b. 1819d. 1892

Walt Whitman


Walt Whitman
The poetry of the “Bard of Democracy,” as America came to call our great poet Walt Whitman, is filled with music--melodic phrases, lyrical imagery, cadences that build and reverberate. Composers around the world have responded to Whitman’s vast canon of poems, giving us settings that number 1,200 (and counting). Photo: Walt Whitman, between 1860 and 1865, courtesy of Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division.

Audio

“A Clear Midnight” (from “A Clear Midnight”)
Donnie Ray Albert (baritone), Greg Hustis (horn) & Simon Sargon (piano)4:07

Simon Sargon

Composer

Walt Whitman

Poet(s)/Writer(s)

Used with the permission of the composer

“A Song of Joys” (from “A Clear Midnight”)
Donnie Ray Albert (baritone), Greg Hustis (horn) & Simon Sargon (piano)2:44

Simon Sargon

Composer

Walt Whitman

Poet(s)/Writer(s)

Used with the permission of the composer

As Adam Early in the Morning
Thomas Hampson (baritone) & Wolfram Rieger (piano)1:44

Ned Rorem

Composer

Walt Whitman

Poet(s)/Writer(s)

2001

Date

Salzburg Festival

Location

*”Darest Thou Now O Soul?” (from “Whitman Portrait”)
TBD5:02

Jeremy Gill

Composer

Walt Whitman

Poet(s)/Writer(s)

Dirge For Two Veterans
Thomas Hampson (baritone) & Wolfram Rieger (piano)6:47

Hermann Reutter

Composer

Walt Whitman

Poet(s)/Writer(s)

2001

Date

Salzburg Festival

Location

“Dirge For Two Veterans” (from “A Clear Midnight”)
Donnie Ray Albert (baritone), Greg Hustis (horn) & Simon Sargon (piano)6:07

Simon Sargon

Composer

Walt Whitman

Poet(s)/Writer(s)

Used with the permission of the composer

Ethiopia Saluting the Colors
Thomas Hampson (baritone) & Wolfram Rieger (piano)6:20

Henry Burleigh

Composer

Walt Whitman

Poet(s)/Writer(s)

2001

Date

Salzburg Festspiele

Location

“Gods” (from “Five Poems of Walt Whitman”)
Thomas Hampson (baritone) & Malcolm Martineau (piano)3:42

Ned Rorem

Composer

Walt Whitman

Poet(s)/Writer(s)

2001

Date

Salzburg Festival

Location

Look Down, Fair Moon
Thomas Hampson (baritone) & Wolfram Rieger (piano)2:59

Charles Naginski

Composer

Walt Whitman

Poet(s)/Writer(s)

2001

Date

Salzburg Festival

Location

Look Down, Fair Moon
Thomas Hampson (baritone) & Craig Rutenberg (piano)2:32

Charles Naginski

Composer

Walt Whitman

Poet(s)/Writer(s)

2009

Date

Minnesota Beethoven Festival; Winona, Minnesota

Location

Recorded for Instant Encore as part of American Public Media's Performance Today series; available for download via Instant Encore with the download code: THSOA2009

“Look Down, Fair Moon” (from “Five Poems of Walt Whitman”)
Thomas Hampson (baritone) & Malcolm Martineau (piano)1:21

Ned Rorem

Composer

Walt Whitman

Poet(s)/Writer(s)

Memories of Lincoln
Thomas Hampson (baritone) & Craig Rutenberg (piano)6:59

William Harold Neidlinger

Composer

Walt Whitman

Poet(s)/Writer(s)

2009

Date

Minnesota Beethoven Festival; Winona, Minnesota

Location

Recorded for Instant Encore as part of American Public Media's Performance Today series; available for download via Instant Encore with the download code: THSOA2009

“Must All Then Amount to But This?”
Ann Marie McPhail, soprano; Gwynne Kuhner Brown, piano3:03

Jonathan Bailey Holland

Composer

Walt Whitman

Poet(s)/Writer(s)

2022

Date

Irvine, California

Location

This recording was part of a 3pm concert ("Soul & Reconciliation") on Friday, October 14, 2022 during the 25th Anniversary African American Art Song Alliance Conference. The concert venue was Winifred Smith Hall at the University of California, Irvine.

