Melvyn Bragg

  • Read by: Robert Powell

    Duration: 13 hrs 30 mins

    The remarkable story of a language that began as a minor Germanic dialect, to its position as a global language. This is also the story of the people who shaped the language.

    Biography - Art Music & Literature
  • Read by: Melvyn Bragg

    Duration: 11 hrs 54 mins

    In this captivating memoir, Melvyn Bragg recalls growing up in the Cumbrian market town of Wigton, from his early childhood during the war to the moment he had to decide between staying on or spreading his wings.

    This is the tale of a boy who lived in a pub and expected to leave school at fifteen yet won a scholarship to Oxford. Derailed by a severe breakdown when he was thirteen, he developed a passion for reading and study - though that didn't stop him playing in a skiffle band or falling in love. 

    It is equally the tale of the people and place that formed him. Bragg indelibly portrays his parents and local characters from pub regulars to vicars, teachers and hardmen, and vividly captures the community-spirited northern town - steeped in the old ways but on the cusp of post-war change. A poignant elegy to a vanished era as well as the glories of the Lake District, it illuminates what made him the writer, broadcaster and champion of the arts he is today.


    Biography - General
  • Read by: Mark McGann

    Duration: 14 hrs 30 mins

    Sequel to 'A Son Of War' (5933). In the final part of the trilogy, Joe Richardson experiences the rites of passage into adulthood, and has decided to leave his home town in Cumbria to study at Oxford University, a very different world! Contains some offensive language and explicit sex.

    Contemporary Fiction
  • Read by: Melvyn Bragg

    Duration: 11 hrs 49 mins

    With his landmark series In Our Time, Melvyn Bragg introduced an audience of over 2 million to big ideas across the realms of science, religion, culture, history and philosophy. Now, in A History of Ideas, he looks at the fundamental concepts that underpin our world, and the great thinkers who explored them. 

    He is joined by experts from a wide range of fields to discuss the biggest questions we ask ourselves, such as 'What does it mean to be free?', 'How do I tell wrong from right?', 'What makes us human?' and 'How can I know anything at all?' Each of his guests attempts to answer these questions using their specialist expertise.

    Wide-ranging, entertaining and inspiring, this stunning series puts the big ideas in their historical context, showing us that they are not merely academic abstractions, but essential tools for living.

     

    Plays Theatre & Dance
  • Read by: Miscellaneous

    Duration: 18 hrs 30 mins

    In 1998, a brand new culture show was launched on Radio 4, featuring Melvyn Bragg and a panel of leading academics discussing the ideas, individuals and events that have shaped our world. In Our Time rapidly became one of radio's most well-loved programmes, regularly attracting over 2 million listeners eager to learn more about the topic of the week - which could be asteroids, Zoroastrianism or anything in between. This specially curated collection charts the evolution of the novel as a literary form throughout the past four centuries, analysing 25 works ranging from Cervantes' 17th century epic Don Quixote to George Orwell's 1945 political fable Animal Farm. Some of the best books of all time are examined and elucidated here, including Robinson Crusoe, Tristram Shandy, Emma, Frankenstein, Jane Eyre, Crime and Punishment, Ulysses and Mrs Dalloway. Three additional programmes, on 'The Novel', 'Victorian Realism' and 'Literary Modernism', set these masterpieces in their historical context.


    Arts General
  • Read by: Miscellaneous

    Duration: 15 hrs 43 mins

    Eclectic, erudite and entertaining, In Our Time is one of Radio 4's most successful programmes, regularly attracting an audience of over 2 million for its discussions on every subject under the sun: from oceanography to Ovid. In this special themed collection, Melvyn Bragg is joined by guest experts including Simon Schaffer, John Gribbin, Jim Al-Khalili and Sir Martin Rees to discuss 25 of the key laws, principles and problems of physics.

