Poetry

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  • Belgrove
    Full Member
    • Nov 2010
    • 938

    Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View Post
    Weds 27 April
    10pm - Free Thinking

    [I]Anne McElvoy discusses the legacy of Austrian poet Rainer Maria Rilke (1875-1926)…[/url]
    Thanks for the alert to this. I learnt something from the programme, particularly the challenges that musicians face in setting Rilke’s poetry.

    It’s always struck me that Rilke’s verse lends itself to a musical treatment, yet I have no example of his work set to music in my library. Can anyone suggest musical settings of his verse that matches its quality? The excerpt used in the programme by contributor Ninfea Crutwell-Reade was very beautiful.

    Comment

    • Serial_Apologist
      Full Member
      • Dec 2010
      • 37678

      Originally posted by Belgrove View Post
      Thanks for the alert to this. I learnt something from the programme, particularly the challenges that musicians face in setting Rilke’s poetry.

      It’s always struck me that Rilke’s verse lends itself to a musical treatment, yet I have no example of his work set to music in my library. Can anyone suggest musical settings of his verse that matches its quality? The excerpt used in the programme by contributor Ninfea Crutwell-Reade was very beautiful.
      A setting of the Duinese Elegie, Op 90 by Egon Wellesz for soprano, choir and orchestra, composed in his Schoenbergian late manner, partly using Sprechgesang in the solo part, which I heard broadcast in the late 1960s and found very moving.

      Comment

      • gurnemanz
        Full Member
        • Nov 2010
        • 7386

        In my collection I can find:

        Hindemith song cycle Das Marienleben to Rilke texts with Roxolana Roslak accompanied by none other than Glenn Gould. Recommendable. https://www.prestomusic.com/classica...no-piano-op-27

        I recently got Berg Complete Songs from Brilliant. Three Rilke settings including the best-known, Traumgekrönt from Sieben frühe Lieder which I have in several versions https://www.prestomusic.com/classica...complete-songs

        Schoenberg set Rilke's Am Strande. It's on this 4CD set from Capriccio which I snapped up when it came out. https://www.prestomusic.com/classica...complete-songs

        Shostakovich set some piano songs to Rilke. His most famous setting is probably in the 14th Symphony: Der Tod des Dichters. YouTube

        Comment

        • Belgrove
          Full Member
          • Nov 2010
          • 938

          Thanks for the suggestions- will investigate.

          Comment

          • Padraig
            Full Member
            • Feb 2013
            • 4236

            By the Shortcut to the Rosses

            By the shortcut to the Rosses a fairy girl I met,
            I was taken in her beauty as a fish is in the net.
            The fern uncurled to look at her, so very fair was she,
            With her hair as bright as seaweed new-drawn from out the sea.

            By the short cut to the Rosses 'twas on the First of May
            I heard the fairies piping and they piped my heart away;
            They piped till I was mad with joy, but when I was alone
            I found my heart was piped away and in my breast a stone.

            By the shortcut to the Rosses 'tis I'll go never more,
            Lest she should steal my soul that stole my heart before,
            Lest she take my soul and crush it like a dead leaf in her hand,
            For the shortcut to the Rosses is the way to Fairyland.

            Nora Hopper Chesson



            Provided to YouTube by RCA Gold SealBy the Short Cut to the Rosses · John McCormack · Edwin Schneider · TraditionalMy Wild Irish Rose℗ Recorded Prior to 1972...


            In association with Irish Fridays.

            Comment

            • johncorrigan
              Full Member
              • Nov 2010
              • 10358

              Originally posted by Padraig View Post
              By the Shortcut to the Rosses



              Provided to YouTube by RCA Gold SealBy the Short Cut to the Rosses · John McCormack · Edwin Schneider · TraditionalMy Wild Irish Rose℗ Recorded Prior to 1972...


              In association with Irish Fridays.
              There's nobody quite like the Count, Padraig.

              This bears no relation - I just happen to have been reading it this last couple of days and I'm not sure I'd read anything by Lowell before.


              Sailing Home from Rapallo

              [February 1954]
              Your nurse could only speak Italian,
              but after twenty minutes I could imagine your final week,
              and tears ran down my cheeks....

              When I embarked from Italy with my Mother’s body,
              the whole shoreline of the Golfo di Genova
              was breaking into fiery flower.
              The crazy yellow and azure sea-sleds
              blasting like jack-hammers across
              the spumante-bubbling wake of our liner,
              recalled the clashing colors of my Ford.
              Mother traveled first-class in the hold;
              her Risorgimento black and gold casket
              was like Napoleon’s at the Invalides....


              While the passengers were tanning
              on the Mediterranean in deck-chairs,
              our family cemetery in Dunbarton
              lay under the White Mountains
              in the sub-zero weather.
              The graveyard’s soil was changing to stone—
              so many of its deaths had been midwinter.
              Dour and dark against the blinding snowdrifts,
              its black brook and fir trunks were as smooth as masts.
              A fence of iron spear-hafts
              black-bordered its mostly Colonial grave-slates.
              The only “unhistoric” soul to come here
              was Father, now buried beneath his recent
              unweathered pink-veined slice of marble.
              Even the Latin of his Lowell motto:
              Occasionem cognosce,
              seemed too businesslike and pushing here,
              where the burning cold illuminated
              the hewn inscriptions of Mother’s relatives:
              twenty or thirty Winslows and Starks.
              Frost had given their names a diamond edge....


              In the grandiloquent lettering on Mother’s coffin,
              Lowell had been misspelled LOVEL.
              The corpse
              was wrapped like panettone in Italian tinfoil.

              Robert Lowell

              Comment

              • johncorrigan
                Full Member
                • Nov 2010
                • 10358

                Simon Armitage has started a 10-parter on radio 4 looking at 10 of Larkin's poems as a way of exploring this complex man. Armitage starts with 'Born Yesterday', and explores Larkin's use of the word 'dull' in the poem.


                Born Yesterday

                For Sally Amis

                Tightly-folded bud,
                I have wished you something
                None of the others would:
                Not the usual stuff
                About being beautiful,
                Or running off a spring
                Of innocence and love —
                They will all wish you that,
                And should it prove possible,
                Well, you’re a lucky girl.

                But if it shouldn’t, then
                May you be ordinary;
                Have, like other women,
                An average of talents:
                Not ugly, not good-looking,
                Nothing uncustomary
                To pull you off your balance,
                That, unworkable itself,
                Stops all the rest from working.
                In fact, may you be dull —
                If that is what a skilled,
                Vigilant, flexible,
                Unemphasised, enthralled
                Catching of happiness is called.

                Philip Larkin

                Comment

                • Belgrove
                  Full Member
                  • Nov 2010
                  • 938

                  On the basis of yesterday’s broadcast, Larkin Revisited will be an essential listen. Simon Armitage is such an engaging, sympathetic and knowledgeable presenter (and a pretty fine poet too!). There is a clutch of programmes about Larkin on BBC4 tonight from 10pm.

                  Comment

                  • Padraig
                    Full Member
                    • Feb 2013
                    • 4236

                    The bad news is that Philip Larkin (and Seamus Heaney) have been dropped from the GCSE Syllabus, but the good news is that Emily Dickinson will be included. Did I read this or dream it?

                    Dreams and reality, living and dead, singular and plural. . . all is revealed in the last stanza, which needs a closer look - itself


                    Of nearness to her sundered Things
                    The Soul has special times -
                    When Dimness - looks the Oddity -
                    Distinctness - easy - seems -

                    The Shapes we buried dwell about,
                    Familiar, in the Rooms -
                    Untarnished by the Sepulchre,
                    The Mouldering Playmate comes -

                    In just the Jacket that he wore -
                    Long buttoned in the Mold
                    Since we - old mornings, Children - played -
                    Divided - by a world -

                    The Grave yields back her Robberies -
                    The Years her pilfered Things -
                    Bright knots of Apparitions
                    Salute us with their wings -

                    As we - it were -that perished -
                    Themself - had just remained till we rejoin them -
                    And 'twas they, and not ourself
                    That mourned -

                    Emily Dickinson 1862 published 1929

                    Comment

                    • johncorrigan
                      Full Member
                      • Nov 2010
                      • 10358

