Catriona Young presents a concert by the Romanian Radio Chamber Orchestra with music by Mozart and Haydn
1:01 AM
Mozart, Wolfgang Amadeus [1756-1791]
Flute and Harp Concerto in C major, K299 (Cadenzas by Dan Dediu)
Ion Bogdan Stefanescu (flute), Maria Bîldea (harp), Romanian Radio Chamber Orchestra, Gabriel Bebeselea (conductor)
1:32 AM
Bartók, Béla [1881-1945]
Romanian Folk dances, Sz.56 (Polka; Fast Dance)
Ion Bogdan Stefanescu (flute), Maria Bîldea (harp)
1:35 AM
Haydn, Josef [1732-1809]
Symphony No 60 in C major, Hob.1.60, 'Il distratto'
Romanian Radio Chamber Orchestra, Gabriel Bebeselea (conductor)
2:03 AM
Schumann, Robert [1810-1856]
Etudes en formes de variations, Op 13
Zhang Zuo
2:32 AM
Nielsen, Carl (1865-1931)
Wind Quintet, Op 43
The Ariart Woodwind Quintet
3:01 AM
Klami, Uno (1900-1961)
Revontulet - Fantasy for orchestra, Op 38
Finnish Radio Symphony Orchestra, Sakari Oramo (conductor)
3:21 AM
Mielck, Ernst (1877-1899)
String Quintet in F major, Op 3
Erkki Palola (violin), Anne Paavilainen (violin), Matti Hirvikangas (viola), Teema Kupiainen (viola), Risto Poutanen (cello)
3:45 AM
Bach, Johann Sebastian (1685-1750)
Cello suite No 1 in G major, BWV 1007
Claudio Bohórquez (cello)
4:01 AM
Handel, George Frideric (1685-1789)
Cara sposa, (Rinaldo)
Delphine Galou (Contralto), Les Ambassadeurs, Alexis Kossenko (Director)
4:06 AM
Saint-Saëns, Camille (1835-1921) arr. R. Klugescheid
My heart at thy sweet voice, Cantabile from 'Samson and Delilah' arranged for violin, cello and piano
Moshe Hammer (violin), Tsuyoshi Tsutsumi (cello), William Tritt (piano)
4:10 AM
Mozart, Wolfgang Amadeus (1756-1791)
Divertimento in B flat major, K137
Orchestra Libera Classica, Hidemi Suzuki (conductor)
4:23 AM
Sweelinck, Jan Pieterszoon (1562-1621)
Beati pauperes spiritu
Netherlands Chamber Choir, Philippe Herreweghe (conductor), Stephan Stubbs (lute)
4:28 AM
Merula, Tarquino [1594/5-1665]
Ciaccona for 2 violins and continuo, Op 12
Il Giardino Armonico
4:32 AM
Weber, Carl Maria von (1786-1826)
Peter Schmoll und sein Nachbarn (Overture)
Netherlands Radio Chamber Orchestra, Antoni Ros-Marba (conductor)
4:43 AM
Bach, Johann Sebastian (1685-1750)
Capriccio in B flat, BWV 992 ('Sopra la lontananza del suo fratello dilettissimo')
David Kadouch (piano)
4:53 AM
Mozart, Wolfgang Amadeus (1756-1791)
Overture - Don Giovanni, K527
Danish Radio Sinfonietta, Adám Fischer (conductor)
5:01 AM
Dimitrescu, Ion (1913-1996)
Symphonic Prelude
Romanian Youth Orchestra, Cristian Mandeal (conductor)
5:10 AM
Roman, Johan Helmich (1694-1758)
Symphonia No 20 in E minor
Stockholm Antiqua
5:19 AM
Bach, Carl Philipp Emanuel (1714-1788)
Keyboard Sonata in A minor, Wq 57 No 2
Pavel Kolesnikov (piano)
5:28 AM
Delius, Frederick (1862-1934)
La Calinda
BBC Concert Orchestra, Stephen Cleobury (Conductor)
5:33 AM
Suk, Josef (1874-1935)
Serenade for Strings in E flat, Op 6
Virtuosi di Kuhmo, Peter Csaba (conductor)
6:00 AM
Chopin, Frédéric (1810-1849)
Rondo à la Mazur, Op 5
Ludmil Angelov (piano)
6:08 AM
Grieg, Edvard (1843-1907)
Jesus Kristus er opfaren, from 'Four Salmer (Hymns), Op 74
Eilert Hasseldal (Baritone), Oslo Chamber Chorus (Choir), Håkon Nystedt (Conductor)
6:17 AM
Halvorsen, Johan [1864-1935]
Symphony No 2 in D minor, Op 67
Norwegian Radio Orchestra, Thomas Søndergård (conductor)
6:48 AM
Naumann, Johann Gottlieb (1741-1801)
Symphonie à grand orchestre de l'opéra Cora (Overture to "Cora and Alonzo")
Concerto Köln.
Elizabeth Alker presents Radio 3's classical breakfast show, featuring listener requests.
Email 3breakfast@bbc.co.uk.
As part of New Year, New Music, Tom Service talks to the composer and conductor Esa-Pekka Salonen, Principal Conductor of the Philharmonia Orchestra and Conductor Laureate for the Los Angeles Philharmonic.
Mezzo-soprano Joyce DiDonato chooses some gems from the American repertoire, focusing on some less well-known composers alongside numbers from the great American songbook. The programme includes works by William Grant Still, Amy Beach, Ruth Crawford Seeger, Charles Griffes, Henry Cowell, Paul Creston, Philip Glass, John Corigliano, Mark Adamo, Jake Heggie and Craig Urquhart, alongside some favourite songs by Jerome Kern, Harold Arlen, Duke Ellington, Cole Porter and Irving Berlin.
Matthew Sweet on the film music of Franz Waxman and in this, the second of two programmes, the focus is on the post war years - a time which gave us some of Waxman's greatest scores from Sunset Boulevard to Taras Bulba. Matthew also looks at Waxman's major contribution to the classical musical life of America through the annual Los Angeles Music Festival which Waxman created and ran, and at how his remarkable musical gifts helped establish the sound of Hollywood in the years following the Second World War. The programme includes comment from Waxman's son John.
Featured films include "Humoresque"; "The Paradine Case"; "Sunset Boulevard"; "A Place In The Sun"; "Peyton Place"; "Sayonara"; "The Spirit of St Louis" and "Taras Bulba".
This week's postbag and emails contain requests from across the spectrum of jazz. Alyn Shipton's selection includes Duke Ellington's famous version of Creole Love Call with vocalist Adelaide Hall.
Artist Duke Ellington with Alica BabsKevin Le Gendre presents Cuban pianist Alfredo Rodriguez and his trio in concert at the Sage as part of the Gateshead Jazz Festival. Rodriguez has been mentored by jazz icon Quincy Jones and featured as guest soloist as part of the 2017 BBC Proms paying tribute to the legendary producer. Recorded on the Jazz Line-Up stage at Gateshead, this performance captures the energy of Alfredo's music and features the dynamic playing of bassist Munir Hossn and drummer Michael Olivera.
Presented by Donald Macleod, a Rossini masterpiece not seen at the Royal Opera House for more than 120 years: Semiramide, the dramatic story of the Queen of Assyria, who conspired with her then lover Assur, an army commander, to poison her husband, King Nino, whose corpse comes back from the underworld to claim justice. As if things weren't complicated enough, Semiramide now loves a younger warrior, Arsace, and wants him to be king, but unbeknown to her, he's her long-lost son - and discovering it triggers an ending of tragic proportions. Superstar mezzo-soprano Joyce DiDonato takes the title role, with mezzo-soprano Daniela Barcellona as Arsace and the bass Michele Pertusi as Assur. Sir Antonio Pappano conducts the Orchestra and Chorus of the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden, in a production by David Alden.
Semiramide ..... Joyce DiDonato (mezzo-soprano)
Assur ..... Michele Pertusi (bass)
Arsace ..... Daniela Barcellona (mezzo-soprano)
Idreno ..... Lawrence Brownlee (tenor)
Azema ..... Jacquelyn Stucker (soprano)
Oroe ..... Bálint Szabó (bass)
Mitrane ..... Konu Kim (tenor)
Nino's Ghost ..... Simon Shibambu (bass)
Royal Opera Chorus
Orchestra of the Royal Opera House
Sir Antonio Pappano (Conductor).
Tom Service presents highlights from the London Contemporary Music Festival, recorded in December 2017. Tonight's programme features works by Robert Ashley performed by the new music ensemble Apartment House, with the composer's son Sam Ashley on vocals.
Robert Ashley was one of the greatest American experimentalists, following in the pioneering footsteps of John Cage. He co-founded one of the earliest American Electronic Music studios in 1958, and gradually developed into a master of contemporary opera with a distinctively American sound.
Photo by Tina Rousou.
A jazz superstar popular enough to fill the Royal Albert Hall, pianist Oscar Peterson (1925-2007) was renowned for his dazzling technique, mighty swing and the ensemble power of his great trios. Geoffrey Smith picks highlights from his recorded legacy.
01 00:02 Oscar Peterson (artist)Catriona Young presents a concert of piano duets from Minnesota, including music from Beethoven, Bach and Bernstein. Greg Anderson and Elizabeth Joy Roe perform.