    Here are examinations of major concepts including plasma, radiation, matter and antimatter and the Second Law of Thermodynamics, as well as discourses on historical theories such as Zeno's paradoxes, the speed of light and relativity. Also featured are analyses of modern developments in physics, including the discovery and growing understanding of the proton, neutron and electron, the controversial breakthrough of nuclear technology, and the search for the holy grail of 20th century physics: the Grand Unified Theory. 

    Science - Earth & Physical
  • Read by: Miscellaneous

    Duration: 17 hrs 3 mins

    In Our Time is a linchpin of the Radio 4 schedule, attracting over 2 million listeners a week since its launch in 1998. Erudite, edifying and enlightening, it tackles serious ideas succinctly, providing fascinating insight into subjects ranging from the Fibonacci Sequence to Frida Kahlo. 

    In this special thematic anthology, we traverse the solar system, the galaxies and the multiverse, voyaging across space to explore 25 celestial objects and phenomena. Included are programmes on the universe, the sun, the moon, the stars and the planets - among them our near neighbours, Venus and Mars.

     

    Science - General
  • Read by: Miscellaneous

    Duration: 16 hrs 40 mins

    In Our Time has been the cornerstone of broadcasting on BBC Radio 4 since its launch in 1998. Presented by one of Britain's greatest champions of the arts, Melvyn Bragg, the show explores ideas across history, religion, philosophy, science and culture.

    With a vast array of contributors from the world of academia, such as Mary Beard, Angie Hobbs and Diarmaid MacCulloch, it is one of Radio 4's most successful programmes. 

    Collected in this thematic anthology are 25 episodes focusing on notable events and individuals in Christian history, from the third century AD to the founding of Methodism, that have transformed the history of the world.

     

    Religion & Philosophy
  • Read by: Miscellaneous

    Duration: 17 hrs 19 mins

    Since its debut in 1998, In Our Time has amassed a dedicated following of more than 2 million listeners. Hosted by Melvyn Bragg, with a panel of guest experts, each show features a plethora of fascinating facts and inspirational discourse on topics ranging from democracy to dark matter. 

    This specially curated collection celebrates the rich diversity of poetry in English, focussing on 25 major works and writers from the mediaeval era to the 20th Century. Opening with a programme on Geoffrey Chaucer, often called the father of English literature, it encompasses some of the greatest poets of all time, including John Donne, Pope, Milton, Emily Dickinson, Christina Rossetti, W B Yeats and Wilfred Owen.

    Poetry
  • Read by: Miscellaneous

    Duration: 15 hrs 36 mins

    Melvyn Bragg and guests explore the history of the Islamic world through its religion thinkers poetry empire and rulers 'An ever-growing library of wisdom' The Economist Since 1998 In Our Time has been the go-to radio programme for knowledge seekers and inquiring minds. Tackling big topics with a light touch it has introduced weekly audiences of over 2 million to subjects ranging from Romulus and Remus to the Renaissance.

    This special themed collection provides a focussed wide-ranging introduction to 25 of the ideas and events that shaped the Islamic world highlighting the numerous connections between Islamdom and the West throughout history. We learn the origins of Sharia law and how prophets became important to Islam Judaism and Christianity alike; discover how the Translation Movement introduced the Arabic world to Greek philosophy medicine engineering and maths; and find out how settlers and invaders from both East and West transformed and refashioned the civilisations they touched from the Arab Conquest Muslim Spain and the Volga Vikings to the Third Crusade and the Siege of Vienna. Here too are key scholars and writers among them al-Kindi the first significant thinker to reconcile philosophy and Islam; Averroes who worked to integrate Islamic theology with the rationality of Aristotle; Maimonides a titan of Jewish intellectual history who was much influenced by the Islamic world; and Rumi the Persian poet and Sufi mystic whose work transcends borders of time faith language and geography.