“Nocturne” (from “A Clear Midnight”)
Donnie Ray Albert (baritone), Greg Hustis (horn) & Simon Sargon (piano)4:43

Simon Sargon

Composer

Walt Whitman

Poet(s)/Writer(s)

Used with the permission of the composer

“O You Whom I Often” (from “A Clear Midnight”)
Donnie Ray Albert (baritone), Greg Hustis (horn) & Simon Sargon (piano)1:30

Simon Sargon

Composer

Walt Whitman

Poet(s)/Writer(s)

Used with the permission of the composer

One Thought Ever At the Fore
Thomas Hampson (baritone) & Wolfram Rieger (piano)1:48

Ernst Bacon

Composer

Walt Whitman

Poet(s)/Writer(s)

2001

Date

Salzburg Festival

Location

“The Last Invocation” (from “A Clear Midnight”)
Donnie Ray Albert (baritone), Greg Hustis (horn) & Simon Sargon (piano)3:18

Simon Sargon

Composer

Walt Whitman

Poet(s)/Writer(s)

Used with the permission of the composer

“This is thy hour, O Soul” (from “A Clear Midnight”)
Jeffrey Brich (tenor) & University of Northern Iowa Symphony Orchestra, with Rebecca Burkhardt (conductor)2:47

Jonathan Clarke Schwabe

Composer

Walt Whitman

Poet(s)/Writer(s)

2005

Date

Gallagher-Bluedorn Performing Arts Center, UNI

Location

Used with the permission of the composer

“To What You Said” (from “Songfest”)
Thomas Hampson (baritone) & Wolfram Rieger (piano)5:57

Leonard Bernstein

Composer

Walt Whitman

Poet(s)/Writer(s)

2001

Date

Salzburg Festival

Location

About

Just listen to the titles of Walt Whitman’s poems–

I Sing the Body Electric
Song of Myself
A Song of Joys
A Song for Occupations
Song of Prudence
Song of the Answerer
Song of the Broad-Axe
A Song of the Rolling Earth
Song of the Universal

For Whitman, music was a central metaphor in life and work, both as a metaphysical mindset and as a practical reality. He was blessed with an extraordinary ear for inner rhythms which he then articulated in the radically free, rolling, thrusting verses that revitalized the entire world of poetic language. That same ear led the poet to the appreciation of classical music. This was a largely self-taught quest in which Whitman relied on both his innate musicality and his experience as a music journalist to formulate aesthetic principles that would carry over into his poetry.

Whitman and Classical Music

In the Broadway Journal of November 29, 1845, Whitman wrote his now-famous essay Art-Singing and Heart-Singing, in which he denounced as decadent the stale, second-hand foreign method with its flourishes, its ridiculous sentimentality, its anti-republican spirit and its sycophantic influence, tainting the young taste of the Republic. The poet claimed he preferred untutored voices and folk groups like the Hutchinsons and the Cheney sisters to trained songbirds like Jenny Lind, whom he found too showy. His initial objections stemmed from the same wary reserve he applied to all imported forms of culture; he insisted that America needed to create its own new frontier voice, vigorous and free.

“I say no land or people or circumstances ever existed so needing a race of singers and poems differing from all others,” Whitman wrote in “A Backward Glance O’er Travel’d Roads.” Yet despite his Emersonian insistence on “ignoring the courtly Muses of Europe,” it was only by exposure to European opera and art song that Whitman began to discover the essentiality and universality of classical music’s language. That exposure came during the 1840’s and 1850’s when the poet served as a member of New York City’s working press, reviewing musical performances at Castle Garden, Palmo’s Opera House, the Astor Place Theatre, and the Academy of Music. After enjoying a year of press seats for the Brooklyn Eagle, Whitman admitted that foreign music was exercising an elevating influence on American taste. From the late 1840’s onward his critical posture gradually shifted from a stance of tolerance to one of sophisticated pleasure and finally to one of total passion for classical music, especially for opera.

