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"Ode to a Nightingale" by John Keats (read by Tom O'Bedlam) 

SpokenVerse
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I felt like doing the Ode to a Nightgale today.
It's one of the first poems I read, using a cheaper microphone with a poor lower register and making an mp3 file before uploading. I know now that these things make me sound different from the way I really sound. My wife tells me so. Note that I didn't say they made me sound worse - just different. This recording sounds more like me, so my wife says. I know of no higher authority.
In fact, the first time I met my wife she was surprised that I knew the "Nightingale" by heart: she knew it too. We recited it together, perhaps because we weren't entirely sober. Poetry is a very good way of gaining points in a girl's estimation, if she's that sort of girl: whether it counts as a dirty trick I don't know - all I know is that, as tricks go, it works pretty well. Anyway, she's still here and she still listens to me reciting poetry.
Sometimes people like to tell me that I don't sound like John Geilgud, Peter O'Toole. Orson Welles, Alan Rickman or Kenneth Branagh, not usually because they care about poetry but because, in general, they are of a spiteful nature and want to annoy me.
They are mistaken in thinking that I will be annoyed. In fact, they might be surprised to learn that I deliberately avoid sounding like any of those great actors. They all have characteristics that I don't like nor have any wish to emulate: I just want to sound like me, for better or for worse.
Not that these actors do not have wonderful voices. The problem is that they also have characteristic faults. And imitations are no use anyway: lots of people can sing like Al Jolson.
Orson Welles, particularly when he was older, became more fruitily bass than was appropriate: it's wrong to sound too self-aware. Geilgud wasn't macho enough for my liking, he sounded too effete, dear boy. Kenneth Branagh sounds like the Head Prefect playing the leading man in the school play. Peter O'Toole sounds like a world-weary reprobate half-cut shakes-pher-herian ac-tor. Alan Rickman reads everything, no matter what it means, like he's trying to get into some girl's knickers.
I don't sound like any of these guys. The trap I have to avoid is sounding like Tom Baker who was Dr. Who, the one with the curly wig, and who did the blissfully offensive voice-over for Little Britain in the USA. I really love Tom's voice but he lays it on like icing on a wedding cake. He revels in self-parody, like Bill Shatner, doing commercials for china plates and other voice-overs that really sound like he's taking the piss.
Now, it's not me who applies these critical standards, it's my dear wife. She says - do that bit again, you sound too fruity like Tom Baker, or too sexy like Alan Rickman and so forth. And I say "Yes, dear, you're right," and I humbly obey. It pays well to know on which side your bread is buttered.
So if you want to piss me off, you'll have to think of something better than comparing me unfavourably with famous actors. As John Donne said, comparisions are odious. And you wouldn't want to displease my wife, would you?

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5 окт 2024

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Комментарии : 10   
@atheist1941
@atheist1941 9 лет назад
A poem so rich in feeling and emotion it needs this straight no nonsense delivery, because it does not require underlining. Thank you Tom.
@h.harrison5841
@h.harrison5841 10 лет назад
Very nice to hear a reading of the poem that focuses on the poem and not the reader.
@jenniferzeleznick6521
@jenniferzeleznick6521 2 года назад
mesmorized in the moments, the first to hear such complex lexicon ,lost in these times....Quite beautiful
@3damnthis
@3damnthis 13 лет назад
ok. you won't like this- but then your voice reminds me of Paul Auster's. He has an awesome voice by the way. Nice Poetry voice. 5 stars!
@SpokenVerse
@SpokenVerse 14 лет назад
@nickidame Poetry does have its seductive properties, particularly this poem which, as an astute observer, you may have noticed was implied earlier in my notes.... (good choice of epithet qualifying competition, by the way). Yes, the nightingale flies away at the end of the poem, leaving only an ephemeral memory of lingering sweetness. .
@lumpfish99
@lumpfish99 12 лет назад
to think this dude was only 26 when he died.....and they say the education system is dumbing us down....what a euphamism....if you are reading this then it means you care.....know this....you are not alone...
@Nichola_Ward
@Nichola_Ward 14 лет назад
That last line "Do I wake or sleep"... seems to hang there. There's an unresolved feel to it... As if there's a missing verse or conclusion. That lack of resolution is implied on the page... and you carry it over into your read. Since you're obviously a very thoughtful interpreter, I wonder if you have any comments? On an unrelated note, I've shared some of your readings with girlfriends of mine - And you offer Mr. Rickman stiff competition in the knicker-removal department.
@melaniewarnerMA
@melaniewarnerMA 13 лет назад
Poetry offers an exquisite melding of souls and minds in a higher delicate beauty of spiritual nature between two people rarely found in a tragically hyper sexualized society of empty loneliness and self loathing. Unfortunately as women majoring in this in University too well know, men lacking parental nurturing and mature self esteem are culturally hypnotized into dragging everything offering a variety of beauties into the manipulation of women. Let us just escape into beauty for a moment.
@marioriospinot
@marioriospinot 12 лет назад
Nice.
@TheUtopianidealist
@TheUtopianidealist 12 лет назад
Thank you. Poetry is meant to be read out loud.
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