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cover of episode The Happy Pod: A song fit for a King

The Happy Pod: A song fit for a King

2025/6/28
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Global News Podcast

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People
A
Amina Ibrahim
B
Bernadette Keogh
C
Caitlin Garcia-Ajern
E
Emily
J
Jack Pepper
L
Leila Kadri
M
Maria del Carmen Reyes
P
Peggy Whitson
S
Shona Scales
S
Shubhanshu Shukla
S
Steve Mills
Topics
Jack Pepper:我受国王基金会委托,为查尔斯三世国王创作了一首名为《和谐》的歌曲,旨在激励人们采取行动保护地球。创作这首皇家作品的挑战在于要获得多方认可,但我尽量不让这些影响我。在研究后,我突然灵感迸发,一小时内完成了歌曲的创作。我希望合唱部分充满力量,承认世界面临的挑战,并激励人们采取行动。这首歌从细微处开始,逐渐增强,最终达到高潮。音乐与歌词相呼应,表达了世界既脆弱又充满力量和美丽。为国王表演这首歌是一次非凡的经历,他似乎对音乐产生了共鸣。国王不仅与我交谈,还与我的父母交谈,这非常棒。我认为年轻的作曲家们应该分享他们的音乐,因为音乐是一种交流行为。分享音乐能让你更有信心,因为音乐是为交流而生的。音乐让我感到快乐,因为它是一种自我表达,也是一种永无止境的探索,我喜欢这种冒险的感觉。

Deep Dive

Chapters
Jack Pepper, a young composer, discusses his experience writing and performing "Harmony," a song commissioned by the King's Foundation to celebrate the harmony between people and nature. The song's creation, performance for King Charles III, and the composer's journey are highlighted.
  • Jack Pepper composed "Harmony" for King Charles III, inspired by the King's environmental philosophy.
  • The song's title is taken from a book by Prince Charles.
  • "Harmony" was performed for King Charles III, with the composer's parents in attendance.
  • Pepper encourages young musicians to share their work and build confidence through performance.

Shownotes Transcript

Translations:
中文

This BBC podcast is supported by ads outside the UK.

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Don't miss the Thomas Rhett Veteran Boots Tour this summer. Fueled by Marathon. Now participate in locations. Terms and conditions apply. Hello there, it's Jack Pepper here and I'm going to be telling you about the song I wrote for King Charles III in this edition of the Happy Pod from the BBC World Service. I'm Bernadette Keogh and in this edition...

We are beautiful when we want to be. I knew I wanted a chorus that was uplifting and a kind of a rallying cry that says that, yes, we do have power. It's the actions that we can all take.

Inspiring action to help the planet with a song written and performed especially for King Charles. Newfound optimism for controlling Alzheimer's disease with dozens of potential treatments being trialled. Thinking about patients of today and the patients of tomorrow just really gives me hope and propels me on. Why astronauts from India, Poland and Hungary have an unusual crewmate...

And... They get to meet all kinds of people, all kinds of energy, learn to be calm and confident. We're able to expose them to different situations where they can be really well-rounded dogs. Using tourism to help stray dogs in Mexico. We begin with a young musician given the daunting task of writing and performing a song that was fit for a king and could inspire people to take action to help the planet.

Jack Pepper, who's 26, is one of Britain's youngest commissioned composers. He's been writing for orchestras since his early teens. And it was a significant honour when he was approached by the charity, the King's Foundation, and asked to compose a piece inspired by the King's environmental philosophy.

The result is Harmony, named after a book of the same name written by the then Prince Charles in 2010. It's about the need for a good relationship between people and the natural world. The piece was first performed for the charity earlier this month, but Jack came into our studios to record a version for us and to chat to our reporter, Harry Bly, about the experience of writing for royalty.

The daunting nature of a royal piece can be that you think, oh my goodness, a lot of people have to like this. And you do have to get it approved by lots of different layers. So I tried not to let that get to my head. I did the research for a few weeks, read the book and then parked it and did other things.

And a couple of weeks later, this melody out of nowhere with some of the words came. I sat at the piano and the whole song, music and lyric was probably written in an hour. And this sort of inspiration that came to you, it's a very catchy earworm. Yeah, so the... Thank you, that's very kind. The opening melody...

