Amazing Songs & Other Delights #44 – The Dulce et Decorum Est edition by Raquel Pinheiro @ Yé Yé’s mixcloud

Amazing Songs & Other Delights is back with a new programme the #44 – The Dulce et Decorum Est edition. Dulce et Decorum Est is a line from Horace’s Odes of which the full sentence is “Dulce et decorum est pro patria mori” (it is sweet and fitting to die for one’s country) used as the antithesis, “The old Lie”, as an expression of senseless loss of life of the glorious meaning in Horace by Wilfred Owen in his poem of the same name.

April 24th is the eve of 25 de Abril (April 25th) that came to be know as A Revolução dos Cravos (The Carnation Revolution) a military coup d’etat that deposed the 48 year Military than right wing running dictartorship (28.05.1926-15.04.1974) in Portugal leadimg to the demise of Portugal’s Colonial War (1961-1975)
Owen wrote Dulce et Decorum Est while a soldier in the trenches of WWI. Wilfred died seven days before the 1918 Artistice Owne’s poems were mosty written between August 1917 and September 1918 and live on.
The programme opens with Christopher Eccleston reading Owen’s poem and ends with the choir of prisoner soldiers in Merry Christmas Merry, Mr. Lawrence singing the 23rd Psalm.

Not all songs relate to war. At least not in the strict sense of war. Some approach daily struggles, the hardships of working people or racism or injustice. The Portuguese songs are from before the end of the dictartoship. From a time when every word had to carefully measured, inuendos or love, romantic and longing song spoke what could not be said. Although Reinaldo Ferreira poem sang by José Afonso is rather to the point, the soldier will only return home in a pine box. Chico Buarque’s Construção is a critique of the Brazilian social situation under the Brazilian military dictatorship (01.04.1964-15-03-1985).

Both Dulce et Decorum Est and 23rd Psalm can be read bellow the tracklist.

Tracklist:
01 – Christopher Eccleston – reads Dulce et Decorum Est by Wilfred Owen
02 – Comunicado do MFA – Aqui Posto de Comando
03 – The Doors – The End (from the Soundtrack of Apocalypse Now)
04 – Billy Bragg – Waiting For The Great Leap Foward
05 – Bob Dylan – Blind Willie McTell
06 – Bruce Springsteen – The River
07 – Chico Buarque – Construção
09 – Dire Straits – Brothers In Arms
10 – Elvis Costello and the Attractions – Oliver’s Army
11 – Fernando Tordo – O Café (José Carlos Ary dos Santos’ poem)
12 – José Afonso – Menina dos Olhos Tristes (Reinaldo Ferreira’s poem)
13 – Manic Street Preachers – Let Robeson Sing
14 – Marvin Gaye – What’s Going On
15 – Monophonics – There’s A Riot Going On
16 – Public Enemy – By The Time I Get to Arizona
17 – Richard Wagner – Ride of the Valkyries excerpt (from the Soundtrack of Apocalypse Now)
18 – Ryuichi Sakamoto – 23rd Psalm (From the Soundtrack of Merry Christmas Mr Lawrence)

Dulce et Decorum Est by Wilfred Owen

Bent double, like old beggars under sacks,
Knock-kneed, coughing like hags, we cursed through sludge,
Till on the haunting flares we turned our backs,
And towards our distant rest began to trudge.
Men marched asleep. Many had lost their boots,
But limped on, blood-shod. All went lame; all blind;
Drunk with fatigue; deaf even to the hoots
Of gas-shells dropping softly behind.

Gas! GAS! Quick, boys!—An ecstasy of fumbling
Fitting the clumsy helmets just in time,
But someone still was yelling out and stumbling
And flound’ring like a man in fire or lime.—
Dim through the misty panes and thick green light,
As under a green sea, I saw him drowning.

In all my dreams before my helpless sight,
He plunges at me, guttering, choking, drowning.

If in some smothering dreams, you too could pace
Behind the wagon that we flung him in,
And watch the white eyes writhing in his face,
His hanging face, like a devil’s sick of sin;
If you could hear, at every jolt, the blood
Come gargling from the froth-corrupted lungs,
Obscene as cancer, bitter as the cud
Of vile, incurable sores on innocent tongues,—
My friend, you would not tell with such high zest
To children ardent for some desperate glory,
The old Lie: Dulce et decorum est
Pro patria mori.

