Hörbuch  Poesie und Drama
Kenneth Patchen The Journal of Albion Moonlight FW-09716-CCD CCD
Currently not in stock. Available in 1-2 weeksWould you like to get informed if this article is in stock?
Please enter your e-mail address and confirm our data privacy statement. Your e-mail address will be only used for a one-time e-mail notification and will be deleted afterwards. In any case your e-mail address will be deleted after 6 months.
Email
I have read the data privacy statement and agree to the use of my e-mail address for a one-time stock information notification.
Send
Price: 17.98 EURO

Detailed information hide

FormatOn Demand CD
Ordering NumberFW-09716-CCD
Barcode093070971622
labelSmithsonian Folkways CCD
Release date4/6/2005
Release date1/1/1972

Manufacturer/EU Representative

Manufacturer
  • Company nameGalileo Music Communication GmbH
  • AdresseGutenbergstr. 9, Puchheim Puchheim, DE
  • e-Mailinfo@galileo-mc.de

Press infoshide

More releases of this artisthide

    You may be interested in these titles toohide

      Description hide

      Poet/novelist Kenneth Patchen (1911-1972) was a figure in New York City’s Greenwich Village literary scene, which Folkways Records’ founder Moses Asch documented. A jazz lover, Patchen often read poetry to jazz accompaniment, and he also collaborated with John Cage and Charles Mingus. In the ’50s and ’60s Folkways released three albums of the author reading his poems, but this one is something different. Released in 1972 as a memorial to Patchen, it features recordings of the author reading excerpts from one of his novels, The Journal of Albion Moonlight. He wrote the book in 1941, capturing in a surrealistic way an observer’s reaction to the horror of World War II as it enveloped Europe in the summer of 1940. Patchen was a staunch pacifist, a distinctly minority position during World War II, but he won the admiration of San Francisco beat poets such as Allen Ginsberg, who cited him as an influence. The liner notes include a message from Patchen’s widow, Miriam, as well as reproductions of various artifacts from the author’s career.

      Tracklist hide