在线客服
|
意见反馈
|
在线订单
|
帮助中心
|
我要纠错
教育网登录:
edu.kuke.com
[
免费注册
] [
登录
]
[激活]
忘记密码
个人中心
首 页
音乐图书馆
主题音乐
英语读物
功能音乐
免费杂志
库客爱乐论坛
最新唱片
音乐故事
音乐分类
音乐家
乐器分类
情景素材
乐谱基地
音乐教育
星座音乐
音乐素描
模糊
曲目
专辑
音乐家
您当前的位置
首页
–>
英语读物
–>
传记
–> 叶慈诗选 Yeats: Life and Works of W.B. Yeats (The) (KAVANAGH)
叶慈诗选
Yeats: Life and Works of W.B. Yeats (The) (KAVANAGH)
专辑号:NA226412
订购价格:15元/月
叶慈诗选 / Yeats: Life and Works of W.B. Yeats (The) (KAVANAGH)
[ 读物介绍 ]
THE LIFE AND WORKS OF W.B. YEATS W.B. Yeats remains one of the most famous and respectedpoetic voices in written English. As we enter the twenty-first century hisreputation seems more than intact with a healthy readership and steady sales.Students in the now massive edu-business of academia turn regularly to hispoetry, theatre, prose and the massive volume of correspondence to fuel anendless flow of theses. And in the last fifty or so years, Yeats has also proved apowerful magnet for the talents of many highly successful artists innon-literary fields, such as music and film, with a considerable number ofcomposers and songwriters drawing on his works as sources of word, idea andinspiration. What is it that continues to appeal to such a broadconstituency of poetry reader and student? Well, there is, of course, the life itself – a tumultuous,protean incarnation that lasted a crammed 73 years from 1865-1939. This, initself a fascinating subject, is fuller than most could bear to contemplate,never mind replicate: it is a dramatic one, often very dramatic. Despite thevast public and often political dimensions of its contours – the latter notoften fully appreciated – Yeats’ life was not so much dramatic in thetraditional sense of the public, heroic adventurer or the goal-driven extrovertso redolent of the world of Empire of the nineteenth century; his is an adventurism of theinterior spaces and caverns of heart and psyche – the ‘deeps of the mind’, ashe would call it. This approach sets him up as being avant-garde in his anticipationsof the sensibilities of the Western world through the twentieth and into thetwenty-first centuries, especially in light of the rise of psychologies andmore general concerns with the ‘self’ developmental pursuits of the post-1960sWestern civilisation. The ‘working’ span of this life is also phenomenal: from thepersonal breakthrough at the age of 23 with The Lake Isle of Innisfree, thepoem which he said was the first to contain ‘my own music’, to the correctionson his deathbed of the proofs of The Death of Cuchulain fifty years later.Within this half-century is contained a body of poetry which does appear tocapture all of ‘the fury and mire of human vein’, and chances are remote that aspan of such skill, energy, insight, focus and poetic brilliance will happentoo often, if ever, again given the multimedia worlds we now live in. This world, characterised by the demands of a sound bite,frequently turns to the polished jewel of a Yeatsian line of poetry or rhetoricto add weight to interview, debate, political speech, letter to an editor orbook title. Such uses keep the work constantly in the public eye and domain. A major reason the work remains so fresh today is Yeats’constant ability to change – to, as he put it, make himself ‘anew’. Theseefforts ensured that he never fell into easy habits and the life-longexperimentation with, and use of, many forms, wedded to such technicalvirtuosity, gives us a poetic palette perhaps unmatched. The personal life as subject, in particular its immersionsin love and the subsequent immersions of love itself into poetry – oftenfailed, unconsummated or unfulfilled love – has left us a body of stunninglyachieved and felt work that speaks to readers with a universal resonanceunlikely to be dimmed where poetry is loved and appreciated. We, the generalreaders, are perhaps lucky in that Yeats felt these aches most when young andwhen in the high lyrical phase of his early works which conformed to suchmasterfully wrought traditional verse structure and rhythm. There are also the extraordinarily colourful philosophicaland meta-physical underpinnings of both the life and work. These