May 2013
MAGAZINE
FOUR OF THE BEST
Tokyo String Quartet farewell tour
HARMONY IN THE TROPICS Feast of chamber music for Townsville
ARTS ON DEMAND The digital evolution
DIVA ON A MISSION Lisa Gasteen
ODE TO WAGNER 200th Anniversary Month
FROM THE ROYAL OPERA
Eugine Onegin LIMITED SEASON ONLY
MAY 10, 11, 12, 15
www.palaceoperaandballet.com.au
CONTENTS Vol 40 No 5 4
COVER STORY Barry Walmsley talks with members of the treasured Tokyo String Quartet currently on their farewell world tour and soon to grace Australia’s shores.
3
Simon Says
7
Australian Festival of Chamber Music
9
Opera on the Big Screen
10
Lisa Gasteen Profile
11
Young Virtuosi
13
The Collaborators Series
14
What’s On
16
CD Reviews
18
Swinging on the Vine
21
Progam Guide
54
Directors, Committees, Staff
55
Fine Music Friends
56
Crossword and Trivia Quiz
Digital Channel – Fine Mus On Fine Mus between noon and 4pm weekdays you’ll find programs covering classical up to 3pm and Jazz in Concert until 4pm. For more on this month’s digital programs see page 19.
EDITOR’S DESK
This month, Barry Walmsley catches up with members of the Tokyo String Quartet on their world farewell tour. For over four decades the group has been regarded as the grand masters of the string quartet and Musica Viva brings you one last chance to see them live. (Details page 4.) After you’ve read Henry Mendelson’s story (page 7) you’ll doubtless be picking up the phone to your travel agent and booking a winter escape to the tropics. The annual Australian Festival of Chamber Music in Townsville sounds absolutely sumptuous - world class performers, foodie heaven, sunny days and balmy nights. Sascha Kelly takes a look at the massive growth over the last six years of opera on the big screen. The Metropolitan Opera in New York was the crusader in making works globally accessible and last year ten million people worldwide bought tickets to The Met high definition screenings. The concept has spread to other art forms and platforms and there is now a massive trend towards online on-demand viewing. There’s nothing like the real thing though, and Opera Australia continues to bulldoze its way through perceptions of elitism and court the hoi polloi with some highly entertaining and accessible offerings like Falstaff and Orpheus in the Underworld. At Carmen - this year’s Handa Opera on the Harbour - it was great to see so many young people in an audience that ran the gamut from black tie to blue jeans. For opera aficionados the world over, 22 May will be a day of great significance. It marks 200 years since the birth of Richard Wagner. We thank conductor Patrick Thomas for sharing his thoughts on the great man’s works - below. On this day Fine Music’s Colleen Chesterman has programmed a broadcast of Die Walküre the second in Wagner’s four opera Ring cycle. This recording is from the Melba label with the State Opera of South Australia and the Adelaide Symphony Orchestra. In it, Lisa Gasteen is Brunnhilde and, coincidentally, you’ll find Randolph Magri-Overend’s profile on the diva herself on page 10. Simon Tedeschi pens his last column for us for a while - concert commitments are keeping him on his toes - I’ll miss the “OMG what’s he saying this month” moments when the email lands. Thank you Simon, it’s been a privilege.
Registered Offices & Studios: 72-76 Chandos Street, St Leonards 2065 Tel: 02 9439 4777 Fax: 02 9439 4064 Email: admin@finemusicfm.com Web: finemusicfm.com Facebook, Twitter and YouTube: finemusicfm Frequency: 102.5 Transmitter: Governor Philip Tower, Circular Quay. ABN 64 379 540 010 Art Direction: Shoebox Design shoeboxdesign@gmail.com Printing: Megacolour, Unit 6, 1 Hordern Place. Camperdown, NSW, 2050 Advertising Enquiries: sponsorship@finemusicfm.com Editor: Lizzie Herbert Subeditors: Chris Blower, Anne Irish, Helen Milthorpe Contributors: Bree Baxter, Judy Deacon, Troy Fil, Kevin Jones, Sascha Kelly, Philip Lidbury, Patrick D Maguire, Randolph Magri-Overend, Henry Mendelson, Simon Tedeschi, Patrick Thomas, Phil Vendy, Barry Walmsley, Richard Wong. Subscribe to Fine Music Magazine: visit www.finemusicfm.com or email friends@finemusicfm.com The views expressed by contributors to this magazine do not necessarily reflect or represent the views of the publisher, Fine Music 102.5. Cover image: Tokyo String Quartet. Photo - Marco Borggreve
200 th Anniversary
WAGNER
2013
1813
Lizzie
RICHARD WAGNER (1813-1883) Born 22 May Your audacious virtuosity of orchestration, your endless motifs, your cascading chromatics, all fuse perfectly together with those evolving streams of melody and grand, exotic visions. Your Music Dramas are a coalescence of magical ingredients and creative genius. They remain as giant creations in towering majesty, while your superb “Ring” cycle stands as the greatest of man’s artistic triumphs, single-handedly conceived. Yet, despite these monumental masterpieces, it is your exquisite “Siegfried Idyll”, with its cogent, heartfelt eloquence that moves my heartstrings more greatly. This “Staircase Music” touches poignantly, as does the warmth felt at Triebschen that Christmas Day, when those privileged players intoned your gentle paean of joy and thankfulness. For me, this tender “Triebschen Idyll” for Cosima’s birthday (later re-titled in honour of your and her son, Siegfried) expresses rapture more deeply than your larger canvasses and battalions. - Patrick Thomas MBE May 2013
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FINE MUSINGS
Ashkenazy’s
Favourites
Tchaikovsky, Strauss & Walton “Walton 1 is an absolute favourite of mine,” says Ashkenazy. “It’s compelling and it has tremendous energy.” This breathtaking symphony follows Tchaikovsky’s Romantic masterpiece and Strauss’s elegant Oboe Concerto. TCHAIKOVSKY Romeo and Juliet – Fantasy Overture R STRAUSS Oboe Concerto WALTON Symphony No.1 Vladimir Ashkenazy conductor Hansjörg Schellenberger oboe
MAY AT THE INDEPENDENT THEATRE - Exclusive reader ticket offer
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sydneysymphony.com or call 8215 4600 Mon-Fri 9am-5pm Tickets also available at
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Facebook & Fine Music For those of you who tinker with the internet (and who doesn’t?…I can just see and hear Graucho Marx saying that, cigar poking in front of a bushy moustache bristling with the movement caused by his ungainly gait). Now where was I? I can just hear Jack Benny say that. Enough!