In March of last year, Toronto collector Greg Gatenby auctioned off âsome 1,700 LPs, 45s, and 10-inch discsâ-worth of recorded literary history, containing readings by such canonical figures as âAuden and Atwood, Camus and Capote, Eliot, Faulkner, Kipling, Shaw and Yeats,â and the recordings featured here from Sylvia Plath. Gatenbyâs entire collection went on sale for a buy-it-now price of $ 85,000 (I assume itâs sold by now), and while we might have preferred that he donated these artifacts to libraries, there may have been no need. Most of them are already, or we hope soon will be, digitized and free online. Sylvia Plath reading her poetry (now out of print) was originally released on vinyl and cassette in 1977 by prolific spoken word record label Caedmon, but of course the readings they document all took place over fifteen years earlier, some at least as early as 1959, the year before the publication of her first book, The Colossus and Other Poems.
Many of the poems here appeared in The Colossus, the only collection of poems Plath published in her lifetime. Some, like âNovember Graveyardâ—first published in Mademoiselle in 1958—were collected late, in the Ted Hughes-edited Collected Poems in 1981, and the rest appeared in Ariel and other posthumous collections. Oddly, the title poem of her first book doesnât appear, nor will you hear any of the poems that made Plath an infamous literary figure: no âAriel,â no âDaddy,â no âLady Lazarus,â though you can hear her read those poems elsewhere. Many of these poems are more lush, less visceral and personal, though no less rich with arresting and sometimes disturbing imagery. Several of these readings took place in February 1959 at Harvardâs Woodberry Poetry Room. The albumâs official description tells us these are âselections from the last 6 years of her life,â and also include âreadings for the BBC before she wrote her controversial novel, The Bell Jar.â
Before Caedmon collected these lesser-known poems recorded readings of âDaddyâ and âLady Lazarusâ had already been released on the compilation record The Poet Speaks in 1965. Listening to Plath read these poems may prompt you to pull out your own editions to read them for yourself, whether again or for the first time. To see a full listing of the poems Plath reads above, scroll to the bottom of this bibliography page on sylviaplath.info.
Find more great poetry readings in our audio collection —Â 550 Free Audio Books: Download Great Books for Free.
Related Content:
Hear Sylvia Plath Read Fifteen Poems From Her Final Collection, Ariel, in 1962 Recording
For Sylvia Plathâs 81st Birthday, Hear Her Read âA Birthday Presentâ
Sylvia Plath Reads âDaddyâ
Lady Lazarus: Watch an Experimental Film Spoken by Sylvia Plath
Josh Jones is a writer and musician based in Durham, NC. Follow him at @jdmagness.
Sylvia Plath Reads Her Poetry: 23 Poems from the Last 6 Years of Her Life 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 Sylvia Plath Reads Her Poetry: 23 Poems from the Last 6 Years of Her Life appeared first on Open Culture.
Sylvia Plath Reads Her Poetry: 23 Poems from the Last 6 Years of Her Life
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