1:01 AM
Ludwig van Beethoven [1770-1827]
Allegretto, from Symphony No 6 in F, Op 68, 'Pastoral'
Greg Anderson (piano), Elizabeth Joy Roe (piano)
1:11 AM
John Adams [b.1947]
Hallelujah Junction
Greg Anderson (piano), Elizabeth Joy Roe (piano)
1:28 AM
Leonard Cohen [1934-2016]
Hallelujah Variations
Greg Anderson (piano), Elizabeth Joy Roe (piano)
1:40 AM
Johann Sebastian Bach [1685-1750] arr. G. Kurtag
Sonatina, from 'Gottes Zeit ist die allerbeste Zeit', BWV 106
Greg Anderson (piano), Elizabeth Joy Roe (piano)
1:44 AM
John Lennon [1940-1980] and Paul McCartney [b.1942]
Let it be
Greg Anderson (piano), Elizabeth Joy Roe (piano)
1:51 AM
Astor Piazzolla [1921-1992]
Primavera porteña; Oblivion; Libertango
Greg Anderson (piano), Elizabeth Joy Roe (piano)
2:05 AM
Christoph Gluck [1714-1787]
Ballet, from 'Orpheus and Eurydice'
Greg Anderson (piano), Elizabeth Joy Roe (piano)
2:09 AM
Maurice Ravel [1875-1937]
La Valse
Greg Anderson (piano), Elizabeth Joy Roe (piano)
2:22 AM
Leonard Bernstein [1918-1990]
Mambo, from 'West Side Story'
Greg Anderson (piano), Elizabeth Joy Roe (piano)
2:24 AM
Bob Thiele [1922-1996]
What a Wonderful World
Greg Anderson (piano), Elizabeth Joy Roe (piano)
2:28 AM
Copland, Aaron (1900-1990), arr. Timothy Kain
Hoe Down - from 'Rodeo' arr. for 4 guitars
Guitar Trek
2:32 AM
Bach, Johann Sebastian (1685-1750) orch. Schoenberg
Chorale Prelude: Komm, Gott Schöpfer, heiliger Geist (BWV 631)
Sydney Symphony Orchestra, Edo de Waart (conductor)
2:35 AM
Dvorák, Antonín (1841-1904)
String Quartet No 12 in F major, Op 96, 'American'
Escher Quartet
3:01 AM
Gershwin, George (1898-1937)
Symphonic Suite from Porgy and Bess
William Tritt (piano), Hamilton Philharmonic Orchestra, Boris Brott (conductor)
3:27 AM
Ravel, Maurice [1875-1937]
Gaspard de la nuit for piano
Benjamin Grosvenor (piano)
3:49 AM
Stenhammar, Wilhelm (1871-1927)
Vårnatt (Spring Night)
Swedish Radio Choir, Swedish Radio Symphony Orchestra, Stefan Sköld (conductor)
3:57 AM
Veremans, Renaat (1894-1969)
Nacht en Morgendontwaken aan de Nete (Night and Sunrise on the Nete)
Flemish Radio Orchestra, Bjarte Engeset (Conductor)
4:09 AM
De Boeck, August (1865-1937)
Ave Maria
Tallinn Boys Choir, Lydia Rahula (conductor)
4:12 AM
Gilson, Paul (1865-1942)
Andante and Scherzo for cello and orchestra
Timora Rosler (cello), Flemish Radio Orchestra, Martyn Brabbins (conductor)
4:21 AM
Ysaÿe, Eugène (1858-1931)
Prelude from Solo Violin Sonata No 2 in A minor Op 27 No 2 (Obsession)
Arabella Steinbacher (violin)
4:24 AM
Franck, Cèsar (1822-1890)
Pastorale en mi majeur, Op19 (1863)
Joris Verdin (organ of the Cathedral of St-Étienne de St-Brieuc)
4:34 AM
Chausson, Ernest (1855-1899)
Chanson perpétuelle, Op 37
Barbara Hendricks (soprano), Staffan Scheja (piano), Vertavo String Quartet
4:42 AM
Albéniz, Isaac (1860-1909)
'Cuba' from Suite española No.1 (Op 47 No 8)
Tomaz Rajteric (guitar)
4:48 AM
Rodrigo, Joaquín (1901-1999)
Cuatro madrigales amatorios
Isabel Bayrakdarian (soprano) and cellists
4:56 AM
Maurice Ravel (1875-1937)
Pièce en forme de habanera arr. Neuberth for viola and piano
Gyözö Máté (viola), Balázs Szokolay (piano)
5:01 AM
Bach, Johann Sebastian (1685-1750)
Double Concerto in C minor, BWV 1060
Hans-Peter Westermann (oboe), Mary Utiger (violin), Camerata Köln
5:15 AM
Weir, Judith (b. 1954)
String Quartet
Silesian Quartet
5:27 AM
Wagner, Richard (1813-1883)
Im Treibhaus (Wesendonck-Lieder)
Agata Zubel (soprano); Warsaw Cellonet Group; Andrzej Bauer (director)
5:33 AM
Strauss, Richard [1864-1949]
Trio from Der Rosenkavailer - Act II, final scene "Maria Theres ..."
Adrianna Pieczonka (soprano), Tracey Dahl (soprano), Jean Stilwell (mezzo-soprano), Toronto Symphony Orchestra, Mario Bernardi (conductor)
5:38 AM
Messiaen, Olivier (1908-1992)
Le Loriot (Golden Oriole) (No.2 of Catalogue d'oiseaux)
David Louie (piano)
5:46 AM
Vivaldi, Antonio (1678-1741)
Concerto in A major (RV.335), 'The Cuckoo'
Elizabeth Wallfisch (baroque violin), Australian Brandenburg Orchestra, Paul Dyer (director)
5:56 AM
Boulanger, Lili (1893-1918)
Nocturne for flute and piano
Valentinas Gelgotas (flute), Audrone Kisieliute (piano)
6:00 AM
Lutoslawski, Witold [1913-1994]
Dance Preludes, for clarinet and piano
Seraphin Maurice Lutz (clarinet), Eugen Burger-Yonov (piano)
6:11 AM
Stants, Iet (1903-1968)
String Quartet No 2
Dufy Quartet
6:25 AM
Haydn, Joseph (1732-1809)
Symphony No 88 in G major
Swedish Radio Symphony Orchestra, Manfred Honeck (Conductor)
6:46 AM
Henderson, Ruth Watson (b. 1932)
Missa brevis
Elmer Iseler Singers, Elmer Iseler (conductor).
Elizabeth Alker presents Radio 3's classical breakfast show, featuring listener requests.
Email 3breakfast@bbc.co.uk.
This week's Sunday Escape is Edvard Grieg's song "Last Spring" in which Sarah Walker whisks us off to a Nordic landscape. She also includes Mozart's Horn Quintet K407, the contrasting atmospheres of music by John Dowland and Harry Partch, and operatic gems from Bizet.
Grayson Perry burst into the public consciousness in 2003 when he accepted the Turner Prize with the words: 'It's about time a transvestite potter from Essex won the Turner.' Since then he's become celebrated for his beautiful, intricately decorated vases, which juxtapose images of innocence, obscenity and humour.
He's worked across many other media as well - from tapestry to bronze, print-making to architecture, and the outrageously flamboyant frocks he wears when he goes out dressed as a woman are works of art in their own right.
He chooses Tchaikovsky, Philip Glass, Marcello and Kathleen Ferrier and explores with Michael Berkeley the emotional power of music and memory; escaping an unhappy childhood; the fun of demystifying the art world; and the joys and perils of moving from rebel to national treasure.
Producer: Jane Greenwood
A Loftus production for BBC Radio 3.
The Meccore Quartet plays Szymanowski and Sibelius at Wigmore Hall in London
Introduced by Clemency Burton-Hill.
Szymanowski: String Quartet No 1 in C major, Op 37
Sibelius: String Quartet in D minor, Op 56, 'Voces intimae'
Meccore Quartet.
Fiona Talkington looks at the life and music of Joseph de Bologne, Chevalier de Saint-Georges (1745-1799) - the son of a French plantation owner and his slave mistress - who became a virtuoso violinist and composer, close friend of Queen Marie Antoinette, and was known in 18th-century Paris as "The Black Mozart".
01 00:03 Joseph Bologne De Saint-GeorgesA Sequence of Music and Readings for Epiphany with the Exon Singers at St Eustachius Parish Church, Tavistock.
Introit: Tribus miraculis ornatum (David Bednall)
Hymn: Brightest and best of the sons of the morning (Epiphany)
Reading: Matthew 2 vv.1-12
Reflection: The arrival of the Wise Men at the stable
Carol: Stars in heaven (Toby Young)
Carol: Remember Bethlehem (Richard Wilberforce)
Hymn: Bethlehem of noblest cities (Stuttgart)
Reading: Matthew 2 vv.13-18
Reflection: The slaughter of the Innocents and the flight into Egypt
Motet: Vox in Rama (De Wert)
Reading: Luke 2 vv.21-35
Canticle: Nunc Dimittis (Rachmaninov)
Reflection: A Light to lighten the Gentiles
Hymn: O worship the Lord (Was lebet)
Organ Voluntary: Chorale Prelude on Wie schön leuchtet der Morgenstern (Buxtehude)
Richard Wilberforce (Director)
Josef Laming (Organist).
Sara Mohr-Pietsch introduces an hour of the very best organ music and performances. Including original music for the instrument by Bach and Vierne, plus favourite orchestral works transcribed for two hands and two feet.
Tom Service considers the semitone. Music's most fundamental building block, it can mean sorrow when it falls, triumph when it rises, but also provoke fear (in the theme from Jaws). It can become a glittering decoration when repeated as a trill. Tom talks to mezzo-soprano Sarah Connolly about the tragic falling semitones of Purcell's opera Dido and Aeneas, and also to musicologist Sarha Moore about the varied significances of the semitone in musical traditions of the Middle East and India, and its special effect in the riffs of Heavy Metal rock music.
In the Sound of Music, Julie Andrews sang "Tee - a drink with jam and bread - that will bring us back to Doh" - but what makes that "tee" note pull us so inexorably back (by a semitone) to "doh" - the tonic? Tom calls the semitone "the piquant spice that drives the change from one key to another" - powerful effects from a little interval.
Daniel Defoe to W B Yeats, Koechlin to Cole Porter, Fanny Burney to Mrs Beeton. Music, poetry and prose on the subject of disease. This edition pops a thermometer under the tongue and examines for buboes, sores and carbuncles. The readers are Michael Fenton Stevens and Josette Simons.
01 Henry PurcellClemency Burton-Hill presents a series exploring the impact of technology on creativity. Across three episodes she traces how technology has shaped the creative process, from conception and execution, to sharing and experiencing. Technology may help us to be more productive, but does it make our ideas better?
Artists are both preoccupied with technology and empowered by it. Technology underpins the way we live, but how does the technology artists, writers and musicians use change the way they create?
In this first programme she focuses on conception - how technology has shaped the way we have come up with ideas over the last 50 years. We examine the impact of a seminal event in New York that formed a brave new alliance between art and technology. Electronic music composer Suzanne Ciani explains how she trained as a classical composer, but was frustrated by the limitations of the instruments and sought answers in a new instrument built by a former NASA scientist. Pulitzer prize-winning composer John Luther Adams finds his music in wild exposures; a cabin in Alaska that was his home for close to forty years. For him the tool he keeps returning to is a rare discontinued pencil.