Whitman’s conversion to Italian opera probably occurred in 1847 when he saw Don Francisco Marti’s Italian company from Havana at Castle Garden. Years later, in Specimen Days, the poet wrote: “I yet recall the splendid seasons . . . the fine band…the cool sea-breezes…the unsurpass’d vocalism… . No better playing or singing ever in New York.” Among Whitman’s favorite artists were soprano Giulia Grisi, the tenor known simply as Mario, and baritone Cesare Baldiali, whom he called the finest in the world. He was also profoundly influenced by George Sand’s novel Consuelo, with its emancipated contralto heroine, and he imagined that the popular contralto Marietta Alboni was a real-life incarnation of Sand’s heroine. He called Alboni the supreme singer of all time, recalling toward the end of his life the impact she made on his youthful soul: “I doubt if ever the senses and emotions of the future will be thrilled as were the auditors of a generation ago by the deep passion of Alboni’s contralto.”

Indeed, it was passion that became not only the key to Whitman’s appreciation of and response to singing, but also the hallmark of his emerging style as a journalist and ultimately as a poet. His vocabulary had an unabashed enthusiasm that is woefully lacking in today’s criticism. For example, in describing tenor Geremia Bettini in La Favorita at Castle Garden on August 11, 1851, he rhapsodized: “His voice has often affected me to tears. Its clear, firm, wonderfully exalting notes, filling and expanding away; dwelling like a poised lark up in heaven; have made my very soul tremble…”

Though Whitman never learned (nor perhaps never cared to learn) a formal musical vocabulary, he replaced formula with freshness, as his language in describing music became increasingly metaphysical: “Have not you…felt an overwhelming desire for measureless sound–a sublime orchestra of a myriad orchestras–a colossal volume of harmony, in which the thunder might roll in its proper place; and above it the vast, pure Tenor,–identity of the Creative Power itself–rising through the universe, until the boundless and unspeakable capacities of that mystery, the human soul, should be filled to the uttermost, and the problem of human cravingness be satisfied and destroyed? Of this sort are the promptings of good music upon me.”

“But for opera I would never have written Leaves of Grass,” Whitman acknowledged in his waning years. Indeed, the poet’s experience as a music journalist was a significant prelude to discovering and shaping the themes and style that were to become his mature voice when the first edition of his life’s work appeared in 1855.

Song and Singing in Whitman’s Poetry

Whitman’s verse is crowded with allusions to song and the singer. The singer is poet, prophet, bard, mystic celebrator of the self–of the poet in everyman, in the worker, in the individual, in America en masse. Whitman’s references to music are all-pervading and eclectic; in his various poetic songs he chants hymns to a range of people and experiences, from the plantation chorus of Negroes to the strong baritone of the big longshoremen of Mannahatta. While Whitman, ironically, disliked the piano–he called it a parlor instrument–he loved the wide range of orchestral instruments and used them as images to people his poems: drums became the march of nations; bugles were calls to valor or funeral taps; trumpets suggested celebrations of joy and fanfares for ethereal bliss; the cello recalled a young man’s heart complaint. He drew from nature too: birdsong signified freedom of flight. Whitman’s poems are, in fact, orchestrated with as full a range of color as any musical score–with voices which rise and fall in dialogue. Of these always emerges clearest and truest that of the poet. For Whitman, the human voice was the most poignant and powerful of all instruments. To sing was to articulate both the soul and the Self.

Settings of Whitman

Given the musicality of the poetry itself, it is small wonder that over 1,200 settings of Whitman’s texts exist. (In preparation for performances and a recording, Thomas Hampson unearthed over 400 settings for voice and piano alone.) As Ned Rorem asserts, “Whitman is content… A poet’s content in a musician’s form.” The earliest settings appeared in the last decade of the poet’s life, though the first major surge of compositional activity coincided with the 1919 centennial of Whitman’s birth. The range of styles, nationalities, and languages represented by these settings is as far-reaching as was Whitman’s influence on world literature. While there are songs to be found in German, Italian, French, Dutch, Norwegian, Danish, and Russian, the greatest number is in English.

