E. E. Cummings Reads: Xaipe, One Times One and Fifty Poems
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Average customer review:Product Description
The experimental poetry of e. e. cummings made him famous, or at least infamous. He described himself as someone "whose only happiness is to transcend himself, whose every agony is to grow." Here he reads a varied selection of his innovative work, including poems from the collections Xaipe, One Times One, and Fifty Poems.
e.e.cummings (1894-1962) was born in Cambridge, Massachusetts. After earning a B.A. and M.A. at Harvard in Latin and Greek, he went to France as a volunteer ambulance driver with the French army during World War I. The majority of his life was spent writing poetry and painting in New York's Greenwich Village.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #2428804 in Books
- Published on: 1993-09-01
- Released on: 1993-08-24
- Formats: Abridged, Audiobook
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Binding: Audio Cassette
Editorial Reviews
Review
"The attentive reader can hardly go wrong, especially if he owns a Caedmon recording of Cummings' own beautifully modulated voice." -- --Robert Graves, New York Times Book Review
Customer Reviews
cummings was a great poet and a brillant reader.
After listening to this tape, one will understand how e.e. cummings attracted large audiences to his readings. Each syllable is spoken with care, and you can hear and feel the unique rhythms of his poetry. cummings has a musical voice with a range that conveys a variety of emotions. This tape is an insight not only to the work of cummings, but to the oral art of poetry as well.
"but beauty is more now than dying's when"
Side One of this cassette contains passages from two of Cummings' plays, HIM, and the blank-verse SANTA CLAUS, as well as the bewilderingly jazzy account of visiting Lenin's tomb, taken from his ponderous book EIMI. "Him" is a joyous ars poetica, and the blank verse of "Santa" is deft and enchanting.
But Side Two is the reason for buying this recording: eighteen of Cummings' poems written at the peak of his powers: odes to Spring and odes to Love, and a blithely undaunted championing of the proudhumble "i" against the drab machinery of egalitarianism. Nine of the poems are sonnets, all of the poems are in the nimble idiom that is so recongizably his own.
The small lyric "yes is a pleasant country" (14th of the eighteen poems) is as delicate and fine as anything by Robert Herrick.
The listener will finds herself memorizing these poems, perhaps without intending to. Cummings' mellow, sharp, distinctive, and occasionally cranky voice gives him the slight edge over the unremittingly stentorian yet much beloved Dylan Thomas as the premier reader of poetry in the twentieth century.
To paraphrase Cummings himself: "we thank you, estlin, for most these amazing songs."
Just Buy It
If you are as much a fan of ee cummings as me, you just have to buy this. For about 8 years, I've been reading his poetry, but this is the first time that I ever heard his voice. I could tell you how my expectations were wrong, but that would ruin the fun for you. I would have liked to have more poems, instead of the lengthy works, but maybe now I'll take a closer look at those too. If I knew about this tape years ago, I would have gotten it then