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Graham Norton, Jamie Cullum, Jimmy Page and Gemma Arterton

Chris gets that Friday feeling going with BBC TV and Radio 2 host Graham Norton, Led Zep legend Jimmy Page, English actress Gemma Arterton and jazz genius Jamie Cullum plays live in the studio.

2 hours, 59 minutes

Last on

Fri 17 Oct 2014 06:30

Music Played

  • Shirley Bassey

    Goldfinger

  • Bee Gees

    You Win Again

    • Bee Gees - Their Greatest Hits.
    • Polydor.
  • Big Country

    In a Big Country

    • Without The Aid Of A Safety Net.
    • EMI.
  • Christie

    Yellow River

    • 70's Number Ones Vol 3.
    • Old Gold.
  • Sammy Davis Jr.

    Talk To The Animals

    • Sammy Davis Greatest Hits.
    • Curb.
    • 1.
  • Neil Diamond

    Something Blue

    • (CD Single).
    • Capitol.
    • 001.
  • Jack Johnson

    Better Together

    • (CD Single).
    • Brushfire Records.
  • Keane

    Silenced By The Night

    • (CD Single).
    • Island.
    • 1.
  • Lenny Kravitz

    Are You Gonna Go My Way

    • (CD Single).
    • Virgin.
  • Avril Lavigne

    Complicated

    • Avril Lavigne - Let Go.
    • Arista.
  • Madonna

    Vogue

    • Finally Enough Love (Deluxe Edition).
    • Rhino.
  • Imelda May

    Johnny Got A Boom Boom

    • (CD Single).
    • Universal Classics & Jazz.
    • 1.
  • Pratt & McClain

    Happy Days

    • Television's Greatest Hits Volume 3 70s & 80s.
    • Silva Screen Records Ltd.
  • Timbuk 3

    The Future's So Bright, I Gotta Wear Shades

    • I.R.S..
  • Ward Thomas

    Way Back When

    • (CD Single).
    • WTW Music.
    • 1.
  • Brian Wilson & Various Artists

    God Only Knows

    • (CD Single).
    • BBC Music.
    • 4.
  • Pete Wingfield

    Eighteen With A Bullet

    • The All Time Greatest Movie Songs.
    • Columbia/Sony Tv.
  • John Paul Young

    Love Is In The Air

    • 20 Songs Of Love From The 70's (Vario.
    • MFP.

Pause for Thought

Pause for Thought

From Rev'd Richard Coles, cleric and broadcaster:

People often ask me ‘are you really a Vicar?’; a bit disconcerting, really, especially when it’s the Bishop. One person recently commented, ‘I bet you only got ordained for the dressing up’, a perceptive comment, as it happens, because even for a dressy Vicar it’s been a dressy week. I’m Chaplain to the High Sheriff, which means I get to wear a tricorn hat should a senior judge come to Northampton, and we’ve recently hosted Lord Justice Ryder of the Court of Appeal. He was sitting at court number one in the Session House, where in 1705 the last two women to be executed for witchcraft in England were condemned. Back then it would have been my job to pronounce the ‘Amen’ at the end of that death sentence.

None of that now, I’m happy to say, for Lord Justice Ryder was not pronouncing sentences but giving a lecture as part of the High Sheriff’s seminar on youth justice, calling for people who have fallen into unimaginably difficult circumstances not to be written off and dispensed with, but to be given a helping hand and another chance. Mercy, not judgment, is where the emphasis falls now, although those things invariably come as a pair. Afterwards, we all went to dinner in the Judge’s Lodgings where I sat next to the Chief Constable, who turned out to have trained for the priesthood, and in an odd reversal of roles, found myself confessing my motoring offences.

I never did get to wear the tricorn hat. I borrowed one from the panto, but it had been made for a pirate and I didn’t have time to unpick the skull and crossbones on the front (which would have sent out quite the wrong message).

What’s the right message? That it’s not about us. We’re not models making fashion statements, just the latest wearers of this kit, not here to be beautiful, but dutiful, the latest occupants of a role which was there before we were and will continue after we’re gone. On with the motley.

Broadcast

  • Fri 17 Oct 2014 06:30

Farewell Chris Evans: The best bits from his last shows at Radio 2

Farewell Chris Evans: The best bits from his last shows at Radio 2

After eight years of hosting the Breakfast Show, Chris Evans leaves Radio 2.

500 Words

500 Words

BBC Radio 2's story-writing competition for kids.