The BBC has announced that it has a sustainable plan for the future of the BBC Singers, in association with The VOCES8 Foundation.
The threat to reduce the staff of the three English orchestras by 20% has not been lifted, but it is being reconsidered.
See the BBC press release here.
RADIO-LISTS: BBC RADIO 3
Unofficial Weekly Listings for BBC Radio 3 — supported by bbc.co.uk/programmes/
Catriona Young presents a programme featuring 3 of Mozart's piano concertos from Russian Radio, with pianist Mikhail Voskresensky
1:01 AM
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756-1791)
Piano Concerto No 12 in A major, K414
Mikhail Voskresensky (piano); Pavel Slobodkin Centre Chamber Orchestra, Moscow', Leonid Nikolaev (conductor)
1:25 AM
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756-1791)
Piano Concerto No 21 in C major, K467
Mikhail Voskresensky (piano); Pavel Slobodkin Centre Chamber Orchestra, Moscow', Leonid Nikolaev (conductor)
1:51 AM
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756-1791)
Piano Concerto No 24 in C minor, K491
Mikhail Voskresensky (piano); Pavel Slobodkin Centre Chamber Orchestra, Moscow', Leonid Nikolaev (conductor)
2:21 AM
Johann Christian Bach (1735-1782)
Quintet in E flat major, Op 11 No 4, for flute, oboe, violin, viola and double bass
Les Ambassadeurs
2:37 AM
Johann Nepomuk Hummel (1778-1837)
Piano Quintet in E flat major/minor, Op 87 (1825)
Tobias Ringborg (violin), Ingegard Kierkegaard (viola), John Ehde (cello), Håkan Ehrén (double bass), Stefan Lindgren (piano)
2:57 AM
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756-1791)
Overture to 'Bastien and Bastienne', K50
Edmonton Symphony Orchestra, Mario Bernardi (conductor)
3:01 AM
Pyotr Il'yich Tchaikovsky (1840-1893)
Variations on a Roccoco Theme, Op 33, for cello and orchestra
Bartosz Koziak (cello), Polish Radio Orchestra, Andrzej Mysinski (conductor)
3:22 AM
Alexander Konstantinovich Glazunov (1865-1936)
Mazurka in F sharp minor, Op 25 No 2
Stefan Lindgren (piano)
3:28 AM
Witold Maliszewski [1873-1939]
Symphony No 1 in G minor, Op 8
Polish Radio Symphony Orchestra, Lukasz Borowicz (conductor)
4:04 AM
Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach (1714-1788)
Cantata: Heilig, Heilig Wq 217 (H778)
Netherlands Chamber Choir, Amsterdam Baroque Orchestra, Ton Koopman (conductor)
4:11 AM
Maurice Ravel (1875-1937)
Une Barque sur l'océan - from 'Miroirs'
Trondheim Symphony Orchestra, Eivind Aadland (conductor)
4:19 AM
Frédéric Chopin (1810-1849)
Scherzo No 3 in C sharp minor, Op 39
Simon Trpceski (piano)
4:27 AM
Joseph Haydn (1732-1809)
Trumpet Concerto in E flat major, Hob VIIe:1
Ole Edvard Antonsen (trumpet), Norwegian Radio Orchestra, Nicolae Moldoveanu (conductor)
4:44 AM
Sergey Rachmaninov (1873-1943)
2 pieces for Cello and Piano, Op 2
Monika Leskovar (cello), Ivana Švarc-Grenda (piano)
4:53 AM
Johann Sebastian Bach (1685-1750)
Sinfonia from Cantata BWV 209, 'Non sa che sia dolore'
Alexis Kossenko (Flute), Les Ambassadeurs, Alexis Kossenko (Director)
5:01 AM
Ludwig van Beethoven [1770 -1827]
Leonora Overture No 3, Op 72b
Slovenian RTV Symphony Orchestra, Anton Nanut (conductor)
5:15 AM
Josef Suk (1874-1935)
Elegie (Pod dojmem Zeyerova Vysehradu), Op 23, arr. for piano trio
Aronowitz Ensemble (Trio)
5:22 AM
Johann Sebastian Bach [1685-1750]
'Herr! Warum trittest du'(recitative) and 'Die schaumenden Welle' (aria) from Cantata BWV 81, 'Jesus schlaft, was soll ich hoffen'
Anders Dahlin (tenor), Zefira Valova (violin), Les Ambassadeurs, Alexis Kossenko (director)
5:27 AM
Jan Dismas Zelenka (1679-1745)
Capriccio in F major, ZWV 184
Ekkehard Hering & Wolfgang Kube (oboes), Andrew Joy & Rainier Jurkiewicz (horns), Rhoda Patrick (bassoon) Akademie für Alte Musik Berlin, Bernhard Forck (director)
5:42 AM
Antonín Dvorák(1841-1904)
Symphony No 3 in E flat major, Op 10
Netherlands Radio Philharmonic, Hiroyuki Iwaki (conductor)
6:14 AM
Richard Wagner [1813-1883]
Siegfried Idyll
BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra, Donald Runnicles (conductor)
6:33 AM
John Field (1782-1837)
Andante inédit in E flat major for piano
Marc-André Hamelin (piano)
6:41 AM
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756-1791)
Church Sonata in B flat, K212, for 2 violins, double bass and organ
Royal Academy of Music Beckett Ensemble, Patrick Russill (Conductor)
6:46 AM
Francesco Durante (1684-1755)
Concerto No 8 in A major 'La pazzia'
Concerto Köln.
Martin Handley presents Radio 3's classical breakfast show, featuring listener requests.
Email 3breakfast@bbc.co.uk.
Kate Molleson meets Mark-Anthony Turnage, one of the UK's leading composers, to find out about his fairy-tale opera, Coraline, inspired by Neil Gaiman's bestselling fantasy novel. Plus, lutes, theorbos, strings and things: Elizabeth Kenny & Paula Chateauneuf discuss the musical world of the Renaissance, when soft plucked strings reigned supreme.
Cerys Matthews takes us on a personal guided tour of the musical world, taking in Bellini and Blind Snooks Eaglin, Max Richter and the Rhos Male Voice Choir, with poetry too from Rumi, Dylan Thomas and W B Yeats.
Matthew Sweet talks to Academy Award winner Alexandre Desplat ona line to his home in France, about his career in film music in the week that sees the release of his latest score for Wes Anderson's 'Isle of Dogs'.
Alexandre talk about his methodology of writing for film and about the importance of collaboration. The programme draws on scores for 'Le Plus Bel Age'; 'Girl with A Pearl Earring', 'The Beat My Heart Skipped'; ''Rust and Bone'; ''Philomena'; 'The Tree of Life'; 'The Curious Case of Benjamin Button'; 'Argo'; 'The Imitation Game'; 'Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows'; ''The Fantastic Mr Fox'; 'Grand Budapest Hotel' and 'Isle of Dogs'.
Alexandre also chooses this week's Classic Score.
Among this week's selection of music in all styles of jazz requested by listeners, Alyn Shipton includes a classic track by Humphrey Lyttelton and his Band, evoking memories of the 1950s, and of this much-loved trumpeter and broadcaster who was the original presenter of Jazz Record Requests.
Julian Joseph presents a special edition featuring American saxophonist Donny McCaslin, best known for his work with David Bowie on his Number 1 album Blackstar, plus a performance from vocalist Jumoke Fashola. Donny studied at the famed Berklee College of Music in Boston and in 1987 he joined vibraphonist Gary Burton's touring band. In 1991 he replaced Michael Brecker in the group Steps Ahead and in 2006 joined the Dave Douglas Quartet. As part of this intimate performance Donny will perform his own compositions as well as paying tribute to Bowie. This special concert recorded at BBC Scotland's headquarters in Glasgow features Jason Lindner - keyboards, Zach Danziger - drums, Tim Lefebvre - bass, and Donny on saxophone. Also on the bill is singer Jumoke Fashola, who will be performing tracks from her latest project Protest! mixing revolutionary music and words including an exclusive performance for Jazz Line-Up of The Slave's Lament by poet Robert Burns.
Direct from the Met in New York, Mozart's Cosi fan tutte with David Robertson conducting the Metropolitan Opera House orchestra and chorus. The tenor Ben Bliss and the bass-baritone Adam Plachetka take on the roles of Ferrando and Guglielmo, the two young officers in the Neapolitan army who enter a bet to see if their girlfriends Fiordiligi and Dorabella, sung by the soprano Amanda Majeski and the mezzo-soprano Serena Malfi, will be faithful, with intriguing results. This spicy tale of love and treason was the last collaboration between Mozart and librettist Lorenzo Da Ponte. Mary Jo Heath presents with commentator Ira Siff.
Fiordiligi ..... Amanda Majeski (soprano)
Dorabella ..... Serena Malfi (soprano)
Despina ..... Kelli O'Hara (soprano)
Ferrando ..... Ben Bliss (tenor)
Guglielmo ..... Adam Plachetka (bass)
Don Alfonso ..... Christopher Maltman (bass)
New York Metropolitan Opera Chorus
New York Metropolitan Opera Orchestra
David Robertson (conductor).
Robert Worby introduces a recent performance by the Ulster Orchestra, including the World Premiere of Greg Caffrey's Environments 1. We hear more pieces from a concert of works for clarinet and bass clarinet recorded last December at London's Cafe Oto. And in the latest Sound of the Week, Larry Goves reflects on the sound of wind in poplar trees.
Brian Irvine: Drowning in the Sea of Your Dreams
Greg Caffrey: Environments 1 for Piano and Orchestra (Finghin Collins, piano)
Patrick Brennan: Cycling
Elaine Agnew: Make a Wish
Ed Bennett: Psychedelia
Ton de Leeuw: Mountains for bass clarinet and pre-recorded electronics
Chris Cundy (bass clarinet).
As an Easter treat, Geoffrey Smith selects highlights from the immortal partnership of vocal legend Billie Holiday and her saxophonist soulmate Lester Young, co-creators of some of the greatest recordings of the Swing Era.
01 00:02 Billie Holiday & Lester Young (artist)John Shea presents the Vienna Philharmonic and Michael Tilson Thomas at the 2017 BBC Proms in Brahms, Mozart and Beethoven. Emanuel Ax is the soloist in Mozart Piano Concerto No14.