We are beautiful when we want to be. I knew I wanted a chorus that was uplifting and a kind of a rallying cry that says that, yes, we do have power, we do have agency, there is beauty in the world. But I also wanted it to start acknowledging the challenges that the world faces. And that's why very early on when I was writing, I knew I wanted the song to start with, Are You Tired of Fighting Fires?

But then there's something that we can do, and that's exactly what the King's Foundation stands for. It's the actions that we can all take to promote a better and more sustainable world. And, of course, the joy of this song is it's one massive crescendo, basically. It starts very small, just voice and piano, and by the end, everybody's singing. We have this big build, so the choir, just one voice, this is just one voice, just one person singing. Second, just one voice, this is just one voice, and the females come in, just one.

And then I have this lovely big bass note to really set up the big chorus. But I tease you, there's a silence and then... And it really gets big there. So the choir are...

And the joy of that is that you can make the music match the words. So we said, we are beautiful, we are powerful at the beginning, and we didn't really sound particularly powerful. It was very small, it was fragile. And that was the point I was making about the world. You know, there's fragility there, but there's also power and beauty. And when we all come together, as we do at the end of the song, everybody's singing and playing together, then finally that lyric, we are powerful, sounds powerful too. We are powerful, we are powerful, we are powerful.

You performed this to His Majesty the King. How did it go? It was an extraordinary premiere. So we had a string quartet, a youth choir and then me singing at the piano. And His Majesty was literally stood at the end of the keyboard. That kind of intimacy...

is pretty extraordinary. I could literally sense him leaning forward at certain lines. I could hear him responding to the cello in the string quartet. And for this performance, it wasn't just the king who was a special guest because your parents were invited as well. They were. It was my dad's birthday. And even more special that after His Majesty spoke with me and with some of the performers...

He then turned around and went to my parents. And they had a good five minutes talking with the king. And so it was really lovely that rather than just sort of coming back and telling them about my day, this time they could be there. And they literally stood behind Meryl Streep and the king and heard this piece performed live. A piece that they'd heard me, you know, noodling away at home quite a lot. But for them to hear it come together in that way in that room was pretty epic. Around the world, there will be...

so many young people that compose their own music in their bedrooms, at school, at home. What's your advice to those young people who wish to compose for a bigger audience, perhaps for royalty? Where do you find your muse? I think you have to share. Ultimately, you need an audience, you need a stage, and that can be just down the road from you. It can be 10 people in a room. It sounds obvious, but you have to let it out and get it out. And

The more you do it, the more you'll realise you can lift heavier, you can play to this big space and you will grow in confidence. Music was not made just for us, it was made as an act of communication, as something social, so you must share. What is it about music that makes you happy?

Self-expression, definitely. It helped me express things that I couldn't find the words alone for. Meeting new people. Ultimately, music is an expression of curiosity. So it's that treasure trove of discovery that is constant. However old you are, whatever country you're in, whatever your background, there's always more music just around the corner. And I love that. It's an adventure. We are capable Even after all There still can be

Jack Pepper speaking to Harry Bly. We were thrilled to invite Jack here to BBC Broadcasting House, where he recorded a piano version of Harmony, which you can hear at the end of this podcast.

Around the world, it's estimated more than 50 million people are living with Alzheimer's disease and related dementias, and the numbers are expected to continue rising sharply. But scientists say there's reason for optimism, with dozens of potential treatments currently being developed that could have a huge impact.

Alzheimer's is characterised by memory loss, cognitive decline and behavioural changes caused by an abnormal protein building up in the brain, and it gradually progresses over time. Peter Goffin spoke to Dr Shona Scales, the Director of Research for Alzheimer's Research UK.

There's now 180 trials underway globally. About three quarters of these treatments are actually what we call disease targeting and can change the course of the disease. And about a third of these drugs are already being used in other conditions. And they're being looked at to be repurposed into Alzheimer's disease treatment, meaning that we could potentially speed up the drug development pipeline for these drugs.

The most famous one at the moment, or the one that's really gathered a lot of attention within the media, is that of semaglutide, which is a type 2 diabetes and weight loss drug. And that's currently being trialled for mild cognitive impairment or mild dementia from Alzheimer's disease. We have a number of clinical trials that will be reading out this year. And all we can do is just wait excitedly to see what those results are. And are there treatments

treatments that are in development now that are, would you say, drastically different than what's on offer now? Yes. So there's two treatments at the moment that can modify the course of the disease. These are licanumab and ananumab. They're difficult to administer and their effects are modest.

