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Robert Burns's iPod

David Owen Norris and guests consider songs the Scottish bard might have carried around with him. With Liz Lochhead. From November 2011.

David Owen Norris and guests listen to Robert Burns' favourite songs in his drinking club in Tarbolton, near Glasgow. With National Poet of Scotland Liz Lochhead (writer of a play about Burns), Dr Kirsteen McCue and Professor Nigel Leask - and featuring Burns' own fiddle.

We hear the songs with the tunes he wanted - not always the ones which have become famous. For instance, 'My Love is like a Red Red Rose' was changed by his publisher against Burns' wishes. Kirsteen McCue is the world expert on Burns' songs and she reveals the original versions. We also hear a naughty song called 'Nine Inch will Please a Lady'.

Robert Burns' playlist reflects his political vision and also his complex love life. Burns was writing for the high-class Edinburgh ladies who took him up in his 30s, but he was also composing songs in broader Scots about their maids. Songs were a crucial part of his seduction technique - and they seem to have worked for him. He left 15 illegitimate children. Even on his death-bed, Burns was writing songs - for the pretty blonde teenager who was nursing him. That song, 'Oh Wert Thou in the Cold Blast', is one of his most beautiful and almost unbearably moving. Burns was destitute, he was dying at the age of only 37, and yet he sang to his nurse: "Oh wert thou in the cold blast, I'd shelter thee, I'd shelter thee".

Presenter David Owen Norris is a broadcaster, composer and concert pianist. He has arranged the songs, which are performed by Thomas Guthrie and jazz singer Gwyneth Herbert.

Producer: Elizabeth Burke.
A Loftus production for 麻豆社 Radio 4.

30 minutes

Last on

Fri 26 Jan 2018 01:30

Broadcasts

  • Sat 26 Nov 2011 10:30
  • Wed 25 Jan 2012 17:00
  • Thu 26 Jan 2012 05:00
  • Thu 27 Dec 2012 23:30
  • Thu 25 Jan 2018 06:30
  • Thu 25 Jan 2018 13:30
  • Thu 25 Jan 2018 20:30
  • Fri 26 Jan 2018 01:30