1:01 AM
Johannes Brahms (1833-1897)
Variations on a theme by Haydn Op 56a vers. for orchestra
Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra, Michael Tilson Thomas (conductor)
1:20 AM
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756-1791)
Piano Concerto No 14 in E flat major, K.449
Emanuel Ax (piano), Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra, Michael Tilson Thomas (conductor)
1:42 AM
Franz Schubert (1797-1828)
4 Impromptus D.935, Op 142 for piano: No 2 in A flat major
Emanuel Ax (piano)
1:47 AM
Ludwig van Beethoven (1770-1827)
Symphony no. 7 in A major Op 92
Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra, Michael Tilson Thomas (conductor)
2:29 AM
Frederick Delius (1862-1934])
On hearing the first cuckoo in spring
Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra, Michael Tilson Thomas (conductor)
2:36 AM
Ludwig van Beethoven (1770-1827)
Sonata for violin and piano in F major 'Spring' Op 24
Henning Kraggerud (violin), Hårvard Gimse (piano)
3:01 AM
Grace Williams (1906-1977)
Sea Sketches (1944)
Manitoba Chamber Orchestra, Roy Goodman (conductor)
3:19 AM
Benjamin Britten (1913-1976)
On this Island Op 11
Sally Matthews (soprano), Simon Lepper (piano)
3:34 AM
Claude Debussy (1862-1918)
La Mer (No 1: De l'aube a midi sur la mer; No 2: Jeux de vagues; No 3: Dialogue du vent et de la mer)
Trondheim Symphony Orchestra, Eivind Aadland (conductor)
3:59 AM
James MacMillan (b.1959)
O Radiant Dawn (from the Strathclyde motets)
BBC Singers, David Hill (conductor)
4:04 AM
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756-1791)
Rondo in D, K.485
Jean Muller (piano)
4:11 AM
Johann Sebastian Bach (1685-1750)
Harpsichord Concerto No 5 in F minor (BWV.1056)
Lembit Orgse (harpsichord), Estonian Radio Chamber Orchestra, Paul Mägi (conductor)
4:21 AM
Traditional (19th century) arr. Narciso Yepes (1927-1997)
Romanza for guitar
Stepan Rak (guitar)
4:27 AM
Hector Berlioz (1803-1869)
Le Carnaval Romain - overture
Finnish Radio Symphony Orchestra, Jukka-Pekka Saraste (conductor)
4:36 AM
Richard Strauss (1864-1949)
Der Abend Op 34 No 1
Danish National Radio Choir, Stefan Parkman (conductor)
4:46 AM
Fanny Mendelssohn (1805-1847)
Lied (Lenau): Larghetto; Wanderlied: Presto Op 8 Nos 3 & 4 (1840)
Sylviane Deferne (piano)
4:53 AM
Emmanuel Chabrier (1841-1894)
España - rhapsody for orchestra
Toronto Symphony Orchestra, Andrew Davis (conductor)
5:01 AM
Carlo Gesualdo (c.1561-1613)
Miserere
Camerata Silesia, Anna Szostak (Conductor)
5:12 AM
Arvo Pärt (b.1935)
Cantus in memoriam Benjamin Britten
Baltic Sea Youth Philharmonic, Kristjan Järvi (conductor)
5:20 AM
Edvard Grieg (1843-1907)
Three Lyric Pieces
Juhani Lagerspetz (piano)
5:30 AM
Pavel Mihelcic (b.1937)
Nocturne for violin and guitar
Tomaž Lorenz (violin), Jerko Novek (guitar)
5:36 AM
Ástor Pantaleón Piazzolla (1921-1992)
Le Grand Tango
Musica Camerata Montréal
5:47 AM
Schoenberg, Arnold (1874-1951)
Waldsonne, No 4 from 4 lieder Op 2
Arleen Augér (soprano), Irwin Gage (piano)
5:52 AM
Joseph Haydn (1732-1809)
String Quartet in D minor Op 42
Pavel Haas Quartet
6:05 AM
Sergey Rachmaninov (1873-1943)
Rhapsody on a theme of Paganini for piano and orchestra Op 43
Nikolay Evrov (piano), Bulgarian National Radio Symphony Orchestra, Vassil Stefanov (conductor)
6:29 AM
Ludwig van Beethoven (1770-1827)
Trio for piano and strings in E flat major Op 1 No 1 (4. Finale (Presto))
Macquarie Trio.
Martin Handley presents Radio 3's classical breakfast show, featuring listener requests.
Email 3breakfast@bbc.co.uk.
Sarah Walker with music by Cherubini, Lutoslawski, and Milhaud, a creativity quote suggested by a listener, leading to Mozart's Kegelstatt Trio for clarinet, viola and piano. And today's Sunday Escape is Grieg's Peace of the Woods, from his Lyric Pieces, Opus 71 No 4.
In a revealing and entertaining programme for Easter Day, the Reverend Richard Coles talks to Michael Berkeley about his double life as a celebrity priest and his enduring passion for classical music.
The only vicar to have had a number one hit and to have danced the paso doble dressed as Flash Gordon in front of 10 million television viewers, Richard Coles is also the presenter of Radio 4's Saturday Live and the author of several books including a devastatingly honest autobiography in which he describes how he swapped the sex-and-drugs fuelled world of pop stardom for the life of a parish priest.
Richard talks to Michael about how he balances being a celebrity - appearing on shows such as Strictly Come Dancing, Celebrity Masterchef and Have I Got News For You - with the day to day normalities of being a vicar in rural Northamptonshire. He reveals how Mozart helped his recovery from depression as a teenager, looks back on the risks he took as a hedonistic pop star with The Communards in the 1980s, and talks frankly about the difficulties of being gay in the Church of England.
Classical music has always been at the centre of Richard's life from his days as a teenage pianist and chorister, and he continues to discover new passions such as Janacek and Wagner. He chooses choral music which reminds him of studying theology at King's College London, jazz in memory of his racy grandfather, and the Monks of Solesmes singing from the Gradual Mass of Easter.
Producer: Jane Greenwood
A Loftus production for BBC Radio 3.
From Wigmore Hall, London, pianist Danny Driver plays works by Messiaen, Ligeti and Kaija Saariaho, plus Schumann's Kreisleriana.
Introduced by Kate Molleson.
Sound colours and evocative imagery belong to Danny Driver's imaginative choice of repertoire. He returns to Wigmore Hall to explore the soundworlds of Messiaen and Kaija Saariaho before delving into the kaleidoscopic expressive contrasts of Schumann's Kreisleriana.
Messiaen: Prelude No 5 (Les sons impalpables du reve)
Kaija Saaraiaho: Ballade
Ligeti: Etude No 6 (Automne à Varsovie)
Schumann: Kreisleriana
Danny Driver (piano).
Lutenist Thomas Dunford performs Dowland, Kapsberger and Dalza at the National Centre for Early Music in York. This concert was held to celebrate the European Day of Early Music, Wednesday 21st March.
Live from the Cathedral and Abbey Church of St Alban on Easter Day.
Introit: O Sons and daughters (Walford Davies)
Responses: Smith
Psalm 114 (Bairstow)
First Lesson: Ezekiel 37 vv. 1-14
Office Hymn: The day of resurrection (Ellacombe)
Canticles: Stanford in A
Second Lesson: Luke 24 vv. 13-35
Anthem: Let all the world (Leighton)
Hymn: Light's glittering morn bedecks the sky (Lasst uns erfreuen)
Organ Voluntary: Symphonie No 5 in A major, Op 47 (Final) (Vierne)
Andrew Lucas (Master of the Music)
Tom Winpenny (Assistant Master of the Music).
Acclaimed baritone Roderick Williams joins Choir and Organ to present an hour of the very best organ music and performances.
Including a dazzling improvisation on Gershwin's show tune "I Got Rhythm" by the brilliant British virtuoso Wayne Marshall - plus works by father and son Johann Sebastian and Wilhelm Friedemann Bach. There's also a chance to hear a vivid rarity of the Spanish Baroque - the "Battle of Punta Baix" by Juan Cabanilles.
In the second of three companion programmes to BBC TV's Civilisations series, Tom Service unpicks western music's debt to the exotic and ponders the allure of western music for other cultures.
Reflecting contemporary attitudes and trends in fashion and the arts, the exotic has long cast its spell on western composers. Mozart catered to the 18th-century Viennese craze for all things Turkish; in 19th-century France the exotic stretched east to Indonesia and Japan. More recently, the music of Africa has attracted the likes of Steve Reich and György Ligeti. And 150 years ago, as Japan opened up to outside influences, western culture became suddenly desirable in the east, with profound and lasting consequences. But what does it take to make the exotic in music more than a titillating and imperialist added extra?
Including contributions from composer Unsuk Chin, and cultural historian of Japan, Jonathan Service.
David Papp (producer).
As spring approaches, Emma Fielding and Julian Rhind-Tutt read a selection of texts inspired by trees. Authors include Edmund Spenser, John Clare, Amy Levy and Roger Deakin, with music from Grieg to Sibelius, Art Tatum to Radiohead.
01 Talivaldis KeninsCerys Matthews explores the enduring influence of the Psalms on musicians and composers across the centuries and across musical genres from plainsong to pop, from choral to country, from jazz to reggae.
"Ever since singing Psalms in chapel as a small girl I've been intrigued by how they spoke directly and clearly to me. What still fascinates me is the longevity of these powerful poems - texts that have travelled the world and across cultures and are constantly being revisited and reworked and given new life. What is the power behind these poems and why do we still turn to them in times of trouble, love, sadness, conflict and joy?"
These ancient texts have inspired composers like Schutz, Handel, Mendelssohn and Stravinsky as well as Duke Ellington, Sinead O'Connor and U2. Their themes of praise and thanksgiving as well as ideas of resistance, echo through African American, spirituals and form a fundamental part of worship in a range of religious events as well as repertoire in the concert hall. The many settings of Psalm 23 'The Lord is my Shepherd', Psalm 137 'By the Waters of Babylon' and Psalm 150's celebration of praise - speak of the universal influence of these words on our daily lives.
What is it about the power of these poems that allows them to transcend continents, cultures and musical styles?
Producers: Philip Titcombe and Andy Cartwright
A Soundscape Production for BBC Radio 4.
Kate Molleson presents Bruckner's 3rd Mass in a performance recorded at Basel Cathedral last Autumn conducted by Ivor Bolton. Plus organ music performed by Jan Sprta from last year's Easter Festival of Sacred Music from Brno in the Czech Republic.
VLADIMIR WERNER
Victimae paschali laudes (Sequentiae per organo)
Jan Šprta (organ - Basilica of the Assumption of Our Lady, Brno )
BRUCKNER
Mass No.3 in F minor, WAB 28
Sandrine Piau (soprano)
Catherine Wyn Rogers (contralto)
Toby Spence (tenor)
Thomas Oliemans (bass)
Balthasar Neumann Chorus
Basel Symphony Orchestra
Ivor Bolton (conductor)
REGER
Fantasy on the Chorale "Hallelujah! Gott zu loben, bleibe meine Seelenfreud," Op. 52
Jan Šprta (organ - Basilica of the Assumption of Our Lady, Brno)
Producer Elizabeth Arno
Presenter Kate Molleson.
