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/
Jonathan Swain presents an archive concert from the 2014 Wratislavia Cantans International Festival in Poland.
1:01 AM
Grzegorz G Gorczycki (1667-1734)
Completorium
Aldona Bartnik (soprano), Agnieszka Ryman (soprano), Matthew Venner (countertenor), Maciej Gocman (tenor), Tomás Král (bass), Jaromír Nosek (bass), Period Instruments Ensemble, Andrzrej Kosendiak (director)
1:24 AM
Grzegorz G Gorczycki (1667-1734)
Conductus funebris
Aldona Bartnik (soprano), Agnieszka Ryman (soprano), Matthew Venner (countertenor), Maciej Gocman (tenor), Tomás Král (bass), Jaromír Nosek (bass), Period Instruments Ensemble, Andrzrej Kosendiak (director)
1:41 AM
Grzegorz G Gorczycki (1667-1734)
Missa Rorate caeli
Aldona Bartnik (soprano), Agnieszka Ryman (soprano), Matthew Venner (countertenor), Maciej Gocman (tenor), Tomás Král (bass), Jaromír Nosek (bass), Period Instruments Ensemble, Andrzrej Kosendiak (director)
1:53 AM
Grzegorz G Gorczycki (1667-1734)
Litaniae de Providentia Divina
Aldona Bartnik (soprano), Agnieszka Ryman (soprano), Matthew Venner (countertenor), Maciej Gocman (tenor), Tomás Král (bass), Jaromír Nosek (bass), Period Instruments Ensemble, Andrzrej Kosendiak (director)
2:03 AM
Grzegorz G Gorczycki (1667-1734)
Te lucis ante terminum, from 'Completorium'
Aldona Bartnik (soprano), Agnieszka Ryman (soprano), Matthew Venner (countertenor), Maciej Gocman (tenor), Tomás Král (bass), Jaromír Nosek (bass), Period Instruments Ensemble, Andrzrej Kosendiak (director)
2:06 AM
Panufnik, Andrzej [1914-1991]
Lullaby, for 29 strings and two harps
Polish National Radio Symphony Orchestra, Christoph Campestrini (conductor)
2:14 AM
Szymanowski, Karol (1882-1937)
Variations on a Polish Folk Theme, Op 10
Jerzy Godziszewski (piano)
2:34 AM
Janacek, Leos [1854-1928]
Taras Bulba - rhapsody for orchestra
Warsaw Philharmonic Orchestra; Miguel Gomez Martinez (conductor)
3:01 AM
Nielsen, Carl (1865-1931)
Symphony No 4, Op 29, 'The Inextinguishable'
Danish National Radio Symphony Orchestra, Michael Schønwandt (conductor)
3:38 AM
Mussorgsky, Modest [1839-1881]
Pictures From an Exhibition for piano
Fazil Say (piano)
4:11 AM
Haydn, Joseph (1732-1809)
String Quartet in D major, Op 64 No 5, 'The Lark'
Yggdrasil String Quartet: Fredrik Paulsson & Per Ohman (violins), Robert Westlund (viola), Per Nystrom (cello)
4:29 AM
Stanford, (Sir) Charles Villiers (1852-1924)
The Blue Bird - from 8 Partsongs, Op119
BBC Singers, Stephen Cleobury (conductor)
4:33 AM
Bach, Johann Sebastian (1685-1750)
Suite in A minor, BWV 818a
Wolfgang Glüxam (harpsichord)
4:47 AM
Brahms, Johannes (1833-1897) [text Friedrich Schiller]
Nänie, Op 82
Oslo Philharmonic Choir and Orchestra, Rafael Frühbeck de Burgos (conductor)
5:01 AM
Schreker, Franz [1878-1934]
Fantastic Overture, Op 15
BBC Philharmonic, Vassily Sinaisky (conductor)
5:11 AM
Albicastro, Henricus (fl.1700-06)
Concerto a 4, Op 7 No 2
Ensemble 415, Chiara Banchini (violin & director)
5:20 AM
Desprez, Josquin (1440-1521)
Qui habitat in adjutorio Altissimi, for 24 voices
BBC Singers, Stephen Cleobury (conductor)
5:28 AM
Kats-Chernin, Elena [b.1957]
Russian Rag
Donna Coleman (piano)
5:34 AM
Strozzi, Barbara (1619-1677)
Hor che Apollo è a Theti in seno'
Musica Fiorita: Susanne Rydén (soprano), Enrico Parizzi & Roberto Falcone (violins), Rebeka Rusó (viola da gamba), Rafael Bonavita (theorbo), Daniela Dolci (harpsichord/director)
5:47 AM
Wagner, Richard (1813-1883)
Tannhäuser - Overture & Venusberg music (concert version)
Orchestre du Conservatoire de Musique du Québec, Franz Paul Decker (conductor)
6:09 AM
Scriabin, Alexander [1872-1915]
Piano Sonata No 3 in F sharp minor, Op 23
Daniil Trifonov (piano)
6:29 AM
Scarlatti, Domenico (1685-1757)
Stabat mater in C minor, for 10 voices, organ and continuo
Danish National Radio Chorus, Søren Christian Vestergaard (organ), Bo Holten (conductor)
6:53 AM
Saint-Saëns, Camille (1835-1921)
Le cygne (The Swan) - from 'Le carnaval des animaux'
Henry-David Varema (cello), Cornelia Lootsmann (harp)
6:56 AM
Lindberg, Oskar (1887-1955) [lyrics Johan Ludvig Runeberg]
Morgonen (The Morning)
Swedish Radio Choir (women's voices only), Eric Ericson Chamber Choir, Maria Wieslander (piano), Gustav Sjökvist (conductor).
Elizabeth Alker presents Radio 3's classical breakfast show, featuring listener requests.
Email 3breakfast@bbc.co.uk.
Presented by Sara Mohr-Pietsch
Sara meets two artists who reveal how they discovered, and continue to cultivate their distinctive musical voices: the Serbian pianist Tamara Stefanovich, who plays the music of Hans Abrahamsen at the London Sinfonietta's 50th anniversary concert this month, and the Canadian bass-baritone Gerald Finley, who is currently singing the role of Scarpia in Puccini's Tosca at Covent Garden.
And Kate Molleson explores Scots dialect in song, the first in a series about language and music around the British Isles. Focusing on the east and central belt of Scotland, Kate meets the writer James Robertson and singers Scott Gardiner, Aidan Moffat, Karine Polwart and Sheena Wellington, and discovers a language which is rich in sound and full of resonances for today.
To mark Australia Day on 26th January, Artistic Director of the Australian Chamber Orchestra Richard Tognetti chooses some of his favourite pieces and performers, including works by Bach, Haydn, Mozart, Beethoven, Grainger, Lutoslawski, Peter Sculthorpe and Brett Dean.
Matthew Sweet presents a selection of film music inspired by ideas of patriotism and promoted by this week's new release, Richard Linklater's 'Last Flag Flying'.
Amid requests from listeners for music in all styles of jazz, Alyn Shipton includes a track with the vintage sounds of drummer and bandleader Ben Pollack who helped give Benny Goodman his start in New York.
Artist Dexter GordonKevin Le Gendre presents a drum and saxophone performance by award winning jazz duo Binker and Moses recorded in concert at the Gateshead Jazz Festival.
Tonight's opera from the Met is Puccini's verismo opera Tosca, which tells the tale of the love between Tosca and Cavaradossi pitted against the plotting of the evil chief of police, Baron Scarpia. A top cast includes Sonya Yoncheva as Tosca and Vittorio Grigolo as her doomed lover Cavaradossi. Emmanuel Villaume conducts.
Tosca ..... Sonya Yoncheva (soprano)
Cavaradossi ..... Vittorio Grigolo (tenor)
Scarpia ..... Željko Lučić (baritone)
Sacristan ..... Patrick Carfizzi (bass-baritone)
Angelotti ..... Christian Zaremba (bass)
Spoletta ..... Brenton Ryan (tenor)
Sciarrone ..... Christopher Job (bass-baritone)
A Jailer ..... Richard Bernstein (bass)
A Shepherd Boy ..... Davida Dayle (soprano)
Metropolitan Opera Chorus and Orchestra
Emmanuel Villaume (conductor).
Tom McKinney introduces music by Peter Eötvos including music for percussion and orchestra and his opera The Golden Dragon, a controversial and gritty indictment of attitudes towards migration and to the exploitation of those forced to find an existence on the extreme fringes of society. The opera was given last year to critical acclaim by Music Theatre Wales and is inspired by an allegorical play by Roland Schimmelpfennig and Aesop's fable of "The Cricket and The Ant". It is "part comedy and part tragedy", a quasi Brechtian drama in style, with the singers performing multiple role types and telling many stories, all of which converge to convey a moving and sometimes very shocking, visceral comment on the human potential for brutality. The programme includes an interview with the director Michael McCarthy.
Peter Eötvos: Speaking Drums (2012/13) for percussion and orchestra
BBC Philharmonic / Juanjo Mena (conductor)/ Martin Grubinger (percussion)
(Recorded in Gasteig, Munich on March 16 2017 )
Peter Eötvos: The Golden Dragon (2013/14)
(Recorded at the Birmingham Repertory Theatre, 3rd October 2017)
Cast:
Llio Evans (The Little One)
Lucy Schaufer (Old Cook, Granddaughter, The Ant, Hans, Chinese Mother)
Andrew Mackenzie-Wicks (Waitress, young Asian, Grandfather, The Cricket, Chinese Aunt)
Daniel Norman (Old Asian, Eva - the brunette air stewardess, the friend of the granddaughter, Chinese Father)
Johnny Herford (An Asian, Inga- the blonde air stewardess, Chinese Uncle)
The Music Theatre Wales Ensemble conducted by Geoffrey Paterson.
A crossover king of the 1960s, saxophonist Charles Lloyd combined jazz, rock and meditation in a spell-binding quartet featuring new star pianist Keith Jarrett. Geoffrey Smith celebrates Lloyd's remarkable career on the eve of his 80th birthday.
Chico HamiltonHindu philosophy links John Foulds's Three Mantras and Olivier Messiaen's Turangalîla Symphony in a concert from the 2015 BBC Proms with the BBC Philharmonic conducted by Juanjo Mena. John Shea presents.
