Programme Index

Discover 11,128,835 listings and 282,118 playable programmes from the BBC

With Edward Seckerson.

Schubert Arpeggione Sonata in A minor, D821 (arr for flute and piano)

6.30 Villa-Lobos Ballet: Genesis

7.00 Liapunov Zhelyazova Volya

7.30 Lutoslawski Concerto for Orchestra

8.00 Berlioz Overture: Le Corsaire

8.45 Schumann Introduction and Allegro for piano and orchestra, Op 134

Full details of Morning on 3's music are posted at [web address removed] a few days before transmission

Contributors

Presenter:
Edward Seckerson

Andrew McGregor plays some of this month's newest releases.
9.30 Building a Library: Ivan Hewett surveys the currently available recordings of Rossini's Petite Messe Solennelle.
10.30 Rob Cowan reviews some recent orchestral releases, including Malcolm Arnold 's symphonies conducted by Andrew Penny , music by Victor de Sabata , Thomas Zehetmair directing Schoenberg, Veress and Bartok, and two fifth symphonies -Mahler's conducted by Benjamin Zander and Bruckner's conducted by Giuseppe Sinopoli.
11.00 An interview with cellist
Sebastian Comberti about the new label Cello Classics.
11.30 Radio 3 "s Disc of the Week:
Buxtehude Membra Jesu Nostri, BuxWV75 The Sixteen, director Harry Christophers Producers Andrew Lyle and Mark Lowther
WEB SITE: www.bbc.co.uk/radio3/cdreview E-MAIL: cdreview@bbc.co.uk
DISC DETAILS: call the Radio 3 Information Line on [number removed] or consult CEEFAX, BBC1. page 651

Contributors

Unknown:
Andrew McGregor
Unknown:
Ivan Hewett
Unknown:
Rob Cowan
Unknown:
Malcolm Arnold
Conducted By:
Andrew Penny
Music By:
Victor de Sabata
Music By:
Thomas Zehetmair
Conducted By:
Benjamin Zander
Conducted By:
Giuseppe Sinopoli.
Unknown:
Sebastian Comberti
Director:
Harry Christophers
Producers:
Andrew Lyle
Producers:
Mark Lowther

Michael Berkeley talks to Chief
Superintendent Nicholas Fisher , a police officer serving with HM Inspectorate of Constabulary. He is currently completing a doctorate at Leeds University on the Restoration poet and libertine, the Earl of Rochester. His choices range from music of Rochester's time to sacred works by Handel, Reger and Aaron Jay Kernis , a piano piece by Smetana, and an extract from Prokofiev's ballet Romeo and Juliet.
Executive producer Wendy Thompson

Contributors

Talks:
Michael Berkeley
Unknown:
Nicholas Fisher
Unknown:
Aaron Jay Kernis
Producer:
Wendy Thompson

Humphrey Carpenter introduces this week's selection of listeners' requests, including: Beethoven Symphony No 3 in E flat (Eroica) London Philharmonic Orchestra, conductor Serge Koussevitzky Lutyens String Quartet No 6 Dartington Quartet Finzi For St Cecilia
Philip Langridge (tenor),
London Symphony Chorus and Orchestra, conductor Richard Hickox
Producer Christina Pritchard. ADDRESS: Listeners'
Choice, BBC Birmingham, B5 7QQ. PHONE: [number removed] E-MAIL: listeners.choice@bbc.co.uk

Contributors

Introduces:
Humphrey Carpenter
Conductor:
Serge Koussevitzky
Unknown:
St Cecilia
Tenor:
Philip Langridge
Conductor:
Richard Hickox
Producer:
Christina Pritchard.

This week the BBC Big Band is featured with and directed bytenor saxophonist and clarinet soloist Ken Peplowski. This session includes a piece by Alec Wilder that has been recorded for the first time.
Presented by Stacey Kent. Producer: Keith Loxam.
ADDRESS: JazzLine-Up. Room 220, Broadcasting House, Queen Margaret Drive , Glasgow, G12 8DG E-MAIL: jazzlineup@bbc.co.uk

Contributors

Soloist:
Ken Peplowski.
Unknown:
Alec Wilder
Presented By:
Stacey Kent.
Producer:
Keith Loxam.
Unknown:
Queen Margaret Drive

Another programme exploring jump jive jazz rooted in the dance floor.

By the end of the forties the greatest names of the big band era were downsizing, yet jump, modified by the influence of rhythm and blues, continued to be a popular style. The biggest star of fifties jump jive was rooted in Las Vegas cabaret but Louis Prima's band swung just as hard as any. Rhythm and blues and then rock and roll, offspring of the jump style, started to take the audience away.

This listing contains language that some may find offensive.

Six programmes in which Simon Dove and Duncan Fraser explore the relationship between dance and music, from first steps in a dance class to tackling the big scores and taking to the dance floor. 1: What's the Score? Choreographers David Bintley , Anna Huber and Jerome Bel talk about the way they settle old scores.

Contributors

Unknown:
Simon Dove
Unknown:
Duncan Fraser
Unknown:
David Bintley
Unknown:
Anna Huber
Unknown:
Jerome Bel

A report from Belfast's Sonorities Festival, which this year hosts the Sonic Arts Network Conference, with guest composer Robert Normandeau from Canada. As well as a new electronic work by him, music in the programme includes Dublin's multimedia Crash Ensemble playing pieces by their founder Donnacha Dennehy and works by Claude Vivier and Roger Doyle ; improvisation by Paul Dunmall
(saxophone) with electronic composers Alistair McDonald and Joseph Hyde ; and the amplified ensemble Icebreaker playing Dutch and American music with driving rhythms. Presented by Verity Sharp.

Contributors

Unknown:
Robert Normandeau
Unknown:
Donnacha Dennehy
Unknown:
Claude Vivier
Unknown:
Roger Doyle
Unknown:
Paul Dunmall
Unknown:
Alistair McDonald
Unknown:
Joseph Hyde
Presented By:
Verity Sharp.

With Susan Sharpe. Rimsky-Korsakov
Russian Easter Festival Overture Kanchell Symphony No 4 Tchaikovsky Symphony
No 4 in F minor 2.20 Schumann Carnaval , Op 9 2.50Stradella Oratorio: San Giovanni Battista 4.10 J Strauss (son), arr Berg Wine, Woman and Song4.20 Schubert, arr Prokofiev Waltzes 4.30 Palestrina
Motet: Salve Regina 4.50 Strauss Befreit, Op 39 No 4 5.00 Otto Deutsch Overture: The Croatian Girl 5.15 Liszt Prometheus
5.25 Couperin Douzième Concert a deux violes 5.40 Chopin Andante Spianato and Grande Polonaise Brillante, Op 22

Contributors

Unknown:
Susan Sharpe.
Unknown:
Schumann Carnaval

BBC Radio 3

About BBC Radio 3

Live music and the arts: broadcasts more live music than any other radio network. Classical music is its core. Genres include world and new music, jazz, speech and drama.

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About this data

This data is drawn from the Radio Times magazine between 1923 and 2009. It shows what was scheduled to be broadcast, meaning it was subject to change and may not be accurate. More

About this data

This data is drawn from the data stream that informs BBC's iPlayer and Sounds. The information shows what was scheduled to be broadcast, meaning it was/is subject to change and may not be accurate. More