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Vesna Goldsworthy

Michael Berkeley's guest is the Serbian writer Vesna Goldsworthy, discussing growing up in Belgrade during the Communist regime. With music by Serbian, Greek and Russian composers.

Thirty years ago, Vesna Goldsworthy fell in love with a young Englishman she met at a summer school in Bulgaria; she moved to England to be with him, much to the disapproval of her parents, arriving in London in 1986. Since then, she's established a reputation as a writer of great wit and originality: with her memoir, Chernobyl Strawberries; with her poetry; and in 2015 with her first novel, Gorsky, which became a best-seller and which was serialized on Radio 4. Vesna Goldsworthy is also a Professor of Creative Writing at the University of East Anglia.

In Private Passions, Vesna Goldsworthy talks to Michael Berkeley about being brought up in Belgrade during the Communist regime. The popular idea is of an era which was grey and philistine - but in fact there was a huge amount of classical music around. And when she moved to England, her friends and family were horrified. They asked, "How could you move to a country where there is no music"? She reveals why she started writing a memoir of her Serbian childhood: because her doctors told her she was dying of cancer, and she wanted to leave a record for her son. Happily, the cancer was cured, but it taught her a lifelong lesson: not to take life too seriously.

Vesna Goldsworthy's music choices include the Romanian-Serbian composer Ion Iovanovici; an Orthodox address to the Virgin by Divna Ljubojevic; the Sephardic song, "Adio Querida", by Yasmin Levy; and a popular Russian song from the Second World War. She ends with Purcell, a composer she discovered only after she moved to a country "with no music".

Produced by Elizabeth Burke
A Loftus production for Â鶹¹ÙÍøÊ×Ò³Èë¿Ú Radio 3.

Available now

38 minutes

Last on

Sun 29 Oct 2017 12:00

Music Played

  • Iosif Ivanovici

    The Danube Waves

    Performer: Vienna Volksoper Orchestra. Conductor: Franz Bauer-Theussl.
  • St Nectarios of Aegina

    Agni partene (O virgin pure)

    Performer: Divna Ljubojević.
  • Manuel Valls

    Adio querida

    Performer: Yasmin Levy.
  • Nikita Bogoslovsky

    Dark is the night

    Orchestra: Moscow Chamber Orchestra. Conductor: Constantine Orbelian. Singer: Dmitri Hvorostovsky.
  • Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky

    Marche slave

    Orchestra: London Symphony Orchestra. Conductor: Kenneth Alwyn.
  • Henry Purcell

    When I am laid in earth (Dido and Aeneas)

    Orchestra: Philharmonia Baroque Orchestra & Chorale. Conductor: Nicholas McGegan. Singer: Lorraine Hunt Lieberson.

Broadcast

  • Sun 29 Oct 2017 12:00

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