Artist

Dylan Thomas

Genre: Classical ,Vocal Music ,Miscellaneous (Classical)
Origin: U.S.A
Active: 1931 - 1953
Listen on Coda
Welsh poet Dylan Thomas grew up as the son of an English instructor at Swansea Grammar School, the very institution he later attended. After settling in London he built a livelihood through journalism and radio work. Early notice arrived with the poetry collections Eighteen Poems in 1934 and Twenty-Five Poems in 1936, yet genuine renown followed the appearance of Deaths and Entrances in 1946. He also produced prose, notably The Map of Love in 1939 and the short-story volume Portrait of the Artist as a Young Dog in 1940. His verse employed a dramatic register and rhythmic free verse to explore love and death with emotional force, a combination that enlarged his public profile while limiting his standing among the period’s leading poets. Radio experience sharpened his skill as a performer of his own texts, resulting in numerous recordings. The 1951 collection In Country Sleep and Other Poems earned further praise, but alcoholism ended his life at thirty-nine just two years later. Several of his best-known writings, including the radio play Under Milk Wood and the prose collection Adventures in the Skin Trade, reached audiences only after his death. Composers and recording artists have repeatedly set his poems to music or featured readings of his work on their own releases. One especially noteworthy example is Robin Williamson’s 2001 album The Seed-at-Zero.