In England, where Whitman already had a strong coterie of literary supporters (among them William Rossetti, Anne Gilchrist, Alfred Lord Tennyson, and John Addington Symonds), composer Charles Villiers Stanford, who influenced several generations of famous pupils, made Whitman the poet of choice for the likes of Vaughan Williams, Boughton, Bridge, Dougherty, Holst, and Wood.

Among American composers of art songs, many were born while Whitman was still alive; most were nursed on his verse as one of the shaping forces of American thought; and all who moved in the small communal circles of American music inspired each other in choice of texts and style of setting. To cite but two examples of the interconnected chain of inspiration: William Neidlinger worked in choral societies where David Bispham sang, while Whitman was a familiar presence in Bispham’s Philadelphia boyhood; Charles Naginski, Charles Ives, and Leonard Bernstein all studied and worked at Tanglewood, while later composers like Gerald Busby and Michael Tilson Thomas, and Craig Urquhart were moved by Bernstein to create their own Whitman settings.

The early Whitman settings tended to fall into the big, Romantic genre of the late 19th century: songs whose musical idiom derived from European art song–Schumann, Brahms. They are songs which rely heavily on the piano (or on the piano as organ, for many of the composers had church affiliations) as a parlor instrument. This vein continued into the 20th century with songs such as Stanford’s “To the Soul,” Vaughan Williams’s “Joy, Shipmate, Joy!” and “A Clear Midnight,” Bridge’s “The Last Invocation,” Neidlinger’s “Memories of Lincoln,” Dalmas’s “As I Watch’d the Ploughman Ploughing,” and Elinor Remick Warren’s “We Two.”

Other composers, like Ives, Burleigh, Strassburg (and again Vaughan Williams), were attracted to the folk idiom of Whitman’s verse–the vox populi with all its individuality and universality. Burleigh’s ability to capture the voices of the downcast African American in “Ethiopia Saluting the Colors,” Ives’s skill in replicating the poet’s plain-spokenness in “Walt Whitman,” and Strassburg’s cantorial rhythms and melodies in “Prayer of Columbus” are but three examples of this genre.

Just as his literary descendants were drawn to the groundbreaking aspects of Whitman’s language and his thematic innovations, mid-20th century composers enjoyed experimenting with musical forms in their settings of the poet. Naginski and Rorem each affect a haunting impressionism in their respective renderings of “Look Down, Fair Moon;” in “Dirge for Two Veterans” Weill recaps his political/humanitarian message in a New World idiom; and Bacon (“One Thought Ever at the Fore”) and Hindemith (“Sing on, There in the Swamp”), also transplanted Europeans, look to Whitman’s verse to infuse their musical language with the energetic essence of their adoptive country.

Composers continue to return to the great Bard, finding relevant chords in both his thought and his form. Rorem (“As Adam Early in the Morning,” “That Shadow, My Likeness,” “Sometimes With One I Love”) Urquhart (“Among the Multitude”), Busby (“Behold This Swarthy Face”), Tilson Thomas (“We Two Boys Together Clinging”) and Bernstein have all immersed themselves in the poet’s liberated thought and in his passionate intellectual and emotional message. One of the most moving examples of this is found in “To What You Said,” Bernstein’s setting of an unpublished Whitman fragment–what may have been a private musing or unsent letter to his friend Anne Gilchrist. With its combination of delicacy and militantism the song is at once an assertion of freedom and responsibility–a statement that the love of comrades is the highest human good and that such love may express itself in an infinite number of couplings–man to man, wife to husband, friend to friend, individual to society, and poet to democracy.

This bold new salute was not lost on Mrs. Gilchrist, who even after her return to England remained Whitman’s close friend and champion. Upon hearing for the first time a musical setting of the words of the poet she loved (Stanford’s 1884 Elegiac Ode), she wrote to Whitman: “Your words will be sent home to hundreds of thousands who had not before seen them. How lovely the words read as themes for great music!”

