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User sites have been reporting that the Mac maker has embedded a poem in a file likely to be discovered by software pirates attempting to crack the Mac OS in order to run it on non-Apple hardware. Get more done with the new Google Chrome. A more simple, secure, and faster web browser than ever, with Google’s smarts built-in. By Rob Griffiths, Macworld How-To. Export text from all notes in Stickies. Today's Best Tech Deals. Picked by Macworld's Editors. Find More Hand-Picked Tech Deals. NOTE: The latest versions of Adobe Reader do not support viewing PDF files within Firefox on Mac OS and if you are using a modern (Intel) Mac, there is no official plugin for viewing PDF files within the browser window. Rayha’s Poem is a third person narrative platformer about a young girl running away to the mythical Fairyland to escape injustice.
Home > URCA > UNDERGRADUATE-RESEARCH-JOURNAL > Vol. 19 (2015)
Undergraduate Research Journal
Article Title
Authors
Keywords
Poetry, American music & musicians
Abstract
“We are talking now of summer evenings in Knoxville, Tennessee in the time that I lived there so successfully disguised to myself as a child” (Agee 3). These first words of James Agee’s prose poem “Knoxville: Summer of 1915,” introduce the reader to a world of his youth – rural Tennessee in the early part of the century. Agee’s highly descriptive and lyrical language in phrases such as “these sweet pale streamings in the light out their pallors,” (Agee 5) invites the reader to use all his senses and become enveloped in the inherent music of the language. Is it any wonder that upon reading Agee’s words, composer Samuel Barber should be drawn into this narrative that enlivens the senses and touches the heart with its complexity of human emotions told through the recollections of childhood from a time of youth and innocence.
The search for their native voice – their “American” voice – was something that interested both James Agee and Samuel Barber. For Agee, it was finding the sights, sounds, and images of America that had been described in the works of Walt Whitman, Robert Frost, Carl Sandburg, and his contemporaries, Southern writers William Faulkner, Tennessee Williams, and Carson McCullers. For Barber, it was a different process. Samuel Barber had to discover his “American voice” by exploring borrowed traditions – folksongs, and homegrown popular musical styles of Jazz and the Blues. The idea of an “American voice” in music was already present and established in works of composers such as Charles Ives and Aaron Copland. For Barber, his native voice emerged when he chose James Agee’s text to set to music.
Recommended Citation
Kluver, Danielle E. (2015) 'Musical and Cultural Significance in Samuel Barber’s “Knoxville: Summer of 1915”,' Undergraduate Research Journal: Vol. 19 , Article 12.
Available at: https://openspaces.unk.edu/undergraduate-research-journal/vol19/iss1/12
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