    History - World
  • Read by: Miscellaneous

    Duration: 19 hrs

    In Our Time is one of BBC Radio's most successful and best-loved programmes, with a weekly listenership of over two million. Since 1998, it has 'transformed the landscape for serious ideas at peak listening time' (The Times), introducing its audience to an astonishing array of intriguing topics, from the epic of Gilgamesh to the gin craze.

    History - Ancient
  • Read by: Miscellaneous

    Duration: 22 hrs

    This special themed collection provides a focussed, wide-ranging introduction to 25 of the ideas and events that shaped the Islamic world, highlighting the numerous connections between Islamdom and the West throughout history. We learn the origins of Sharia law, and how prophets became important to Islam, Judaism and Christianity alike; discover how the Translation Movement introduced the Arabic world to Greek philosophy, medicine, engineering and maths; and find out how settlers and invaders from both East and West transformed and refashioned the civilisations they touched, from the Arab Conquest, Muslim Spain and the Volga Vikings to the Third Crusade and the Siege of Vienna. Here, too, are key scholars and writers, among them al-Kindi, the first significant thinker to reconcile philosophy and Islam; Averroes, who worked to integrate Islamic theology with the rationality of Aristotle; Maimonides, a titan of Jewish intellectual history who was much influenced by the Islamic world; and Rumi, the Persian poet and Sufi mystic whose work transcends borders of time, faith, language and geography.

    War - General
  • Read by: Miscellaneous

    Duration: 19 hrs 10 mins

    Radio 4's In Our Time has established itself at the pinnacle of essential conversation on a wide range of subjects from science, history, philosophy and the arts. The programme, which celebrated its 25th anniversary in 2023, is presented by Melvyn Bragg with contributors from the diverse worlds of academia. 

    Opening with four contextual episodes - The Artist, Imagination, The Muses, and Architecture and Power - this thematic anthology contains 25 programmes on the history of visual art. Included are artistic styles and movements, from Avant Garde to Bohemianism, and great cultural figures such as Hans Holbein the Younger, Katsushika Hokusai, Frida Kahlo, Michelangelo and William Morris.

     

    Arts General
  • Read by: Miscellaneous

    Duration: 9 hrs 52 mins

    Melvyn Bragg and guests discuss 25 scientific pioneers who have shaped the development of science over 500 years 'Exemplifies what Radio 4 is all about and what makes it world class' The Guardian One of the bedrocks of Radio 4 In Our Time has entertained and fascinated millions of listeners since it was first broadcast in 1998. Each week Melvyn Bragg and a panel of leading academics discuss the big ideas that form the intellectual agenda of our age traversing an eclectic spectrum of topics from the alphabet to Absolute Zero.

    This specially curated collection introduces us to 25 of the best minds who have shaped the fields of science over the past five centuries. Beginning with an introductory episode 'The Scientist' it encompasses pioneers such as mathematicians Blaise Pascal Carl Friedrich Gauss Ada Lovelace and Emmy Noether; astronomers Johannes Kepler and William and Caroline Herschel; chemists Rosalind Franklin and Dorothy Hodgkin; and physicists Ernest Rutherford and Paul Dirac. Among the other famous names featured are Michael Faraday Louis Pasteur Thomas Edison Alan Turing and the Curies as well as the great naturalist Charles Darwin who is the subject of a 4-part special devoted to his life and work. Science students In Our Time fans and lovers of learning will relish these captivating wide-ranging discussions giving us unparalleled insight into the remarkable individuals whose ideas and inventions have transformed our world.

    Science - General
  • Read by: Miscellaneous

    Duration: 18 hrs 30 mins

    In Our Time is a Radio 4 phenomenon, a knowledge juggernaut that has informed and entertained over 2 million listeners each week since its first broadcast in 1998. In its 25 years on air, it has covered an astonishing array of topics, from the Second Law of Thermodynamics to the Sistine Chapel. 