…Enough! Ah yes, as I was saying, if you’re internet-savvy you would have noticed that Fine Music has its own Facebook page on www.facebook.com/finemusicfm and furthermore, the page is full of quirky and, at times, useful musical information. For example you may have noticed postings of the latest obituaries. In the past the loss to the music world of the following luminaries has been reported: pianist, conductor and composer Tommy Tycho, pianist and conductor Wolfgang Sawallisch, pianist Van Cliburn, organist MarieClaire Alain, jazz trumpeter Kenny Ball, Elizabeth Furtwängler (widow of Wilhelm), jazz great Terry Lightfoot and soprano Ava June. On another tangent, the biggest number of ‘hits’ received was when a copy of the March cover of Fine Music Magazine was featured. No one’s quite sure whether the 1531 hits was due to the fact that people couldn’t wait to receive their own copies before hoeing into the contents of the magazine or whether the good looks of cover-person, Eric Whitacre, created a metabolism imbalance with a proportion of subscribers. Be that as it may, the next biggest hit was 432 (still a substantial amount) for a report in which soprano Laura Aikin (right) decried the practices of the Salzburg Festival administration for not paying singers for time spent at rehearsals. Other tidbits picked up from around the music world have included news that a violin had been authenticated as belonging to an orchestra member from the Titanic... then swiftly debunked. And, there was Sir Antonio Pappano’s outburst about the younger class of singers being unreliable and the riposte from mega mezzi-soprani (!) Susan Graham and Rosalind Plowright offering their own two cents worth on the matter. News reported from music commentator’s Norman Lebrecht blogs tend to attract big followings, but then you can find all this yourself by looking up the Facebook page! www.facebook.com/finemusicfm Oh and BTW (internet-speak for Oh By The Way!) Fine Music also splashes the page with the odd upcoming broadcasts of interest. TTFN! - Fulton Myers
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Sunday 5 May 2pm *The Actors’ Forum: Ninety Sunday 12 May 2:30pm Seraphim Trio: The Illusionist Saturday 18 May 6:30pm *The Aurealis Awards Saturday 25 May 7pm Emily-Rose Sarkova & Susie Bishop: When the Poet met Music Courtesy of The Australian Elizabethan Trust, readers of Fine Music Magazine can purchase individual tickets for $31 - a generous reduction on normal adult ticket prices and most concessions. Use promotional code ‘FM2013’ when buying your tickets at The Independent. Visit theindependent.org.au or call 1300 302 604 for details and bookings. *Discount does not apply to asterisked events.
Simon says:
PRACTISING & PEDAGOGY
Many pianists have not practised sufficiently, but not just for emotional reasons. Cortot, so overwhelmed by his various responsibilities as conductor, writer, teacher and intellectual, often simply did not have the time to do donkey work at the piano. His recordings, legendary as they are, often reflect a stunning musical vision but with the odd bum note. I, like anybody who devours the sound of the great masters with a wistful pleasure, do not care one iota whether Cortot hits a wrong note here or there. After all, his wrong notes are better than most people’s right notes. Paderewski, in my opinion much maligned, was perhaps a more grievous offender, but he had an even better excuse – he was the Prime Minister of Poland. I’d love to see Julia Gillard play as well as he did! Rubenstein was also one whose accuracy, you could say, sometimes fell by the wayside. The live recording of Chopin’s 1st piano concerto, savagely difficult by any standards, is one I like to listen to, despite Rubenstein’s occasional corker. He was a pianist to whom excessive practising was neither necessary nor desired: for the great Pole, ‘technical’ work was doing double thirds under his hat at the cinema. Good for him! Perhaps the greatest anomalies in the world of piano playing are the Walter Giesekings…those elusive, flabbergasting creatures who both practised little and maintained devastating accuracy. Gieseking would be one of my very favourite pianists, if not my favourite of all time. But it’s nothing to do with his accuracy.
But it’s nothing to do with his accuracy. It’s because he’s unmistakable Arrau – erudite, sometimes perhaps a little stilted, but sincere in a way that few are.
I think it’s safe to say that one should always study music, and the musical problems it presents: you can’t go wrong if you learn the Well Tempered Klavier or the Etudes by Chopin.
Practising is a mysterious practice (I couldn’t think of any other word), because there’s no one way to do it. Reams of literature and pedagogic material abound on ‘how to practise’ along with every convoluted pianistic ‘method’ under the sun. The minute I see a method, I run the other way – perhaps I overcompensate - I grant you that. I despise anything that resembles a cult, be it religious or musical.
What always resonated with me the most was a sentence from Gieseking. He wondered why people separated ‘technique’ and ‘music’ into two different categories. That instinctively made sense to me. Susan Sontag said much the same thing when she excoriated the obsession we have in reducing all art to its form, rather than revelling in the inherently spiritual and even erotic thrall of its content. Surely technique and music are the same thing: an attempt to capture the sound that your brain is feeding you. Of course, piano playing has a decidedly physical element, and in this sense there is a myriad of physical problems that must be solved. But to solve them in a ‘technical’ way I feel undermines the reason we all got into music in the first place. All passagework is melody, and we’re all trying to sound like the human voice. That’s what I am trying – and hopefully succeeding at least 50 percent of the time – to do whenever I sit down at the keyboard. What I am not trying to do is play the same passage so many times that I will end up wearing a sling for the rest of my life. I would much rather sling forward a clump of wrong notes. I just hope I play them right. - Simon Tedeschi
Gyorgy Sandor’s book was in vogue for a while, and before that Leschetitsky, and Cortot’s own book of Etudes with corresponding exercises which are themselves an exercise in temptation to follow the master. Hanon is perhaps unique for its marketing, with the indefatigable ‘promise’ to grant the faithful student a virtuoso technique.
“
To blindly follow one method bypasses the intellect.
“
Jorge Bolet famously said that he hated practising. I think in my eyes, this made him a great and honest man for simply admitting it.
I despise anything that resembles a cult, be it religious or musical..
“
“
Brahms’ exercises, while very useful, are pretty much an invitation for injury and Clementi’s Gradus ad Parnassum was written for completely different instruments to our own. To blindly follow one method bypasses the intellect. One must never lose one’s sense of critical reasoning, be it in choosing a ‘great’ teacher, one’s own approach to a great piece of music; or even in any walk of life.
Editor: This will be ST’s last column for a while to come – concert commitments are happily keeping his life hectic. We say thank you to Simon – it’s been a joy having you as a columnist.
It’s his sound, as crisp and recognisable as any Jazz musician’s voice or compositional style.
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Arrau’s sound is like ivory or chocolate, dripping with an oil-like legato..
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On the other side of the spectrum are the marathon runners, the 12-14 hour a day guys. Rudolf Serkin, Arrau, Richter and Michelangeli were all in this mould. Did they have to work like slaves? Possibly not. Arrau is probably my favourite out of these guys. Why? Because to me, his sound is like ivory or chocolate, dripping with an oil-like legato that is matched only by the strength of his intellectual conviction.