of course havecome in for much dismissal and derisory comment throughout hislife and since (as in Auden’s well-retailed remarks that he was ‘silly likeus’), but it would be wise to understand their importance contextually. Yeats,like many before and since, needed a belief system or religion to fathommeaning. Rather than turn to conventional models, he turned with a deeply religiousspirit to what he called ‘heterogeneous orthodoxies’ and not the moreavailable or popular orthodoxies of the established churches of which some ofhis forbears were quite prominent members. What is often ignored or dismissed is that the reservoir ofoccult, magical and other hermetic lore and ritual that Yeats drew on for bothhis spiritual and poetic well-being are in fact long established and ancientWestern knowledge and wisdom systems. Yeats was not so much ‘New Age’ as wewould now term it, but a student of the some of the oldest and mostconservative initiatory systems known to Western culture, whose origins dateback to the Egyptian, Greek and Jewish mystery schools of the ancient world.These are characterised by what are known as ‘universal truths’ common to alllives and souls – the philosophia perennis or perennial wisdomthat has always been and will always be available to those who look for it.This lifelong search was no fad for it required years of dedicated reading andstudy and was also a direct response and resistance to the rise of empiricism,rationalism (and realism in art and literature) in mid- and late-nineteenthcentury Europe. When these resistances were embodied in a young man who grewup in Sligo in the landscape and Celtic-based culture of the West of Ireland,then it is perfectly understandable that for a poet with such sensibilities,experiential truth holds more sway than any other, and certainly more thanthose systems on the rise throughout his youth via the works of Darwin, Tyndalland Huxley, whom he abhorred. These lifelong beliefs gave rise to missionary impulseswhich were given full rein in his native country’s battle forself-determination, to which he would add his considerable passion and talents.He saw an opportunity for an independent Ireland to embrace beliefs compatiblewith his own, which he believed were merely dormant and in need of reactivationand which would make Ireland a leading nation in the world. This impulse saw him join in the growing political andartistic ferment which would give rise to a successful separatist movement notjust on political but also on cultural levels. Yeats became a leading figure inthe birth of a new Ireland; he also helped to promote the work of writers suchas Joyce and Synge (his ‘Go west, young man’ edict that was the making of thewriter) O’Casey. He co-founded the world’s first subsidised national theatre,the Abbey Theatre, and his own 26 plays remain influential among aficionados,though their experimental qualities have prevented popular embrace. The eventual establishment of the new Ireland and thepolitical realities on which it was founded saw little room for artists likeYeats and he shrank from it after a brief period of public office as a Senator.However, his stature as a world literary figure was confirmed after his winningof the Nobel Prize in 1923, the first Irishman to win it. He would spend the latter years of his life and career inretreat from the kind of dominant world order he had battled so hard to staveoff since his youth. This final period, spent in long and brilliant reflection,produced an astonishing late flowering and contains some of his most accessibleand memorable poems as well as more difficult but rarely forgettable work. Notes by John Kavanagh John Kavanagh from Sligo, Ireland is an award winning poet,playwright, screenwriter and song-writer. He has been a Director of the YeatsSociety for twelve years. His poetry collections to date from Salmon books are‘Etchings’ and ‘Half Day Warriors’. He is at work on a third. He has recentlywritten and recorded ‘Words For Music’, a musical album of Yeats’poems put to music featuring some of Ireland’s top musicians. Jim Norton, one