This MP3 release contains 23 poems and is 48 minutes in length. The poems are beautiful, and the poems are read beautifully by Sylvia Plath. Writing poetry and reading poetry involve two completely different skill-sets. Compared to some other recordings of poets reading their own material, Plath is an accomplished artist-performer. I especially enjoy the rhythmic quality she shows in her reading: understated but palpable. It may be a fair criticism that she reads in a bit of a monotone, but recalling that this genius poet was already suffering from bouts of severe depression when she started the first of the recordings and took her own life a few months after the last, we can cut her a little slack, and enjoy her perfect diction, her superb poetry, and her accomplished sense of reading rhythmically. Truly great!
All of the poems are contained in "Sylvia Plath: The Collected Poems," ed by Ted Hughes, publ by Harper Perennial Modern Classics (2008). Four of the recorded poems have different titles in the Collected Poems edition, most notably for me, the recorded "Nocturne" is collected as "Hardcastle Crags." Ten of the poems were published in "The Colossus," while one was included in "Ariel," and four in "Crossing the Water."
The first 13 poems were recorded at the Poetry Room of the Harvard College Library in 1958-1959, and made up Side One of the original recordings by Caedmon Records, back in the day of vinyl and cassette. The last ten poems (Side Two) were recorded by BBC Records in 1960-1962.
My only criticism of this recording is a production item. The poems are not cited by title during the recorded presentation, and the gap between poems is so small that one can miss the beginning of the next poem. I know I will listen enough times to learn the poems well enough that this will not be an important issue for long. Fortunately, the titles of the poems are labelled clearly in text on Windows Media Player and on my Sansa MP3 device.
I am extremely happy to own the recording. Truly sensational stuff!
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