![]() |
courtesy of https://www.bbc.co.uk/sounds/play/m0002zbz |
BBC Radio Four is always coming up with bright ideas for new programmes and I’ve particularly been enjoying the thirty-minute sessions called Only Artists, which involve unscripted conversations between people who work in the various creative arts. We’re now on Series 7, which includes a fascinating chat between theatre director Iqbal Kahn, famous for his innovative productions of Shakespeare, and another Brummie, the poet, playwright and children's author, Benjamin Zephaniah. Although all the artists have fascinating things to say, as a creative writer I prick up my ears when writers are talking, to see if I can garner any tips, or just have that moment where you think…yes, that’s so true!

Scottish Poet Don Paterson met the composer Thomas Adès at the Guildhall School of Music. Adès asked about Patterson’s use of notebooks, how some might get abandoned and others returned to in an obsessive way. Adès said that the one thing he envied was that poets didn't have to produce ‘hours and hours of little black dots’ on paper. Patterson, on the other hand was inquisitive about the collaboration Adès has to undergo to get an opera or symphony performed. Patterson had been asked to create a libretto and found the work ‘frustrating and difficult’. Neither of them felt they had an infallible gut instinct about what worked and what didn’t. Don Paterson explained how he looked at the ‘minimal number of prompts I can offer the reader to complete this picture’, citing Robert Frost’s methodology. The composer loved this description, and came back with a great metaphor for poetry. ‘It’s as if you’re vibrating to the world’ .
![]() |
Between the Two My Heart is Balanced – Revenge – from Migrations at Tate Britain by Lubaina Himid |
‘Oor hair it micht be silver noo,
oor walk a wee bit doddery,
but we’ve had a whirl and a blast, girl,
thru the cauld blast winter, thru spring, summer.’
oor walk a wee bit doddery,
but we’ve had a whirl and a blast, girl,
thru the cauld blast winter, thru spring, summer.’
![]() |
https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m0002813 |
Joanne Harris has written more than fifteen novels plus collections of short stories, including Chocolat and Blackberry Wine. She was talking with the composer Howard Goodall so it was natural that the musicality of words would come up. They both agreed that it didn’t matter what sort of work they were undertaking, the important part was to enjoy the work. Goodall writes church music, film music, even music for adverts, but puts equal importance to each piece. Harris spoke of the pressure of conforming to the bandwagons that novelists are put under; ‘they told me not to write about food, to always set my stories in cities and to feature young characters. So I wrote about chocolate, set my story in provincial France, and featured old people’.
Find out more about these writers by clicking on the links at their names, and all the programmes are available on BBC Sounds, so also check out poet Hollie McNish, crime doyenne Louise Welsh, award-winning Irish writer Sebastian Barry and Amma Asante, among other artists chatting from the heart, spilling out observations that ring so true, at https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b08ltbhl/episodes/player