Computers can help us paint, write stories, design objects and compose music, but as technology is heralded as an enabler to a better life do we risk losing sight of that spark of imagination that makes us human? If human beings are no longer needed to make art, then what are we for?
Produced by Barney Rowntree.
A Reduced Listening production for BBC Radio 3.
Clemency Burton-Hill presents a concert given at the Rudolfinum in Prague in December last year by the Prague Symphony Orchestra under Michal Nesterowicz, which was billed as Winter Dreaming.
Suk: Fantastic Scherzo, Op 25
Martinu: Rhapsody-Concerto, H.337, for viola and orchestra
Tchaikovsky: Symphony No 1 in G minor, Op 13 (Winter Daydreams)
Prague Radio Symphony Orchestra
Maxim Rysanov (viola)
Michal Nesterowicz (conductor).
Compassionate and disturbing, John Ford's great story of doomed love between a brother and sister in this new, visceral production for radio, intercut with the music of Jimi Hendrix and Nick Cave.
Annabella ..... Jessie Buckley,
Giovanni ..... Damien Molony
Signor Florio ..... Niall Buggy,
Putana ..... Fenella Woolgar,
Friar Bonaventura ..... Oliver Cotton.
Lord Soranzo ..... Matthew Pidgeon,
Vasques ...... Enzo Cilenti,
Hippolita ..... Indira Varma.
Grimaldi ..... Gary Duncan,
Cardinal ..... Neil McCaul,
Officer ..... Adam Fitzgerald
Dorando ..... Tayla Kovacevic-Ebong.
The original song - In Deep - composed by Jules Maxwell, and sung by Jessie Buckley, Indira Varma, and Abby Andrews
Introduction by Professor Emma Smith from Hertford College, Oxford.
Adapted and directed by Pauline Harris.
Further info:-
Jessie Buckley stars in her first radio appearance as Annabella. Credits include War and Peace for BBC One, The Last Post - BBC One and Taboo.
She played Anne Egermann in the West End revival of Stephen Sondheim's A Little Night Music. Buckley played the part of Emily Strong in Rosamunde Pilcher's four-part TV adaptation of her book Shades of Love.
She appeared opposite Jude Law in Michael Grandage's West End production of Henry V at the Noël Coward Theatre, and played Perdita in the Kenneth Branagh Theatre Company's production of The Winter's Tale.
Simon Heighes presents a concert of vocal music highlights from the BRQ Vantaa Festival in Finland. Ensemble Plus Ultra perform a selection of choral pieces reflecting the Cantiones Sacrae, a joint publication by William Byrd and his teacher Thomas Tallis which was dedicated to Queen Elizabeth I.
Thomas Tallis: Salvator mundi (I)
William Byrd: Mass for Four Voices(Kyrie and Gloria)
Tallis: Salve intemerata
Byrd: Mass for Four Voices (Credo)
Byrd: Ne irascaris, Domine
Byrd: Mass for Four Voices (Sanctus and Benedictus)
Tallis: O sacrum convivium
Byrd: Mass for Four Voices (Agnus Dei)
Tallis: O nata lux de lumine
Ensemble Plus Ultra
Rachel Ambrose Evans (soprano)
Martha McLorinan (mezzo-soprano)
David Martin (countertenor)
Guy Cutting (tenor)
Ben Durrant (tenor)
Jimmy Holliday (bass).
Edgard Varèse's Octandre, Density 21.5 and Hyperprism played by musicians from the Guildhall School; and the cityscape Amériques from the BBC SO conducted by Sakari Oramo.
Recorded on the 6th May 2017 at Milton Court, and the Barbican Hall, London as part of the BBC's Total Immersion Varèse day.
Presented by Andrew McGregor.
Varèse: Octandre (1923)
Guildhall New Music Ensemble
Geoffrey Paterson (conductor)
Varèse: Density 21.5 (1936)
Antonia Berg (flute)
Varèse: Hyperprism (1923)
Guildhall New Music Ensemble
Geoffrey Paterson (conductor)
Varèse: Amériques
BBC Symphony Orchestra
Sakari Oramo (conductor)
The radical French composer Edgard Varèse displayed in all his startling stripes. From the 'collision of masses' and the lion's roar in the soundworld of the chamber work Hyperprism, to Density 21.5 just for solo flute. To conclude, his celebrated Amériques, the siren-infused New York cityscape written by Varèse in the New World in 1918, and here performed by the BBC Symphony Orchestra conducted by Sakari Oramo.
Catriona Young presents a performance of Monteverdi Vespers from 2015 Ludwig van Beethoven Easter Festival, Warsaw
12:31 AM
Monteverdi, Claudio [1567-1643]
Vespro della Beata Vergine - Part 1
Yulia Van Doren (soprano), Teresa Wakim (soprano), Thomas Cooley (tenor), Aaron Sheeham (tenor), Brandford Gleim (baritone), Dana Whiteside (baritone), Boston Baroque, Martin Pearlman (director)
1:29 AM
Monteverdi, Claudio [1567-1643]
Vespro della Beata Vergine - Part 2: Sonata sopra Sancta Maria; Hymnus: Ave maris stella; Magnificat (septem vocibus et sex instrumentis)
Yulia Van Doren (soprano), Teresa Wakim (soprano), Thomas Cooley (tenor), Aaron Sheeham (tenor), Brandford Gleim (baritone), Dana Whiteside (baritone), Boston Baroque, Martin Pearlman (director)
2:06 AM
Bach, Johann Sebastian [1685-1750]
Violin Sonata No 3 in C, BWV 1005
Vilde Frang (violin)
2:31 AM
Hannikainen, Ilmari (1892-1955)
Piano Concerto, Op 7
Arto Satukangas (piano), Helsinki Radio Symphony Orchestra, Petri Sakari (conductor)
3:05 AM
Beethoven, Ludwig van (1770 -1827)
String Quartet in E flat major, 'Harp', Op 74
Oslo Quartet: Geir Inge Lotsberg (violin), Per Kristian Skalstad (violin), Are Sandbakken (viola), Oystein Sonstad (cello)
3:41 AM
Anonymous/Freedman, Harry [1922-2005] arr
Two Canadian Folksongs: 1. I Went to the Market; 2. Petit hirondelle
Phoenix Chamber Choir, Ramona Luengen (conductor)
3:46 AM
Strauss, Richard [1864-1949]
Variations on Deandl is arb auf mi, for string trio
Leopold String Trio
3:53 AM
Grieg, Edvard (Hagerup) [1843-1907]
Norwegian Dance, Op 35 No 1
Leif Ove Andsnes & Håvard Gimse (piano)
3:59 AM
Graupner, Christoph (1683-1760)
Flute Concerto in F, GWV 323
Bolette Roed (recorder), Arte dei Suonatori (ensemble)
4:09 AM
Svendsen, Johan (1840-1911)
Romance arr. for violin and choir
Borisas Traubas (violin), Polifonija (Lithuanian State Chamber Choir), Sigitas Vaiciulionis (conductor)
4:18 AM
Schumann, Robert (1810-1856)
Toccata in C major, Op 7
Francesco Piemontesi (piano) Recorded at BBC Studios in Maida Vale, London, UK on 16 November 2009
4:24 AM
Tchaikovsky, Pyotr Il'yich (1840-1893)
Polonaise from Eugene Onegin
Edmonton Symphony Orchestra, Uri Mayer (conductor)
4:31 AM
Bach, Johann Sebastian (1685-1750)
Harpsichord Concerto No 5 in F minor, BWV 1056
Lembit Orgse (harpsichord), Estonian Radio Chamber Orchestra, Paul Mägi (conductor)
4:41 AM
Haydn, Joseph (1732-1809)
Piano Sonata in G minor, H.16.44
Kristian Bezuidenhout (fortepiano)
4:52 AM
Britten, Benjamin (1913-1976)
5 Flower Songs
Camerata Chamber Choir, Michael Bojesen (conductor)
5:02 AM
Abel, Carl Friedrich (1723-1787)
Trio in G major for 2 flutes and continuo, Op 16 No 4
La Stagione Frankfurt: Karl Kaiser and Michael Schneider (flutes), Rainer Zipperling (cello)
5:12 AM
Paganini, Nicolò (1782-1840)
Duetto Amoroso for violin and guitar
Tomaz Lorenz (violin), Jerko Novak (guitar)
5:22 AM
Mendelssohn, Felix (1809-1847)
Hebrides - overture
Norwegian Radio Orchestra, Markus Lehtinen (conductor)
5:33 AM
Beethoven, Ludwig van (1770-1827)
Fantasia in C minor, Op 80, for piano, chorus and orchestra
Frank Fernández (piano), Cuban National Chorus, Coro Vocal Leo, Minnesota Orchestra, Osmo Vänskä (conductor)
5:56 AM
Mozart, Wolfgang Amadeus [1756-1791]
Piano Sonata in D, K576
Jonathan Biss (piano)
6:11 AM
Druschetsky, Georg (1745-1819)
Sextet in E flat major, for 2 clarinets, 2 horns and 2 bassoons
Bratislava Chamber Harmony.
Petroc Trelawny presents Radio 3's classical breakfast show, featuring listener requests.
Email 3breakfast@bbc.co.uk.
Suzy Klein with Essential Classics - the best in classical music.
0930 Your ideas for potential companion pieces for a well-known piece of music.
1010 Time Traveller - A quirky slice of cultural history
1050 Writer and broadcaster Sue MacGregor on the things that have inspired and influenced her throughout her life and career.
This week of programmes about Franz Schubert focuses on five years through his short life, and features one of his string quartets every day.
At the age of only 16 the shy, bespectacled Schubert was at school. Yet he was not concentrating on his main studies, being far too distracted by music, much to the disappointment of his father. Today's programme focuses on the year 1813 in Schubert's life, and we hear his String Quartet No.10, D87. Other music includes settings of songs by Schiller and Körner, an opera aria, and movements from his first symphony. Plus we learn about Schubert's sudden rage over his singing rather loudly in a tavern. Presented by Donald Macleod.
Producer: Amy Wheel for BBC Wales.
Live from Wigmore Hall, London, violinist Isabelle van Keulen and pianist Ronald Brautigam perform Beethoven's Violin Sonata Op 30 No 3, Szymanowski's The Fountain of Arethusa and Fauré's Violin Sonata No 1.
