|
||||||||
|
After a seven-year hiatus, singer and songwriter Natalie Merchant has just released a two-disc album titled "Leave Your Sleep," a collection of 26 traditional poems set to original music. The project began shortly after the birth of her daughter six years ago, when she wanted to find a way to introduce her child to both poetry and music. In preparation, Merchant conducted exhaustive research about the poets. Some are big names, like Robert Louis Stevenson and e.e. cummings. But others, like Charles Carryl, who had been a New York stockbroker, are much less well known. Though childhood is a theme in of all of the poems, Merchant is quick to say this is not a children's album. Merchant composed across a variety of musical genres -- from gypsy music to jazz, even a sailor's horn pipe -- trying to match each poem with the appropriate sound. She collaborated with over 100 artists on the recording. Jeffrey Brown will have a full poetry report on the NewsHour about this project in the coming days. In the meantime, here's a preview of Merchant rehearsing "The Nursery Rhyme of Innocence and Experience" by British poet Charles Causley. It's a poem that Merchant says is about growing up and becoming disillusioned. (Read the original Causley poem after the jump.) by Charles Causley (1917 - 2003) I had a silver penny 'Sailor O sailor 'A fez from Algeria And he smiled and he kissed me 'You may keep your penny O the ship dipped down Then one steel morning Slowly she came All round her wake Slowly she came And a stranger came running 'O are you the boy 'I've a plum-coloured fez 'O where is the sailor 'O where are the other |
Broadcast Reports
Search this Blog
Arts Correspondent
Correspondent Jeffrey Brown covers all things art and
culture in these online
exclusive reports. Best of the Beat
For Teachers
Lesson plans, student voices and a teacher community devoted to bringing arts coverage into the classroom. NewsHour Poetry Series
|
| |||||
|
|||||
| |||||
| Support the kind of journalism done by the NewsHour...Become a member of your local PBS station. | |||||