Soul Music with stories of the lasting impact of Joni Mitchell's song 'River', from her iconic 1971 album Blue.
A song about the breakdown of a relationship and of a longing to be elsewhere that has become a melancholy Christmas anthem.
It's coming on Christmas\nThey're cutting down trees \nThey're putting up reindeer \nAnd singing songs of joy and peace\nOh I wish I had a river\nI could skate away on....
Emotional true stories of what the song means to different people, including:
* Comedian Chris Forbes, who lost his father on Christmas Day\n* Isobel, who fell sick far from home and understands the longing to be elsewhere captured in the song\n* Laura, who heard the song while pregnant at Christmastime\n* Writer Rob Crossan, who will forever associate the song with his first love\n* Canadian poet Lorna Crozier who describes the frozen rivers of her and Joni's Saskatchewan childhood
Plus thoughts from Joni Mitchell's biographer, David Yaffe.
Includes a rare live recording of 'River' from a BBC Concert in 1970, hosted by John Peel.
The other versions of the song are by (in order of appearance):
Joni Mitchell (Blue, 1971)\nScott Matthews (Live Session for BBC 6 Music, 2011)\nB\xe9la Fleck and the Flecktones (Jingle All the Way, 2008)\nThe Belgian indie choir Scala & Kolacny Brothers (Live Session for BBC 6 Music, 2011).
Series about pieces of music with a powerful emotional impact.
Producer: Mair Bosworth
First broadcast on BBC Radio 4 in December 2018.