Introduced by Sara Mohr-Pietsch.
Beethoven: Violin Sonata in G, Op 30 No 3
Szymanowski: The Founatain of Arethusa (from Myths, Op 30)
Fauré: Violin Sonata No 1 in A.
Tom Redmond presents a week of concerts from the BBC Philharmonic. Today, Simone Young conducts Brett Dean's Testament, with Jonathan Biss the soloist in Beethoven's Piano Concerto No 1 and Sally Beamish's City Stanzas (Piano Concerto No 3). Then the Enigma Variations and the Cello concerto by Elgar, with Asier Polo the soloist and Juanjo Mena the conductor.
2pm:
Brett Dean: Testament
Beethoven: Piano Concerto No 1
Sally Beamish: City Stanzas (Piano Concerto No 3)
Elgar Enigma Variations
BBC Philharmonic
Jonathan Biss (piano)
Simone Young (conductor)
c.3.50pm:
Bantock: Thalaba the Destroyer
BBC Philharmonic
Michael Seal (conductor)
c.4.20pm:
Elgar: Cello Concerto
BBC Philharmonic
Asier Polo (cello)
Juanjo Mena (conductor).
Sean Rafferty presents a lively mix of music, chat and arts news. His guests include The King's Singers, who celebrate their 50th birthday this year, and period instrument ensemble The Revolutionary Drawing Room, who play live for us in the studio.
A specially curated mixtape, including music by Chaminade, Schoenberg and Bach. Plus a traditional song: 'Je elsker dae', or 'I love thee'.
The BBC Symphony Orchestra and Chief Conductor Sakari Oramo conclude their Sibelius cycle with Symphonies 2 and 7. Soprano Anu Komsi solos in Sibelius's soaring, intense Luonnotar, and fellow Finnish composer Aarre Merikanto's equally daring 'Ekho', a portrait of the doomed love of Echo for Narcissus.
Recorded at the Barbican Hall on Saturday 6th January
Presented by Martin Handley
Sibelius: Symphony No 7 in C, Op 105
Sibelius: Luonnotar Op 70 *
8.00
Interval. Martin Handley talks to Sibelius expert Leah Broad of Oxford University.
8.20
Aarre Merikanto: Ekho*
Sibelius: Symphony No 2 in D, Op 43
Anu Komsi (soprano)
BBC Symphony Orchestra
Sakari Oramo (conductor)
Twenty-five years separate Sibelius's Second and Seventh symphonies, but that hardly hints at the growth in his musical style - No 2 rich, romantic and the work that sealed his international reputation; No 7 a powerful study, in one movement, of organic musical growth. Together, they conclude Sakari Oramo's Sibelius symphony cycle with the BBC Symphony Orchestra. Luonnotar (1913) from mid-way between the two is a magical creation-story for soprano and orchestra and finds Anu Komsi the soloist - in a work premiered in Gloucester. no less! Aarre Merikanto's Ekho (1922), a perfect, beautiful work makes an ideal partner to Luonnotar - and Komsi is a superb exponent of this vocally taxing score, having already made a magnificent recording of the piece.
The writer Alan Garner sparks with flint, the stone that, perhaps more than any other, has enabled human civilisation. It's a stone that has featured in some of his novels, such as Red Shift, where the same Neolithic hand axe resurfaces across different times to haunt his characters. And it is time and evolution that he looks at in this essay: "My blood walked out of Africa ninety thousand years ago. We came by flint. Flint makes and kills; gives shelter, food; it clothes us. Flint clears forest. Flint brings fire. With flint we bear the cold."
Alan's essay is the first of five Cornerstones this week in which different writers reflect on how a particular rock shapes both people and place.
Producer: Mark Smalley
Image: Courtesy of the artist Rose Ferraby.
From the Clore Ballroom on London's South Bank, Soweto Kinch presents percussionist Marilyn Mazur's band Shamanaia in concert. Born in the USA and resident or most of her life in Denmark, Mazur is not only a dazzling percussionist and drummer, but a composer, bandleader and dancer. This is the first ever UK appearance by her eleven-piece all-female Shamania, which includes pianist Makiko Hirabayashi, drummer Anna Lund, and saxophonist Lotte Anker. Plus Emma Smith meets UK pianist Eliott Galvin to discuss his latest album.
Catriona Young presents a concert from Romanian Radio featuring Beethoven's First Piano Concerto and Haydn's 'Drum Roll' Symphony.
12:31 AM
Beethoven, Ludwig van (1770-1827)
Piano Concerto No 1 in C major, Op 15
Daniel Goiti (piano), Romanian Radio Chamber Orchestra, Roberto Buffo (conductor)
1:07 AM
Grieg, Edvard (1843-1907)
Morning Mood, from 'Peer Gynt'
Daniel Goiti (piano)
1:12 AM
Haydn, Joseph (1732-1809)
Symphony No 103 in E flat major, Hob.1/103 ('Drum roll')
Romanian Radio Chamber Orchestra, Roberto Buffo (conductor)
1:42 AM
Bach, Carl Philipp Emanuel (1714-1788)
Quartet for flute, viola and continuo in D major
Les Adieux
1:58 AM
Mozart, Wolfgang Amadeus [1756-1791]
Litaniae Lauretanae, K195
Dita Paegle (soprano), Antra Bigaca (mezzo-soprano), Martins Klisans (tenor), Janis Markovs (bass), Choir of Latvian Radio, Riga Chamber Players, Sigvards Klava (conductor)
2:25 AM
Estendorffer, Anton (1670-1711)
Ciaccona super: Joseph, lieber Joseph mein
Peter van Dijk on the Conradus Ruprecht II organ (c.1715) of Tuindorpkerk, Utrecht.
2:31 AM
Dvorák, Antonín (1841-1904)
Symphony No 6 in D major, Op 60
BBC National Orchestra of Wales, Richard Hickox (conductor)
3:17 AM
Pranzer, Joseph (early C.19th)
Concert Duo No 4
Alojz & Andrej Zupan (clarinets)
3:29 AM
Chopin, Fryderyk [1810-1849]
Nocturne for piano in C minor, Op 48 No 1
Wojciech Switala (piano)
3:35 AM
Jarzebski, Adam (1590-1649)
Diligam te Domine from Canzoni e concerti
Lucy van Dael, Marinette Troost (violins), Richte van der Meer, Reiner Zipperling (violas da gamba), Anthony Woodrow (violone), Viola de Hoog (cello), Michael Fentross, (theorbo), Jacques Ogg (organ)
3:41 AM
Gesualdo, Carlo (c.1560-1613)
O vos omnes for 5 voices (W.8.40)
BBC Singers, Bo Holten (conductor)
3:44 AM
Scarlatti, Domenico (1685-1757)
Sonata in G minor, K88, for 2 harpsichords
Dagmara Kapczyńska (harpsichord), Gwennaëlle Alibert (harpsichord)
3:53 AM
Chausson, Ernest (1855-1899)
Chanson perpétuelle, Op 37
Barbara Hendricks (soprano), Staffan Scheja (piano), Vertavo String Quartet
4:00 AM
Glazunov, Alexander Konstantinovich (1865-1936)
Lyric poem in D flat major, Op 12
West Australian Symphony Orchestra, Vladimir Verbitsky (conductor)
4:11 AM
Pergolesi, Giovanni Battista (1710-1736)
Violin Sonata in G major
Peter Michalica (violin), Elena Michalicova (piano)
4:20 AM
Handel, George Frideric (1685-1789), orch. Mozart, Wolfgang Amadeus (1756-1791)
Overture and Prelude to Act II of Acis and Galatea (K.566)
Norwegian Radio Orchestra, Andrew Manze (conductor)
4:31 AM
Bach, Johann Sebastian (1685-1750), arr. Fiona Walsh
Fugue in G minor, BWV542, 'Great' (originally for organ)
Guitar Trek
4:38 AM
Field, John [1782-1837]
1. Aria; 2. Nocturne and Chanson
Barry Douglas (piano & director), Camerata Ireland
4:46 AM
Karlowicz, Mieczyslaw (1876-1909)
4 Songs - Z nowa wiosna (When spring arrives); O nie wierz temo, co powiedza ludzie (Do not believe what the people say); Czasem, gyd dlugo na pól sennie marze (Sometimes when long I dream); Rdzawe liscie strzasa z drzew (Rust-coloured leaves fall from the trees)
Jadwiga Rappé (contralto), Ewa Poblocka (piano)
4:53 AM
Debussy, Claude (1862-1918)
Danse sacrée et danse profane for harp and strings
Eva Maros (harp), orchestra and conductor not credited
5:04 AM
Haydn, Joseph (1732-1809)
Piano Sonata in G major, H.16.27 (1774-76)
Niklas Sivelöv (piano)
5:15 AM
Schubert, Franz (1797-1828) arr. Mottl, Felix (1856-1911)
Fantasia in F minor, D940 (originally for 4 hands)
Oslo Philharmonic Orchestra, Gennady Rozhdestvensky (conductor)
5:35 AM
Handel, Georg Frideric (1685-1759)
Meine Seele hört im Sehen (HWV.207) - No.6 from Deutsche Arien (originally for soprano, violin & bc, arranged for oboe, violin and organ)
Hélène Plouffe (violin), Louise Pellerin (oboe), Dom André Laberge (organ - 1999 Karl Wilhelm at the abbey church Saint-Benoît-du-Lac)
5:41 AM
Bach, Johann Sebastian (1685-1750)
Cantata No 35 (BWV35) 'Geist und Seele wird verwirret'
Jadwiga Rappé (alto), Concerto Avenna, Andrzej Mysinski (conductor)
6:06 AM
Busoni, Ferruccio (1866-1924)
Five pieces from 'Sechs kurze Stücke zur Pflege des polyphonen Spiels' (1923)
Valerie Tryon (piano)
6:24 AM
Elgar, Edward (1857-1934)
To her beneath whose steadfast star
BBC Singers, Stephen Layton (conductor).
Petroc Trelawny presents Radio 3's classical breakfast show, featuring listener requests.
Email 3breakfast@bbc.co.uk.
A sequence of great music in classic recordings.
This week of programmes about Franz Schubert focuses on five years through his short life, and features one of his string quartets every day.
In 1816, a year in which he made his first money from composing, 19-year-old Schubert was locked in a room and forced to compose by his 'friends', friends who went on to encourage him to leave his teaching work and devote himself to music.
