Richard Linklater on Boyhood, Garrick Ohlsson on Scriabin
John Wilson talks to Richard Linklater, who directed the film Boyhood over twelve years. Plus pianist Garrick Ohlsson on the Russian composer Scriabin.
John Wilson talks to Richard Linklater, who directed the film Boyhood over twelve years, so that his actors, including Patricia Arquette and Ethan Hawke, aged appropriately.
Pianist Garrick Ohlsson celebrates the music of Alexander Scriabin, the Russian composer who believed his music would change the world.
Nicholas Cullinan, today announced as the new director of the National Portrait Gallery.
And a poem for January, written specially for Front Row by Alison Brackenbury.
Last on
Clip
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Richard Linklater
Duration: 09:38
Chapters
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Richard Linklater
Duration: 09:48
Nicholas Cullinan
Duration: 05:32
Garrick Ohlsson
Duration: 09:12
Alison Brackenbury's January
Duration: 03:06
Richard Linklater
, directed by Richard Linklater, is back in cinemas nationwide on January 16, certificate 15. It is released on DVD on January 19.Ìý
photo (c) Universal PicturesNicholas Cullinan
The newly appointed Director of the talks about his new role.ÌýGarrick Ohlsson
Pianist Garrick OhlssonÌýperforms pieces by Russian composer and pianist AleksandrÌýScriabinÌýat tonight whichHis latest cd, , is released on February 2 on Hyperion Records
Photo (c) Kacper Pempel
Alison Brackenbury's poem 'January'
This week on Front Row we’re running a series of January items in which artists and commentators encapsulate these dark days of the year. Here is the poem contributed.
Ìý
JANUARY
Harsh, hateful month, yet morning’s moon,
my silver penny, dear as dark,
floods ash buds black, as first cars fume.
For January brings work, work, work.
Have you heard the town foxes bark?
How screams as sharp as yours or mine,
hungry and raw as children, spark
our small rooms by the railway line?
Ìý
Work ends.Ìý Dusk drops.Ìý I tramp from car,
call my old horse. Wreathed hill mists pass.
Our heated world already stars
daisies across the hoof-pocked grass.
The rescued mare, found fly-grazed, thin,
now trots with Christmas foal at heels.
A few days old, or thirty springs,
all charge for stables, leave night’s fields.
Ìý
Out January’s dark and freezing rain
I reach my kitchen’s warm cocoon.
I dream of my grandmother’s pudding,
hot steamed sponge sliding from the spoon
with dripping amber, her plum jam,
lost summer caught, red in jars’ rank.
She fed her neighbour’s hungry son,
I find tinned beans for a food bank.
Ìý
Are you in your warm kitchen now?
Keep off the killing New Year’s dark
which has drunk some we love, but how
in mud, in rooms, we make our mark.
Peel the potatoes.Ìý Stir the spoon.
I hope, before lit days, and many,
you meet a January moon.
How will you spend your silver penny?
Alison Brackenbury
Credits
Role Contributor Presenter John Wilson Interviewed Guest Richard Linklater Interviewed Guest Garrick Ohlsson Interviewed Guest Nicholas Cullinan Broadcast
- Tue 6 Jan 2015 19:15´óÏó´«Ã½ Radio 4
´óÏó´«Ã½ Arts Digital
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Front Row
Live magazine programme on the worlds of arts, literature, film, media and music