- published: 13 Apr 2010
- views: 542
3:07
Week 39 | Symbolists | Carolyne | The Vlog Poets
Carolyne discussed the Symbolist poets: carolynewhelan.com
http://www.poetryfoundation.or...
published: 11 Jul 2012
Week 39 | Symbolists | Carolyne | The Vlog Poets
Carolyne discussed the Symbolist poets: carolynewhelan.com
http://www.poetryfoundation.org/learning/glossary-term/Symbolist%20Movement
For a description of this weeks topic please go to our Tumblr page, or our website
Tumblr: http://thevlogpoets.tumblr.com/
Facebook: www.facebook.com/vlogpoets
Twitter: http://twitter.com/#!/TheVlogPoets
Website: http://projectvideobard.com/
- published: 11 Jul 2012
- views: 19
4:37
A translation into English of a poem by the great Flemish poet Karel Van de Woestijne...'
Karel Van de Woestijne was a Flemish poet and prosaist who is perhaps the most important p...
published: 07 Oct 2011
A translation into English of a poem by the great Flemish poet Karel Van de Woestijne...'
Karel Van de Woestijne was a Flemish poet and prosaist who is perhaps the most important post-symbolist poet to have written in the Dutch language. While he was profoundly influenced by the French symbolism of the latter quarter of the nineteenth century, he also formed part of the international reaction against symbolism. His early poetry has much in common with the inclination to the everyday and to nature inspired by André Gide and Francis Jammes. Later, after World War One, his work connects with the late, modernist lyricism of Yeats and Rilke. He remained one of the most influential poets in Flanders and the Netherlands until shortly after the Second World War.
The translation was made by TANIS GUEST.
(With thanks to Poetry International Web)
The reciter is a non native speaker of English.
- published: 07 Oct 2011
- views: 193
1:16
Zinaida Gippius "The Light" - "CBET" Russian Poem Animation
Heres a virtual movie of the Russian Symbolist poet Zinaida Nikolaevna Gippius, Зинаида Ни...
published: 16 Feb 2011
Zinaida Gippius "The Light" - "CBET" Russian Poem Animation
Heres a virtual movie of the Russian Symbolist poet Zinaida Nikolaevna Gippius, Зинаида Николаевна Гиппиус(1869 - 1945) reading her poem "The Light" - "CBET".
Zinaida Gippius the wife of writer Dmitri Merezhkovsky, she forged her own reputation as a prominent member of the Russian Symbolists. The principal subject of her fiction and poetry was the duality of nature, occasionally expressed in terms of gender-reversal and in a hothouse style influenced by Dostoyevsky. Zinaida Nikolayevna Gippius was born in Belev, Tula Province, Russia. Largely self-educated, she was already a published poet when she entered the Kiev Institute for Women at age 17. In 1889 she married Merezhkovsky and their St. Petersburg literary salon became a focal point for the Symbolists, notably Alexander Blok and Andrei Bely. Gippius first attracted attention with her unconventional behavior, cultivating an androgynous image, and later as an outspoken and perceptive critic. From 1905 to 1907 the couple lived in exile in Paris for their support of the first Russian Revolution, and they settled there permanently in 1919 because they opposed the Bolsheviks. During the 1920s Gippius had much of her earlier output republished in French editions. Her oeuvre includes the novels "The Bitter End" (1911) and "Roman-Tsarevich" (1912), six collections of short stories, five books of poetry, among them "Verses" (1910) and "Radiance" (1938), and a two-volume memoir, "Living Persons" (1925). She died before completing her biography of Merezhkovsky, which was edited and published in 1951.
Thanks to Lisa a Christian translator living in Jerusalem at the time she sent me this wonderful readingKind Regards
Jim Clark
All rights are reserved on this video recording copyright Jim Clark 2011
LIGHT..............
Moans,
Moans,
Exhausted,
Abyssmal,
Long-ringing
Funereal,
Moans,
Moans,
Bitterness,
Bitterness at the Father,
Sorry, gangrenous, feverish,
Thirst for the end,
Bitterness,
Bitterness,
The tourniquet tighter, tighter,
The path winding, winding,
All the time slighter, slighter,
The clouds gloomier,
Horror demolishes the soul,
The knot strangles,
The knot tighter, tighter, tighter,
Dear Lord, Dear Lord -- No!