1:01 AM
John Foulds (1880-1939)
Three Mantras
London Symphony Chorus (women's voices), BBC Philharmonic Orchestra, Juanjo Mena (conductor)
1:23 AM
Olivier Messiaen (1908-1992)
Turangalîla Symphony
Steven Osborne (piano), Valerie Hartmann-Claverie (soloist), BBC Philharmonic Orchestra, Juanjo Mena (conductor)
2:35 AM
Beethoven, Ludwig van (1770-1827)
String Quartet in B flat major, Op 18 No 6
Psophos Quartet
3:01 AM
Poulenc, Francis (1899-1963)
Sextet for piano and winds
Zoltán Kocsis (piano), Anita Szabó (flute), Béla Horváth (oboe), Zsolt Szatmári (clarinet), Pál Bokor (bassoon), Tamás Zempléni (horn)
3:18 AM
Rameau, Jean-Philippe [1683-1764]
Pygmalion - acte de ballet
Elodie Fonnard (soprano), Rachel Redmond (soprano), Reinoud van Mechelen (tenor), Yannis François (bass baritone), European Union Baroque Orchestra, Paul Agnew (director)
4:02 AM
Debussy, Claude (1862-1918)
Hommage à Rameau (No 2 from Images, Set 1)
Walter Gieseking (piano)
4:09 AM
Elgar, Edward (1857-1934)
Serenade for Strings in E minor, Op 20
Sofia Soloists Chamber Ensemble, Plamen Djurov (conductor)
4:20 AM
Nielsen, Carl (1865-1931)
Serenata in vano for clarinet, horn, bassoon, cello and double bass (FS.68)
Kari Krikku (clarinet), Jonathan Williams (horn), Per Hannisdahl (bassoon), Øystein Sonstad (cello), Katrine Øigaard (double bass)
4:28 AM
Norgard, Per (b.1932)
Pastorale for string trio (from the film 'Babette's Feast')
Trio Aristos
4:34 AM
Stravinsky, Igor (1882-1971)
Suite italienne for violin and piano (1925)
Alena Baeva (violin), Giuzai Karieva (piano)
4:52 AM
Castello, Dario (fl.1621-1629)
Sonata XII, a due soprani e trombone
Musica Fiata Köln
5:01 AM
Mozart, Wolfgang Amadeus [1756-1791]
Don Giovanni - Overture
Prague Chamber orchestra (without conductor)
5:07 AM
Bruckner, Anton (1824-1896)
Ave Maria; Christus factus est; Locus iste (motets)
Sokkelund Choir, Morten Schuldt Jensen (conductor)
5:21 AM
Vivaldi, Antonio (1678-1741)
Concerto in F for violin, 2 oboes, 2 horns, bassoon and cello, RV 571
Zefira Valova (violin), Anna Starr (oboe), Markus Muller (oboe), Anneke Scott (horn), Joseph Walters (horn), Moni Fischaleck (bassoon), Les Ambassadeurs, Alexis Kossenko (director)
5:31 AM
Strauss, Richard [1864-1949]
Befreit, Op 39 No 4
Christianne Stotijn (mezzo-soprano), Joseph Breinl (piano)
5:36 AM
Yanev, Petar (b. 19??) (20th century Bulgarian)
Rhythms in Re
Eolina Quartet , Petar Yanev (bagpipes)
5:43 AM
Bartók, Béla (1881-1945) arr. Arthur Willner
Romanian Folk Dances from Sz56
I Cameristi Italiani
5:50 AM
Hammerschmidt, Andreas (1611/12-1675)
Suite in G minor/G major for winds - from the collection 'Ester Fleiß'
Hesperion XX, Jordi Savall (director)
6:05 AM
Rachmaninov, Sergey (1873-1943)
Suite No 2 for 2 pianos, Op 17
Ouellet-Murray Duo (piano duo)
6:30 AM
Mozart, Wolfgang Amadeus (1756-1791)
Symphony No 38 in D major, K504, 'Prague'
Bergen Philharmonic Orchestra, Ivor Bolton (conductor).
Elizabeth Alker presents Radio 3's classical breakfast show, featuring listener requests.
Email 3breakfast@bbc.co.uk.
Sarah Walker with music on a pastoral theme from Rameau, Liszt and Vivaldi. Plus her Sunday escape is the Meditation from Massenet's opera Thaïs, and there's also music from composers as varied as Arthur Sullivan, Bernard Rogers, Samuel Coleridge Taylor and musical archaeologist Anna Friederike Potengowski.
Eleanor Rosamund Barraclough is steeped in Viking lore. She travels through the icy landscapes of the Far North in the footsteps of those Norse "far travellers" who have left us their wonderful poetic stories of kings and trolls and dragons. She's an Associate Professor at Durham University and an AHRC Radio 3 New Generation Thinker, and her fieldwork has taken her pretty much everywhere the Vikings went: through Greenland, Norway, Iceland, Sweden, and Orkney. Recently she went to stay on the Arctic island of Svalbard, where in 24-hour darkness she encountered a family of polar bears.
Eleanor Barraclough's music list full of snow and ice - glittering, shimmering music - from the Norwegian composer Frode Fjellheim and Sibelius's 5th Symphony, through Eriks Esenvalds' "Northern Lights", to Martin Carthy, singing "Lady Franklin's Lament". She ends with music by Geoffrey Burgon that will resonate with anyone growing up at the end of the last century: the theme tune to the BBC dramatization of Narnia.
Produced by Elizabeth Burke
A Loftus production for BBC Radio 3.
From Wigmore Hall in London, acclaimed Israeli pianist Inon Barnatan plays music by Bach's Toccata in E minor, Franck's Prelude Choral and Fugue, and Barber's Piano Sonata.
Introduced by Clemency Burton-Hill.
First broadcast, live, on Monday 23 January
Bach: Toccata in E minor, BWV 914
Franck: Prelude, Chorale and Fugue
Barber: Piano Sonata in E flat minor, Op 26
Inon Barnatan (piano).
Lucie Skeaping talks to Prof Armand D'Angour of Jesus College Oxford about the music and poetry of Ancient Greece, from Homer to Mesomedes via Sappho, Euripides, Pindar and Athenaeus.
From St Paul's Cathedral, London, on the Eve of the Conversion of St. Paul the Apostle.
Introit: Saul, Saul, was verfolgst du mich? SWV 415 (Schütz)
Responses: Ayleward
Psalm 149 (Stanford)
First Lesson: Isaiah 49 vv.1-13
Canticles: Wesley in E
Second Lesson: Acts 22 vv.3-16
Anthem: Ascribe unto the Lord (Wesley)
Hymn: Disposer supreme (Hanover)
Organ Voluntary: Fugue in E minor, Op 35 No 1 (Mendelssohn, arr. Smits)
Andrew Carwood (Director of Music)
Simon Johnson (Organist)
First broadcast live on Wednesday 24 January.
Sara Mohr-Pietsch introduces an hour of unmissable choral music. Today, a haunting Requiem by Icelandic master Jon Leifs, plus two contrasting opera choruses by Verdi and Glass.
Tom tunes into the background, exploring what background music really is; telling the surprising story of the Muzak corporation, and discovering that there's a range of background functions that music can have: from the 'furniture music' of Erik Satie to the Stimulus Progression albums used in Lyndon B Johnson's White House. Daniel Barenboim, Julian Lloyd-Webber and Brian Eno help explain the power of and problems with background music.
Lorelei King and John Paul Connolly are looking heavenwards, with poetry and music on the beauty, science and influence of the stars.
Includes poetry by Keats, Whitman, Katherine Mansfield and Gerard Manley Hopkins, plus wise words from theoretical physicist Richard Feynman, and music from John Cage, Vaughan Williams, Kraftwerk and Britten, to name only a few.
Producer Note
This edition of Words and Music celebrates the ancient pastime, art and science of star-gazing, beginning and ending with whatever secret wish upon a star you need to make...
The sheer vastness of the starry height is described for us by Katherine Mansfield and Gerard Manley Hopkins, accompanied by silvery starlit music from Eriks Esenvalds and a violin concerto by Oliver Davis that takes as its inspiration the NASA Voyager probe, speeding through the galaxies. And Jerry Goldsmith's expansive Star Trek theme morphs into Holst's "Venus" - we know now it's a planet, but it was known to ancient civilisations as both the morning and the evening star...
Poetry from Louise Gluck and prose from Thomas Hardy express the feeling of human insignificance when set against the rolling night sky, as Jennifer Higdon's piano quintet "Scenes from the Poet's Dreams" races through stars, and as Robert Frost, underdog, leaps and barks with the great overdog - Canis Major.
Walt Whitman's poetic impatience with the learned astronomer's facts and figures is understandable perhaps, but those astronomers of old, the Magi, embraced both science and theology in their quest for the Star of Bethlehem. And staying with the theology for a while, Mary was commonly known as Our Lady, Star of the Sea in medieval times - a symbol of hope and guidance.
But back to the science - Philip Glass wrote his piece "Orion" as an evening-long piece for the 2004 Athens Olympics, as the constellation is visible from both hemispheres. We hear part of "Australia", complete with didgeridoo, accompanying Sir Patrick Moore with a brief excerpt from "The Sky at Night" in which he runs through part of his own "Caldwell Catalogue" of star clusters, nebulae and galaxies. Theoretical physicist Richard Feynman has no objection, as you might expect, to speaking of the wondrous science of astronomy, and we have an ... unexpected contribution from Professor Stephen Hawking as well. The words in the electro-pop offering from Kraftwerk tell us that "From the deeps of space radio stars are transmitting pulsars and quasars". Christine Paice's poem "A star against the eye" was written for National Science Week 2010 - "Science Made Marvellous".
A change of pace next with music by William Herschel, who not only was a composer of numerous symphonies, sonatas and concertos but was also Court Astronomer to George III and the discoverer of the planet Uranus. I have also included part of "Atlas eclipticalis" by John Cage, a piece of music that is made by superimposing musical staves over star charts, He writes that the piece is "a heavenly illustration of nirvana," and a performance "should be like looking into the sky on a clear night and seeing the stars."
We can't ignore the effects of stars on lovers, courtesy of Shakespeare, Keats and Puccini's aria from Tosca, whereas the hope or perhaps fear that the movements of the stars affects human fate is expressed by Siegfried Sassoon, Peter Grimes in Britten's opera, and in a catalogue of the stars in the zodiac in Vaughan Williams "Sons of Light".
The programme draws towards a close with hymns to the stars of evening, and finally, against a backdrop of Terry Riley's quirky "Sunrise of the Planetary Dream Collector", Louis MacNeice wrestles with the mind-blowing concept that the light from the stars began its journey millennia before we were born, and that we will never see the light that is setting out on that journey right now. Easier perhaps, to wish upon a star than to comprehend one...