Simon Tedeschi
May 2013
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TOKYO STRING QUARTET FAREWELL TOUR
Bidding fond farewells are always filled with heart-wrenching moments. This will be no further from the truth when the acclaimed Tokyo String Quartet makes its final tour of Australia this month. Established in 1969, the Quartet has attracted accolades across the world for its “exemplary chamber music” (The New York Times). Making the decision to say farewell to its audiences and the success that the Quartet has enjoyed was not an easy one. But for cellist Clive Greensmith, there is life beyond the Tokyo String Quartet. Speaking from Warsaw on this final world tour, Greensmith reminisced about his 14 years with the Quartet, and outlines what is on the horizon for all four members. “..none of us will cease to be involved in our first love, which is chamber music. We’ll be able to participate as musicians in varied ways.” For the Quartet’s founding member, violist Kazuhide Isomura, life will be split between teaching chamber music and viola as a visiting professor at his alma mater, the Toho School of Music in Tokyo, as well as taking up a new position at the Manhattan School of Music in New York, where Greensmith also teaches. Second violinist, Kikuei Ikeda (who joined the group three years after its formation) will continue, along with Isomura, some form of relationship with the Yale School of Music, where the Quartet has been in residence since 1976. Ikeda will also teach at a private university in Tokyo in a similar capacity as a visiting professor.
“And we’ll also have our own piano trio. So there will be a group that will emerge from the TSQ, and we’re still thinking about who will be the pianist with whom we would like to play.”
That means that when the Quartet finally disbands, the instruments, which have been inseparable to its members, will be returned to the Foundation.
So unlike many who might be thinking of retirement, for Greensmith there is still much to do and to explore. Understandably, seeing the world is not high on his list.
“It is going to be a wrench saying our farewells to these wondrous instruments, and there’s no getting around that fact. It is a little more bearable knowing that we all have our own personal instruments.
“Touring has been a big slice of my life. I have been very fortunate to have played all over the world. It has been a real privilege, and way more than I ever expected, when I was thinking about my future in my 20s.” Not living in a hotel suite and seeing a different city every couple of days will be a welcome change. “People underestimate how difficult it is to travel. Even on this trip from New York to Warsaw, my luggage did not arrive, so you’re always a little anxious about the things that are important, even just having the music with you on arrival for a concert.” There is no possibility that his cello would go missing, however, as it occupies a seat on every plane next to him when he travels. Greensmith’s cello belongs to what is known famously as the Paganini Strads, two violins, a viola and cello, which range in age from 269 to 325 years of age, and owned by virtuoso, Niccolo Paganini until his death in 1840. The “Strads” have been through a series of collectors, but since 1995 have been owned by the Nippon Music Foundation, which loans them to the Quartet with the only caveat being that they are always played together.
“The Strad cello I have been using, and to which I have grown very familiar and close, that is 14 years of constant use, is really a part of me. It has taught me what I like in cellos, what I want to find in terms of sound. “I’m now at the point where I’m confident that I’ll be able to re-sculpt that sound on another cello. I was very lucky to find a modern Italian instrument from the 1920s, which I really love. It’s the same style of instrument – the famous B Form Strad Cello – I’m so glad I have that, so that when I give the Strad back, I will feel relatively comfortable. I have been using the new one to break myself in, and it won’t be such of a wrench when I have to give the Strad back.” No doubt the Paganini Strads will be closely watched by a world audience to see to which group they are loaned by the Foundation. Whilst consoling himself about the fate of giving up these beautiful instruments, Greensmith also acknowledges that they must be used. “We all recognise that they should be given to another group. These are instruments that should be played, and honestly, nothing would make me happier than to know a deserving
Greensmith is both melancholic about the passing of something that was truly great, but optimistic also, looking forward to a new era for himself and the other members. “First violinist, Martin (Beaver) and I will be moving to Los Angeles full-time to take up new positions at a wonderful emerging school called The Colburn School, which is situated in the downtown area, right opposite the Disney Hall. It is a conservatory that is only nine years old, and a school that has done remarkably well in a few years.” “He and I will be co-directing the string chamber music program and we will also have our own students. So we’ll begin that move to LA full-time in the summer, after the Quartet disbands. 4
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Martin Beaver, Kazuhide Isomura, Kikuei Ikeda, Clive Greensmith
group can enjoy them and have an intimate relationship with them as we have done. They should be played, not kept in a bank vault, so I am happy to see them go to a group that will exploit them and enjoy them.” It may even be possible that on a future tour for Musica Viva, the Paganini Strads may once again be heard by a quartet, yet unknown. The Quartet’s previous visits to Australia have been met with unanimous praise from critics and audiences alike. And the admiration is mutual says Greensmith - “Australians have tremendous passion and enthusiasm for chamber music. They are warm, attentive and knowledgeable. “There is more variation in Australia though, than when we visit, say to Japan, where cell phones and coughing never happen…. But then, in Madrid for example, the audiences are almost like attending a soccer match.” Greensmith believes that local audiences owe much to Musica Viva, the company that contracts and tours such artists as the Tokyo String Quartet. “Because the roots of Musica Viva are so deeply connected to Europe and the emigration from Europe, my take is that the audiences, which we find and have come to love in Australia, are every bit as erudite, enthusiastic and passionate about chamber music as the finest audiences in North America and Europe.” Greensmith notes that on previous visits the Quartet has played music by Australians Carl Vine and Peter Sculthorpe. The Quartet No 16, by Sculthorpe, was in fact commissioned by Musica Viva, for the Quartet’s 2004 Australian tour, and this emotive work will be on the upcoming tour program. “It was an extraordinarily topical piece, being inspired by letters from asylum seekers; they were very personal.” Greensmith quickly points out that the Quartet members were not asked to comment on the politics of the piece, but were simply to take it upon face value about its musical worth. “We loved it and found it very powerful, and it spoke to us. We were very happy to work with Peter (Sculthorpe) on the piece and, must say, it was extremely well written for the group. “We saw it as our role to be powerful advocates for the piece, but also acknowledge that he (Sculthorpe) has written over 16 string quartets, and his is a very important body of work for
the 20th and 21st century repertoire for string quartets. For some, there might be questions as to whether works for string quartets will continue in this modern age. Greensmith has no doubt that they will, albeit proving a very difficult path for any composer. “Writing for string quartet is an extremely exacting medium; it is very hard for composers to write for string quartets as there is no hiding behind orchestral colour. “As well, there’s an almost over bearing presence of Haydn, Beethoven, Schubert, Bartok and Shostakovich, and composers must be constantly measuring themselves against that incredible body of repertoire. “It is an exacting task. For string players, there’s very little chance to hide - make ‘filler’ music that’s going to convince people. Composers must almost feel naked as there’s not much trickery that you can use, if you have a lack of ideas. It’s an awfully big responsibility.” For many performing artists, leaving a legacy is important. The Tokyo String Quartet has left an enormous legacy of memorable concerts, and a prodigious recording output. But perhaps, it is best for Greensmith himself to sum up how the group might like to be remembered. “I would suggest that the group be known for its homogeneity of sound; like a fine choir. It is the internal balance of the Quartet at which we’ve worked very hard, to make sure that the tonal picture of the group is something
that we feel right about. That means a great homogeneity of sound and clarity of voicing, so you can hear the main line wherever it is; the balance is good, so that you can distinguish the individual voices together, as well as a sense of harmonious working together. “The balance between the individual and the corporate identity of the group is always important. We never “shout” when we play. We like to play with a tremendous range of sound; we like to explore the softer and more intimate range of sounds in the dynamic spectrum. We never grandstand, that is, superimpose our egos on the music. I think the Paganini instruments have allowed us to realise such a philosophy in a successful way. Each instrument has a very distinct timbre of sound, and there’s a certain warmth and clarity and precision that the instruments have. It’s not a question of loud or soft, but a question of character”. Just as each of the Quartet will miss his equally famous instrument, so collectively they will miss their audiences who have adored their playing for over four decades. - Barry Walmsley Musica Viva Presents Tokyo String Quartet Monday 27 May 7pm and Saturday 8 June 2pm City Recital Hall Angel Place, Sydney For full tour details visit www.musicaviva.com.au May 2013
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The Australian Festival of Chamber Music brings you 10 days of leading international musicians and unique programming in a seductive tropical North Queensland setting. Join Artistic Director Piers Lane and a superb line-up of artists that includes Michael Collins, Joe Chindamo, Giovanni Guzzo, Nicholas Daniel, Neal Perez da Costa, Zuill Bailey, Ksenija Siderova and more. Attend one, ten or all thirty concerts and special events that make up this wonderful festival. Be entertained by the personalities at Concert Conversations, the delights of a Ray Golding Sunset Series concert and the magic of a Magnetic Island beach concert.
