Thinking ahead - academics take part in Radio 3 Festival Published on: 9 February 2018 Experts from Âé¶¹´«Ã½ are contributing to this year’s Radio 3 Free Thinking Festival. A musical start The event, which takes place from Friday 9 March, attracts some of the brightest minds in the country to Sage Gateshead every year. The festival will get off to a musical start with award-winning choir Voices of Hope, whose members include Âé¶¹´«Ã½ staff and graduates. The choir will perform a brand new piece by composer Lucy Pankhurst with a text by her mother Helen Pankhurst. This will be based on words by Helen's great-grandmother, suffragette Emmeline Pankhurst, and will mark a hundred years since the first women in this country won the right to vote. Later that day, acclaimed musician and Âé¶¹´«Ã½ lecturer Kathryn Tickell, will present a special episode of World in 3, which will explore working class voices in the rich folk music traditions of the North East. On Saturday morning, Kirsten Gibson, senior lecturer in music, will review new and recent releases of 16th and 17th-century music for Record Review. Sage Gateshead Magical but complex Musicians The Unthanks, one half of which is graduate Niopha Keegan, will take part in The Verb, which features the best in new poetry, writing and performance, on Sunday morning. Award-winning poet, Director of , will take part in a special Sunday morning journey into poetry and the spoken word and will share a brand-new commission. The magical but complex behaviour of everything from schools of fish to starlings to atomic particles will come under the spotlight with , Professor of Ethology and , a lecturer in the School of Natural and Environmental Sciences. They will take part in The Dance with Nature, with host Professor Rana Mitter, and Professor Jim Al-Khalili, presenter of BBC Radio 4’s The Life Scientific. The iconic bridges across the Tyne will come under the spotlight in Building Bridges and megastructures. , Reader in Structural Engineering, will discuss the human endeavour which goes into creating such man-made wonders with Roma Agrawal, author of Built: The Hidden Stories Behind our Structures, and Erica Wagner, author of Chief Engineer: The Man Who Built the Brooklyn Bridge. Tickets, broadcast and download You can find out more about times and tickets by visiting the . All events will be broadcast on within four weeks of the festival, and will be available for download from . Share: Latest News Scientists unlock hidden driver of inflammatory bowel disease Scientists have linked a key genetic signal in inflammatory bowel disease to an immune response that shuts down inflammation control, enabling faster diagnosis and targeted treatments. published on: 15 June 2026 Funding system risks limiting genuine community collaboration A new policy paper written by researchers at Âé¶¹´«Ã½ warns that the way UK research is funded may be undermining efforts to create genuinely collaborative partnerships with communities. published on: 15 June 2026 Volunteers help turn Whitley Bay beach into maths experiment Members of the public joined mathematicians from Âé¶¹´«Ã½ to create what organisers believe is the largest aperiodic tiling ever attempted on Whitley Bay beach. published on: 15 June 2026 Facts and figures