Difference between revisions of "George MacBeth"
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+ | [[George MacBeth]] is a Scottish poet who was also the Art and Poetry Producer for the BBC's Third Programme.<ref>[https://voca.arizona.edu/readings-list/152/193 Lois Shelton's introduction to George MacBeth's poetry reading at the University of Arizona on the 7th May 1969]</ref> | ||
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* In 1965 he helped bring [[Bob Cobbing]] to the BBC and spoke the introduction to ''[[An ABC in Sound]]''; | * In 1965 he helped bring [[Bob Cobbing]] to the BBC and spoke the introduction to ''[[An ABC in Sound]]''; | ||
* In 1965/66 he produced ''[[Sono-Montage]]''; | * In 1965/66 he produced ''[[Sono-Montage]]''; | ||
* in 1966 he produced ''[[A Bayeux Tapestry]]''; | * in 1966 he produced ''[[A Bayeux Tapestry]]''; | ||
* Tape [[DD112]], for the 1970 Science Fiction film festival is "G McB speech" spoken by Brian Aldis, but George Macbeth's part in this is unclear. | * Tape [[DD112]], for the 1970 Science Fiction film festival is "G McB speech" spoken by Brian Aldis, but George Macbeth's part in this is unclear. | ||
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+ | =References= | ||
+ | <references/> | ||
[[Category:Person]] | [[Category:Person]] |
Latest revision as of 12:11, 3 July 2020
George MacBeth is a Scottish poet who was also the Art and Poetry Producer for the BBC's Third Programme.[1]
- In 1965 he helped bring Bob Cobbing to the BBC and spoke the introduction to An ABC in Sound;
- In 1965/66 he produced Sono-Montage;
- in 1966 he produced A Bayeux Tapestry;
- Tape DD112, for the 1970 Science Fiction film festival is "G McB speech" spoken by Brian Aldis, but George Macbeth's part in this is unclear.