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The Pebble In Your Pocket

Why do people love pebbles? What is it about their appearance, texture, sounds, history and folklore that inspires us? What do pebbles tell us about the world, and about ourselves?

Why do people love pebbles? What is it about their appearance, texture, sounds, history and folklore that inspires us? Â鶹ԼÅÄ Radio 4 invites you on a lyrical pebble pilgrimage, shaped by the sounds of scrunching shingle and wild waves.

‘The beautifully shaped stone, washed up by the sea, is a symbol of continuity, a silent image of our desire for survival, peace and security.’ (Barbara Hepworth)

We hear how pebbles have influenced some of our greatest artists, possessing secrets of deep time, and woven into our history and our very being. What do pebbles tell us about the world, and about ourselves?

Across the British Isles, we meet a writer, a geologist, an archivist, a clothes designer, and a team of pebble dashers – people who work with and are captivated by pebbles. In Cambridge, we visit Kettle’s Yard gallery – created by the late art collector Jim Ede and known as the Louvre of the Pebble.

The programme includes pebble-inspired poetry and music, and soundscapes of pebbles recorded in a range of locations, from NE Scotland to SW England.

POETRY:
Stone Speech by Charles Tomlinson
Dover Beach (extract) by Matthew Arnold

MUSIC:
The Sea – Morcheeba
Pebble Dash – Gang Colours
Sunday Morning, from Four Sea Interludes from Peter Grimes (Opus 33a), composed by Benjamin Britten.
Pebble Shore – Baltic Fleet
Gotta Pebble In My Shoe – Ella Fitzgerald
The Pebble and the Boulder – MJ Hibbett
Su-a Song – Jenna Reid

Extract from Barbara Hepworth, Â鶹ԼÅÄ TV, September 1961 – by kind permission of Sophie Bowness: ‘Barbara Hepworth © Bowness'

Producer: Steve Urquhart
Executive Producer: Emma Walker
A Rosa production for Â鶹ԼÅÄ Radio 4

Available now

28 minutes

Last on

Mon 18 May 2020 21:00

Broadcasts

  • Tue 12 May 2020 11:00
  • Mon 18 May 2020 21:00

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