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Garth Greenwell on Finding Refuge in the Music of Britten and Pears

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Manage episode 412605040 series 2541202
Content provided by WQXR & WNYC Studios, WQXR, and WNYC Studios. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by WQXR & WNYC Studios, WQXR, and WNYC Studios or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

By now, Garth Greenwell is an award-winning author, poet, literary critic, and teacher of writing whose novels include “What Belongs To You” and “Cleanness.” But his first creative aspiration was as a musician: He attended the Interlochen Academy for the Arts and, later, the Eastman School of Music, focusing on vocal performance.

In this episode, Greenwell recalls his introduction to music and meditates on his identity as a gay man growing up in rural Kentucky. A high school choir teacher gave Greenwell his first vocal lessons and directed him to the music of Benjamin Britten as performed by Britten’s partner, Peter Pears. Despite the grim themes of their song cycle “Winter Words,” Greenwell listened to this music over and over again, finding within it his first example of queer love.

Greenwell writes about books, music, and more at his substack To A Green Thought.

This episode contains a discussion of sexuality-based discrimination and a quote of a homophobic slur. Listener discretion is advised.

This recording of Benjamin Britten’s Winter Words is performed by tenor Peter Pears in the 1972 Decca album “Britten, Peter Pears, Benjamin Britten – Winter Words / Seven Sonnets Of Michelangelo.”

  continue reading

52 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 412605040 series 2541202
Content provided by WQXR & WNYC Studios, WQXR, and WNYC Studios. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by WQXR & WNYC Studios, WQXR, and WNYC Studios or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

By now, Garth Greenwell is an award-winning author, poet, literary critic, and teacher of writing whose novels include “What Belongs To You” and “Cleanness.” But his first creative aspiration was as a musician: He attended the Interlochen Academy for the Arts and, later, the Eastman School of Music, focusing on vocal performance.

In this episode, Greenwell recalls his introduction to music and meditates on his identity as a gay man growing up in rural Kentucky. A high school choir teacher gave Greenwell his first vocal lessons and directed him to the music of Benjamin Britten as performed by Britten’s partner, Peter Pears. Despite the grim themes of their song cycle “Winter Words,” Greenwell listened to this music over and over again, finding within it his first example of queer love.

Greenwell writes about books, music, and more at his substack To A Green Thought.

This episode contains a discussion of sexuality-based discrimination and a quote of a homophobic slur. Listener discretion is advised.

This recording of Benjamin Britten’s Winter Words is performed by tenor Peter Pears in the 1972 Decca album “Britten, Peter Pears, Benjamin Britten – Winter Words / Seven Sonnets Of Michelangelo.”

  continue reading

52 episodes

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