[78-L] Radio Poets
Thomas Stern
sternth at attglobal.net
Wed Jun 13 18:04:57 PDT 2012
http://victor.library.ucsb.edu/index.php/talent/detail/61020/Guest_Edgar_A._author
-----Original Message-----
From: 78-l-bounces at klickitat.78online.com
[mailto:78-l-bounces at klickitat.78online.com]On Behalf Of Donna Halper
Sent: Wednesday, June 13, 2012 8:14 PM
To: 78-L Mail List
Subject: [78-L] Radio Poets
I was reading a newspaper article about the popular poet Edgar A. Guest,
who was one of the earliest poets to embrace radio and do readings on
several stations. The article that said in January 1922, the Victor
Talking Machine Company released "the first of a series of Guest Victor
Records," which contained the poet reading three of his most well-known
poems. Does this mean he had his own subsidiary label, or was this a
public-relations strategy to capitalize on how famous and beloved Guest
was at that time by claiming Victor named a series of records after
him? If anyone has heard this record (were there others?), is it just
his voice, or do they put music in the background? I wonder if there
were other "radio poets" who made recordings. I know Amy Lowell did
several radio readings in the early to mid-1920s (before her untimely
death) but I have never heard that she recorded anything.
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