Findmittel 0-M
bbc_90
90 Jahre BBC
30.01.13
Archivnummern: AP/e_eng/bbc_90_(Dateiname Audiodatei und/oder Begleitinformation)
© Urheber
Datei | Datum | Inhalt | Dauer |
90 x 90: The Full Set (1990-2011) Celebrating 90 years of BBC radio - short features marking some memorable radio moments. | |||
bbc_1922 | 1922 | Such An Extraordinary Pulpit Reverend John Mayo marvels at Mr Marconi's invention. Reverend Richard Coles gives his thought for the day on religious broadcasting. | 01:36 |
bbc_1923 | 1923 | Cardiff Calling Remarkable microphone technique from baritone Mostyn Thomas who remembers the first Welsh words on radio singing out from BBC Wales. | 01:31 |
bbc_1924 | 1924 | The Cello and The Nightingale Cellist Beatrice Harrison duets with nightingales in a Surrey garden - or does she? Sound recordist Chris Watson investigates. | 01:34 |
bbc_1925 | 1925 | The Pips The pips' first birthday! There's a party to crash. | 01:35 |
bbc_1926 | 1926 | The Riot That Never Was A broadcasting priest convinces listeners that London is under threat by murderous rioters. Ray Snoddy reports. | 01:35 |
bbc_1927 | 1927 | Put the Needle on the Record Christopher Stone, one of the BBC's first DJs, introduces gramophone discs with his Time for a Tune programme. | 01:39 |
bbc_1928 | 1928 | Faith, Hope and Clarity Sit down children: schools' producer George Dixon researches radio's classroom potential. | 01:34 |
bbc_1929 | 1929 | Val Gielgud - drama's new boss Val Gielgud epitomised theatricality and helped shape radio drama. | 01:32 |
bbc_1930 | 1930 | No News TodayOn 18 April the BBC decided there was nothing newsworthy worth reporting, so broadcast some piano music instead. | 01:36 |
bbc_1931 | 1931 | Ezra Pound writes an operaPoet Ezra Pound writes an opera for radio and listens to it on the BBC in an Italian kitchen. With Margaret Fisher. | 01:36 |
bbc_1932 | 1932 | Days of Empire Lord Reith introduces what would become the World Service, broadcasting its "voices out of the air" around the world. | 01:35 |
bbc_1933 | 1933 | The Song of Elisabeth Welch Soft Lights and Sweet Music from one of the first black women on the BBC. With West End actress Sharon D Clarke. | 01:33 |
bbc_1934 | 1934 | On an 'Opping 'Oliday An early excursion to record the 'actual' world provides the opportunity for a hop picking holiday. With Sheila Dillon. | 01:35 |
bbc_1935 | 1935 | Encounter with Brahms Suffragette and composer Dame Ethel Smyth remembers meeting her hero in 1877. | 01:37 |
bbc_1936 | 1936 | Charlie Chilton - Cockney rebel Veteran radio star Charles Chilton recalls being threatened with the sack for sounding "too cockney" on his "jazz" programme. | 01:30 |
bbc_1937 | 1937 | Ms Slocombe and The Sound Archive Secretary Marie Slocombe defies her bosses to become the unsung heroine of the BBC Archive. | 01:37 |
bbc_1938 | 1938 | Journey Through Czechoslovakia Swastikas and fairylights - a chilling reminder that journalism is the first draft of history. | 01:35 |
bbc_1939 | 1939 | The Classic Soil Friedrich Engels, Joan Littlewood and working class voices from Manchester and Salford. | 01:35 |
bbc_1940 | 1940 | Arthur Smith Gets on the Band Waggon Arthur Smith visits the Broadcasting House flat lived in by another Arthur. Arthur Askey, "Stinker" Murdoch and their goat shared a flat that has been left untouched... till now. | 01:32 |
bbc_1941 | 1941 | Sincerely Yours Vera Lynn presents a weekly letter in words and music, bringing the forces and their sweethearts together. | 01:31 |
bbc_1942 | 1942 | Crystal Radio Resistance in Guernsey When radio is finally banned in Guernsey, one man risks his life to listen. Paddy O'Connell talked to Thomas Robin. | 01:36 |
bbc_1943 | 1943 | The resignation of George Orwell George Orwell leaves the BBC. Tosco Fyvel, who worked for the BBC German service, tells all. | 01:34 |
bbc_1944 | 1944 | CS Lewis and The Evacuee Child evacuee, Jill Freud, discovers that her new landlord is also a radio hero. | 01:30 |
bbc_1945 | 1945 | I Call… Zelma Karch A call from homeless children who've been Nazi captives, addressed to relatives believed to be living in Great Britain | 01:36 |
bbc_1946 | 1946 | Hello Campers A slice of optimistic post-war life from a northern holiday camp. | 01:34 |
