Last week we quoted a review that Carl Jung wrote of James Joyceâs Ulysses in which the psychologist called the labyrinthine modernist novel an âaesthetic discipline.â Jungâs phrase can describe equally the readerâs experience and Joyceâs own highly sophisticated artistry. The author himself produced a detailed schema of Ulyssesâ structure for his friend Stuart Gilbert: in addition to primary fields of reference like human biology and color symbolism, Joyce connects each chapter to a particular âartââtheology, rhetoric, architecture, and medicine, to mention but a few. But for all this rigorous schematization of each episode, music spills out into every chapter and fully permeates the novel: advertising jingles, hymns, sonorous high oratory, sentimental ballads, brooding folk songsâ¦. Joyce heard music everywhere.
And itâs no surprise, given that the novelist once aspired to a career as a performer. Joyce composed his own songs, played piano and guitar, sang in his high tenor, and championed the work of fellow Irishman and tenor John Sullivan. He was also, again unsurprisingly, a scholar of music. Sunphone Records, which released a two-volume set called Music From the Works of James Joyce, remarks that he had an âencyclopedic mastery of music of every type and genre, rivaling his vast knowledge of world literature. As a writer, he nevertheless incorporated music into all his works in increasingly complex ways.â (For detailed info on the music that inspired Joyce, visit the Sunphone Records site and click through the links.)
Music From the Works of James Joyce compiles many of the songs Joyce alluded to in his poems, stories, and novels (such as music-hall ballad âFinneganâs Wakeâ). It also includes Joyceâs own workâhis collection of poems, Chamber Musicâgiven âmusical settingsâ by composer Ross Lee Finney. Inspired by this enlightening collection of Joyceâs favorite music, blogger ulyssestone of Spotify Classical Playlists compiled the playlist above of all the songs available to stream. This playlist includes not only songs that influenced the author, or were written by him; ulyssestone also added several songs that Joyce inspired, such as Syd Barrettâs âGolden Hair,â based on a poem from Chamber Music, Kate Bushâs âFlower of the Mountain,â based on Molly Bloomâs final soliloquy, and Jefferson Airplaneâs âRejoyce,â a âhighly selective cap of Ulysses.â John Cageâs Roaratorio appears, as does the work of several other Joyce-inspired classical composers.
The playlist begins with the voice of James Joyce, not singing alas, but reading from Ulyssesâ âEolianâ episode. DJ Spooky (alias of Paul D. Miller) mixes the authorâs voice with Erik Satieâs Gnossiennes. To hear the unadulterated Joyce reading, check out our post on the only two recordings of his voice.
Note: If you need to download Spotify in order to hear the playlist, you can find/download the software here.
Related Content:
James Joyce Reads From Ulysses and Finnegans Wake In His Only Two Recordings (1924/1929)
James Joyce Plays the Guitar, 1915
Carl Jung Writes a Review of Joyceâs Ulysses and Mails It To The Author (1932)
Josh Jones is a writer and musician based in Durham, NC. Follow him at @jdmagness
A Free Playlist of Music From The Works Of James Joyce (Plus Songs Inspired by the Modernist Author) is a post from: Open Culture. Follow us on Facebook, Twitter, and Google Plus, or get our Daily Email. And don’t miss our big collections of Free Online Courses, Free Online Movies, Free eBooks, Free Audio Books, Free Foreign Language Lessons, and MOOCs.
The post A Free Playlist of Music From The Works Of James Joyce (Plus Songs Inspired by the Modernist Author) appeared first on Open Culture.
A Free Playlist of Music From The Works Of James Joyce (Plus Songs Inspired by the Modernist Author)
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