Episodes

  • Triptych Ep 8 | A Rock, A Mother’s Yellow Wallpaper, and a Local Hero
    May 30 2025
    What happens when a desperately ill new mother encounters Paul Simon's Rock, and ends up fully immersed in a remote Scottish fishing village.
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    1 hr
  • Triptych Ep 7 | Through Black Mirror to Lake Street Dive, pursued by Derek Walcott
    May 17 2025
    The Masterpieces 1. Black Mirror 3:5 "Men Against Fire" (2016) Black Mirror is both a phenomenon and an outlier, one that has gained cult status in some quarters (though perhaps there’s a generational divide there? You’ll need to ask our producer Owen for more on that. He has views…). It started life on the UK’s once quite edgy and adventurous Channel 4, the brainchild of journalist, arch-satirist and presenter, Charlie Brooker. He has either written, or prompted creative discussions for each episode, working with his producer Annabel Jones. Stripe’s commander Medina, played by the one and only Shiv Roy (aka Sarah Snook!!) But what makes it incredibly unusual is that it is an anthology show; in other words, one made up of a series of unrelated, stand-alone episodes. This is obviously much more expensive than a regular show because new sets, casts, designs etc are needed every time. The common thread is the impact of technology, socially, relationally, economically, and politically. Some gripe that it often piggy-backs on ideas that are developed at greater length elsewhere, but that does seem nit-picky when the production values are so high and the provocations so thoughtful. If that was not the case, it’s unlikely Netflix would have thrown huge budgets at it or so many A-list stars given their right arms to be in it. That said, it is rarely comfortable viewing and sometimes incredibly dark. As this episode is… the discussion we had was very ‘interesting’! The premise of Men against Fire: soldiers are given neural implants that affects their perceptions, especially of enemies, so that they appear as lethal grotesques, or ‘roaches’. However nothing is as it seems. But what is interesting is that none of the ethical issues are as straightforward as they first seem. In this clip, psychiatrist Arquette (played by the brilliant Michael Kelly) explains the ethos behind the implants to protagonist Stripe (Malachi Kirby). Brooker was initially inspired to focus on propaganda by a British John-Pilger-made documentary about the Iraq war called The War You Don’t See.But his thinking was subsequently shaped by Men Against Fire: The Problem of Battle Command by military historian S L A Marshall, and Dave Grossman’s On Killing: The Psychological Cost of Learning to Kill in War and Society.An intro to the concept of ‘Othering’Finally, a flavour of Brooker’s less intense work (apols for some of the NSFW language) 2. Love after Love by Derek Walcott (1976) The total population of the 16 Caribbean nations comes to only around 44 million (so 0.54% of the world’s population). But just stop for a moment to think of its cultural impact: this is a region punching well above its weight: in music (eg mambo, calypso, dancehall, ska, reggaein international cuisine with the joys of things like jerk cooking or rumin sport (cricket and athletics especially)on many other cultures via its diasporasthrough its joyful festival and carnival culturein intellectual clout with the likes of CLR James (Trinidad) and Frantz Fanon (Martinique); not to forget the Nobel-winners: Sir Arthur Lewis (St Lucia) for Economics; V.S. Naipaul (Trinidad & Tobago) and Sir Derek Walcott (St Lucia) for Literature. [Plus I’ve not even MENTIONED our very own Carib genius, The Crooner — just a matter of time, surely — let alone anything to do with pirates] So it’s to Derek Walcott that we turn now (1930-2017). He won the Nobel in 1992 for his varied writing (plays, short poems, epic poetry, criticism), work that bridged all kinds of different influences making him one of the leading post-colonial writers of his generation. In this episode we discuss his beautiful, Love after Love, which was his publisher’s Poem of the Week only the other day. Receiving his Nobel in 1992 Some other connections George Herbert’s LOVE IIITimothy Keller’s short book (based on a talk he often gave) The Freedom of Self-Forgetfulness.Joel even mentioned Calvin’s Institutes, so more on them here. 3. Making Do by Lake Street Dive (2021) Lake Street Dive is a highly talented and versatile band made up originally of friends who met at music college over 20 years ago (the New England Conservatory of Music in Boston). Since then, they have successfully experimented with different genres while the line-up has changed slightly. There is so much to love about their music, with its invention, virtuosity, flexibility and joie-de-vivre. This song, Making Do, is deceptively straightforward at first listen, though – and prompted a very interesting discussion. The core line-up on this 2021 album, Obviously, was: Rachael Price (original line-up) – vocals, writingBridget Kearney (original line-up) – vocals, background vocals, bass, synthesizer, writingMichael Calabrese (original line-up) – drums, writing, background vocals, ...
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    57 mins
  • Triptych Ep 6 | WH Auden, Wassily Kandinsky, Snarky Puppy
    May 1 2025
    What happens when WH Auden informs Vassily Kandinsky about a trip to a Belgian Art Museum and then meets Snarky Puppy... it all kicks off here!