So we have drugs that are coming where they're thinking about actually how to increase the effects of the drugs by using new technologies to bypass the blood brain barrier. So that barrier that stops nasties getting into your brain and protects it, but also obviously makes it very difficult to drugs to enter. Different treatments would be needed from the earliest stages of Alzheimer's disease to the later, more advanced stages.

And so different biological sort of underpinnings are being looked at within these treatment pathways in order to really broaden out the number of treatments and the number of shots on target that we're aiming to get.

There was a previous story on the Happy Pod that we covered about a new blood test for Alzheimer's. I'm just wondering how likely that sort of diagnostic tool could be to help improve things for Alzheimer's patients. Some of the biological changes that happens within Alzheimer's disease actually can happen decades before you get the onset of clinical symptoms.

And we know that treating at the earliest possible moment means that these drugs can have a bigger effect. So being able to have an early and accurate diagnosis is vital. Can we look forward now to a time when Alzheimer's is completely controllable or even curable? Is that...

imaginable at this time? Here at Alzheimer's Research UK, we have real hope for the future. We have hope that we will have drugs that can slow the disease down, that can stop the disease, and then one day, hopefully, maybe reverse the disease.

We know that the drugs that we're seeing today are those first generation of treatments and the second and even third generation of treatments are already in our sights. We can see them coming. On a personal level, how does it feel to be working on research that could improve the lives of millions of people one day? Working in this area is genuinely one of the...

incredible things I have and will ever do. I remember the days where we were doing slow, painful research trying to understand the underpinning parts of the disease. And it's taken decades of research and

And now it really feels exciting to be on the cusp of something. You can see that these treatments that have come through, the chink in the armour, and suddenly feeling that pace of change just start to really take off.

means that suddenly working in this area right now is just scientifically an exciting place to be. But also thinking about patients of today and the patients of tomorrow just really gives me hope and propels me on. Dr Shona Scales from Alzheimer's Research UK.

There were celebrations in India this week as the country's first astronaut to visit the International Space Station took off from Cape Canaveral in Florida. Across the country, people gathered around screens to watch live coverage of Group Captain Shubhanshu Shukla lift off, especially in his hometown of Lucknow, where his parents joined hundreds of students for the event.

10, 9, 8, 7, 6, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1. For three nations, a new chapter in space takes flight. Godspeed, AX4.

Axiom 4 crew members Svavos Usnanski-Wizniewski from Poland and Tibor Kapu from Hungary also took their countries back to space after more than four decades. And before the launch, the astronauts revealed their fifth crew member, a soft, cuddly swan called Joy. The mission's leader, former NASA astronaut Peggy Whitson, said the five-inch tall toy was more than just a cute companion.

I believe that space has a unique way of bringing people together, and I'm proud to be a part of a mission that reflects that spirit. I'm honored to lead AX4, and I can't wait to share this journey with all of you. And now, I'm proud to unveil our zero-g indicator for AX4: Joy. It's a plush swan symbolizing grace and elegance. More than just a companion, Joy will signal our arrival in microgravity shortly after launch.

Joy represents the shared aspirations of three nations united in their return to human spaceflight. The swan is rich in cultural symbolism, stands for wisdom in India, resilience in Poland and grace in Hungary. Through joy, we'll celebrate our diversity and our unity in the shared journey of space exploration. And group captain Shukla said he was proud to represent the spirit of his country.

In Indian culture, the swan is the vehicle of goddess Saraswati, symbolizing wisdom, learning, and purity. It is said to have the rare ability to separate milk from water, a symbolism that is a powerful reminder of discernment in an age of distraction. To carry this symbol is to carry the essence of our mission, pursuit of knowledge, clarity of purpose, and grace under pressure. Now, with the training behind me and not just ahead, I feel deeply inspired, prepared, and confident.

The excitement of venturing into space, of experiencing a new way of living, seeing and being is beyond words. Group Captain Shukla. Coming up in this podcast. We thought no more of it and what a strange coincidence. So I'm sitting there a few days later and so I still haven't gone through that stack of books.