Prophetically my heart avers!
My God, please no!
We are under your wing.
Horror. And moans. And darkness. And above them
Your never-diminishing light.
1915
- published: 16 Feb 2011
- views: 1619
8:13
Jean de Boschere - The City Curious
Para Tine (tinitussi21) Happy Birthday !!!
http://www.youtube.com/user/tinitussi21
Jean d...
published: 06 Mar 2013
Jean de Boschere - The City Curious
Para Tine (tinitussi21) Happy Birthday !!!
http://www.youtube.com/user/tinitussi21
Jean de Boschere - The City Curious 1920
Music: Edward Scissorhands - Danny Elfman
Jean de Bosschère (Uccle, 5 July 1878 - Châteauroux, 17 January 1953) was a Belgian writer and painter.
Bosschère was born in Uccle, the son of Charles de Bosschere and Nancy Marie Hélène Van der Stock. In 1884 the family moved to Lier, where Jean spent a tormented childhood full of affection for his disfigured sister Marthe, described in Marthe et l'Enragé. In 1893, Jean attended the Ecole d'Horticulture in Ghent. In 1894 the family moved to Antwerp, where Jean attended the Royal Academy of Fine Arts from 1896 to 1900.
Between 1901 and 1905 he regularly visited Paris where he met writers with a passion for the occult. On 25 March 1905 he married Jeanne Fanny Alexandra Jones; they separated officially in 1923. From 1905-1914, he wrote regular articles for the magazine L'Occident and L'Art Flamand et Hollandaise. From 1907 he also wrote several monographs, especially on Flemish art. In 1909 he published his first collection of poetry, Béâle-Gryne, which he illustrated himself. The style of these illustrations, as well as his later work, was a version of Art Nouveau heavily influenced by the drawings of Aubrey Beardsley. He was also influenced by the Roman Catholic spiritual works of French poet and dramatist Paul Claudel, whom he saw lecture in 1909. That same year, he began a lifelong friendship with the Antwerp Symbolist poet Max Elskamp (of whom in 1914 he published a critical study), and in 1911 the French writer Andre Suares. Around 1912 he underwent a moral and emotional crisis, and he distanced himself from Symbolism. He was accused of Satanism in 1912 in response to his first novel, Dolorine et les Ombres (1911). In 1914 he made a trip to Italy.
Illustration by Jean de Bosschere in Ovid's Ars Amatoria
In 1915, when the war broke out, he fled from Belgium and went to London where he met writers such as John Gould Fletcher, Aldous Huxley and D. H. Lawrence, and Imagist poets such as Ezra Pound, TS Eliot and Richard Aldington. He met several London publishers for whom he illustrated numerous books in the '20s and '30s. Among the books he illustrated were the poems of Oscar Wilde and Charles Baudelaire, but also erotic classic authors such as Aristophanes, Ovid, Strato and Apuleius. In 1920 he moved in with his beloved Vera Anne Hamilton, but she died in January 1922. At the end of 1922 he left London with Élisabeth d'Ennetières, with whom he would stay for the rest of his life. They settled in Albano, near Rome. In the winter of 1925-26 they lived in Brussels, then from March 1926 in Paris, where he met Antonin Artaud. They also stayed regularly Solaia near Siena in Italy, where De Bosschere worked on his many novels and poetry collections.
The work of De Bosschere was marked by a persistent spiritual seeking in his life he developed a fascination with the occult, the spiritual, the obscure and the sexual. He gave himself the nickname "Satan" and "l'Obscure", which formed the title of Satan l'Obscure (1933), his second autobiographical novel after Marthe et l'Enragé.
The decade of the 30s were difficult for De Bosschere. He wrote several novels that he regarded as failures and found little illustration work due to the poor economic climate. From 1938 he lived a secluded life in La Châtre in central France. He kept a diary from 1946 titled Journal d'un Rebelle Solitaire that has remained unreleased. He also made two anthologies of most of his poetry: Derniers poèmes de l'Obscur (1948) and Héritiers de l'abime (1950).
In September 1952 he received the Prix de la Méditerranée and in November the Mandat des Poètes. A year later he died at the age of 74 in the hospital in Châteauroux. Following his death several of his works were published, but much of the work, which is kept in the Archives et Musée de la littérature in Brussels, of this prolific writer has remained unpublished.