    Beginning with three introductory episodes, this specially curated collection explores 25 of the most important individuals, ideas and discoveries that have transformed our understanding of mathematics over the past 5,000 years. We learn how Indian mathematics provided the foundations for much of our modern thinking, discover why Euclid's Elements is the most influential textbook ever written and hear of the epic feud between Sir Isaac Newton and Gottfried Leibniz over who invented calculus.

    Science - General
  • Read by: Miscellaneous

    Duration: 22 hrs

    First aired in 1998, In Our Time has become one of Radio 4's most beloved and enduring shows, regularly attracting an audience of over 2 million. Each week, Melvyn Bragg and his panel of guest experts take part in an erudite, stimulating discussion on subjects ranging from the Peasants' Revolt to plate tectonics, taking the listener on a fascinating tour through a wonderland of ideas. Collected in this special thematic anthology are 25 episodes showcasing notable individuals from Renaissance times to the present day who have transformed the way we think about the world. Included are philosophers such as Descartes, Kierkegaard, Nietzsche, Wittgenstein and Karl Marx, authors Albert Camus, Iris Murdoch, Mary Wollstonecraft and Simone de Beauvoir, psychoanalyst Carl Jung and many other celebrated thinkers. Also featured are programmes on key philosophical themes, traditions and theories, among them existentialism, empiricism and feminism.

    Religion & Philosophy
  • Read by: Peter Sawford

    Duration: 19 hrs

    In July 1802 a stranger arrived in the Lake District. His arrival was to put this beautiful corner of England at the centre of one of the greatest scandals of the day. It was his meeting wih Mary Robinson - "The Beauty of Buttermere" - daughter of a local innkeeper, which triggered these events.

    Contemporary Fiction
  • Read by: Simon Armitage

    Duration: 6 hrs

    Melvyn Bragg explores the pivotal role of England's north in defining modern Britain, and its enduring effect on every part of the globe

    In this captivating 10-part series, Melvyn Bragg brings all his enthusiasm, experience and expertise to a subject that has enthralled him his entire life: the importance of the North in shaping the United Kingdom. Joined by special guests including Dame Judi Dench, Sir Michael Parkinson, Joan Bakewell, David Hockney, Maxine Peake, Simon Armitage and Sir Geoffrey Boycott, he charts the ebb and flow of Northern power and influence, examining how one smallish geographical region came to have such an enormous effect on our culture worldwide: from science and philosophy to music and sport.

    Beginning his story from the top of Hadrian's Wall, Bragg looks at the fall of Rome and the rise of Northumbria, and considers the glorious Northumbrian Renaissance - and the mark left on the North by invading Vikings and Normans. He looks at the turbulent years of rebellion that swept the area and the idea of 'northern speech', and tells of his love for the Northern landscape that inspired Wordsworth, Coleridge, the Brontës and Turner.

    Bragg also celebrates the North as the heartland of the Industrial Revolution, and sings the praises of Manchester, the first city of that revolution. He explains how many radical movements had their genesis in the North: from Chartism and the suffragettes to the birth of the Labour Party. Bringing us right up to date, he looks at some great 20th Century cultural icons, such as the Beatles and Coronation Street. Finally, he reflects on 'Northern power', asking what being and sounding Northern means and questioning what the future holds for the North in the wake of the EU referendum.

    Also included In Our Time: Hadrian's Wall, in which Melvyn Bragg and guests discuss this famous archaeological monument, and the two-part series North and South: Across the Great Divide, which finds Ian Marchant travelling along England's North/South divide to ask what it really means - and see if it is shifting.