We hear one of the songs he gifted to his first love (sadly not resulting in the marriage he longed for), part of an early setting of the Mass, settings of poems by Goethe, and his eleventh String Quartet.
Producer: Amy Wheel.
Nicola Heywood Thomas presents music from The Two Moors Festival and Dartington International Summer School and Festival.
From All Saint's Church in Dulverton, at the Two Moors Festival, pianist Barry Douglas performs a selection from Tchaikovsky's The Seasons, and Beethoven's 'Waldstein' Sonata. Recorded at the Great Hall in Dartington, we hear soprano Carolyn Sampson perform Schubert lieder, accompanied by Joseph Middleton.
Tchaikovsky: The Seasons Op 37b - May (Bright Nights); June (Barcarolle); August (Harvest)
Barry Douglas, piano
Schubert: Gretchen am Spinnrade, D118
Gretchens Bitte, D564
Der Konig in Thule, D367
Carolyn Sampson, soprano
Joseph Middleton, piano
Beethoven: Sonata No 21 in C major, Op 53 (Waldstein)
Barry Douglas, piano
Produced by Chris Taylor for BBC Wales.
Tom Redmond presents a week of concerts from the BBC Philharmonic. Today the orchestra perform Stravinsky's tone poem Song of the Nightingale and music by Rossini and Mozart live at their home in Salford. Plus performances including Saint-Saëns's First Piano Concerto and Beethoven's Fifth Symphony.
2pm - LIVE from MediaCityUK, Salford
Rossini: Overture, The Barber of Seville
Mozart: Piano Concerto No 9 in E flat, K271
Stravinsky: The Song of the Nightingale
BBC Philharmonic
Christian Ihle Hadland (piano)
Ben Gernon (conductor)
c.3.15pm:
Roussel: Le festin d'araignée: symphonic fragments
Claude Vivier: Lonely Child
Katrien Baerts (soprano)
BBC Philharmonic
Manoj Kamps (conductor)
c.3.50pm:
George Walker: Lyric for Strings
BBC Philharmonic
Clark Rundell (conductor)
c.4pm:
Saint-Saëns: Piano Concerto No 1 in D major
Louis Lortie (piano)
BBC Philharmonic
Edward Gardner (conductor)
c.4.30pm:
Beethoven: Symphony No 5 in C minor
BBC Philharmonic
Nicholas Collon (conductor).
Sean Rafferty presents a lively mix of music, chat and arts news. His guests include pianist Anna Tsybuleva, who performs live in the studio before heading north for a concert in Leeds with The Hallé.
In Tune's specially curated mixtape including some sprightly strings from Rossini, a soothing oboe from Albinoni and a dramatic cello from Mendelssohn. Also in the mix: a jazzy re-imagining of January from Tchaikovsky's The Seasons, a choral masterpiece from Candide marking the start of Leonard Bernstein's centenary year and joyous music from Carl Orff's Carmina Burana.
Producer: Ian Wallington.
The National Youth Orchestra of Great Britain plays music by Liadov, Dukas and Bartok.
Recorded at the Royal Concert Hall in Nottingham on 6th January and introduced by Ian Skelly.
Liadov: The Enchanted Lake
Dukas: The Sorcerer's Apprentice
8.10: Interval
8.25: Bartók Duke Bluebeard's Castle
Robert Hayward (bass-baritone), Bluebeard
Rinat Shaham (mezzo-soprano), Judith
National Youth Orchestra of Great Britain
Sir Mark Elder, conductor
The National Youth Orchestra of Great Britain takes listeners on a musical journey into the mystical, the magical and the weird. The adventure begins exploring the mysteries of the deep in Liadov's Enchanted Lake. Soon the spell broken and the scene moves to a magical workshop where mischievous experiments spiral into chaos in Dukas's Sorcerer's Apprentice. Proving that once upon a time doesn't always end happily ever after, we reach Bartok's Duke Bluebeard's Castle. This spooky tale will be brought to life with lighting, acting and theatrical staging imagined by opera and theatre director Daisy Evans, and tells the story of a determined young bride who uncovers the dark truth about her new husband.
Amit Chaudhuri, Karen McCarthy Woolf, Daniel Mendelsohn and Emily Wilson join Philip Dodd to explore translating, rewriting and using Homer's epic work to frame a memoir.
Emily Wilson has published a new translation of The Odyssey
Daniel Mendelsohn has written An Odyssey: A Father, A Son and An Epic
Karen McCarthy Woolf wrote Nightshift as part of a BBC Radio 4's Odyssey Project which commissioned ten writers to create a contemporary response. Her most recent collection is called Seasonal Disturbances.
Amit Chaudhuri has written a novel called Odysseus Abroad which draws on A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man and The Odyssey.
The discussion also mentions The Odyssey translated by Robert Fitzgerald
Producer: Zahid Warley
Main Image: Odysseus and the Sirens, detail. Photo by: Leemage / UIG via Getty Images.
The writer Sara Maitland conjures with a rock of ages, Lewisian gneiss. Two-thirds the age of the earth itself, and the oldest stone in the UK, it makes up parts of the Northwest Highlands and the Western Isles. It's part of this week's series of Cornerstones - nature writing about rock, place and landscape.
Sara reflects on how the gneiss began its slow journey across the face of the earth more or less where Antarctica is today. It is still moving northwards, at about the same speed as our nails grow. 'Gneiss' comes from the German word meaning to sparkle, and Sara wonders whether it's this quality that convinced Neolithic builders to construct the Callanish stone circle on Lewis from this distinctive, ancient stone.
The other Cornerstones essays broadcast on Radio 3 this week hears different writers reflecting on how other rocks shape landscapes and us, such as flint, North Sea oil and gas, gypsum, which is the main constituent of plaster, and the clay bricks that define our urban landscapes.
Producer: Mark Smalley
Image: Courtesy of the artist Rose Ferraby.
Broadcasting live from Oslo, Norway, Anne Hilde Neset welcomes local musicians to the studio in order to preview All Ears Festival for Improvised Music. The annual event, which was founded in 2002, begins on Thursday, running for four days. Tonight, the best of the line-up drop in to perform live.
Also on the programme tonight: shimmery folk-pop songwriting from Circuit Des Yeux, deep and funky disco from Golden Teacher, and performance poetry from Belinda Zhawi.
Produced by Jack Howson for Reduced Listening.
Catriona Young presents a performance from the 2017 BBC Proms of Handel's oratorio 'Israel in Egypt' performed by the Orchestra and Choir of the Age of Enlightenment conducted by William Christie.
12:31 AM
George Frideric Handel (1685-1759)
Israel in Egypt - oratorio (original 1739 version) - Part 1
Zoë Brookshaw (soprano), Rowan Pierce (soprano), Christopher Lowrey (countertenor), Jeremy Budd (tenor), Dingle Yandell (bass-baritone), Callum Thorpe (bass), The Choir & Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment, William Christie (conductor)
1:14 AM
George Frideric Handel (1685-1759)
Israel in Egypt - oratorio (original 1739 version) - Part 2
Zoë Brookshaw (soprano), Rowan Pierce (soprano), Christopher Lowrey (countertenor), Jeremy Budd (tenor), Dingle Yandell (bass-baritone), Callum Thorpe (bass), The Choir & Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment, William Christie (conductor)
1:40 AM
George Frideric Handel (1685-1759)
Israel in Egypt - oratorio (original 1739 version) - Part 3
Zoë Brookshaw (soprano), Rowan Pierce (soprano), Christopher Lowrey (countertenor), Jeremy Budd (tenor), Dingle Yandell (bass-baritone), Callum Thorpe (bass), The Choir & Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment, William Christie (conductor)
2:18 AM
Platti, Giovanni Benedetto (1696-1763)
Concerto in G minor for oboe, strings and bass continuo
Hans-Peter Westermann (oboe), Neue Düsseldorfer Hofmusik, Mary Utiger (director)
2:31 AM
Grieg, Edvard Hagerup [1843-1907]
Violin Sonata No 3 in C minor, Op 45
Julian Rachlin (violin), Leif Ove Andsnes (piano)
3:28 AM
Villa-Lobos, Heitor (1887-1959)
Guitar Prelude No 3 in A minor
Norbert Kraft (guitar)
3:35 AM
Scarlatti, Domenico (1685-1757)
Sonata in D minor, Kk9 'Pastorale'; Sonata in B minor, Kk27; Sonata in A major, Kk322
Arturo Benedetti Michelangeli (piano)
3:42 AM
Bach, Johann Sebastian (1685-1750)
Brandenburg Concerto No 3 in G major for 3 violins, 3 violas, 3 cellos & basso continuo, BWV 1048
Australian Brandenburg Orchestra, Paul Dyer (conductor)
3:56 AM
Rimsky-Korsakov, Nikolai (1844-1908) [Libretto derived from Alexander Pushkin's play of the same name]
Salieri's Aria from "Mozart and Salieri" - opera in 1 act, Op 48
Robert Holl (bass), Netherlands Radio Philharmonic, Kenneth Montgomery (conductor)
4:04 AM
Mozart, Wolfgang Amadeus (1756-1791)
Flute Quartet No 4 in A major, K298
Dae-Won Kim (flute),Yong-Woo Chun (violin), Myung-Hee Cho (viola), Jink-Yung Chee (cello)
4:16 AM
Strauss, Johann Jr (1825-1899)
Rosen aus dem Süden, waltz Op 388
Danish Radio Concert Orchestra, Roman Zeilinger (conductor)
4:26 AM
Kroll, William (1901-1980)
Banjo and Fiddle
Moshe Hammer (violin), Valerie Tryon (piano)
4:31 AM
Järnefelt, Armas (1869-1958)
Kanteletar
Finnish Radio Symphony Orchestra, Ilpo Mansnerus (conductor)
4:37 AM
Wikander, David, (1884-1955), lyrics by Gustaf Fröding
Kung Liljekonvalje (King Lily of the Valley)
Swedish Radio Choir, Eric Ericson (conductor)
4:41 AM
Abel, Carl Friedrich (1723-1787)
Trio in F major for 2 flutes and continuo
Karl Kaiser and Michael Schneider (flutes), Rainer Zipperling (cello), Harald Hoeren (harpsichord)
4:50 AM
Handel, Georg Friedrich (1685-1759)
Incidental music to 'The Alchemist', a play by Ben Johnson
CBC Vancouver Orchestra, Monica Huggett (conductor)
5:07 AM
Mozart, Wolfgang Amadeus [1756-1791]
Piano Sonata in C, K.330
Dang Thai Son (piano)
5:21 AM
Verdi, Giuseppe (1813-1901)
Aria 'Di Provenza il mar' - from 'La Traviata'
Gaétan Laperrière (baritone), Orchestre Symphonique de Trois-Rivières, Gilles Bellemare (conductor)
5:26 AM
Strauss, Richard (1864-1949)
Tod und Verklärung, Op 24
BBC National Orchestra of Wales, Thomas Søndergård (conductor)
5:51 AM
Schubert, Franz [1797-1828]
Sonata in A minor D821 for arpeggione and piano
Lise Berthaud (viola), Francois Pinel (piano)
6:17 AM
Telemann, Georg Philipp (1681-1767)
Concerto in D major for 2 horns and orchestra, TWV 52:D2
Jozef Illéš & Ján Budzák (horns), Chamber Association of Slovakian Radio, Vlastimil Horák (conductor).
