COMPLETE Short Poetry Collection 160 - rap

Solo or group recordings that are finished and fully available for listeners
Rapunzelina
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Posts: 18000
Joined: November 15th, 2011, 3:47 am

Post by Rapunzelina »

LibriVox Short Poetry Collection 160

This project is complete and all audio files can be found in the catalogue: http://librivox.org/short-poetry-collection-160-by-various/

This is an open collection of poems for the month of September 2016. When this month is over, another one will be started. Don't despair if the sections are all filled up! I will add more sections as needed. :)
  1. How to record a poem - Initial Guidelines:
    • All poems read must be in the public domain (that is, not copyrighted).
    • You do not have to "sign-up" to submit a poem; as long as it's clearly in the public domain, just start recording!
    • There is a limit of 3 poems per person per collection.
    • Poems can be as short as you like, but not longer than 74 minutes (so as to fit in an audio CD)
    • To see what's been recorded already, you can search the LibriVox Catalog - but remember that we welcome multiple versions! :)
  2. Find a public domain poem:
    The Poets' Corner is a great resource for public domain poetry. Other sources to try are Bartleby and Project Gutenberg.
    • You may use other websites if you like, but they need to state date of publication (or book edition) to verify public domain status.
    • Please read from the text you post! You may not read from another source, as the other source may not be public domain!
    • See this page for more info on copyrights. You can always ask me in this thread if you're not sure whether a poem is public domain.
  3. BEFORE recording:
    • If you are new to LibriVox, please check the Recording Notes thread first.
    • If this is your first time recording, you'll find this useful as well: The Newbie Guide to Recording.
    Set your recording software to:
    Bit Rate: 128 kbps
    Sample Rate: 44.1 kHz (44100 Hz)
    Channels: 1 (Mono)
  4. DURING recording:
    • At the beginning of the recording, leave no more than one second of silence and read the abbreviated "LibriVox disclaimer":
    "[Poem title], by [author], read for LibriVox dot org by [your name]" or some variation on that, adding date, location, your personal URL, etc., if you wish.
    • Then read the poem.
    • At the end, say: "End of poem. This recording is in the public domain." and leave five seconds of silence.
    • No recordings can be accepted without the LibriVox disclaimer.
  5. AFTER recording:
    ID3 tags: Not needed for this project. (You may put "Recorded by [your name]" in the comments section if you wish)

    Save file as:
    spc160_[poem's title in short form - no leading articles]_[your initials]_128kb.mp3
    Put file name all in lowercase, and the title all in one word (no leading articles - the, a, an, without the square brackets, please, and NO SPACES):
    e.g. spc160_roadnottaken_apc_128kb.mp3

    When submitting, please post in the thread, following this template:
    [Title of Poem] by [Author] (BIRTH-DEATH)
    Text URL:
    Duration:
    MP3 URL:
  6. Upload your completed recording:
    • Upload your file with the LibriVox Uploader:
    http://librivox.org/login/uploader
    Image
    (If you have trouble reading the image above, please message an admin)
    You'll need to select the MC, which for this project is: Rapunzelina
    When your upload is complete, you will receive a link. Please click "Post Reply" at the top left of this thread, and post the link there.
    Also post the following information:
    • The title and author of the poem.
    • A link to the poem's text online (Poets' Corner, Bartleby, Gutenberg, etc.) so it can be verified as public domain. Please READ FROM the text you post!
    • The length of your recording in minutes & seconds.
    • If this is your first recording for LibriVox, please give us your name as you'd like it to appear in the catalog (that is, either your real name or some pseudonym). Also let us know if you have a personal URL you'd like to list (e.g. a personal blog).
PL Type: Special - Standard PL, plus checking all tech specs including ID tags, file names, volume, background noise, and plosives for new readers. For everyone, follow along with text and check to make sure any deviations from text don't affect rhyme, meter, or meaning.

Magic Window:



BC Admin
Any questions?
Please post below or PM me. :)
Sandals
Posts: 1
Joined: September 2nd, 2016, 8:10 pm

Post by Sandals »

Hi Rapunzelina,

Here's 'With a Flower' by Emily Dickinson. My first recording for Librivox. Any feedback most welcome! Happy to re-do if need be.

https://librivox.org/uploads/rapunzelina/spc160_withaflower_ljs_128kb.mp3

Read from this Gutenberg text:

http://www.gutenberg.org/files/12242/12242-h/12242-h.htm

Recording is 50 seconds long. Read by Laura Southgate.

Thanks a lot!

Laura
Rapunzelina
LibriVox Admin Team
Posts: 18000
Joined: November 15th, 2011, 3:47 am

Post by Rapunzelina »

Hey, Laura! Welcome to Librivox! :clap:

The poem is lovely and beautifully read! Thank you for your contribution!

