Hearing the Voice (part 1)
Thu 21st Mar '19, 10:00am
Researchers from Durham University introduce their interdisciplinary study of voice-hearing.
WOA ’19 is a broadcast festival of writing. It will happen over four days, 21st-24th March at Chapel FM Arts Centre, our beautiful state-of-the-art studio and performance complex in East Leeds set in a restored Methodist chapel. East Leeds FM, which started in 2003, broadcasts to an annual local and global listenership of over 35,000 people.
Thu 21st Mar '19, 10:00am
Researchers from Durham University introduce their interdisciplinary study of voice-hearing.
Thu 21st Mar '19, 10:30am
First Story brings professional writers to secondary schools to work with pupils and teachers. The young writers return to Chapel FM to share their work.
Thu 21st Mar '19, 12:00pm
Stu Hennigan from Leeds Libraries reads the winning entries from a short story competition for schools in the Leeds East Primary Partnership.
Thu 21st Mar '19, 12:20pm
Silence and speaking out; Chapel FM’s young Associate Writers sow their ideas in our ears.
Thu 21st Mar '19, 12:45pm
Young people from Chapel FM’s Next Generation Foundation course teach us the art of conversation.
Thu 21st Mar '19, 1:00pm
Kathleen Strafford reads from her new collection Tell it to the Moon, with guest Andrea Hardaker.
Thu 21st Mar '19, 2:00pm
From mewling in nurse’s arms to sans everything, The Agbrigg Writers give their take on Shakespeare’s Seven Ages of Man.
Thu 21st Mar '19, 3:00pm
What’s it like to find your writing voice later in life? Alison Lock and Rachel Kerr review their journey.
Thu 21st Mar '19, 3:45pm
Mike Thompson’s dreams of being a professional footballer were dashed. How did he fill the void? He tells Linda Sage.
Thu 21st Mar '19, 4:20pm
Your life’s been about looking after a loved one. Now they’re gone, what next? Helen Thompson shares her thoughts.
Thu 21st Mar '19, 5:30pm
Leeds Beckett Writers speak about finding their voice in a populated writing community. What’s it mean to be a writer now?
Thu 21st Mar '19, 6:15pm
Chapel FM’s Next Generation Drama Group give us a sneaky peek into their world.
Thu 21st Mar '19, 6:30pm
Five authors share poetry and prose from ‘Stories from Stone’, inspired by Undercliffe Cemetery, Bradford.
Thu 21st Mar '19, 6:45pm
Capitalism and Nationalism against Nature and Humanity? Only poetry can save us! Antonio Martínez Arboleda is interviewed by Mike Baynham.
Thu 21st Mar '19, 7:00pm
How did Shakespeare sound when he spoke his own sonnets? Find out with Professor Richard Rastall and lutenist Helen Atkinson.
Thu 21st Mar '19, 8:00pm
A play by Neil Rathmell about gender inequality in India, first performed by students at Punjabi University, Patiala.
Thu 21st Mar '19, 9:00pm
Jacqueline Saville, Rosalind York and Emily Devane, with Keely Hodgson (cello) and Karen Vaughan (violin),show the ways music can speak for and to us.
Thu 21st Mar '19, 10:00pm
Open Mic hosted by The Leeds Savage Club, featuring poet Amy Kinsman.
Fri 22nd Mar '19, 10:00am
HtV is the interdisciplinary study of voice-hearing at Durham University which inspired WOA19’s festival theme.
Fri 22nd Mar '19, 10:30am
A gathering of poetic spoken word and nostalgic music from Jaimes Lewis Moran’s first poetry collection.
Fri 22nd Mar '19, 10:45am
Aladdin Green is amazed that rubbing an old lamp produces a genie wearing overalls, a hard hat, and hiviz jacket. What to wish for? Story by Geoff Reiss.
Fri 22nd Mar '19, 11:00am
Hearing voices is often associated with ‘madness’. A short drama by John Martin that challenges the stigma.
Fri 22nd Mar '19, 11:15am
Sleeping Beauty’s 100-year sleep is nearing its end. Her carer dusts her off every day. Will a prince arrive in time? Story by Geoff Reiss.
Fri 22nd Mar '19, 11:45am
Jimmy Andrex talks to Joe Williams about his recent verse novella narrated in the multiple voices of drinkers on the famous Otley Run.
Fri 22nd Mar '19, 12:15pm
After everyone you love melts away, there’s no one left to lose; short fiction from Amaylia Dewis. Plus Chapel FM resident storyteller, Vickie Orton.
Fri 22nd Mar '19, 1:00pm
Short fiction from Monica Dickson. What would a bag of sweets sound like if they spoke to you?
Fri 22nd Mar '19, 1:15pm
The Deli team deliver their inimitable smorgasbord of poetry, comedy, discussion and music.
Fri 22nd Mar '19, 2:30pm
A man wakes up with a hangover. Pitch dark, unknown room. Where is he? What happened? Dark drama by James Fernie.
Fri 22nd Mar '19, 2:45pm
A girl’s life explodes in puberty. Forty years later the hormones disappear overnight after a hysterectomy. Bitter transition comedy in diaries and song by Ali Bullivent
Fri 22nd Mar '19, 3:45pm
What’s it like not to be able to speak? How do we hear the speechless? Jimmy Andrex interviews poet Jane Kite.
