Legend

BBC Radio 4
Legend
Latest episode

17 episodes

  • Legend

    The Miles Davis Story: 3. Miles in Blue

    12/06/2026 | 28 mins.
    Clarke Peters explores what many consider the apex of Miles Davis’s career: 1959, the year of Kind of Blue.
    It was a time of tailored suits, fast cars, and a radical new sound that redefined the 20th-century idea of cool. Clarke takes us inside the legendary Columbia studio to witness the birth of the best-selling jazz album of all time - a recording session where Miles’ scrawled notes transformed the genre forever. But beneath the surface of this "sublime" era, Miles’ life didn't always run as smooth as his music.
    Clarke explores the uncomfortable collision of professional triumph and personal volatility, as his relationship with his soon to be wife, dancer Frances Taylor, was tested by the same uncompromising drive that fuelled his art. The episode reaches a pivotal climax just days after the album’s release. Despite his global stardom, a brutal encounter with the police outside a New York club served as a savage reminder that, for a Black man in 1959 America, the "cool" was never a shield from social reality.
    Narrator and longtime fan Clarke Peters (The Wire, Treme) explores the restless genius and radical evolution of Miles Davis. Across five episodes, Clarke traces a 50 year odyssey of constant reinvention - from a teenage outsider in 1944 to a global icon who redefined what it meant to be Black, to be cool, and to be an artist. Blending archival recordings with fresh perspectives, the series reveals how Miles’ "take no shit" attitude and aesthetic fearlessness influenced everyone from rock stars to Oscar-winning filmmakers. Yet, Clarke also grapples with the darker truths of Miles’ legacy, including the substance issues and domestic abuse that left a trail of pain for those closest to him. It's a searching investigation into an artist capable of the most sublime beauty and the most brutal behavior - a man who refused to be palatable, refused to be a "legend", and simply refused to stop moving forward.
    Presenter: Clarke Peters
    Series Producer: Clem Hitchcock
    Executive Producer: Rami Tzabar
    Editor: Kirsten Lass
    Production Manager: Emily Duffy
    Music Consultant: Guy Barker
    Additional music recorded at Ronnie Scott's by James Pearson and Guy Barker
    Archivist: Simon Rooks
    Script Consultant: Anne Harbin
    Technical Production and Sound Design: Melvin Rickarby
    Commissioning Editors for the BBC: Dan Clarke and Matthew Dodd
    A Loftus Media production for BBC Radio 4
    Tracks as Featured:
    'There is no Greater Love' - Miles Davis Quintet
    'Just Squeeze Me' - Miles Davis Quintet
    'How am I to Know' - Miles Davis Quintet
    'Ah Lei Che' - MIles Davis Quintet
    'Freddie Freeloader' - MIles Davis Quintet
    'So what' - Miles Davis
    'All Blues' - Miles Davis
    Flamenco Sketches' - Miles Davis and Bill Evans
    'Blue in Green' - Miles Davis and Bill Evans
    'Bitches Brew' - Miles Davis
    'Pharoes Dance' - Miles Davis
    Frances Taylor from BBC Jazz File: Miles Davis at 80, 2001
    Jimmy Cobb from interview with Mike Lanchin, 2014
  • Legend