bbc_1947 | 1947 | How Does Your Garden Grow? Eric Robson revisits a question about DDT for Gardener's Question Time's first outing. | 01:38 |
bbc_1948 | 1948 | Mrs Dale and her Diary The famous soap remembered by Gillian Reynolds and satirised by Round The Horne. | 01:30 |
bbc_1949 | 1949 | Chambermaids and Figleaves Excerpts from The BBC Variety Programmes Policy Guide For Writers and Producers, read by Clive Anderson with a little help from ITMA. | 01:35 |
bbc_1950 | 1950 | A soap called the McFlannels Listener Pat Taylor recalls Scotland's favourite weekly home-grown family saga. | 01:29 |
bbc_1951 | 1951 | The Third Man on the BBC That was the shot that killed Harry Lime. Seán Street on how Orson Welles brought a dead man to British radio. | 01:33 |
bbc_1952 | 1952 | Friday Night is Music Night Ken Bruce reveals the secret of Friday Night is Music Night's longevity. | 01:33 |
bbc_1953 | 1953 | Journey into Space A massive radio sci-fi success recalled by David Jacobs and his fellow crew members, who remember how radio faced the evil threat of TV drama... | 01:33 |
bbc_1954 | 1954 | Nature Parliament A young Michael Rosen writes a letter about caterpillars to naturalist Peter Scott's radio show. | 01:32 |
bbc_1955 | 1955 | The Archers' Year Through the seasons - a year in the life of the Archers | |
bbc_1956 | 1956 | Rock Around the Radio As rock 'n' roll seizes Britain, a group of lads get ticked off by a magistrate, and a Scottish teddy girl explains how she bought the chain that decorates her drainpipes. | 01:34 |
bbc_1957 | 1957 | Waiting For Beckett How Samuel Beckett revolutionised writing for radio with All That Fall. | 01:35 |
bbc_1958 | 1958 | Educating Archie Britain's favourite radio vintage ventriloquist's show recalled by a modern day dummy called Monkey and his companion, ventriloquist Nina Conti. | 01:34 |
bbc_1959 | 1959 | Entertaining Mr Orton Joe Orton's controversial and blackly comedic first play is rescued from the scrap pile. | 01:35 |
bbc_1960 | 1960 | Shannon, Rockall, Hebrides… While others slept, former coastguard Ian Stephen was listening to the shipping forecast. What does it really mean to those out on the open sea? | 01:34 |
bbc_1961 | 1961 | The Eichmann Trial Radio broadcasts from the court room during the trial of Adolf Eichmann changed attitudes to the holocaust. At last the world was listening. | 01:35 |
bbc_1962 | 1962 | Children talking Journalist Harold Williamson was the man who talked to children. The show he created, after a winning 1961 series, became a phenomenon, and was later sampled by The Aphex Twin. | 01:34 |
bbc_1963 | 1963 | The Beatles talk posh Jolly joshing between the Beatles and a BBC reporter. | 01:31 |
bbc_1964 | 1964 | In Top Gear Listener Tris Penna recalls listening to Brian Matthew in bed with his new transistor radio. | 01:32 |
bbc_1965 | 1965 | Out in the Sixties A vivid example of how attitudes to sexuality have changed. | 01:35 |
bbc_1966 | 1966 | Aberfan Writer Gwyn Thomas' radio eulogy to the children of Aberfan. | 01:34 |
bbc_1967 | 1967 | Keep The Noise Down, Hendrix The day a Radio 3 producer popped her head around the studio door and asked Jimi Hendrix to keep the noise down | 01:37 |
bbc_1968 | 1968 | The King of Love Is Dead Nina Simone talks about the assassination of Martin Luther King and her song Why? The King of Love is Dead. | 01:33 |
bbc_1969 | 1969 | The View from the Petticoat Line Women in the hotseat. In hats. Gillian Reynolds grabs her handbag for this 1969 episode. | 01:33 |
bbc_1970 | 1970 | The Long March of Everyman Daniel Snowman begins work on a landmark history of the British People, with modern workers giving voice to workers from the past. | 01:34 |
bbc_1971 | 1971 | If You Think You've Got Problems Worried married woman seeks an anti-aphrodisiac and advice in radio's agony column, as recalled by Gillian Reynolds. | 01:36 |
bbc_1972 | 1972 | Belfast's Golden Girl Mary Peters remembers winning Gold in the Olympics, and her Belfast homecoming. | 01:36 |
bbc_1973 | 1973 | Let’s Get This Show on The Roadshow Tour Manager Richard Greaves relives a day in the life of the Radio 1 Roadshow. | 01:34 |
