Opens main menu Main menu

Bernard Shaw, Bernard Shaw 1856 - 1950

Dettagli del rilascio

TitoloBernard Shaw 1856 - 1950
Artista(i):Bernard Shaw
Categoria:BBC - RE* (Fare clic su questo pulsante per visualizzare altre versioni di BBC - RE* Album.)
Etichetta e numero di catalogo:Picture of images/labels/BBC Radio Enterprises.jpg labelBBC Radio Enterprises - REB 32
Formato:Vinyl Album
Paese:UK UK flag
Rilasciato:1968
Genere:Documentaries Visualizza tutte le altre tracce elencate come Documentaries.
Codici di fuga:RE 32 SIDE 1 BBC 1
RE 32 SIDE 2 BBC
Elemento eliminato?
Distribuito/stampato daGarrod & Lofthouse International Limited, London
Visualizzazioni di pagina:1059 volte dal 20 maggio 2017, la classifica globale è 6000, classificarsi albums is 2940.
La mia valutazione:*****
Valutazione degli ospiti:*****

Informazioni sulle mie copie

Questa sezione mostra le informazioni che ho registrato per questa versione.
DettaglioValore
Condizioni della copertinaBene
Condizione di registrazioneMolto buono Inoltre
Codice dell'etichetta della BBC RecordsA
Il numero ha1
Che tipo di venditore è stato utilizzatoPhysical shop
Dove posso acquistare questa versione?Potresti essere in grado di acquistare questa versione dai seguenti siti Web (altri sono disponibili!)
 Amazon
 Discogs
 Ebay
 EIL
 MusicStack
 Recordsale

Brani

Di seguito è riportato un elenco delle tracce per questa versione
Lato e binarioTraccia e artistaLunghezza
A1Whither Britain (6.2.34) - 'Money is nothing but a title deed to goods.'
A2Whither Britain (6.2.34) - The future of the British Isles and the British Empire
A3Modern education (11.6.37) - A talk to school leavers - 'You will escape from school only to discover the world is a bigger school and that you are back in the First Form'
B1As I see it (2.11.37) - War, class-conflicts, misdirection of wealth, labour and leisure.
B2Televised talk on his 90th birthday (26.7.46) - 'The way to have a happy life is to be too busy doing what you like'
Lunghezza totale del supporto 0:00.

Tutte le foto rilasciate

Di seguito sono riportate tutte le immagini della copertina (anteriore, posteriore, centrale e inserti se applicabili) e delle etichette che ho per questa pubblicazione.
Copertura frontale
Front cover of REB 32
Copertina posteriore
Back cover of REB 32
Etichetta
Label Label

Recensioni

Di seguito è riportata la mia recensione per questa versione e le valutazioni.
Una buona voce, includerò una recensione completa al più presto!
Giudizi
La mia valutazione3
Valutazione degli ospitiIl valore medio attuale è 3.

Per votare seleziona uno di questi pulsanti:

Note extra su copertina, parte centrale (copertina apribile) ed eventuali inserti

BERNARD SHAW 1856 - 1950
Some of his broadcasts
The recordings of Bernard Shaw are from the Archives of the BBC. The 90th Birthday talk was televised from Shaw's Hertfordshire home at Ayot St Lawrence under difficulties. During the talk, aircraft passed overhead but Shaw carried on.
Public performances reserved by the Society of Authors as agent for the George Bernard Shaw Estate.


Produced by

Jack Aistrop.
Edited by Stephen Williams.

G.B. Shaw was born in Dublin, a son of a genteel, shiftless father and an operatic singer who in 1872 abandoned her husband and three children to seek fame in London. From his father the boy learned to laugh as life and himself; from his mother to love music passionately and independence more. After a spell as rent-collector and cashier to a land-agent, Shaw followed his mother to London in 1876 and lived on her while writing five novels which nobody would publish. He became a vegetarian, a freethinker and a Socialist and in 1884 joined the Fabian Society. Soon he gained a great reputation as street-corner orator and public debater. As music-critic for The Star (1888) and drama-critic for The Saturday Review (1898) he developed his lifelong method: 'to take the utmost trouble to find the right thing to say, and then to say it with the utmost levity.' After much philandering as a young man he married an heiress in 1898, very happily. His friendships with Ellen Terry and Mrs. Pat Campbell produced some notable correspondence.

The theatre and Ibsenite comedy gave Shaw an ideal vehicle for his blend of witty paradox and dialectical social comment. In Widowers' Houses (1892) he attacked slum landlords; in Mrs. Warren;s Profession (1894), long banned by the censor, he blamed the smug 'rentier' middle-class for the prevalence of prostitution. Always he was the enemy of moral hypocrisy and false ideals, showing up his romance of war in Arms and the Man, Shakespeare's heroic eroticism in Caesar and Cleopatra (1898), the cant of medical science in The Doctor's Dilemma (1906), Man and Superman (1903) introduced an evolutionary philosophy of an impersonal Life Force which uses men and women and love simply as a means of 'helping Life in its struggle upward.'

