Main content
Sorry, this episode is not currently available

An Autumn Walk

Autumn is a season which has inspired composers and writers. In today's edition of Words and Music, a selection of poetry and music to celebrate autumn and walking in the leaves. Poetry read by Lesley Sharp and Julian Wadham.

Producer: Sarah Taylor

1 hour, 15 minutes

Last on

Sun 28 Oct 2018 17:30

Music Played

Timings (where shown) are from the start of the programme in hours and minutes

  • 00:01

    Igor Stravinsky

    Concerto in E flat ‘Dumbarton Oaks’ 1st movement

    Performer: Nash Ensemble, Elgar Howarth (conductor).
    • EMI 7243 5 72698 2 7.
    • Tr12.
  • Rainer Maria Rilke

    Autumn Day read by Julian Wadham

  • 00:06

    J. Mercer

    Autumn Leaves

    Performer: Wynton Marsalis.
    • CBS 4510392.
    • Tr11.
  • Louisa May Alcott

    What the Swallows Did read by Lesley Sharp

  • 00:13

    Ralph Vaughan Williams

    An Acre of Land from Folk Songs for All Seasons (Autumn)

    Performer: Purcell Singers, Imogen Holst (conductor).
    • WORLD RECORDS CM46.
    • Tr4.
  • Charles Baudelaire

    Autumn read by Julian Wadham

  • 00:16

    Ralph Vaughan Williams

    The Unquiet Grave from Folk Songs for All Seasons (Autumn)

    Performer: Purcell Singers, Imogen Holst (conductor).
    • WORLD RECORDS CM46.
    • Tr5.
  • Emily Bronte

    Fall read by Lesley Sharp

  • 00:21

    Warren and Dublin

    September in the rain

    Performer: Yehudi Menuhin (violin), Stephane Grappeli (violin).
    • EMI CDC7471442.
    • Tr11.
  • Dante Gabriel Rossetti

    Autumn Song read by

  • 00:25

    Frederick Delius

    Autumn (The Wind soughs in the trees)

    Performer: Aarhus Symphony Orchestra, Bo Holten (conductor).
    • DACOCD721.
    • Tr12.
  • Elizabeth Barrett Browning

    The Autumn read by Lesley Sharp

  • 00:35

    Benjamin Britten

    Songs from the Chinese Op.58 The Autumn Wind

    Performer: Ian Bostridge (Tenor), Xuefei Yang (guitar).
    • EMI 4 33230 2.
    • Tr28.
  • Louis MacNeice

    Extract from Autumn Journal read by Julian Wadham

  • 00:38

    Kurt Weill

    September Song

    Performer: Lou Reed.
    • SONY CLASSICAL SK63046.
    • Tr12.
  • Seamus Heaney

    Blackberry Picking read by Lesley Sharp

  • 00:48

    Richard Strauss

    Four Last Songs (September)

    Performer: Felicity Lott (soprano), Scottish National Orchestra, Neeme Jarvi (conductor).
    • CHANDOS CHAN8518.
    • Tr8.
  • William Blake

    To Autumn read by Lesley Sharp

  • 00:53

    Vivaldi recomposed by Max Richter

    The Four Seaons (Autumn, third movement)

    Performer: Daniel Hope (violin), Konzerthaus Kammerochester Berlin, Andre de Ridder (conductor).
    • DEUTSCHE GRAMMOPHON 4810044.
    • Tr10.
  • Robert Louis Stevenson

    Autumn Fires read by Julian Wadham

  • 00:55

    Joseph Haydn

    Der Herbst

    Performer: RIAS Kammerchor, Freiburger, Baroque Orchestra, Rene Jacobs (conductor).
    • HARMONIA MUNDI HMC80182930.
    • CD2 Tr4.
  • D.H. Lawrence

    Autumn at Taos read by Julian Wadham

  • 01:01

    Prokoviev

    Autumn, Op. 9

    Performer: USSR Radio and TV Large Symphony Orchestra, Gennady Rozhdestvensky (conductor).
    • CONSONANCE 815007.
    • Tr10.
  • Laurence Binyon

    The Burning of the Leaves ready by Julian Wadham

  • 01:09

    Grappelli

    Automne

    Performer: Yehudi Menuhin, (violin) Stephane Grappeli (violin).
    • EMI CDC7471442.
    • Tr13.