bbc_1974 | 1974 | Spike's tales from the Raj Spike Milligan tells the story of his Indian colonial childhood in More Plain Tales From The Raj. The story of this landmark series began in 1974 with Plain Tales From The Raj. | 01:33 |
bbc_1975 | 1975 | Order, Order Ken Clarke revisits the start of Parliamentary radio and the fear it would change the House. | 01:36 |
bbc_1976 | 1976 | Mind over matter A young Colin Blakemore's Reith Lecture: Understanding the human brain is more important than understanding the frontiers of space or the inside of an atom. | 01:36 |
bbc_1977 | 1977 | This is Radio Orkney Livestock prices and a dating agency for sheep. "You live it and breathe it," explains Dave Gray from Radio Orkney. A different kind of local radio, right from the start. | 01:31 |
bbc_1978 | 1978 | Drainpipe Radio Hear 13-year-old Jeremy Vine making his radio debut on his own home made station - broadcasting down a sewage pipe to his brother and sister. | 01:30 |
bbc_1979 | 1979 | Up All Night On the first night of 24 hour national broadcasting, Radio 2 DJs, Ray and Colin, consider how to fill the long and lonely hours till morning. Right. Absolutely. | 01:32 |
bbc_1980 | 1980 | The difficult second Series Simon Jones, who played Arthur Dent, recalls the hurried birth of the difficult second series shortly after the surprise success of the first. | 01:36 |
bbc_1981 | 1981 | Lady of the Rings Elizabeth Parker recalls manipulating sound in the Radiophonic Workshop, and finding the perfect sound for gold. | 01:35 |
bbc_1982 | 1982 | A Mole on the Radio Adrian Mole, Radio 4's surprise hit of 1982, was famously anti-Thatcher. 30 years later, Lady T's former press secretary Bernard Ingham springs to her defence. | 01:33 |
bbc_1983 | 1983 | It was Our Tune Grace Dent explains her teenage love of Our Tune. | 01:34 |
bbc_1984 | 1984 | The Assassination of Indira Gandhi Hardeep Singh Kohli remembers hearing Mark Tully breaking the news of Indira Gandhi's death. | 01:36 |
bbc_1985 | 1985 | Piano Movement How to 'fill' for 30 minutes, by Radio 3's Suzy Klein. | 01:31 |
bbc_1986 | 1986 | Post-Modern Neo Dada Mullard When Libby Purves went on holiday, producer Victor Lewis-Smith, booked her replacement on Midweek. His name was Arthur and Victor told her "It was the nearest I could get". | 01:36 |
bbc_1987 | 1987 | Stormy Weather The power is out in Broadcasting House. It's torchlight and typewriters for Sue MacGregor. The morning after storms devastate the South East, she remembers the emergency drill. | 01:35 |
bbc_1988 | 1988 | Anthony and Claire: In the Psychiatrist's chair Is there any point in digging up past misery if you can't do anything about it? Claire Rayner is moved to comment when confronted by Dr Anthony Clare. Gillian Reynolds remembers. | 01:33 |
bbc_1989 | 1989 | Now That's What I call Mali Andy Kershaw on an early trip to Mali. In the late 80s, the BBC put what it was learning to call World Music on Radio 1 and 4. | 01:32 |
bbc_1990 | 1990 | Secret Messages John Waite remembers how he used radio to send family messages to his cousin, hostage Terry Waite, when "literally nothing else in the world could reach him". | 01:36 |
bbc_1991 | 1991 | It's all gone Pete Tong A shout going out to Radio 1's official start to the weekend. | 01:34 |
bbc_1992 | 1992 | Hold Your Plums Radio Merseyside's potty cult quiz. | 01:34 |
bbc_1993 | 1993 | Derek Jarman's film without pictures Blue was both a film and a Radio 3 feature, a vivid image of an artist losing his sight. | 01:36 |
bbc_1994 | 1994 | www dot what? Radio 1 cautiously embraces the digital revolution, though presenters struggle a bit with the jargon. | 01:36 |
bbc_1995 | 1995 | Victory! Broadcasting's taboo word appears multiple times in Howard Barker's uncompromising play on Radio 3. Mark Lawson recalls how radio dealt with a welter of bad language. | 02:03 |
bbc_1996 | 1996 | Goodness Gracious Adil Ray giggles again at the hit radio comedy show. | 01:36 |
bbc_1997 | 1997 | A Girl Called Spoonface Actress Becky Simpson was only 11 when she played the amazing Spoonface Steinberg in a moving play that changed radio drama. 15 years later Becky remembers her radio debut. | 01:35 |
bbc_1998 | 1998 | Touching The Elephant A group of blind people touch an elephant and describe it... | 01:39 |
