![]() |
|||
|
Set into Song: Ewan MacColl, Charles Parker,
Peggy Seeger and the Radio Ballads
Uniquely, the programmes took the speech of working people, until then almost always voiced by actors, and allowed them to tell their own stories. They told them into the new 'Midget' mobile tape recorder wherever they lived and worked - in railway yards, on fishing vessels, down pits, on bulldozers, in Traveller encampments. Their stories were woven together by Ewan MacColl with songs that he wrote specially for the programmes, after listening intensely to the language and rhythms of the voices, and by the young Peggy Seeger, who designed the musical setting and directed the performers. The programmes were rehearsed and recorded under the overall direction of the visionary Birmingham radio producer Charles Parker, a pioneer of the new painstaking art of tape splicing. The book tells the story of the making of the programmes, and of
the lives of their begetters - three very different people, whose
complementary talents created brilliant radio programmes which were
hugely influential on subsequent documentary makers. Begun in 1958,
they were ended by the BBC in 1964, as radio lost its popularity
and its money to television. |
||
|
|
|||
|
| Home | Songwriter
| Singer | Activist
| Family & Friends | Itinerary
| This page updated August 8, 2007
|
|||