Could an Archbishop become an enemy of the state? Inspired partially by Eliot's classic verse drama Murder in the Cathedral, Is Your Love Better than Life explores a futuristic scenario in which senior figures in the Church and Government discover they have irreconcilable differences, so that it becomes for them a matter of life and death. What beliefs will we die for? Or kill for? It's about telling the truth.
"O God, you are my God, for you I long;
for you my soul is thirsting. My body pines for you
like a dry, weary land without water.
So I gaze on you in the sanctuary
to see your strength and your glory.
For your love is better than life." (Psalm 63)
The writer
Frances Byrnes is a Sony award winning radio producer and dramatist. Her adaptation of L P Hartley's The Go-Between for BBC Radio 3 was shortlisted in the 2013 Writers Guild Awards.
With thanks to Graham Hunter, St John's Church, Hoxton, Ed West and Canon Alan Billings
Sound design, Eloise Whitmore.
The Netherlands Bach Society directed by Jos van Veldhoven perform sacred and secular works by Buxtehude, Bach, Hassler and Schein.
Using a chorale melody as a starting point in each half, the director Jos van Veldhoven has devised a programme of music with melodic links threading through each half of this concert, which includes organ works and choral cantatas by Germany's greatest Baroque composers.
This concert was recorded last summer as part of the Utrecht Early Music Festival.
The longer works by Buxtedhude include:
Dietrich Buxtehude (1637-1707)
Herzlich lieb hab' ich dich, o Herr, BuxWV 41
Jesu, meines Lebens, BuxWV 62
Frohlocket mit Händen all Völker, BuxWV 29
Nimm von uns Herr, BuxWV 78
Maria Keohane, Lucia Caihuela, sopranos
Margot Oitzinger, contralto
Thomas Hobbs, tenor
Stephan MacLeod , bass
Netherlands Bach Society
Bart Naessens organ
Jos van Veldhoven, director
Producer Helen Garrison.
Slow down and join Nick Luscombe on a sonic journey through Japan, with the unique and expressive sounds of everyday life - tea making, transportation, parades, nature, domestic appliances and video arcade centres - from towns and cities across the country.
John Shea presents a concert given by Il Giardino Armonico and Giovanni Antonini from Poland including music by Haydn, Telemann, WF Bach, CPE Bach and JS Bach.
12:31 AM
Wilhelm Friedemann Bach (1710-1784)
Symphony in F, F67
Il Giardino Armonico, Giovanni Antonini (director)
12:45 AM
Joseph Haydn (1732-1809)
Violin Concerto in G, Hob. VIIa:4
Il Giardino Armonico, Giovanni Antonini (director)
1:04 AM
Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach (1714-1788)
Symphony No. 1 in G, Wq. 182/1
Il Giardino Armonico, Giovanni Antonini (director)
1:15 AM
Georg Philipp Telemann (1681 - 1767)
Concerto in C, TWV 51:C1
Il Giardino Armonico, Giovanni Antonini (director)
1:32 AM
Johann Sebastian Bach (1685-1750)
Selig ist der Mann, cantata, BWV 57
Il Giardino Armonico, Giovanni Antonini (director)
1:56 AM
Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach (1714-1788)
Symphony No. 1 in G, Wq. 182/1' (Presto)
Il Giardino Armonico, Giovanni Antonini (director)
1:59 AM
Johann Sebastian Bach (1685-1750)
Sonata in D minor, BWV.964
Wolfgang Glüxam (harpsichord)
2:21 AM
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756-1791)
Adagio in E major, K.261
James Ehnes (violin/director); Mozart Anniversary Orchestra
2:31 AM
Benjamin Britten (1913-1976)
Serenade for tenor, horn and string orchestra Op 31
Benjamin Butterfield (tenor), James Sommerville (horn), Manitoba Chamber Orchestra, Simon Streatfield (conductor)
2:55 AM
Robert Schumann (1810-1856)
Kinderszenen for piano Op 15
Håvard Gimse (piano)
3:15 AM
Claude Debussy (1862-1918), orch. Henri Büsser
Printemps - symphonic suite orch. Büsser
The Ukrainian Radio Symphony Orchestra, Volodymyr Sirenko (conductor)
3:31 AM
Marko Ruzdjak (1946-2012)
April is the Cruellest Month
Zagreb Guitar Trio: Darko Petrinjak, Istvan Romer, Goran Listes (guitars)
3:39 AM
George Frideric Handel (1685-1789)
Samson (Return, O God of hosts from Act 2)
Maureen Forester (alto), I Solisti Zagreb, Antonio Janigro (conductor)
3:48 AM
Frédéric Chopin (1810-1849)
Polonaise in A major, Op 40 No 1
Eugen d'Albert (piano)
3:53 AM
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756-1791)
String Quartet in D major, K.155
Australian String Quartet
4:03 AM
Maurice Duruflé (1902-1986)
Quatre motets sur des themes Gregoriens for a capella choir, Op 10
BBC Singers, Stephen Cleobury (conductor)
4:11 AM
Ludwig van Beethoven (1770 -1827])
Coriolan (overture) Op 62
New Zealand Symphony Orchestra, Mark Taddei (conductor)
4:20 AM
Franz Liszt (1811-1886)
Tarantella from Venezia e Napoli, S.162
Janina Fialkowska (piano)
4:31 AM
John Cage (1912-1992)
Four2 for a capella choir
BBC Singers, Stephen Cleobury (conductor)
4:38 AM
Alexander Scriabin (1872-1915)
3 Etudes, Op 65
Roger Woodward (Piano)
4:46 AM
Claudio Monteverdi (1567-1643)
Vespro della Beata Vergine, Venice 1610 (Magnificat)
Studio de Musique Ancienne de Montréal, Christopher Jackson (conductor)
5:02 AM
László Sáry (b.1940)
Kotyogó ko egy korsóban (1976) - version for two marimbas
Aurél Holló & Zoltán Rácz (marimbas) (from the Amadinda Percussion Group)
5:11 AM
Johann Sebastian Bach (1685-1750), orch. Schoenberg, Arnold (1874-1951)
Chorale Prelude, BWV.654
Sydney Symphony Orchestra, Edo de Waart (conductor)
5:20 AM
Johann Strauss Jr (1825-1899) arranged by Schoenberg, Arnold (1874-1951)
Kaiser-Walzer, Op 437 (1888) arr. Schoenberg (1925) for chamber ensemble
Canadian Chamber Ensemble, Raffi Armenian (conductor)
5:32 AM
Steve Reich (b.1936)
Eight Lines (1979), octet for two pianos, string quartet and two brass instruments
Ricercata Ensemble , Ivan Siller (director / piano / electric organ)
5:50 AM
Dora Pejacevic (1885-1923)
Life of Flowers, Op 19
Ida Gamulin (piano)
6:10 AM
George Gershwin (1898-1937)
An American in Paris (vers. for orchestra)
Melbourne Symphony Orchestra, Jorge Mester (conductor).
Petroc Trelawny presents Radio 3's classical breakfast show, featuring listener requests.
Email 3breakfast@bbc.co.uk.
Ian Skelly with Essential Classics - the best in classical music.
0930 Your ideas for companion pieces on the Essential Classics playlist.
1010 Time Traveller - A quirky slice of cultural history
1050 Each day this week the actor Niamh Cusack, currently starring as Lady Macbeth with the RSC in Stratford, reveals the cultural influences that have inspired and shaped her life and career.
It was an offer Robert Schumann only wished he could have refused. But lacking other job opportunities, the composer reluctantly accepted Dusseldorf's offer of the post of Director of Music, with responsibility not only for a semi-professional orchestra, but also for a choir. All this week Donald Macleod looks at Schumann's Dusseldorf years and the creative stimulus this move provided for Schumann, his triumphs as well as his many failures. In less than five years, Robert would write some third of his entire output, composing concertos, choral works and symphonies. Despite the composer's tragic illness, he lost none of his powers of invention, and was indeed on the brink of enjoying both popular as well as critical success.
In today's episode, Robert and Clara are feted with a grand reception and a concert of Robert's own music. Despite this promising beginning, there are already domestic problems: the famiiar struggle to find suitable accommodation, away from barrel organs and other street noises. And already there are mutterings among the choir and some of the orchestra about Robert's abilities as a conductor and manager of people.
Genoveva Overture, Op.81
New York Philharmonic
Leonard Bernstein
Sechs Gedichte von Nikolaus Lenau, Op. 90 (Meine Rose; Requiem)
Peter Schreier, tenor
Normal Shetler, piano
Myrthen, Op.25 (Widmung; Die Lotosblume)
Barbara Bonney, soprano
Vladimir Ashkenazy, piano
Das Paradies und die Peri, Op.50 (Part 2)
Monteverdi Choir
Orchestre Révolutionnaire et Romantique
John Eliot Gardiner, conductor.
Live from Wigmore Hall, London.
Introduced by Fiona Talkington.
Laura van der Heijden, cello and Petr Limonov, piano play sonatas by Britten and Shostakovich.
Britten: Cello Sonata in C major Op. 65
Shostakovich: Cello Sonata in D minor Op. 40
Laura van der Heijden, cello
Petr Limonov, piano
Laura van der Heijden scored a sensational hit as winner of BBC Young Musician 2012. Her first Wigmore Hall lunchtime recital, given in company with regular duo partner Petr Limonov, presents two intensely haunting modern masterworks for cello.
Penny Gore begins a week of concerts featuring the NDR Elbphilharmonie Orchestra, with symphonies by Mozart and Bruckner.
Mozart: Symphony No 39 in E flat, K543
Bruckner: Symphony No 3 in D minor
NDR Elbphilharmonie Orchestra
Herbert Blomstedt (conductor)
The NDR Elbphilharmonie Orchestra - north Germany's equivalent of the BBC Symphony Orchestra or BBC Philharmonic - is resident at the amazing new Elbphilharmonie concert hall in Hamburg, famous for its architecture, for its acoustics and for costing more than ten times as much as its original budget by the time it finally opened a year ago. This week Penny Gore presents a week of concerts by the orchestra and uncovers the story of its home base.
In the 40th-anniversary year of the competition, Penny Gore presents highlights from this year's Young Musician string category finalists, all hoping to get through to the Grand Final on 13th May. In today's programme we hear from violinist Elodie Chousmer-Howelles.