23rd Psalm as in Ryuichi Sakamoto’s version for Merry Christmas, Mr. Lawrence

The Lord’s my Shepherd, I’ll not want;
He makes me down to lie
In pastures green; He leadeth me
The quiet waters by

My soul He doth restore again
And me to walk doth make
Within the paths of righteousness
E’en for His own name’s sake

Yea, though I walk in death’s dark vale
Yet will I fear no ill;
For Thou art with me, and Thy rod
And staff me comfort still
My table Thou hast furnished
In presence of my foes

All previous shows: http://www.mixcloud.com/infoyeye/stream | http://www.mixcloud.com/raquelpinheiro/stream/

Amazing Songs & Other Delights #44 – The Dulce et Decorum Est edition by Raquel Pinheiro

Amazing Songs & Other Delights is back with a new programme the #44 – The Dulce et Decorum Est edition that airs tomorrow on Yé Yé Radio: yeyeradio.com/(or on the app)

Dulce et Decorum Est is a line from Horace’s Odes of which the full sentence is “Dulce et decorum est pro patria mori” (it is sweet and fitting to die for one’s country) used as the antithesis, “The old Lie”, as an expression of senseless loss of life of the glorious meaning in Horace by Wilfred Owen in his poem of the same name.

April 24th is the eve of 25 de Abril (April 25th) that came to be know as A Revolução dos Cravos (The Carnation Revolution) a military coup d’etat that deposed the 48 year Military than right wing running dictartorship (28.05.1926-15.04.1974) in Portugal leadimg to the demise of Portugal’s Colonial War (1961-1975)
Owen wrote Dulce et Decorum Est while a soldier in the trenches of WWI. Wilfred died seven days before the 1918 Artistice Owne’s poems were mosty written between August 1917 and September 1918 and live on.
The programme opens with Christopher Eccleston reading Owen’s poem and ends with the choir of prisoner soldiers in Merry Christmas Merry, Mr. Lawrence singing the 23rd Psalm.

Not all songs relate to war. At least not in the strict sense of war. Some approach daily struggles, the hardships of working people or racism or injustice. The Portuguese songs are from before the end of the dictartoship. From a time when every word had to carefully measured, inuendos or love, romantic and longing song spoke what could not be said. Although Reinaldo Ferreira poem sang by José Afonso is rather to the point, the soldier will only return home in a pine box. Chico Buarque’s Construção is a critique of the Brazilian social situation under the Brazilian military dictatorship (01.04.1964-15-03-1985).

Both Dulce et Decorum Est and 23rd Psalm can be read bellow the tracklist.

Tracklist:
01 – Christopher Eccleston – reads Dulce et Decorum Est by Wilfred Owen
02 – Comunicado do MFA – Aqui Posto de Comando
03 – The Doors – The End (from the Soundtrack of Apocalypse Now)
04 – Billy Bragg – Waiting For The Great Leap Foward
05 – Bob Dylan – Blind Willie McTell
06 – Bruce Springsteen – The River
07 – Chico Buarque – Construção
09 – Dire Straits – Brothers In Arms
10 – Elvis Costello and the Attractions – Oliver’s Army
11 – Fernando Tordo – O Café (José Carlos Ary dos Santos’ poem)
12 – José Afonso – Menina dos Olhos Tristes (Reinaldo Ferreira’s poem)
13 – Manic Street Preachers – Let Robeson Sing
14 – Marvin Gaye – What’s Going On
15 – Monophonics – There’s A Riot Going On
16 – Public Enemy – By The Time I Get to Arizona
17 – Richard Wagner – Ride of the Valkyries excerpt (from the Soundtrack of Apocalypse Now)
18 – Ryuichi Sakamoto – 23rd Psalm (From the Soundtrack of Merry Christmas Mr Lawrence)

Dulce et Decorum Est by Wilfred Owen

Bent double, like old beggars under sacks,
Knock-kneed, coughing like hags, we cursed through sludge,
Till on the haunting flares we turned our backs,
And towards our distant rest began to trudge.
Men marched asleep. Many had lost their boots,
But limped on, blood-shod. All went lame; all blind;
Drunk with fatigue; deaf even to the hoots
Of gas-shells dropping softly behind.

Gas! GAS! Quick, boys!—An ecstasy of fumbling
Fitting the clumsy helmets just in time,
But someone still was yelling out and stumbling
And flound’ring like a man in fire or lime.—
Dim through the misty panes and thick green light,
As under a green sea, I saw him drowning.

In all my dreams before my helpless sight,
He plunges at me, guttering, choking, drowning.

If in some smothering dreams, you too could pace
Behind the wagon that we flung him in,
And watch the white eyes writhing in his face,
His hanging face, like a devil’s sick of sin;
If you could hear, at every jolt, the blood
Come gargling from the froth-corrupted lungs,
Obscene as cancer, bitter as the cud
Of vile, incurable sores on innocent tongues,—
My friend, you would not tell with such high zest
To children ardent for some desperate glory,
The old Lie: Dulce et decorum est
Pro patria mori.

