The award-winning Have You Heard George’s Podcast? returns to BBC Sounds for Chapter 3

Chapter 3 of the award-winning Have You Heard George’s Podcast? with George Mpanga, better known as George The Poet, and producer Benbrick, returns to BBC Sounds on 15 July

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Episodes will also be broadcast weekly on BBC Radio 1Xtra and Radio 4, with music mixes to accompany selected episodes available only on BBC Sounds.

Communicated through spoken word, archive, drama, interviews, meticulous sound design and collaborators including ZeZe Mills, Alhan, and Big Narstie, and with music from Stormzy, Mahalia, Ella Mai and more, Chapter 3 is at once a celebration of Black culture and a manifesto for the way forward.

The highly acclaimed Chapter 2 made history when it became the first podcast outside of the US to win a Peabody Award, frequently cited as the most respected in US media. The scope and ambition of Chapter 3 is just as extraordinary, with George’s train of thought taking listeners on a journey through Black music and how it intersects with society and culture.

Stopping off at key moments in music history from the 60s and the civil rights movement, dancehall and Jamaican gangster culture, R&B, the portrayal of Black relationships and the Black family, how rap defined a generation, and an episode devoted entirely to Jay Z’s back story. George pieces together the far reaching influences of Black music and looks at the economic opportunity created by it.

Chapter 3 is also the most personal yet, as George introduces his fiance, Sandra. He reflects on their 15-year friendship, sharing what he has learned through the transition to a relationship and finally to marriage. He celebrates Black love and talks about the structure and importance of family.

The music was scored by producer and collaborator Benbrick and recorded at the iconic Abbey Road Studios, with the BBC Concert Orchestra.

George Mpanga says: “I have an idea. For years I have written poems about the highs and lows of Black life, and for years the driving force behind this poetry has been Black music. In this upcoming chapter, I will look at the unifying power of this music, and how it has transformed the world. These episodes will walk you through historic injustices that sparked Black music movements, which created fresh opportunities - over and over again.

"This process has always seemed random. Jazz in America. Reggae in Jamaica. Grime in Britain. But it’s clearly not random. What if the world anticipated this genius? What if 150 years of musical innovations in the harshest circumstances have proven Black music to be a safe bet? What if the listeners supporting this music were able to tackle the problems behind it? Could this be the future of art?

"To test this idea out, I have created an interactive platform - called Common Ground. This online discussion space allows listeners to dive into the world behind the words alongside original artworks by global artists.”

Benbrick, producer of Have You Heard George’s Podcast?, says: “I am so lucky to collaborate with George on this project which is both important and inspiring. We faced the hurdle of creating this Chapter during the pandemic, but inevitably that also gave us more time to refine our episodes, and for George to become even more laser focused in his writing.

"To work with the BBC Concert Orchestra was a complete dream, and I’m grateful to BBC Sounds for making it happen - by committing to these recordings at Abbey Road they are once again demonstrating the importance of long-form storytelling and podcasting.”

Dylan Haskins, Commissioning Executive at BBC Sounds, says: “Have You Heard George’s Podcast? is a world-class podcast with the power to tell stories that move, resonate, educate and entertain across borders. For Chapter 3, many parts of the BBC have collaborated to help realise George and Benbrick’s creative ambition for the podcast, teaming them up with the BBC Concert Orchestra to record the score to the entire series, and providing a platform for as wide an audience as possible with the podcast on BBC Sounds, Radio 1Xtra and Radio 4. As ever, we’re incredibly proud of this title and as audio lovers and creatives, we’re once again inspired by it.”

About Have You Heard George’s Podcast?

George The Poet’s Have You Heard George’s Podcast? is a genre-defying, award-winning and critically acclaimed podcast that delivers a fresh take on inner city life through a mix of storytelling, music and fiction.

Chapter 2 was released on BBC Sounds in 2019 and made history as the first podcast outside of the US to win a Peabody Award. It also won five Radio Academy Arias (two Golds, a Silver and a Bronze), Broadcasting Press Guild Podcast Of The Year, Lovies Artist Of The Year and Best Podcast at the NME Awards. It was also featured in the best podcasts of 2019 end of year lists in the Guardian, Observer, Financial Times, The Economist, New York Magazine (Vulture), NME, CBC and Bello Collective.

“A remarkable and arresting creative engagement with European colonialism and the Black Atlantic consciousness its afterlife produced. Through the portals of poetry, spoken word, music, and speculative fiction, George the Poet imagines new horizons of possibility and pushes the boundaries of language and word-play to explore issues of trauma, intimacy, work, art and creativity, belonging, attachment, and meaning in Black Atlantic worlds." Peabody Awards, Winners Citation

“Blows through the medium’s newly established boundaries, offering an experience as innovative as it is undefinable.” The New Yorker

"George the Poet’s second series outshines all other podcasts for inventiveness, honesty and beauty.” Miranda Sawyer, The Observer

“It was as good as the New Yorker said. There’s something special about it: the storytelling is unique, so exciting, so kinetic.” Candice Carty-Williams, The Guardian

"A genre-defying piece of audio that pushes the limits of what a podcast can be." The New York Times
Have You Heard George’s Podcast? is produced by Benbrick and George the Poet, and commissioned by Dylan Haskins for BBC Sounds.

Source BBC Sounds

July 15, 2021 3:57am ET by Pressparty  

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