Petroc Trelawny presents Radio 3's classical breakfast show, featuring listener requests.
Email 3breakfast@bbc.co.uk.
Suzy Klein with Essential Classics - the best in classical music.
0930 Your ideas for potential companion pieces for a well-known piece of music.
1010 Time Traveller - A quirky slice of cultural history
1050 Writer and broadcaster Sue MacGregor on the things that have inspired and influenced her throughout her life and career.
This week of programmes about Franz Schubert focuses on five years through his short life, and featurse one of his string quartets every day.
Today the focus is on the year 1820, when Schubert was aged 23. Donald Macleod looks into Schubert's friendships, people who rallied round helping him out, including paying his rent whilst he worked on establishing himself as a freelance composer. However, some of his friends cheerfully began calling him "The Tyrant" due to Schubert's tendency to occasionally respond to these kindnesses harshly; they began to see a different side to his nature.
Music featured includes an extract from two unfinished works, his oratorio Lazarus and the Quartet Movement in C minor. Plus we hear one of the best loved of all Schubert's Goethe settings, Erlkönig,which was first performed in this year, and the glorious Song of the Spirits Over the Waters.
Producer: Amy Wheel.
Nicola Heywood Thomas presents music from The Two Moors Festival and Dartington International Summer School and Festival.
From All Saint's Church in Dulverton, at the Two Moors Festival, pianist Barry Douglas performs Britten's Notturno and Schubert's stormy Sonata in C minor. Soprano, Carolyn Sampson performs Schubert songs inspired by Goethe's heroine, Mignon, accompanied by Joseph Middleton at the Great Hall in Dartington,
Schubert:
Heiss mich nicht reden, D877 No 2
Nur wer die Sehnsucht kennt, D877 No 4
So lasst mich scheinen, D877 No 3
Kennst du das Land, D321
Carolyn Sampson, soprano
Joseph Middleton, piano
Britten: Notturno
Schubert: Sonata in C minor, D958
Barry Douglas, piano
Produced by Chris Taylor for BBC Wales.
Tom Redmond presents more performances from the BBC Philharmonic, including tone poems by Marx and Dukas; part of Afternoon Concert's tone poem theme, and music by Schoenberg, Webern and Berg.
c.2pm:
Schoenberg: Notturno
Webern Passacaglia, Op 1
Berg Wozzeck: Three Fragments from 'Wozzeck'
BBC Philharmonic
Claire Booth (soprano)
Simone Young (conductor)
c.3pm:
Dukas: The Sorcerer's Apprentice
BBC Philharmonic
Manoj Kamps (conductor)
c.3.12pm:
Coleridge-Taylor: Two Novelletes, Op 52 Nos 1 & 4
BBC Philharmonic
Lee Reynolds (conductor).
Live from Hereford Cathedral
Introit: Jesus richte mein Beginnen (Bach)
Responses: Sumsion
Psalms 53, 54, 55 (Martin, Rimbault, Hervey)
First Lesson: Amos 3
Office Hymn: The race that long in darkness pined (Dundee)
Canticles: Brewer in D
Second Lesson: 1 Corinthians 2
Anthem: Reges Tharsis (Sheppard)
Organ Voluntary: Dieu parmi nous (La nativité du Seigneur - Messiaen)
Geraint Bowen (Director of Music)
Peter Dyke (Assistant Director of Music).
Former New Generation Artists Zhang Zuo and Louis Schwizgebel play Rachmaninov's 6 Piano Duets, Op 11, in a studio recording from 2014.
Rachmaninov: 6 Duets, Op 11, for piano 4 hands
Zhang Zuo and Louis Schwizgebel (piano).
Sean Rafferty presents a lively mix of music, chat and arts news. His guests include choreographers Eva Kloborg and Frank Andersen, who chat about their production of La Sylphide with English National Ballet.
In Tune's specially curated playlist: an imaginative, eclectic mix of music, featuring favourites together with lesser-known gems, with a few surprises thrown in for good measure. The perfect way to usher in your evening.
Verity Sharp presents the new production, featuring many of Britain's finest younger folk musicians, of Peter Bellamy's famous ballad opera The Transports, recorded live at the Radio Theatre in Broadcasting House.
7.30 The Transports: Part One
8.20 Interval Feature: A Portrait of Peter Bellamy
Verity Sharp sketches a portrait, in words and music, of The Transports' composer, Peter Bellamy, revealing a complex, troubled character and rather an outsider. He admired Rudyard Kipling, when most dismissed him as an imperialist, for giving voice to ordinary soldiers, and set his Barrack-Room Ballads. There are contributions from Heather Wood, who sang with Bellamy in The Young Tradition, in which he came to fame in the 1960s; the singer Martin Carthy; fellow Norfolk musician Damien Barber, who was mentored by Bellamy; Jon Boden, a musician much influenced by Bellamy; and his widow, Jenny Bellamy. It features, too, Bellamy's own music, with his distinctive singing.
8.40 The Transports: Part Two
Cast
Susannah Holmes ..... Rachel McShane (cello, vocals)
Henry Kable ..... Sean Cooney (vocals)
Narrator ..... Matthew Crampton (vocals)
Abe Carman ..... David Eagle (vocals, accordion)
The Coachman ..... Michael Hughes (vocals)
The Mother ..... Nancy Kerr (fiddle, vocals)
The Convict ..... Benji Kirkpatrick (guitar, bouzouki, vocals)
The Shantyman ..... Saul Rose (melodeons, vocals)
John Simpson, the humane turnkey ..... Greg Russell (guitar, vocals)
The Father ..... Paul Sartin (oboe, cor anglais, fiddle, vocals)
The Transports tells true story of Susannah Holmes and Henry Kable. She was convicted of stealing £2's-worth of spoons and linen. He broke into a house. Both were sentenced to death in 1784. This was commuted to transportation. They met in Norwich gaol, fell in love and had a child and, after forced separation and great anguish, and the stubborn compassion of a humane turnkey, sailed on the First Fleet to Australia. This sounds like a traditional song and it inspired the folk singer Peter Bellamy to compose a cycle of ballads. The Transports was recorded in 1977, with arrangements by Dolly Collins and a glittering roster of musicians - Dave Swarbrick, Nic Jones, June Tabor, Mike & Norma Waterson and Martin Carthy - and this album is one of the monuments of English folk music. The new production features a new generation of musicians of similar calibre: BBC Folk Award winners The Young 'Uns, Nancy Kerr, members of Bellowhead and Faustus. Bellamy's songs have been arranged afresh by Paul Sartin and narrator Matthew Crampton weaves the story through them with new material linking Susannah Holmes and Henry Kable's story with the experience of refugees and migrants today.
Producer: Julian May.
Eleanor Rosamund Barraclough explores the uncanny possibilities of the In Between with the neuroscientist Dean Burnett, award-winning poet Vahni Capildeo, artist Alexandra Carr, writer and walker of London and other wastelands, Iain Sinclair, and the philosopher, Emily Thomas.
How do our brains and bodies react in the In Between spaces of the airport lounge or the station platform where we're waiting to move on but temporarily in stasis and why have so many artists, writers and poets used these places to explore the uncanny, the strange and ourselves?
Dean Burnett: 'The Idiot Brain' is out now
Vahni Capildeo: 'Matters of Expatriation' is out now; her forthcoming collection 'Venus as a Bear' is out in April 2018
Iain Sinclair: 'The Last London' is out
Alexandra Carr: Sculpting with Light, University of Durham residency
Emily Thomas: Absolute Time: Rifts in Early Modern British Metaphysics; Early Modern Women on Metaphysics - both out in 2018
Producer: Jacqueline Smith
Photo: Waiting Room for Studio BA in BBC Broadcasting House (BH), July 1932.
The writer Esther Woolfson contrasts the solidity of Aberdeen, the 'Granite City', with the decline of the North Sea oil and gas industry, on which its economy has so relied since the 1970s. It's part of this week's series of Cornerstones - nature writing about rock, place and landscape.
Author of 'Field Notes from a Hidden City', about her encounters with Aberdeen's wildlife, Esther reflects on the city's relationship with the North Sea hydrocarbons industry, and how much the city has been affected by the waning oil boom. She contrasts the city's big, public granite Victorian edifices with the slow creation in past milennia beneath the seabed of the oil and gas hydrocarbons which have powered the modern world.
Among the other Cornerstones essays this week, the writer Alan Garner reflects upon flint, the stone that has enabled human civilisation, and Sara Maitland considers Lewisian gneiss, so much a rock of ages that it is two thirds the age of the earth itself.
Producer: Mark Smalley
Image: Courtesy of the artist Rose Ferraby.
Continuing a week of broadcasts from Oslo, provocative Norwegian polymath Jenny Hval is the latest compiler of the Late Junction mixtape. She has 30 minutes to make her musical mark on the programme.
As a recording artist, writer and performer, Jenny Hval is a formidable experimental force. Across several solo albums she has seamlessly sewn together musical, literary, and visual modes of expression, creating work that is at once accessible and obscure. Her other work includes a novel, poetry, journalism, a book of feminist essays, sound installations, and even a Master's thesis on Kate Bush.
Also on the programme tonight: Arctic electronica, spiritual new age music based on liquid teleportation, and David Toop's Dirty Songs.
Produced by Jack Howson for Reduced Listening.