23rd Psalm as in Ryuichi Sakamoto’s version for Merry Christmas, Mr. Lawrence

The Lord’s my Shepherd, I’ll not want;
He makes me down to lie
In pastures green; He leadeth me
The quiet waters by

My soul He doth restore again
And me to walk doth make
Within the paths of righteousness
E’en for His own name’s sake

Yea, though I walk in death’s dark vale
Yet will I fear no ill;
For Thou art with me, and Thy rod
And staff me comfort still
My table Thou hast furnished
In presence of my foes

All previous shows: http://www.mixcloud.com/infoyeye/stream | http://www.mixcloud.com/raquelpinheiro/stream/

Amazing Songs & Other Delights # 43 – The It’s Spring Again edition by Raquel Pinheiro @ Yé Yé Radio’s mixcloud

Amazing Songs & Other Delighs # 43 – Amazing Songs & Other Delights # 43 – The It’s Spring Again edition as the titles says brings us back to Spring. From two excerpts of Igor Stravinsky The Rite of Spring to Miguel Feraso Cabral’s upcoming singe, Alegado Suspeito, through Bill Prichard singing a poem by Patrick Woodcock, The Sundays, Éme e Moxila, Donovan and more, Spring is celebrated in spirit, tone and, of course, in the work itself. The Beatles’ Here Comes the Sun appears once more, it matches several seasons, here by the Glee Cast.

Monday, March 27th 2023, 3-4pm
Running time: 60:02:48

Tracklist:
01: Igor Stravinsky – A Sagração da Primavera (excerpt) by Vortice Dance Company)
02: Bill Pritchard – Lance (Patrick Woodcock poem)
03: Blanche – Bottles
04: David Van Auken – Blossom
05: Cory Hanson – Twins
06: Éme e Moxila – Estocolmo 1984
07: Douglas Dare – Doublethings
08: Donovan – The Lullaby of Spring
09: Glee Cast – Here Comes The Sun (The Beatles cover)
10: Gordon Grdina | Mat Maneri | Christian Lillinger – Stand By
11: Lael Neale – Faster Than The Medicine
12: Lola Flowers – Saudades
13: Miguel Feraso Cabral – Alegado Suspeito
14: Rodrigo Amarante – Hourglass
15: Suarasama – Sea Fish
16: The Gift – Primavera
17: The Sundays – Skin & Bones
18: Igor Stravinsky – The Rite of Spring (excerpt) by The London London Symphony Orchestra conducted by Sir Simon Rattle

All previous shows: http://www.mixcloud.com/infoyeye/stream/ | http://www.mixcloud.com/raquelpinheiro/stream

Amazing Songs & Other Delights # 43 – The It’s Spring Again edition por Raquel Pinheiro

Amazing Songs & Other Delighs # 43 – Amazing Songs & Other Delights # 43 – The It’s Spring Again edition as the titles says brings us back to Spring. It airs tomorrow Monday 27th, 3-4pm on Yé Yé Radio: yeyeradio.com/ (or on the app).


From two excerpts of Igor Stravinsky The Rite of Spring to Miguel Feraso Cabral’s upcoming singe, Alegado Suspeito, through Bill Prichard singing a poem by Patrick Woodcock, The Sundays, Éme e Moxila, Donovan and more, Spring is celebrated in spirit, tone and, of course, in the work itself.


The Beatles’ Here Comes the Sun appears once more, it matches several seasons, here by the Glee Cast.

Tracklist:
01: Igor Stravinsky – A Sagração da Primavera (excerpt) by Vortice Dance Company)
02: Bill Pritchard – Lance (Patrick Woodcock poem)
03: Blanche – Bottles
04: David Van Auken – Blossom
05: Cory Hanson – Twins
06: Éme e Moxila – Estocolmo 1984
07: Douglas Dare – Doublethings
08: Donovan – The Lullaby of Spring
09: Glee Cast – Here Comes The Sun (The Beatles cover)
10: Gordon Grdina | Mat Maneri | Christian Lillinger – Stand By
11: Lael Neale – Faster Than The Medicine
12: Lola Flowers – Saudades
13: Miguel Feraso Cabral – Alegado Suspeito
14: Rodrigo Amarante – Hourglass
15: Suarasama – Sea Fish
16: The Gift – Primavera
17: The Sundays – Skin & Bones
18: Igor Stravinsky – The Rite of Spring (excerpt) by The London London Symphony Orchestra conducted by Sir Simon Rattle

All previous shows: http://www.mixcloud.com/infoyeye/stream/ | http://www.mixcloud.com/raquelpinheiro/stream

Amazing Songs & Other Delights #42 – The Everything and the Kitchen Sink edition by Raquel Pinheiro @ Yé Yé Radio mixcloud

Amazing Songs & Other Delights #42 is The Everything and the Kitchen Sink edition is a rather ecletic programme that can now be listened to at Yé Yé Radio’s mixcloud.

