Hay Festival 2016
Ian McMillan presents Radio 3's cabaret of the word in front of an audience at the 2016 Hay Festival. With singer-songwriter Danielle Lewis and novelist Peter Carey.
The Verb recorded in front of an audience at the 2016 Hay Festival. Ian's guests include singer-songwriter Danielle Lewis. Danielle is a folk-pop singer who performs in both Welsh and English, and is part of the ³ÉÈË¿ìÊÖ Radio Cymru/Arts Council Wales 'Horizon' scheme to promote emerging musical talent in Wales.
We also hear from the Australian novelist Peter Carey, twice winner of the Booker Prize, who will be reading from his latest novel 'Amnesia' and Tahmima Anam, who was chosen as one of Granta's 'Best of Young British Novelists'. She has just published 'The Bones of Grace', a novel about a young woman searching for love and identity in America and Bangladesh.
Producer: Cecile Wright.
Last on
Peter Carey
The Australian novelist and twice winner of the Booker Prize discusses his latest novel ‘Amnesia’ (Faber). Set in the recent past and inspired by real events, the 1975 Australian constitutional crisis known as ‘the dismissal’. Peter explains to Ian how fiction can go places that factual accounts of the past can’t access.
Ìý
Jasmine Gardosi
Performance poet Jasmine Gardosi wants to remind young people that it’s ok not to enjoy clubbing! Instead in her poem. ‘Why Does She Write in Nightclubs?’, she imagines what might happen if a nightclub became a space for creativity. Jasmine is part of the ‘³ÉÈË¿ìÊÖ Arts Online Collective’, a group of six young writers and performers brought together to respond in new ways to ³ÉÈË¿ìÊÖ content.
Ìý
Tahmima Anam
Tahmima Anam’s new novel is ‘The Bones of Grace (Cannongate), the final part of a loose trilogy exploring identity, culture and belonging. Tahmima explains how she writes books that are about one person and a whole culture at the same time, and how it is often the tiny details she notices in the world around her that spark off the ideas for her long, intricate novels.
Ìý
Danielle Lewis
Singer songwriter Danielle Lewis sings in both Welsh and English. She performs a beautiful bilingual song ‘Aros’ (I’ll Wait) and her joyful anthem ‘Live, Love, Life’. Danielle is one of the , new welsh musical talent who are being supported by ³ÉÈË¿ìÊÖ Wales and the Arts Council Wales.
Ìý
John Mullan
You might think of Charles Dickens as a conformist, but Professor John Mullan is currently working on a new book illuminating Dickens’ disobedient ways with language. He’s brought some examples just for The Verb, showing how the masterful writer broke all the rules with his use of cliché, hyperbole and repetition.
Ìý
Hereford College of Arts
We asked our Verb audience to create a poem with the help of Hereford College of Arts students Max Low, Amy Vale,ÌýSarah Dean and Andrew Graham. They brought along their Letterpress and helped our audience to print out their chosen words, which were then cut out and placed on our ‘Dadaist Washing Line’. To close the show we asked our Verb guests to pick a word at random to create a special Verb Hay Festival Dadaist Poem!
Ìý
Broadcast
- Fri 3 Jun 2016 22:00³ÉÈË¿ìÊÖ Radio 3
The Verb: Something New – The Poems
³ÉÈË¿ìÊÖ Arts
Explore the ³ÉÈË¿ìÊÖ Arts website and discover the best of British art and culture.
The Dylan Thomas Collection
Listen to programmes, poetry readings and commentary from Radio 3's Dylan Thomas Day.
Podcast
-
The Verb
Radio 3's cabaret of the word, featuring the best poetry, new writing and performance