Merseyside is an unusual geographical area in that it encompasses several tradition English heartlands, both industrial and rural, and a large urban area which emphatically does not consider its identity or reference points to be English. Liverpool has sometimes been referred to as Dublin's largest suburb and that's before you get into the Welsh, African, Polish and other world peoples who have come through the port.
BBC Radio Merseyside and the public together create three works of performance
art encapsulating these varied cultural dynamics to celebrate Liverpool's
800th birthday.
Listen
to the Liverpool Saga: A Peoples Poem
AnOther England
Act One - Poem
Working with people of Wirral, an epic poem will explore the heritage and
identity of the peninsula people. From the remaining Viking mitochondrial
DNA in the population to the garden city of the Lever soap empire and the
loss of the shipbuilding maritime heritage.
Act Two - Play
St Helens is a Lancashire town with three strong pulse points: Pits, Pilks
and Penalties. It is a former mining stronghold, a glass town where Pilkingtons
still define the industrial landscape and a place where rugby league is
sacred. Working with local writer Angela Clarke community groups will have
the chance to create a radio drama about their town.
Act Three - Anthem
Liverpool is a musical city, a port city and in the loosest sense (if at
all), an English city. What better than a new "Anthem for a City"
drawing on Celtic, Welsh, African and world music, as well as the traditions
of recent asylum seekers. Their voices and stories form the lyrics for the
soundtrack created as Anthem.
Unleash your talents
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