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BBC Radio 4 „Seriously…“: „Song of the Thames“

Logo BBC bei Wikimedia Commons„Singer and song col­lec­tor Sam Lee traces a map in sto­ries, folk­lore and song along England’s longest and most famous riv­er, the Thames.
Begin­ning at its under­ground source in the idyl­lic Glouces­ter­shire coun­try­side, Sam fol­lows the Thames from a trick­ling stream to a majes­tic riv­er car­ry­ing a myr­i­ad of human and ani­mal lives. He wit­ness­es its changes of mood and mean­ing as it squeezes through its busy, embanked, cen­tral Lon­don stretch search­ing for the soul of the riv­er – the deep sto­ries of its waters and banks.
Through folk­lore, music, ecol­o­gy and lives lived along 215 miles of water, Sam uncov­ers the past, present and future influ­ence of the river’s deep cul­tur­al roots. Who is fed and who is starved by the Thames now and what does it mean to the peo­ple who come under its influ­ence?
With sto­ry­teller, Druid and mead mak­er Chris Park at Thames Head, via author and land rights activist Nick Park on his house­boat in Oxford­shire, Deb­bie Leach of Thames 21 work­ing to help com­mu­ni­ties recon­nect with and clean up the riv­er in Lon­don, retired Thames lighter­man Dave Jes­sop and Sourav Niyo­gi who explains the river’s sig­nif­i­cance to many in London’s Hin­du com­mu­ni­ty, Sam explores a flow of ideas run­ning from source to sea.
Final­ly, with author Rachel Licht­en­stein, he stands on Two Tree Island on the Essex shore of the Thames estu­ary and gazes out across the Thames’s final incar­na­tion, as a 5 mile wide delta mouth.
We are a world away from the pure waters of the river’s begin­nings as Sam con­sid­ers the ambigu­ous future of the Thames, its com­mu­ni­ties and the atten­tion owed to it by the peo­ple who live along its banks.“
(BBC)

Sie kön­nen die Sendung, die am 7.9.2021 in der Rei­he „Seri­ous­ly…“ lief, über die Seite der BBC nach­hören oder als Audio­datei herun­ter­laden.

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