- Видео 3
- Просмотров 219 878
Dor Shilton
Добавлен 25 янв 2010
Comprising so far my film school projects, and one audio recording by James Joyce.
Mint by Seamus Heaney
It looked like a clump of small dusty nettles
Growing wild at the gable of the house
Beyond where we dumped our refuse and old bottles:
Unverdant ever, almost beneath notice.
But, to be fair, it also spelled promise
And newness in the back yard of our life
As if something callow yet tenacious
Sauntered in green alleys and grew rife.
The snip of scissor blades, the light of Sunday
Mornings when the mint was cut and loved:
My last things will be first things slipping from me.
Yet let all things go free that have survived.
Let the smells of mint go heady and defenceless
Like inmates liberated in that yard.
Like the disregarded ones we turned against
Because we’d failed them by our disregard.
Charlie Rose 04...
Growing wild at the gable of the house
Beyond where we dumped our refuse and old bottles:
Unverdant ever, almost beneath notice.
But, to be fair, it also spelled promise
And newness in the back yard of our life
As if something callow yet tenacious
Sauntered in green alleys and grew rife.
The snip of scissor blades, the light of Sunday
Mornings when the mint was cut and loved:
My last things will be first things slipping from me.
Yet let all things go free that have survived.
Let the smells of mint go heady and defenceless
Like inmates liberated in that yard.
Like the disregarded ones we turned against
Because we’d failed them by our disregard.
Charlie Rose 04...
Просмотров: 239
Видео
James Joyce reading from Ulysses
Просмотров 220 тыс.12 лет назад
James Joyce reading an excerpt from the Aeolus episode. Recorded in 1924. He began: - Mr Chairman, ladies and gentlemen: Great was my admiration in listening to the remarks addressed to the youth of Ireland a moment since by my learned friend. It seemed to me that I had been transported into a country far away from this country, into an age remote from this age, that I stood in ancient Egypt an...
this is the recording the syvia beach had made on la voce del padrone 78rpm in 30 copies?
wow i was expecting totally a different voice!! in my mind i was picturing it more "weird"
What about that man.
"His wrong shoulder higher than his right"!
Nice.
Ah, curse you! That's saint Augustine.
Bit of a snappy dresser, wasn't he ?
I wonder if AI could improve this audio, probably could.
Happy Blooms day !
I don't know if anybody is looking for this extremely specific piece of information, but this text can be found on page 179 in the Penguin Modern Classics edition of James Joyce's Ulysses (the light blue one with the Martello Tower on the cover).
I was, thank you
Thank you, I have this very edition
@@arch_dornan6066james joyce and king krule fan is doubly awesome
Yep. With the beginning of the first paragraph and the end of the last paragraph of the whole book.
Thanks
This is one of the coolest fucking things I have ever heard
layer cake
Musicalissimo.
Which part is this?
legendary
IIRC, the British Library has the world's largest library of recorded voice. When I visited it several decades ago, they had a phone bank ( a row of 10 - 12 phones) in their exhibition room on the 2nd (?) floor. One could pick up a phone and hear a recorded voice of a famous person, some recorded over one hundred years ago. I think I remember..... one of the phones had Winston Churchill giving a wartime (WW II) speech, one had Clara Barton describing her life work in establishing the Red Cross and one phone had James Joyce reading a passage (either from Dubliners or Ulysses). I don't know if this phone bank at the British Library still exists.
Astonishing!!
awesoem
A marvellous thing, but the blurred edge to the sound makes it difficult to identify with.
The text is provided - click more
Powerful, beautiful, indisputably unique. Thanks for posting this!
I don't understand how we could have perfect sound on a Marx bros. Movie from the twenties, but they played catch or Frisby with this record or cylinder Joyce recorded on. Crowley had a better recording and nobody knew who he was at the time. Jesus, built an international space station, but cannot clean up some incredibly vital audio. What a silly race, man.