Fri 22nd Mar '19, 4:30pm
What does home mean? Poems by adults discovering their creativity in English, with Pascha Taylor.
Fri 22nd Mar '19, 5:15pm
Eleven Half Moon poets read and talk about each other’s poems.
Fri 22nd Mar '19, 6:15pm
Poets Tom Weir and Nick Allen reveal to James Fountain how their key influences have shaped their poetic DNA.
Fri 22nd Mar '19, 7:15pm
Jo’s father was killed in the Brighton bombing of 1984. She has spent the last 18 years in dialogue with the ex-IRA combatant who planted the bomb. She talks to Mike Winter.
Fri 22nd Mar '19, 8:30pm
Poetry with music hosted by Jimmy Andrex to provoke debate about economic inequality, based on Utopia for Realists by Rutger Bregman.
Sat 23rd Mar '19, 10:00am
The final instalment in our series from Hearing The Voice, the research project at Durham University.
Sat 23rd Mar '19, 11:30am
Poets give voices to their favourite works of art in Leeds Art Gallery, introduced by Sandra Burnett.
Sat 23rd Mar '19, 11:30am
In the latest in his series, Jaimes Lewis Moran talks to writer Kevin Phillips about his experiences.
Sat 23rd Mar '19, 12:15pm
Poet Joe Williams challenges a selection of local writers to create micro-poetry using the 5-7-5 haiku form.
Sat 23rd Mar '19, 1:15pm
Gill Lambert brings her students from Swarthmore to read their poems and stories.
Sat 23rd Mar '19, 2:00pm
A panel discusses independent publishers and marginalised voices in contemporary literature, with Kevin Duffy (BlueMoose), Jeremy Poynting (PeePal Tree) and author SJ Bradley.
Sat 23rd Mar '19, 3:00pm
How do local people get heard? Linda Sage hosts a panel of representatives from the Police, the Health Service and the Council.
Sat 23rd Mar '19, 3:45pm
Two friends dip into their memories (real and imagined) to tell sweet surreal stories about people they used to know before they knew each other.
Sat 23rd Mar '19, 4:30pm
How to find your voice when you have a disability? Vickie Orton and guests present stories told through art, song and symbols.
Sat 23rd Mar '19, 5:30pm
Three female writers search the world for the lost heart of communication. What else will they find on the journey?
Sat 23rd Mar '19, 5:45pm
Children from Fun Face Drama tell us what matters to them, and why they won’t be silenced.
Sat 23rd Mar '19, 6:00pm
Resist, heal, engage, transcend; words from the heart making a difference in people’s lives.
Sat 23rd Mar '19, 7:00pm
New local poetry publisher Yaffle showcase both new and familiar voices reading from their forthcoming pamphlets and collections.
Sat 23rd Mar '19, 8:15pm
A selection of spoken word performances from the Manifesto in Verse project, exploring how borders affect our personal, public and political lives.
Sat 23rd Mar '19, 9:00pm
Malika Booker, Khadijah Ibrahiim, and Vahni Capildeo talk about Colonizinin Reverse, their poetic response to Windrush: Songs in a Strange Land
Sat 23rd Mar '19, 9:45pm
Juleus Ghunta introduces a panoply of poets from The Caribbean in this bumper follow-up to Part 1 which aired on Love The Words.
Sun 24th Mar '19, 10:00am
Poet Helen Burke with Phil Pattinson dial up voices of protest, from Beethoven to The Beats.
Sun 24th Mar '19, 11:00am
Challenge the irrational beliefs that give fear its foundations, with Linda Sage
Sun 24th Mar '19, 11:30am
Set in a support group, this play by Fay Kesby explores the commonalities of oppression and the deep, meaningful love of biscuits.
Sun 24th Mar '19, 12:15pm
Prose Poetry is surging in popularity. Oz Hardwick and Hannah Stone offer a celebration of the form, along with a discussion of its characteristics and potential.
Sun 24th Mar '19, 1:15pm
Maggie Mash chats with Anglo-American poet Lydia Kennaway about her new pamphlet, A History of Walking.
Sun 24th Mar '19, 2:00pm
Word, music and electronic sound in which time stretches, space becomes permeable, and lost voices speak again
Sun 24th Mar '19, 3:00pm
The oldest-established writing group in Yorkshire read pieces exploring the theme of Voices.
Sun 24th Mar '19, 4:30pm
Laura talks about the musical and literary influences which have shaped her work from childhood verse to adult voice.
Sun 24th Mar '19, 5:00pm
Meet Slitherbi, Gloit, Mucky Carol, Agatha Hard-Boiled Gelding III, and Reverend Pike. Meanwhile a Naculator is up to no good.
Have a look at the day-by-day programmes by clicking on the images below or download the full 4-day schedule as a pdf…
Writing On Air 2018 was our biggest broadcast literature festival yet with 50 original programmes made by Yorkshire-based writers. This year’s festival took the theme ‘Borderlands’ which resonates throughout the schedule in different ways. You can listen again to any of them...
Thu 15th Mar '18, 5:15pm
Six short plays from The Writing Squad and Hull Truck Theatre. The Squad is a free programme for writers aged 16-21
Thu 15th Mar '18, 3:30pm
Sounds from the edge of sleep, a sonic collage by Alex Rushfirth and Rosalie Counelis