Sean Rafferty presents a lively mix of music, chat and arts news. His guests today include Scandinavian folk musicians Erik Rydvall and Olav Mjelva, who together with violist Max Baillie perform works by Bach in St Mary's Music Hall, Walthamstow later in the week. Plus the Modulus Quartet, a group dedicated to the performance of contemporary works, play live for us before a gig in an extraordinary setting: the Brunel Museum's Tunnel Shaft.
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.
Tom Redmond presents a concert of Mozart, Beethoven and Debussy given in Liverpool by the Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra, Stephen Hough (piano) and Vasily Petrenko.
Exotic climes in tonight's programme, beginning with Mozart's sparkling overture to The Abduction from the Seraglio, whose loud bits ring like the marching of the Turkish military band found later in the opera. Debussy conjures up the sultry warmth of Spain in Iberia, the second in his late orchestral triptych, Images. Then to the sea with La Mer, Debussy's impressionist oil-painting of a work whose iridescent surface hints at the brooding depths beneath. Before the interval, Stephen Hough performs Beethoven's youthful and virtuosic First Piano Concerto, with its distinctly Mozartian moments.
Mozart: Overture, The Abduction from the Seraglio
Beethoven: Piano Concerto No. 1
INTERVAL
Debussy: Ibéria
Debussy: La Mer
Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra
Stephen Hough (piano)
Vasily Petrenko (conductor).
Journalist and writer Afua Hirsch discusses "Wide Sargasso Sea" by Jean Rhys, the story of the forgotten first wife of Mr Rochester in Charlotte Bronte's novel Jane Eyre. Encountering Rhys's novel aged 14, Hirsch detested her account of a Creole girl growing up in 1830s Jamaica. Re-reading it much later in life, she came to believe that "it is one of the most perfect books ever written in the English language. The sparsity of Rhys's painfully meticulous sentences, which so alienated the teenage me, touches me now - a writer myself - as the work of a genius." The novel helped shape her thinking on Britishness. "Race is everywhere. Its legacy is real and traumatic. You can't opt out of it or - as so many people in contemporary Britain attempt to do - claim not to see it."
Producer Smita Patel
Editor Hugh Levinson.
Soweto Kinch presents a concert set by Django Bates' Belovèd at Ronnie Scott's, the trio featuring Django on keyboards, Petter Eldh on bass and Peter Bruun Hartz on drums.
From 2014 BBC Proms, Qatar Philharmonic Orchestra play Rachmaninov's 2nd Piano Concerto with Denis Matsuev and Tchaikovsky's 5th Symphony. Catriona Young presents.
12:31 AM
Ranjbaran, Behzad (b.1955)
Seemorgh - The Sunrise for Orchestra
Qatar Philharmonic Orchestra, Han-na Chang (conductor)
12:39 AM
Rachmaninov, Sergei (1873-1943)
Concerto no. 2 in C minor Op.18 for piano and orchestra
Denis Matsuev (piano) Qatar Philharmonic Orchestra, Han-na Chang (conductor)
1:11 AM
Rachmaninov, Sergei (1873-1943)
10 Preludes, Op 23 No 5 in G minor
Denis Matsuev (piano)
1:15 AM
Tchaikovsky, Peter Ilyich (1840-1893)
Symphony No 5 in E minor, Op 64
Qatar Philharmonic Orchestra, Han-na Chang (conductor)
2:02 AM
Vivaldi, Antonio (1678-1741)
Gloria, cantata for soloists, mixed choir and orchestra in D major, RV.589
Olga Gracelj (soprano), Eva Novsak Houska (mezzo-soprano), Andrej Jarc (organ), Choir Consortium Musicum, Orchestra of Slovenian Philharmonic, Marko Munih (conductor)
2:31 AM
Dvorak, Antonin (1841-1904)
Trio for piano and strings, No 1 Op 21 in B flat major
Kungsbacka Trio
3:05 AM
Chopin, Fryderyk (1810-1849)
24 Preludes, Op 28 for piano
Claire Huangci (piano)
3:39 AM
Brahms, Johannes (1833-1897)
Fest- und Gedenksprüche for 8 voices (2 choirs) Op 109
Danish National Radio Choir, Stefan Parkman (conductor)
3:49 AM
Debussy, Claude (1862-1918)
Sonata for cello and piano in D minor
Duo Krarup-Shirinyan: Johan Krarup (cello), Marianna Shirinyan (piano)
4:01 AM
Butterworth, Arthur (1923-2014)
Romanza for horn and strings
Martin Hackleman (horn), CBC Vancouver Orchestra, Mario Bernardi (conductor)
4:11 AM
Gabrieli, Andrea (1532/3-1585)
Aria della battaglia à 8
Theatrum Instrumentorum, Stefano Innocenti (conductor)
4:21 AM
Haapalainen, Väinö (1893-1945)
Lemminkainen Overture (1925)
Finnish Radio Symphony Orchestra, Atso Almila (conductor)
4:31 AM
Contant, (Joseph Pierre) Alexis (1858-1918)
Les Deux Âmes - overture
Edmonton Symphony Orchestra, Uri Mayer (conductor)
4:40 AM
Salzedo, Carlos (1885-1961)
Variations sur un thème dans le style ancien, Op 30
Mojca Zlobko (harp)
4:51 AM
Nystroem, Goesta (1890-1966)
Tre havsvisioner (3 Visions about the sea)
Swedish Radio Choir, Gustaf Sjökvist (conductor)
5:02 AM
Groneman, Johannes (c.1710-1778)
Flute Sonata in E minor
Jed Wentz (flute), Balazs Mate (cello), Marcelo Bussi (harpsichord)
5:14 AM
Liszt, Franz (1811-1886)
Légende No 1: St. François d'Assise prêchant aux oiseaux, S.175
Llyr Williams (piano)
5:25 AM
Fritsch, Balthasar (1570/80-after 1608)
Paduan and 2 Galliards (from Primitiae musicales, Frankfurt/Main 1606)
Hortus Musicus, Andres Mustonen (director)
5:33 AM
Debussy, Claude (1862-1918)
La Mer - 3 symphonic sketches for orchestra (1. De l'aube a midi sur la mer; 2. Jeux de vagues; 3. Dialogue du vent et de la mer)
BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra, Ilan Volkov (conductor)
5:58 AM
Mozart, Wolfgang Amadeus (1756-1791)
10 Variations on 'Unser dummer Pobel meint' for piano, K.455, aus Gluck's 'Pilger von Mekka'
Eduard Kunz (piano)
6:14 AM
Alfvèn, Hugo (1872-1960)
Suite for Orchestra from 'King Gustav II Adolf' Op 49
Swedish Radio Symphony Orchestra, Niklas Willén (conductor).
Petroc Trelawny presents Radio 3's classical breakfast show, featuring listener requests.
Email 3breakfast@bbc.co.uk.
Ian Skelly with Essential Classics - the best in classical music.
0930 Your ideas for companion pieces on the Essential Classics playlist.
1010 Time Traveller - A quirky slice of cultural history
1050 Each day this week the actor Niamh Cusack, currently starring as Lady Macbeth with the RSC in Stratford, reveals the cultural influences that have inspired and shaped her life and career.
It was an offer Robert Schumann only wished he could have refused. But lacking other job opportunities, the composer reluctantly accepted Dusseldorf's offer of the post of Director of Music, with responsibility not only for a semi-professional orchestra, but also for a choir. All this week Donald Macleod looks at Schumann's Dusseldorf years and the creative stimulus this move provided for Schumann, his triumphs as well as his many failures. In less than five years, Robert would write some third of his entire output, composing concertos, choral works and symphonies. Despite the composer's tragic illness, he lost none of his powers of invention, and was indeed on the brink of enjoying both popular as well as critical success.
In today's episode, the relationship between the Schumanns and their employers sours slightly when Clara is expected to play the piano in a concert gratis. The couple later take a trip to Cologne, inspiring one of Robert's best-loved symphonies, the 'Rhenish'. The subsequent premiere is a triumph, to the delight of both Robert and the Board of the Dusseldorf Music Society. It is a period of almost unbelievable creativity - no fewer than eighteen very substantial compositions in one year alone. And yet there are signs that not all is well with Schumann's health. And his conducting technique leaves a great deal to be desired, even in the opinion of some of his staunchest admirers!
Märchenbilder, Op 113 (1st movt)
Adrien Boisseau, viola
Gaspard Dehaene, piano
Symphony No. 3 in E flat, Op. 97, 'Rhenish'
London Classical Players
Roger Norrington, conductor
Mädchenlieder, Op. 103
Felicity Lott, soprano
Ann Murray, mezzo
Graham Johnson, piano
Nachtlied, Op.108
Monteverdi Choir
Orchestre Révolutionnaire et Romantique
John Eliot Gardiner.
This week, Radio 3 Lunchtimes will be dipping into the New Town Concerts which were founded in the 1960s as a subscription series with the intention "to light up the 49 weeks of musical darkness over the winter months between one Edinburgh International Festival and the next". Gareth Williams presents the Cremona String Quartet, who play quartets written by their Italian compatriots, Giuseppe Verdi and Ottorino Respighi.
Cremona String Quartet.
Verdi: Quartet in E minor
Respighi: Quartet in D major.
Penny Gore introduces more live concert recordings featuring the NDR Elbphilharmonie Orchestra, including a symphony by Schubert and a rarely heard work for soloists, chorus and orchestra by Hindemith.
Schubert: Symphony No 8 in B minor, D759
Hindemith: When lilacs last in the dooryard bloom'd; a requiem for those we love
Gerhild Romberger, contralto
Matthias Goerne, baritone
RIAS Chamber Chorus
NDR Elbphilharmonie Orchestra
Christoph Eschenbach, conductor.
In the 40th-anniversary year of the competition, Penny Gore presents highlights from this year's Young Musician string category finalists, all hoping to get through to the Grand Final on 13th May. In today's programme we hear from double bass player Will Duerden.
Sean Rafferty presents a lively mix of music, chat and arts news. A veritable feast of live music today: violinist Anne-Sophie Mutter and her protegee, cellist Pablo Ferrández; pianist Llŷr Williams; and singers Robin Tritschler and Gareth Brynmor John with pianist Iain Burnside.
In Tune's specially curated playlist: an eclectic mix of music, featuring favourites, lesser-known gems, and a few surprises. Tonight's selection features furious dance music from Gluck, choral music by Parry and a Scarlatti Sonata played on the accordion.
Recorded at Cadogan Hall, London on 29th March 2018
The English Chamber Orchestra and Christian Zacharias play Mozart.