For more information visit afcm.com.au
Take advantage of a Festival Holiday Package AND SAVE! To make it even easier, we’ve created four exciting new packages to tempt you. Each package offers 3 or 4 nights accommodation, discounted concert tickets AND preferential seating. So you enjoy the best seats for less!
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Friday 26 July, 8:00pm, Townsville Civic Theatre
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Concert Conversations with Piers Lane 1
Friday 2 August, 8:00pm, Townsville Civic Theatre
Governor’s Gala – Liebestod
Saturday 3 August, 10:00am, Townsville Civic Theatre, C2
Add in a ticket to the sell-out Chefs in the North dinner, a four course five-star black tie dinner on the lawns of Jupiters Townsville, for just $280 more.
Saturday 3 August, 8:00pm, Townsville Civic Theatre
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Concert Conversations with Piers Lane 6
Saturday 27 July, 8:00pm, Townsville Civic Theatre
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LIMELIGhT 2012 Award winner for BEST FESTIvAL
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26 JULY - 3 AUGUST 2013
TROPICAL TOWNSVILLE: TREAT FOR MUSICAL TASTE BUDS
such anniversaries of composers, prominent and some not so prominent by highlighting sometimes well-known works, other times rarely-performed ones. 2013 will include Poulenc’s Bal Masqué - merely one of several items reflecting the 50th anniversary of the French composer’s death. Meanwhile the bicentenary of Wagner’s birth will be recognised via chamber adaptations by the Festival’s 2013 composer-in-residence, James Ledger of the Prelude and Liebestod from Tristan and Isolde. In addition, the AFCM will present Schubertiade, a celebration of Franz Schubert’s music with many of his popular classics and the 50th anniversary of Hindemith’s death will be saluted by his dazzling and exciting Kammermusik 1. Photo - Festival of Chamber Music A somewhat surprising combination of sunshine and beach sands with contrapuntal harmony and chamber opera is unquestionably a rarity in most parts of the musical world. Moreover, in the ranks of the international anthology of festival cities, Townsville could well be regarded by many a music aficionado as a surprising inclusion. Yet for the past 23 years, the northern Queensland city has witnessed a measure of musical programming likely to provoke the envy of many of the world’s leading festival directors. Held annually in August (this year’s dates are 26 July – 3 August) the Australian Festival of Chamber Music (AFCM) has developed a unique international reputation for its distinguished artists and innovative programming across a wide range of chamber music genres. Under its director of the past seven years, internationally acclaimed pianist Piers Lane, each year’s program aims to provide diverse music based on the core classics and new, rarely heard music as well as light hearted selections and educational components. Period performance element London born but raised in Queensland where Lane Sr. was a major force at its Conservatorium of Music, the feisty Lane has instilled an atmosphere of innovative, often courageous programming combined with a festive atmosphere which has audiences returning year after year. Highlight examples are aplenty such as the outdoor beach concert on Townsville’s offshore Magnetic Island which this year will showcase the artistry of Nicholas Daniel, one of the world’s leading oboists playing solo Britten intended by the composer to be played outdoors.
“I aim to program artists who are recognised as chamber musicians, not just as famous soloists”, Lane stated. As a result, leading artists from the UK, USA, Latvia, Switzerland, Norway, Singapore and Australia will have music lovers flocking to Townsville from around the country and the world again this year. The program includes the premier cellist Zuill Bailey (USA) and a new exploration of familiar classics by pianist Joe Chindamo and Australian violinist Zöe Black. Describing the program, the London based Lane said: “For some the highlight might be the Australian Jazz Quintet. For someone else it will be the opportunity to hear Bach’s six cello suites played candlelit by the charismatic American cellist, Zuill Bailey whose recording of them has sold wildly. “Someone else will particularly enjoy the tango fun on the final night or the rare chance to hear the complete Britten Canticles live on a Sunday morning”. His comments reflect the 2013 programming which will be underlined by what Lane describes as ‘a period performance element’. “The Baroque is far better represented than usually, partly because of the 450th anniversaries of English composers, John Dowland and Giles Farnaby’s births and the 300th anniversary of Italian composer Arcangelo Corelli’s death, but also because of three exciting Townsville debuts by harpsichordist/forte pianist Neal Peres da Costa, gambist/cellist Daniel Yeadon and recorder player Ruth Wilkinson,” he said. “For our sins” Lane went on to outline for Fine Music Magazine his predilection for celebrating
“We’re also producing a chamber opera for our sins”, Lane said, adding that being a Benjamin Britten anniversary year, his ‘Noyes Fludde’ - a work for a sizeable cast - will see a contingent of local singers, choirs, buglers, instrumentalists and the North Queensland Recorder Society joining forces with Festival musicians. Adding to the impressive line up of leading music world names is renowned viola soloist Phillip Dukes (UK), acclaimed Opera Australia countertenor Tobias Cole, Australia’s Goldner String Quartet and the Australian String Quartet, the foremost clarinettist of his generation, Michael Collins (UK), violinist Giovanni Guzzo (Venezuela/ Italy) and tenor Markus Schäfer (Germany). Paralleling this array of musical performances are events such as the “Chefs of the North” Dinner. Introduced in 2006 it has beguiled festival goers with its eclectic mix of degustation menus prepared by major Australian, New Zealand and local chefs accompanied by fine wines and three musical interludes. The last word The last word, predictably is Lane’s: “Visitors from Australia and overseas will continue to travel to the Australian Festival of Chamber Music, not only for its enviable global reputation for the quality of distinguished artists, but also for its warm welcome and host of like-minded people. The AFCM offers a rare and exciting opportunity to hear and meet international musicians in a wonderfully inviting and relaxed setting,” he said . That it should not be missed is an obvious conclusion. - Henry Mendelson www.afcm.com.au May 2013
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“WITHOUT DOUBT THE GRANDEST CINEMA IN SYDNEY” - TIME OUT SYDNEY
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fineMusic 102.5
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US ON
Opera:
The Digital Evolution 2013 is a good year for concerts in Sydney. Last month I caught Jonas Kaufmann in The Metropolitan Opera’s production of Parsifal. The Paris Opera Ballet is presenting Eugene Onegin with Simon Keenlyside in the title role in May. And, I enjoyed my favourite seats to the premiere of Brett Dean’s new work commissioned and performed by the Berlin Philharmonic... my couch.