    The Miles Davis Story: 2. Back off the Ropes

    05/06/2026 | 28 mins.
    Clarke Peters explores a period when Miles Davis, the "King of Cool," was nearly knocked out for good.
    By the early 1950s, Miles had hit rock bottom - scraped off a Manhattan gutter by a friend and forced to pawn his trumpet to fund a heroin habit that had swallowed his career and his reputation. Clarke follows Miles on a desperate, 20-hour bus ride back to his father’s farm, where he would face his greatest demon in a brutal, solitary fight for his life. We discover how Miles used the grit and physical discipline of his boxing idols, Jack Johnson and Sugar Ray Robinson, to survive a "cold turkey" recovery and find a radical new way to play. Using a Harmon mute to create a dark, aching, and intensely intimate sound that would become his signature, Miles began a high-stakes hustle to reclaim his throne.
    From the shame of a prison cell to a last-chance appearance at a major jazz festival, this is the story of a legendary artist fighting his way back from the brink to see if the world was still listening.
    Narrator and longtime fan Clarke Peters (The Wire, Treme) explores the restless genius and radical evolution of Miles Davis. Across five episodes, Clarke traces a 50 year odyssey of constant reinvention - from a teenage outsider in 1944 to a global icon who redefined what it meant to be Black, to be cool, and to be an artist. Blending archival recordings with fresh perspectives, the series reveals how Miles’s "take no shit" attitude and aesthetic fearlessness influenced everyone from rock stars to Oscar-winning filmmakers.
    Yet, Clarke also grapples with the darker truths of Miles’s legacy, including the substance issues and domestic abuse that left a trail of pain for those closest to him. It is a searching investigation into an artist capable of the most sublime beauty and the most brutal behavior - a man who refused to be palatable, refused to be a "legend", and simply refused to stop moving forward.
    Presenter: Clarke Peters
    Series Producer: Clem Hitchcock
    Executive Producer: Rami Tzabar
    Editor: Kirsten Lass
    Production Manager: Emily Duffy
    Music Consultant: Guy Barker
    Additional Music: Guy Barker and James Pearson
    Archivist: Simon Rooks
    Script Consultant: Anne Harbin
    Technical Production and Sound Design: Melvin Rickarby
    A Loftus Media production for BBC Radio 4
    Commissioning Editors for the BBC: Dan Clarke and Matthew Dodd
    Featured tracks (in order of appearance)
    "Right Off" - Miles Davis
    "Yesternow" - Miles Davis
    "Blue n Boogie" - Miles Davis
    "Walkin" - Miles Davis
    "Love me or Leave me" Rudy van Gelder (featuring Miles Davis)
    "it Never Entered my Mind" - MIles Davis
    "Oleo" - MIles Davis
    "Round Midnight" - Thelonius Monk (featuring Miles Davis)
    "So What" - Miles Davis
    Jack Johnson, directed by Jim Jacobs, The Big Fights Inc. 1970
    Clark Terry from BBC Jazz File, Miles Davis at 80, 2001
  • Legend

    The Miles Davis Story: 1. Don't Call Me Legend

    29/05/2026 | 28 mins.
    Clarke Peters explores the life and legacy of a visionary artist whose relentless pursuit of the "new" often scorched his own life and the lives of those around him.
    In September 1944, an 18-year-old Miles Davis arrives in New York with a trumpet in his hand and a secret mission. He may have first arrived in New York to take up a place at the prestigious Juilliard School, but in reality Miles was actually patrolling the smoke-filled jazz clubs of 52nd Street, chasing the high-speed sounds of his bebop heroes, Charlie Parker and Dizzy Gillespie.
    Across the series, Clarke charts Miles’s ever-evolving artform, starting with this first great transformation of a legend - when the young Miles chose to step into the unknown, seize control of his own creative destiny, and begin his journey as a leader.
    Narrator, acclaimed actor and longtime fan, Clarke Peters (The Wire, Treme, Da 5 Bloods) reveals the restless genius and radical evolution of Miles Davis. Growing up in a New York household where his father’s jazz records were the permanent soundtrack, Clarke was captivated by Miles long before he fully appreciated the man behind the music. Across five episodes, Clarke traces a 50 year odyssey of constant reinvention - from a teenage outsider chasing the bebop revolution in 1944 to a global icon who redefined what it meant to be Black, to be cool, and to be an artist.
    Blending archival recordings and legendary tracks with fresh perspectives from a range of creators, the series reveals how Miles’ influence ripples far beyond the world of jazz. We discover how his "take no shit" attitude and aesthetic fearlessness impacted on the likes of Oscar-winning filmmakers, celebrated designers and music icons like Prince, Joni Mitchell, Sting and even bands like Radiohead, as well as generations of now also legendary jazz musicians that he championed early in their careers - John Coltrane, Bill Evans, Herbie Hancock, Ron Carter, Keith Jarrett and Marcus Miller, to name a few.
    The series also grapples with the darker side of Miles’ legacy, including the domestic abuse that left a trail of pain for those closest to him and the substance issues that took a deep toll on his health. It asks difficult questions about how to regard an artist capable of creating the most sublime aesthetic statements while engaging in brutal behaviour.
    Clarke Peters, whose own creative journey as an actor was sparked by Miles’s music, leads a searching investigation into a man who refused to be palatable, refused to be a "legend", and simply refused to stop moving forward.
    Miles Davis Interview: From Jazz Talking by Ben Sidran, 1986.
    The Arsenio Hall Show, Paramount, originally broadcast in 1989.
    60 Minutes, CBS News. Originally broadcast in 1989
    Featured tracks (in order of appearance)
    “So What” – Miles Davis
    “Blue in Green” – Miles Davis (feat. John Coltrane & Bill Evans)
    “Bitches Brew” – Miles Davis
    "Miles Runs the Voodoo Down" - MIles Davis
    “Agitation” – Miles Davis
    “Flamenco Sketches” – Miles Davis & Bill Evans
    “Ko Ko” – Charlie Parker
    “Salt Peanuts” – Dizzy Gillespie
    "Jivin with Jack the Bellboy" - Miles Davis
    "Move" - Miles Davis
    "Moon Dreams" - Miles Davis
    "Boplicity" - Miles Davis
    Presenter: Clarke Peters
    Series Producer: Clem Hitchcock
    Executive Producer: Rami Tzabar
    Editor: Kirsten Lass
    Production Manager: Emily Duffy
    Music Consultant: Guy Barker
    Additional Music: Guy Barker
    Archivist: Simon Rooks
    Script Consultant: Anne Harbin
    Technical Production and Sound Design: Melvin Rickarby
    Commissioning Editors for the BBC: Dan Clarke and Matthew Dodd
    A Loftus Media production for BBC Radio 4
  • Legend

