2,000 episodes

Live magazine programme on the worlds of arts, literature, film, media and music

Front Row BBC Radio 4

    • Society & Culture
    • 4.4 • 110 Ratings

Live magazine programme on the worlds of arts, literature, film, media and music

    Michelangelo exhibition at British Museum, Jembaa Groove perform, Inside Number 9

    Michelangelo exhibition at British Museum, Jembaa Groove perform, Inside Number 9

    Historian Andrew Graham-Dixon and art curator Kate Bryan discuss Michelangelo: the last decades, a major new exhibition at the British Museum which focuses on the last thirty years of Michelangelo’s life.
    Reece Shearsmith discusses the ninth and final series of the BAFTA award winning Inside No. 9. Written with Steve Pemberton, the six episodes will feature new stand-alone stories, starting with ‘Boo To A Goose’ . Guest stars include Charlie Cooper and Katherine Kelly.
    Jembaa Groove perform live. The Berlin-based band produce Ghanaian highlife/American R&B fusion music, an optimistic and positive sound created when they got together during the covid pandemic.
    Presenter: Tom Sutcliffe
    Producer: Claire Bartleet

    • 39 min
    Hanif Kureishi, Ingrid Persaud, Arts Council funding

    Hanif Kureishi, Ingrid Persaud, Arts Council funding

    Hanif Kureishi has joined forces with Emma Rice to adapt his 1990 novel The Buddha of Suburbia into an RSC production that’s just opened at the Swan Theatre, Stratford upon Avon. Kureishi discusses what it feels like to see himself and his fictionalised family onstage, why his first novel remains painfully relevant and how he has been able to continue writing despite the December 2022 accident that left him tetraplegic.
    Recently on Front Row we heard from some leaders of classical music organisations including the Wigmore Hall and LSO saying that Arts Council England, the body responsible for distributing funding, was putting inclusion before excellence. Today we hear from the Arts Council’s CEO, Darren Henley about Let’s Create, the ten year strategy behind the recent funding decisions.
    Ingrid Persaud discusses the real man behind her new novel The Lost Love Songs of Boysie Singh, an outlaw figure who looms large in the cultural memory of Trinidad and Tobago - an island nation with a wealth of contemporary novelists, including Persaud herself.
    Presenter: Samira Ahmed
    Producer: Corinna Jones

    • 42 min
    Pet Shop Boys, review of Challengers film and Expressionists exhibiition

    Pet Shop Boys, review of Challengers film and Expressionists exhibiition

    The Pet Shop Boys are the most successful duo in UK music history. Forty years after their first hit West End Girls they are about to release their new album Nonetheless. Chris Lowe and Neil Tennant join Samira Ahmed to talk about making sense of life through culture, their music being used in hit films like Saltburn and All of Us Strangers and their gay icon status.
    Also joining Samira in the studio are art critic Catherine McCormack and writer Jenny McCartney to review the new tennis film Challengers - which stars Zendaya and Josh O'Connor and Tate Modern's new exhibition Expressionists: Kandinsky, Münter and The Blue Rider.
    Presenter: Samira Ahmed
    Producer: Paula McGrath

    • 42 min
    The Legend of Ned Ludd, Women's Prize for Fiction shortlist, Mohammad Barrangi

    The Legend of Ned Ludd, Women's Prize for Fiction shortlist, Mohammad Barrangi

    The Legend of Ned Ludd - writer Joe Ward Munrow and director Jude Christian discuss their new play at the Liverpool Everyman theatre which explores the changing nature of work over the centuries and around the world in the the face of automation.
    The shortlist for the Women's Prize for Fiction was announced today - journalist Jamie Klingler assesses the selection.
    As the Walker Art Gallery in Liverpool prepares to show off its latest acquisitions, curator Kate O'Donoghue explains what the their new Degas and Monet works will bring to their collection.
    Artist Mohammad Barrangi discusses his new installation - One Night, One Dream, Life in the Lighthoue - at the Stanley and Audrey Burton Gallery in Leeds University, inspired by his residency at the university's Special Collections.
    Presenter: Nick Ahad
    Producer: Ekene Akalawu

    • 42 min
    Women and Shakespeare, best beach reads, Black British music exhibition

    Women and Shakespeare, best beach reads, Black British music exhibition

    The British Library isn’t all books; it has a huge sound archive, one of the largest in the world. It has drawn on this for Beyond the Bassline, the first major exhibition to documenting Black British music. Curators Aleema Gray and Mykaell Riley guide Shahidha Bari through the 500-year musical journey of African and Caribbean people in Britain.
    Emily Henry is a giant of the Beach Read: indeed one of her best selling novels is literally called that. With her forthcoming Funny Book, she is joined by author of The Garnett Girls Georgina Moore to discuss what goes into an ideal summer book.
    And on Shakespeare's birthday, we discuss the women who made him as well as his female contemporaries with Charlotte Scott, from the Shakespeare Birthplace Trust, and Rami Targoff author of Shakespeare's Sisters: Four Women Who Wrote the Renaissance
    Presenter: Shahidha Bari
    Producer: Ciaran Bermingham

    • 42 min
    Designer Sir Kenneth Grange, Taylor Swift's new album, Venice Art Biennale

    Designer Sir Kenneth Grange, Taylor Swift's new album, Venice Art Biennale

    Taylor Swift returns with The Tortured Poets Department, a surprise double album that features 31 tracks that fans are saying is her most intimate and lyrically revealing yet. Joining Tom Sutcliffe to discuss the work are Times music writer Lisa Vericco and Satu Hameenho-Fox, whose new book Into The Taylor-Verse is out next month.
    The Intercity 125 train, the Kenwood mixer, the Morphy Richards iron, the Wilkinson triple razor, bus shelters, the black cab, and the Parker 25 pen all have one thing in common – they were designed by Sir Kenneth Grange. As a new book about his life and work comes out, we went to his house to meet him.
    Hettie Judah joins us fresh from the famous international cultural exhibition, the Venice Biennale, now in it’s 60th year. She’ll be reviewing the highs and lows.
    Presenter: Tom Sutcliffe
    Producer: Julian May

    • 43 min

Customer Reviews

4.4 out of 5
110 Ratings

110 Ratings

SuckeredByItunes ,

Great Arts Podcast

They cover a wide variety from theater to TV to art museums to books, sometimes the interviews are with creators/actors authors and sometimes with critics but there’s always something interesting.

USkaren ,

BBC Front Row

Great hosts and guests. The conversation is always intelligent without being pedantic or pretensions.

#never Viking ,

Leftist elitist from BBC

Ultra left wing political views interfere with reviews. Elitists just cannot help but offend a large swath of people. I will download different podcasts thank you.

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