Sylvia Plath Reading Her Poetry

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  • čas přidán 12. 03. 2012
  • Caedmon TC 1544. Sylvia Plath reads her poetry. This selection is from side two of the album.
    Readings are:
    The Disquieting Muses
    Spinster
    Parliament Hill Fields
    The Stones
    Leaving Early
    Candles
    Mushrooms
    Berck-Plage
    The Surgeon at 2:00AM

Komentáře • 76

  • @leatate9815
    @leatate9815 Před rokem +2

    Thanks, I appreciate hearing Sylvia’s voice read her poems. Such a wonderful teacher about living life.

  • @sarahimara4099
    @sarahimara4099 Před 9 lety +48

    I've fallen in love with her voice.

  • @yggdrasil9039
    @yggdrasil9039 Před 6 lety +12

    A priceless historical document.

  • @abooswalehmosafeer173
    @abooswalehmosafeer173 Před 4 lety +3

    Unteachable in everything I aspire
    Yet learning unquenchable dire
    No pretence nor presumption
    Sylvia was so so clever and so lonely and
    So much anger... could only exit as so it escaped.
    Her voice carries the anger the protest the beseeching her loneliness
    A voice I like
    So much had she learnt and absorbed and so much she poured into her poetry.
    A still pebble...
    A microcosm into a Macrocosm
    Yet lost and lonely
    Wonder awe
    I like Sylvia"s Voice...

  • @FooFoo_CuddlyPoops
    @FooFoo_CuddlyPoops Před 9 lety +67

    0:00 The Disquieting Muses
    3:04 Spinster
    4:29 Parliament Hill Fields
    7:34 The Stones
    10:11 Leaving Early
    12:35 Candles
    14:45 Mushrooms
    15:46 Berck-Plage
    22:04 The Surgeon at 2 a.m.

    • @hannahvandervelde883
      @hannahvandervelde883 Před 9 lety +2

      Foo Foo Cuddlypoops My hero!

    • @peterlynch2193
      @peterlynch2193 Před 5 lety

      I love this recording, I have it on tape packed away, somewhere. Thanks so much for posting!

    • @peterlynch2193
      @peterlynch2193 Před 5 lety

      This is my very favourite audio compilation of her reading her poetry! I have an ancient audiotape of this recording, that I taped off of a record from the library, in 1986! Still plays......but listening to this on YT, just might preserve it for a while longer. My favourite poet. Thanks so much for posting!

  • @barrylamb1963
    @barrylamb1963 Před 7 lety +18

    You can feel the longing and the sadness.

  • @Sarah-r3nee
    @Sarah-r3nee Před 7 měsíci +1

    Love her poetry!

  • @lakeshagadson357
    @lakeshagadson357 Před 2 lety +3

    whoever is reading this poem i like them for reading it.

  • @simonperry8569
    @simonperry8569 Před 8 lety +11

    Berck-Plage is sublime. To maintain that vivid imagery over a long poem, without exhausting the reader, is sheer genius.

  • @sicilyny5375
    @sicilyny5375 Před 3 lety +2

    Her words are like painting...each stroke of a brush against palate...flows at places..bold and harsh in others.
    I get it!!

  • @73kdt
    @73kdt Před 9 lety +21

    Thank you for the up load, it's wonderful to hear the voice of such a remarkable poet..

  • @reaganwiles_art
    @reaganwiles_art Před 3 měsíci

    She has meant so much to me. Her poetry has changed my life. You don't know yadayadayada. This is amazing poetry. She is one of the best.

  • @michaelalpert5019
    @michaelalpert5019 Před 7 lety +17

    I am happy to hear Sylvia Plath's voice, but I think some of the poems, "Candles" in particular, are much more intimate and welcoming in intent than comes through in Plath's mannered rendition. In the 50s and early 60s, many poets felt the need to recite in a certain crisp literary way, which did not always fit the emotional content of their poems. At her death, Sylvia Plath had much to say about the world, not just about her personal anguish; her suicide was a tragedy for poetry.

    • @sicilyny5375
      @sicilyny5375 Před 3 lety

      Sometimes the way a poem is read can change the feel of it.
      I much rather read the words and hear the voice of the poems thru the words.

  • @teril733
    @teril733 Před 8 lety +21

    So inspiring to hear her.

    • @teril733
      @teril733 Před 8 lety +3

      I suppose the best way to say it would be that hearing her words (that I've grown to love) in her own voice is powerful for me as a writer of poetry. She was definitely troubled, yet brilliant.