All the tech specs are fine, just the volume is a bit too soft. There won't be any re-recording needed, we can use the Amplification effect.
Do you use Audacity to record? You can find the Amplify option in the Effect menu in Audacity; you'll need to amplify so that the waveform peaks above the 0.5 mark, maybe by 12dB, in the box where it says "Amplification (dB)".
If you notice that the background noise gets distracting by this amplification, you can use the Noise Reduction effect (in the Effect menu). It's a two-step process. First you select (highlight with your mouse) a few seconds of background noise only - no speech - e.g. from the ending seconds of the recording. Then you click Effect -> Noise Reduction -> Get Noise Profile. Then you select the whole recording (Ctrl+A in Windows), go to Noise Reduction again, check your settings and click OK! You can play with the settings for Noise Reduction and Sensitivity, to see what gives better results for your setup. I have 10 for Noise Reduction and 3 for Sensitivity, and 1 for Frequency Smoothing, for my setup.

So, try this, and reupload the result here with the same filename :thumbs:
Kitty
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Posts: 39497
Joined: March 28th, 2014, 5:57 am

Post by Kitty »

Here's my first one for September :)

"An Invocation" by Anonymous (I hope anonymous authors are also ok. I took the poem from a "Punch magazine" and they only stated the pseudonym "by a town mouse")
Text URL: http://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/12262
Duration: 1:29 min.
MP3 URL: https://librivox.org/uploads/rapunzelina/spc160_invocation_ss_128kb.mp3

Sonia
Rapunzelina
LibriVox Admin Team
Posts: 18000
Joined: November 15th, 2011, 3:47 am

Post by Rapunzelina »

Thank you, Sonia! Yes, anonymous authors are fine! And the recording is also fine and PL OK ;)
Kitty
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Joined: March 28th, 2014, 5:57 am

Post by Kitty »

my second one I find quite intriguing, because it uses vocabulary that one would normally not find often in poetry:
"From super-heat grown hyper-mad" (...) "The Lampyrine Linnæan" (...) "The "bright electric lady" , to name only a few...

"Lightning-Bugs" by Hattie Howard (1860-1920) [I am not sure at all these dates are correct, I practically found nothing on the author in question. The dates I have, are from this site, but even they don't seem too sure about it: https://allpoetry.com/Hattie-Howard . I guessed since she already had a poetry volume out in 1887, she will surely be PD for us now :mrgreen: ]
Text URL: http://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/19109
Duration: 2:02 min.
MP3 URL: https://librivox.org/uploads/rapunzelina/spc160_lightningbugs_ss_128kb.mp3

Sonia
JorWat
Posts: 1692
Joined: February 16th, 2009, 10:20 am
Location: Oxfordshire, England

Post by JorWat »

This is easily one of my favourite short poems. Even though I barely know what it means...

'Villon's Straight Tip to All Cross Coves' by William Ernest Henley (1849-1903)
Text: Musa pedestris. Three centuries of canting songs and slang rhymes (1536-1896), specifically this page
Duration: 01:48
MP3: https://librivox.org/uploads/rapunzelina/spc160_villonsstraighttip_jw_128kb.mp3
Jordan

Alcohol and Maths don't mix. So never drink and derive.
Rapunzelina
LibriVox Admin Team
Posts: 18000
Joined: November 15th, 2011, 3:47 am

Post by Rapunzelina »

Newgatenovelist wrote:Mine for the month:

'During Music' by Arthur Symons (1865-1945)
Text: https://archive.org/details/poemssym01symouoft (main page); https://archive.org/stream/poemssym01symouoft#page/54/mode/2up (p. 55)
Duration: 0.45
MP3: https://librivox.org/uploads/rapunzelina/spc160_duringmusic_el_128kb.mp3

'White Heliotrope' by Arthur Symons (1865-1945)
Text: https://archive.org/details/poemssym01symouoft (main page); https://archive.org/stream/poemssym01symouoft#page/122/mode/2up (p. 23)
Duration: 1.30
MP3: https://librivox.org/uploads/rapunzelina/spc160_whiteheliotrope_el_128kb.mp3

And a two-for-one special:
Diamonds and Sleep by Arthur Symons (1865-1945)
Text: https://archive.org/details/poemssym01symouoft (main page); https://archive.org/stream/poemssym01symouoft#page/162/mode/2up (p. 162) and https://archive.org/stream/poemssym01symouoft#page/166/mode/2up (p. 166)
Duration: 2.01
MP3: https://librivox.org/uploads/rapunzelina/spc160_diamondssleep_el_128kb.mp3

Erin
Thank you, Erin! :9:
Was Diamonds and Sleep ever published as one poem? If not, we should also record them separately.
But otherwise, all poems are marvellously read Image you'll just have to choose which three to keep for this month.


Kitty wrote:my second one I find quite intriguing, because it uses vocabulary that one would normally not find often in poetry:
"From super-heat grown hyper-mad" (...) "The Lampyrine Linnæan" (...) "The "bright electric lady" , to name only a few...

"Lightning-Bugs" by Hattie Howard (1860-1920) [I am not sure at all these dates are correct, I practically found nothing on the author in question. The dates I have, are from this site, but even they don't seem too sure about it: https://allpoetry.com/Hattie-Howard . I guessed since she already had a poetry volume out in 1887, she will surely be PD for us now :mrgreen: ]
Text URL: http://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/19109
Duration: 2:02 min.
MP3 URL: https://librivox.org/uploads/rapunzelina/spc160_lightningbugs_ss_128kb.mp3

Sonia
Thank you, Sonia! :D I'll look for more info on the author, and let you know if I find anything. But for now, this will do! PL OK and added into the MW!


