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The Chessboard

Readings from Adjoa Andoh and Henry Goodman. Music from Shostakovich to The Rolling Stones. Authors include Han Kang, Shakespeare, Philip Larkin and Omar Khayyam.

Adjoa Andoh and Henry Goodman read extracts from Han Kang's The White Book, Shakespeare's Othello, Philip Larkin's Sympathy in White Major and the Rubaiyat by Omar Khayyam. Our music ranges from Shostakovich to The Rolling Stones Paint it Black, via the piece by Chopin in G Flat major, Op.10, No.5 which is known as the Black Key etude, and performances by Louis Armstrong and Rokia Traore in a programme that zig zags like a knight, soars like a bishop and plods like a pawn. We take in the subject of race in America, the look of snowfall in Alsace, and the bright white magic of an anchovy shoal glimpsed in the pitch dark and described in Herman Melville's novel about the Great White Whale Moby Dick and our journey from white to black and back starts with the topsy-turvy world of Alice Through the Looking Glass.

Producer: Zahid Warley.

1 hour, 15 minutes

Last on

Wed 29 Dec 2021 18:15

Music Played

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

  • Lewis Carroll

    From Alice Through the Looking Glass, read by Adjoa Andoh

  • 00:00

    Dmitry Shostakovich

    Fugue No.1 in C Major

    Performer: Vladimir Ashkenazy (piano).
    • Decca 4660662.
    • Tr2.
  • Lewis Carroll

    From Alice Through the Looking Glass, read by Adjoa Andoh

  • 00:03

    Fr茅d茅ric Chopin

    Etude in G Flat major, Op.10, No.5 (聯Black Key聰)

    Performer: Vladimir Horowitz.
    • Naxos Historical 8110606.
    • Tr11.
  • The Bible, King James Version

    From Genesis, 1, read by Henry Goodman

  • 00:05

    Morten Lauridsen

    Agnus Dei-Lux Aeterna

    Performer: Polyphony with Britten Sinfonia, Stephen Layton (Conductor).
    • Hyperion A67449.
    • Tr5.
  • Junichiro Tanizaki

    From In Praise of Shadows, read by Adjoa Andoh

  • 00:17

    Hans Abrahamsen

    Canon 4A (minore)

    Performer: ensemble recherche.
    • Winter&Winter 9101592.
    • Tr9.
  • Richard Wilbur

    First Snow in Alsace, read by Henry Goodman

  • 00:22

    Hans Abrahamsen

    Canon 4B (maggiore)

    Performer: ensemble recherche.
    • Winter&Winter 9101592.
    • Tr10.
  • Philip Larkin

    Sympathy in White Major, read by Adjoa Andoh

  • 00:25

    Waller/Brooks/Razaf

    (What did I do to be so) Black and Blue?

    Performer: Louis Armstrong & His Orchestra.
    • JSP CD315.
    • Tr4.
  • Ralph Ellison

    From the Prologue to Invisible Man, read by Henry Goodman

  • 00:32

    Gil Scott鈥怘eron

    The Revolution will not be Televised

    Performer: Gil Scott鈥怘eron.
    • BGPD 306.
    • Tr1.
  • Carol Ann Duffy

    War Photographer, read by Adjoa Andoh

  • 00:36

    Michel Legrand

    Le Cinema

    Performer: Claude Nougaro.
    • Philips 0631500.
    • Tr1.
  • Shakespeare

    Othello聮s soliloquy before he murders Desdemona, read by Adjoa Andoh

  • 00:41

    Rokia Traor茅

    惭聮叠颈蹿辞

    Performer: Rokia Traor茅.
    • Indigo 2594.
    • Tr1.
  • Han Kang

    From The White Book, read by Henry Goodman

  • 00:48

    William Grant Still

    Moderato Assai

    Performer: Fort Smith Symphony.
    • Naxos 8559174.
    • Tr5.
  • Herman Melville

    From Moby Dick, the whiteness of the Whale, read by Henry Goodman

  • 01:00

    Jagger/Richard

    Paint it Black

    Performer: The Rolling Stones.
    • ABKCO 聳 ROLCD 1.
    • Tr6.
  • Ted Hughes

    Crow Falls, read by Adjoa Andoh

  • 01:05

    Trad.

    Amazing Grace

    Performer: Soweto Gospel Choir.
    • Shanachie 66036.
    • Tr8.
  • Omar Khayyam

    A couple from The Rubaiyat translated by Robert Fitzgerald, read by Adjoa Andoh and Henry Goodman

Producer's Notes: 'The Chessboard'

Chess is believed to have originated in India or China more than a thousand years ago. It reached Europe with the Moorish conquest of Spain and the pieces were standardized in the 19th century. There are thirty two pieces 鈥 16 black and 16 white and the game is played on a board with sixty four spaces arranged as a square.聽 You probably knew that. 聽But then there鈥檚 a reason for telling you this at the outset.聽聽

What you鈥檝e just read is my offer 鈥 a technical chess term related to another technical chess term 鈥 the gambit. In fact I鈥檓 wondering whether this isn鈥檛 a gambit but I think I can leave this up to you to decide. The point of the offer 鈥 as with any offer 鈥 is 鈥 do you want to accept it?聽 Do you want to play? 聽If you do, you could be letting yourself in for seventy five minutes of pleasure and intellectual stimulation 鈥 at least that鈥檚 what I鈥檓 hoping.

Just to be clear - You won鈥檛 be castling, pushing forward a pawn or sending a knight on a zig zag leap 鈥 but you will be stepping through a kind of looking glass into a kind of wonderland. The first voice you鈥檒l hear is Lewis Carroll鈥檚 Alice and then things will become curiouser and curiouser as you career through time and space with Philip Larkin, Shakespeare, Carol Ann Duffy, Shostakovich, Louis Armstrong and Claude Nougaro amongst others. 聽It鈥檚 a Mad Hatter鈥檚 Tea Party so there鈥檚 no knowing who else might appear. 聽All you really need to hang onto if you want to keep your head is the fact that you鈥檙e going to be moving from white to black, from the shade into the light 鈥 just as if you were on a chessboard. 聽It may be a bit dizzying at times because you鈥檒l be skating across music composed only of white notes, poetry about playing the white man, prose about being black in white America, a crow鈥檚 black heart and the whiteness of Melville鈥檚 whale, Moby Dick. Never fear 鈥 all pets win prizes and you鈥檒l bump back safely to earth at the end.

Producer: Zahid Warley

Broadcasts

  • Sun 17 Jun 2018 17:30
  • Wed 29 Dec 2021 18:15

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