- published: 06 Mar 2013
- views: 84
11:13
Aldo Samuele 1962 - 1979
An unusual cross-over between reality and forgery. This film is about
The touching vici...
published: 17 Nov 2012
Aldo Samuele 1962 - 1979
An unusual cross-over between reality and forgery. This film is about
The touching vicissitudes of Aldo Samuele, a symbolist poet, born in Sciarborasca in 1962 and dead at Hospital Marina Rati in Cogoleto, when he was only 17. The poems are "sarabands" and lautremontian rhapsodies and were written by Marco Lavagetto during his adolescense. They are now used for the reconstruction of a mysterious figure of Genius loci, Aldo Samuele, a silent poet who abandoned poetry when he was 15 to devote himself " to the elixir which takes away the pain to be born".
- published: 17 Nov 2012
- views: 49
11:21
Maurice Ravel - Trois Poèmes de Stéphane Mallarmé
Trois poèmes de Stéphane Mallarmé, song cycle for voice & ensemble (or piano) (1913)
Mari...
published: 27 May 2011
Maurice Ravel - Trois Poèmes de Stéphane Mallarmé
Trois poèmes de Stéphane Mallarmé, song cycle for voice & ensemble (or piano) (1913)
Marie-Thérèse Escribano Ensemble
Friedrich Cerha
In a 1927 interview, Maurice Ravel said of the symbolist poet Stéphane Mallarmé that he "exorcised our language, like the magician that he was. He has released the winged thoughts, the unconscious daydreams from their prison." Mallarmé had been an immense influence on a variety of artists, including Ravel, who had set his first Mallarmé poem, Sainte, in 1896 and returned to the poet's work in 1913 with the Trois poèmes. Around that time Ravel had heard Igor Stravinsky's Trois poésies de la lyrique japonaise (1912-1913), and was particularly impressed by Stravinsky's arrangement, in which the singer was backed by an ensemble of piano, string quartet, two flutes, and two clarinets. Stravinsky, in turn, had been much influenced by Arnold Schoenberg's notorious Pierrot lunaire (1912), with its similar instrumentation. On completing his songs, which employed the same instrumental layout as Stravinsky's, Ravel envisioned what he called a "scandalous concert," featuring his songs along with Stravinsky's and Schoenberg's. That concert did take place, although with songs by Maurice Delage replacing the Schoenberg, under the auspices of the Société Musicale Indépendante on January 14, 1914. Soprano Jane Bathori, one of the best known French singers of her day, was featured, along with an ensemble conducted by Désiré-Emile Inghelbrecht.
The increasing angularity and dissonance of Ravel's Trois poèmes reflects the increasingly dissociative imagery of the three Mallarmé poems. The first song, "Soupir" (Sigh), is in two parts, the first slow and delicate (evoking the poet's "white fountains"), the second more spacious and evanescent. The vocal line becomes a bit more jagged in "Placet futile" (Futile Petition), a gently melancholy love song. And with the third and final song, "Surgi de la croupe et du bond" (Risen from the Crupper and Leap), Ravel comes as close to the atonality of Arnold Schoenberg as he ever would. This setting of what Ravel once called "the strangest, if not the most hermetic" of Mallarmé's sonnets is still and mysterious, with a very spare accompaniment.
Coincidentally, at the very time that Ravel was composing his Trois poèmes, Claude Debussy was also setting three of Mallarmé's poems (both were perhaps inspired by a new complete edition of Mallarmé's poetry which had just been published). Not only that, but they had both chosen to set two of the same poems; Debussy called this a "phenomenon of autosuggestion worthy of communication to the Academy of Medicine." [Allmusic.com]
Art by Jean-Léon Gérôme
- published: 27 May 2011
- views: 7496
9:24
La Double Maîtresse (The Art of George Barbier)
George Barbier illustrated 'La Double Maîtresse' by Henri De Régnier in 1928.
Henri Franç...
published: 28 Jul 2012
La Double Maîtresse (The Art of George Barbier)
George Barbier illustrated 'La Double Maîtresse' by Henri De Régnier in 1928.
Henri François Joseph de Régnier (1864 - 1936) was a French symbolist poet, considered one of the most important of France during the early 20th century.