JorWat wrote:This is easily one of my favourite short poems. Even though I barely know what it means...

'Villon's Straight Tip to All Cross Coves' by William Ernest Henley (1849-1903)
Text: Musa pedestris. Three centuries of canting songs and slang rhymes (1536-1896), specifically this page
Duration: 01:48
MP3: https://librivox.org/uploads/rapunzelina/spc160_villonsstraighttip_jw_128kb.mp3
Thank you, Jordan!! A fine reading, marked PL OK in the Magic Window.
JorWat
Posts: 1692
Joined: February 16th, 2009, 10:20 am
Location: Oxfordshire, England

Post by JorWat »

Rapunzelina wrote:
JorWat wrote:This is easily one of my favourite short poems. Even though I barely know what it means...

'Villon's Straight Tip to All Cross Coves' by William Ernest Henley (1849-1903)
Text: Musa pedestris. Three centuries of canting songs and slang rhymes (1536-1896), specifically this page
Duration: 01:48
MP3: https://librivox.org/uploads/rapunzelina/spc160_villonsstraighttip_jw_128kb.mp3
Thank you, Jordan!! A fine reading, marked PL OK in the Magic Window.
Glad you liked it! I first heard it in Ricky Jay & His 52 Assistants (which I should note is a magic show, so I'm not quite sure why it was there...), and just loved the sound of it, even if it's fairly incomprehensible due to it being written almost entirely in thieves' cant. And then completely independently found it discussed in Le Ton beau de Marot.
Jordan

Alcohol and Maths don't mix. So never drink and derive.
Kitty
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Joined: March 28th, 2014, 5:57 am

Post by Kitty »

And here is my last one for this month.

This poem has quite a personal touch, as it's an inscription found on a tombstone, so probably not ever released in any anthology (apart from the one I found it in). Also, the author is unknown, I'd like to think maybe he/she was a member of the deceased family. They probably never would have dreamed that their short poem would ever be released online, for all the world to listen to. :9:

That's the beauty of LibriVox, finding unknown poems (and poets) and pulling them out from their obscurity and into the light. (I'm waxing poetical here, sorry. :mrgreen: )

"Epitaph for Richard Shortridge" by Anonymous
Text URL: http://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/34273
Duration: 0:51 min.
MP3 URL: https://librivox.org/uploads/rapunzelina/spc160_epitaphforrichardshortridge_ss_128kb.mp3

Sonia
Newgatenovelist
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Joined: February 17th, 2015, 7:22 am

Post by Newgatenovelist »

Was Diamonds and Sleep ever published as one poem? If not, we should also record them separately.
Hello Rapunzelina,

Sorry about that! I don't actually know if that was published as a single poem. In that case, I have a stupid question - when can we record poems together? It was in my mind that occasionally people have recorded two poems as one, or that sometimes multiple poems are bundled together as one line in the MW for group or solo projects. I wasn't trying to be sneaky by uploading it as one submission.

I'll know in future, but for now, could you please delete Diamonds and Sleep from the server and I'll go find an interesting poem for the third submission?

Erin
Rapunzelina
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Posts: 18000
Joined: November 15th, 2011, 3:47 am

Post by Rapunzelina »

I would say that in book projects (group or solo), you can bundle poems together in one section when they are in the same order as in the book, consecutively. Otherwise, it is omitting text, which is changing the text, which we say is not allowed, to retain the PD status of the text.
I don't know if other MCs/BCs have allowed non-consecutive bundling but I wouldn't do it, so it may also depend on the MC/BC.
But in this collection, since we have the limit of 3 poems per month, it's preferable to have them recorded separately if they are separate poems. :thumbs:
Rapunzelina
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Post by Rapunzelina »

JorWat wrote:Glad you liked it! I first heard it in Ricky Jay & His 52 Assistants (which I should note is a magic show, so I'm not quite sure why it was there...), and just loved the sound of it, even if it's fairly incomprehensible due to it being written almost entirely in thieves' cant. And then completely independently found it discussed in Le Ton beau de Marot.
Ah! Thank you for this interesting information! Now I like it even more :D


Kitty wrote:"Epitaph for Richard Shortridge" by Anonymous
Text URL: http://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/34273
Duration: 0:51 min.
MP3 URL: https://librivox.org/uploads/rapunzelina/spc160_epitaphforrichardshortridge_ss_128kb.mp3
Yes! It's one of the things I like about Librivox Collections! Discovering authors (and poets) you might not stumble upon otherwise!
Well, except in this case, we won't discover who the poet is, they'll remain anonymous...! :mrgreen:
PL OK and in the MW! Thank you, Sonia!
Newgatenovelist
Posts: 5237
Joined: February 17th, 2015, 7:22 am

Post by Newgatenovelist »

Ah, light dawns. Thank you for clearing that up!
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