of Ireland’s leading actors, workedextensively in Irish Theatre, TV and radio before coming to London. His manyWest End credits include Comedians, The Changing Room, Bedroom Farce and Chorusof Disapproval. For Naxos AudioBooks he has also recorded A Portrait of theArtist As A Young Man, Dubliners, Ulysses and Finnegans Wake. Active on bothsides of the Atlantic, he has become particularly associated with the plays ofConor McPherson, playing a leading role in the world premieres of many plays,including The Weir and Port Authority. He has since also recorded PortAuthority for Naxos AudioBooks. Denys Hawthorne’s long and distinguished career hasencompassed extensive work in theatre, television and film, both in England andIreland. Drama has included Shakespeare and Chekhov, as well as manycontemporary plays, while he has been seen in popular TV series includingInspector Morse and Father Ted, and The Russia House and Emma on the widescreen. Throughout, radio performance has been a constant theme, notably indrama and poetry. Nicholas Boulton studied at the Guildhall School of Musicand Drama, winning the BBC Carleton Hobbs Award for Radio in 1993. Since thenhe has been heard in numerous productions for BBC Radio 4 and the WorldService. Work for Naxos includes Cecil in Lady Windermere’s Fan and mostrecently Mozart in The Life and Works of W A Mozart. Film work includesShakespeare in Love and Topsy Turvy. Theatre credits include Platonov for theAlmeida, Henry V for the RSC and Arcadia for the Theatre Royal Haymarket. He isalso a cutting edge House Music DJ. Marcella Riordan began her career at The Abbey School inDublin and has worked in theatres all over Ireland and the UK, including DruidTheatre and Lyric (Belfast). She has worked extensively on BBC Radio and RTE inDublin. Her previous work on James Joyce text includes playing Gerty McDowellin Anthony Burgess’s Blooms in Dublin (BBC/RTE), Zoe in Ulysses (RTE) and MollyBloom for Naxos AudioBooks’ recording of Ulysses. She was awarded Best Actressfor her portrayal of Nancy Gulliver in a BBC Radio adaptation of JenniferJohnston’s The Old Jest.
作品列表
CD01
作品编号:33790 The Life and Works of W.B. Yeats
Down By The Salley Gardens
The Early History of the Yeats Family
Extract from The Wanderings of Oisin
The Early Poems and Sligo
The Stolen Child
Down By The Salley Gardens
A 'Man of Letters'
To The Rose Upon The Rood Of Time
The Lake Isle of Inisfree
The Pity Of Love
The Sorrow OF Love
December 1891 - Yeats meets Maud Gonne
When You Are Old
A Dream Of Death
The Ballad Of Father Gilligan
The Fiddler Of Dooney
The 1890s
The Host Of The Air
The Song Of Wandering Aengus
1896 - A love affair
The Lover Mourns For The Loss Of Love
The Cap And Bells
Lady Augusta Gregory
The Secret Rose
The Wishes For The Cloths Of Heaven
Adam's Curse
The New Century
No Second Troy
Drama and a National Theatre for Ireland
To A Child Dancing In The Wind
The Cold Heaven
1912 - The 'Great Lock Out'
September 1913
The Fisherman
The Wild Swans At Coole
Broken Dreams
Easter 1916
The Rose Tree
An Irish Airman Foresees His Death
Men Improve With The Years
CD02
作品编号:33790 The Life and Works of W.B. Yeats
Summer 1917 - Marriage
Solomon To Sheba
To A Young Beauty
January 1919
The Second Coming
A Prayer For My Daughter
The Years Following 1920
Leda And The Swan
The Nobel Prize for Literature 1923
Among Schoolchildren
Sailing To Byzantium
The Tower
In Memory Of Eva Gore-Booth And Con Markiewicz
A Dialogue Of Self And Soul
For Anne Gregory
At Algeciras - A Meditation Upon Death
The Choice
Mohini Chatterjee
Byzantium
Crazy Jane And Jack The Journeyman
Crazy Jane Talks With The Bishop
Crazy Jane On God
After Long Silence
Her Vision In The Wood
A Prayer For Old Age
Sweet Dancer
Roger Casement
Why Should Not Old Men Be Mad?
From Under Ben Bulbin
The Man And The Echo
1938 - The Death of Olivia Shakespeare
The Circus Animals' Desertion
Politics
1939 - Final Days in France
Cuchulain Comforted
Final Letter to Lady Elizabeth Pelham
关于我们
|
KUKE动态
|
商务合作
|
联系我们
|
版权信息
Copyright KUKE.com. All Rights Reserved
中华人民共和国网络文化经营许可证
|
中华人民共和国电信与信息服务业务经营许可证