He was born at Honfleur (Calvados) on the 28th of December 1864, and was educated in Paris for law. In 1885 he began to contribute to the Parisian reviews, and his verses were published by most of the French and Belgian periodicals favorable to the symbolist writers. Having begun as a Parnassian, he retained the classical tradition, though he adopted some of the innovations of Jean Moréas and Gustave Kahn. His vaguely suggestive style shows the influence of Stéphane Mallarmé, of whom he was an assiduous disciple.
His first volume of poems, Lendemains, appeared in 1885, and among numerous later volumes are Poèmes anciens et romanesques (1890), Les Jeux rustiques et divins (1890), Les Médailles d'argile (1900), La Cité des eaux (1903). He is also the author of a series of realistic novels and tales, among which are La Canne de jaspe (2nd ed., 1897), La Double maîtresse (5th ed., 1900), Les Vacances d'un jeune homme sage (1903), and Les Amants singuliers (1905). M. de Régnier married Mlle Marie de Heredia, daughter of the poet José María de Heredia, and herself a novelist and poet under the name of Gérard d'Houville.
Henri de Régnier died in 1936 at age 71 and was interred in the Père Lachaise Cemetery in Paris.
Music by Maurice Ravel, 'Pavane de la Belle au bois dormant - Petit poucet - Les Entretiens de la Belle et la Bête', from 'Ma Mère l'Oye' ("Mother Goose").
- published: 28 Jul 2012
- views: 1354
3:58
Eleni Karaindrou Alphonse Osbert
Music: Eleni Karaindrou - Depart and eternity
Paintings: Alphonse Osbert. (1857, 1939) Fr...
published: 14 Oct 2012
Eleni Karaindrou Alphonse Osbert
Music: Eleni Karaindrou - Depart and eternity
Paintings: Alphonse Osbert. (1857, 1939) French painter. He studied at the Ecole des Beaux-Arts and in the studios of Henri Lehmann, Fernand Cormon and Léon Bonnat. His Salon entry in 1880, Portrait of M. O. (untraced), reflected his early attraction to the realist tradition of Spanish 17th-century painting. The impact of Impressionism encouraged him to lighten his palette and paint landscapes en plein air, such as In the Fields of Eragny (1888; Paris, Y. Osbert priv. col.). By the end of the 1880s he had cultivated the friendship of several Symbolist poets and the painter Puvis de Chavannes, which caused him to forsake his naturalistic approach and to adopt the aesthetic idealism of poetic painting. Abandoning subjects drawn from daily life, Osbert aimed to convey inner visions and developed a set of pictorial symbols. Inspired by Puvis, he simplified landscape forms, which served as backgrounds for static, isolated figures dissolved in mysterious light. A pointillist technique, borrowed from Seurat, a friend from Lehmann's studio, dematerialized forms and added luminosity. However, Osbert eschewed the Divisionists' full range of hues in his choice of blues, violets, yellows and silvery green. Osbert's mysticism is seen in his large painting Vision (1892; Paris, Mus. d'Orsay). The Rosicrucian ideal of 'art as the evocation of mystery, like prayer' finds no better expression than the virginal figure of Faith—often interpreted as either St Geneviève or St Joan—set in a meadow with a lamb and enmeshed in an unearthly radiance. Such works were praised by Symbolist writers who considered them visual counterparts of the poetry of Paul Verlaine, Stéphane Mallarmé and Maurice Maeterlinck. Osbert was called a 'painter of evenings', an 'artist of the soul' and a 'poet of silence' for his evocation of a mood of mystery and reverie.
- published: 14 Oct 2012
- views: 371
3:59
VAN MORRISON (THEM): IT'S ALL OVER NOW, BABY BLUE (1966) with words
The Best cover of Dylan's song... ever!
Cleaned up track, with bass boost :D
"It's All ...
published: 16 Jan 2013
VAN MORRISON (THEM): IT'S ALL OVER NOW, BABY BLUE (1966) with words
The Best cover of Dylan's song... ever!
Cleaned up track, with bass boost :D
"It's All Over Now, Baby Blue" is a song written and performed by Bob Dylan
and featured on his Bringing It All Back Home album, released on March 22, 1965 byColumbia Records (see 1965 in music).
The song was originally recorded on January 15, 1965 with Dylan's acoustic guitar and harmonica and William E. Lee's bass guitar the only instrumentation.
The lyrics were heavily influenced by Symbolist poetry and bid farewell to the titular "Baby Blue."