“I’m thinking of subscribing as we speak”, says Emily. “I love the interval interviews with the artists. It reminds me that these super-stars are real people. Beyond that, it’s a magnificent insight to hear the things they say about the music. You can see what goes on behind the scenes”. There isn’t a monopoly on this market. The Berlin Philharmonic has a similar application, Digital Concert Hall. Sydney based conductor Ben Crocker has been subscribing to this since he returned from travelling to Berlin last year. “They have done well to unify the feel of the physical concert hall with the online application. It’s avoided the pitfall of becoming a collection of videos on a website, and turned it into a virtual experience.”
Don’t worry, you haven’t been living under a rock. Sadly none of these international companies are physically gracing our shores this year. They are coming to me via my local cinema, or even my desktop computer. What could be more surprising is the cinema revolution began with what is often (unfairly) perceived as the most elitist tradition of all – opera.
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..ten million people worldwide bought tickets to the Met HD.
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2006 heralded the dramatic rethink in strategy. Instead of just audio they would bring live simulcasts of the newest productions to cinemas across the country. Critics were quick to doubt the commercial prospects of this venture, but by 2013, the sales track record has silenced them. The 2008-09 season sold 400, 000 tickets, but by July 2010 in excess of two million tickets were sold for the nine highdefinition telecasts. Four years ago, the Hayden Cremorne Orpheum in Sydney started screening these productions, after distributors approached director Paul Dravet. “I’m no opera buff, but when we surveyed our audience, the interest was there.” Not just in Sydney it seems. Ten million people worldwide bought tickets to The Met HD last year. On the 16 February 2013, the flashy, colourful production of Rigoletto screened to an estimated audience of 113, 000 in North America alone. So, who makes up this audience? “A crowd that you would expect,” says Dravet. “The age range isn’t too diverse to our opera screenings.” A movie ticket is still cheaper than the airfare
It’s not just opera companies and philharmonics that are clamouring for the cinema audience. Dravet elaborates - “This year we are screening to New York, so audiences who might not normally afford a concert-going lifestyle are seeing the advantage”. One such patron is Emily Edmonds, recent vocal graduate of the Sydney Conservatorium. With the affordable prices and international performers, should local arts companies be worried about losing her patronage? “Not at all. The availability of these broadcasts doesn’t deter me from attending local productions at all. I class the two as separate entities. “The big companies, like The Met and the Paris Opera have the ability to focus the seasons on different repertoire than we would see here in Australia. Even though we are staging the complete Ring Cycle this year in Melbourne, I have already got to know the music and the staging by watching the new Lepage production last year.” Six hours at the opera on a Saturday afternoon might be a wonderful prospect, but impossible for a busy lifestyle. The Met has already thought to counter that problem and developed Met Opera on Demand - subscription can be bought monthly or yearly and gives access to 120 videos in the back-catalogue, and new productions are added each month.
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There is always an audience when you are seeing what is renowned as the best.
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The Met in HD was developed in 2006 as a vehicle to “reach existing audiences and introduce new audiences to opera through new technology.” Of course, using broadcasting as a means of bringing music to the people is not new at all. The Met(ropolitan Opera) has been presenting their Sunday matinee performances live on radio for decades.
Mirren as Queen Elizabeth II The National Theatre’s production of The Audience with Dame Helen Mirren as Queen Elizabeth II. Also, there are three new features in a series called Exhibition – Great Art on Screen, where you can see art from Manet, Munch and Vermeer. There is always an audience when you are seeing what is renowned as the best.” – Sascha Kelly Operas screening in Sydney - May The Royal Opera’s Eugene Onegin, The Metropolitan Opera’s Francesca da Rimini (Palace Cinemas) & Giulio Cesare (Palace Cinemas and Cremorne Orpheum) www.palaceoperaandballet.com.au www.orpheum.com.au May 2013
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Lisa Gasteen
The supreme Wagnerian soprano problem on her hands. Five years of forward concert and operatic bookings eventually had to be cancelled. Agonisingly, she was forced to cancel her second Ring performance at the Metropolitan and Simone Young’s new production at the Hamburg State Opera.
