meta_pixel
Tapesearch Logo
Log in
Soul Music

Ae Fond Kiss by Robert Burns

Soul Music

BBC

Personal Journals, Music Commentary, Society & Culture, Music

4.7772 Ratings

🗓️ 12 April 2025

⏱️ 28 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Burns began a correspondence with Agnes McElhose, also known as Clarinda and Nancy, a married woman he was besotted with. When she left Scotland to reunite with her husband he wrote Ae Fond Kiss as a heartfelt farewell. It was later set to music and is one of his most famous 'songs' along with Auld Lang Syne and My Love Is Like A Red Red Rose.

Karen Matheson the singer with Capercaillie talks about its meaning to her and how performing it at the Commonwealth Games in Glasgow in 2014 was a very special moment.

Joan Donaldson from Michigan grew up with Scottish music and has called her latest historical novel Ae Fond Kiss. She says she channelled her grief into the characters as a way of dealing with a devastating loss.

Sir Geoff Palmer discovered the song when he arrived in Edinburgh in the 1960s. He has traced Burns' and the song's connection to his home country of Jamaica and feels proud of the links he discovered.

For film maker Karen Guthrie from Ayrshire - Burns' birthplace - coping with and caring for her estranged parents meant long drives home through the countryside he inhabited. It was a journey of rediscovering Scotland's national poet and relating her family's story to Ae Fond Kiss.

Musician Seonaid Aitken plays both versions of the song on the violin and explains how the music conveys the feelings of longing after an unresolved love affair.

Producer: Maggie Ayre

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Why would anyone want to steal a toilet?

0:05.0

If they think they can get away with it, they'll get away with it.

0:08.0

But this isn't any old toilet.

0:11.0

This is a solid gold toilet, worth nearly five million pounds, stolen from a palace.

0:17.0

A solid gold toilet has been stolen.

0:20.0

Police are trying to flush the robbers out.

0:23.0

It's a tale of security failures, ruthless robbers and missing millions.

0:27.7

Crime next door.

0:28.7

The Golden Toilet Heist.

0:30.4

Listen first on BBC Sounds.

0:34.1

BBC Sounds, music, Radio, podcasts.

0:44.7

I was born in Ayrshire and I share a birthday with Robert Burns,

0:49.8

which isn't always good when you're a kid growing up in Ayrshire.

0:52.9

It means you have haggis for your birthday every year.

0:59.7

A month after Christmas, Burns night, when everyone else just wants to curry down in front of the television and you have to have your haggis for your birthday and celebrate this very distant figure.

1:06.9

I'm Karen Guthrie. I'm an artist and a filmmaker.

1:11.0

You do a lot of Burns poetry at school.

1:13.6

They didn't really tell you much about his life apart from the outline of a romantic hero.

1:20.0

I think I knew A. Fon Kiss as one of the most popular Burns' poems at that time.

1:27.2

But that wasn't a poem that young children were encouraged to learn.

1:31.3

Of all the versions of A-Fond Kiss that I like,

1:35.1

I think it's the Karen Matheson one that moves me the most deeply.

...

Please login to see the full transcript.

Disclaimer: The podcast and artwork embedded on this page are from BBC, and are the property of its owner and not affiliated with or endorsed by Tapesearch.

Generated transcripts are the property of BBC and are distributed freely under the Fair Use doctrine. Transcripts generated by Tapesearch are not guaranteed to be accurate.

Copyright © Tapesearch 2025.