There has been much speculation about the real life identity of "Baby Blue", with suspects including Joan Baez, David Blue, Paul Clayton, Dylan's folk music audience, and even Dylan himself.
"It's All Over Now, Baby Blue" has been covered many times by a variety of different artists, including Baez, Them, The Byrds, The Animals, The Chocolate Watch Band,Graham Bonnet, Judy Collins, Joni Mitchell, Marianne Faithfull, Falco, The 13th Floor Elevators, the Grateful Dead, Link Wray, and Bad Religion.
Them's version, released in 1966 influenced garage bands during the mid-60's and Beck later sampled it for his 1996single "Jack-Ass".
The Byrds recorded the song twice in 1965 as a possible follow up single to "Mr. Tambourine Man" and "All I Really Want to Do", but neither recording was released in that form. The Byrds did release a 1969 recording of the song on their Ballad of Easy Rider album (see 1969 in music).
One interpretation of the song is that it is directed at Dylan's folk music audience.
The song was written at a time when he was moving away from the folk protest movement musically and, as such, can be seen as a farewell to his days as an acoustic guitar-playing protest singer.
Dylan's choice of performing "It's All Over Now, Baby Blue" as his last acoustic song at the infamous Newport Folk Festival of 1965, after having had his electric set met with boos, is often used as evidence to support this theory.That particular performance of the song is included in Murray Lerner's film The Other Side of the Mirror.
Yet another interpretation is that Dylan is directing the farewell to himself, particularly his acoustic performer self. The opening line "You must leave now" can be a command, similar to the line "Go away from my window" that opens "It Ain't Me, Babe".
But it can also be an imperative, meaning just that it is necessary that you leave.
And the song is as much about new beginnings as it is about endings.
The song not only notes the requirement that Baby Blue leave, but also includes the hope that Baby Blue will move forward, in lines such as "Strike another match, go start anew".
If Dylan is singing the song to himself, then he himself would be the "vagabond who's rapping at your door / standing in the clothes that you once wore". That is, the new, electric, surrealist Dylan would be the vagabond, not yet having removed the "clothes" of the old protest singer. Alternatively, the vagabond and "stepping stones" referenced in the song have been interpreted as Dylan's folk audience whom he needs to leave behind.
He would also be telling himself to "Forget the dead you've left, they will not follow you."
Others to whom he may be saying farewell in the song are any of the women he had known, the political left or to the illusions of his youth.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/It's_All_Over_Now,_Baby_Blue
The Belfast band Them (featuring Van Morrison) recorded a cover of "It's All Over Now, Baby Blue" that was first released on their album, Them Again, in January 1966 in the UK and April 1966 in the U.S.
The song was subsequently issued as a single (b/w "I'm Gonna Dress in Black") in the Netherlands during October 1966 but failed to reach the Dutch Singles Chart.
It was later re-released in Germany in December 1973 with "Bad or Good" on the B-side, following its appearance in the 1972 German television movie, Die Rocker (aka Rocker).
The single became a hit in Germany, first entering the charts in February 1974 and peaking at #13, during a chart stay of 14 weeks.
This song recently featured in the BBC series, ''Inspector George Gently''. A detective drama, now in it's 5th series. It's set in the mid 1960's in NE England, and stars Martin Shaw and Lee Ingleby - Martin Shaw plays the title character, and Lee Ingleby plays his sergeant, John Bacchus. It's gritty and very faithful to the era, and always features excellent songs from the period.
Fancy watching an episode? http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LGMZ7b4PiIs
All pictures from Google Images, as far as I know - apart from the very last picture - they are all authentic REAL people from the era of the late 1960's.
Copyrights acknowledged
- published: 16 Jan 2013
- views: 884
24:52
Fyodor Sologub - Hide And Seek
Fyodor Sologub (March 1 1863 -- December 5, 1927) was a Russian Symbolist poet, novelist, ...
published: 19 Dec 2012
Fyodor Sologub - Hide And Seek
Fyodor Sologub (March 1 1863 -- December 5, 1927) was a Russian Symbolist poet, novelist, playwright and essayist. He was the first writer to introduce the morbid, pessimistic elements characteristic of European fin de siècle literature and philosophy into Russian.
