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Jonathan Aitken

In a frank and moving interview, priest and former politician Jonathan Aitken talks to Michael Berkeley about the music that has accompanied his rollercoaster life.

In a frank and moving interview the priest and former politician Jonathan Aitken talks to Michael Berkeley about the music that has accompanied his rollercoaster life.

At one time Jonathan Aitken was widely tipped to be a future Conservative Prime Minister, but his glittering political career came crashing down just over twenty years ago, when he stood in the dock of the Old Bailey to plead guilty to perjury, after a lie he told about the payment of a hotel bill caused the collapse of his libel case against the Guardian and Granada Television. He left the court in a prison van with an 18-month sentence. Last December, he was back at the Old Bailey – this time leading the annual carol service, having recently been ordained as a priest.

Jonathan chooses pieces which bring back childhood memories of singing for Benjamin Britten and performing Messiah as a chorister in Norwich, and we hear a song John McCormack sang to him during the three years Jonathan spent on a Dublin TB ward as a very young child.

He talks frankly to Michael about the mistakes and pride that led to his downfall from public life, and how he survived disgrace, divorce, bankruptcy and prison. He chooses, with a smile, the Prisoners’ Chorus from Fidelio, and a setting of Psalm 24 that was a crucial part of his spiritual journey in prison.

Jonathan tells a funny musical story about when Nixon met Wilson, and he reveals the piece of music that best captures his sense of redemption and renewal as he embarks on his new life as a prison chaplain.

Producer: Jane Greenwood
A Loftus production for ´óÏó´«Ã½ Radio 3

Available now

43 minutes

Last on

Sun 16 Feb 2020 12:00

Music Played

  • George Frideric Handel

    Ev'ry Valley (Messiah)

    Singer: Richard Lewis. Orchestra: Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra. Conductor: Malcolm Sargent.
  • Traditional Irish

    The Garden where the praties grow

    Performer: John McCormack.
  • Benjamin Britten

    Sammy's bath (The little sweep)

    Orchestra: English Opera Group. Conductor: Benjamin Britten.
  • Richard Wagner

    Entry of the Gods into Valhalla (Das Rheingold)

    Singer: Iain Paterson. Orchestra: Hallé. Conductor: Sir Mark Elder.
  • Ludwig van Beethoven

    O welche Lust (Fidelio)

    Choir: Arnold Schoenberg Chor. Orchestra: Lucerne Festival Orchestra. Conductor: Claudio Abbado.
  • Joseph Barnby

    Psalm 24

    Performer: Andrew Lumsden. Choir: Choir of Westminster Abbey. Conductor: Martin Neary.
  • Arthur Sullivan

    When I was a lad (HMS Pinafore)

    Performer: John Reed. Orchestra: D'Oyly Carte Opera Orchestra. Conductor: Isidore Godfrey.
  • George Frideric Handel

    All we like sheep (Messiah)

    Singer: Emma Kirkby. Orchestra: Academy of Ancient Music. Conductor: Christopher Hogwood.

Broadcast

  • Sun 16 Feb 2020 12:00

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