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    1 hr
  • Triptych Ep 5 | Eternal Sunshine, Ghosteen, Achebe
    Apr 14 2025
    When Eternal Sunshine's Joel and Clem meet Nick Cave's Ghosteen and found themselves chatting with Chinua Achebe's Okonkwo in an Igbo village
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    1 hr and 5 mins
  • Triptych Ep 4 | Tamlins, Marina Abramović, Lives of Others
    Apr 1 2025
    The Masterpieces 1. 'Baltimore' by The Tamlins (1979) Baltimore was the first big international hit for The Tamlins, a Jamaican reggae group founded in 1970 and renowned for their remarkable vocal skills. The original lineup was Carlton Smith, Junior Moore and Winston Morgan. From small beginnings in nightclubs, they became highly sought after by producers and singers alike for their rich harmonies and superb musicality, working with the likes of Peter Tosh in particular, as well as with Delroy Wilson, Pat Kelly, John Holt, and Jimmy Cliff. The original song was written in by the highly influential composer Randy Newman for his 1977 album Little Criminals. But it took the legendary Nina Simone to nudge it into a form closer to The Tamlins’ version for her eponymous 1978 album Baltimore. The Tamlins’ line-up was originally made up of Carlton Smith, Junior Moore and Derrick Lara, each a remarkably strong singer in his own right. But a wonderful synergy occurs when they work together, such that the sum is greater even than its great parts. They have been described as “a cross between Bob Marley and Earth Wind & Fire, a combination that makes them definitely worth experiencing live.” However, it’s no longer possible to hear the original group as Derrick Lara sadly died of cancer in Feb 2020. For more information, check out the bio and recordings list here at Reggaeville. Oh an while we’re talking about Baltimore, here’s some info about the phenomenon that was The Wire that Mark mentioned. 2. 'The Artist is Present' by Marina Abramović (2010) Marina Abramović – The Kitchen – Levitation (still), 2009. c/o Marina Abramović Archives, and Galleria Lia Rumma © Marina Abramović Marina Abramović was born in Belgrade, in the Serbian part of what was then Yugoslavia, a year after the end of the Second World War. Her parents had been very involved in Tito’s Partisans and so had a privileged place in post-war Yugoslav society. Their activities meant that she was largely brought up by her religious grandparents for the first few years of life. She has been a pioneer of performance art, presenting works with hair-raising levels of threat and vulnerability. Most celebrated / notorious / infamous (take your pick!) was her Rhythm 0 which entailed her standing for six hours in a Naples Art Gallery next to 72 objects (which included food and drink, scissors, a gun and a bullet). Visitors were invited to do whatever they wanted to her, using one of the objects. It started off gently, but by the end one visitor even held a loaded gun at her head. After her 20 year relationship and working partnership with Ulay (the West German Uwe Laysiepen), they devised a formal end by walking from opposite ends of the Great Wall of China and meeting in the middle. When they did, they greeted one another, spoke briefly, and then each continued their journeys. The next time they would meet was in 2010 at ‘The Artist is Present’. She made ‘The Artist is Present’ at the Museum of Modern Art (MOMA) in New York in 2010. A documentary about the process and experience was then released in 2012. This involved sitting at an empty table for around 730 hours in total, and visitors were allowed to sit with her for a minute. There was to be no speaking or physical contact, just being in one another’s presence. Many spoke of the extraordinary experience of sitting like this with a stranger. Marina Abramović’s official websiteThe MOMA show in 2010Page for the 2024 Retrospective at the Royal Academy in London. 3. 'The Lives of Others' (dir. Henckel von Donnersmarck (2006) This German-language film won Best Foreign Language Oscar and made a far greater impact on Anglophone cinema audiences than German films often get. It is set in East Berlin in 1984 (of course, it’s no accident that this was the year selected), under communist rule. The GDR (German Democratic Republic: ie East Germany) was constantly scrutinised and patrolled by the country’s security services, (the Stasi). And this fictitious account posits the possibility of one senior officer who finds himself swept up in the lives of those he is charged with surveilling. In some quarters the film was highly controversial, because of the sheer implausibility of a single individual having both the means and the opportunity to do what Gerd Wiesler (played by the astonishing Ulrich Mühe) did in the film. There were just too many internal checks and ‘safeguards’ to prevent such unilateral action. This is debated, of course, but the wonder of the film is that it does find humanity in the bleakest of contexts. And that is what makes this such an inspiring work of art (perhaps naively, perhaps not). For here, see that art and humanity can pierce through the rigid constructs of a totalitarian state and make a difference. The film’s 92% score on Rotten Tomatoes is ...
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    50 mins
  • Triptych Ep 3 | Tchaikovsky, Stony Ground, GenX
    Mar 15 2025
    What sort of conversation would ensure if Tchaikovsky encounters a Jamaican photographer and Douglas Coupland's GenXers...
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    57 mins
  • Triptych Ep 2 | Billie, Zurbarán, Andor
    Feb 28 2025
    Triptych Ep 2 | Billie Eilish: What was I made for? Francisco de Zurbarán: St Luke at the Cross Star Wars' Andor: Series 1
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    59 mins
  • Triptych Ep 1 | Richie, Thomas, Hopper
    Feb 14 2025
    The First Ever: Lionel Richie (and friends) MEETS Welsh poet R S Thomas MEETS American painter Edward Hopper
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    52 mins