Sologub was born in St. Petersburg into the family of a poor tailor, Kuzma Afanasyevich Teternikov, who had been a serf in Poltava guberniya, the illegitimate son of a local landowner. His father died of tuberculosis in 1867, and his illiterate mother was forced to become a servant in the home of the aristocratic Agapov family, where Sologub and his younger sister Olga grew up. Seeing how difficult his mother's life was, Sologub was determined to rescue her from it, and after graduating from the St. Petersburg Teachers' Institute in 1882 he took his mother and sister with him to his first teaching post in Kresttsy, where he began his literary career with the 1884 publication in a children's magazine of his poem "The Fox and the Hedgehog" under the name Te-rnikov.
Sologub continued writing as he relocated to new jobs in Velikiye Luki (1885) and Vytegra (1889), but felt that he was completely isolated from the literary world and longed to be able to live in the capital again; nevertheless, his decade-long experience with the "frightful world" of backwoods provincial life served him well when he came to write The Petty Demon. (He said later that in writing the novel he had softened the facts, things happened that no one would believe if I were to describe them.) He felt sympathetic with the writers associated with the journal Severnyi vestnik (Northern Herald), including Nikolai Minsky, Zinaida Gippius, and Dmitry Merezhkovsky, who were beginning to create what would be known as the Symbolist movement, and in 1891 he visited Petersburg hoping to see Minsky and Merezhkovsky, but met only the first.
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- published: 19 Dec 2012
- views: 37
3:18
VRADY - KARYOTAKIS - PLATONOS
Kostas Karyotakis (Greek: Κώστας Καρυωτάκης, October 30, 1896 -- July 20, 1928) is conside...
published: 21 Dec 2012
VRADY - KARYOTAKIS - PLATONOS
Kostas Karyotakis (Greek: Κώστας Καρυωτάκης, October 30, 1896 -- July 20, 1928) is considered one of the most representative Greek poets of the 1920s and one of the first poets to use iconoclastic themes in Greece. His poetry conveys a great deal of nature, imagery and traces of expressionism and surrealism. The majority of Karyotakis' contemporaries viewed him in a dim light throughout his lifetime without a pragmatic accountability for their contemptuous views; for after his suicide,the majority began to revert to the view that he was indeed a great poet. He had a significant, almost disproportionately progressive influence on later Greek poets.
Karyotakis gave existential depth as well as a tragic dimension to the emotional nuances and melancholic tones of the neo-Symbolist and new-Romantic poetry of the time. With a rare clarity of spirit and penetrating vision, he captures and conveys with poetic daring the climate of dissolution and the impasses of his generation, as well as the traumas of his own inner spiritual world.
On July 19, 1928 Karyotakis went to Monolithi beach and kept trying to drown in the sea for ten hours, but failed in his attempt, because he was an avid swimmer as he himself wrote in his suicide note. In the subsequent morning he returned home and left again to purchase a revolver and went to a little café in the place Vryssoula (near today Hotel Zikas). After smoking for a few hours, and drink cherry juice, he left 75 drachmas as a gratuity, while the cost of the drink was 5 drachmas, he went to a nearby seashore called Agios Spyridon (today Benzine Station of Greek Army) and there, under a eucalyptus tree, he shot himself through the heart. His suicide letter was found in his pocket.
- published: 21 Dec 2012
- views: 241
11:56
Threads of Yoga: Indiegogo pitch video
Pitch for an Indiegogo campaign to crowdsource funds for the professional design and publi...
published: 01 Oct 2012
Threads of Yoga: Indiegogo pitch video
Pitch for an Indiegogo campaign to crowdsource funds for the professional design and publicity of Threads of Yoga: a remix of patanjali's sutras with reverie and commentary.
The link to the campaign is here: http://www.indiegogo.com/threadsofyoga?a=1459188.
_____
I don't know of any reading of the yoga sutras as wildly creative, as impassioned and as earnest as this. it engages Patanjali and the reader in an urgent, electrified conversation that weaves philosophy, symbolist poetry, psychoanalysis and cultural history. There's a kind of delight and freshness in this book that is very rare in writing on yoga, and especially rare in writing on the yoga sutras. This is a Patanjali for postmoderns, less a translation than a startlingly relevant report on our current condition, through the prism of this ancient text. Please help Matthew Remski raise the funds to produce this book. The world needs it.