New or nearly new song. New renditions of traditional songs. From Portugal to Australia through the UK.
As well as a preview of Rapariga de Truffautfrom Fire in the Lab upcoming debut album.

Monday, 13th March 2023, 3-4pm

Running Time: 60:00:04
Tracklist:
01 – 1st Base Runner – Night Stalker
02 – Alasdair Roberts – Eppie Morrie (Traditional song)
03 – Angel Olsen – Nothing’s Free
04 – Balla – Segredos
05 – Banana Leaf Boy – I Want 2
06 – Bill Rivers – Captured
07 – Fire In The Lab – Rapariga de Truffaut
08 – Fontaines D.C. – Cello Song (Nick Drake’s cover)
09 – Michael J Sheehy feat. Suzanne Rhatigan – Phoenix Island (Traditional song)
10 – Mick Harvey & Amanda Acevedo – Milk & Honey
11 – Miraculous Mule – Sinnerman
12 – Mudhoney – Move Under
13 – Panic Pocket – Mad Half Hour
14 – Quadra (feat. Miguel Santos) – Tropicália
15 – Sleaford Mods ft. Florence Shaw – Force 10 From Navarone
16 – Zebra Libra – Summer Day

All previous shows: http://www.mixcloud.com/infoyeye/stream/ | http://www.mixcloud.com/raquelpinheiro/stream

Amazing Songs & Other Delights #42 – The Everything and the Kitchen Sink edition by Raquel Pinheiro @ Yé Yé Radio

Amazing Songs & Other Delights #42 is The Everything and the Kitchen Sink edition, a rather ecletic programme airs tomorrow Monday 13th, 3-4pm (gmt) on Yé Yé Radio: yeyeradio.com/ (or on the app).

New or nearly new song. New renditions of traditional songs. From Portugal to Australia through the UK and the US. As well as a preview of Rapariga de Truffautfrom Fire in the Lab upcoming debut album.

Tracklist:
01 – 1st Base Runner – Night Stalker
02 – Alasdair Roberts – Eppie Morrie (Traditional song)
03 – Angel Olsen – Nothing’s Free
04 – Balla – Segredos
05 – Banana Leaf Boy – I Want 2
06 – Bill Rivers – Captured
07 – Fire In The Lab – Rapariga de Truffaut
08 – Fontaines D.C. – Cello Song (Nick Drake’s cover)
09 – Michael J Sheehy feat. Suzanne Rhatigan – Phoenix Island (Traditional song)
10 – Mick Harvey & Amanda Acevedo – Milk & Honey
11 – Miraculous Mule – Sinnerman
12 – Mudhoney – Move Under
13 – Panic Pocket – Mad Half Hour
14 – Quadra (feat. Miguel Santos) – Tropicália
15 – Sleaford Mods ft. Florence Shaw – Force 10 From Navarone
16 – Zebra Libra – Summer Day

All previous shows: http://www.mixcloud.com/infoyeye/stream/ | http://www.mixcloud.com/raquelpinheiro/stream

Amazing Songs & Other Delights #41 – The Burt, the Tom and the So edition by Raquel Pinheiro @ Yé Yé Radio’s mixcloud

Amazing Songs & Other Delights #41 – The Burt, the Tom and So edition is now available om
Yé Yé Radio’s mixcloud.

It features three Burt Bacharach songs and two Tom Verlaine ones, two solo one with Television and one instrumental from Warm and Cold. There also ten onther assorted songs from Mick Harvey with A Suitcase in Berlin an Aldo von Pinelli and Ralph Maria Siegel’s cover to Ghosts Again Depeche Mode’s latest song.