Catriona Young presents a concert from Irish Radio of Spanish-flavoured music.
12:31 AM
Joaquín Turina (1882-1949)
La procesión del Rocío, Op 9
RTÉ National Symphony Orchestra,
Duncan Ward (conductor)
12:40 AM
Joseph Canteloube (1879-1957)
Songs of the Auvergne
Mari Moriya (soprano), RTÉ National Symphony Orchestra, Duncan Ward (conductor)
12:57 AM
Claude Debussy (1862-1918)
Iberia, from 'Images'
RTÉ National Symphony Orchestra,
Duncan Ward (conductor)
1:18 AM
Maurice Ravel (1875-1937)
Alborada del gracioso
RTÉ National Symphony Orchestra,
Duncan Ward (conductor)
1:27 AM
Heitor Villa-Lobos (1887-1959)
Bachianas Brasileiras No 5
Mari Moriya (soprano), RTÉ National Symphony Orchestra, Duncan Ward (conductor)
1:38 AM
Tatsunosuke Koshitani (1909-1982), arr. Takeshi Moriuchi (* 1979)
Hatsukoi
Mari Moriya (soprano), RTÉ National Symphony Orchestra, Duncan Ward (conductor)
1:43 AM
Isaac Albéniz (1860-1909)
Navarra
RTÉ National Symphony Orchestra,
Duncan Ward (conductor)
1:49 AM
George Gershwin (1898-1937)
Cuban Overture
RTÉ National Symphony Orchestra,
Duncan Ward (conductor)
2:01 AM
Albéniz, Isaac (1860-1909)
Suite española, Op 47
Ilze Graubina (piano)
2:23 AM
Navas, Juan de (1650-1719)
Ay, divino amor for soprano and organ
Olga Pitarch (soprano), Accentus Austria, Thomas Wimmer (director)
2:31 AM
Rachmaninov, Sergey (1873-1943)
Vespers (All-night vigil) for chorus, Op 37
BBC Singers, Stephen Cleobury (director)
3:27 AM
Eno, Brian (b.1948) arr. Julia Wolfe (b.1958)
Music for Airports 1/2
Bang on a Can All-Stars
3:40 AM
Mozart, Wolfgang Amadeus (1756-1791)
Divertimento (Concerto) in E flat major, K113
Saarbrücken Radio Symphony Orchestra, Myung-Whun Chung (conductor)
3:54 AM
Schubert, Franz [1797-1828]
Heidenroslein, D257; Der Konig in Thule, D367; 3. Gretchen am Spinnrade, D118
Daniela Lehner (mezzo-soprano) , Love Derwinger (piano)
4:03 AM
Britten, Benjamin (1913-1976)
5 Flower Songs
Camerata Chamber Choir, Michael Bojesen (conductor)
4:14 AM
Borodin, Alexander [1833-1887]
Polovtsian dances from 'Prince Igor'
Sydney Symphony Orchestra; Stuart Challender (conductor)
4:25 AM
Bach, Johann Sebastian (1685-1750) arr. Unknown
Sarabande from Solo Cello Suite No 6, BWV 1012, in D major arr. for 4 cellos
David Geringas, Tatjana Vassilieva, Boris Andrianov, Monika Leskovar (cellos)
4:31 AM
Bernstein, Leonard (1918-1990)
Overture - Candide
BBC Philharmonic, Rumon Gamba (conductor)
4:36 AM
Piazzolla, Ástor Pantaleón (1921-1992)
Adios Noniño (tango)
Musica Camerata Montréal
4:46 AM
Mägi, Ester (b. 1922)
Murdunud aer (The broken oar)
Estonian National Male Choir, Ants Soots (director)
4:50 AM
Schubert, Franz [1797-1828]
Auf dem Wasser zu singen, D774
Edith Wiens (soprano), Rudolf Jansen (piano)
4:54 AM
Mozart, Wolfgang Amadeus (1756-1791)
Adagio and Fugue in C minor, K546, for strings
Norwegian Radio Orchestra, Andrew Manze (conductor)
5:02 AM
Byrd, William [c.1540-1623]
First Pavian and Galliarde
Andreas Borregaard (accordion)
5:09 AM
Grieg, Edvard Hagerup [1843-1907]
2 Norwegian Dances, Op.35 Nos 1 & 2
Plovdiv Philharmonic Orchestra, Rouslan Raychev (conductor)
5:19 AM
Hildegard von Bingen (1098-1179)
Spiritus Sanctus vivificans vite - antiphon for solo voice; O ignis spiritus Paracliti - sequence for voice and chorus; Caritas habundat in omnia - antiphon for chorus
Sequentia
5:30 AM
Britten, Benjamin (1913-1976)
Choral Dances from 'Gloriana'
BBC Singers, Stephen Layton (conductor)
5:39 AM
Bartók, Béla (1881-1945)
Dance Suite for orchestra, Sz77
Hungarian State Orchestra, János Ferencsic (conductor)
5:56 AM
Debussy, Claude (1862-1918)
Estampes for piano
Roger Woodward (piano)
6:11 AM
Williams, Grace (1906-1977)
Sea Sketches (1944)
Manitoba Chamber Orchestra, Roy Goodman (conductor).
Petroc Trelawny presents Radio 3's classical breakfast show, featuring listener requests.
Email 3breakfast@bbc.co.uk.
Suzy Klein with Essential Classics - the best in classical music.
0930 Your ideas for potential companion pieces for a well-known piece of music.
1010 Time Traveller - A quirky slice of cultural history
1050 Writer and broadcaster Sue MacGregor on the things that have inspired and influenced her throughout her life and career.
This week of programmes about Franz Schubert focuses on five years through his short life, and features one of his string quartets every day.
In this programme, Donald Macleod takes a look at Schubert's life in the year 1824. Aged 27, Schubert was suffering from symptoms of syphilis, as well as episodes of despair and depression. We hear how his father encouraged him to persevere through his suffering, and Schubert was able to take the sorrow and melancholy he was feeling through into his music.
That music in this programme includes Schubert's Rosamunde String Quartet, some of his "Grand Duo" Sonata for piano four hands, and - proof of his composition speed - his setting of Gebet for vocal quartet, commissioned in the morning and performed in the evening of the very same day.
Producer: Amy Wheel.
This week's lunchtime concerts come from two music festivals based in South West England: the Dartington Festival and the Two Moors Festival.
From All Saint's Church in Dulverton, at the Two Moors Festival, the Endellion String Quartet explore two contrasting classical works: Beethoven at his most gentle and lyrical, and Haydn full of good-natured fun. Between them, we hear more numbers from Carolyn Sampson's Schubert recital at Dartington's Great Hall.
Haydn: Quartet in G major, Op 54 No 1
Endellion String Quartet
Schubert: Romanze Der Vollmond strahlt, D797 No.3
Blondel zu Marien D626
Carolyn Sampson, soprano
Joseph Middleton, piano
Beethoven: Quartet in D major, Op 18 No 3
Endellion String Quartet
Produced by Chris Taylor for BBC Wales.
Tom Redmond presents today's Opera Matinee - a performance of Beethoven's Fidelio performed by this week's orchestra, the BBC Philharmonic, on tour in San Sebastian, Spain. Stuart Skelton sings the imprisoned Florestan, and Ricarda Merbeth the brave Leonora who comes to his rescue. Then more from the BBC Philharmonic on home ground, with songs by Elgar, a tone poem by Honegger and Copland's Third Symphony.
2pm
Beethoven Fidelio
Leonora ..... Ricarda Merbeth (soprano)
Florestan ..... Stuart Skelton (tenor)
Rocco ..... James Creswell (bass)
Marzelline ..... Louise Alder (soprano)
Jaquino ..... Benjamin Hulett (tenor)
Don Pizarro ..... Detlef Roth (bass)
Don Fernando ..... David Soar (bass)
BBC Philharmonic
Orfeon Donostiarra (chorus)
Juanjo Mena (conductor)
c.3.50pm
Elgar: Three Songs, Op 59
Roderick Williams (baritone)
BBC Philharmonic
Andrew Davis (conductor)
Honegger: Pacific 231
BBC Philharmonic
Manoj Kamps (conductor)
c.4.15pm
Copland: Symphony No 3
BBC Philharmonic
John Wilson (conductor).
Sean Rafferty presents a lively mix of music, chat and arts news. His guests include the Elias String Quartet, who perform live in the studio.
In Tune's specially curated playlist: an imaginative, eclectic mix of music, featuring favourites together with lesser-known gems, with a few surprises thrown in for good measure. The perfect way to usher in your evening.
Live from Wigmore Hall in London, contralto Sonia Prina and the Akademie für Alte Musik, Berlin, perform works by Handel, Ferrandini, Bach, Locatelli and Vivaldi.
Handel: Concerto Grosso in F major
Ferrandini: Cantata 'Il pianto di Maria'
Interval
Bach: Cantata 'Widerstehe doch der Sünde' BWV54
Locatelli: Concerto Grosso in E flat, Op 7 No 6 'Il Pianto d'Arianna'
Vivaldi: Motet 'Longe mala, umbrae, terrores' RV629
Sonia Prina (contralto)
Akademie für Alte Musik, Berlin
Italian contralto Sonia Prina has established a reputation as one of the world's most dazzlingly virtuosic and freely expressive interpreters of Baroque vocal repertoire. In this concert she is joined by the equally admired period orchestra, the Akademie für Alte Musik Berlin, for an evening of vivid cantatas by Ferrandini, Bach and Vivaldi intermixed with concertos by Handel and Locatelli.
Matthew Sweet discusses protests like the 1968 uprising at Columbia University and 1985's Battle of the Beanfield plus illegal clubbing in warehouses in the 1980s with guests including DJ Norman Jay, novelist Tony White and film-maker Paul Cronin and writer Tessa DeCarlo.
The Fountain in the Forest by Tony White is published in January
A Time To Stir: Columbia '68 by Paul Cronin is published in January
Producer: Debbie Kilbride
Main image: Students protesting, on the Columbia University Campus, in April 1968. Credit: University Archives, Rare Book and Manuscript Library, Columbia University, NY City.
The artist and archaeologist Rose Ferraby gets to grips with something that is always around us, but which we almost never stop to consider: gypsum, the chief constituent of the plaster on the walls around us. It's part of this week's series of Cornerstones - nature writing about how rock, place and landscape affects us.