    Production credits
    Presented by Melvyn Bragg. Produced by Faith Lawrence

    With guests including: Simon Armitage, Syima Aslam, Prof Simon Bainbridge, Dame Joan Bakewell, Maria Balshaw, Prof Hannah Barker, Dr Sarah Bastow, Chris Bonington, Frank Cottrell Boyce, Sir Geoffrey Boycott, Claire Breay, Prof Michelle Brown, Revd Canon Rosalind Brown, Prof Sally Bushell, Prof Robert Colls, Julian Cooper, Ed Cox, Prof Katy Cubitt, Judith Cummins MP, Dame Judi Dench, Prof Richard Gameson, Toby Gordon, Lee Hall, Prof Ian Haynes, Susan Harrison, Prof Nick Higham, David Hockney, Prof Richard Horrocks, Howard Hull, Prof Judith Jesch, Dr Chris Jones, Dr Katy Layton-Jones, Dr Jill Liddington, Bill Lloyd, Natalie McCaul, Jimmy McGovern, Ian McMillan, Dr Katrina Navickas, Sir Michael Parkinson, Maxine Peake, Dr Robert Poole, Irna Qureshi, Canon Apiarist Adrian Rhodes, Lee Rigg, Jonnie Robinson, Prof Dave Russell, Jonathan Schofield, Rommi Smith, Prof Keith Stringer, Dr James Sumner, Dr Matthew Townend, Jenny Uglow, Matthew Watson, Prof Andy Wood
    First broadcast on BBC Radio 4, 29 August-9 September 2016

    In Our Time: Hadrian's Wall
    Presented by Melvyn Bragg
    Produced by Victoria Brignell
    With Greg Woolf, David Breeze and Lindsay Allason-Jones. First broadcast BBC Radio 4, 12 July 2012

    North and South: Across the Great Divide
    Presented by Ian Marchant
    Produced by Mary Ward-Lowery
    With Sir Michael Darrington, Prof Danny Dorling, Rachel North, Dominic Watt, Prof David Morley, John Langton. First broadcast BBC Radio 4, 21-28 March 2012

    History - British
  • Read by: Tony Lister

    Duration: 9 hrs 15 mins

    A study of twelve great scientists, from Archimedes to Crick & Watson, whose discoveries have changed the world.

    Biography - Historical to 1945
  • Read by: Ray Adamson

    Duration: 25 hrs 30 mins

    Fascinating portrait of the actor Richard Burton.

    Biography - Art Music & Literature
  • Read by: Melvyn Bragg

    Duration: 11 hrs

    In this collection, Melvyn Bragg surveys how English has evolved over 1,000 years. He starts by looking at the disappearance of old dialects like that of Cumbria, and how English has been enriched by foreign languages, from Latin and Old French to dozens more as conquest, trade and immigration played their part in recent centuries. He also examines new coinages, puns and wordplay; how accents and social class are entwined; swear words; attempts to stop the evolution of language in its tracks; and, lastly, the many varieties of English that are spoken around the world today.

    Next, it's dialects from around Britain: the Pitmatic of Northumberland, the dialect of (London/Derry), the increasingly elusive Cornish dialect, Pidgin and Shropshire dialect, before finishing up with a speculation on the future of English dialects.

    Finally, Melvyn examines some of the many different varieties of English spoken around the world today, taking in Spanglish from the USA, Indian English, Caribbean English, Australian English, South African English and a kind of 'international English' used between non-native English speakers.

    History - British
  • Read by: Frank Harling

    Duration: 9 hrs

    Returning from the war in Burma in 1946, Sam finds his Cumbrian home town barely changed, but war has changed him. Now he and his family find bonds stretched to breaking point as they strive to adjust and rebuild their lives.

    Contemporary Fiction
  • Read by: Andrew Burt

    Duration: 12 hrs 45 mins

    Sequel to 'The Soldier's Return' (5626). Even in peacetime the upheavals of war are still having an effect as Sam Richardson and his family strive to get on with their lives.

    Contemporary Fiction
  • Read by: Brian Stokes

    Duration: 8 hrs

    A lifetime of restraint and placid affection erupts when a retired bank manager falls for a young girl. Set in Cumbria, this is an intensely moving evocation of an overwhelming passion and its destructive kernel of jealousy.

    CONTENT WARNING: contains scenes of a sexual nature and explicit language

    Contemporary Fiction
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