In 1933 Franz Werfel's epic novel "The Forty Days of Musa Dagh" was published to huge acclaim. The story of a guerilla army of Armenian villagers holding out against overwhelming Turkish forces on the mountain of Musa Dagh in 1915, before evacuation by French forces to Port Said in Egypt. The mass murder of more than a million Armenians during this period had led to an international outcry during the war and, after 1919, the beginning of a campaign of denial by the Turkish government that succeeded the collapsing Ottoman empire. Germany, former ally of the Ottoman empire, also rejected any guilt by association but the assassination of Talaat Bey, former Ottoman Minister of the Interior and the key architect of the Armenian extermination, who was gunned down in Berlin in 1921 by an Armenian, caused a furore. The subsequent trial became a major media event and exposed the knowledge of the German government about the massacres. The fate of the Armenians was widely discussed and many on the right explicitly linked them with the 'Jewish question' as Hitler rose to power.
Franz Werfel, already a famous poet and well-known author, touring the Middle East in 1929 with his new wife, Alma Mahler, encountered pathetic Armenian refugee children. Their plight was the spark for his vast work. For both Werfel and its many readers "The Forty Days of Musa Dagh" was not just an epic tribute to Armenian resistance and survival but a warning. Werfel's works were burned and banned after Anschluss and in 1938 he and Alma Mahler fled to America. Hollywood's attempts to film it soon after publication began a decades-long campaign of long-distance censorship by the Turkish government. Maria Margaronis tells the extraordinary story of an extraordinary book and its impact as Europe descended into barbarism.
Clemency Burton-Hill presents a performance of Bruckner's mighty 9th Symphony - Daniele Gatti conducts the Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra at the Philharmonie in Berlin. Plus music by Scheidt and Bach performed by Cappella Mariana.
Scheidt: Veni redemptor gentium
Cappella Mariana
Sebastian Knebel (organ)
Vojtěch Semerád (director)
Bruckner: Symphony No 9 in D minor
Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra
Daniele Gatti (conductor)
Bach: Singet dem Herr ein neues Lied, BWV 225
Cappella Mariana
Sebastian Knebel (organ)
Vojtěch Semerád (director).
by Lucy Prebble.
Starring Jessie Buckley, Christine Entwisle, Damien Molony and Samuel West.
"I can tell the difference between who I am and a side effect."
Award-winning chemical romance.
Connie (Jessie Buckley - 'The Last Post', 'Taboo') and Tristan (Damien Molony - 'Crashing', 'Being Human') are taking part in a clinical trial for a new psychoactive drug. So when they start to feel attracted to each other, can they really trust how they feel?
A profound, and funny, play about love, depression and selfhood, winner of the Critics' Circle Award for Best New Play when it was performed at the National Theatre in 2012.
Dr Lorna James .... Christine Entwisle
Connie .... Jessie Buckley
Tristan .... Damien Molony
Dr Toby Sealey .... Samuel West
Composer, Richard Hammarton
Writer, Lucy Prebble
Director, Abigail le Fleming
THE WRITER
Lucy Prebble is a writer for film, television, games and theatre. Before THE EFFECT she wrote the hugely successful ENRON (2010). Her first play, THE SUGAR SYNDROME (2003), won her the George Devine Award and was performed at the Royal Court.
Lucy is an Associate Artist at the Old Vic Theatre.
For television, she is the creator of the TV series SECRET DIARY OF A CALL GIRL. She is Co-Executive Producer and writer on HBO's media mogul drama, SUCCESSION.
THE COMPOSER
Richard Hammarton is a composer and sound designer for Theatre, TV and Film. His work has been heard throughout the UK and Internationally. He was part of the design team that won the Manchester Evening News "Best Design" award for DR FAUSTUS in 2010 and was Sound Designer for the Olivier Award winning play, THE MOUNTAINTOP. He also worked on the Ivor Novello winning RIPPER STREET for TV.
Musica Fiata and La Capella Ducale perform a reconstruction of a mass celebrated in Dresden in 1617 on the 100th anniversary of the Reformation movement, based on works by Michael Praetorius and Heinrich Schütz. Then more music by Schütz - excerpts from his Symphoniae Sacrae II performed by L'Arpeggiata.
Presented by Elin Manahan Thomas.
Schütz/Praetorius: Mass for the Reformation Jubilee (Dresden, 1617)
Schütz: Eine feste Burg ist unser Gott, SWV deest
Schütz: Singet dem Herren ein neues Lied a 8, SWV35
Praetorius: Missa Gantz Teudsch (Kyrie, Gloria)
Schütz: Nun lob, mein Seel, den Herren, SWV41
Praetorius: Wir glauben all an einen Gott
Schütz: Nicht uns, Herr, sondern deinem Namen gib Ehre, SWV43
Schütz: Esaia, dem Propheten, das geschah, SWV496
Praetorius: Christe, du Lamm Gottes
Praetorius: Ach Gott, vom Himmel sieh darein: Das Silber durchs Feuer siebenmal
Schütz: Verleih uns Frieden gnadiglich, SWV372
Schütz: Danket dem Herren, denn er ist freundlich, SWV45
Musica Fiata
La Capella Ducale
Roland Wilson (conductor)
Schütz: Excerpts from Symphoniae Sacrae II, Op.10
Erbarm Dich mein, o Herre Gott, SWV447
Von Gott will ich nicht lassen, SWV366
Céline Scheen (soprano)
Philippe Jaroussky (countertenor)
L'Arpeggiata
Christina Pluhar (director).
John Shea presents a concert of Choral music from Sweden, including works by Sven-David Sandström, JS Bach and Byrd. Performed by the Eric Ericson Chamber Choir and Fredrik Malmberg
12:31 AM
Josquin des Prez [c1440 - 1521]
Ave Maria
Eric Ericson Chamber Choir, Fredrik Malmberg (director)
12:37 AM
Sven-David Sandström [b. 1942]
Ave Maria
Eric Ericson Chamber Choir, Fredrik Malmberg (director)
12:47 AM
Dietrich Buxtehude [1637-1707]
Es ist genug
Eric Ericson Chamber Choir, Fredrik Malmberg (director)
12:50 AM
Sven-David Sandström [b. 1942]
Es ist genug
Eric Ericson Chamber Choir, Fredrik Malmberg (director)
12:58 AM
Catharina Palmér [b.1963]
Dona nobis pacem
Eric Ericson Chamber Choir, Fredrik Malmberg (director)
1:11 AM
William Byrd [1543-1623]
Agnus Dei, from 'Mass for five voices'
Eric Ericson Chamber Choir, Fredrik Malmberg (director)
1:16 AM
Sven-David Sandström [b. 1942]
Der Geist hilft
Eric Ericson Chamber Choir, Fredrik Malmberg (director)
1:25 AM
Johann Sebastian Bach [1685-1750]
Der Geist hilft
Eric Ericson Chamber Choir, Fredrik Malmberg (director)
1:33 AM
Guillaume de Machaut [c.1300-1377]
Sanctus, from 'Missa de Notre Dame'
Eric Ericson Chamber Choir, Fredrik Malmberg (director)
1:36 AM
Frank Martin [1890-1974]
Sanctus, from 'Mass for Double Choir'
Eric Ericson Chamber Choir, Fredrik Malmberg (director)
1:41 AM
Brahms, Johannes [1833-1897]
Piano Quartet No 2 in A major, Op 26
Julian Rachlin (violin), Maxim Rysanov (viola), Torleif Thedén (cello), Itamar Golan (piano)
2:31 AM
Mahler, Gustav (1860-1911)
Symphony No 1 in D major, 'Titan'
Bergen Philharmonic Orchestra, Andrew Litton (conductor)
3:24 AM
Josquin des Prez (c1440 - 1521)
Inviolata, integra et casta es (5-part motet)
Montreal Early Music Studio, Christopher Jackson (Director)
3:30 AM
Kreisler, Fritz (1875-1962)
Praeludium and Allegro in the style of Pugnani
Moshe Hammer (violin), Valerie Tryon (piano)
3:36 AM
Debussy, Claude (1862-1918)
L'isle joyeuse
Jurate Karosaite (piano)
3:43 AM
Mozart, Wolfgang Amadeus (1756-1791)
Die Zauberflöte, K620 (Overture)
Bergen Philharmonic Orchestra, Michael Christie (conductor)
3:50 AM
Byrd, William (c.1543-1623)
Fantasia in D minor for keyboard (MB.28.46)
Aapo Häkkinen (harpsichord)
3:56 AM
Murcia, Santiago de (1673-1739)
Cumbées, Gallardes
Simone Vallerotonda (guitar)
4:02 AM
Debussy, Claude (1862-1918) orch. Brewaeys, Luc (b.1959)
Canope (Canopic Jar) - from Preludes Book II
Royal Flemish Philharmonic, Daniele Callegari (conductor)
4:06 AM
Bach, Johann Sebastian (1685-1750)
Contrapunctus 1 and 2 from 'Die Kunst der Fuge' ('The Art of Fugue')
(Young) Danish String Quartet
4:13 AM
Ravel, Maurice (1875-1937)
Alborada del gracioso (The Jester's Aubade) - from the suite 'Miroirs' (1905)
Bengt-Åke Lundin (piano)
4:20 AM
Haydn, Michael (1737-1806)
Cantata: Lauft, ihr Hirten allzugleich (Run ye shepherds, to the light) for 4 voices, strings and continuo
Wolfgang Brunner, Salzburger Hofmusik Recorded at Kreuzkirche, Herne, Germany on 17 November 1996
4:31 AM
Bach, Johann Sebastian (1685-1750)
Keyboard Concerto No 7 in G minor, BWV 1058
Angela Hewitt (piano), The Norwegian Chamber Orchestra
4:45 AM
Clemens non Papa, Jacobus (ca.1510-1555/6)
Carole magnus eras
Netherlands Chamber Choir, Paul van Nevel (conductor)
4:51 AM
Chopin, Frédéric (1810-1849)
Rondo à la mazur in F major, Op 5
Ludmil Angelov (piano)
5:00 AM
Mozart, Wolfgang Amadeus (1756-1791)
String Quartet in D major, K155
Australian String Quartet
5:10 AM
Stradella, Alessandro (1644-1682)
Ardo, sospiro e piango - duet for soprano, baritone and continuo
Emma Kirkby (soprano), David Thomas (bass), Jakob Lindberg (lute), Anthony Rooley (director and lute)
5:17 AM
Holst, Gustav (1874-1934)
St Paul's Suite, Op 29 No 2
Seoul Chamber Orchestra, Yong-Yun Kim (conductor)
5:31 AM
Rachmaninov, Sergey (1873-1943)
3 pieces from Morceaux de Salon, Op 10: Barcarolle; Romance; Humoresque
Duncan Gifford (piano)
5:44 AM
Cavalli, Francesco (1602-1676)
Dixit Dominus à 8 - from 'Musiche sacre concernenti messa, e salmi concertati con istromenti, imni, antifone et sonate' (Venice 1656)
Balthasar-Neumann-Chor, Balthasar-Neumann-Ensemble, Thomas Hengelbrock (conductor)
5:55 AM
Brahms, Johannes (1833-1897)
Concerto in A minor for violin and cello, Op 102
Bartlomiej Niziol (violin), Adam Klocek (cello), Sinfonia Varsovia, Tomasz Bugaj (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 potential companion pieces for a well-known piece of music.
