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PROGRAMME INFO |
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Nature offers a window on global natural history, providing a unique insight into the natural world, the environment, and the magnificent creatures that inhabit it. nhuradio@bbc.co.uk
If you like natural history and you're interested in the environment, why not visit Radio 4's first ever interactive blog here.
You can read, watch and listen to natural history on the radio.
And being a blog,听you can听of course contribute to it...
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LISTEN AGAIN听30听min |
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PRESENTER |
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"Nature is full of surprises, so the programme can investigate fascinating and challenging areas in our relations with the natural world without being too technical or preachy. My job is brilliant because, as a link between the listener and the subject, I can discover new information and ideas which help people make up their own minds on important issues."
Paul Evans |
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PROGRAMME DETAILS |
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Chris Watson recording with a parabolic reflector in Springfield Park. |
The Sounds of Britain 3 -听An Urban Dawn Chorus
In the third of a short series of sound portraits of Nature鈥檚 Britain, wildlife sound recordist Chris Watson captures and releases an urban Dawn Chorus.
Founded in 1914, Alder Hey Children鈥檚 hospital in Liverpool is one of the largest and busiest children's hospitals in Europe, treating more than 200,000 children a year. The building can be an imposing and impersonal place for both patients and staff, but alongside the hospital is Springfield Park, an urban park mainly used by local residents to walk their dogs, and as a venue for teenagers to meet, or play football.
When sound recordist Chris Watson visited Alder Hey hospital for the first time last year, he was struck by how the patients and staff could see Springfield Park from the hospital windows, but they couldn鈥檛 hear it; and so he suggested recording and installing a dawn chorus inside the hospital. The idea was greeted with huge enthusiasm. And so Chris was commissioned by the Foundation for Arts and Creative Technology (FACT) and Alder Hey to create a sound installation for the hospital. This edition of NATURE tells the story of how the dawn chorus was captured and then released into the hospital for the benefit of the patients.
In Spring 2007, Chris was joined by patients, staff, and some local students to make recordings at dawn in the park. This was the first time many of the volunteers had ever done any sound recording. Children from the hospital crept round the park, accompanied by their parents or carers, recording greenfinches, robins, blackbirds and song thrushes as well as the rain and the wind. For everyone involved it was an 鈥渆ar-opening鈥 and inspirational experience.
From the hours and hours of recordings, Chris carefully edited the material to create a shortened version of the dawn chorus by 鈥渢ime compressing鈥 the actual event to create a piece lasting about 6 minutes, called WILD SONG AT DAWN. Now, patients and staff can escape the noisy, impersonal environment of the hospital and immerse themselves in the sounds of a dawn chorus by listening to the chorus on a personal audio player. Long term, the cathartic effect of the dawn chorus on the patients is something which the hospital is particularly keen to explore.
In this edition of NATURE, Paul Evans narrates the journey of a dawn chorus; from urban park to hospital ward as the children and staff at Alder Hey immerse themselves in an orchestra of birds, which until now, had been beyond their reach.
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RELATED LINKS
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