–Thomas Hampson and Carla Maria Verdino-Süllwold, PBS I Hear America Singing

Photo: Academy of American Poets

Related Information

Songs

(Hark Close and Still What I Now Whisper)2014 · Whitman PortraitJeremy GillWalt WhitmanA Clear Midnight2005Jonathan Clarke SchwabeWalt WhitmanA Clear Midnight1995Simon SargonWalt WhitmanA Clear Midnight1942 · Six SongsErnst BaconWalt WhitmanA Clear Midnight2009Tom CipulloWalt WhitmanA Clear Midnight1901Philip DalmasWalt WhitmanA Clear Midnight1988 · I Was There: Five Poems of Walt WhitmanLee HoibyWalt WhitmanA Clear Midnight1995 · A Clear MidnightSimon SargonWalt WhitmanA Glimpse1997 · Evidence of Things Not SeenNed RoremWalt WhitmanA Night Battle1971 · War ScenesNed RoremWalt WhitmanA Sight in Camp in the Daybreak Gray and Dim1990 · Drum-Taps: A Song Cycle of Whitman PoemsRichard Pearson ThomasWalt WhitmanA Song of Joys1995 · A Clear MidnightSimon SargonWalt WhitmanA Specimen Case1971 · War ScenesNed RoremWalt WhitmanA Walt Whitman Triptych1995William BolcomWalt WhitmanAn Incident1971 · War ScenesNed RoremWalt WhitmanAre you the new person?1989Ned RoremWalt WhitmanAre you the new person drawn toward me?1996 · FidelityDavid LeisnerWalt WhitmanAs Adam1927 · Whitman SongsMarc BlitzsteinWalt WhitmanAs Adam Early in the Morning1957Ned RoremWalt WhitmanAs I Watch’d the Ploughman Ploughing1901Philip DalmasWalt WhitmanAs If a Phantom Caress’d Me1925 · Whitman SongsMarc BlitzsteinWalt WhitmanAfter the Dazzle of Day1925 · Whitman SongsMarc BlitzsteinWalt WhitmanAges and Ages1928 · Whitman SongsMarc BlitzsteinWalt WhitmanApparition1979George CrumbWalt WhitmanBeat! Beat! Drums!1928Ernst BaconWalt WhitmanBeat! Beat! Drums!1990 · Drum-Taps: A Song Cycle of Whitman PoemsRichard Pearson ThomasWalt WhitmanBeat! Beat! Drums!1942 · Four Walt Whitman SongsKurt WeillWalt WhitmanBeginning My Studies1988 · I Was There: Five Poems of Walt WhitmanLee HoibyWalt WhitmanBehold This Swarthy Face1990Gerald BusbyWalt WhitmanCome Lovely and Soothing Death2000 · Intimations of MortalitySimon SargonWalt WhitmanCome Up From the Fields, Father1995 · A Walt Whitman TriptychWilliam BolcomWalt WhitmanCome up from the fields, father2009Richard DanielpourWalt WhitmanCome Up From the Fields, Father1947 · Four Walt Whitman SongsKurt WeillWalt WhitmanDarest Thou Now O Soul?2014 · Whitman PortraitJeremy GillWalt WhitmanDark Mother, Always Gliding Near1919 · In MemoriamJames H. RogersWalt WhitmanDirge For Two Veterans1995 · A Clear MidnightSimon SargonWalt WhitmanDirge For Two Veterans1880Frédéric Louis RitterWalt WhitmanDirge For Two Veterans1990 · Drum-Taps: A Song Cycle of Whitman PoemsRichard Pearson ThomasWalt WhitmanDirge For Two Veterans1942 · Four Walt Whitman SongsKurt WeillWalt WhitmanDrum-Taps: A Song Cycle of Whitman Poems1990Richard Pearson ThomasWalt WhitmanFive Poems of Walt Whitman1970Ned RoremWalt WhitmanElegy (op. 33, no. 1)1918Louis Campbell-TiptonWalt