1010 Time Traveller - A quirky slice of cultural history
1050 Actress Dame Penelope Keith on some of the things that have inspired and influenced her throughout her life and career.
By the time Handel arrived in London in 1710 he was an established composer with five Italian operas under his belt. He took the capital by storm with his first offering for the London stage a year later and over the next three decades Handel composed over 50 operas, all produced in London and starring some of the greatest singers of the Baroque era.
In 1719 the Royal Academy of Music was formed in order to create a more secure footing for the production of Italian opera, which was just the platform Handel needed. Donald Macleod introduces music from the first opera he wrote for the Academy - complete with family feuds, illicit passions and royal tyrants - the second suite created from the music which famously accompanied King George I's progress along the River Thames in 1717 and one of the eleven anthems Handel composed in honour of his patron the first Duke of Chandos.
Aria: Venti turbini (Rinaldo)
David Daniels, countertenor (Rinaldo)
Academy of Ancient Music
Director Christopher Hogwood
Water Music Suite No 2
Akademie für Alte Musik Berlin
Conductor George Kallweit
O Sing unto the Lord
The Sixteen Choir and Orchestra
Conductor Harry Christophers
Radamisto (excerpt)
Maite Beaumont, mezzo-soprano (Zenobia)
Joyce DiDonato, mezzo-soprano (Radamisto)
Laura Cherici, soprano (Tigrane)
Dominique Labelle, soprano (Fraarte)
Il Complesso Barocco
Director Alan Curtis.
Live from Wigmore Hall, London, recent Radio 3 New Generation Artists the Apollon Musagète Quartet play three compelling chamber works by Sibelius, Puccini and Grieg.
Presented by Sara Mohr-Pietsch
Sibelius: Andante festivo
Puccini: Crisantemi
Grieg: String Quartet No 1 in G minor, Op 27
Apollon Musagète Quartet.
Tom McKinney presents a week of performances by the BBC Symphony Orchestra. Today includes a concert the orchestra gave at the Barbican with music by Britten, Tchaikovsky and Alasdair Nicolson. The BBC Symphony Orchestra accompany Tenebrae in a new recording of choral music by Schoenberg and his teacher Zemlinsky. Plus new recordings of Rachmaninov's Third Piano Concerto with Yevgeny Sudbin, and Bartok's Two Pictures.
2pm
Britten: Sinfonia da requiem, Op 20
Alasdair Nicolson: Shadows on the Wall - 5 hauntings for voice and orchestra
Tchaikovsky: Symphony No 1 in G minor, Op 13 (Winter daydreams)
Marta Fontanals-Simmons (mezzo-soprano)
BBC Symphony Orchestra
Ben Gernon (conductor)
c.3.25pm
Schoenberg's Friede auf Erden
Zemlinsky: Psalm 23
Tenebrae
BBCSO
Nigel Short (conductor)
c.3.45pm
Rachmaninov: Piano Concerto No 3
Yevgeny Sudbin (piano)
BBCSO
Sakari Oramo (conductor)
c.4.30pm
Bartok: Two Pictures
BBCSO
Gergely Madaras (conductor).
Sean Rafferty with a lively mix of chat, arts news and live performance. Sean's guests include Lucy Crowe, David Bates and players from La Nuova Musica, performing for us before a date at St John's Smith Square. Sean also visits a new Charles I exhibition at the Royal Academy of Arts.
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.
Total Immersion Leonard Bernstein: to mark the centenary of the composer and conductor the BBC Symphony Orchestra at the Barbican with conductor David Charles Abell in Songfest, plus the Serenade with violinist Vadim Gluzman.
Recorded at the Barbican Hall London on Saturday 27th January 2018
Presented by Andrew McGregor
Bernstein: Candide Overture; Serenade*
8.00pm
INTERVAL
8.20pm
Bernstein: Songfest#
Vadim Gluzman (violin)*
Sophia Burgos (soprano)#
Nicky Spence (tenor)#
J'Nai Bridges (mezzo-soprano)#
Fleur Barron (alto)#
Nmon Ford (baritone)#
Brandon Cedel (bass)#
BBC Symphony Orchestra
David Charles Abell (conductor)
To mark the composer's centenary year, three very different faces of Leonard Bernstein in one concert. The overture to his opera Candide shows not just his virtuosity with the orchestra but his wit and knowledge of bel canto opera too - it's one of his most sparkling scores.
The Serenade, a philosophical reflection, is his violin concerto in all but name and has become increasingly popular in recent years.
Songfest, which Bernstein himself conducted at the 1988 BBC Proms, is an orchestral song-cycle for six soloists and orchestra. It celebrates many of the things closest to his heart in a dozen beautifully chosen poems, ranging from Walt Whitman and Edgar Allen Poe to Gertrude Stein and EE Cummings. David Charles Abell, who worked with Bernstein during the 1980s, takes up the baton.
Five writers consider the art of viewing a phenomenon or social activity closely:
Art historian James Fox drew a yellow disc and put a face on it, he was very young at the time. Since then he has been beguiled by the star that gives our planet light and warmth. And, as he says, looking up to the sky, "there is much that is god-like about it."
Producer Duncan Minshull.
The ICP (Instant Composers' Pool) is one of the leading free jazz ensembles in the world, formed around a core of Dutch improvisers. In the autumn of 2017 the band toured the UK and Soweto Kinch catches up with them for a concert set from Turner Sims in Southampton. Plus a memory of the trumpeter, composer and bandleader Hugh Masekela.
John Shea presents a performance from the 2015 BBC Proms featuring the St Petersburg Philharmonic and Julia Fischer in Tchaikovsky's Violin Concerto and Elgar's Enigma Variations.
12:31 AM
Rimsky-Korsakov, Nikolai (1844-1908)
Invisible City of Kitezh - 3 Symphonic Pictures
St Petersburg Philharmonic Orchestra, Yuri Temirkanov (conductor)
12:44 AM
Tchaikovsky, Peter Ilyich [1840-1893]
Violin Concerto in D major (Op.35)
Julia Fischer (violin), St Petersburg Philharmonic Orchestra, Yuri Temirkanov (conductor)
1:18 AM
Paganini, Nicolò (1782-1840)
Caprice for solo violin in E flat major, Op.1 no.17
Julia Fischer (violin)
1:23 AM
Elgar, Edward (1857-1934)
Variations on an original theme ('Enigma') (Op.36)
St Petersburg Philharmonic Orchestra, Yuri Temirkanov (conductor)
1:54 AM
Elgar, Edward (1857-1934)
Salut d'amour (Op.12) vers. for orchestra
St Petersburg Philharmonic Orchestra, Yuri Temirkanov (conductor)
1:59 AM
Stravinsky, Igor (1882-1971)
Duetto (Vivo) from Pulcinella Suite for orchestra
St Petersburg Philharmonic Orchestra, Yuri Temirkanov (conductor)
2:01 AM
Mozart, Wolfgang Amadeus (1756-1791)
String Quartet in D minor (K.421)
Biava Quartet
2:31 AM
Grieg, Edvard [1843-1907]
Slatter Op.72
Ingfrid Breie Nyhus (piano)
3:08 AM
Kodály, Zoltán (1882-1967)
Summer evening
Hungarian Radio Orchestra, György Lehel (conductor)
3:27 AM
Schreker, Franz (1878-1934)
Valse Lente
Symphony Nova Scotia, Georg Tintner (conductor)
3:32 AM
Handel, Georg Frideric (1685-1759)
Aria with variations from Piano Suite No.5 in E major (HWV.430) "The harmonious blacksmith"
Marián Pivka (piano)
3:38 AM
Kunzen, Friedrich (1761-1817)
Overture to the opera 'Erik Ejegod'
Danish Radio Concert Orchestra, Peter Marschik (conductor)
3:44 AM
Zelenka, Jan Dismas [1679-1745]
Suite in F major
Les Ambassadeurs, Alexis Kossenko (director)
4:00 AM
Porumbescu, Ciprian (1853-1883)
Ballade
Razvan Stoica (violin), Andrea Stoica (piano)
4:06 AM
Moniuszko, Stanislaw (1819-1872)
Mazurka from Halka (original version)
Polish Radio Symphony Orchestra, Lukasz Borowicz (conductor)
4:10 AM
Bach, Johann Sebastian [1685-1750]
Cantata BWV.118 "O Jesu Christ, mein's Lebens Licht"'
Concerto Vocale Ghent (Orchestra and Choir), Philippe Herreweghe (conductor)
4:20 AM
Schumann, Robert (1810-1856), trans. Liszt, Franz (1811-1886)
Widmung (Op.25 No.1)
Jorge Bolet (piano)
4:24 AM
Mozart, Wolfgang Amadeus (1756-1791)
Overture to La Clemenza di Tito (K.621)
Bergen Philharmonic Orchestra, Sebastian Weigle (Conductor)
4:31 AM
Bach, Johann Sebastian (1685-1750), orch. Schoenberg, Arnold (1874-1951)
Chorale Prelude (BWV.654)
Sydney Symphony Orchestra, Edo de Waart (conductor)
4:39 AM
Liszt, Franz (1811-1886)
Valse impromptu (S.213)
Louis Schwizgebel (piano)
4:45 AM
Mendelssohn, Felix (1809-1847)
Capriccio (Op.81 No3) in E minor
Brussels Chamber Orchestra
4:52 AM
Bach, Johann Sebastian (1685-1750)
Gloria in Excelsis Deo (BWV.191)
Ann Monoyios (Soprano), Colin Ainsworth (Tenor), Tafelmusik Chamber Choir, Tafelmusik Baroque Orchestra, Ivars Taurins (Conductor)
5:07 AM
Tchaikovsky, Peter Ilyich [1840-1893]
Romeo and Juliet - fantasy overture
Rotterdam Philharmonic Orchestra, Valery Gergiev (conductor)
5:28 AM
Haydn, Joseph (1732-1809)
String Quartet in D minor (Op.42)
Pavel Haas Quartet
5:41 AM
Jeanjean, Paul (1874 - 1928)
Prelude and Scherzo
Bálint Mohai (bassoon), Monika Michel (piano)
5:50 AM
Kraft, Antonín (1749-1820)
Cello Concerto in C major (Op.4)
Michal Kanka (cello), Prague Chamber Orchestra, Pavel Safarik (concert master)
6:14 AM
Mozart, Wolfgang Amadeus [1756-1791]
Exsultate, jubilate - motet K.165 for soprano and orchestra
Julia Lezhneva (soprano), Wroclaw Baroque Orchestra, Giovanni Antonini (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 potential companion pieces for a well-known piece of music.
