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Last Train to Hilversum: A journey in search of the magic of radio [Kietas viršelis]

4.02/5 (155 ratings by Goodreads)
  • Formatas: Hardback, 336 pages, aukštis x plotis: 234x153 mm, weight: 646 g
  • Išleidimo metai: 24-Jan-2019
  • Leidėjas: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
  • ISBN-10: 1408889994
  • ISBN-13: 9781408889992
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Hardback, 336 pages, aukštis x plotis: 234x153 mm, weight: 646 g
  • Išleidimo metai: 24-Jan-2019
  • Leidėjas: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
  • ISBN-10: 1408889994
  • ISBN-13: 9781408889992
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
Despite the all-pervading influence of television ninety per cent of people in Britain still listen to the radio, clocking up over a billion hours of listening between us every week. Its a background to all our lives: we wake up to our clock radios, we have the radio on in the kitchen as we make the tea, its on at our workplaces and in our cars. From Listen With Mother to the illicit thrill of tuning into pirate stations like Radio Caroline; from receiving a musical education from John Peel or having our imagination unlocked by Douglas Adams The Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy; from school-free summers played out against a soundtrack of Radio One and Test Match Special to more grown-up soundtracks of the Today programme on Radio 4 and the solemn, rhythmic intonation of the shipping forecast in many ways, our lives can be measured in kilohertz.

Yet radio is changing because the way we listen to the radio is changing. Last year the number of digital listeners at home exceeded the number of analogue listeners for the first time, meaning the pop and crackle and the age of stumbling upon something by chance is coming to an end. There will soon be no dial to turn, no in-between spaces on the waveband for washes of static, mysterious beeps and faint, distant voices. The mystery will be gone: well always know exactly what it is were listening to, whether its via scrolling LCD on our digital radios, the box at the bottom of our TV screen or because weve gone in search of a particular streaming station.

And so, as the world of analogue listening fades, Charlie Connelly takes stock of the history of radio and its place in our lives as one of the very few genuinely shared national experiences. He explores its geniuses, crackpots and charlatans who got us to where we are today, and remembers its voices, personalities and programmes that helped to form who we are as individuals and as a nation. He visits the key radio locations from history, and looks at its vital role over the past century on both national and local levels.

Part nostalgic eulogy, part social history, part travelogue, Last Train To Hilversum is Connellys love letter to radio, exploring our relationship with the medium from its earliest days to the present in an attempt to recreate and revisit the world he entered on his childhood evenings on the dial as he set out on the radio journey of a lifetime.

Recenzijos

Utterly charming - witty, warm, tender, deeply evocative and so intelligently written. Charlie's voice is as clear, sonorous and assured as the sound of the Shipping Forecast during a sleepless night. * Daisy Buchanan, author and journalist * A joy to read. * Observer * Charlie Connelly proves to be an enthusiastic and entertaining guide to radio's history, personalities and hallowed sites. His book is a heartfelt and funny celebration. * Guardian * Combining sturdy appraisal, recondite historical byways and delightful personal touches, Last Train to Hilversum is a revealing as well as charitable evocation of our most intimate and abiding medium. * David Kynaston, historian and author * Charlie is a great writer: warm, funny and engaging. I was so struck after reading his books that I actually sent him a fan letter and I've never done that to anyone in my life before. His books are always a great read. * Bernard Sumner, musician and founding member of Joy Division and New Order * An amiable and impressively wide-ranging ramble, from the Dutch town of Hilversum itself (of radiogram dial fame) to Utsire, a shipping forecast region in northern Norway. * Stuart Maconie, Mail on Sunday *

Daugiau informacijos

A beautifully written celebration of the ever-present soundtrack to our lives
1 We Are All Radio People
1(12)
2 Love Hertz: a Radio Life
13(9)
3 Insinuating Eavesdropper: the Pioneers
22(8)
4 Follow Spot to Light Icing: an Afternoon with Corrie Corfield, Part One
30(6)
5 `Romantic, Authoritative, Mesmeric': the World of the Shipping Forecast
36(20)
6 The Six Per Cent Silence: an Afternoon with Corrie Corfield, Part Two
56(10)
7 `A Science of Inestimable Value to Humanity': Guglielmo Marconi in Dorset
66(17)
8 `The World is Calling for More': the Chelmsford Broadcast
83(10)
9 The Bridle Path to Glory: the Birth of British Broadcasting
93(12)
10 A Slumbering Old Warrior: Looking for Lord Reith
105(15)
11 Women Against the Tide: the Ballad of Sheila Borrett
120(17)
12 Charlton Athletic Nil: Charlotte Green Reads the Football Results
137(19)
13 `Don't Swear': the First Commentator
156(7)
14 And the Sun Shines Now: the Greatest Commentator
163(8)
15 `Make it a Conversation': Spending the Night with Dotun Adebayo
171(17)
16 Last Heard of: the Lost World of the Radio SOS
188(13)
17 Norman Conquest: Leonard Plugge and the Birth of Independent Radio
201(14)
18 Not Fit for Human Habitation: Two Lochs Radio, Britain's Smallest Commercial Station
215(19)
19 The Birth of Satire: Ronald Knox and the Red Panic of 1926
234(10)
20 `The Goons are the Lonnie Donegan of British Comedy': Arthur Mathews in the Comic Ether
244(12)
21 The Filthiest Joke in the World: Clapham and Dwyer's Moral Panic
256(4)
22 `There's Nothing Between Us and Heaven': the Fleet's Lit Up and So is Tommy Woodrooffe
260(9)
23 `Who Cares if the Government's Unhappy?': Jessie Brandon, Pirate Queen
269(14)
24 `Pack it in, Beatrice': Revisiting the Cello and the Nightingale
283(4)
25 `The World is a Small Place When You Have a Radio': Sunday Morning with Cerys Matthews
287(11)
26 `It was Basically Boys Playing with Stuff, but They Also Had a Vision': Radio Lessons in Hilversum
298(15)
27 Listening Out at Rampisham Down
313(8)
Further Reading 321(2)
Acknowledgements 323(2)
Index 325
Charlie Connelly is a bestselling author, award-winning broadcaster and popular public speaker. Three of his books have featured as Radio 4's Book of the Week. He has written for most of the UK and Irish national newspapers and a range of magazines from The Oldie to Outdoor Fitness, as well as comedy scripts for BBC radio and RTÉ radio in Ireland and documentaries for BBC Radio 4 on subjects as diverse as the poetry of Noel Coward and the legendary cricket coach Alf Gover.

The audio version of his bestselling Attention All Shipping came second in a public vote to find the greatest audiobook of all time organised by Waterstones and the Guardian. Romeo and Juliet was third, which Charlie takes as official confirmation that hes better than Shakespeare.

@charlieconnelly