30/07/2017
Two hours of music and conversation with a faith and ethical perspective, asking what the week's events say about values and beliefs.
Journalist and author Will Self speaks to Cathy Macdonald about his latest novel, 'Phone', a perceptively sharp and witty exploration of our relationship with modern technology, family dynamics and the process of aging.
In our occasional Inspirations series, we get to hear about what or who has inspired people in their lives. Roxana Vilk, a film-maker, musician, and actor, talks about the impact of a piece of music by South African pianist Bheki Mseleku.
It's been called the largest humanitarian crisis since the formation of the UN. With four nations facing famine and twenty million lives in the balance, Selena Victor from Mercy Corps and journalist David Pratt, look at the reality of famine being used as a weapon of war.
After a chance meeting with an American tourist after one of her concerts, mezzo soprano Andrea Baker took her show Sing Sistah Sing! to Tuscaloosa in Alabama and found out about the city's role in the early civil rights movement.
And how do we store our memories? Journalist Paul English and Rachel Hosker, Archives Manager at the University of Edinburgh, explore if tangible objects like photographs and letters give us a deeper connection to our past, than memories that are stored in a virtual cloud or box.
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Lost Letters
Journalist and broadcaster Paul English looks back at his childhood passion of pen pals.
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Tuscaloosa – 1.The Early Civil Rights Years
Duration: 16:20
Songs of Praise
Songs of Praise is coming to Edinburgh as the city’s world famous festivals season begins for its 70th year, and would like to invite you to recording of hymns as part of a massed choir at Stockbridge Church on Friday 4th August, 7pm – 10pm.
Broadcast
- Sun 30 Jul 2017 10:00´óÏó´«Ã½ Radio Scotland