-- Mark Singleton, author of Yoga Body:The Origins of Modern Posture Practice
_____
I have retranslated the Yoga Sutras of Patanjali for our present paradigm. I've used the lenses of contemporary philosophy, psychology, and neuroscience to "remix" the original stillness and insight of the old book with the best that our age has to offer. I interweave the refashioned verses with critical commentary and personal reflections from a decade of practice.
After nearly three years of work and the collaborative input of dozens of colleagues, I am now ready to publish, and have decided on the print-on-demand route, for reasons of ecology, economy, and timing. My goal over the next 30 days is to raise enough money to pay for my typsetter/designer, my publicist, and the initial promotion drive. Contributing to this campaign is like pre-ordering the book.
- published: 01 Oct 2012
- views: 687
1:27
GREEK POEM PREVEZA BY KARYOTAKIS READ BY G P SAVVIDIS
PREVEZA by Kostas Karyotakis
Death is the crows clattering
on dark walls and roof-tile...
published: 27 Sep 2007
GREEK POEM PREVEZA BY KARYOTAKIS READ BY G P SAVVIDIS
PREVEZA by Kostas Karyotakis
Death is the crows clattering
on dark walls and roof-tiles;
death - those women who make love
as if they were peeling onions.
Death these grimy, insignificant streets
with their great, illustrious names,
the olive grove, in all directions the sea,
and even the sun - death amid deaths.
Death - that cop who wraps up
an "Insufficient" serving and weighs it;
death - these hyacinths on the balcony
and that teacher with the newspaper.
Base, Garrison, Platoon of Preveza.
On Sunday we'll hear the band.
I got a savings book from the bank,
first deposit - thirty drachmas.
Walking slowly on the wharf you say,
"Do I exist" and then, "You do not exist!"
The ship arrives, Raised flag.
Perhaps His Honor the Governor is coming.
If, among these people, just
one would die from disgust . . .
Silent, sad, decorous,
we'd all have fun at the funeral.
Kostas Karyotakis is a Greek poet influenced by the 19th-century French Symbolist poets. He born in Tripolis at 1896 and died in Preveza at 1928.
Kariotakis spent most of his lonely childhood in Crete. He read law at Athens and won a prize for poetry in 1920. After obtaining his degree he worked as a government clerk in Athens, where he developed a friendship with the young poet Maria Polidouri. Later he was transferred to Patrai and thence to Preveza, where he shot himself (July 20, 1928).
Karyotakis' two volumes of poetry show the influence of the New School of Poetry of Athens, founded in about 1880 by Kostis Palamas, which revolted against Katharevusa, the stilted and archaic official language of Greece, and against the emotionalism of the Romantics. His poetry also reveals the Symbolist influence in addition to the loneliness and despair of his childhood.
- published: 27 Sep 2007
- views: 18303
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6:00
How to Shear Your Pine Tree
Shearing Pine Trees HHF http://www.seedlingsrus.com We deliver and plant as well as grow...
published: 12 Jun 2010
How to Shear Your Pine Tree
Shearing Pine Trees HHF http://www.seedlingsrus.com We deliver and plant as well as grow pines....Alphonse de Lamartine
St�phane Mallarm� -- poet
Andr� Malraux
Pierre de Marivaux - playwright
Cl�ment Marot -- poet
Guy de Maupassant novelist
Fran�ois Mauriac - Roman Catholic writer
Prosper M�rim�e - 19th century novelist
Jean Baptiste Poquelin dit Moli�re -- 17th century comedic playwright and actor
Alfred de Musset -- 19th century poet
Ana�s Nin
Marcel Pagnol
Charles P�guy -- 20th century poet
Charles Perrault -- Mother Goose Tales
Saint-John Perse
Christine de Pizan, historian, poet, philosopher
Jacques Prevert -- 20th century poet
Marcel Proust -- novelist
Fran�ois Rabelais -- Renaissance writer
Jean Racine -- classicist playwright
Pauline Reage, novelist
Arthur Rimbaud -- symbolist poet
Edmond Rostand -- neo-romantic playwright
Jean-Jacques Rousseau -- author
Marquis de Sade -- erotic and philosophic author
George Sand -- feminist author
Madame de S�vign�
Madame de Sta�l
Antoine de Saint-Exupery , humanist author and aviators.