Mozart: Piano Concerto No. 25 in C major, K. 503
Mozart: Ch'io mi scordi di te, K. 505
8.05: Interval
Mozart: Parto, Parto from La clemenza di Tito, K. 621
Mozart: Symphony No. 38 in D major, K. 504 (Prague)
Tamara Gura soprano
English Chamber Orchestra
Christian Zacharias piano/conductor
The German master-pianist Christian Zacharias has devoted a lifetime to the music of Mozart, and today he directs the ECO in both the majestic Prague Symphony and some of Mozart's brilliant concert arias - music that Mozart said should fit a singer's voice "like a well-tailored suit". First, however, he stars as both soloist and director in Mozart's 25th Piano Concerto exactly as the composer himself would have done, back in 1786.
The 10 academics chosen to turn their research into radio. This year's specialisms include explorations into 18th-century masculinity and the medical history of George Orwell, early 20th-century vegetarianism in Britain, and how the Ottoman Empire dealt with piracy. Others in the new intake are exploring more contemporary issues, such as the way globalisation is impacting how films are made around the world, or how the ethics of commercial surrogacy in India can be understood.
The New Generation Thinkers is an annual competition run by BBC Radio 3 and the Arts and Humanities Research Council. In this event, recorded with an audience at Sage Gateshead, the 2018 selection make their first public appearance together. Hosted by Eleanor Rosamund Barraclough of Durham University a New Generation Thinker class of 2013.
Dr Ben Anderson Lecturer in Twentieth-Century European History, School of Humanities, Keele University.
Dr Gulzaar Barn Lecturer in philosophy at the University of Birmingham, where she is also a member of the Centre for Global Ethics.
Dr Daisy Black Lecturer in English Literature at the University of Wolverhampton, who also works as a freelance theatre director, storyteller, writer and arts advisor
Dr Dafydd Mills Daniel McDonald Departmental Lecturer in Christian Ethics and Lecturer in Theology Jesus College, University of Oxford
Dr Des Fitzgerald a sociologist working at Cardiff university, where he teaches courses on the sociology of science and the sociology of health and illness
Dr Sarah Goldsmith Leverhulme Early Career Fellow Centre for Urban History and School of History, University of Leicester
Dr Lisa J Mullen Steven Isenberg Junior Research Fellow Worcester College, University of Oxford is writing a book on the novels & journalism of George Orwell
Dr Elsa Richardson Chancellor's Fellow Centre for the Social History of Health and Healthcare Strathclyde University, Glasgow
Dr Iain Smith King's College London His research investigates the impact of globalisation on popular films made around the world.
Dr Michael Talbot Lecturer in the History of the Ottoman Empire and Modern Middle East Department of History, Politics and Social Sciences, University of Greenwich
Producer: Jacqueline Smith.
Neurosurgeon and writer Henry Marsh on how "War and Peace" by Leo Tolstoy began a teenage love affair with all things Russian. "I burned the plastic coating off my NHS spectacle frames to reveal the revolutionary intellectual steel inside. And bought a young Communist League badge which I could wear on my black polo neck pullover." Marsh later drove across Europe to begin the first of many stints as a volunteer surgeon in Ukraine. "My life might easily have careered off in an entirely different direction if it had not been for Tolstoy," he says.
Producer Smita Patel
Editor Hugh Levinson.
Max's track selections have a distinctly maverick edge tonight. Expect to hear especially wild, free, idiosyncratic, and singular pieces of experimental music from the past one hundred years. Featured artists include contemporary German junk collective Datashock, outsider composer Lou Harrison, cosmic saxophonist Idris Ackamoor, and the legendary Serge Gainsbourg collaborating with Sly & Robbie.
There's also a moment to celebrate the explosive creativity of feminist photographer and visual artist Penny Slinger, who is the subject of a new documentary film by Richard Kovitch.
Produced by Jack Howson for Reduced Listening.
Catriona Young presents a recital from the Peralada Festival with Georgian mezzo-soprano Anita Rachvelishvili and pianist David Aladashvili.
12:31 AM
Handel, George Frideric [1685-1759]
Serse (Ombra mai fu, Act 1) HWV 40
Anita Rachvelishvili (soprano), David Aladashvili (piano)
12:35 AM
Taktakishvili, Otar [1924-1989]
Mzeo Tibatvis (June Sun)
Anita Rachvelishvili (soprano), David Aladashvili (piano)
12:39 AM
Rachmaninov, Sergei [1873-1943]
Three Songs
Anita Rachvelishvili (soprano), David Aladashvili (piano)
12:48 AM
Fauré, Gabriel [1845-1924]
Two Songs
Anita Rachvelishvili (soprano), David Aladashvili (piano)
12:53 AM
Saint-Saëns, Camille [1835-1921]
Samson et Dalila (excerpts from Act 2)
Anita Rachvelishvili (soprano), David Aladashvili (piano)
1:04 AM
Lara, Agustin [1897-1970]
Granada
Anita Rachvelishvili (soprano), David Aladashvili (piano)
1:07 AM
de Falla, Manuel [1876-1946]
Seven Spanish Popular Songs
Anita Rachvelishvili (soprano), David Aladashvili (piano)
1:21 AM
Bizet, Georges [1838-1875]
Carmen (excerpts)
Anita Rachvelishvili (soprano), David Aladashvili (piano)
1:29 AM
Bizet, Georges [1838-1875]
Carmen (Prés des remparts de Séville)
Anita Rachvelishvili (soprano), David Aladashvili (piano)
1:33 AM
Saint-Saëns, Camille [1835-1921]
Samson et Dalila (Mon coeur s'ouvre à ta voix)
Anita Rachvelishvili (soprano), David Aladashvili (piano)
1:40 AM
Mozart, Wolfgang Amadeus (1756-1791)
String Quartet in C major, K.465, 'Dissonance'
Casals Quartet: Vera Martínez-Mehner and Abel Tomàs (violins), Jonathan Brown (viola), Arnau Tomàs (cello)
2:08 AM
Bach, Johann Sebastian (1685-1750)
Brandenburg Concerto No 5 in D major, BWV 1050
Ensemble 415, Lars-Ulrik Mortensen (Harpsichord)
2:31 AM
Bruch, Max (1838-1920)
Fantasy for Violin and Orchestra with Harp, freely using Scottish Folk Melodies Op 46
James Ehnes (violin), Orchestre Symphonique de Montréal, Mario Bernardi (conductor)
3:01 AM
Bach, Johann Christoph Friedrich (1732-1795)
Pygmalion, cantata for bass and orchestra
Harry Van der Kamp (bass), Das Kleine Konzert, Hermann Max (conductor)
3:34 AM
Haydn, Joseph (1732-1809)
2 Marches in E flat major for wind
Bratislavská komorná harmónia (Bratislava chamber harmony), Justus Pavlík (director)
3:41 AM
Schubert, Franz (1797-1828)
Eight Landler (German dances) (from D.790)
Leif Ove Andsnes (Piano)
3:49 AM
Tartini, Giuseppe (1692-1770)
Symphony in A major
I Cameristi Italiani
3:58 AM
Sor, Fernando (1778-1839)
Introduction, Theme and Variations on Marlborough s'en va-t-en guerre, Op. 28 (For he's a jolly good fellow)
Xavier Díaz-Latorre (Guitar)
4:08 AM
Bach, Johann Christian (1735-1782)
Quintet in F major for flute, oboe, violin, viola and continuo, Op 11 No 3
Les Adieux
4:18 AM
Falla, Manuel de [1876-1946]
7 Canciones populares espanolas arr. for trumpet and piano
Alison Balsom (trumpet), Alisdair Beatson (piano)
4:31 AM
Bacewicz, Grazyna (1909-1969)
Suite for chamber orchestra
Polish Radio Symphony Orchestra, Jan Krenz (conductor)
4:39 AM
Liszt, Franz (1811-1886)
Hungarian Rhapsody No 2 in C sharp minor (from S.244)
Ladislav Fantzowitz (piano)
4:48 AM
Lassus, Orlande de (1532-1594)
Magnificat 'Praeter rerum seriem'
The King's Singers: Jeremy Jackman & Alastair Hume (countertenors), Robert Chilcott (tenor), Colin Mason & Simon Carrington (baritones), Stephen Connolly (bass)
4:57 AM
Ravel, Maurice [1875-1937]
Tzigane
Razvan Stoica (violin), Andrea Stoica (piano)
5:07 AM
Coulthard, Jean (1908-2000)
Four Irish Songs orch. Michael Conway Baker
Linda Maguire (mezzo-soprano), CBC Vancouver Orchestra, Mario Bernardi (conductor)
5:17 AM
Zarebski, Juliusz (1854-1885)
Polonaise triomphale in A major, Op 11
Polish Radio Symphony Orchestra, Pawel Przytocki (Conductor)
5:25 AM
Beethoven, Ludwig van (1770-1827)
Sonata for piano No 30 in E Op 109
Christian Ihle Hadland (piano)
5:44 AM
Mozart, Wolfgang Amadeus (1756-1791)
Violin Sonata in C, K.296
Malin Broman (violin), Simon Crawford-Phillips (piano)
6:01 AM
Brahms, Johannes (1833-1897)
Trio for horn, violin and piano in E flat major, Op 40
Martin Hackleman (horn), Martin Beaver (violin), Jane Coop (piano).
Petroc Trelawny presents Radio 3's classical breakfast show, featuring listener requests.
Email 3breakfast@bbc.co.uk.
Ian Skelly with Essential Classics - the best in classical music.
0930 Your ideas for companion pieces on the Essential Classics playlist.
1010 Time Traveller - A quirky slice of cultural history
1050 Each day this week the actor Niamh Cusack, currently starring as Lady Macbeth with the RSC in Stratford, reveals the cultural influences that have inspired and shaped her life and career.
It was an offer Robert Schumann only wished he could have refused. But lacking other job opportunities, the composer reluctantly accepted Dusseldorf's offer of the post of Director of Music, with responsibility not only for a semi-professional orchestra, but also for a choir. All this week Donald Macleod looks at Schumann's Dusseldorf years and the creative stimulus this move provided for Schumann, his triumphs as well as his many failures. In less than five years, Robert would write some third of his entire output, composing concertos, choral works and symphonies. Despite the composer's tragic illness, he lost none of his powers of invention, and was indeed on the brink of enjoying both popular as well as critical success.
In today's programme, Schumann presents his melancholy Manfred Overture to a half-empty concert hall and appears somewhat less than heroic to his orchestra members. With the birth of a new child, the family finally find more suitable accommodation, with rooms sufficiently large to host a choir. Only, there are now mutterings of dissent among some of the singers. As relations between Schumann and his employers deteriorate, there are demands for him to consign some of his duties to his deputy. It's a situation that would frustrate most people, and yet Robert Schumann still manages to compose popular Hausmusik to be played and enjoyed in the home. And we hear a lighter side to the cigar-smoking Robert with a charming piano duet.