    The Miles Davis Story: Trailer

    15/05/2026 | 2 mins.
    Trumpeter Miles Davis didn’t just change jazz; he redefined the sound of the 20th century. But that constant reinvention came at a price. Clarke Peters explores a visionary artist, to reveal the man behind the legend: a complicated genius whose relentless pursuit of the "new" often scorched his own life and the lives of those around him.
  • Legend

    The Bruce Springsteen Story: 5. The Land of Hope and Dreams

    14/11/2025 | 28 mins.
    How did Bruce become The Boss, and what did it cost him to get there? Laura Barton explores the extraordinary life story of Bruce Springsteen, taking a front-row seat at five important gigs to reveal the life behind the legend.
    In our final chapter, we trace Bruce’s journey to his latest tour - The Land of Hope and Dreams - where he speaks out on stage against the President of the United States. How did Bruce become the kind of artist who wears his politics so openly? And what impact has this had on his fan base?
    Laura travels to Milan in the heat of July for the last stop on the tour at San Siro Stadium, where she meets fans who’ve journeyed from around the world to witness this moment.
    ~~~
    “I'm here tonight to provide proof of life to that ever elusive, never completely believable, particularly these days, us. That's my magic trick.”
    In Legend: The Bruce Springsteen Story, we uncover the magic trick to discover how a scrawny, long-haired introvert from small-town New Jersey became the iconic, muscular, and oft-misunderstood rock star of the 1980s, to the eloquent elder statesmen he is now. What can his story tell us about America today?
    In each episode, Laura takes us to the front row of a live performance that reveals a different side of The Boss, and hears him across the decades in his own words from the archive. We'll also hear from fellow worshippers in the Church of Springsteen and disciples from the E Street Band, including drummer Max Weinberg, tributes from those influenced by Bruce, such as Bryce Dessner from The National, as well as Freehold town historian Kevin Coyne and music critics and biographers such as Richard Williams, Eric Alterman, Steven Hyden, Warren Zanes and Diane H. Winston.
    The Bruce Springsteen Story comes from the production team behind BBC Radio 4’s award-winning Joni Mitchell Story, and the podcast Soul Music – “… the gold standard for music podcasts…” (Esquire).
    Producer: Eliza Lomas
    Sound Design and Original Music: Hannis Brown
    Mix engineer: Ilse Lademann
    Series Development: Mair Bosworth
    Production Coordinator: Stuart Laws
    Research: Sarah Goodman
    Series Editor: Emma Harding
    Commissioning Editors: Daniel Clarke and Matthew Dodd
    Assistant Commissioner Podcasts: Will Drysdale
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About Legend
Some artists change music forever. Legend tells the incredible life stories of musical pioneers. How did they become legends? And what does their music tell us about our times? We go deep into the artist's world and get to know the life beyond the legend. Latest series: Miles Davis
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