Monthly Archives: December 2006

I’m ready for my close-up: John Grierson and the Creative Treatment of Actuality

Martin Williams produced this programme focusing on the work of John Grierson. Grierson spearheaded the British Documentary Film Movement in the years before WWII. Featuring interviews with Ian Aitken, author of Film and Reform (Routledge 1990), Realist Film Theory and Cinema (Manchester University Press 2006) and editor of the Encyclopaedia of Documentary Film (Routledge 2005) and Brian Winston, author of Claiming the Real (BFI 1995) and Lies, Damned Lies and Documentary (BFI 2001).

Links: Wikipedia page on John Grierson
The John Grierson Trust

Originally broadcast 25th May 2006 (mp3 format, 27mb)

Hooting Yard: Foamy Potation.

Regular readers will have gathered that the bulk of the prose in Hooting Yard is the result of many, many hours of painstaking research. Before writing Pipistrelle Pursuivant, for example, I needed to know a lot more about heraldic bats than I did when I woke up that morning. Indeed, I had much to learn about bats, and even more about heraldry. To gain a precarious foothold in the latter, one of my sources was Pimbley’s Dictionary of Heraldry.

dictionary.jpg

I must say, having read it in full, that this is the very model of what a dictionary can be. Seldom have I found such a rigorous approach to the act of definition. Pimbley’s are clear, succinct, and remarkable. Take this, as just one example: there you are, thumbing through your heraldic dictionary, wanting – even needing – to know what is meant by the phrase ‘Barry bendy dexter and sinister’. Pimbley defines it as ‘a combination of barry and bendy dexter and sinister’. Isn’t that perfect? You close the book, thump your fist on your escritoire, and furrow your brow, older and wiser than you were but a minute ago.

  • World of Birds
  • Where Are They Now? No. 12 : Tad Wensleydale
  • The Thing
  • Splendidly Useful Definition
  • Docent With A Speech Impediment
  • Quotation from ‘The History Of England And Great Britain’ by Professor Meikeljohn
  • Quotation from ‘Spying In Guru Land’ by William Shaw

This episode of Hooting Yard was first broadcast on the 19th July 2006. A complete transcript of this episode can be found on Frank Key’s Hooting Yard website. Photo by Magister Spencer Boegeman.

I’m ready for my close-up: The (horror) films of Stephen King

Alex Fitch talks to Emma Smart from the BFI about film adaptations of Stephen King’s novels and short stories. Featuring excerpts from his talk in Battersea earlier in the month and trailers from his earliest and most recent films…
(This show is dedicated to Grace, a King fan from Timsbury, near Bath, with thanks to The Times for getting me tickets to the Battersea event)

Links: The Times Online podcasts of Stephen King’s talk in Battersea 7th November 2006 Stephen King’s entry on Wikipedia

Originally broadcast 23rd November, 2006 (mp3 format, 26mb)

Marvin Suicide: 98 – Shoot me in the face.

“Oo, oo, I know Miss…is it…err…Easter?”
Here is the tracklisting for this weeks programme:

1. Sunshine Of Your Love by Dondero High School A Capella Choir, Pop Concert 2002:
www.comfortstand.com

2. Weird Science by Does It Offend You, Yeah?:
www.myspace.com

3. Dansmosaik by Dorothy’s Magic Bag, Dansmosaik:
www.candymind.com

4. Wow-va-pitsi by Kemialliset Ystavat:
www.thewire.co.uk

5. Ketchup And Mayonnaise by Fred Stonka, Release No.3:
www.frogsrecords.co.uk

6. Hypocrite by Antibalas Afrobeat Orchestra, Talkative:
www.epitonic.com

7. Tango by Bernadette Seacrest And The Yes Men:
music.download.com

This episode was broadcast on 7th December 2006. Please visit www.marvinsuicide.org for previous shows and more information. Plus I would love it if you were to send me an e-mail.