Thank you so much.
thanks! 🌹🌲🌿❤️
Nikki ...First time I ever hear the voice of one of my favourite writers...Friday 9.7.21, now..15.30......same day when i read in the morning in the Finnegans wake... aloud read and it was wors ...-NA GA SA KI In 1939. So...yes. James Joyce.
Fantastic the way he speaks and pronounces!
Here's a horrible thought: what if someone made a text to speech out of his voice and made it read his love letters to his wife
Scripture
Thank you so much for this!
One of the earliest form of Amazon audible
I wish we would also have recordings from Stefan George. But old man George tried to be as elite and unique as possible, resulting in no recordings of him reading... Guess he was successful... 😑
Genau
otro-inventario.blogspot.com/2020/10/reflexiones-sobre-el-ulises-de-joyce-y.html
The voice of "the lost angel from a ruined paradise."
sounds like richard harris
Amazing
What! Someone compares this to Hamlet!!! No, no, no......Hamlet was written by a god.......Ulysses was written by a guy who liked to drink wine!
A god who liked to drink wine you mean.
Score one for Ulysses, then.
Silence, plebian.
_"Someone compares this to Hamlet!!"_ exclaims the air-bag who then goes on to compare Ulysses to Hamlet. The reason why one cannot ever compare Ulysses to Hamlet is because one cannot compare an early 16th Century play with a modernist novel if one expects to be taken seriously by educated people who have actually read these works. It is the literary equivalent to comparing Monet's _The Magpie_ with Bruegel the Elder's _The Hunters in the Snow._ _"They're both made with paint and feature serene winter landscapes, but Bruegel is way better because [insert inane and nonsensical reasoning]."_ One doesn't suspect you have ever even read Ulysses -or, indeed, could ever fully comprehend such a labyrinth multi-layered l prose -but one does suspect this isn't the first time you've tried posing as a sophisticated literati on the internet. As they say in Hamlet, your favorite book....um I mean play, _"Something is rotten in the state of Denmark."_
😙 ruclips.net/video/G26kMSztDF4/видео.html
Sounds almost exactly like I imagined him
Same. I didn't really get William Burroughs until I heard him reading his work out loud
Aeolus (Book 7). Great passage. Took me a bit to recognize it. As I listened to it I thought it might be either Scylla and Charybdis (book 9) or Circe (book 15). I think both mention Egyptian culture and high-priests. Mesmerizing to hear his voice across almost a century.
First time I ever hear the voice of one of my favourite writers...Monday, November 27th, 2017. 17:33 EST
ruclips.net/video/tQ0ceusyFOw/видео.html&ab_channel=FootageFile
1:20 :D
Incredible
Sounds a bit like Winston Churchill
No he doesn't at all.
are you sure that this is Joyce's reading Ulysses and not Pound reading it?
+elmunafo it's an English accent. Was pound English?
+Euge Murtagh no, he was American...
it is definitely Joyce's voice.
+Euge Murtagh Need I point out that Joyce wasn't English either?
John Calligy yes of course, he lived just down the road from me. Some Irish used to 'put on' a bit of an English accent to sound posh but that accent sounds very English.
Thanks!
Astonishing, thrilling.
Where's the 2nd. photo by Man Ray?
2:14
hello Dor Shilton, do you know if there are any copyright issues with this recording?
To the best of my knowledge, it is public domain (on account of it being 90 years old).
This is as profound an experience as seeing Hamlet being performed on its maiden voyage on the stage, or Dostoevsky reading from Karamazov. I hope people who hear this realise how special it is.
Agree.
I think his reading of finnegans wake is equally if not better than this one
@@robertpetrie6847 bad English! You're missing a subordinate clause. Sorry, grammar nazi.
@@mavericjoe5075 lol
@@robertpetrie6847 you are though! Haha, how do you expect to read Ulysses or FW if you can't write a simple sentence! Just trying to help
The machine's voice, their chewing.
Just wonderful.....thank you so much for posting this!!!
I'm surprised that I didn't remember that John Stanislaus Joyce was from Fermoy... I'm from Fermoy myself and Joyce's accent is a carbon copy of several of the auld men around me. It really is quite remarkable.
is he famous there