WhitmanEthiopia Saluting the Colors1915Henry T. BurleighWalt WhitmanFidelity1996David LeisnerWendell Berry, William Meredith, Kenneth Patchen, Leslie Marmon Silko, May Swenson, Walt WhitmanFine, Clear, Dazzling Morning2014 · Whitman PortraitJeremy GillWalt WhitmanFour Walt Whitman Songs1942Kurt WeillWalt WhitmanFrom Calamus1997Christopher BergWalt WhitmanGliding O’er All1970 · Five Poems of Walt WhitmanNed RoremWalt WhitmanGrand is the Seen1930 · Songs at PartingErnst BaconWalt WhitmanGods1926 · Whitman SongsMarc BlitzsteinWalt WhitmanGods1970 · Five Poems of Walt WhitmanNed RoremWalt WhitmanI Am He1928 · Whitman SongsMarc BlitzsteinWalt WhitmanI Am He1997 · Evidence of Things Not SeenNed RoremWalt WhitmanI Dream’d in a Dream2005 · A Clear MidnightJonathan Clarke SchwabeWalt WhitmanI Hear America Singing2008Tom CipulloWalt WhitmanI Saw in Louisiana a Live-Oak Growing1982 · Three Calamus PoemsNed RoremWalt WhitmanI Was There: Five Poems of Walt Whitman1988Lee HoibyWalt WhitmanI Was There1988 · I Was There: Five Poems of Walt WhitmanLee HoibyWalt WhitmanIn Memoriam1919James H. RogersInauguration Ball1971 · War ScenesNed RoremWalt WhitmanJoy, Shipmate, Joy!1930 · Songs at PartingErnst BaconWalt WhitmanJoy, Shipmate, Joy!1925 · Whitman SongsMarc BlitzsteinWalt WhitmanJoy, Shipmate, Joy!1988 · I Was There: Five Poems of Walt WhitmanLee HoibyWalt WhitmanJoy, Shipmate, Joy!1919 · In MemoriamJames H. RogersWalt WhitmanLilacs1996George WalkerWalt WhitmanLingering Last DropsErnst BaconWalt WhitmanLong, Too Long America2007Caryn BlockEmily Dickinson, Walt WhitmanLong, Too Long America2007 · Long, Too Long AmericaCaryn BlockWalt WhitmanLook Down, Fair Moon1983 · Echo’s SongsDaron Aric HagenWalt WhitmanLook Down, Fair Moon1940Charles NaginskiWalt WhitmanLook Down, Fair Moon1957 · Five Poems of Walt WhitmanNed RoremWalt WhitmanMemories of Lincoln1920William Harold NeidlingerWalt WhitmanMossbonkers2014 · Whitman PortraitJeremy GillWalt WhitmanO Captain! My Captain!1988 · I Was There: Five Poems of Walt WhitmanLee HoibyWalt WhitmanO You Whom I Often and Silently Come1961Ned RoremWalt WhitmanOh Captain! My Captain1942 · Four Walt Whitman SongsKurt WeillWalt WhitmanO Tan-Faced Prairie Boy1990 · Drum-Taps: A Song Cycle of Whitman PoemsRichard Pearson ThomasWalt WhitmanO Hymen, O Hymenee!1927 · Whitman SongsMarc BlitzsteinWalt WhitmanO, Living Always, Always Dying1982Steve HeitzegWalt WhitmanO You Whom I Often1995 · A Clear MidnightSimon SargonWalt WhitmanOf Him I Love Day and Night1982 · Three Calamus PoemsNed RoremWalt WhitmanOn the Beach at Night, op. 782001Lowell LiebermannWalt WhitmanOut of the Cradle Endlessly Rocking, op. 411993Lowell LiebermannWalt WhitmanPrayer of Columbus1993Robert StrassburgWalt WhitmanQuiet Airs1952Ernst BaconSara Teasdale, Emily Brontë, Walt Whitman, Robert Herrick, Emily Dickinson, A. E. Housman, William BlakeRhapsodie (op. 32, no. 1)1913Louis Campbell-TiptonWalt