Gypsum's use dates back to at least the ancient pyramids of Egypt. Rose explains how gypsum, being highly soluble, is responsible for the notorious sink holes around the city of Ripon, frequently causing subsidence and damage to homes. She also considers alabaster, a soft, luminous stone composed of gypsum, and which was used to stunning effect for medieval memorials and sometimes even in place of stained glass in windows.
Among the other Cornerstones essays this week the writer Alan Garner takes flint, the stone that has enabled human civilisation, and Esther Woolfson contrasts Aberdeen's granite solidity with the decline of the North Sea oil and gas industry, on which its economy has relied for the last forty years.
Producer: Mark Smalley
Image: Courtesy of the artist Rose Ferraby.
Concluding her week of broadcasts from Oslo, Anne Hilde Neset takes an extra-special sonic tour of the city. Her guide for the trip is artist and expert field recordist Jana Winderen.
With a background in marine biology and also in fine arts, Jana Winderen has dedicated her life to recording and revealing sounds from the most remote sources, including oceans, glaciers, and ice cavities.
Also on the programme tonight: Anne Hilde plays some Sami rap, and pays tribute to Morton Feldman, on the occasion of what would have been his ninety-second birthday.
Produced by Jack Howson for Reduced Listening.
From the 2017 BBC Proms, the BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra (conducted by Thomas Dausgaard) play Schubert's 'Unfinished' Symphony and Mahler's 10th Symphony. Catriona Young presents.
12:31 AM
Schubert, Franz (1797-1828)
Symphony No 8 in B minor, D759, (Unfinished)
BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra, Thomas Dausgaard (conductor)
12:53 AM
Mahler, Gustav (1860-1911), compl. Deryck Cooke
Symphony No 10
BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra, Thomas Dausgaard (conductor)
2:06 AM
Mozart, Wolfgang Amadeus (1756-1791)
Trio for piano and strings in C major, K548
Trio Orlando
2:31 AM
Poulenc, Francis (1899-1963) (orch. Sir Lennox Berkeley)
Flute Sonata (1956)
Emmanuel Pahud (flute), Orchestre de la Suisse Romande, Enrique Garcia-Asensio (conductor)
2:44 AM
Elgar, Edward [1857-1934]
Symphony No 2 in E flat major, Op 63
Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra, Andre Previn (conductor)
3:33 AM
Fauré, Gabriel (1845-1924)
Nocturne in E flat minor, Op 33 No 1
Livia Rev (piano)
3:42 AM
Pezel, Johann Christoph (1639-1694)
German Dance Suite
Canadian Brass
3:50 AM
Kodály, Zoltán (1882-1967)
Mátrai Kepek (Mátra Pictures) for choir
Danish National Radio Choir, Stefan Parkman (conductor)
4:01 AM
Mendelssohn, Felix (1809-1847)
Ruy Blas - overture, Op 95
BBC Symphony Orchestra, Jiří Bělohlávek (conductor)
4:10 AM
Haydn, Joseph (1732-1809)
Keyboard Sonata in D major, Hob.XVI/37
Andreas Staier (fortepiano)
4:20 AM
Strauss, Richard (1864-1949)
Love Scene - from the opera 'Feuersnot' (Op.50)
Toronto Symphony Orchestra, Andrew Davis (conductor)
4:31 AM
Beethoven, Ludwig van (1770-1827)
7 Variations on 'God save the King', WoO 78
Theo Bruins (piano)
4:39 AM
Martucci, Giuseppe (1856-1909)
Noveletta Op 82 No 2 for orchestra
Oslo Philharmonic Orchestra, Nello Santi (Conductor)
4:46 AM
Handel, Georg Frideric [1685-1759]
Concerto grosso in A minor, Op 6 No 4 (HWV 322)
Accademia Bizantina, Stefano Montanari (violin and leader)
4:58 AM
Chopin, Fryderyk (1810-1849)
Prelude in C sharp minor, Op 45
Cédric Tiberghien (piano)
5:04 AM
Smetana, Bedrich (1824-1884)
Vltava (Moldau) - from 'Ma Vlast'
Orchestre du Conservatoire de Musique du Québec, Raffi Armenian (conductor)
5:16 AM
Barber, Samuel (1910-1981)
Agnus Dei for chorus
BBC Singers, Stephen Cleobury (Conductor)
5:24 AM
Uccellini, Marco [c.1603-1680]
Violin Sonata Op 5 No 7
Davide Monti (violin)
5:31 AM
Schubert, Franz (1797-1828)
Piano Sonata No 15 in C major, D840
Alfred Brendel (piano)
5:51 AM
Dvorák, Antonín (1841-1904)
The Water Goblin, Op 107
BBC Philharmonic, Gianandrea Noseda (conductor)
6:12 AM
Haydn, Joseph (1732-1809)
Missa brevis Sancti Joannis de Deo (Hob XXII:7), 'Kleine Orgelmesse'
Henriette Schellenberg (soprano), Laverne G'Froerer (mezzo-soprano), Keith Boldt (tenor), George Roberts (baritone), Vancouver Chamber Choir, CBC Vancouver Orchestra, Jon Washburn (conductor).
Petroc Trelawny presents Radio 3's classical breakfast show, featuring listener requests.
Email 3breakfast@bbc.co.uk.
Suzy Klein with Essential Classics - the best in classical music.
0930 Your ideas for potential companion pieces for a well-known piece of music.
1010 Time Traveller - A quirky slice of cultural history
1050 Writer and broadcaster Sue MacGregor on the things that have inspired and influenced her throughout her life and career.
This week of programmes about Franz Schubert focuses on five years through his short life, and feature sone of his string quartets every day.
In 1826, Schubert was only two years away from his untimely death at the age of 31. Three of his close friends married in this year, whilst he remained single. In this year Schubert was short of money, suffering manic-depression and syphilis, and smoking and drinking heavily. But we hear, in a passionate outburst, his declaration: "I am Schubert....who has written great things and beautiful things... and who is going to write still more beautiful things..."
This programme, presented by Donald Macleod, features Schubert's monumental final string quartet, plus his setting of Goethe's poignant "Nur wer die Sehnsucht kennt" - "None but the Lonely Heart".
Producer: Amy Wheel.
Nicola Heywood Thomas presents music from The Two Moors Festival and Dartington International Summer School and Festival.
From All Saint's Church in Dulverton, at the Two Moors Festival, the Endellion String Quartet are joined by pianist Barry Douglas, to perform Brahms's Piano Quartet No 1 in G minor, Op 25, A work that brought Brahms one of his earliest public successes, and which wrests music of symphonic ambitions from it's four performers.
We also Schubert's ambitious and dramatic ballad 'Viola' recorded at the Great Hall in Dartington, sung by soprano Carolyn Sampson with pianist Joseph Middleton.
Schubert: Viola, D786
Carolyn Sampson, soprano
Joseph Middleton, piano
Brahms: Piano Quartet No 1 in G minor, Op 25
Endellion String Quartet
Barry Douglas, piano
Produced by Chris Taylor for BBC Wales.
Tom Redmond introduces performances from the BBC Philharmonic conducted by Joshua Weilerstein, Nicholas Collon, Leo Hussain, Edward Gardner and Manoj Kamps.
c.2pm:
Bach arr. Webern: Ricercare a 6 (from 'The Musical Offering')
Beethoven: Overture Leonora No 3
Debussy: Prelude a l'aprés-midi d'un faune
Smyth: On the Cliffs of Cornwall (Prelude to Act II, 'The Wreckers')
Webern: Five Pieces, Op 10
Ives orch. Schuman: Variations on "America"
John Luther Adams: The Light that Fills the World
BBC Philharmonic
Joshua Weilerstein (conductor)
c.3.15pm:
Stravinsky: Apollo
BBC Philharmonic
Nicholas Collon (conductor)
c.3.45pm:
Szymanowski: Violin Concerto No 1
Alina Ibragimova (violin)
BBC Philharmonic
Leo Hussain (conductor)
c.4.10pm:
Berg: Lulu - Symphonic Pieces
Sophie Bevan (soprano)
BBC Philharmonic
Edward Gardner (conductor)
c.4.40pm:
Holst: Egdon Heath
BBC Philharmonic
Manoj Kamps (conductor).
Sean Rafferty presents a lively mix of music, chat and arts news.
In Tune's specially curated playlist: an imaginative, eclectic mix of music, featuring favourites together with lesser-known gems, with a few surprises thrown in for good measure. The perfect way to usher in your evening.
Live from the Bridgewater Hall in Manchester
Presented by Tom Redmond
Smetana: The Bartered Bride, Overture
Saint-Saëns: Piano Concerto No 4
Saint-Saëns: Rhapsodie d'Auvergne
8.20 Music Interval
8.40
Berlioz: The Trojans: Royal Hunt and Storm
Janácek: Sinfonietta
BBC Philharmonic
Louis Lortie (piano)
Edward Gardner (conductor)
Virtuoso pianist Louis Lortie joins the BBC Philharmonic for two contrasting pieces by Saint-Saëns, his innovative Fourth Piano Concerto and his atmospheric and engaging Rhapsodie d'Auvergne in which, unusually for this composer, he quotes French folk song. Berlioz's dramatic Royal Hunt and Storm follows the interval and the programme is book-ended by Czech music; Smetana's energetic Overture to his nationalistic opera The Bartered Bride opening the proceedings and the utterly unique sound-world of Janácek's Sintonietta bringing the concert to a thrilling end.
Ian McMillan presents Radio 3's cabaret of the word.
The poet Fiona Hamilton contrasts the different states of clay before and after it's baked hard. The satisfying tactile quality of clay squished in the hand, compared to the dry ordinariness of a brick. It's part of this week's series of Cornerstones - nature writing about how rock, place and landscapes affect us.
Mud bricks are as old as civilisation, and have been used throughout the world, but in England they underpinned the Industrial Revolution, enabling the rapid, cheap construction of mills, factories, terraced housing and the bridges and viaducts of an expanding rail network. Whilst bricks are mundane and ubiquitous, they derive from the deposits left across large parts of England after the last Ice Age, and so are surely the youngest 'rock' of all.
Producer: Mark Smalley.
Lopa Kothari presents a live recording of Indian classical musician Hariprasad Chaurasia, master of the bansuri, the Indian bamboo flute. Plus a round-up of the latest releases from across the globe.