Manfred - incidental music, Op. 115 (Overture)
Berlin Philharmonic
Rafael Kubelik
Waldszenen, Op. 82 nos 3, 4, 5
Andras Schiff, piano
Der Rose Pilgerfahrt, Op. 112 (Part 1)
Danish National Radio Symphony Orchestra and Choir
Gustav Kuhn, conductor
Ballszenen, Op. 109 (No. 7, Ecossaise)
Hector Moreno & Norberto Capelli (piano duet).
The New Town Concerts were set up in 1965 to counteract the '49 weeks of darkness' between annual Edinburgh International Festivals. Today's recital is by the Casals Quartet and is presented by Gareth Williams. The Casals Quartet celebrated their 20th anniversary, in 2017, with a cycle of Beethoven quartets, and it's from this cycle they perform both early and late Beethoven with the String Quartet in G major Op.18'2 and the String Quartet in F major Op.135. By way of contrast the Quartet perform an inventive new work by the Italian cellist and composer, Giovanni Sollima.
Casals Quartet
Beethoven: String Quartet in G major Op.18'2
Beethoven: String Quartet in F major Op.135
Sollima: String Quartet B267.
Penny Gore introduces another live concert recording featuring the NDR Elbphilharmonie Orchestra, today playing Mahler's last completed symphony.
Mahler: Symphony No 9
NDR Elbphilharmonie Orchestra
Thomas Hengelbrock.
From the Chapel of Keble College, Oxford.
Introit: Victimae paschali laudes (Plainsong, arr. Andrew Reid)
Responses: Radcliffe
Psalm 105 (Stanford, Martin, Atkins)
First Lesson: Isaiah 26 vv.1-19
Office hymn: Ad regias Agni dapes (Plainsong, mode viii)
Canticles: Jackson in G
Second Lesson: John 20 vv.1-10
Anthem: Ye choirs of new Jerusalem (Stanford)
Hymn: The strife is o'er (Victory)
Marian Antiphon: Regina coeli (Palestrina)
Voluntary: Organ Symphony No 6 in G minor, Op 42 No 2 (Finale: Vivace) (Widor)
Matthew Martin (Director of Music)
Robert Quinney (Organist)
Aine Kennedy (Organ Scholar).
In the 40th-anniversary year of the competition, Penny Gore presents highlights from this year's Young Musician string category finalists, all hoping to get through to the Grand Final on 13th May. In today's programme we hear from violinist Stephanie Childress.
Sean Rafferty presents, a lively mix of music, chat and arts news. His guests include flautist Katherine Bryan, who performs live in the studio before a recital in Stoller Hall in Manchester next week.
In Tune's specially curated playlist. From the raw power of Verdi's Dies Irae, to the flowing serenity of Bach, the dramatic sweeping of Handel's famous Saraband in D minor and a classic jazz tune - Take 5 from Dave Brubeck. Plus a lesser known Hummel mandolin concerto, a tumbling Chopin study, an energetic Vivaldi concerto, big Brahms flourishes and something quite different from William Walton.
In Tune Mixtapes - you never know what you're going to get!
Produced by Philip O'Meara.
Live from the Royal Festival Hall, London
The Royal Philharmonic Orchestra and Steven Isserlis perform Elgar's melancholic Cello Concerto and Thomas Dausgaard conducts Rachmaninov's glittering Symphonic Dances.
Britten: 4 Sea Interludes from Peter Grimes
Elgar: Cello Concerto
8.15: Interval Music: Vladimir Ashkenazy, a former Principal Conductor of the RPO, plays Rachmaninov's piano Variations on a Theme of Corelli Op. 42.
Rachmaninov: Symphonic Dances
Steven Isserlis, cello
Royal Philharmonic Orchestra
Thomas Dausgaard conductor
Conductor Thomas Dausgaard sets the scene for this concert with Britten's dramatic Four Sea Interludes from Peter Grimes. Then follows Elgar's much-loved Cello Concerto played by Steven Isserlis. The concert ends with Rachmaninov's last composition, the brilliantly orchestrated Symphonic Dances.
Kit de Waal, Darren McGarvey, Adelle Stripe and Michael Chaplin join Shahidha Bari to examine what we mean by 'working class writing'. Crowd funding has helped bring a new generation of authors into print but is this because mainstream publishing has neglected diverse voices? What experiences do we want to see on the page and stage? Recorded at Sage Gateshead.
Kit de Waal's short stories include "Crushing Big", "I am the Painter's Daughter" and "The Beautiful Thing" - which was broadcast on BBC Radio 4. Her debut novel My Name Is Leon was shortlisted for the Costa First Book Award 2016. De Waal used some of her advance for My Name Is Leon to found the Kit de Waal Creative Writing Fellowship to improve working-class representation in the arts. Her new novel is called The Trick To Time.
Darren McGarvey, author of Poverty Safari, is also known as Loki, a Scottish hip-hop artist, writer and community activist. Darren was rapper-in-residence at Police Scotland's Violence Reduction Unit.
Adelle Stripe and written 3 collections of poetry and her debut novel Black Teeth and a Brilliant Smile is inspired by the life and work of Bradford playwright Andrea Dunbar. It was shortlisted for the Gordon Burn Prize and received the K Blundell Trust Award for Fiction.
Michael Chaplin has written extensively for TV, radio and theatre. A journalist, TV documentary producer and executive and now full time writer, he created the TV series Grafters and Monarch of the Glen and has written 8 theatre plays and numerous works for radio including Two Pipe Problems and Tommies. He is also the editor of Hame, a collection of essays, short stories and poems by his father Sid Chaplin, the acclaimed writer whose works are mostly set in the North East.
Producer: Zahid Warley.
From Monarchs to Presidents. Joanne Paul on satire, flattery and document leaks in the C16 and C17 centuries and the relevance of strategies for telling truth to those who hold power over us now.
Zarah Hussain explains how The Arabian Nights inspired her as an artist. On discovering the book as a child, she found "the book was absolutely beautiful...There was a border of pink and blue arabesque flowers and a central image of a King wearing a gold crown and beautiful robes in conversation with a Queen similarly bedecked in robes. The floor and walls were covered in repeating geometric patterns. ...they came from a different world, a faraway place, but a place that was somehow familiar to me."
Producer: Smita Patel.
Writer, researcher, and record label boss Jennifer Lucy Allan makes her Late Junction debut. She wants to enlighten Max on the subject of lighthouses, foghorns, and Gaelic psalms, after her wet, working retreat in Shetland.
And... as we're on the subject of the weather... featured musicians tonight include Michael Snow, Muddy Waters, and Windjammer.
Produced by Jack Howson for Reduced Listening.
John Shea presents a gala concert of music by Rossini given by the National Opera of Ukraine.
12:31 AM
Rossini, Gioachino [1792-1868]
La gazza ladra (overture) (The Thieving Magpie)
12:41 AM
Rossini, Gioachino [1792-1868]
Il Signor Bruschino, ossia il figlio per azzardo (excerpt)
12:53 AM
Rossini, Gioachino [1792-1868]
L'italiana in Algeri (finale)
1:03 AM
Rossini, Gioachino [1792-1868]
La Cenerentola (Un soave non so che)
1:14 AM
Rossini, Gioachino [1792-1868]
The Barber of Seville (Cessa de piu' resistere)
1:22 AM
Rossini, Gioachino [1792-1868]
William Tell (overture)
1:34 AM
Rossini, Gioachino [1792-1868]
Stabat mater: Inflammatus et accensus; Amen
1:47 AM
Rossini, Gioachino [1792-1868]
Il Viaggio a Reims (overture)
1:55 AM
Rossini, Gioachino [1792-1868]
Il Viaggio a Reims (finale)
Performers: Lilia Hrevtsova (soprano), Liudmyla Monastyrska (soprano), Alla Rodina (soprano), Tetyana Piminova (soprano), Susanna Chakhoyan (soprano), Olga Fomichova (soprano), Mariya Berezovska (mezzo-soprano), Daria Knyazeva (mezzo-soprano), Filippo Adami (tenor), Dmutro Kuzmin (tenor), Velentyn Dytyuk (tenor), Oleksandr Boyko (baritone), Igor Mokrenko (baritone), Andriy Maslakov (bass), Dmytro Ageev (bass), National Opera of Ukraine Symphony Orchestra and Chorus, Mykola Dyadyura (conductor)
2:28 AM
Chopin, Fryderyk [1810-1849]
Study, Op 10 No 2 in A minor
Daniil Trifonov (piano)
2:31 AM
Grieg, Edvard Hagerup (1843-1907)
Holberg Suite, Op 40, vers. for string orchestra
Bergen Philharmonic Orchestra, Andrew Litton (conductor)
2:51 AM
Piazzolla, Ástor Pantaleón (1921-1992)
Las cuatro estaciones portenas (The Four Seasons of Buenos Aires): Otoño Porteño (Buenos Aires Autumn)
Musica Camerata Montréal
3:14 AM
Pierne, Gabriel [1863-1937]
Konzertstuck for harp & orchestra, Op 39, (1903)
Suzanna Klintcharova (harp), Sofia Symphony Orchestra, Dimitar Manolov (conductor)
3:30 AM
Scarlatti, Alessandro [1660-1725]
Toccata in F major
Rinaldo Alessandrini (harpsichord)
3:36 AM
Sibelius, Jean (1865-1957)
Luonnotar, tone poem, Op 70
Soile Isokoski (soprano), Finnish Radio Symphony Orchestra, Jukka-Pekka Saraste (conductor)
3:45 AM
Strauss, Richard (1864-1949)
Festmusik der Stadt Wien, AV.133 for brass and percussion
Tom Watson (trumpet), Royal Academy of Music Brass Soloists
3:55 AM
Bruch, Max (1838-1920)
Kol Nidrei, Op 47
Adam Krzeszowiec (cello), Polish Radio Symphony Orchestra, Lukasz Borowicz (conductor)
4:08 AM
Franz Schubert (1797-1828)
Quartettsatz (movement) for strings in C minor, D.703
Tilev String Quartet
4:18 AM
Smetana, Bedrich (1824-1884)
Sonata movement in E minor, B.70, for 2 pianos, 8 hands
Else Krijgsman, Mariken Zandliver, David Kuijken, Carlos Moerdijk (pianos)
4:31 AM
Gombert, Nicolas (c.1495-c.1560)
Musae Jovis a 6
BBC Singers, Bo Holten (conductor)
4:38 AM
Giustini, Lodovico (1685-1743)
Suonata X in F minor (Alemande - Affetuoso; Canzone - Tempo di Gavotta; Alemanda - Grave e Affetuoso; Corrente - Allegro assai)
Wolfgang Brunner (fortepiano)
4:47 AM
Hughes, Robert (b. 1912-2007)
Essay II
Melbourne Symphony Orchestra, Leonard Dommett (conductor)
4:56 AM
Beethoven, Ludwig van (1770-1827)
Romance in G major for Violin and Orchestra Op 40
Igor Ozim (violin), Slovenian Radio and Television Symphony Orchestra, Samo Hubad (conductor)
5:04 AM
Webern, Anton (1883-1945)
Passacaglia, Op 1
Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra, Riccardo Chailly (conductor)
5:17 AM
Purcell, Henry (1659-1695)
Pavan, Z.752, and Chacony, Z.730, for 4 instruments in G minor
London Baroque
5:25 AM
Debussy, Claude (1862-1918) orch. Brewaeys, Luc (b.1959)
Preludes book 1, No 1, Danseuses de Delphes
Royal Flemish Philharmonic, Daniele Callegari (conductor)
5:29 AM
Hammerschmidt, Andreas (1611/12-1675)
Erster Fleiß (Suite in D minor for gambas)
Hesperion XX, Jordi Savall (director)
5:45 AM
Tchaikovsky, Peter Ilyich [1840-1893]
Romeo and Juliet (fantasy overture)
Polish Radio Symphony Orchestra, Jerzy Maksymiuk (conductor)
6:02 AM
Ernest Chausson (1855-1899)
Poeme, Op 25 (version for violin, string quartet and piano)
Philippe Graffin (violin), Jorgen Larsen (piano), Skampa Quartet
6:17 AM
Mozart, Wolfgang Amadeus (1756-1791)
Sonata in B flat major, K.281
Ingo Dannhorn (piano).
