BBC sounds music radio podcasts.
Hello, I'm Lauren Laverne and this is the Desert Island Discs podcast.
Every week I ask my guests to choose the eight tracks, book and luxury they'd want to take with them if they were cast away to a desert island.
And for rights reasons, the music is shorter than the original broadcast.
I hope you enjoy listening.
My castaway this week is Erilyn Wallen.
She's the first woman to receive an Ivan Avella Award for classical music and is one of the world's most performed living composers.
Her work has been played everywhere from the 2012 Paralympic Games to the late Queen's Gold and Diamond Jubilees.
She's prolific writing symphonies, song cycles, chamber works and 22 operas, and early in her career, she learned to improvise.
Following her classical training, she worked as a session musician, even appearing on Top of the Pops.
In 1998, she was the first black woman to have her work performed at the BBC Proms and in 2020, reworked Jerusalem for the season's last night.
As a little girl growing up in London, she told her uncle Arthur that she had a head full of sounds and didn't know what to do with them.
Perhaps, he suggested, you are a composer.
She says the calling to be a musician has been stronger than any other consideration.
If along the way I've helped to dispel the myth that a composer is only white and male, that can only be a good thing.
Erilin Wall, and welcome to Desert island Discs.
Hello, Lauren.
It's so lovely to meet you.
So, Erilyn, it all started with the piano for you.
How would you describe your relationship with the instrument today?