Ian Rosenblatt and the Inheritance Tracks of Jennifer Saunders
Richard Coles and Suzy Klein with lawyer and founder of the Rosenblatt Opera Recitals, Ian Rosenblatt and the Inheritance Tracks of comedian Jennifer Saunders.
Richard Coles and Suzy Klein with lawyer and founder of the Rosenblatt Opera Recitals Ian Rosenblatt, the Inheritance Tracks of comedian Jennifer Saunders, the story of Roger Mason who along with a friend and fellow veterinary surgeon, took much needed animals to the Falkland Islands after the 1982 War in an old converted fishing boat, the delights of Riga in Latvia with travel writer Adrian Mourby, one of Britain's leading forensic scientists, Mike Silverman, talking about a life in forensics, poems from Kate Fox and JP Devlin meets a Second World War meteorologist.
Producer Chris Wilson.
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Clip
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World War 2 meteorologist Lucy Best
Duration: 07:19
Music Played
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Inhertiance Tracks: Jennifer Saunders
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Spike Milligan
The "Q5" Theme
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Kate McGarrigle, Rufus Wainwright & Martha Wainwright
Talk To Me Of Mendocino
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Studio Guest: Ian Rosenblatt
Poetry: Kate Fox
Poet and StandÌýUp ComedianÌý reflects on the programme with lyrical intent.ÌýKate has been regular on Radio 4 since 2007, making appearances on the Today Programme, Woman’s Hour, Arthur Smith’s Balham Bash, the Wondermentalist Cabaret and many more.
Feature: Falklands Ark
Feature: JP Meets World War 2 meteorologist Lucy Best
Guest: Mike Silverman
Travel: Adrian Mourby in Riga
Inheritance Tracks: Jennifer Saunders
Studio Guests: 04 Jan 2014
Poetry by Kate Fox
Poem 1: @ Norbert SnookÌý
Our dog knows that air is memorable and his nose tells truths;
which way the sparrows, shoes and shopping bags went,
that a subtle new bouquet has arrived in the field
where he snuffles grass scents as if they are a fine salad
laid out every morning just for him.
He knows that days are plenty wide enough to greet every being who passes
and fixing his deep brown eyes on sausages
can bring them miraculously closer.
He knows the dimensions of the last space on the settee,
how to paddle his paws to slot in
and punctuate his flow with easy sleep.
He knows the metallic pop of his treat tin lid and
the rustle of my coat as I slide it off the hook are actually a summons.
He knows I’m on my way back before I do,
his bottom waggling like a bee high on pollen
whether it’s been five minutes or five days
since I moved out of his view,
Our dog doesn’t know that his days as a quick black cloud will ever end,
that repetition is not always the same as prediction,
that his wet pawprints blur metaphors I have written him into.Ìý
He doesn’t know that I’m not in the house as he thumps his feather duster tailÌý
when I'm on speakerphone.
That curled nose to tip into an @
he has become my sign for home.
Ìý
Poem 2: The Flood
Ìý
The country is currently being severely battered
by metaphors about weather.
We cannot predict when this relentless torrent will stop,
if ever.
The media is being soaked with a tsunami of sentences
about immigrants and floods.
The tempest-tossed consequences of a lack of defences,
swollen ground, stolen goods.
overwhelming gales of whipped up words
may eventually harry us
into raising up our barriers.
Every bulletin sees new super storm- superlatives emerge.
If only the workers who protect us hadn't been swept away
in an austerity surge.
The ground is saturated,
you need to be brave,
there's a high alert,
yet another wave.
(One possible way to halt the flow reigning
from a newscaster's mouth
is to get them to talk about the weather
somewhere other than the South.)
Ìý
Ìý
Poem 3: Thank You Jar
Ìý
In between a Facebook photograph of a cat riding a bike
and a baby hedgehog piloting a hot air balloon
I see a viral encouraging people to
write down something they’re grateful for
and put the pieces of paper into a jar daily,
to be unfolded and rejoiced in at at the end of the year
by the time the optimism has run out
like last Christmas’ Baileys.
Because gratitude is an attitude.
I pick up a pen wondering where to start.
Suddenly my heart
is seized with happiness
I was born in a literate society.
I could give thanks for my pen!
Thank you Mr Biro!
For words, syntax, alphabetics,
for being able to write poems,
avoid athletics.
Then I glimpse my thumb.
Opposable, curved yet chunky-
one of the things stopping me from being a monkey.
Oh but- there’s also my fingernail.
A marvellous miracle of keratin,
protein and dead cells packed tightly in.
And air-
Credits
Role | Contributor |
---|---|
Presenter | Richard Coles |
Presenter | Suzy Klein |
Interviewed Guest | Ian Rosenblatt |
Interviewed Guest | Jennifer Saunders |
Interviewed Guest | Adrian Mourby |
Interviewed Guest | Mike Silverman |
Interviewed Guest | JP Devlin |
Performer | Kate Fox |
Producer | Chris Wilson |
Broadcast
- Sat 4 Jan 2014 09:00Â鶹ԼÅÄ Radio 4
Podcast
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Saturday Live
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