Lisa Gasteen. Photo - Justin Walpole In 1991 Brisbane-born Lisa Gasteen was on top of the world when she became the first and only Australian to win the Cardiff Singer of the World competition. For anyone watching on television on the night of the finals, or even watching live in Cardiff, it was obvious that Gasteen was streets ahead of the other contestants. What followed was a whirlwind of appearances starting with the Charles Mackerras-conducted Il Trovatore in which Gasteen sang Leonora to a Scottish audience. She was in great demand. She performed in all the great opera houses of Europe - Wagner, Verdi, Strauss - and in 2002 sang Brunnhilde in London, Vienna and the Metropolitan in New York. She also sang in the 2004 Adelaide Ring cycle. The conductors she has performed with include Sir Antonio Pappano, Lorin Maazel, Sir Bernard Haitink, James Levine, Zubin Mehta, Valery Gergiev and, of course, Simone Young. In fact it was Young who got her ready for the big Wagnerian roles of Isolde and Brunnhilde. She had become the supreme Wagnerian soprano. And then, in May 2008, it all came to a shattering halt. In trying to lift a bucket of cumquats in her Brisbane backyard she pinched a nerve in her neck. She started suffering from muscle spasms and it became so painful that, at times, she couldn’t grip something as innocuous as a saucepan handle and she was even forced to use both hands to lift a glass to her lips. Later that August, while singing at a concert in Adelaide, the pain became intolerable and she realised she had a serious 10
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Months of rehabilitation followed and even injections of Botox were tried. Slowly but surely Gasteen showed signs of improvement and four years after the first spasms occurred she tentatively started performing again in a Wagner recital with The Queensland Symphony Orchestra. Naturally the finances started dwindling but Gasteen was optimistic about her plight. The children (Eve now 25 and Henry 23) were no longer at school and husband Barry Johnson (a solicitor) was earning a decent wage so the family was not exactly living in penury. Gasteen is very philosophical about her lifestyle change. For starters, her home life has thrived and these days she loves the family environment. I ask her about her jet-setting days when she virtually lived out of a suitcase. She doesn’t miss it one bit, admitting it was demanding and wasn’t as glamorous as people make it out to be. What about the financial losses? You don’t start showing a profit, she confides, until the third performance of each operatic series. Plus you have to find your own accommodation (partially subsidised by the operatic company) and transportation costs have to be borne if one wishes to upgrade from the basic entitlement. Gasteen’s optimism also now extends to her current occupation as a ‘Practice Professor of Opera’ at the Griffith University campus
of the Queensland Conservatorium. I ask her what her title means. She doesn’t really know except to say that she uses her experience as an opera singer to help aspiring singers. She is also running a series of master classes every summer in Brisbane, between November and December, in which singers are placed in an environment beneficial to their future development by mingling with professionals who may be of use to them when furthering their careers abroad. Gasteen is very passionate about the classes. The first of them, in 2012, included conductor Giovanni Reggioli, administrator John Fisher and Wagnerian tenor Siegfried Jerusalem. An Alexander Technique teacher was also in attendance advising on how to avoid the bad physical habits that could prevent a singer achieving their full potential. But running the school isn’t cheap. The original fund-raising concert involving tenor Glenn Winslade and Simone Young on the piano raised approximately $30,000. But a lot more is needed and she is looking for sponsors. In fact, Gasteen would like to see the school provide year-long education but such a scheme would require at least $3 million. In August this year, Gasteen will provide further proof that her former debilitation has been overcome. She has teamed up with old chum Simone Young and the Sydney Symphony and will sing Wagner’s Wesendonck Lieder while the orchestra will perform Bruckner’s final, unfinished symphony. – Randolph Magri-Overend
Glenn Winslade (Florestan) and Lisa Gasteen (Leonore) in Opera Australia’s Fidelio. Photo - James Sharrock
Young Virtuosi
YOUNG PERFORMER 2013 SEMI FINALISTS JONATHON RAMSAY - EUPHONIUM
Eighteen-year-old Jonathon Ramsay, is an undergraduate student at the Sydney Conservatorium of Music. In 2009 he won SABINA IM - PIANO Twenty-three year old Sabina Im was a full music scholarship holder at St. Catherine’s School, Waverley. At age thirteen, she gave her first solo debut performance at the Sydney Opera House. In 2012, having again achieved full scholarship status, she graduated with a Bachelor of Music in Piano Performance Degree with honors from the Yong Siew Toh Conservatory of Music, National University of Singapore. Under the tutelage of Albert Tiu she gave several solo and chamber recitals in Singapore. PHOEBE GARDNER - VIOLIN
Fifteen-year-old Phoebe Gardner is a violinist in the Sydney Conservatorium of Music’s Rising Stars Program. She gained her Associate
the Australian National Junior Euphonium Championship and was named Junior Champion of Champions. He was a finalist in the 2010, 2011 Sydney Eisteddfod Doctors Orchestra Scholarship and in 2012 won the NSW Open Euphonium and Champion of Champions titles as well as State Junior Euphonium, Junior Champion of Champion and the National Junior Bass Trombone title. Jonathon achieved a mark of 50/50 for extension music in his HSC examinations in 2011 and was invited to perform as part of the Encore concert in 2012. He has performed as a soloist with symphony orchestras and as a part of many recognised and award winning
ensembles, as well as in numerous concerts including the Schools Spectacular, the Opening ceremony of the Youth Olympics, and the TDP Graduation Ceremony. He has been recorded multiple times by ABC Classic FM and Fine Music 102.5 as part of state and national competitions. Jonathon recently won the prestigious Ern Keller International Soloist of the Year Competition, an invitation only event featuring brass soloists from around the world. He was a finalist in the 2012 Fine Music 102.5 Young Performer Award. He is currently under the guidance of Scott Kinmont, Associate principal trombone of the Sydney Symphony Orchestra.
Sabina performed in notable venues such as the Metropolitan Art Space in Tokyo, Japan in 2005 and the University of New South Wales in 2006 and has performed for prominent individuals such as the Korean ambassador and Sir Donald Spencer. In 2007, she was a guest performer at the “Richard Tognetti with the Australian Chamber Orchestra” concert and she has featured in the Artist Concert Series at the John F. Kennedy Center USA during the Washington International Piano Festival. She has been broadcast on SBS 97.7 and Fine Music 102.5 and this year begins studying for her
Master of Music in Piano Performance Degree at the Royal College of Music in London.
and Licentiate diplomas with distinctions. Concertmaster of the Performing Arts Unit Orchestra, Phoebe has performed solo at many concerts over the years at the Conservatorium and other venues including the Sydney Opera House and Sydney Town Hall. Phoebe was a featured artist in the 2012 NSW Schools Spectacular.
enjoy doing, and I think I will always compose throughout my life.”
Phoebe has won several scholarships and prizes for violin performance and composition including first prize twice in the Australian National Song Writing Competition. She was a recipient of the APRA Encouragement Prize in the Fine Music 102.5 Young Composer Awards and says that, “Composing is something I
YOUNG VIRTUOSI BROADCASTS Young Performer Awards: 1pm Wednesday 1 May - Jonathon Ramsay, euphonium 1pm Wednesday 15 May - Sabina Im, piano 1 pm Wednesday 29 May - Phoebe Gardner, violin Emerging Young Artist Series: 1pm Wednesday 8 May Edith Yam, pipe organ, Daisy Ou, piano, Yejin Min, violin 1pm Wednesday 22 May Josephine Chung, violin, Rachael Fullston, soprano, Caleb Wong, cello
In 2012 she was the runner up in the Fine Music 102.5 Young Performer Awards, a semi-finalist in the Ku-ring-gai Concerto Competition, and was a recitalist in the National Youth Concerto Competition’s Finals Week in Brisbane. Phoebe was awarded a scholarship for the Australian Chamber Orchestra’s inaugural ACO Academy and in April this year, made her orchestral debut performing as a guest soloist with the Mosman Symphony Orchestra. Next month – on a scholarship - Phoebe will attend the Perlman Music Program to study with Itzhak Perlman in New York.
All recordings for the Young Virtuosi series took place at St Catherine’s School Waverley. Pipe Organ was recorded at the Sydney Conservatorium of Music. Presenters- Andrew Bukenya, Chloe Chung, Josh McNulty. Audio Engineer - Greg Ghavalas. Piano tuning - Ron Overs, Overs Pianos COMING UP 10am to 4pm Saturday 4 May Sydney Conservatorium Association: Mary Greville and Bert Coughtrey Piano Scholarship 2013, MLC School Centenary Music Centre, cnr Grantham Road and Rowley Street, Burwood. Co-ordinator: Judy Deacon yv@finemusicfm.com May 2013
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NATIONAL THEATRE LONDON CAPTURED LIVE IN HD FROM THE CURRENT LONDON SEASON
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Starring screen royalty herself HELEN MIRREN as she reprises her Academy Award winning role as Queen Elizabeth II in the SOLD OUT West End production!
