Eliza Carthy, Ruben Östlund, Brutalist Architecture
Eliza Carthy plays live, film director Ruben Östlund on Triangle of Sadness.
An episode of the Front Row podcast, hosted by BBC Radio 4, titled "Eliza Carthy, Ruben Östlund, Brutalist Architecture" was published on October 25, 2022 and runs 42 minutes.
October 25, 2022 ·42m · Front Row
Summary
Eliza Carthy is celebrating 30 years as a professional musician with a new album, Queen of the Whirl. She talks about this, the legacy of her musical family – as the daughter of Norma Waterson and Martin Carthy – the way traditional music develops, and her own song-writing, and performs live in the Front Row studio.Double Palme d'Or winning Swedish director Ruben Östlund tells Samira about his first English language film, Triangle of Sadness - a satire on the fashion industry, influencer culture, and the world of the super-rich.Plus the threat to brutalist architecture. Last year the Dorman Long Tower in Redcar was demolished, and now the Kirkgate Shopping centre in Bradford is condemned too. Brutalist architecture provokes both love as well as hate, but around the country its buildings are in peril. Author John Grindrod and Duncan Wilson from Historic England discuss how much is being lost, and if it matters.Presenter: Samira Ahmed Producer: Julian MayPhoto: Eliza Carthy. Credit: Elodie Kowalski
Episode Description
Eliza Carthy is celebrating 30 years as a professional musician with a new album, Queen of the Whirl. She talks about this, the legacy of her musical family – as the daughter of Norma Waterson and Martin Carthy – the way traditional music develops, and her own song-writing, and performs live in the Front Row studio.
Double Palme d'Or winning Swedish director Ruben Östlund tells Samira about his first English language film, Triangle of Sadness - a satire on the fashion industry, influencer culture, and the world of the super-rich.
Plus the threat to brutalist architecture. Last year the Dorman Long Tower in Redcar was demolished, and now the Kirkgate Shopping centre in Bradford is condemned too. Brutalist architecture provokes both love as well as hate, but around the country its buildings are in peril. Author John Grindrod and Duncan Wilson from Historic England discuss how much is being lost, and if it matters.
Presenter: Samira Ahmed Producer: Julian May
Photo: Eliza Carthy. Credit: Elodie Kowalski
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