1010 Time Traveller - A quirky slice of cultural history
1050 Actress Dame Penelope Keith on some of the things that have inspired and influenced her throughout her life and career.
Handel was in demand as an operatic composer and he was keen to outdo his fellow composers in order to maintain his position. He was aided in his task by the finest performers money could buy, including the castrato known as Senesino and sopranos Faustina Bordoni and Francesca Cuzzoni, though their presence would prove both a blessing and a curse. Donald Macleod introduces three operas from this challenging but intensely productive time - the first featuring Cuzzoni in her London debut, the second in which she played Cleopatra to Senesino's Julius Caesar and finally, in an excerpt from the hectic operatic account of the life of Alexander the Great, the two divas star as rivals in love.
Ottone: 'Falsa immagine'
Lisa Saffer, soprano (Teofane)
Freiburg Baroque Orchestra
Conductor Nicholas McGegan
Giulio Cesare (excerpt)
Karina Gauvin, soprano (Cleopatra)
Marie-Nicole Lemieux, alto (Cesare)
Gianluca Buratto, bass (Curio)
Il Complesso Barocco
Conductor Alan Curtis
Alessandro (excerpts)
Max Emanuel Cencic, countertenor (Alessandro)
Juan Sancho, tenor (Leonato)
Julia Lezhneva, soprano (Rossane)
Karina Gauvin, soprano (Lisaura)
Armonia Atenea
Conductor George Petrou.
Sarah Walker presents the first of four recitals from the brand new concert hall at the recently reopened Royal Birmingham Conservatoire, featuring some of Radio 3's current New Generation Artists.
Today's programme features the Arod Quartet in music by Mozart and Mendelssohn.
Mozart: String Quartet in D minor, K421
Mendelssohn: String Quartet No 2 in A minor, Op 13
Established in 2013, the Arod Quartet came to the attention on the international stage when they won First Prize at the prestigious ARD International Music Competition in Munich, having already taken First Prize at the Carl Nielsen Chamber Music Competition in Copenhagen in 2015 and at the FNAPEC European Competition (Paris) in 2014.
In 2017, Quatuor Arod premiere the first string quartet by French composer Benjamin Attahir (commissioned by La Belle Saison, ProQuartet and Quatuor Arod). They are invited to perform alongside artists such as violists Amihai Grosz and Mathieu Herzog, clarinetists Martin Fröst, Romain Guyot and Michel Lethiec, pianist Eric Lesage, and cellists Raphaël Pidoux, François Salque, Harriet Krijgh and Bruno Philippe.
The Arod Quartet studies with Mathieu Herzog and Jean Sulem and is currently artist-in-residence at the Queen Elisabeth Music Chapel in Brussels with the Artemis Quartet. They also work with the Ebène Quartet and Diotima Quartet. The quartet is in residence at the Fondation Singer-Polignac and at ProQuartet - CEMC.
Tom McKinney continues a week of performances by the BBC Symphony Orchestra. Today includes a concert the Orchestra gave at the Bath Mozart Festival 2017 with a programme including music by Beethoven and Brahms. There's a new recording of Szymanowski's Violin Concerto No 1 with soloist Tasmin Little, and Afternoon Concert's continues with Judith Weir's Natural History, with the soprano Ailish Tynan as soloist.
2pm
Smetana: The Bartered Bride - Overture
Beethoven: Piano Concerto No 4 in G
Brahms: Symphony No 4 in E minor
Stephen Osborne (piano)
BBC Symphony Orchestra
Alexander Vedernikov (conductor)
c.3.30pm
Stravinsky: Symphony of Psalms
Tenebrae
BBC Symphony Orchestra
Nigel Short (conductor)
c.4pm
Szymanowski: Violin Concerto No 1, Op 35
Tasmin Little (violin)
BBC Symphony Orchestra
Edward Gardner (conductor)
c.4.30pm
Judith Weir: Natural History
Ailish Tynan (soprano)
BBC Symphony Orchestra
Martyn Brabbins (conductor).
Katie Derham with a lively mix of chat, arts news and live performance. Katie's guests include Sir Andrew Davis, who is soon to perform with the BBC Symphony Orchestra and also has a new CD of works by Bliss coming 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 Milton Court, London
The Estonian Philharmonic Chamber Choir performs the music of Arvo Pärt and his Estonian compatriots, marking 100 years since the proclamation of Estonia as an independent, democratic republic.
Arvo Pärt: Solfeggio; Summa; Magnificat; Zwei Beter; The Woman with the Alabaster Box; Nunc dimittis; Dopo la vittoria
Jonathan Harvey: Plainsongs for Peace and Light; The Angels
Cyrillus Kreek: Psalms of David
Veljo Tormis: St John's Day Songs for Midsummer Eve; Curse Upon Iron
Estonian Philharmonic Chamber Choir
Kaspars Putninš, conductor
The Estonian Philharmonic Chamber Choir embodies a very particular choral tradition - with one eye on the Russian vocal heritage, another looking very definitely west. Their relationship with Arvo Pärt is famous, but tonight they broaden that picture with music by his compatriots and Jonathan Harvey.
Matthew Sweet discusses Ingmar Bergman's Wild Strawberries with the writer Colm Toibin, the film critic Larushka Ivan-Zadeh and the Swedish Cultural Attaché Ellen Wettmark.
Released in 1957 and inspired by Bergman's own memories of childhood holidays in a summerhouse in the north of Sweden, Wild Strawberries tells the story of elderly professor Isak Borg, who travels from his home in Stockholm to receive an honorary doctorate. On the way, he's visited by childhood memories. The film stars veteran actor and director Victor Sjostrom, Bibi Andersson and Ingrid Thulin.
With additional contributions from the film historian Kevin Brownlow and Jan Holmberg from the Ingmar Bergman Foundation, which administers Bergman's archives.
The BFI in London is running a season of Ingmar Bergman films until March 1st 2018 as part of the global celebrations of the centenary of world-renowned Swedish filmmaker Ingmar Bergman (1918 - 2007).
A Matter of Life and Death: the Films of Ingmar Bergman has been republished with a new introduction by Geoff Andrew of the BFI.
Wild Strawberries is being screened on 26 Feb, Newlyn Filmhouse; 8 March, Borderlines Film Festival; 11 March, Chapter Arts Centre.
This programme was originally recorded in December 2015.
Producer: Laura Thomas
Five writers consider the pleasures of viewing a phenomenon or social activity closely:
Lauren Elkin reckons that the way people walk, their gait, is a signifier. It also tells us something about ourselves as we watch people file past us, the quick and the slow. And it makes her think of George Sand strolling Paris..
Producer Duncan Minshull.
Immersive musical explorations with the ever-inquisitive Max Reinhardt. Tonight we take a trip to an underground reservoir in Fife with sound artist Akio Suzuki, to a Mississippi prison with jazz drummer Jaimeo Brown, to Epping Forest with field recordist Spaceship, and to an intergalactic bar with producer Thru Colours.
Produced by Jack Howson for Reduced Listening.
John Shea presents a concert of music by the Bach family, recorded at the 2014 Poznan Baroque Festival, with Friederike Heumann (viola da gamba) and Dirk Borner (harpsichord)
12:31 AM
Johann Sebastian Bach (1685-1750)
Sonata No 1 in G major, BWV 1027, for viola da gamba and keyboard
Friederike Heumann (viola da gamba), Dirk Borner (harpsichord)
12:44 AM
Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach (1714-1788)
Keyboard Fantasia in F sharp minor, Wq67
Dirk Borner (harpsichord)
12:55 AM
Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach (1714-1788)
Sonata in D major, Wq137, for viola da gamba and continuo
Friederike Heumann (viola da gamba), Dirk Borner (harpsichord)
1:12 AM
Wilhelm Friedemann Bach (1710-1874)
Three Polonaises (from 12 Polonaises F12)
Dirk Borner (harpsichord)
1:22 AM
Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach (1714-1788)
Sonata in G minor Wq88 for viola da gamba and harpsichord
Friederike Heumann (viola da gamba), Dirk Borner (harpsichord)
1:44 AM
Johann Sebastian Bach (1685-1750)
Magnificat in D major BWV 243
Lydia Teuscher (soprano), Maria Espada (soprano), Marie-Claude Chappuis (mezzo), Kenneth Tarver (tenor), Florian Boesch (baritone), Bavarian Radio Choir, Peter Dijkstra (director), Il Gardino Armonico, Giovanni Antonini (conductor)
2:11 AM
Bach, Johann Sebastian (1685-1750)
Solo Violin Partita No 3 in E major, BWV 1006
Sigiswald Kuijken (violin - Giovanni Grancino, Milano c. 1700)
2:31 AM
Ernest Chausson (1855-1899)
Poème, Op 25 (version for violin, string quartet and piano)
Philippe Graffin (violin), Jorgen Larsen (piano), Skampa Quartet
2:46 AM
Richard Strauss
Till Eulenspiegels lustige Streiche, Op 28
Miguel Angel Gomez Martinez (conductor), Warsaw Philharmonic Orchestra
3:02 AM
Franz Schubert (1797 - 1828)
Piano Sonata in A minor, Op 42 (D845)
Alfred Brendel (piano)
3:38 AM
Giulio Schiavetto (fl.1562-5, Croatian), Dr Lovro Zupanovic (transcriber)
Madrigal: Ma il temp' e breve (But time is short)
Slovenian Chamber Choir, Vladimir Kranjcevic (director)
3:40 AM
Giovanni Gabrieli
Canzon II septimi toni a 8
Canadian Brass
3:44 AM
Joaquin Turina (1882-1949)
Homenaje a Navarra
Niklas Liepe (violin), Niels Liepe (piano)
3:50 AM
Bela Bartok (1881-1945)
Romanian Folk Dances, Sz68 (orch. from Sz.56 orig. for piano)
BBC National Orchestra of Wales, James Clark (conductor)
3:58 AM
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756-1791)
Adagio and Allegro in E flat major (K.Anh.C 17.07) for wind octet (attrib. Mozart)
The Festival Winds
4:07 AM
Johann Sebastian Bach (1685-1750)
Organ Fantasia in G major, BWV 572
Theo Teunissen (organ)
4:17 AM
Franz von Suppe (1819-1895)
Overture from Die Leichte Kavallerie (Light Cavalry) - operetta
RTV Slovenian Symphony Orchestra, Marko Munih (conductor)
4:25 AM
Carl Maria von Weber (1786-1826)
Perpetuum mobile (from Sonata No 1 in C, J138)
Konstantin Masliouk (piano)
4:31 AM
Claude Debussy (1862-1918), Luc Brewaeys (Orchestrator)
Feux d'artifices - from Preludes Book II
Royal Flemish Philharmonic, Daniele Callegari (conductor)
4:36 AM
Robert de Visee (c.1655-1733)
La grotte de Versailles de Mr J.B. Lully (1685)
Yasunori Imamura (theorbo)
4:39 AM
Georg Muffat (1653-1704),Jean-Baptiste Lully (1632-1687), Georg Muffat (arranger)
Suite for Orchestra
Armonico Tributo Austria, Lorenz Duftschmid (director)
4:51 AM
Olivier Messiaen (1908-1992)
O sacrum convivium (1937)
BBC Singers, Stephen Cleobury (conductor)
4:57 AM
Jacques Offenbach (1819-1880)
Les larmes de Jacqueline
Hee-Song Song (cello), Myung-Seon Kye (piano)
5:04 AM
Maurice Ravel (1875-1937)
Tzigane - rapsodie de concert arr. for violin & orchestra (orig. for violin & piano)
Moshe Hammer (violin), Winnipeg Symphony Orchestra, Kazuhiro Koizumi (conductor)
5:13 AM
Maurice Ravel (1875-1937)
Chants populaires
Catherine Robbin (mezzo), Andre Laplante (piano)
5:27 AM
Robert Schumann (1810-1856)
Symphony No 4 in D minor, Op 120
Norwegian Radio Orchestra, Oleg Caetani (conductor)
5:59 AM
Felix Mendelssohn (1809-1847)
Organ Sonata No 6 in D minor, Op 65 No 6
Martti Miettinen (organ)
6:14 AM
Eugen Suchon (1908-1993)
Nocturne for Cello and Orchestra
Jan Slavik (cello), Slovak Radio Symphony Orchestra Bratislava, Mario Kosik (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 potential companion pieces for a well-known piece of music.
