Product Details
In Their Own Voices: A Century of Recorded Poetry

In Their Own Voices: A Century of Recorded Poetry
Various Artists

Price:

This item is not available for purchase from this store.
Click here to go to Amazon to see other purchasing options.


9 new or used available from $5.95

Average customer review:

Track Listing

Disc 1:

  1. America - Walt Whitman
  2. Lake Isle of Innisfree - W.B. Yeats, William Butler Yeats
  3. Song of the Old Mother - W.B. Yeats, William Butler Yeats
  4. Road Not Taken - Robert Frost
  5. Birches - Robert Frost
  6. If I Told Him: A Completed Portrait of Picasso - Gertrude Stein
  7. So & So Reclining on Her Couch - Wallace Stevens
  8. Red Wheelbarrow - William Carlos Williams
  9. To Elsie - William Carlos Williams
  10. Hugh Selwyn Mauberley [Excerpt] - Ezra Pound
  11. Bird-Witted - Marianne Moore
  12. Recuerdo - Edna St. Vincent Millay
  13. Next of Course God America - E.E. Cummings
  14. Anyone Lived in a Pretty How Town - E.E. Cummings
  15. To Juan at the Winter Solstice - Robert Graves
  16. Openings of the Battle of Gettysburg - Steven Vincent Benét
  17. Negro Speaks of Rivers - Langston Hughes
  18. Ballad of the Gypsy - Langston Hughes
  19. Mulatto - Langston Hughes
  20. Portrait of the Artist as a Prematurely Old Man - Ogden Nash
  21. Love Recognized - Robert Penn Warren
  22. King of the River - Stanley Kunitz
  23. In Memory of W.B. Yeats, Pt. 1 - W.H. Auden

Disc 2:

  1. I Knew a Woman - Theodore Roethke
  2. Elegy for Jane - Theodore Roethke
  3. Rough - Stephen Spender
  4. Thoughts During an Air Raid - Stephen Spender
  5. My Sisters, O My Sisters - May Sarton
  6. In Our Time - Muriel Rukeyser
  7. Despisals - Muriel Rukeyser
  8. Ballad of Orange and Grape - Muriel Rukeyser
  9. World Is So Difficutl to Give up... - David Ignatow
  10. This Is the Solution, to Be Happy With Slaughter... - David Ignatow
  11. Here I Am With Mike in Hand, Shooting Down the Rapids... - David Ignatow
  12. I Killed a Fly... - David Ignatow
  13. What About Dying?... - David Ignatow
  14. Scars - William Stafford
  15. It Is - William Stafford
  16. Do Not Go Gentle into That Good Night - Dylan Thomas
  17. If I Were Tickled by the Rub of Love - Dylan Thomas
  18. Happiness - John Ciardi
  19. Old Flame - Robert Lowell
  20. Skunk Hour - Robert Lowell
  21. Epilogue - Robert Lowell
  22. Crossing Over - William Meredith
  23. See It Was Like This When... - Lawrence Ferlinghetti
  24. Underwear - Lawrence Ferlinghetti
  25. Secret of My Endurance - Charles Bukowski
  26. Thanksgrieving - Howard Nemerov
  27. Sonnet for Minimalists - Mona Vanduyn
  28. Shame - Richard Wilbur
  29. Apology - Richard Wilbur
  30. Love Calls Us to the Things of This World - Richard Wilbur
  31. American Haikus [Excerpt] - Al Cohn, Jack Kerouac, Zoot Sims, Zoot Sims
  32. Monet Refuses the Operation - Lisel Mueller
  33. America - Allen Ginsberg
  34. Song - John Ashbery
  35. After Making Love We Hear Footsteps - Galway Kinnell
  36. Last Gods - Galway Kinnell

Disc 3:

  1. River Bees - W.S. Merwin
  2. Blessing - James Wright
  3. Truth the Dead Know - Anne Sexton
  4. All My Pretty Ones - Anne Sexton
  5. Phenomenal Woman - Maya Angelou
  6. Even in Paris [Excerpt] - Richard Howard
  7. Diving into the Woods - Adrienne Rich
  8. Omeros [Excerpt] - Derek Walcott
  9. Song of the Taste - Gary Snyder
  10. How Poetry Comes to Me - Gary Snyder
  11. Why I Take Good Care of My Macintosh Computer - Gary Snyder
  12. Daddy - Sylvia Plath
  13. Ariel - Sylvia Plath
  14. Greatest Poem in the World - David Ray
  15. Oddly Lovely Day Alone - John Updike
  16. Learning About Easter and Passover - Dan Jaffe
  17. Bang, Bang Outishly - Amiri Baraka
  18. Rhythim Blues - Amiri Baraka
  19. Shazam Doowah - Amiri Baraka
  20. Story of Issac - Leonard Cohen
  21. Dahomey - Audre Lorde
  22. Putting the Good Things Away - Marge Piercy
  23. Right to Life - Marge Piercy
  24. Keeping Things Whole - Mark Strand
  25. Way It Is - Mark Strand
  26. Poem - Mark Strand
  27. Zimmer Imagines Heaven - Paul Zimmer
  28. Yes Lord, He Was Born... - Lucille Clifton
  29. Cruelty - Lucille Clifton

Disc 4:

  1. I Have Had to Learn to Live With My Face - Diane Wakoski
  2. Dear John, Dear Coltrane - Michael S. Harper
  3. We Were So Poor... - Charles Simic
  4. I Was Stolen by the Gypsies... - Charles Simic
  5. Everybody Knows the Story - Charles Simic
  6. Lester Leaps In - Al Young
  7. For Poets - Al Young
  8. Dance for Militant Dilettantes - Al Young
  9. Odysseus to Telemachsu - Joseph Brodsky
  10. Ode to My Shoes - Erica Jong
  11. Prayer - Joseph Bruchac
  12. Translator's Son - Joseph Bruchac
  13. Wonder - Sharon Olds
  14. Lost Pilot - James Tate
  15. One Kiss - Tess Gallagher
  16. Tent People of Beverly Hills - James Ragan
  17. Uh Oh Plutonium - Anne Waldman
  18. Fine Printing on the Label of a Bottle of Non-Alcohol Beer - Adrian Louis
  19. Sweat Lodge - Adrian Louis
  20. Logan Heights & The World - Juan Felipe Herrera
  21. Colonel - Carolyn Forché
  22. Wild Gratitude - Edward Hirsch
  23. For Anna Mae Pictou Aquash - Joy Harjo
  24. Tia Sophia - Carmen Tafolla
  25. This Is Number 26 - Jimmy Baca
  26. I Am Offering You This Poem - Jimmy Baca
  27. Parsley - Rita Dove
  28. Raisin Eyes - Luci Tapahonso
  29. Children's Undercroft - Donald Revell
  30. Concrete River - Dr. Luis Rodriguez
  31. Tia Chucha - Dr. Luis Rodriguez
  32. My Father, in Heaven, Is Reading Out Loud - Li-Young Lee

Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #1071700 in Music
  • Released on: 1996-09-17
  • Format: Box set

Customer Reviews

A Feast For The Ears5
I wonder what our world would be like if our ancestors had learned first to preserve language in an archival form (that is, durable, convenient for shelving, and available for idle perusal) as spoken rather than written. Before we knew how to write, poetry was already a living and ancient art. We knew it as spoken word, recited before a crowd. The recital was as much of a performance as a play. Somewhere in the last two or three millenniums we have forgotten how important the spoken word is to poetry, how far a voice carries toward making the art accessible.

This anthology of 20th century recorded poetry, released without an accompanying text, forces us to reconsider our normally complacent approach to verse. We cannot *read* these poems, we can only *listen* as their creators perform them for us. It's a wonderful opportunity and a thrilling experience!

The collection starts with a scratchy take of Walt Whitman, notable mostly because it is the first recording of a poem. It progresses smoothly through the 20th century via a multi-cultural variety of 79 known and lesser-known poets reading 122 known and lesser-known poems. Most poetry is spoken, some is sung. A few include music. One of these--an excerpt of Jack Kerouac's "American Haikus" punctuated with a saxophone--is one of the high points of the collection. Another--Anne Waldman's clumsy "Uh Oh Plutonium"--is the worst of the bunch. Even it can be excused, as all selections contribute to the theme at the heart of this anthology: at least some poetry, even in this book-bound age, is meant to be read and heard aloud. The ancient art in its richest tradition is alive and well.

END

Astonishing-long overdue per my ears!5
Received as a gift that keeps on giving. Each hearing's another present. Liner Notes and order of presentation superb.

We need another set like this of more and more and more; find all old Caedmon and Voyager audio tapes plus Burton's Donne and make one! Stuart, light bearer, led the way to this; he is thanked and thanked ever after...

It will break your breath in half!5
if you're into poetry...this is essential. best purchase of an audio cd i ever made.