Episodes
Other Podcasts
You can access all Musicians in Ordinary podcasts through Apple Podcasts, on most other podcatchers, on Spotify or from the individual links below.
A special thank-you
These podcasts are supported by Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada (SSHRC),the Spem in Alium Fund of Toronto Foundation, and York University
Episode 8: Pleasure Might Make Her Read - Poems and Music for the Sidneys
Tracy Ryan reads 'With how sad steps, O Moon, Sonnet 31 from Sir Philip Sidney's Astrophel and Stella, in original pronunciation of the time of Shakespeare and Sidney.
Episode 7: Pleasure Might Make Her Read - Poems and Music for the Sidneys
Tracy Ryan reads part of a lament by Lady Mary Sidney, on the death of her brother Sir Philip Sidney, author of Astrophel and Stella and The Countess of Pembroke’s Arcadia in original pronunciation from the time of Sidney and Shakespeare.
Episode 6: Pleasure Might Make Her Read - Poems and Music for the Sidneys
Tracy Ryan reads a description of the death of Phillip Sidney at Battle of Zutphen from Elizabethan historian John Stow's The Annals of England to 1603 in original pronunciation from the time of Sidney and Shakespeare.
Episode 4: Pleasure Might Make Her Read - Poems and Music for the Sidneys
Tracy Ryan reads a sonnet by Robert Sidney, the Viscount Lisle, found in manuscript, in original pronunciation from the time of Sidney and Shakespeare.
Episode 3: Pleasure Might Make Her Read - Poems and Music for the Sidneys
Tracy Ryan reads a poem from Sir Philip Sidney's romance The Countess of Pembrokes Arcadia in original pronunciation from the time of Sidney and Shakespeare.
Episode 2: Pleasure Might Make Her Read - Poems and Music for the Sidneys
Actor Tracy Ryan reads and excerpt from the First Eclogues Sir Philip Sidney's romance The Countess of Pembrokes Arcadia in original pronunciation from the time of Sidney and Shakespeare.
Episode 1: Pleasure Might Make Her Read - Poems and Music for the Sidneys
Actor Tracy Ryan reads the first poem from Sir Philip Sidney's sonnet cycle Astrophel and Stella in original pronunciation from the time of Sidney and Shakespeare.