Producer Note - An Autumn Walk

As Autumn begins this weekend, it seemed a perfect opportunity to set this week’s Words and Music around the theme of An Autumn Walk.Ìý It’s a subject which inspires composers and poets. And what strikes you when you begin to look and listen is how differently people respond to the season.Ìý Some writers like Rilke and Baudelaire see it as a season of departure and despair.Ìý Emily Bronte and Robert Louis Stevenson seem to welcome its arrival and relish the chance for a clean sweep and settling down to darker evenings.

 The programme begins with the first movement of Stravinsky’s ‘Concerto in E flat major, Dumbarton Oaks’.Ìý  I feel that an autumn walk is never complete without working out which trees the leaves on the ground  have fallen from and when I was growing up, the easiest leaf for me to identify was the oak leaf.Ìý Whenever I listen to Stravinsky’s Dumbarton Oaks it takes me straight back to my childhood, going for a walk in the park with my parents after Sunday lunch and them teaching me how to identify trees from their different shaped leaves.Ìý   

 This is followed by Rilke’s poem ‘Autumn Day’ which introduces the idea of restlessness and the idea of blowing leaves.Ìý After which, I thought it was the right moment for Wynton Marsalis’ interpretation of the jazz classic ‘Autumn Leaves’.

 After hearing from Emily Bronte who seems to welcome autumn, I’ve included a lovely duet with Yehudi Menuhin and Stéphane Grappelli, ‘September in the Rain’.Ìý

 Dante Rosetti’s ‘Autumn Song’ follows and then musically we move from autumn rain to wind with one of Delius’ North Country Sketches, Autumn' (The Wind soughs in the trees)’.Ìý Delius is followed by ‘The Autumn’ by Elizabeth Barrett Browning.Ìý I’ve included this because it seems to me that she’s commanding the reader to go outside, walk up a hill and survey the surroundings and take time to appreciate the changing landscape both externally and internally.

 Moving through the twentieth century, I included an extract from Louis MacNeice’s ‘Autumn Journal’.Ìý Published in May 1939 the passage focuses on the autumn of 1939 when the world was in a state of flux. It was striking how hopeful MacNeice seemed on the brink of war. He talks of how nature is invincible and I loved the line ‘And all of London littered with remembered kisses’.Ìý It made me think about all those dating ads which cite ‘like country walks’.Ìý Autumn is as good a time as any to go on a romantic walk!

 I couldn’t resist putting in a movement from Vivaldi’s ‘Four Seasons’.Ìý However, there’s a little twist.Ìý I’ve used the recently recorded version which features the violinist Daniel Hope which has been recomposed by Max Richter.

 ‘Autumn Fires’ by Robert Louis Stevenson follows this novel arrangement and introduces the theme of bonfires.Ìý I do love that secret bonfire smell which you get around this time of year – you can’t quite see them but you can smell someone somewhere getting on with the gardening chores.

 An extract from Haydn’s ‘Herbst’ follows then we move to DH Lawrence’s evocative account of ‘Autumn At Taos’. One of the joys of growing older is the layers of new memories you have of seasons from different places.Ìý As I’ve moved around the country I have different autumnal memories, Yorkshire landscapes, London landscapes and I enjoyed reading DH Lawrence’s description of ‘Autumn at Taos’, so different from his native Nottinghamshire!

 The programme ends with Laurence Binyon’s ‘The Burning of the Leaves’.Ìý  More bonfire smells, heralding November and memories of Bonfire Night but also a hint of nature recreating everything in springtime.

 Why don’t you take advantage of playlister and download some of the music tracks to accompany you on your own autumn walk?

 Producer: Sarah Taylor

Broadcasts

  • Sun 28 Sep 2014 17:30
  • Sun 28 Oct 2018 17:30

The hidden history of plant-based diets

The hidden history of plant-based diets

Forget social media influencers - the meat-free movement started with the Victorians.

Books website

Get closer to books with in-depth articles, quizzes and our picks from radio & TV.

Gallery