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Maud (BBC Radio 4 Classic Serial)
Maud (BBC Radio 4 Classic Serial)
Oct 3, 2024 3:25 PM

Author:Alfred Tennyson,Joseph Millson

Maud (BBC Radio 4 Classic Serial)

Joseph Millson reads Alfred Lord Tennyson's 1855 dark and lyrical poem 'Maud' in celebration of the 200th anniversary of the poet's birth in 2009. Originally broadcast on BBC Radio 4 in the 'Classic Serial' slot on 26 July 2009 and repeated on 1 August 2009. A disturbed young man roams the windswept hills, haunted by his father's suicide and his mother's early death. He blames his father's old friend, the lord of the Hall, for his ruin. The young man was betrothed to Maud, the lord's daughter, when they were children, but she and her family left the area after the suicide. But now there are workmen up at the Hall - Maud has come home. Read by Joseph Millson, with Kathryn Nutbeem. 'Maud' features sound design by Christopher Shutt, and was directed Abigail le Fleming.

Reviews

A panoramic vision of Bob Dylan, his music, his shifting place in American culture, from multiple angles. In fact, reading Sean Wilentz' Bob Dylan in America is as thrilling and surprising as listening to a great Dylan song

—— Martin Scorsese

Among those who write regularly about Dylan, Wilentz possesses the rare virtues of modesty, nuance and lucidity. If I may extend the Moby-Dick metaphor just a little here, Wilentz is a whale watcher rather than a whale hunter. He is content to observe rather than possess

—— Scotland on Sunday

Wilentz combines his deep musical knowledge with the skills of a fine historian to write one of the most important, insightful and revelatory books about America, its culture and its people as interpreted through the works of one of its greatest artists

—— Irish Times

All the American connections that Wilentz draws to explain the appearance of Dylan's music are fascinating, particularly at the outset the connection to Aaron Copland. The writing is strong, the thinking is strong - the book is dense and strong everywhere you look

—— Philip Roth

Bob Dylan in America is vital reading

—— Christopher Bray , Literary Review

Fascinating

—— Observer

Wilentz is at his best... From the shelves full of Dylan books this and one other...are the ones to read. This is also one to look at

—— Bryan Appleyard , Sunday Times

Sean Wilentz makes us think about Bob Dylan's half-century of work in new ways. Combining a scholar's depth with a sense of mischief appropriate to the subject, Wilentz hears new associations in famous songs and sends us back to listen to Dylan's less familiar music with fresh insights. By focusing on the parts of Dylan's canon that most move him, Wilentz getsstraight to the heart of the matter. If you thought there was nothing new to say about Bob Dylan's impact on America, this book will make you think twice

—— Bill Flanagan, Editorial Director: MTV Networks

Sean Wilentz's beautiful book sets a new standard for the cultural history of popular music in America

—— Leon Wieseltier

Unlike so many Dylan-writer-wannabes and phony 'encyclopedia' compilers, Sean Wilentz makes me feel he was in the room when he chronicles events that I participated in. Finally a breath of fresh words founded in hardcore, intelligent research

—— Al Kooper, musician, record producer and Bob Dylan collaborator

Writing about Bob Dylan's music, and fitting it into the great crazy quilt of American culture, Sean Wilentz sews a whole new critical fabric, part history, part close analysis, and all heart. What he writes, as well as anyone ever has, helps us enlarge Dylan's music by reckoning its roots, its influences, its allusive spiritual contours

—— Jay Cocks, screenwriter for THE AGE OF INNOCENCE and THE GANGS OF NEW YORK

It throws up a wealth of unexpected connections.

—— Ian Thomson , Spectator, Christmas round up

Did you know Bob Dylan loves Eileen Aroon? One of the many facts in Bob Dylan in America.

—— Patrick McCabe , Irish Times, Christmas round up

The result is a broad and brilliantly illuminating appreciation of Dylan as both performer and songwriter up to the present day

—— Belfast News Letter

So charming and so acute that one cannot help forgiving him

—— Daily Express

You need to read this - period

—— Fact
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