1010 Time Traveller - A quirky slice of cultural history
1050 Actress Dame Penelope Keith on some of the things that have inspired and influenced her throughout her life and career.
In 1727 a new king came to the throne. By then Handel was a British citizen and he'd taken a lease on 25 Brook Street in London, so clearly he intended to stay. Spiralling costs forced the closure of the Royal Academy of Music but Handel was granted permission to continue staging operas at the King's Theatre, Haymarket, for another five years. Donald Macleod introduces an anthem from the set Handel was commissioned to write for the coronation of George II, a trio sonata full of music Handel recycled from his dramatic works and an excerpt from one of his 'magic' operas, the staging of which nearly ruined him.
Handel arr Somervell: Silent Worship
Kenneth McKellar (tenor)
London Symphony Orchestra
Conductor Adrian Boult
Coronation Anthem: The King Shall Rejoice
The Sixteen Chorus and Orchestra
Conductor Harry Christophers
Trio Sonata in G, Op 5 No 4
Brook Street Band
Orlando (excerpt)
Sophie Karthäuser, soprano (Angelica)
Bejun Mehta, countertenor (Orlando)
Kristina Hammarström, mezzo-soprano (Medoro)
B'Rock Orchestra
Director René Jacobs.
Sarah Walker presents the second of four recitals from the brand new concert hall at the recently reopened Royal Birmingham Conservatoire, featuring some of Radio 3's current New Generation Artists.
Today's programme features trumpeter Simon Hofele and pianist Magdalena Mullerperth in sonatas by Karl Pilss and Theodor Holdheim. Simon also plays a solo trumpet piece written for him by his close friend Kathrin Denner, and Magdalena performs Ravel's "Jeux d'eau" and two short pieces for piano solo by Hindemith.
Karl Pilss: Sonata for trumpet and piano
Ravel: Jeux d'eau, for solo piano
Kathrin Denner: Sonare II for solo trumpet
Hindemith: Marsch and Ragtime from Piano Suite (1922), Op 26
Theodor Holdheim: Sonata for trumpet and piano
Simon Höfele, trumpet
Magdalena Müllerperth, piano
One of the most exciting young trumpeters of his generation, Simon Höfele has already made his debut with some of the world's greatest orchestras, including the Royal Concertgebouw under conductor Semyon Bychkov.
He is the winner of the 2016 Reinhold Friedrich International Trumpet Competition in Lisbon, and also won the European Prize for Young Trumpet Players in Alençon, France, and First Prize at the Felix Mendelssohn Bartholdy Conservatory.
Tom McKinney introduces a concert with the BBC Singers, conducted by Ragnar Bohin and recorded last month at St Giles, Cripplegate, as part of the BBC Symphony Orchestra Total Immersion series dedicated to Leonard Bernstein. The concert starts with Hashkiveinu for solo cantor, mixed chorus and organ; it's followed by his Missa Brevis for countertenor, chorus and percussion; then we hear Simchu Na for chorus and piano, Soldier's Song from The Lark for chorus and percussion, ending with his Chichester Psalms. This concert is followed by two tone poems performed by the BBC Symphony Orchestra; first, Judith Weir Heroic Strokes of the Bow, with conductor Martyn Brabbins at the helm, and then Vincent D'Indy's Istar, this time with the orchestra under the baton of Pascal Rophé.
2.00pm
Bernstein: Hashkiveinu, for solo cantor (tenor), mixed chorus, and organ
Bernstein: Missa Brevis, for chorus, countertenor solo and incidental percussion
Bernstein: Simchu Na, for chorus and piano
Bernstein: Soldier's Song from The Lark, for chorus and percussion
Bernstein: Chichester Psalms (chamber version)
BBC Singers
Ragnar Bohlin (conductor)
2.50pm
Judith Weir: Heroic Strokes of the Bow
BBC Symphony Orchestra
Martyn Brabbins (conductor)
3.05pm
D'Indy: Istar, Op 42
BBC Symphony Orchestra
Pascal Rophé (conductor).
Live from Magdalen College, Oxford.
Introit: Hail, gladdening light (Stainer)
Responses: Rose
Psalm 118 (Varley, Ives)
First Lesson: Haggai 2 vv.1-9
Canticles: Daniel Purcell in E minor
Second Lesson: Luke 2 vv.22-40
Anthem: Gaude, gaude, gaude Maria (Sheppard)
Hymn: When all thy mercies, O my God (Belgrave)
Organ Voluntary: Reges Tharsis (Preston)
Mark Williams (Informator Choristarum)
Alexander Pott (Assistant Organist)
William Fox (Organ Scholar).
Norwegian viola-player Eivind Holtsmark Ringstad performs Brahms's Sonata in F minor, Op 120 No 1.
Brahms: Viola Sonata in F minor, Op 120 No 1
Eivind Holtsmark Ringstad (viola)
Zoltan Fejervari (piano).
Sean Rafferty with a lively mix of chat, arts news and live performance. Sean's guests include the Endellion String Quartet, who perform ahead of a recital at Wigmore Hall. Karen Kamensek is conducting ENO's production of Satyagraha, and guitarist Sean Shibe performs live in the studio before appearing at Colston Hall.
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 performances from the Black Dyke Band and the Cory Band at this year's Brass Band Festival at the Royal Northern College of Music in Manchester.
Part 1 - Cory Band, conductor Philip Harper:
Christopher Bond: Corineus (world premiere)
John Pickard: Rain, Steam and Speed (world premiere)
Philip Harper: Destination Moon
INTERVAL
Part 2 - Black Dyke Band, conductor Nicholas Childs:
Robert Farnon: Une vie de matelot
Eric Ball: Journey into Freedom
Peter Graham: Radio City (Peter Moore, solo trombone; Dale Gerrard, narrator)
Paul Mealor: Paradise (world premiere) (featuring Sheffield Philharmonic Chorus)
New York Movie by Peter Graham (world premiere) (featuring Sheffield Philharmonic Chorus).
Philip Dodd presents the Arts and Ideas programme.
Five writers consider the pleasures of viewing a phenomenon or social activity closely:
Every year Nicholas Shakespeare visits the River Hodder in Lancashire. The aim is to catch sea-trout. But to catch sea-trout you have to understand them, and to understand them you have to read their river - expertly.
Producer Duncan Minshull.
The meeting of two music lovers from BBC radio: poet and presenter of 'The Verb', Ian McMillan, drops in on our very own Max Reinhardt to share song recommendations.
Expect an evening of lyricism and lucidity, with tracks from wonderful wordsmiths including Ani DiFranco, Jens Lekman, Earl Sweatshirt, and Belinda Zhawi.
Produced by Jack Howson for Reduced Listening.
John Shea presents a programme of Rachmaninov, Schubert, Fauré and Brahms from former BBC New Generation Artists.