The collapse of Utopian hopes with the first World War (which Shaw strenuously opposed) was foreseen in his Checkhovian Heartbreak House (begun in 1913). The fatuities of politicians and clerics made him speculate in Back to Methusaleh (1921) that through a Lamarckian will to live longer individual men might grow wiser and society better. But Saint Joan (1924), regarding her as the first Protestant and the first Nationalist, ended with the cry, 'O God that madest this beautiful earth, when will it be ready to receive thy saints? how long, O Lord, how long?' The later plays, stressing the need for political leadership and reason in a world slipping towards disaster, were less effective.

Shaw gained (and provoked) his audiences by playing wittily round typical characters in topical situations, by mocking Victorian ideals and English sentimentality. He was idolized by young intellectuals between 1905 and 1925. Like his masters Swift and Samuel Butler he demonstrated the illogicality (and inhumanity) of prevailing assumptions about money, marriage, education, and religion. Actually he put more care into his long Prefaces (explaining what the plays were about) than into the plays themselves. IN so doing he wrote the most lucid polemical prose of our century. Gradually the Irish Jester became the Grand Old Man of English letters.

The talks here presented, recorded in old age, touch pleasantly on many of his lifelong interests and prejudices, e.g. his assumption that examiners over 50 are bound to be out-of-date; his dislike of doctors; his opposition to indiscriminating charity (Cf. Major Barbara); and how prophetic he could be! He saw a second World War as likely to end the British Empire and endanger civilization. Seeing the 'class war' as a reality he admired the Russian experiment but as a good Fabian abominated 'bloody revolution' yet feared civil wars unless there were a more equitable distribution of 'wealth, labour and leisure.' Already in 1934 he was preaching against colour-prejudice and looking forward to a desire for Home Rule for Wales and Scotland.

For Shaw man was an infinitesimal product of the cosmic evolutionary process, easily expandable through wars or inability to adapt; yet all-important to himself. Hence the absolute need for a rational human society. We must learn to tolerate everything except intolerance, without expecting too much of human nature.

As Shaw says here: 'I never got out of the habit of thinking of myself as a boy': he remained an 'enfant terrible', loving to surprise his listeners with some piece of unexpected frankness. Essentially he was a talker; as he admits 'I'm a born actor myself. I like an audience.' By quickening other minds, he quickened his own brilliance. Even in the ramblings of the man of ninety his through this record, will never afterwards be able to read the Prefaces of The Intelligent Woman's Guide without hearing that lovely soft Irish voice with its lifting modulations which age could not wither nor custom stale.


Geoffrey Bullouch, who wrote this brief introduction, was Professor of English in University of London King's College from 1947 to 1968. Previously, while teaching at Sheffield, he was for many years on the Board of the Sheffield Playhouse. He has lectured on poetry and drame in four continents. He is a fellow of the British Academy. His books include: The Trend of Modern Poetry, Poems and Dramas of Fulke Greville, The Oxford Book of Seventeenth Century Verse (with Sir. H. J. C. Grierson), Mirror of Minds and a large collection of Shakespeare Sources and Analogues.

Ulteriori informazioni

BBC Radio Enterprises Ltd e BBC Enterprises Ltd, predecessori di BBC Worldwide / BBC Worldwide Ltd., il braccio commerciale della BBC. Costituite rispettivamente nel 1968 e nel 1979, erano una filiale interamente posseduta dalla BBC e si fusero con BBC Worldwide nel 1995. A quel tempo, c'erano società create all'interno o marchi strutturati come parte dell'azienda per gestire parti separate del business, per esempio. BBC Records per l'audio registrato. A volte scritto come BBC Enterprise Ltd.

Gli elementi mostrati qui provengono dalla libreria "principale" di dischi e nastri della BBC che copre un'ampia selezione di generi da temi, commedie drammatiche e altri, a seconda del formato selezionato.

Statistiche

Ecco alcune statistiche su questa pagina.
Visualizzazioni di pagina: 1059 volte dal 20 maggio 2017, la classifica globale è 6000, classificarsi albums 2940.
Questa pagina è stata aggiornata l'ultima volta il unknown

Altre uscite che potrebbero interessarti

Di seguito sono riportate alcune altre versioni correlate a 'REB 32 Bernard Shaw 1856 - 1950' in base al suo genere.
Image of RESL 201
RESL 201
I want tomorrow (The Celts)
Enya
Image of RE 10
RE 10
Sir Malcolm Sargent - Music maker
Sir Malcolm Sargent
Image of RESL 169
RESL 169
Voyage of the heroes (Closing theme)
Howard Davidson

Copyright

© 2002-2025 Mike Everitt.

Questa pagina è stata aggiornata l'ultima volta il: unknown