These are the songs that we have listened to, laughed to, loved to and laboured to, as well as downed tools and danced to.
Covering the last seven decades, Stuart Maconie looks at the songs that have sound tracked our changing times, and – just sometimes – changed the way we feel. Beginning with Vera Lynn’s ‘We’ll Meet Again’, a song that reassured a nation parted from their loved ones by the turmoil of war, and culminating with the manic energy of ‘Bonkers’, Dizzee Rascal’s anthem for the push and rush of the 21st century inner city, The People’s Songs takes a tour of our island’s pop music, and asks what it means to us.
This is not a rock critique about the 50 greatest tracks ever recorded. Rather, it is a celebration of songs that tell us something about a changing Britain during the dramatic and kaleidoscopic period from the Second World War to the present day. Here are songs about work, war, class, leisure, race, family, drugs, sex, patriotism and more, recorded in times of prosperity or poverty. This is the music that inspired haircuts and dance crazes, but also protest and social change.
The companion to Stuart Maconie’s landmark Radio 2 series, The People’s Songs shows us the power of ‘cheap’ pop music,- one of Britain’s greatest exports. These are the songs we worked to and partied to, and grown up and grown old to – from ‘A Whiter Shade of Pale’ to ‘Rehab’, ‘She Loves You’ to ‘Star Man’, ‘Dedicated Follower of Fashion’ to ‘Radio Ga Ga’.

The Eternal Return of Clara Hart
Brisingr, Or, The Seven Promises of Eragon Shadeslayer and Saphira Bjartskular
Under the Open Skies
Thirteen
Gift Wrapping
Stories We Tell Ourselves
The Paper & Hearts Society. Book 1
When Shadows Fall
Night Games
Voices of History
The Stonewall Reader
May At 10
Freedom to Think
Maths On the Back of An Envelope
Happy Moments
Vile Stars
Beeswing
Sixteen Souls
Good Economics For Hard Times
Heroic Animals
Great British Spirit
Normandy '44
Mark My Words
(R)Evolution