WhitmanReconciliation1970 · Five Poems of Walt WhitmanNed RoremWalt WhitmanSail Forth1919 · In MemoriamJames H. RogersWalt WhitmanScented Herbage of My Breast1995 · A Walt Whitman TriptychWilliam BolcomWalt WhitmanSix Songs1942Ernst BaconCarl Sandburg, Walt Whitman, Emily DickinsonSometimes With One I Love1970 · Five Poems of Walt WhitmanNed RoremWalt WhitmanSongfestLeonard BernsteinLawrence Ferlinghetti, Julia de Burgos, Walt Whitman, Conrad Aiken, Gregory Nunzio Corso, Edna St. Vincent MillaySongs at Parting1930Ernst BaconWalt WhitmanThat Shadow, My Likeness1983Ned RoremWalt WhitmanThe Commonplace1946Ernst BaconWalt WhitmanThe Divine Ship1952 · Quiet AirsErnst BaconWalt WhitmanThe Last Invocation1995 · A Clear MidnightSimon SargonWalt WhitmanThe Last Invocation1930 · Songs at PartingErnst BaconWalt WhitmanThe Last Invocation1919 · In MemoriamJames H. RogersWalt WhitmanThe Open Road1997 · Evidence of Things Not SeenNed RoremWalt WhitmanThe Real War Will Never Get in the Books1971 · War ScenesNed RoremWalt WhitmanThe Sobbing of the Bells1930 · Songs at PartingErnst BaconWalt WhitmanThe Sobbing of the Bells2007 · Long, Too Long AmericaCaryn BlockWalt WhitmanThis is thy hour O Soul2005 · A Clear MidnightJonathan Clarke SchwabeWalt WhitmanThree Calamus Poems1982Ned RoremWalt WhitmanThus By Blue Ontario’s Shore2014 · Whitman PortraitJeremy GillWalt WhitmanTo a Common Prostitute1982 · Three Calamus PoemsNed RoremWalt WhitmanTo a Stranger, #52 from Leaves of Grass2018 · These StrangersJake HeggieWalt WhitmanTo Those Who’ve Fail’d2005 · A Clear MidnightJonathan Clarke SchwabeWalt WhitmanTo What You Said1977 · SongfestLeonard BernsteinWalt WhitmanTo You1965Ned RoremWalt WhitmanTwilight1930 · Songs at PartingErnst BaconWalt WhitmanVigil1990 · Drum-Taps: A Song Cycle of Whitman PoemsRichard Pearson ThomasWalt WhitmanVocalism2006John HarbisonWalt WhitmanWalt Whitman1921Charles IvesWalt WhitmanWar Scenes1971Ned RoremWalt WhitmanWay of the River2011Robert G. PattersonAnonymous, James Joyce, Rudyard Kipling, Sara Teasdale, Walt WhitmanWarble for Lilac-Time1943Elliott CarterWalt WhitmanWe Two1946Elinor Remick WarrenWalt WhitmanWhat Weeping Face1925Marc BlitzsteinWalt WhitmanWhitman Portrait2014Jeremy GillWalt WhitmanYears of the Modern1995 · A Walt Whitman TriptychWilliam BolcomWalt WhitmanYou Laggards There on Guard!2014 · Whitman PortraitJeremy GillWalt WhitmanYouth, Day, Old Age & Night2005 · A Clear MidnightJonathan Clarke SchwabeWalt Whitman

Video

Records

1997

To The Soul – Poetry Of Walt Whitman

Ernst Bacon, Leonard Bernstein, Henry T. Burleigh, Gerald Busby, Philip Dalmas, Charles Ives, Charles Naginski, Ned Rorem, Robert Strassburg, Michael Tilson Thomas, Kurt Weill, Elinor Remick Warren, Walt Whitman

Books

American Poetry: The Nineteenth Century, Vol. 1: Philip Freneau to Walt Whitman

Sarah Wentworth Morton, John Greenleaf Whittier, Walt Whitman

Sheet Music