                      Originally posted by Belgrove View Post
                      On the basis of yesterday’s broadcast, Larkin Revisited will be an essential listen. Simon Armitage is such an engaging, sympathetic and knowledgeable presenter (and a pretty fine poet too!). There is a clutch of programmes about Larkin on BBC4 tonight from 10pm.
                      I loved the exploration of the 'frank, submissive chord' from Armitage's look at Larkin's 'Love Songs in Age' in today's programme. He asked one of his band colleagues to play a frank, submissive chord and I was sure I recognised one of them from one of Joni Mitchell's early songs, 'The Arrangement', and it somehow made complete sense.
                      Provided to YouTube by RhinoThe Arrangement · Joni MitchellLadies of the Canyon℗ 1970 Warner Records Inc.Cello Arranger: Don BagleyUnknown: Henry LewyBarito...

                      Comment

                      • johncorrigan
                        Full Member
                        • Nov 2010
                        • 10358

                        I occasionally listen to 'Pick of the Week' on Radio 4 and was delighted to hear Laura Barton hosting this week's show - I always find her interesting and her choices backed that up. As well as choosing the excellent 'High Windows' episode from Armitage's series on Larkin, Laura also drew attention to this programme, 'The New Storytellers'.
                        'The Sound Collector' by Talia Augustidis was the Gold Award winner of the Charles Parker Prize for the Best Student Radio Feature in 2022 and featured Roger McGough. It centred round the death of Talia's Mum many years before.
                        The Gold Winner of the Charles Parker Prize for the Best Student Audio Feature 2023.

                        Very moving, and brought a different sense of McGough's own poem.

                        The Sound Collector

                        A stranger called this morning
                        Dressed all in black and grey
                        Put every sound into a bag
                        And carried them away

                        The whistling of the kettle
                        The turning of the lock
                        The purring of the kitten
                        The ticking of the clock

                        The popping of the toaster
                        The crunching of the flakes
                        When you spread the marmalade
                        The scraping noise it makes

                        The hissing of the frying pan
                        The ticking of the grill
                        The bubbling of the bathtub
                        As it starts to fill

                        The drumming of the raindrops
                        On the windowpane
                        When you do the washing-up
                        The gurgle of the drain

                        The crying of the baby
                        The squeaking of the chair
                        The swishing of the curtain
                        The creaking of the stair

                        A stranger called this morning
                        He didn't leave his name
                        Left us only silence
                        Life will never be the same

                        Roger McGough

                        Comment

                        • Forget It (U2079353)
                          Full Member
                          • Nov 2010
                          • 131

                          I agree the Sound Collector reading and discussion is great radio.

                          Comment

                          • johncorrigan
                            Full Member
                            • Nov 2010
                            • 10358

                            These last few days I've detected a sense up in these parts that Scots feel that if the Queen was going to die, she chose the right place to do it; in Deeside, in Scotland. Scotland's Makar, the ever excellent Kathleen Jamie, reflected this with the poem she composed on the death of Elizabeth, a poem in celebration of their shared love of the Scottish landscape. The Makar chose to write it in an old fashioned rhyming form. Here she is reading 'Lochnagar' on the Scottish news a couple of nights back.
                            The Scots Makar Kathleen Jamie felt it was "incumbent" on her to create a poem for the Queen.

                            Comment

                            • Padraig
                              Full Member
                              • Feb 2013
                              • 4236

                              Originally posted by johncorrigan View Post
                              These last few days I've detected a sense up in these parts that Scots feel that if the Queen was going to die, she chose the right place to do it; in Deeside, in Scotland. Scotland's Makar, the ever excellent Kathleen Jamie, reflected this with the poem she composed on the death of Elizabeth, a poem in celebration of their shared love of the Scottish landscape. The Makar chose to write it in an old fashioned rhyming form. Here she is reading 'Lochnagar' on the Scottish news a couple of nights back.
                              https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/av/uk-scotland-62882171
                              Fitting,John.

                              Comment

                              • JasonPalmer
                                Full Member
                                • Dec 2022
                                • 826

                                Have read many a poem and bought many a book from second hand bookshops and at poetry readings, used to be a regular at the poetry cafe in Covent Garden and even produced a few words and music events. Pity the cafe has not opened since covid.

                                Read many a poem up to and including Dylan Thomas who inspired bob Dylan who found adding music make it more marketable.
                                Annoyingly listening to and commenting on radio 3...

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