Posts Tagged ‘R3’

A Cloud in a Paper Bag

August 4th, 2008 by James Bridle

“This drama-documentary by biographer Richard Holmes tells the story of the first decades of ballooning in the early 1800s.” [BBC Programmes]

Hot air balloons! Duchesses! Reeedeeeeculous French accents! What more could you want? They’re building the blogosphere up there, you know. [MP3]

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Ideas: The British version—John Locke

July 4th, 2008 by Steve Bowbrick

The front page of John Locke's 'Letters on Toleration'Terrific one-hour feature from Radio 3’s Sunday Feature slot about the history of religious tolerance, its roots in Holland and in John Locke’s luminous ‘Letters Concerning Toleration‘ (well worth a read, by the way). There’s a large minibus- or a small coach-load of grade-A scholarship on show here: very topical too. And, while we’re talking about Locke, here’s an In Our Time from February about John Locke and the Social Contract. (/programmes, MP3).

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Debussy’s Summer of 1912

June 29th, 2008 by Steve Bowbrick

This is why I pay my licence fee (that and the threat of a prison sentence). How can you argue with this kind of really deep expertise and impeccable production quality? It’s like diving into a big warm bath of knowledge or sitting down to a four course dinner of insight (need some better imagery here…). But you should listen anyway. It’s full of interesting historical facts and quite a lot of Debussy’s music. And it’s fascinating to learn just how radical and scary his music was back before the first world war—now that it’s to be heard mainly on TV commercials and movie soundtracks (MP3).

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Building a Library

March 6th, 2008 by Steve Bowbrick

What do I learn from Radio Three’s Building a Library? I learn that, though I’ve been building (randomly accumulating, really) my own library for twenty-odd years, I know practically nothing about classical music. I learn that the potential for variation in the delivery of a piece of music is essentially limitless and yet quite often undetectable to my ears.

I learn that there are people in the world (well, Piers Burton-Page Andrew McGregor, really) who know too much about classical music. I learn that I don’t own any of the really good classical recordings (that’s what you get for choosing albums from the bargain bin by the door) and I learn that one person’s passion for and understanding of a subject can be really awe-inspiring.

This edition is about Bartok’s Violin Concerto No. 2. Here’s the MP3. Building a Library now has a podcast and, amazingly, it really works - even though the copyright rules limit the length of clips in the MP3 so the podcast version is a fraction of the length of the broadcast version. Another real joy from your national broadcaster.

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The Essay: St Augustine

January 20th, 2008 by Steve Bowbrick

St Augustine never saw a bible in his lifetime. There’s a fact to get your teeth into. This really fascinating Radio 3 four-parter (four experts: one essay each - and one of them’s the Archbishop of Canterbury!) about Augustine is full of such mind-blowing information, especially the fourth part - presented by Dr James J O’Donnell, one of Augustine’s biographers - which I’m featuring here for the podcast (MP3). Part one, part two and part three are here too. Wonderful.

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Paulin on Blake

November 28th, 2007 by Steve Bowbrick

Here’s some proper learning from the grown-ups over at Radio 3. Tom Paulin, a public intellectual on an almost Eighteenth Century model and a William Blake expert, has written a four-part essay about Blake’s language for the Beeb’s aforementioned Blake-a-thon.

I’m going to grab all four of these because Radio 3’s archiving policy is patchy at best. So as not to swamp the podcast with the old fruitcake (sorry), I’ll add parts two, three and four to this entry. So, remember to come back here if you’d like to hear them all (MP3s: part one, part two, part three, part four). From the  British Library’s collection, here’s a really lovely Shockwave facsimile of one of his notebooks and here’s a page about The Tyger.

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