  • @casinodelosdesertores9672

    Just love it, voice and reading so clear and complex

  • @cmgold00
    @cmgold00 Před 4 lety +1

    Happy Birthday, Sylvia Plath!

  • @circlesinthenight3141
    @circlesinthenight3141 Před 6 lety +6

    I love hearing her voice

  • @martin4458
    @martin4458 Před 6 lety +4

    What a powerful voice.

  • @spinningreelsofrhyme
    @spinningreelsofrhyme Před 5 lety +1

    She delivered her poems with confidence and as if she was declaring that which could give her true worth, she could never find otherwise...She was definitely troubled, and you can hear that in her voice too, but the delivery just further shows how important her writings must have been to her.

  • @nagusd
    @nagusd  Před 12 lety +7

    Thanks for your comment. I intend to upload more in the near future.

  • @Liara_I_Sorry
    @Liara_I_Sorry Před 9 lety +16

    I have a personal recording of Sylvia Plath reading Edge, if anyone is so keen to have a listen. No? All mine then I guess.

  • @DerekHunterDHChaosRiddler
    @DerekHunterDHChaosRiddler Před 11 lety +2

    This is much better to listen to than that (boring!) doc one will see to the right ("Sylvia Plath part 1 of 6," etc) All that doc does is celebrate Plath while marginalizing her and boring you ... Listen to her voice, the strength and fragility saying words of complete and perfect individual expression. I love this woman (Plath).

  • @pinkpanther7030
    @pinkpanther7030 Před 3 lety +2

    Pity she left us so young...I would like to know what now Sylvia. You are deeply surreal. Your stones...pink torso...and nostril prickles...spilt tears...🙄

  • @emr2425introibo
    @emr2425introibo Před 9 lety +1

    Thanks for loading this.

  • @ZOGGYDOGGY
    @ZOGGYDOGGY Před 6 lety +1

    The Anglo-American poet Sylvia Plath explores the darker human feelings through the delineation of objects and sometimes apparently trivial domestic events. Her verse, ironic in tone and irregular in form, also uses myths and the painting of Rousseau, Gaugin, Klee and De Chirico as points of departure.
    Notes
    Recorded at the Poetry Room, Harvard College Library, 1958-1959 and by BBC Records, 1960-1962.
    Caedmon: CDL51544.

  • @nagusd
    @nagusd  Před 11 lety +2

    Sorry James, I know little about the details of this disc. Caedmon recorded many interesting poets during the fifties and sixties. How many discs were pressed I couldn't say. I came across this disc at a record show a few years ago. It is, certainly, an uncommon disc. Thanks for your comment.

  • @arati.behera
    @arati.behera Před 2 lety

    Is it !
    So tantalizing.

  • @oksks
    @oksks Před 11 lety +1

    muchas gracias

  • @aidou97
    @aidou97 Před 10 lety

    I want this EP

  • @jimrader5299
    @jimrader5299 Před 5 lety +1

    a genius who embraced despair, but who in today's poetry approaches the passion of her invective?

  • @sicilyny5375
    @sicilyny5375 Před 3 lety

    I see some similarity with Emily Dickenson..the repeat of a word meant to emphasis and the use of nature..nice!!

  • @ExxylcrothEagle
    @ExxylcrothEagle Před 3 lety +2

    what the fuck planet is this??? i love it. i wanna buy a concert tshirt. plath tour '21 hahaha

  • @rafiakhan8037
    @rafiakhan8037 Před 2 lety

    touchinggggggggg

  • @2000coco
    @2000coco Před 5 lety

    💚💞😭

  • @jamesantell1026
    @jamesantell1026 Před 11 lety

    I recently ordered this same LP and was wondering if you had any information about it. eg. where it was recorded, which year, how many disks were made/sold (it seems to be quite rare)? Thanks

  • @thehouseon9thstreet
    @thehouseon9thstreet Před 12 lety

    Is your turntable at 33 1/3? Getting a little helium in her tone. But yes thanks for uploading!

  • @ktiffy9213
    @ktiffy9213 Před 6 lety +1

    the 'disquieting muses', is on par with Shakespeare's siloquies, actually transcendent.

  • @khalidbaloch2594
    @khalidbaloch2594 Před 6 lety

    i like much

  • @morganhoward2017
    @morganhoward2017 Před 9 lety

    Where would I find this (or any) record of Sylvia?

    • @nancyrose8028
      @nancyrose8028 Před 9 lety +2

      Try the website: "A Celebration, this is", a site dedicated to Sylvia Plath by Peter K. Steinberg. There is a link to the University of Chicago where you can order a CD.

