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Desert Island Discs is a long-running BBC Radio 4 programme. It was first broadcast on 29 January 1942 and is said by the Guinness Book of Records to be the longest-running music programme in the history of radio.[1] Guests are invited to imagine themselves cast away on a desert island, and to choose eight pieces of music, originally gramophone records, to take with them; discussion of their choices permits a review of their life. Excerpts from their choices are played or, in the case of short pieces, the whole work.[2] At the end of the programme they choose the one piece they regard most highly. They are then asked which book they would take with them; they are automatically given the Complete Works of Shakespeare and either the Bible or another appropriate religious or philosophical work. Guests also choose one luxury, which must be inanimate and of no use in escaping the island or allowing communication from outside. The devisor and original presenter of the programme, Roy Plomley,[3] enforced the rules strictly,[4] but it is less strictly enforced today. Examples of luxuries have included champagne[5] and the Internet.[6] After Plomley's death in 1985, the programme was presented by Michael Parkinson, and from 1988 by Sue Lawley.[3] Lawley stepped down in August 2006 after 18 years. She was replaced by Kirsty Young,[3] who interviewed illustrator Quentin Blake for her first show, broadcast on 1 October 2006. The most requested music over the first 60 years was Ode to Joy, the last movement of Beethoven's Ninth Symphony.[7] The programme's theme is By The Sleepy Lagoon composed by Eric Coates in 1930.
[edit] CastawaysMain article: List of Desert Island Discs episodes
[edit] CopyrightUntil late September 2009, Desert Island Discs could not be heard on the BBC's iPlayer service, which allows most programmes to be heard up to a week after transmission. The programme's website[8] explained this was due to rights issues, as explained in The Sunday Times in 2006:
It was announced on 27 September 2009 that an agreement had been reached with the family that the programme would be available to stream via the iPlayer[10]. The first castaway available through the Player was Barry Manilow. Subsequently, the programme was also made available as a podcast[11], beginning with the edition broadcast on 29 November 2009 which featured Morrissey. [edit] In popular culture
[edit] Notes
[edit] External links
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