Episode details

Available for 10 days
...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... Today's Words and Music hears BBC 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 BBC Archives.
Programme WebsiteTracklist
- TrackArtist
- 1.Calm sea in summer (Sea Sketches)Calm sea in summer (Sea Sketches)Grace Williams
- 2.Now is the Month of MayingNow is the Month of MayingThomas Morley
- 3.Tahiti Trot, Op 16Tahiti Trot, Op 16Vincent Youmans