12:31 AM
Rachmaninov, Sergei [1873-1943]
6 Duets Op.11 for piano 4 hands
Zhang Zuo (piano), Louis Schwizgebel (piano)
12:56 AM
Schubert, Franz [1797-1828]
Sonata in A minor D.821 for arpeggione (or viola or cello) and piano
Lise Berthaud (viola), Francois Pinel (piano)
1:22 AM
Fauré, Gabriel [1845-1924]
La Bonne chanson Op.61, arr. for voice, piano & string quartet
Ruby Hughes (soprano), Signum Quartet (string quartet), James Baillieu (piano), Lachlan Radford (double bass)
1:47 AM
Brahms, Johannes [1833-1897]
Quintet in F minor Op.34 for piano and strings
Elias Quartet, Francesco Piemontesi (piano)
2:31 AM
Mendelssohn, Felix [1809-1847]
Symphony no. 4 (Op.90) in A major "Italian"
BBC Symphony Orchestra; Jiri Belohlavek (conductor)
3:00 AM
Cherubini, Luigi (1760-1842)
Requiem Mass for chorus and orchestra No.1 in C minor
Radio Belgrad Choir, Slovenian Radio & Television Symphony Orchestra, Marko Munih (conductor)
3:44 AM
Ravel, Maurice [1875-1937] arranged by Zoltán Kocsis
Pavane pour une infante défunte
Zsolt Szatmári (clarinet), Zoltán Kocsis (piano)
3:51 AM
Telemann, Georg Philipp (1681-1767)
Sonata in F minor - from ''Der Getreue Music-Meister'
Camerata Köln: Michael Schneider (recorder), Rainer Zipperling (cello continuo), Harold Hoeren (harpsichord)
4:01 AM
Glinka, Mikhail Ivanovich (1804-1857)
Capriccio Brillante for symphony orchestra on the theme of 'Jota Aragonese' (also known as Spanish Overture No.1)
Slovak Radio Symphony Orchestra, Ondrej Lenard (conductor)
4:11 AM
Beethoven, Ludwig van (1770-1827)
7 Variations on 'Bei Männern, welche Liebe fühlen' for cello and piano (WoO.46)
Zara Nelsova (cello), Grant Johannesen (piano)
4:20 AM
Wassenaer, Unico Wilhelm van (1692-1766)
Concerto No.6 in E flat major (from Sei Concerti Armonici 1740) (orig. no.5; formerly attrib. Pergolesi & Ricciotti)
Combattimento Consort Amsterdam, Jan Willem de Vriend (conductor)
4:31 AM
Brumby, Colin (b. 1933)
Festival Overture on Australian themes
West Australian Symphony Orchestra, Richard Mills (conductor)
4:41 AM
Chopin, Fryderyk (1810-1849)
Two Nocturnes (Op.32)
Kevin Kenner (piano)
4:51 AM
Schutz, Heinrich [1585-1672]
2 sacred pieces - Spes mea, Christe Deus, SWV.69; Wie lieblich sind deine Wohnungen (Psalm 84) SWV.29
Kölner Kammerchor , Collegium Cartusianum, Peter Neumann (conductor)
5:02 AM
Strauss, Richard [1864-1949]
Festmusik der Stadt Wien AV.133 for brass and percussion
Royal Academy of Music Brass Soloists, Tom Watson (trumpet solo)
5:12 AM
Liszt, Franz (1811-1886)
Tarantella from Venezia e Napoli (S.162)
Janina Fialkowska (piano)
5:22 AM
Handel, Georg Frideric (1685-1759)
Trio sonata for 2 violins & bc (HWV.388) in B flat major (Op.2 No.3)
Musica Alta Ripa
5:32 AM
Goleminov, Marin (1908-2000) [see http://www.ubc-bg.com/composers/m_goleminov.htm]
5 Sketches for Strings (1952)
Sofia Soloists Chamber Ensemble, Vassil Kazandjiev (conductor)
5:49 AM
Bach, Johann Sebastian (1685-1750)
Jesu, meine Freude (BWV.227)
Tafelmusik Chamber Choir, Tafelmusik Baroque Orchestra, Ivars Taurins (conductor)
6:11 AM
Respighi, Ottorino (1879-1936)
Ancient Airs and Dances - Suite No.2
CBC Vancouver Orchestra, Mario Bernardi (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 potential companion pieces for a well-known piece of music.
1010 Time Traveller - A quirky slice of cultural history
1050 Actress Dame Penelope Keith on some of the things that have inspired and influenced her throughout her life and career.
Handel found himself in competition with a rival company which set about systematically poaching all but one of Handel's leading singers. The two companies competed for audiences over the next four seasons before both eventually failed. Donald Macleod introduces Handel's last great operatic triumph, one of the organ concertos which he began to introduce into the intervals of his new oratorios and part of his dramatic setting of an ode by the hugely popular author John Dryden.
Alcina (excerpts)
Renée Fleming, soprano (Alcina)
Timothy Robinson, tenor (Oronte)
Les Arts Florissants
Conductor William Christie
Organ Concerto in F, Op 4 No 5
Matthew Halls (organ)
Sonnerie
Director Monica Huggett
Alexander's Feast (excerpt)
Sophie Bevan (soprano)
Ed Lyon (tenor)
Ludus Baroque
Conductor Richard Neville-Towle.
Sarah Walker presents the third of four recitals from the brand new concert hall at the recently reopened Royal Birmingham Conservatoire, featuring some of Radio 3's current New Generation Artists.
Today's programme features pianist Mariam Batsashvili in Ferruccio Busoni's transcription of Bach's D minor Chaconne, alongside two of Liszt's tour-de-force solo piano works and Chopin's Andante spianato e Grande polonaise brillante.
Bach transc. Busoni: Chaconne in D minor, BWV 1004
Liszt: Hungarian Rhapsody No 13, S244/13
Chopin: Andante spianato e Grande polonaise brillante, Op 22
Liszt: Hungarian Rhapsody No 2
Mariam Batsashvili, piano
At just 24 years old, Mariam Batsashvili already ranks among the most promising young pianists of her generation.
She gained international recognition at the 10th Franz Liszt Piano Competition in Utrecht 2014, where she won First Prize as well as the Junior Jury Award and the Press Prize. "Winner Batsashvili turns every phrase into something special", headlined Dutch newspaper NRC Handelsblad, and the international Jury called her a "complete artist" with a "tremendous touch" and "sincere emotion".
In our opera matinée, Tom McKinney introduces Umberto Giordano's rarely heard opera Siberia with the acclaimed soprano Sonya Yoncheva as Stephana, the mistress of a prince, and the tenor Murat Karahan as officer Vassili, her lover, in this tragic tale of romance, treachery and deception, taken from a performance at last year's Montpellier Festival in France. Domingo Hindoyan conducts a stellar cast as well as the Latvian Radio Chorus and the Montpellier Occitanie National Choir and Orchestra. The opera is followed by a a new recording of Sir Arthur Bliss's Introduction and Allegro from the BBC Symphony Orchestra under Sir Andrew Davis. Then a concert given recently by the BBC Singers at St Paul's Knightsbridge, in London, celebrating the music of Edward Cowie, also including pieces by Elgar, Vaughan Williams and Geoffrey Poole.
2pm
Giordano: Siberia
Stephana ..... Sonya Yoncheva (soprano)
Vassili ..... Murat Karahan (tenor)
Gleby ..... Gabriele Viviani (baritone)
Nikona ..... Catherine Carby (mezzo-soprano)
Girl ..... Anaïs Constant (soprano)
Ivan/Cosack ..... Marin Yonchev (tenor)
Captain/Walinoff/Governor ..... Riccardo Fassi (bass)
Alexis, Il Sergente ..... Alvaro Zambrano (tenor)
Miskinsky the banker/Lame man ..... Jean-Gabriel Saint-Martin (baritone)
Inspector ..... Laurent Sérou (bass)
Latvian Radio Chorus
Montpellier Occitanie National Choir
Montpellier Occitanie National Orchestra
Domingo Hindoyan (conductor)
c.3.40pm
Bliss: Introduction and Allegro
BBC Symphony Orchestra
Andrew Davis (conductor)
c.4.00pm
Edward Cowie: Okavango Dawn Rite
Vaughan Williams: Three Shakespeare Songs
Edward Cowie: Cathedral Music 1
Elgar: They are at rest
Geoffrey Poole: Imerina
BBC Singers
Nicholas Kok (conductor).
Sean Rafferty with a lively mix of chat, arts news and live performance.
In Tune's specially curated mixtape - featuring a concerto for flute that fizzes by CPE Bach, a melancholic one for birds by Rautavaaara and a joyful credo by Guerrero. Plus a serene trio from Mozart's 'Cosi fan tutte', viola and piano take on the roles of Romeo and Juliet in the Balcony Scene from Prokofiev's ballet and the witch casts a midnight spell in Stephen Sondheim's 'Into the Woods'. Enjoy In Tune's magical trip around the garden as the sun sets and night gradually falls!
Producer: Ian Wallington.
The BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra and Martyn Brabbins perform Mozart's Horn Concerto No 4, Stravinsky's Petrushka, and an early work by Michael Tippett receives a very rare outing.
Live from City Halls Glasgow
Presented by Andrew McGregor
Tippett: Symphony in B flat
Mozart: Horn Concerto No 4 in E flat, K495
Mozart: Concert-Rondo, K371
8.20 Interval
8.40
Stravinsky: Petrushka: ballet (1947)
Alberto Menéndez Escribano, horn
BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra
Martyn Brabbins, conductor
At the very outset of his career Michael Tippett withdrew his first substantial work, a Symphony in B flat. Tonight we have a rare chance to consider its merits as it is performed for the first time since the 1930s.
Tippett's music was always characterised by the conjunction between the classical and the modern: Martyn Brabbins and the BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra continue with examples of both. Their principal horn, Alberto Menéndez Escribano, steps forward to perform the fourth of Mozart's exemplary horn concertos; and Stravinsky's ballet Petrushka, with its riot of dazzling colours, closes the evening.
Anne McElvoy looks at trade past and present as she reports on debates from the world economic forum annual meeting at Davos, looks at a new novel depicting a "mermaid" displayed as a visitor attraction by a C18th London based merchant, and visits an exhibition exploring the design and impact of ocean liners.
Ocean Liners: Speed and Style runs at the Victoria and Albert Museum in London from 3 February - 10 June 2018
The Mermaid and Mrs Hancock - the debut novel from Imogen Hermes Gowar is out now.
Sarah Peverley is a New Generation Thinker who teaches at the University of Liverpool and a Leverhulme Research Fellow (2016-18) working on a project entitled 'Mermaids of the British Isles, c. 450-1500.'
Producer: Luke Mulhall.
Five writers consider the pleasures of viewing a phenomenon or social activity closely:
Rachel Cooke considers the way people eat, what it says about them that is good and bad and amusing. Yet her starting line is unnerving - "the optics of eating are inherently violent." How so?
Producer Duncan Minshull.
Max Reinhardt rides out on another adventure in sound, ancient to future, soft to ear-splitting.
Music featured along the way includes Kirsty Law's sensitive exploration of the 'inner child', Lawrence Jakiwo's praise song for good leadership, and Waclaw Zimpel's melodious marriage of Indian instrumentation with Western rules.
Produced by Jack Howson for Reduced Listening.
