With the current celebrations of the 90th anniversary of BBC radio, I thought it would be worth having a thread in which listeners mentioned some of the broadcasts which have made a great impression on them over the years (perhaps a maximum of 5 in any one post!) - they can be any kind of radio broadcasts, whether heard as archive repeats or for the first time.
To start the ball rolling, here are five of mine, which strangely don't include any concert or opera broadcasts (though I'm sure some will come to my mind eventually):
Robert Simpson's talk early-1970s on Beethoven's Fidelio
The first broadcast of Samuel Beckett's Not I with Billy Whitelaw as the speaker - absolutely spell-binding
Giles Cooper's radio play Mathry Beacon
Tom Stoppard's radio play The Dog It Was That Died
and for a piece of live journalism I thought the late Peter Jones' radio commentary on the unfolding Heysel stadium disaster was an astonishing tour-de-force, possibly the best example of commentary reacting to an unpredictable event I have heard.
To start the ball rolling, here are five of mine, which strangely don't include any concert or opera broadcasts (though I'm sure some will come to my mind eventually):
Robert Simpson's talk early-1970s on Beethoven's Fidelio
The first broadcast of Samuel Beckett's Not I with Billy Whitelaw as the speaker - absolutely spell-binding
Giles Cooper's radio play Mathry Beacon
Tom Stoppard's radio play The Dog It Was That Died
and for a piece of live journalism I thought the late Peter Jones' radio commentary on the unfolding Heysel stadium disaster was an astonishing tour-de-force, possibly the best example of commentary reacting to an unpredictable event I have heard.
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