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GIULIO CESARE
David McVicar’s second new production of the season is this dynamic staging of Giulio Cesare, a hit at the Glyndebourne Festival in 2005, which incorporates elements of Baroque theater and 19th-century British imperialism
SATURDAY MAY 18 AT 11.30AM SUNDAY MAY 19 AT 1PM THURSDAY MAY 23 AT 11.30AM ENCORE!
CARMEN JUNE 22/23/27
Richard Eyre’s hit production stars Elīna Garanča as the seductive gypsy of the title, opposite Roberto Alagna as the obsessed Don José.
ENCORE!
IL TROVATORE JULY 27/28/AUG 1 David McVicar’s stirring production stars Sondra Radvanovsky, Dolora Zajick, Marcelo Álvarez, and Dmitri Hvorostovsky—in what might be the composer’s most melodically rich score.
ENCORE!
LA TRAVIATA AUG 24/25/29
Natalie Dessay stars as Verdi’s most beloved heroine in Willy Decker’s stunning production with Matthew Polenzani as her lover,
ENCORE!
TUNANDOT SEP 21/22/26
Director Franco Zeffirelli’s breathtaking production of Puccini’s last opera. Maria Guleghina plays the ruthless Chinese princess of the title, with Marcello Giordani as Calàf.
E X H I B I T I O N G R E AT A R T O N S C R E E N EXHIBITION: GREAT ART ON SCREEN is a new series of cinema events, bringing the world’s greatest art exhibitions to cinema screens worldwide.
EDVARD MUNCH, CELEBRATING HIS 150TH ANNIVERSARY Saturday July 13 at 1pm Sunday July 14 at 1pm Wednesday July 17 at 1pm and 7pm Adult: $25 All concessions: $20 Special Group rates available for schools This year, all of Norway celebrates the 150th anniversary of the birth of Edvard Munch (1863 - 1944), one of the towering figures of modern art. Munch 150, co-hosted by the National Museum and the Munch Museum (both in Oslo), is already being hailed a “once-in-a-lifetime show”. HAYDEN CREMORNE ORPHEUM 380 Military Rd Cremorne NSW 2090 (02) 9908 4344 | www.orpheum.com.au
THE COLLABORATORS In the last of our Accompanist Insights Series, Eun-Jung Byun talks about her rewarding career.
the audience, each opportunity has taught me the mystery of communication in music.
There are many different titles I receive when I appear, the common thread being that I play piano.
My experience as an associate artist “Your sight reading skill must be really good!” This is the most common comment I receive whenever I introduce myself as an accompanist. It is not the only skill required for the profession. I see accompaniment as supporting and completing a team role in music making. Hence my interpersonal skills have developed through the years. I am often asked “Do you miss the solo stage as a pianist where you are the star?” Initially I questioned this myself. However, on balance I have gained more by being an ensemble pianist than being a soloist so my answer is no. I could have gained more audience praise after a performance, but I would not have known the beauty of some of the sonatas, art songs and concerti that I know now. I also would not have met the amazing musicians who are willing to perform with me. I love what I do. I am a staff accompanist at the Sydney Conservatorium of Music and General Manager of The North Shore School of Music. I do not know what the future holds but I am grateful that I have found the calling of my life. - Eun-Jung Byun
Accompaniment was not on my professional career options when I first arrived in Sydney. I came to Sydney with minimal English and I never knew accompaniment actually existed. The only career option I had been told as a piano student, was to become a concert pianist. Participating in national and international competitions, studying in conservatories and obtaining degrees were the only paths mapped out for me. Accompaniment has been viewed as second to a solo pianist’s career so requiring less effort and time. It was at Ravenswood School for Girls where my Eun-Jung Byun perspective was expanded and I was introduced to accompaniment as a career option. Performing accompaniment. Preparing vast ranges of with friends was much more enjoyable than repertoire in limited time - usually less than lonesome hours of practising. two weeks - has given me more discipline as Studying accompaniment a musician. I was forced to read more broadly My lack of pianism became obvious once I to understand historical backgrounds and started studying accompaniment. As a piano pay close attention to composers’ markings. student, I Cat hadProtection choices ofAd.15.3.13.pdf repertoire to 1suit 15/03/13 Accompaniment 3:21 PM definitely allowed for more my capability but that was not the case for exposure as a performer. Regardless the size of
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What’s On
SYMPHONY SYDNEY SYMPHONY Ashkenazy’s Favourites Wednesday 15 May 8pm Friday 17 May 8pm Saturday 18 May 8pm Sydney Opera House Tickets: $35-$125 Bookings: 8215 4600 www.sydneysymphony.com Vladimir Ashkenazy has too many musical favourites to count! But for this concert he’s agreed to name three, beginning with Tchaikovsky’s Romeo and Juliet Fantasy Overture. After Tchaikovsky’s Romantic masterpiece - music to tug at your heartstrings - there’s Richard Strauss in neoclassical mode with his breezily Mozartian Oboe Concerto. Soloist is former Berlin Philharmonic oboist, Hansjörg Schellenberger (above). And then there’s William Walton’s English mix of humour, high spirits and nostalgia. “Walton 1 is an absolute favourite of mine,” says Ashkenazy. “It’s compelling and it has tremendous energy.” This is music that’s carried along by the brazen power of its rhythms and vibrant orchestral sounds - a breathtaking end to a dramatic concert.
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SYMPHONY SYDNEY SYMPHONY ASHKENAZY CONDUCTS BEETHOVEN Thursday 9 May 1.30pm Friday 10 May 8pm Saturday 11 May 2pm Monday 13 May 7pm Sydney Opera House Tickets: $35-$145 Bookings: 8215 4600 www.sydneysymphony.com The star of this all-Beethoven program is one of Vladimir Ashkenazy’s absolute favourite symphonies, the Pastoral. In his Pastoral Symphony, Beethoven - a poet in sound - has gone out into the countryside and brought back the songbirds, the dancing peasants, the bubbling brook and the terrifying thunderstorm. And with it comes the intensity of feeling that comes from being in nature. The concert begins with the Sydney Symphony strings, capturing
the transparency and inner energy of the ‘Grand Fugue’, originally written for four musicians. And in the Triple Concerto we get the double pleasure of three soloists in partnership chamber music style and the athletic virtuosity of a concerto. (Kirsty Hilton violin, Catherine Hewgill cello, Clemens Leske piano).
OPERA SYDNEY PHILHARMONIA FESTIVAL CHORUS AND ORCHESTRA OPERA’S TRIPLE THREAT Saturday 8 June 2pm Sunday 9 June 5pm Sydney Opera House Tickets: $32-$90 Bookings: 9250 7777 www.sydneyphilharmonia.com.au In theatre, a triple threat is someone who can sing, dance and act. In this concert you’ll find more of a triple treat of music, drama and passion. The three birthday boys in the program - Verdi, Wagner and Britten - had those qualities in spades. 2013 marks the bicentenaries of the births of Verdi and Wagner, and the centenary of Britten. Sydney Philharmonia Festival Chorus celebrates with this program of highlights from some of these composers’ greatest creations.
