Betjeman's World
Readings by Tamsin Greig and archive recordings of former poet laureate John Betjeman, who died 40 years ago, are set alongside music by Butterworth, Grieg and Flanders and Swan.
...Ringers in an oil-lit belfry - Bitton? Kelston? who shall say? -
Smoothly practicing a plain course, caverned out the dying day
As their melancholy music flooded up and ebbed away...
John Betjeman, former poet laureate and much-loved broadcaster, was born in Islington in 1906 and died in St Enedoc, Cornwall 40 years ago this month. Today's Words and Music hears 成人快手 archive recordings of Betjeman performing some of his best-loved poems - A Subaltern's Love Song and Christmas - and excerpts from broadcasts he gave on two of his passions: Victorian Architecture and the regional railway. Tamsin Greig reads more of his poetry, including his tender tribute to his dead father, On a Portrait of a Deaf Man, alongside assessments of the poet from the likes of Alan Bennett and former chair of the Arts Council Lord Goodman.
The world Betjeman evokes is one in which beauty is prized above all else - not a Romantic ideal of beauty but an everyday kind of beauty: the beauty of a still day at the seaside, the beauty of a peal of bells across a landscape, and yes, the beauty of the women who were frequently his muses. A man of his time, he was simultaneously nostalgic for the past and ahead of the curve in many respects. His acute observation, his wit, and his palpable passions fill his work with a genuineness that brings his subjects to life vividly and directly.
The music we hear ranges from Grace Williams's Welsh seascape to Arnold Bax's dramatic depiction of the Cornish coast, via Anglican hymns, Pink Floyd and Flanders and Swan's comic and moving rendition of The Slow Train. There are musical settings of Betjeman's poetry from Madeleine Dring and Jim Parker, the latter taken from Banana Blush, a niche recording made in the 1970s and featuring Betjeman himself reciting his poetry. And there are bells - lots of bells.
Producer: David Fay, in collaboration with 成人快手 Archives.
Last on
Music Played
Timings (where shown) are from the start of the programme in hours and minutes
-
00:01
Grace Williams
Calm Sea in Summer (Sea Sketches, No 5)
Orchestra: English Chamber Orchestra. Conductor: David Atherton.- Lyrita SRCD323.
- Tr5.
-
John Betjeman
A Bay in Anglesey, read by John Betjeman
John Betjeman
Myfanwy at Oxford, read by Tamsin Greig
00:09Thomas Morley
Now is the Month of Maying
Performer: The King鈥檚 Singers.- EMI CDC7492652.
- Tr1.
00:10Vincent Youmans
Tahiti Trot (Tea for Two)
Music Arranger: Dmitry Shostakovich. Orchestra: Royal Scottish National Orchestra. Conductor: Neeme J盲rvi.- Chandos CHAN8587.
- Tr12.
John Betjeman
A Subaltern聮s Love-song, read by John Betjeman
Lord Goodman, Chair of Arts Council England
Excerpt from a letter written in 1967 to John Hewitt Prime Minister Harold Wilson聮s Secretary for Appointments, read by Tamsin Greig
00:15George Butterworth
Loveliest of Trees (Songs from A Shropshire Lad)
Singer: Christopher Maltman. Performer: Roger Vignoles.- Hyperion CDA67378.
- Tr1.
00:17Jim Parker
A Shropshire Lad
Narrator: Sir John Betjeman. Performer: Banana Blush. Performer: Jim Parker.- Virgin VCCCD19.
- Tr6.
John Betjeman
Excerpt from 成人快手 Television series 聭Four with Betjeman: Victorian Architects and Architecture聮 (Episode 2)
Alan Bennett
Excerpt from 聭Six Poets: Hardy to Larkin聮, read by Tamsin Greig
00:22Johann Abraham Peter Schulz
We Plough the Fields and Scatter
Performer: John Keys (organ).- John Keys AW5086679.
- Tr.
John Betjeman
Harvest Hymn, read by John Betjeman
00:23Johann Abraham Peter Schulz
We Plough the Fields and Scatter
Choir: Norwich Cathedral Choir. Conductor: Simon Johnson.- Priory PRCD5018.
- Tr3.
00:24Johann Abraham Peter Schulz
We Plough the Fields and Scatter
Performer: Neil Taylor. Choir: Norwich Cathedral Choir. Conductor: Simon Johnson.- Virgin.
John Betjeman
On a Portrait of a Deaf Man, read by Tamsin Greig
00:27Edvard Grieg
Aase's Death (Peer Gynt Suite No 1)
Orchestra: Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra. Conductor: Paavo Berglund.- EMI 5 74731 2.
- Tr5.
00:32Traditional English
Bristol Surprise Maximus
Performer: Change Ringing on Handbells Group.- Saydisc SDL 310.
- Tr8.
John Betjeman
Christmas, read by John Betjeman
00:36Morten Lauridsen
O Magnum Mysterium
Choir: ORA. Composer: Suzi Digby.- Harmonia Mundi HMM905305.
- Tr7.
John Betjeman
Extract from a letter to John Murray, Betjeman聮s publisher; read by Tamsin Greig
00:43Madeleine Dring
Song of a Nightclub Proprietess (Betjeman songs, No 5)
Singer: Ad猫le Charvet. Performer: Susan Manoff.- Alpha ALPHA556.
- Tr8.
00:45Pink Floyd
Have a Cigar
Performer: Pink Floyd.- Pink Floyd Records : 5099902984452.
- Tr.
John Betjeman
Executive, read by John Betjeman
00:49Arthur Honegger
Pacific 231
Orchestra: Tonhalle-Orchester Z眉rich. Conductor: David Zinman.- Decca 4553522.
- Tr6.
John Betjeman
Excerpt from 成人快手 Television programme 聭Let聮s Imagine聟 A Branch Line Railway with John Betjeman聮
00:56Gustav Holst
A Somerset Rhapsody
Orchestra: Royal Scottish National Orchestra. Conductor: David Lloyd-Jones.- Naxos 8.553696.
- Tr1.
John Betjeman
Bristol, read by Tamsin Greig
00:00Traditional English
Stedman Triples
Performer: Evercreech Church Ringers, Somerset.- 成人快手 Sound Effect Archive.
- Tr1.
Philip Paynton
John Betjeman聮s Funeral, read by Tamsin Greig
01:06Arnold Bax
Tintagel
Orchestra: London Philharmonic Orchestra. Conductor: Osmo V盲nsk盲.- Rachmaninoff: Symphony No. 3 - Bax: Tintagel.
- London Philharmonic Orchestra.
- 101.
John Betjeman
The Last Laugh, read by Tamsin Greig
01:11Michael Flanders
Slow Train
Composer: Donald Swann. Singer: Michael Flanders. Performer: Donald Swann.- The Complete Flanders and Swann: At The Drop Of Another Hat.
- EMI.
- 12.
Broadcast
- Sun 12 May 2024 18:00成人快手 Radio 3