And lo and behold, I found a second book and a third book with my wife's name in it. The mind-blowing coincidence that stunned one book collector. MUSIC

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Her charity, Caravana Caninu in Huaca, runs guided walks that help socialise strays so they can find new homes, while also raising money to pay for their care. So far, more than 150 dogs have been rehomed, while a further 450 have been spayed or neutered to help control the population.

Maddy Drury joined five tourists and five excited dogs for a trip to the forests of the Sierra Norte region. Welcome everyone to Oaxaca. I'm Caitlin and I am originally from Atlanta, Georgia, but I've been living in Oaxaca now for six years.

That's Caitlin Garcia-Ajern, who co-founded the rescue centre five years ago and is leading the hike. So we started Caravana Canina really just doing a spay and neuter campaign with vets in my garage with some of the street dogs that were in the neighbourhood. And then in that area I would find dogs that had tumours or dogs that had machete wounds.

Caitlin started taking the dogs into her home and slowly built a team of animal lovers who were willing to treat and train the dogs so they'd be suitable for adoption. Of course, all of this costs money, which is where tourists come in. We already take the dogs hiking anyways for fun for the dogs. It's great for them, it's great for us to be in the forest.

And then combining that with tourism creates this opportunity for us to fundraise for the project. We are in the forest on the walk and the dogs are running in and out of us, through our legs, going a bit crazy for the first 15 minutes. No, no, no. No, no, no. No, no, no.

They don't think much of the mountain bikes that are coming through here. In fact, I think some of them are a bit scared, but that's all part of the experience for them. All part of socialising them with human beings.

I get chatting to Leila Kadri. She is a fosterer with the organisation and introduces us to one of the dogs. So Zora has been with me the longest. So it took about six months to get her healthy and also to a point where she could comfortably socialise. She's very emotionally in tune, she's very elegant, but she's also quite goofy. So she's wonderful and she's kind of like the big sister and keeps all the other puppies in line, which is nice. Why are those hikes so important?

They get to meet all kinds of people, all kinds of energy, learn to be calm and confident, you know, as well as hiking with us, waiting in the car, things like that. But it also, I think, shows a side that people might not often see. When we think of rescue dogs, we might have a bad connotation of a dog that's been in a shelter, in a metal cage, and might have behavioral problems, might be traumatized.

When we're able to have these dogs in smaller groups and with more focused care like this, such as in our homes, we're able to expose them to different situations where they can be really well-rounded dogs. It's clear the tourists are getting as much out of the hike as the dogs. I get chatting to one of them, Maria del Carmen Reyes, who lives in the US but grew up in Mexico. It's amazing that these dogs were all street dogs per se or rescues because they are more well-behaved than some of our domesticated pets at home.

They're intuitive. They listen. They can be off leash and they come right back to you. They're curious. And it's wonderful to see that they get to be a part of nature. I also chat to Emily from Canada, who is on the tour with her mum. You know, we're such big dog fans. And, you know, especially being here as tourists, like, I ideally want in some way my presence here to be like in some way for good. The hike has been wonderful. All the dogs, learning about the dogs has been really, like, quite inspiring and inspiring.

Yeah, just like also always good to get in some dog time and hopefully make a positive impact is like such a win. After a fun but tiring walk under the warmth of the sun, we drive back to the office in Oaxaca. I have another chat with founder Caitlin. You have helped hundreds of dogs, but there are millions on the streets. Is this just a drop in the ocean? You know, there are certainly moments when it feels like there's so much more work to do. What's the point?

And then I think you have these case-by-case relationships with animals and with the humans caring for them, and that makes it all worth it. Like anything in the world, there are ripple effects. It just creates a culture of care. Caitlin Garcia Ahern, ending that report from Maddy Drury. And you can hear more on People Fixing the World wherever you get your BBC podcasts.

In the city of Kano in northern Nigeria, the streets are full of bright yellow three-wheeled taxis known as kekes. Traditionally, they've been driven by men, but now a small group of pioneering women have been getting behind the wheel. Mansu Abubakar from BBC Africa went to meet the woman who led the way.

My name is Amina Ibrahim, the first woman to write a case for the whole of Kano. Amina Ibrahim is a cleaner in a popular hospital in Kano.

