
Ben Nevis
Horatio Clare climbs Ben Nevis in the first of four Sound Walks up the four great peaks of the United Kingdom.
Glen Nevis is the starting point as Horatio Clare walks towards the huge rampart of Ben Nevis, on this, the first of four Sound Walks up the four great peaks of the United Kingdom.
With surrounding mountains like sleepers tangled in their bedding of mist, it’s a sweet and gentle start to the climb of Scotland and Britain’s highest mountain. Hunched and cragged with round heavy shoulders it’s approached on the bridle path – the route used by thousands of hikers every year.
On the climb we discover the origins of the mountain’s name, the geology which spans vast periods of deep time, as well as meeting some of the characters of the mountain. Horatio recounts stories of adventurers, ice climbers, mountaineers, poets and scientists.
And the mountain changes its mood – the wind becomes colder with seas of mist. There are scenes that could be straight from Game of Thrones or Lord of the Rings; screes of rocks with paths climbing into opalescence and nothingness; half imagined walkers striding through a frontier of obscurity; the earth emerges smoking and steaming from the magma below.
Walking alongside parties of climbers, all doing it for their own reasons, this journey is part of a grand tradition of scaling the mountain. Horatio asks why so many of us flock to the high places. This journey is a pilgrimage – in hope and faith, a walk for so many through difficulty, and for which so many are rewarded.
The first of four programmes for Christmas 2021 in which Horatio Clare travels to the four highest peaks of the four UK nations. Climbing Ben Nevis in Scotland, Slieve Donard in Northern Ireland, Scafell Pike in England and Snowdon in Wales, he sets out on an epic journey up the monolithic titans to take the temperature of this particular moment in time and our relationship with the outdoors.
Approaching the dozing giants, not in an athletic spirit of conquest but in a spirit investigation and curiosity, he arrives at the foot of each of them with no preconceptions, but with an open mind in the hope of climbing to the attic of each country and looking through the skylight to see how they talk to each other and how they talk to us.
Hearing the birds, smelling the fresh air, being shrouded by mist and cloud whilst also soaking up the light, shades and colours, with long periods of carefully recorded atmosphere, interwoven with music and lucid descriptions, this is radio that’s designed to take time to hear.
Music threaded through the programmes include works from a wide variety of genres by composers and performers including Amiina, Olafur Arnalds, JS Bach, Beoga, Gavin Bryars, Anna Clyne, Laurence Crane, Danish String Quartet, Dalla, Alex Groves, Leos Janacek, John Luther Adams, EJ Moeran, Úna Monaghan, Anne Müller, Nordic Fiddler’s Bloc, Vikingur Olafsson, Morfydd Owen, Puuluup, Penguin Café, Aidan O’Rourke, Richard Strauss, Ralph Vaughan Williams, A Winged Victory for the Sullen and many more.
Books and sources used for research include:
Ben Nevis: Britain's Highest Mountain - Ken Crockett and Simon Richardson
Twenty Years on Ben Nevis - William T Kilgour
The English Lakes: A History - Ian Thompson
Below Scafell - Dudley Hoys
The Pinnacle Club for Women Climbers pinnacleclub.co.uk/journals
On Cambrian and Cumbrian Hills - Henry S Salt
Slieve Donard's Domain - Nicholas Russell
Snowdon: The Story of a Welsh Mountain - Jim Perrin
Portrait of Snowdonia - Cledwyn Hughes
Mountains and Desire - Margaret Grebowicz
Last on
More episodes
Previous
You are at the first episode
Music Played
-
A Winged Victory for the Sullen
Steep Hills Of Vicodin Tears
Performer: A Winged Victory for the Sullen.- Erased Tapes Records.
-
Aidan O’Rourke
Iorram [boat song]
Performer: Aidan O’Rourke.- Iorram.
- Reveal.
- 2.
-
Víkingur Ólafsson
Reflection after Debussy's Bruyeres
Performer: Víkingur Ólafsson.- Deutsche Grammophon.
-
John Luther Adams
Become Ocean
Orchestra: Seattle Symphony. Conductor: Ludovic Morlot. -
Annie Mahtani
Aeolian
- Empreintes Digitales.
-
Alex Groves
Curved Form (St Endellion)
Performer: Alex Groves.- Bandcamp.
-
Aidan O’Rourke
Iorram - Infuse my eyes with molten grey skies
Performer: Aidan O’Rourke. -
Ólafur Arnalds
Near Light
Music Arranger: Viktor Orri Árnason. Performer: Mari Samuelsen. Ensemble: TrondheimSolistene.- DECCA.
-
Leos Janáček
In the Mists; 1. Andante
Performer: Leif Ove Andsnes.- VIRGIN.
-
Puuluup
November
- Süüta Mu Lumi.
- ÕܲԲ.
-
Terje Isungset
Fola, Fola Blakken
Performer: Terje Isungset.- Ice Concerts.
- All Ice Records.
- 2.
-
Richard Strauss
An Alpine Symphony, Op.64
Performer: Vladimir Jurowski. Orchestra: Rundfunk-Sinfonieorchester Berlin. -
amiina
Glamur
Ensemble: amiina.- Ever Records.
-
John Luther Adams
Untouched (Crossing)
Ensemble: JACK Quartet.- New, John Luther Adams: Lines Made by Walking.
- COLD BLUE MUSIC.
- 5.
-
Anna Clyne
Cello Concerto 'Dance' (When You're Broken Up)
Performer: Inbal Segev. Orchestra: London Philharmonic Orchestra. Conductor: Marin Alsop.- Avie.
-
Trad.
Waltz after Lasse in Lyby
Music Arranger: Danish String Quartet. Ensemble: Danish String Quartet.- Wood Works.
- Dacapo.
- 004.
Broadcast
- Christmas Day 2021 16:00ѿý Radio 3
19 thoughts that everyone experiences during a country walk
“Strangers! I’m going to greet them warmly, even though I would never normally do this.”
Six Great British walks
Feel inspired to take on a few of Britain's 150,000 miles of footpaths? Here's a guide.