Petroc Trelawny presents Radio 3's classical breakfast show, featuring listener requests.
Email 3breakfast@bbc.co.uk.
Ian Skelly with Essential Classics - the best in classical music.
0930 Your ideas for companion pieces on the Essential Classics playlist.
1010 Time Traveller - A quirky slice of cultural history
1050 Each day this week the actor Niamh Cusack, currently starring as Lady Macbeth with the RSC in Stratford, reveals the cultural influences that have inspired and shaped her life and career.
It was an offer Robert Schumann only wished he could have refused. But lacking other job opportunities, the composer reluctantly accepted Dusseldorf's offer of the post of Director of Music, with responsibility not only for a semi-professional orchestra, but also for a choir. All this week Donald Macleod looks at Schumann's Dusseldorf years and the creative stimulus this move provided for the composer, his triumphs as well as his many failures. In less than five years, Robert would write some third of his entire output, composing concertos, choral works and symphonies. Despite the composer's tragic illness, he lost none of his powers of invention, and was indeed on the brink of enjoying both popular as well as critical success.
In today's programme, the composer develops an unhealthy interest in table-tapping and séances, whilst also writing a Mass and a Requiem. Donald Macleod recounts the remarkable story of his Violin Concerto (unearthed, it is claimed, partly through psychic activity), and the Schumanns' successful tour of Holland, where they discovered that Robert's music was almost as well known as at home. Despite ominous signs of declining mental and physical health, the Holland tour will end with popular acclaim, and also a baffling question from the Queen of Holland: "And are you musical, too?"!
Mass, Op. 147 (Tota pulchra es, Maria; Offertorium)
Cologne Chamber Chorus
Peter Neumann, director
Violin Concerto in D minor
Christian Tetzlaff, violin
Frankfurt Radio Symphony Orchestra
Paavo Järvi, conductor
Märchenerzählungen, Op. 132 (movts 1 & 2)
Adrien Boisseau, viola
Pierre Genisson, clarinet
Gaspard Dehaene, piano
Introduction and Concert Allegro, Op. 134
Orchestra dell'Accademia Nazionale di Santa Cecilia
Jan Lisiescki, piano
Antonio Pappano, conductor.
This week, Radio 3 Lunchtimes have been dipping into the New Town Concerts which were founded in the 1960s as a subscription series with the intention "to light up the 49 weeks of musical darkness over the winter months between one Edinburgh International Festival and the next". Gareth Williams presents the Castalian String Quartet who play quartets by Joseph Haydn and Robert Schumann.
Castalian String Quartet
Haydn: String Quartet in D minor Op.76'2
Schumann: String Quartet in A major Op.41'3.
Penny Gore introduces Léo Delibes' Lakmé, a story of doomed love in late-19th-century British India, where Hindus were often forced to practise their religion in secret. When Lakmé is spotted by a young officer called Gerald near the secret Brahmin temple at which her father Nilakantha is High Priest, though wary, she is immediately attracted to him. Nilakantha is furious that Gerald has profaned his temple, and in retribution he forces Lakmé to lure him into revealing himself. When Lakmé, with her captivating voice, sings the Bell Song in the bustling marketplace, Gerald appears and Nilakantha stabs him. Gerald is tended to in a secret forest hideaway by Lakmé's servant Hadji. Once he has been nursed back to health, Lakmé brings water from a sacred spring, so that the couple can make their love eternal. But duty calls, Gerald has second thoughts and Lakmé poisons herself by eating a leaf from the poisonous datura tree.
In a performance from Malmö Opera, Philippe Auguin conducts the Malmö Opera Orchestra and Chorus, with a cast including Svetlana Moskalenko, Leonardo Ferrando and Taras Shtonda.
Lakmé ..... Svetlana Moskalenko (soprano)
Gérald ..... Leonardo Ferrando (tenor)
Nilakantha ..... Taras Shtonda (bass)
Mallika ..... Matilda Paulsson (mezzo-soprano)
Ellen ..... Julie Mathevet (soprano)
Rose ..... Laine Quist (soprano)
Frédéric ..... Jakob Högström (baritone)
Mistress Bentson ..... Maria Streijffert (contralto)
Hajdi ..... Eric Lavoipierre (bass)
Fortune-teller ..... Tobias Nilsson (tenor)
A Chinese merchant ..... Jacob Wistrand (tenor)
Malmö Opera Chorus
Malmö Opera Orchestra
Philippe Auguin (conductor)
And at 4.05pm Penny Gore continues this week's focus on recent recordings by the Hamburg-based NDR Elbphilharmonie Orchestra.
In the 40th-anniversary year of the competition, Penny Gore presents highlights from this year's Young Musician string category finalists, all hoping to get through to the Grand Final on 13th May. In today's programme we hear from guitarist Torrin Williams.
Sean Rafferty presents a lively mix of music, chat and arts news. His guests include rising star of the saxophone Jess Gillam, who performs live in the studio before the launch of a new BBC podcast she is presenting.
In Tune's specially curated playlist: an eclectic mix of music, featuring music by Mendelssohn, Bruckner sung by Polyphony, Dvorak's Serenade for Strings and Clement Doucet's playful take on Wagner's Tristan and Isolde.
Recorded at Wigmore Hall, London on Tuesday 3 April 2018
Theatre of the Ayre, directed by Elizabeth Kenny, perform works by Monteverdi and his contemporaries.
Claudio Monteverdi: Chiome d'oro from Settimo libro de madrigali
Tarquinio Merula: Ciaconna
Giulio Caccini: O che felice giorno; Amarilli, mia bella
Giovanni Fontana: Trio Sonata No 8 in D minor
Sigismondo D'India: Cruda Amarilli; Ancidetemi pur (Lamento di Giasone)
Marco Uccellini: Sonata decima detta La Rinalda
Claudio Monteverdi: Chi vole aver felice e lieto il core
INTERVAL
Antonio Vivaldi: Trio Sonata in D minor Op 1 No 12 RV63 'La follia'
Sigismondo D'India: La mia Filli crudel; Voi bacciatrici; Langue al vostro languir
Francesca Caccini: Lasciatemi qui solo
Marco Uccellini: Sonata ottava detta La Torella
Sigismondo D'India: Se tu, Silvio crudel, mi saettasti
Theatre of the Ayre:
Elizabeth Kenny director, lute
Rodolfo Richter, violin
Jane Gordon, violin
Robert Howarth, harpsichord
Joanne Lunn, soprano
Anna Starushkevych, mezzo-soprano
Nicholas Mulroy, tenor
Nick Pritchard, tenor
Giles Underwood, bass-baritone
Monteverdi and his followers unleashed a musical revolution, ditching old rules to create compositions filled with spine-tingling expression and powerful human emotions.
Former Bishop Richard Holloway, author of My Father's Wake Kevin Toolis and palliative care consultant Kathryn Mannix join Philip Dodd to consider mortality. "In this world nothing can be said to be certain except death and taxes" Benjamin Franklin once wrote, but as we face the final curtain what can death teach us about ourselves and the ones we love?
Richard Holloway is a writer, broadcaster and cleric, formerly Bishop of Edinburgh. His books include A Little History of Religion and Leaving Alexandria: A Memoir of Faith and Doubt.
Kathryn Mannix is a pioneer of palliative medicine, who has worked in hospices, hospitals and patients' homes, helping enhance people's quality of life as they near death. Kathryn started the UK's first CBT clinic exclusively for palliative care patients. Her new book With the End in Mind: Dying, Death and Wisdom in an Age of Denial explores the process of dying.
Kevin Toolis is a BAFTA winning filmmaker who has encountered death often in his work as a foreign correspondent in places of famine, war and plague all around the world. In his memoir My Father's Wake: How the Irish Teach us to Live, Love and Die Kevin asks 'Why have we lost our way with death?' He offers both an intimate account of his father's death and a history of the Irish way of dying.
Producer: Debbie Kilbride.
Tony Blair's former spokesman, on how Gustave Flaubert's novel gave him a lifetime love of French culture. "It is a love that has endured. I like reading French, speaking French, listening to French. Every year of my adult life, I have spent a part of it in France, and the older I get, the more freedom I seem to have to go there, and so the more I exploit that freedom."
Producer: Smita Patel.
Max's choice new musical cuts this evening include the hypnotically resonant tones of harpist Rhodri Davies, the extreme reverberations of cellist Okkyung Lee, and the shimmering ambience of Grouper.
Plus: protest music from composer Philip Venables, an ascension song from Reverend Utah Smith, and a blast from the past in the form of the very first release on Apple Records.
Produced by Jack Howson for Reduced Listening.
Catriona Young presents a programme of Gurney, Sally Beamish and Walton from the 2014 BBC Proms.