Violinist Albena Danailova and pianist Plamena Mangova in a recital of Mendelssohn, Bartok and Beethoven. John Shea presents
12:31 AM
Felix Mendelssohn [1809-1847]
Violin Sonata in F
Albena Danailova (violin), Plamena Mangova (piano)
12:56 AM
Bela Bartok [1881-1945]
Rhapsody No 1 for Violin and Piano No 1, Sz86
Albena Danailova (violin), Plamena Mangova (piano)
1:07 AM
Ludwig van Beethoven [1770-1827]
Violin Sonata No 9 in A, Op 47, 'Kreutzer'
Albena Danailova (violin), Plamena Mangova (piano)
1:45 AM
Manuel de Falla [1876-1946]
Suite of Spanish Folksongs (nos 2 & 4)
Albena Danailova (violin), Plamena Mangova (piano)
1:50 AM
Dobrzynski, Ignacy Feliks (1807-1867)
Symphony No 2 in C minor 'Caractéristique'
Polish Radio Symphony Orchestra, Ruben Silva (conductor)
2:31 AM
Grieg, Edvard (1843-1907)
String Quartet No 1 in G minor, Op 27
Ensemble Fragaria Vesca
3:06 AM
Beethoven, Ludwig van (1770-1827)
Piano Concerto No 3 in C minor, Op 37
Christian Zacharias (piano), Académie Beethoven, Jean Caeyers (conductor)
3:40 AM
Förster, Kaspar (1616-1673)
Vanitas vanitatum - dialogus de Divite et paupere Lazaro
La Capelle Ducale: Mona Spägele (soprano), Wilfred Jochens (tenor), Harry van der Kamp (bass), Musica Fiata Köln, Roland Wilson (conductor)
3:51 AM
Szymanowski, Karol (1882-1937)
Prelude and Fugue in C sharp minor
Jerzy Godziszewski (piano)
3:59 AM
Giuliani, Mauro (1781-1829)
6 Variations, Op 81, for violin and guitar
Laura Vadjon (violin), Romana Matanovac (guitar)
4:08 AM
Schumann, Robert (1810-1856)
Die Braut von Messina - Overture, Op 100
The Radio Bratislava Symphony Orchestra, Ondrej Lenárd (conductor)
4:16 AM
Wikander, David (1884-1955) [lyrics Gustaf Fröding]
Kung Liljekongvalje (King Lily of the Valley)
Swedish Radio Choir, Stefan Sköld (conductor)
4:20 AM
Quantz, Johann Joachim [1697-1773]
Trio in E flat major (QV 2:18)
Nova Stravaganza
4:31 AM
Quinault, Jean-Baptiste (1687-1745)
Overture and Dances - from 'Le Nouveau Monde' (1723)
L'Ensemble Arion - Claire Guimond (baroque flute), Chantal Rémillard (baroque violin), Hank Knox (harpsichord), Betsy MacMillan (viola da gamba/baroque cello)
4:40 AM
Mendelssohn, Felix (1809-1847)
Organ Sonata in D major, Op 65 No 5
Erwin Wiersinga (organ)
4:49 AM
Anonymous
Excelsus in numine/Benedictus
Bois de Cologne: Meike Herzig, Dorothee Oberlinger (recorders), Tom Daun (harp)
4:50 AM
Faidit, Gaucelm (c.1150-c.1220)
Fortz chausa es
Eric Mentzel (tenor), Bois de Cologne: Meike Herzig, Dorothee Oberlinger (recorders), Tom Daun (harp)
4:58 AM
Rathaus, Karol (1895-1954)
Prelude and Gigue in A major, Op 44
Polish Radio National Symphony Orchestra in Katowice, Joel Suben (conductor)
5:06 AM
Chopin, Frédéric (1810-1849)
Polonaise in F sharp minor, Op 44
W S Heo (piano)
5:16 AM
Berezovsky, Maxim Sosontovitch [1745-1777]
Choral Concerto "Cast Me Not Off in the Time of Old Age"
Platon Maiborada Academic Choir, Yulia Tkach (conductor)
5:27 AM
Larsson, Lars-Erik (1908-1986)
String Quartet No 3, Op 65 (1975)
Members of Upsala Chamber Soloists - Peter Olofsson (violin), Patrik Swedrup (violin), Åsa Karlsson (viola), Lars Frykholm (cello)
5:37 AM
Ravel, Maurice (1875-1937)
Piano Concerto in G major
Pascal Rogé (piano), New Zealand Symphony Orchestra, Alexander Lazarev (conductor)
6:00 AM
Liszt, Franz (1811-1886)
Harmonies poétiques et religieuses - 10 pieces for piano (excerpts): Invocation; Pater Noster; Hymne de l'enfant à son réveil; Funérailles
Steven Osborne (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 potential companion pieces for a well-known piece of music.
1010 Time Traveller - A quirky slice of cultural history
1050 Actress Dame Penelope Keith on some of the things that have inspired and influenced her throughout her life and career.
With income from opera drying up, Handel turned to other means of making a living. He realised there was money to be made with his new English oratorio, and the publication of his instrumental works provided him with another source of income.
Donald Macleod introduces one of Handel's last operas, full of light-hearted, amorous intrigue, the first of a set of twelve concerti grossi which are the finest things of their kind he ever composed, and part of the oratorio widely regarded as Handel's most fundamentally English creation.
Serse (excerpts)
Anna Stéphany, mezzo-soprano (Serse)
Hilary Summers, alto (Amasatre)
Brindley Sherratt, bass (Ariodate)
Early Opera Company
Conductor, Christian Curnyn
Concerto grosso in G, Op 6 No 1
Gabrieli Players
Conductor Paul McMcreesh
L'Allegro, Il Penseroso ed Il Moderato (Part 3: Il Moderato)
Gillian Webster (soprano)
Jeremy Ovenden (tenor)
Peter Harvey (baritone)
Gabrieli Consort and Players
Conductor Paul McMcreesh.
Sarah Walker presents the last of four recitals from the brand new concert hall at the recently reopened Royal Birmingham Conservatoire, featuring some of Radio 3's current and former New Generation Artists.
Today's programme features baritone Benjamin Appl and pianist Sholto Kynoch in songs by Schubert, Reger, Brahms, Grieg, Warlock, Strauss, Poulenc and Ireland..
Schubert: Seligkeit, D.433
Reger: Des Kindes Gebet, Op.76'22
Schubert: DEr Einsame, D.800
Schreker: Waldeinsamkeit
Brahms: Mein Madel hat einen Rosenmund
Grieg: Zur Rosenzeit
Richard Strauss: Allerseelen, Op.10'8
Schubert: Drang in die Ferne, D.770
Schubert: Der Wanderer in den Mond, D.870
Adolf Strauss: Ich weiss bestimmt, ich werd' dich wiedersehen
Poulenc: Hyde Park
Vaughan Williams: Silent Noon
Henry Bishop: Home, sweet home
Warlock: My own country
Warlock: The Bachelor
Ireland: If there were dreams to sell
Grieg: Ein Traum
Benjamin Appl, baritone
Sholto Kynoch, piano.
Tom McKinney concludes a week of performances by the BBC Symphony Orchestra. Today includes a concert they gave at the Barbican in November with a programme of Ruders, Shostakovich and Strauss. The BBC Symphony Chorus join the Orchestra for the Beatitudes by Bliss, and Afternoon Concert's tone poem theme continues with music by Chausson and Dohnanyi.
2pm
Poul Ruders: Concerto in Pieces (Purcell Variations)
Shostakovich: Concerto in C minor, Op 35, for piano, trumpet and string orchestra
Strauss: Also sprach Zarathustra, Op 30
Alan Thomas (trumpet)
Behzod Abduraimov (piano)
BBC Symphony Orchestra
Thomas Sondergard (conductor)
c.3.15pm
Bliss: The Beatitudes
Emily Birsan (soprano)
Ben Johnson (tenor)
BBC Symphony Chorus
BBC Symphony Orchestra
Andrew Davis (condcutor)
c.4.10pm
Chausson: Viviane, Op 5
BBC Symphony Orchestra
Pascal Rophé (conductor)
Dohnanyi: Ruralia hungarica, Op 32b
BBC Symphony Orchestra
Gergely Madaras (conductor).
Sean Rafferty with a lively mix of chat, arts news and live performance.
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 Barbican, the BBC Symphony Orchestra conducted by Sir Andrew Davis performs Finzi's Cello Concerto with soloist Paul Watkins and Shostakovich's Tenth Symphony.
Presented by Sara Mohr-Pietsch
Finzi: Cello Concerto, Op 40
8.05: INTERVAL
8.25
Shostakovich: Symphony No 10 in E minor, Op 93
Paul Watkins (cello)
BBC Symphony Orchestra
Sir Andrew Davis (conductor)
Two very different works composed within two years of each other. Gerald Finzi's glorious Cello Concerto, written in 1955 at the request of conductor and cellist John Barbirolli, bursts with turbulent rapture, elegiac strains and melody. It was first broadcast the night before Finzi's death and written with death a constant presence, yet the work has a powerful sense of defiance about it. John Barbirolli wrote to Finzi, 'I felt tears in my eyes in the slow movement; there are only a few moments in music that do that to me'. Paul Watkins, former principal cellist of the BBC Symphony Orchestra, is the soloist.
Shostakovich's Tenth Symphony (1953), hailed by many as his symphonic masterpiece, is a veiled portrait of Stalin. Its intensity never fails to make an impression.
Sir Andrew Davis, who headed the BBC SO from 1989 to 2000 makes a welcome return to the orchestra.
How do you write a fight? Ian McMillan and Hollie McNish are joined by Ross Sutherland, Ben Crystal, Willy Vlautin and Theresa Lola to talk about punching with a pen.
Willy Vlautin is an American novelist and musician. He is the lead singer for Richmond Fontaine, and his latest novel 'Don't Skip out on Me' (Faber), follows a young man who dreams of being a championship boxer.
The poet Ross Sutherland has written a brand new commission for The Verb inspired by the Jackie Chan film 'Rumble in the Bronx'
Hollie McNish introduces Theresa Lola, a British Nigerian poet and workshop facilitator. Based in London, Theresa hosts 'The Rhythm And Poetry Party', an evening of hip-hop-inspired poems and hip-hop song.
The Shakespearean actor and producer Ben Crystal explains how to bring alive a fight scene from page to stage, showing us how the seeds of physical combat are often sown into the fabric of the play without us necessarily knowing.
Producer: Cecile Wright
Presenter: Ian McMillan.
Five writers consider the pleasures of viewing a phenomenon or social activity closely:
Lavinia Greenlaw is on the road in 'intense darkness'. She's visualising what it's like to walk along it and drive along it too. What insights and treasures are revealed ahead?
Producer Duncan Minshull.
Lopa Kothari with a special programme from Celtic Connections in Glasgow., with performances from some of the leading artists at the festival. With sets from Irish singer Daoirí Farrell, the Lian Band from Iran, and Glasgow's own folk super-group Imar.