bbc_1999 | 1999 | "That Woman" Monica Lewinsky tells Jenni Murray about sex, politics, and why she kept that dress. | 01:38 |
bbc_2000 | 2000 | Millennium Bug Brian Roberts prepared BBC radio for the Millennium, and remembers waiting for "the end of the world"... Nothing happened. | 01:36 |
bbc_2001 | 2001 | Who is The Rabbit? Journalist Najiba Kasraee reveals how a children's radio character captivated a Taliban Commander. | 01:36 |
bbc_2002 | 2002 | The Launch of 1Xtra A Shropshire listener recalls hearing 1Xtra for the first time. Stand back. There's FIRE coming off the vinyl! | 01:34 |
bbc_2003 | 2003 | The Troubles with Colin Murray A young Colin Murray takes to the streets of Belfast, talking Westlife with Protestant and Catholic kids in this Radio 1 documentary. | 01:37 |
bbc_2004 | 2004 | Keeping It Peel John Peel in his own words, which were heard on BBC radio for almost 40 years. | 01:34 |
bbc_2005 | 2005 | Back of the Net Clare Balding applauds 5 live's Jacqui Oatley, the first female football commentator on national radio. | 01:33 |
bbc_2006 | 2006 | Mind the Gap Continuity announcer Chris Aldridge reveals what it takes to create the seamless sound of Radio 4. A model blowfish, apparently. | 01:37 |
bbc_2007 | 2007 | Captive On his release, BBC journalist and Gaza hostage Alan Johnston reveals the radio message that kept him going. | 01:34 |
bbc_2008 | 2008 | Adam and Joe 6 Music kings of comedy Adam and Joe wage musical war. Their battlefield? The art of the instructional song. | 01:37 |
bbc_2009 | 2009 | A Bird on the Battlefield Sergeant Geoffrey McMullan recalls a moment of solace while serving in Iraq. | 01:33 |
bbc_2010 | 2010 | To the Music of Time Heel Toe Step Together was a powerful true life story of an octogenarian dancer teaching a twenty eight year old how to waltz. | 01:36 |
bbc_2011 | 2011 | An Emotional Tribute To Gary Speed With the help of listeners, Robbie Savage and Darren Fletcher pay tribute to Welsh footballer and manager, Gary Speed, whose death was announced earlier in the day. | 01:37 |
Diverse Audios | |||
2lo_calling | 1922 | The very first words uttered on air “This is 2LO calling, the London station of the British Broadcasting Company calling. This is 2LO calling”. The first official BBC radio broadcast was the evening news transmitted by London station 2L0 from Marconi House studios on the Strand, Central London on 14 November 1922. This is the station identification that preceded the broadcast. | 00:06 |
2lo_albarn_1 | 2012 | 2LO Calling First scheduled simultaneous broadcast since 1922, when the BBC was established. On Wednesday it is 90 years since the first ever BBC broadcast and to mark the anniversary, every BBC radio station across the UK and the globe will be coming together for the first time in the BBC's history. At 17:33 on Wednesday they will simultaneously broadcast a three minute composition by Blur front man Damon Albarn for the Radio Reunited project. With introduction (2lo_albarn_1.pdf) | 04:27 |
2lo_albarn_2 | 2012 | 2LO Calling A: Demon Albarn (2lo_albarn_2.pdf) | 02:59 |
albarn | 2012 | Damon Albarn's Radio Reunited broadcast The BBC's John Wilson went to meet Mr Albarn, who explained the audio collage that he had created: "There's Bertrand Russell in Morse code, there's a skylark and there's a scary Cold War spy station." | 04:36 |
2 Deutsche Beiträge zum 90-jähriges Jubiläum der BBC | |||
BBC Sound Effects: 120 LP33 | |||
Schriftgut | |||
publications | 2012 | A comprehensive bibliography of BBC related material. | |
1920s-2000s.pdf | 2012 | Detailed factsheets for each decade | |
director-generals.pdf | 2012 | List of the BBC Directors-General | |
chairman.pdf | 2012 | List of the BBC Chairmen | |
committees_of_enquiry.pdf | 2012 | List of the BBC Key Broadcast Committees | |
boards_of_governors.pdf | 2012 | List of the Boards of Governors of the BBC | |
burrows_baker.pdf | 2012 | 90 years after its first transmission, BBC radio – from Arthur Burrows to Danny Baker. A: Andrew Everard | |
90*90.pdf | 2012 | Ninety years of BBC radio – listening back through time. A: Caroline Crampton | |
cole.pdf | 2012 | G D H Cole in 1927: “Whatever the BBC does is, of course, wrong.” The Beeb has always been a space for debate on culture, ethics and standards. A: Philip Maughan |