12:31 AM
Gurney, Ivor [1890-1937]
War elegy for orchestra
BBC Symphony Orchestra, Martyn Brabbins (conductor)
12:45 AM
Beamish, Sally [b.1956]
The Singing - concerto for accordion and orchestra
James Crabb (accordion), BBC Symphony Orchestra, Martyn Brabbins (conductor)
1:07 AM
Rameau, Jean-Philippe [1683-1764]
Pieces de clavecin - Conversations of the muses
James Crabb (accordion)
1:12 AM
Walton, William [1902-1983]
Symphony No 1 in B flat minor
BBC Symphony Orchestra, Martyn Brabbins (conductor)
1:57 AM
Shostakovich, Dmitri (1906-1975)
Violin Sonata, Op 134
Vesko Eschkenazy (violin), Ludmil Angelov (piano)
2:31 AM
Sullivan, Arthur (1842-1900)
Symphony in E major 'Irish'
BBC Philharmonic, Richard Hickox (conductor)
3:07 AM
Schubert, Franz [1797-1828]
Piano Sonata in A minor, D.845, Op 42
Louis Schwizgebel (piano)
3:44 AM
Cozzolani, Suor Chiara Margarita (1602-c.1677)
O quam bonus es - motet for 2 voices (Si Lodano le Piaghe di Christo & le Mamelle Della Madonna)
Cappella Artemisia, Candace Smith (director)
3:55 AM
Weber, Carl Maria von (1786-1826)
Clarinet Concertino in E flat major, Op 26
Hannes Altrov (clarinet), Estonian National Symphony Orchestra, Paul Mägi (conductor)
4:05 AM
Reicha, Antoine (1770-1836)
Trio for French horns (Op.82)
Jozef Illes, Jaroslan Snobl, Jan Budzak (french horns)
4:15 AM
Grainger, Percy (1882-1961)
Après un rêve
Leslie Howard (piano)
4:19 AM
Telemann, Georg Philipp (1681-1767)
Essercizii Musici (trio No 2)
Camerata Köln: Rainer Zipperling (solo viola da gamba), Ghislaine Wauters (continuo viola da gamba), Harald Hoeren (harpsichord)
4:31 AM
Kuula, Toivo (1883-1918)
Prelude and Fugue for orchestra, Op 10 (1909)
Finnish Radio Symphony Orchestra, Pertti Pekkanen (conductor)
4:41 AM
Mozart, Wolfgang Amadeus (1756-1791)
Rondo in A minor, K.511 for piano
Kristian Bezuidenhout (fortepiano)
4:51 AM
Britten, Benjamin (1913-1976)
Hymn to St Cecilia for chorus, Op 27
BBC Singers, David Hill (conductor)
5:02 AM
Kodaly, Zoltán (1882-1967)
Adagio
Morten Carlsen (viola), Sergej Osadchuk (piano)
5:11 AM
Schickhard, Johann Christian (c.1682-c.1760)
Sonata in C major for flute and harpsichord
Vladislav Brunner jr. (flute), Herta Madarova (harpsichord)
5:21 AM
Alpaerts, Flor (1876-1954)
Avondmuziek
I Solisti del Vento, Ivo Hadermann (conductor)
5:31 AM
Milhaud, Darius (1892-1974)
Le Globe-trotter, Op 358
CBC Vancouver Orchestra, Mario Bernardi (conductor)
5:50 AM
Arensky, Anton Stepanovich (1861-1906)
Suite No 2 for 2 pianos, Op 23, 'Silhouettes'
James Anagnoson, Leslie Kinton (pianos)
6:07 AM
Bach, Johann Sebastian (1685-1750)
Suite for orchestra No 3 in D major, BWV.1068)
Erik Niord Larsen, Roar Broström (oboe), Ole Edvard Antonsen, Lasse Rossing, Jens Petter Antonsen (trumpet), Rolf Cato Raade (timpani), Risör Festival Strings, Andrew Manze (conductor).
Petroc Trelawny presents Radio 3's classical breakfast show, featuring listener requests.
Email 3breakfast@bbc.co.uk.
Ian Skelly with Essential Classics - the best in classical music.
0930 Your ideas for companion pieces on the Essential Classics playlist.
1010 Time Traveller - A quirky slice of cultural history
1050 Each day this week the actor Niamh Cusack, currently starring as Lady Macbeth with the RSC in Stratford, reveals the cultural influences that have inspired and shaped her life and career.
It was an offer Robert Schumann only wished he could have refused. But lacking other job opportunities, the composer reluctantly accepted Dusseldorf's offer of the post of Director of Music, with responsibility not only for a semi-professional orchestra, but also for a choir. All this week Donald Macleod looks at Schumann's Dusseldorf years and the creative stimulus this move provided for Schumann, his triumphs as well as his many failures. In less than five years, Robert would write some third of his entire output, composing concertos, choral works and symphonies. Despite the composer's tragic illness, he lost none of his powers of invention, and was indeed on the brink of enjoying both popular as well as critical success.
In this final episode, Donald recounts the tragic events leading up to Schumann's voluntary admission to an asylum, from which he would never reappear. Enraptured by the voices of angels, and later tormented by demons, Schumann frantically composes a set of piano variations on a theme dictated to him by an 'angel'. Even the regime at Endenich did not put a complete stop to his urge to compose, or at least review his compositions. Meanwhile, for Clara and her new friend and supporter Johannes Brahms there is some measure of consolation in playing through some of Robert's music.
Theme and Variations, Wo024
Andras Schiff, piano
Scenes from Goethe's Faust, Wo0 3 (Overture; Garten; Dom)
Bavarian Radio Symphony Chorus and Orchestra
Daniel Harding, conductor
Violin Fantasy, Op. 131
Frankfurt Radio Symphony Orchestra
Christian Tetzlaff, violin
Paavo Jarvi, conductor
Gesänge der Fruhe, Op. 133
Maurizio Pollini, piano
Requiem, Op. 148 (Requiem aeternam)
Chorus Musicus Koln & Das Neue Orchester
Christoph Spering, conductor.
The Cremona Quartet, the Casals Quartet and the Castalian String Quartet perform a selection of works from Puccini, Beethoven and Brahms from the New Town Concert series at the Queen's Hall, Edinburgh. The New Town Concerts were founded in the 1960s as a subscription series with the intention "to light up the 49 weeks of musical darkness over the winter months between one Edinburgh International Festival and the next". Gareth Williams presents.
Cremona Quartet
Puccini: Crisantemi for string quartet
Casals Quartet
Beethoven: Sonata Op 14/1
Castalian String Quartet
Brahms: Quintet no. 1 in F major Op.88.
Penny Gore concludes a week of live concert recordings featuring the NDR Elbphilharmonie Orchestra. Today, music by Argentinian composer Alberto Ginastera.
Ginastera:
Glosses sobre tempes de Pau Casals, Op 4
Harp Concerto, Op 25
Estudios sinfonicos, Op 35 (European premiere)
Estancia, Op 8 - ballet suite
Xavier de Maistre, harp
NDR Elbphilharmonie Orchestra
Carlos Miguel Prieto (conductor).
In the 40th-anniversary year of the competition, Penny Gore presents highlights from this year's Young Musician string category finalists, all hoping to get through to the Grand Final on 13th May. In today's programme we hear from cellist Maxim Calver.
Sean Rafferty presents a lively mix of music, chat and arts news. His guests include the National Youth Folk Ensemble, who perform live before their gig at Cecil Sharp House, and jazz singer Kurt Elling, who has a new CD out.
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 Philharmonic Hall, Liverpool
The RLPO plays Wagner, Elgar and Schumann.
Wagner: Overture, Rienzi
Elgar: Cello Concerto
8.15: Interval
8.35: Schumann: Symphony No. 2
Narek Hakhnazaryan, cello
RLPO
Ben Gernon, conductor
Young Armenian cellist Narek Hakhnazaryan caused quite a stir at the 2016 Proms. Tonight, he plays Elgar's Cello Concerto, with its blend of poetry, passion and very English nostalgia. Shropshire-born Ben Gernon is another fast-rising talent, and he brings Wagner's barnstorming Rienzi overture, and Schumann's Second Symphony, basically a coded love-letter to the composer's wife, to complete the programme.
The Verb celebrates the centenary of the poet W.S. Graham - exploring his language and his relationship with Cornwall. Ian McMillan presents new poetry inspired by Graham from Rachael Boast and Penelope Shuttle, songs inspired by the Cornish landscape from Gwenno, specially commissioned work from Gerry Diver ('The Speech Project') and a collaboration between Bob Devereux and Adrian O'Reilly.
Presenter: Ian McMillan
Producer: Faith Lawrence.
The poet and playwright describes how he was influenced by the comic novel "Pyramids". "When I opened the first few pages...it is no exaggeration to say my whole world changed," he recalls. As a twelve-year-old Nigerian migrant to London, Ellams found that Pratchett's hilarious fantasy world helped him in his transition to his new homeland. "If I could give myself and belong so completely and entirely to his world, which mirrored Britain, then perhaps I could belong to Britain itself."
Producer: Smita Patel.
Buena Vista Social Club star Eliades Ochoa is in session with Lopa Kothari for Radio 3's new world music programme, also featuring a Road Trip to Zimbabwe, and a Mixtape from TV travel presenter Simon Reeve.
Eliades Ochoa is known as 'Mr Chan Chan' in Cuba - he was a lead vocalist and guitar player for the original Buena Vista Social Club sessions in Havana in 1996 - and now, in his 70s, he has launched a new solo career. He performs four classic songs in this solo acoustic session, and introduces a track by one of his own heroes, Benny Moré.
Simon Reeve is an author and TV presenter whose travel features have taken him to the most remote parts of the world. He shares with us some of the music he has picked up on the way, with an all-Africa Mixtape with tracks from Ethiopia, Congo and Egypt.
As Zimbabwe emerges from its years under Robert Mugabe, and Zimbabwe's exiled musicians start returning to their homeland, singer and traditional mbira player Hope Masike introduces tracks that reflect Zimbabwe's rich heritage, and its lively present.
Listen to the world - Music Planet, Radio 3's new world music show presented by Lopa Kothari and Kathryn Tickell, brings us the best roots-based music from across the globe - with live sessions from the biggest international names and the freshest emerging talent; classic tracks and new releases; and every week a bespoke Road Trip from a different corner of the globe, taking us to the heart of its music and culture. Plus special guest Mixtapes and gems from the BBC archives. Whether it's traditional Indian ragas, Malian funk, UK folk or Cuban jazz, you'll hear it on Music Planet.