Monday, February 27th 2023, 3-4pm

Running Time: 60:23

Tracklist:
01 – Mick Harvey – A Suitcase in Berlin (Aldo von Pinelli and Ralph Maria Siegel’s cover)
02 – Television – Days
03 – Dry Cleaning – Swampy
04 – Beabadoobee – Glue Song
05 – Black Toska – Love of Mine
06 – Hannah Jadagu – What You Did
07 – Cory Hanson – Housefly
08 – The Golden Dregs – Vista
09 – Tom Verlaine – Depot
10 – Burt Bacharach with Noel Gallagher – This Guys In Love With You (live at Royal Albert Hall 1994)
11 – JW Francis – Going Home To a Party
12 – Burt Bacharach and Elvis Costello – Such Unlikely Lovers
13 – Tom Verlaine – There’s a Reason
14 – The National – Tropic Morning
15 – Manic Steet Preachers – Raindrops Keep Falling On My Head (Burt Bacharach and Hal David’s cover)
16 – Depeche Mode – Ghosts Again

All previous shows: http://www.mixcloud.com/infoyeye/stream/ | http://www.mixcloud.com/raquelpinheiro/stream

Amazing Songs & Other Delights #41 – The Burt, the Tom and So edition by Raquel Pinheiro

Amazing Songs & Other Delights #41 – The Burt, the Tom and So edition airs tomorrow Monday 27th, 3-4pm (gmt) on Yé Yé Radio: yeyeradio.com/ (or on the app).

There are three Burt Bacharach songs and two Tom Verlaine ones, two solo one with Television and one instrumental from Warm and Cold. There also ten onther assorted songs from Mick Harvey with A Suitcase in Berlin an Aldo von Pinelli and Ralph Maria Siegel’s cover to Ghosts Again Depeche Mode’s latest song.

Tracklist:

01 – Mick Harvey – A Suitcase in Berlin (Aldo von Pinelli and Ralph Maria Siegel’s cover)

02 – Television – Days

03 – Dry Cleaning – Swampy

04 – Beabadoobee – Glue Song

05 – Black Toska – Love of Mine

06 – Hannah Jadagu – What You Did

07 – Cory Hanson – Housefly

08 – The Golden Dregs – Vista

09 – Tom Verlaine – Depot

10 – Burt Bacharach with Noel Gallagher – This Guys In Love With You (live at Royal Albert Hall 1994)

11 – JW Francis – Going Home To a Party

12 – Burt Bacharach and Elvis Costello – Such Unlikely Lovers

13 – Tom Verlaine – There’s a Reason

14 – The National – Tropic Morning

15 – Manic Steet Preachers – Raindrops Keep Falling On My Head (Burt Bacharach and Hal David’s cover)

16 – Depeche Mode – Ghosts Again

all previous shows: http://www.mixcloud.com/infoyeye/stream/ | http://www.mixcloud.com/raquelpinheiro/stream

Amazing Songs & Other Delights #5 – The Poetry edition by Raquel Pinheiro – repeat @ Yé Yé Radio

For tomorrow, Monday, 13th, Amazing Songs & Other Delighs is a repeat, issue #5 The Poetry edition. You can hear it on Yé Yé Radio: /yeyeradio.com/ (or on the app), 3-4pm (gmt).

The poetry edition starts with Marianne Faithfull reading Ode to a Nightingale by Keats with music by Warren Ellis and ends with The Smiths’ Cemetry Gates. Between those there are other 15 songs ranging from Suede’s Heroine to Amália Rodrigues singing Barco Negro, a fado with a David Mourão Ferreira poem, through The Cranberries, Bob Dylan, Phil Ochs, Carla Bruni or Rufus Wainwright.

Tracklist
01 – Marianne Faithfull with Warren Ellis – Ode to a Nightingale (Keats poem)
02 – Suede – Heroine (Byron She Walks in beauty 1st lines)
03 – The Cranberries – Yeats Grave
04 – Amália Rodrigues – Barco Negro (David Mourão-Ferreira poem)
05 – Secos & Molhados – Não não digas nada (Fernando Pessoa poem)
06 – Annie Lennox – Live With Me And Be My Love (Christopher Marlowe poem)
07 – The Waterboys – Stolen Child (Yeats poem)
08 – Bob Dylan – On the Road Again (Bob Dylan poem)
09 – Radio Bukowski – The Genius of The Crowd (Charles Bukowski poem)
10 – Carla Bruni – If You Were Coming In The Fall (Emily Dickinson poem)
11 – Rufus Wainwright – When, in disgrace with fortune and men’s eyes (William Shakespeare, Sonnet 29th)
12 – Fagner – Fanatismo (Florbela Espanca poem)
13 – Ralph Schuckett and Richard Butler – Alabama song (Bertolt Brecht poem, Kurt Weill music)
14 – Patti Smith – Changing of the Guards (Bob Dylan cover and poem)
15 – Phil Ochs – The Bell (Edgar Allan Poe poem)
16 – Quilapayun – Complainte de Pablo Neruda
17 – The Smiths – Cemetry Gates (Keats, Yeats, Wilde came to play)