Stendhal -- novelist (born Henry Beyle)
Paul Val�ry -- 20th century poet
Paul Verlaine -- symbolist poet
Jules Verne -- novelist
Boris Vian -- 20th century author
Alfred de Vigny -- 19th century poet
Jean-Marie Arouet dit Voltaire -- Enlightenment author, deist/agnostic philosopher
�mile Zola -- naturalist author
- published: 12 Jun 2010
- views: 276
37:13
Sergey Rachmaninov - The Bells / Колокола
Sergey Rachmaninov (1873-1943), Россия
The Bells, Op. 35, is a choral symphony written in...
published: 08 Aug 2012
Sergey Rachmaninov - The Bells / Колокола
Sergey Rachmaninov (1873-1943), Россия
The Bells, Op. 35, is a choral symphony written in 1913. The words are from the poem "The Bells" by Edgar Allan Poe, freely translated into Russian by the symbolist poet Konstantin Balmont. Sung in Russian.
Поэма «Колокола», соч. 35, является музыкальное произведение для смешанного хора, трёх солистов (сопрано, тенора и баритона) и оркестра, написанное в 1913 году на слова одноимённого стихотворения Эдгара По в переводе Константина Бальмонта. Исполняется на русском языке.
I. Allegro ma non tanto: The Silver Sleigh Bell
II. Lento: The Mellow Wedding Bells
III. Presto: The Loud ASlarum Bells
IV. Lento: The Mournful Iron Bells
Suzanne Murphy, soprano
Keith Lewis, tenor
David Wilson-Johnson, baritone
Scottish National Orchestra and Chorus
Neeme Järvi
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- published: 08 Aug 2012
- views: 929
5:23
Soprano Amanda Gregory singing "Improvisation sur Mallarmé" by Pierre Boulez
"Improvisation sur Mallarmé"
by Pierre Boulez (b. 1925)
French composer, Boulez embarked...
published: 31 Jan 2012
Soprano Amanda Gregory singing "Improvisation sur Mallarmé" by Pierre Boulez
"Improvisation sur Mallarmé"
by Pierre Boulez (b. 1925)
French composer, Boulez embarked on Pli Selon Pli, a work in five movements for soprano and orchestra set to texts by Mallarmé. One of the major influences on his thinking was the poetry and aesthetic of French Symbolist poet, Stéphane Mallarmé.
"Le vierge, le vivace, et le bel aujourd'hui"
This movement is performed with soprano, harp, vibraphone, tubular bells and four percussion instruments. Overall, the piece progresses from relatively straight-forward syllabic setting of the text to increasingly florid, melismatic writing. Parallel to this, the percussion instruments evolve toward greater "noisiness".
The whole lasts just five minutes, a fleeting experience of fragile beauty.
This performance took place at Frederick Loewe Theatre at NYU, directed by Jonathan Haas on December 4, 2010.
- published: 31 Jan 2012
- views: 412
19:24
Ture Rangström - Häxorna (The Witches) (1938)
Häxorna (The Witches) (1938)
I. Två stora nattfjärilsvingar (Two big moth's wings) [0:00]...
published: 24 Apr 2011
Ture Rangström - Häxorna (The Witches) (1938)
Häxorna (The Witches) (1938)
I. Två stora nattfjärilsvingar (Two big moth's wings) [0:00]
II. Gå ej bland olvonträ och slån (Walk not amidst guelder-rose and sloes) [2:31]
III. Dansen går på grodbladsplan (Dance in a Plantain Field) [8:22]
IV. Långt bort i kvällarnas kväll (Far, far away in the eve och eves) [11:51]
An orchestral song cycle by the Swedish composer, conductor and music critic Ture Rangström (1884-1947). It is based on the poem "Häxorna" (The Witches) from the collection "Flora och Pomona" by the Symbolist poet Erik Axel Karlfeldt (1864-1931), who was awarded the 1931 Nobel Prize in Literature posthumously.
The TEXT of the poem is available here both in Swedish and in a partial English translation:
https://sites.google.com/site/musicanthtext/haexorna
Here a brief biography of Erik Axel Karlfeldt at the Nobel Prize e-Museum:
http://nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/literature/laureates/1931/karlfeldt-bio.html
Soprano: Karin Ingeback
Conductor: Hannu Koivula
Swedish Radio Symphony Orchestra
- published: 24 Apr 2011
- views: 2748