And for her, this is a secondary job. We know the situation in Nigeria and how the economy has been very, very rough the last couple of years. Before I start to ride keke, I'd already learned how to ride bicycle and motorcycle. Actually, her brother was the one who owns a keke. She always tell him that she wants to learn and be able to help her family make some money. And she was able to learn from him.

And he said the first time she was able to take his keke go out, the looks she got from people was unbelievable. She said,

everywhere she went to, people were staring, looking at her because it was the first time they were seeing a woman riding keke. But what kept her going was the fact that the first few days she made a lot of money and she just kept going. And it was money that was very helpful for her family. I think in a day, averagely, they make at least 10,000 naira. 10,000 naira?

You don't say get some people, we don't wise up.

why some people date behind regarding women and work. But generally, people, they appreciate me. At the moment, there are dozens of women in Kano that are J.K. drivers. There's a group, it's a non-governmental organization which was inspired by Amina and the fact that women were complaining of getting harassed by men in cars.

So they wanted female drivers and KK where only women will be carried. So you can see them around with the pink uniform and all of that. It's interesting to see in the car. So the pink uniform is to identify the female drivers so that the women who are particularly concerned about getting into KK with men will go into that one that they are sure that it's only women that are carried.

I'm not thinking of retirement or anything. This is something I won't do for the rest of my life. So when I met her, she was happy with the care driving and she took us around Kano and then finally took us to her home where her children were waiting to welcome her with hugs. We spoke to some of them and they said they are proud of their mum and how inspiring she is to a lot of other women. Mansur Abubakar.

Now to a story about a rather strange coincidence. When Steve Mills bought a set of books from a local charity shop, little did he know they were connected to his family, five decades ago and hundreds of kilometres away. Holly Gibbs has the story.

Steve Mills has been collecting books by the children's author Enid Blyton since he retired a few years ago. Some people think, a grown man, why are you buying Enid Blyton? But the books, they mean something. He bought his latest finds in a charity shop in Essex where he lives with his wife Karen, took them home and sat them on his bookshelf amongst his collection. It was only months later that Steve opened one of the books and was in for a big surprise.

I started to rearrange some books on the shelf and thought, oh, let's just have a look through these.

And I turned the page, the cover, and inside was my brother-in-law's name. And I just stood there in shock looking at it. And I recognized the address because that address had come up in family conversations. And I showed it to my wife, and she was completely amazed. And she then turned the next page, which I hadn't done, and there was her name that she'd written. You know, we were both sitting there thinking, wow,

What are the chances? Luckily, her parents are still with us and they're in their mid-80s now. So we contacted them and they were absolutely thrilled to hear this.

because obviously it's part of their family history. There are sketches in the book by Steve's wife Karen, old addresses and details of family members. Steve's mother-in-law gave them away to a public fete more than 50 years ago and 275 kilometres away from where he found them. But it doesn't stop there. We thought no more of it and what a strange coincidence.

So I was sitting there a few days later and thought, oh, I still haven't gone through that stack of books. And lo and behold, I found a second book and a third book with my wife's name in it. And we just couldn't believe it. And it's just destiny that these books wanted to be found. Steve says in the back of one of the books Karen has written, I have 12 Eden Blyton books and his next challenge is to find the remaining nine.

He says the experience of finding the books has been mind-blowing and has brought him and his wife even closer together. Holly Gibbs. And that's all from the Happy Pod for now, but we thought we'd end where we began, with harmony. Bed without a blanket, a house without a roof.

I need you to complete me. In circles there is truth. We are made for feeling. If you have a story to share, the address as ever is globalpodcast at bbc.co.uk. And you can now watch some of our interviews on YouTube. Just search for The Happy Pod.

This edition was mixed by Callum McLean and the producers were Holly Gibbs and Rachel Bulkley. The editor is Karen Martin. I'm Bernadette Keogh. Until next time, goodbye. There still can be...

The Indian singer and rapper Sidhu Mooseyala inspired a generation of young Punjabis. He really affected the lifestyle, the culture. But at the height of his fame, he was shot dead. This is a murder which Punjab will not forget.

I'm DJ and broadcaster Bobby Friction. And in World of Secrets, The Killing Call, we're searching for answers behind his murder. What kind of world was Sidhu caught up in? Who wanted him dead and why? He always said, bro, one day I'm going to die with a bullet. I know that. World of Secrets from the BBC World Service. Listen now wherever you get your BBC podcasts.