The Two Degrees Show: 1. Science Refresher

The UK’s only weekly programme dedicated to climate change bagan in October with a refresher on the science from a leading authority and a look at the scale and urgency of the challenge now facing us. David Griggs is the Director of the Hadley Centre (the Meteorological Office’s Centre for Climate Prediction and Research). He talks us through the basic science of climate change – what we know and what we don’t know. Dr Alice Bows of the Tyndall Centre is co-author of “Living Within A Carbon Budget” which outlines a plan of action for keeping within the two degrees limit.

Featuring:
· Dr David Griggs (Director, Hadley Centre)
· Dr Alice Bows (Tyndall Centre)

Living Within A Carbon Budget (Tyndall Centre)

Climate Change: Prognosis and courses of action (Phil England)

Climate Radio Archive

Originally broadcast: 10 October 2006

I’m ready for my close-up: History in Film

History and film have been inextricably linked since movie pioneers first shot footage of workers leaving factory gates and trains entering stations. In tonight’s show Alex Fitch explores the nature of history as a topic for film and the use of historical footage in films. The first half of the show is a discussion with James DeCarteret, Mark Stafford and Alison Goldie about recent films that depict and / or include historical events such as Hollywoodland and Nick Broomfield’s Ghosts and then Alex discusses the genre with Dr. Toby Haggith, the head of cinema programming at The Imperial War Museum in London.
[Sorry for the poor audio quality at the beginning and end – I was using unfamiliar equiptment in my lunch break at work!]

Links: The Third Australian History and Film Conference
www.historyonfilm.com
Imperial War Museum
Originally broadcast 30th Novemebr 2006 (mp3 format, 26mb)

the heard world 43: Europe

the long awaited audio from my trip to england and amsterdam in september. everytime i arrive back to the states i feel a little more like a hollowed out robot reading a script. call it cliche, call it what you like. i just can’t believe i’m wasting my perfectly good eu citizenship feeding the american economy. oh, i didn’t mess with the audio at all, these are raw recordings, unedited. i swear. enjoy.

I’m ready for my close-up: Whatever happened to Dan Dare, Pilot of the Future?

Alex Fitch talks to historian Duncan Nott and Kev F. Sutherland, a comics artist and writer about Dare’s continuing appeal and cultural legacy…

Links: The official Dan Dare website
Unofficial fan sites – dan-dare.net & dan-dare.org where you can hear the clips featured in the show in full…
Spaceship Away – the home of new Dan Dare adventures

Originally transmitted on September 14th 2006 (mp3 format, 27.3 mb)

Marvin Suicide: 97 – Don’t Mess With My Face.

Marvin suicide is a funny little programme that plays music and sounds which have been found freely and legally on the internet. The idea is to make people aware that there is an alternative source of music found on the world wide web – or something like that. Maybe not a very good source for people that like Busted, Wee Papa Girl Rappers or Christina Spears, but there is usually something for everyone.

Here is the tracklisting for this weeks episode and it includes links to where all the songs were downloaded:

1. Drew Harm Round by My Oh My!:
www.taurotragusoryx.org.uk

2. Untrue by All The Living And The Dead And Virginie Lamy, In The Moon EP:
www.another-record.com

3. Silver Highways by Mujuice, Still:
www.fragmentmusic.net

4. Bradbury Dub by Flextronic:
www.myspace.com

5. Barequai by Joel Knight Chevalier And Unexpected Social Images, 450:
www.comfortstand.com

6. Ktrp by Adachi Tomomi:
www.ubu.com

7. Sjomannen by FAP, Malekasino Dondolo:
www.stupiddreamrecords.com

This episode was broadcast on 30th November 2006. Please visit www.marvinsuicide.org for previous shows and more information. Plus I would love it if you were to send me an e-mail.

Hooting Yard: Lineated Tiger Heron.

A special edition of Hooting Yard this week. This is a kind of list programme, as in lists; L I S T, and it’s dedicated to Jed Fadhley and to other little tinies that need to be lulled to sleep.

bird.jpg
  • A list of 5 film directors, 2 jazzmen, 1 astronomer, 1 newsreader, 34 stars of stage, screen and television, and 601 birds.

This episode of Hooting Yard was first broadcast on the 12th July 2006. More information can be found on Frank Key’s Hooting Yard website. Photo by Great grey owl.