  • @harrisonsmith-christopher5033

    I love how the crash course video about plath has more view then this? weird .

  • @khalidbaloch2594
    @khalidbaloch2594 Před 6 lety

    any body tell me about her?

    • @h.e.riddleton1373
      @h.e.riddleton1373 Před 5 lety +1

      Sylvia was born in 1932 to Aurelia and Otto Plath. She had a sprightly childhood and very much liked to swim and go to camp and make art. When she was eight, her father died of complications of diabetes that he had believed to be cancer. His father was the professor of Sylvia's mother. He was an entomologist, which would later become the inspiration for Sylvia's bee poems that were the original plans on how she wanted to close Ariel... Frieda, her daughter, would restore the original order of the poems as Sylvia imagined them. Ted marketed Ariel with sensationalism, allowing her suicide to unfold through her closing words-- shutting at the frail hope she, indeed, had...

    • @h.e.riddleton1373
      @h.e.riddleton1373 Před 5 lety

      in 1932 to Aurelia and Otto Plath. She had a sprightly childhood and very much liked to swim and go to camp and make art. When she was eight, her father died of complications of diabetes that he had believed to be cancer. His father was the professor of Sylvia's mother. He was an entomologist, which would later become the inspiration for Sylvia's bee poems that were the original plans on how she wanted to close Ariel... Frieda, her daughter, would restore the original order of the poems as Sylvia imagined them. Ted marketed Ariel with sensationalism, allowing her suicide to unfold through her closing words-- shutting at the frail hope she, indeed, had...

  • @ExxylcrothEagle
    @ExxylcrothEagle Před 3 lety

    I wish we could hear Peter O'Toole read this. that would be nutoole ts... not to take the female voice away at all. I
    am just saying to get weird it would be meta playful to hear O'

  • @bebejackson5724
    @bebejackson5724 Před 2 lety

    Didn't she kill herself???

  • @kelman727
    @kelman727 Před 7 lety +8

    Sounds like someone trying to imitate an English accent and failing.

    • @Plathianloner
      @Plathianloner Před 6 lety +9

      kelman727 Ever hear a Boston accent?

    • @michaelsudduth8916
      @michaelsudduth8916 Před 6 lety +10

      It's called transatlantic.

    • @ayshazaheen3402
      @ayshazaheen3402 Před 6 lety +4

      It's called Transatlantic accent; a blend of British and American accent.

    • @NaughtyVampireGod
      @NaughtyVampireGod Před 3 lety

      William F Buckley; Robert Lowell . ..

    • @sicilyny5375
      @sicilyny5375 Před 3 lety

      That is the East coast..yrs ago they sounded like England and American combined..hardly today.

  • @arati.behera
    @arati.behera Před 2 lety

    Why do u post that she committed suicide. She is within us.

  • @sherlockholmeslives.1605
    @sherlockholmeslives.1605 Před 8 lety +1

    Writing poetry was a thing Sylvia Plath could NOT do!

    • @nicobeing
      @nicobeing Před 8 lety +29

      I wonder what is encouraging you to visit each video on Sylvia and post angry comments. Why not choose something you enjoy to watch? She's dead, you can't touch her now. Move along. Find what you like and immerse yourself in it.

    • @sherlockholmeslives.1605
      @sherlockholmeslives.1605 Před 8 lety +9

      I have got learning difficulties Nicole. I am NOT good with words! I am a child who likes to play! Sometimes I defend other people from nasty comments by suggesting such trolls grow up. I actually had problems during my puberty, despite my parents telling the psychiatrist otherwise in late life. She ( Sylvia Plath ) may be a genius for all I know! I failed in poetry because all my poems are shit! I like William McGonagall and hate all the time I wasted trying to write poetry and I hate how people rightfully hated my poetry and liked or loved Sylvia Plath's poetry! things like that I am sensitive to and those situations irritate me. Thanks for your kindness and patience with my immature and attention drawing comments! I need to GROW UP! With Best Wishes, Nicole! Cheers - Mike.

    • @nancyrose8028
      @nancyrose8028 Před 7 lety +4

      You seem to be pretty good with words in your lengthy reply. What kind of learning difficulty is it that you think you have, if I may ask?

    • @sherlockholmeslives.1605
      @sherlockholmeslives.1605 Před 7 lety

      Thanks for the reply, Nancy!
      I certainly can NOT compose poetry!
      Lol! I just have not got the openness of freedom of expression and the plasticity with words to create true poetry!
      With Best Wishes!
      Happy Christmas and New Year to You and Your Family!
      Cheers - Mike.