Poetical Album; Or, Choice Selections of Poetry and Song
Author:
Publisher:
Published: 1893
Total Pages: 690
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKRead and Download eBook Full
Author:
Publisher:
Published: 1893
Total Pages: 690
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: Mike Mattison
Publisher: Univ. Press of Mississippi
Published: 2021-11-01
Total Pages: 176
ISBN-13: 1496837290
DOWNLOAD EBOOKPoetic Song Verse: Blues-Based Popular Music and Poetry invokes and critiques the relationship between blues-based popular music and poetry in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries. The volume is anchored in music from the 1960s, when a concentration of artists transformed modes of popular music from entertainment to art-that-entertains. Musician Mike Mattison and literary historian Ernest Suarez synthesize a wide range of writing about blues and rock—biographies, histories, articles in popular magazines, personal reminiscences, and a selective smattering of academic studies—to examine the development of a relatively new literary genre dubbed by the authors as “poetic song verse.” They argue that poetic song verse was nurtured in the fifties and early sixties by the blues and in Beat coffee houses, and matured in the mid-to-late sixties in the art of Bob Dylan, the Beatles, the Rolling Stones, the Doors, Jimi Hendrix, Joni Mitchell, Leonard Cohen, Gil Scott-Heron, Van Morrison, and others who used voice, instrumentation, arrangement, and production to foreground semantically textured, often allusive, and evocative lyrics that resembled and engaged poetry. Among the questions asked in Poetic Song Verse are: What, exactly, is this new genre? What were its origins? And how has it developed? How do we study and assess it? To answer these questions, Mattison and Suarez engage in an extended discussion of the roots of the relationship between blues-based music and poetry and address how it developed into a distinct literary genre. Unlocking the combination of richly textured lyrics wedded to recorded music reveals a dynamism at the core of poetic song verse that can often go unrealized in what often has been considered merely popular entertainment. This volume balances historical details and analysis of particular songs with accessibility to create a lively, intelligent, and cohesive narrative that provides scholars, teachers, students, music influencers, and devoted fans with an overarching perspective on the poetic power and blues roots of this new literary genre.
Author: Sylvia Huot
Publisher: Cornell University Press
Published: 2019-05-15
Total Pages: 531
ISBN-13: 1501746685
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAs the visual representation of an essentially oral text, Sylvia Huot points out, the medieval illuminated manuscript has a theatrical, performative quality. She perceives the tension between implied oral performance and real visual artifact as a fundamental aspect of thirteenth- and fourteenth-century poetics. In this generously illustrated volume, Huot examines manuscript texts both from the performance-oriented lyric tradition of chanson courtoise, or courtly love lyric, and from the self-consciously literary tradition of Old French narrative poetry. She demonstrates that the evolution of the lyrical romance and dit, narrative poems which incorporate thematic and rhetorical elements of the lyric, was responsible for a progressive redefinition of lyric poetry as a written medium and the emergence of an explicitly written literary tradition uniting lyric and narrative poetics. Huot first investigates the nature of the vernacular book in the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries, analyzing organization, page layout, rubrication, and illumination in a series of manuscripts. She then describes the relationship between poetics and manuscript format in specific texts, including works by widely read medieval authors such as Guillaume de Lorris, Jean de Meun, and Guillaume de Machaut, as well as by lesser-known writers including Nicole de Margival and Watriquet de Couvin. Huot focuses on the writers' characteristic modifications of lyric poetics; their use of writing and performance as theme; their treatment of the poet as singer or writer; and of the lady as implied reader or listener; and the ways in which these features of the text were elaborated by scribes and illuminators. Her readings reveal how medieval poets and book-makers conceived their common project, and how they distinguished their respective roles.
Author: James Clarence MANGAN
Publisher:
Published: 1850
Total Pages: 314
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor:
Publisher:
Published: 1968
Total Pages: 712
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: Levi Heywood Memorial Library, Gardner, Mass
Publisher:
Published: 1895
Total Pages: 478
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: New York Public Library. Reference Department
Publisher:
Published: 1964
Total Pages: 794
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: William Swan Sonnenschein
Publisher:
Published: 1895
Total Pages: 876
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: William Swan Sonnenschein
Publisher:
Published: 1901
Total Pages: 880
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: Brown University. Library
Publisher: Macmillan Reference USA
Published: 1972
Total Pages: 760
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOK