A Shropshire Lad
Soul Music
BBC
4.7 • 831 Ratings
🗓️ 12 November 2014
⏱️ 28 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Summary
"Into my heart an air that kills From yon far country blows: What are those blue remembered hills, What spires, what farms are those? That is the land of lost content, I see it shining plain, The happy highways where I went And cannot come again."
So wrote the poet AE Housman lamenting the loss of his brother in the Boer war in his epic poem A Shropshire Lad.
It harks back to a simple idyllic rural way of life that is forever changed at the end of the 19th century as hundreds of country boys go off to fight and never return. George Butterworth adapted his words to music in 1913 just before the outbreak of the Great War.
We hear from those whose lives continue to be touched by the loss of so many young men between 1914 and 1918. Broadcaster Sybil Ruscoe recalls visiting her Great Uncle's grave in a military cemetery in France with Butterworth's Rhapsody as the soundtrack to her journey.
A concert at Bromsgrove School in Worcestershire where Housman was a pupil remembers the former schoolboys killed in action, and singer Steve Knightley discusses and performs his adaptation of The Lads In Their Hundreds.
The Bishop of Woolwich connects his love of the countryside and Butterworth's music with his father's battered copy of Housman's poems which comforted him while held captive in Singapore during the Second World War.
Contributors:
James McKelvey Phillip Bowen Tish Farrell Michael Ipgrave Steve Knightley Stephen Johnson Sybil Ruscoe Sam Adamson
Series about pieces of music with a powerful emotional impact Producer: Maggie Ayre
First broadcast on BBC Radio 4 in November 2014.
Transcript
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| 0:00.0 | The Traitors is back, and so is that mysterious cloaked figure with the familiar fringe. |
| 0:06.6 | Yeah, it's me. |
| 0:07.8 | And when you've watched Claudia in the castle, join me, Ed Gamble, for the official visualised companion podcast. |
| 0:13.6 | And remember, I'll be listening. |
| 0:15.8 | Okay? |
| 0:16.6 | No, seriously, I love it. |
| 0:18.4 | What a faithful. |
| 0:19.7 | We'll unpack betrayals and spill scandalous secrets with celebrity guests, traitors' legends, |
| 0:25.0 | and murdered and banished players. |
| 0:27.0 | The Traitors Uncloat. |
| 0:28.3 | Watch on EyePlayer, listen for more on BBC Sounds. |
| 0:32.2 | My name is Sybil Rusco, and I'm from North Shropshire. |
| 0:37.0 | And my great uncle, my grandfather's brother, Wallace Wilkinson, |
| 0:43.0 | died on the Somme on the 10th of August 1916 when he was just 21 years old. I first heard |
| 0:52.8 | Butterworth's Shropshire Lad Rhapsody |
| 0:55.3 | around the time that I read Sebastian Folk's Bird Song |
| 1:00.8 | and reading that novel really got me interested in the First World War. |
| 1:33.1 | Thank you. got me interested in the First World War. There was a member of my family who'd left his tiny Shropshire Hamlet in 1915 for what must have seemed like an enormous adventure. |
| 1:41.6 | Can you imagine what it was like? He was a Shropshire lad. He'd grown up in a tiny little place, no more than four or five houses. |
| 1:46.6 | He worked at crew works, which is where they built railway engines. |
| 1:59.8 | And he and his fellow workers, fired up by a sense of duty, set off for France, and then never came home. |
| 2:22.2 | I set off on my own kind of first World War Odyssey to visit the grave of my great uncle. |
... |
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