Use BBC.com or the new BBC App to listen to BBC podcasts, Radio 4 and the World Service outside the UK.

Find out how to listen to other BBC stations

Episode details

Radio 3,06 May 2026,14 mins

SeriesThe Insect Singers

3. Cicada Summer Song

The Essay

Available for over a year

The Essay celebrates the sheer musicality and noise of Earth’s loudest insect singers. 3. Cicada Summer Song. Cicadas are the heavy metal section of the insect world. Billions can make as much noise as a jumbo jet with their vibrating tymbals, emerging from the warming earth to shed their skins and sing their love songs all summer long. They are celebrated by the ancients of China, Japan, Greece and the Maori of New Zealand. In the hot dawn of a Bangalore forest, engineer Rakesh Khanna captures a Cicada symphony triggered by the sun's rays. Poet and architect Phoebe Giannisi delves into the myths, poetry and love of cicada song, the Tettix of ancient Greece. In 21st century New Zealand, bio-acoustician Julia Kaspar discovered a cupboard of earthly delights at the Tepapa Museum in Wellington. The cicada recordings of Charles Fleming, who, in the 1960s, enlisted his entire family and islanders in an early version of citizen science. Identifying and recording an extraordinary range of song that doubled New Zealand's species count. Kithara Performance by Michael Levy. Raga- Lalit Dawn Shenai performed by Bismillah Khan from the Coates Indian Music Collection. Double Syrinx - CALLISTA on Double Syrinx - composed and performed by Yannis Pantazis. Recording by permission of SEIKILO Museum of Ancient Music Greece. Charles Fleming Cicada recordings courtesy of Tepapa Museum. https://collections.tepapa.govt.nz/topic/11106 Additional cicada recordings courtesy of Cicada Song EU https://www.cicadasong.eu/ As told to series producer Mark Burman. Engineer: Duncan Thornley. A Storyscape production for Radio 3.

Programme Website
More episodes