Head to Toe
Readers Harriet Walter and Tim McInnerny take a journey over and through the human body in the company of writers from Sappho to Larkin, with music from Beethoven to Chas 'n' Dave.
Join readers Harriet Walter and Tim McInnerny in a journey over and through the length of the human body in the company of writers spanning 25 centuries, with music from Beethoven to Chas 'n' Dave.
To begin, neurosurgeon Henry Marsh marvels at the grey jelly that is the source of human consciousness. Walter de la Mare strains his ears in a spooky old house and Milton's blindness helps him imagine Samson's blinded eyes. Cyrano de Bergerac's comically huge nose is followed by two 400-year-old self-help books about the tongue, and Fryderyk Chopin's advice on piano fingering includes the hand's relationship with the wrist, forearm and arm.
At the centre of the journey is the heart. It thumps with John Clare's first love and glows with consummated love in Tennyson's 'Now sleeps the crimson petal'. 'Never give all the heart', warns WB Yeats 鈥 too late for broken-hearted Sappho, Emily Dickinson and John Donne.
The 鈥榟uge stuffed cloak-bag of guts' is the belly of Shakespeare's Falstaff, a cue for Giulia Enders to remind us that the gut is an integral part of human feeling and being.
At the gut's end, a 14th-century fart in Chaucer's 鈥楾he Miller鈥檚 Tale鈥 still has the power of a thunderclap and, round the other side, Montaigne bemoans the 'indocile libertie' of the male member which rises to the occasion only at its choosing.
Nearly at journey's end, here are legs and feet. In Tolstoy's 'War and Peace' the aristocratic Natasha delights everyone with her innate ability to dance like a true Russian peasant, something Edward Lear's Pobble would have found difficult.
With Philip Larkin's 'An Arundel Tomb' and the end of life, the human body is represented in stone effigy. Now, 'Only an attitude remains' - and a final, hedged Larkinesque flourish 'to prove/Our almost-instinct almost true:/What will survive of us is love.'
David Papp (producer)
Last on
Music Played
Timings (where shown) are from the start of the programme in hours and minutes
-
Georgia Mann
Introduction
00:01Steve Reich
Music for 18 Musicians
Ensemble: Ensemble Signal.- Harmonia Mundi.
- HMU907608.
- 14.
Walt Whitman
I Sing the Body Electric, read by Harriet Walter
Henry Marsh
Do No Harm, read by Tim McInnerny
00:03Richard Strauss
Also sprach Zarathustra
Conductor: Andris Nelsons. Orchestra: City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra.- Orfeo.
- C878141A.
- 2.
00:06Maurice Ravel
L'heure espagnol
Conductor: Lorin Maazel. Orchestra: Orchestra National de la RTF.- DG.
- 423 719 2.
- 1.
Walter de la Mare
Seaton's Aunt, read by Harriet Walter
00:07Salvatore Sciarrino
Introduzione all'oscuro
Conductor: Kwam茅 Ryan. Ensemble: ensemble recherche.- Kairos.
- 0012132KAI.
- 5.
00:08Howard Skempton
Rise up, my Love
Conductor: Paul Hillier. Ensemble: Ars Nova Copenhagen.- Cantaloupe.
- CA21127.
00:11William Lawes
Consort Suite 'for the violls' a 6, No. 3 in F major "Sunrise"
Ensemble: Fretwork.- Virgin Classics.
- 791187-2.
- 1.
John Milton
Samson Agonistes, read by Harriet Walter
Edmond Rostand (trans. Charles Renauld)
Cyrano de Bergerac, read by Tim McInnerny
00:18Jean鈥怭hilippe Rameau
Contredanse (Les Indes galantes)
Conductor: Frans Br眉ggen. Orchestra: Orchestra of the Eighteenth Century.- Philips.
- 4389462.
- 9.
Hannah Woolley
The Gentlewomans Companion, read by Harriet Walter
Laurent Bordelon
The Management of the Tongue, read by Tim McInnerny
00:22Chas & Dave
Rabbit
Performer: Chas & Dave.- EMI.
- 094634066327.
- 2.
Fryderyk Chopin (trans. Roy Howat)
Projet de m茅thode, read by Tim McInnerny
00:25Fr茅d茅ric Chopin
12 Studies (Op.10), No. 8 in F major
Performer: Nelson Goerner.- Wigmore Hall Live.
- WHLIVE0039.
- 13.
Aristotle (trans. GRT Ross)
On Youth and Old Age, On Life and Death, On Breathing, read by Harriet Walter
John Clare
First Love, read by Tim McInnerny
00:30Ludwig van Beethoven
Piano Concerto No. 5 in E flat major, Op. 73 'Emperor' (Adagio un poco mosso)
Conductor: Bernard Haitink. Performer: Murray Perahia. Orchestra: Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra.- Sony Classical.
- 88697102902.
- 2.
WB Yeats
Never give all the heart, read by Tim McInnerny
00:37Franz Schubert
String Quintet in C major, D. 956 (Adagio)
Performer: Tak谩cs Quartet, Ralph Kirshbaum (cello).- Hyperion.
- CDA67864.
- 2.
Sappho (trans. Michael R. Burch)
Fragment 42, read by Harriet Walter
John Donne
The Broken Heart, read by Harriet Walter
Emily Dickinson
Heart, we will forget him, read by Harriet Walter
Ernest Dowson
Non sum qualis eram bonae sub regno Cynarae, read by Tim McInnerny
00:47Charles Ives
String Quartet No. 2 (Arguments)
Ensemble: Schumann Quartett.- ARS Produktion.
- ARS38156.
- 6.
William Shakespeare
Henry IV, Part 1, Act 1, read by Tim McInnerny
Giulia Enders
Gut, read by Harriet Walter
00:52John Dowland
A Dream
Performer: Jakob Lindberg.- BIS.
- BIS2082.
- 13.
Geoffrey Chaucer (Edited for Popular Perusal by D Laing Purves)
The Miller鈥檚 Tale, read by Harriet Walter
00:56Boots Randolph
Yakety Sax
- Castle Pulse.
- PLS CD 515.
- 4.
Michel de Montaigne (trans. John Florio)
Of the force of Imagination (from Essays), read by Tim McInnerny
00:58Pierre Cl茅reau
Elle est d鈥檃ndouille friande (She is partial to sausage)
Performer: La Maurache.- Arion.
- ARN68344.
- 2.
Leo Tolstoy
War and Peace, read by Harriet Walter
01:00Traditional (arr. Vera Gorodovskaya)
At Sunrise
Orchestra: Osipov State Russian Folk Orchestra.- Mercury.
- 432 0002.
- 2.
01:02Mons Leidvin Takle
Festmusikk
Performer: Christopher Herrick.- Hyperion.
- CDA67577.
- 10.
Edward Lear
The Pobble Who Has No Toes, read by Harriet Walter and Tim McInnerny
01:06Traditional (arr. The Delta Rhythm Boys)
Dem Dry Bones
Performer: The Delta Rhythm Boys.- Dundeal Entertainment.
- CAT25662.
- 1.
Philip Larkin
An Arundel Tomb, read by Harriet Walter
01:11Thomas Tallis
If ye love me
Conductor: Owain Park. Ensemble: The Gesualdo Six.- Hyperion.
- CDA68256.
- 5.
Broadcasts
- Sun 24 Mar 2019 17:30大象传媒 Radio 3
- Sun 2 Jan 2022 17:30大象传媒 Radio 3