolyn Brooks | We Real Cool |
| 2-17 | –Robert Lowell | Skunk Hour |
| 2-18 | –William Meredith | Crossing Over |
| 2-19 | –Lawrence Ferlinghetti | See It Was Like This When... |
| 2-20 | –Lawrence Ferlinghetti | Underwear |
| 2-21 | –Charles Bukowski | The Secret Of My Endurance |
| 2-22 | –Hayden Carruth | Ray |
| 2-23 | –Richard Wilbur | Love Calls Us To The Things Of This World |
| 2-24 | –Jack Kerouac With Al Cohn & Zoot Simms* | American Haikus |
| 2-25 | –Denise Levertov | Death Psalm: O Lord Of Mysteries |
| 2-26 | –Lisel Mueller | Monet Refuses The Operation |
| 2-27 | –Maxine Kumin | Woodchucks |
| 2-28 | –Allen Ginsberg | America |
| 2-29 | –A.R. Ammons | Still |
| 2-30 | –John Ashbery | My Philosophy Of Life |
| 2-31 | –Galway Kinnell | After Making Love We Hear Footsteps |
| 2-32 | –Galway Kinnell | Last Gods |
| 2-33 | –James Wright | A Blessing |
| 2-34 | –Anne Sexton | All My Pretty Ones |
| 2-35 | –Anne Sexton | For My Lover, Returning To His Wife |
| 3-1 | –Richard Howard | Even In Paris |
| 3-2 | –Adrienne Rich | Diving Into The Wreck |
| 3-3 | –Ted Hughes | Lovesong |
| 3-4 | –Derek Walcott | Omeros |
| 3-5 | –Gary Snyder | The Song Of The Taste |
| 3-6 | –Gary Snyder | Why I Take Good Care Of My Macintosh Computer |
| 3-7 | –Etheridge Knight | The Idea Of Ancestry |
| 3-8 | –Sylvia Plath | Daddy |
| 3-9 | –David Ray | The Greatest Poem In The World |
| 3-10 | –John Updike | An Oddly Lovely Day Alone |
| 3-11 | –Amiri Baraka | Bang, Bang Outishly |
| 3-12 | –Amiri Baraka | Rhythim Blues |
| 3-13 | –Amiri Baraka | Shazam Doowah |
| 3-14 | –Audre Lorde | Dahomey |
| 3-15 | –Marge Piercy | Right To Life |
| 3-16 | –Mark Strand | The Poem |
| 3-17 | –Paul Zimmer | Zimmer Imagines Heaven |
| 3-18 | –Lucille Clifton | Cruelty. Don't Talk To Me About Cruelty |
| 3-19 | –Diane Wakoski | I Have Had To Learn To Live With My Face |
| 3-20 | –Charles Simic | We Were So Poor... |
| 3-21 | –Charles Simic | I Was Stolen By The Gypsies... |
| 3-22 | –Charles Simic | Everybody Knows The Story... |
| 3-23 | –Seamus Heaney | Death Of A Naturalist |
| 3-24 | –Al Young | Lester Leaps In |
| 3-25 | –Al Young | A Dance For Militant Dilettantes |
| 3-26 | –Gloria Vando | Fire |
| 3-27 | –Joseph Brodsky | Odysseus To Telemachus |
| 3-28 | –Simon J. Ortiz* | Sometimes It's Better To Laugh 'Honest Injun' |
| 3-29 | –Erica Jong | Ode To My Shoes |
| 4-1 | –Sharon Olds | Wonder |
| 4-2 | –James Tate | The Lost Pilot |
| 4-3 | –Pedro Pietri | Puerto Rican Obituary |
| 4-4 | –Anne Waldman | Uh Oh Plutonium |
| 4-5 | –Adrian Louis | The Fine Printing On The Label Of A Bottle Of Non-Alcohol Beer |
| 4-6 | –Adrian Louis | The Sweat Lodge |
| 4-7 | –Yusef Komunyakaa | Facing It |
| 4-8 | –Juan Felipe Herrera | Logan Heights And The WorldGuitar – Mark Daterman |
| 4-9 | –Carolyn Forché | The Colonel |
| 4-10 | –Peter Balakian | The History Of America |
| 4-11 | –Joy Harjo | Grace |
| 4-12 | –Rita Dove | Parsley |
| 4-13 | –Vijay Seshadri | The Long Meadow |
| 4-14 | –Marilyn Chin | The Floral Apron |
| 4-15 | –Luci Tapahonso | Raisin Eyes |
| 4-16 | –Luis Rodriguez* | The Concrete River |
| 4-17 | –Li-Young Lee | My Father, In Heaven, Is Reading Out Loud |
| 4-18 | –Elise Paschen | Two Standards |
| 4-19 | –Deborah Garrison | I Saw You Walking |
| 4-20 | –Elizabeth Alexander | The Female Seer Will Burn Upon This Pyre |
| 4-21 | –Elizabeth Alexander | After The Gig: Mick Jagger |
| 4-22 | –D.A. Powell | [Morning Broke On My Cabin Inverted, Tempest In My Forehead] |
| 4-23 | –Carl Hancock Rux | Eleven More Days |
| 4-24 | –John Poch | Simon Peter |
| 4-25 | –Suji Kwock Kim | Fragments Of The Forgotten War |
| 4-26 | –Kevin Prufer | Lucky Criminals |
| 4-27 | –Kevin Young | The Slaughter |
| 4-28 | –Jonathan Lamfers | Scab |
Credits
- Producer, Compiled By – Rebekah Presson Mosby
Notes
Includes 64-page book with illustrated poems.Catalog # locations:
D4K 10029 - Box & Book
D4K 10030 - Disc 1
D4K 10031 - Disc 2
D4K 10032 - Disc 3
D4K 10033 - Disc 4









