Main content
Sorry, this episode is not currently available

4 Extra Debut. From Julie Andrews to Schubert. Musician and orchestra founder Chi-chi Nwanoku shares her choices with Kirsty Young. From 2018.

From Julie Andrews to Schubert.

Musician and orchestra founder Chi-chi Nwanoku shares her choices with Kirsty Young.

Chi-chi is a double bass player and founder of Europe's first professional majority black and minority ethnic orchestra, Chineke!.

She's the eldest of five children, born to a Nigerian father and an Irish mother. Early on, Chi-chi discovered two competing passions: playing the piano and 100 metre sprinting. She was aiming to qualify for the 1976 Olympics when she suffered a knee injury which cut short her life as an athlete. Her music teacher then suggested that she could have a career as a musician if she took up 'an unpopular orchestral instrument'. She began learning the double bass a week later.

She was a student at the Royal Academy of Music and for over 30 years has played with renowned orchestras, including the Academy of St Martin in the Fields, English Baroque Soloists, London Classical Players and the Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment, which she co-founded and where she was principal double bass for three decades.

In 2015, she set up Chineke! to support, inspire and encourage black and minority ethnic musicians.

The Chineke! orchestra made its debut at the Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ Proms in 2017, and Chi-chi was awarded an OBE for her services to music.

First broadcast on Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ Radio 4 in 2018.

45 minutes

Last on

Thu 4 Aug 2022 21:00

Broadcasts

  • Sun 31 Jul 2022 10:00
  • Sun 31 Jul 2022 21:00
  • Thu 4 Aug 2022 11:00
  • Thu 4 Aug 2022 21:00

The Desert Island Discs podcast

Subscribe or download individual episodes.

Listen to over 2,000 programmes

Click above to browse castaways, from 1942 to today.

Articles

Read the surprising things we've learned about some stand-out castaways.