The program includes music from Verdi’s Otello, Britten’s Peter Grimes and Wagner’s Tannhäuser. Special guests are soprano Cheryl Barker and tenor Stuart Skelton. The Sydney Philharmonia Festival Chorus and Orchestra is conducted by Brett Weymark.
BALLET THE AUSTRALIAN BALLET VANGUARD 30 April - 18 May Sydney Opera House, Joan Sutherland Theatre Tickets: $34-$192 Bookings: 9250 7777 www.australianballet.com.au The Australian Ballet celebrates groundbreaking moments in ballet history with Vanguard, a triple bill of works that set the foundations for contemporary dance. George Balanchine stretched classical technique with The Four Temperaments. Jirˇí Kylián raised the bar for abstract ballet with Bella Figura and Wayne McGregor’s Dyad 1929 redefined ballet
for a modern generation. Australian Ballet Artistic Director, David McAllister, says that Vanguard is a program that demonstrates ballet’s modern journey. “Classical ballet underwent dramatic developments in the 20th-century and continues to evolve. Vanguard is a program that will shift people’s expectations of what classical movement can express.” All three choreographers have played a role in reinventing and reinvigorating ballet and Vanguard brings three of their best works together in one season. The Australian Ballet with Australian Opera and Ballet Orchestra. Image - Adam Bull and Ty King-Wall. Photo - Georges Antoni
CHAMBER AUSTRALIA ENSEMBLE CONCERT 3 Saturday 18 May 8pm Sir John Clancy Auditorium University of NSW Tickets: $17-$47 Bookings: 9385 4874 www.ae.unsw.edu.au
CHAMBER SYDNEY OMEGA ENSEMBLE TEDESCHI AND OMEGA Saturday, 1 June 7.30pm City Recital Hall, Angel Place Tickets: $55-$65 Bookings: 8256 2222 www.sydneyomegaensemble.com Following last year’s acclaimed performance with Simon Tedeschi, the Sydney Omega Ensemble once again welcomes the distinguished concert pianist. The program opens with the delightful and playful wind quartet by Françaix, after which the Ensemble is joined by Tedeschi to perform the vivacious and lively Spohr Septet. Spohr’s compositions languished in obscurity following his death in 1859, but are now a staple of chamber groups around the world and enormously popular with audiences. The strings of the Ensemble expand to perform the sumptuous Capriccio string sextet by Strauss, the overture to his final opera Capriccio. The concert concludes with one of Shostakovich’s best-known works, the Quintet for Piano and Strings, composed, as much of his string quartets were, for the Beethoven Quartet. Above - Tedeschi and clarinettist David Rowden.)
This Australia Ensemble rural-themed concert embraces works of Ian Munro (below), Carl Nielsen, Eugene Goossens and Johannes Brahms with guest artists Shefali Pryor (oboe) Robert Johnson (horn) and Andrew Barnes (bassoon). Pieces include Wind Quintet from Carl Nielsen who was raised in a Danish rural community and attained a high stature as a musical poet. Ian Munro’s second String Quartet, subtitled A Colonial Sketchbook, is a work in which this deftly allusive composer and outstanding pianist typically looks at relatively bucolic societies of the past. Eugene Goossens adds unmistakably sophisticated French touches to his sketch of pastoral theatre and improvised Italian comedy. Brahms, a lord of majestic and powerful gesture, is also utterly as at home with a pastoral reverie, demonstrating all of these capacities with remarkable succinctness in his C minor Piano Trio.
JAZZ/BLUES VIVID LIVE – C W STONEKING Saturday 1 June 7.30pm Joan Sutherland Theatre, Sydney Opera House Tickets $45 Bookings: 9250 7777 www.sydneyoperahouse.com Treading the borders of fact, fiction and fantasy in a steamy mix of jungle jazz and pre-war plantation blues - Vivid LIVE proudly presents the anticipated return of C W Stoneking in a rare Sydney appearance; his first in nearly
CHAMBER AUSTRALIAN STRING QUARTET SCHUBERT Tuesday 4 June 7pm City Recital Hall Angel Place Tickets: $27.30-$73.50 Bookings: 8256 2222 www.asq.com.au Timo-Veikko Valve, principal cello of the Australian Chamber Orchestra, joins the ASQ for Schubert’s String Quintet. The 31year old Schubert produced an astonishing amount of music in the last year of his life. Among the finest was the quintet for strings in C major with its innovative use of two cellos playing a succession of duos. Highspirited and defiant, with a heartbreaking slow movement, it is an extraordinary landmark work. It is as if the compositional mould was irreparably broken when Schubert died, with few composers since attempting quintets with a second cello. The program includes Joseph Haydn’s quartet op 64 no 5, nicknamed the Lark and Béla Bartók’s third quartet. Composed in 1926, it is the credo of a very bold artist. Intense and untamed. two years. Reaching veteran status within songwriter circles with over 20 years on the live stage, the 38 year old’s playful spin of primitive pop and soul-searching mysticism has recently enraptured audiences with sell-out tours across the UK, Europe and a scene-stealing spot on the illustrious Later with Jools Holland. Now set to strip back in an intimate one-off preview of all-new songs as well as music from his ARIA Award-winning breakthrough, Jungle Blues, Stoneking will reaffirm his status as one of Australia’s leading songwriters and storytellers. May 2013
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CD Reviews Tognetti’s powerful fusion of music and film in the performance piece The Reef provides a unique, moving experience that transports the viewer into a multi-sensory exploration of music and nature.
THE REEF Australian Chamber Orchestra ABC Classics DVD PLU 763959
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Under Richard Tognetti’s artistic direction, The Australian Chamber Orchestra has produced a wealth of inspirational performances that simultaneously promote classical traditions and embrace new musical possibilities. KENNETH LEIGHTON (1929-1988) MUSIC FOR VIOLIN AND PIANO Edwin Paling violin, Arabella TeniswoodHarvey piano Move MD 3358
✶✶✶✶✶ Leighton is one of the more neglected members of the mid 20th century school of English music, and listening to his work you find yourself wondering what more he could have done to claim his rightful place, up there where names like Rubbra and Walton are so much more familiar today. There is nothing in his first sonata, introducing his work on this CD, that deserves to be snubbed by anyone, whether it is dynamic power they are after, or melodic delicacy. A long and distinguished career in musico-academic circles, and his
CHRISTOF VONDERAU Three Cars on the Moon Fresko Music 4 029322 401827
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What makes The Reef so captivating is the powerful relationship between the music and imagery. Inspired by the diverse land and seascapes of Ningaloo in Western Australia, beautiful images of the surf, untouched ocean depths and desolate desert plains are matched to musical styles ranging from Beethoven, to 1990s grunge and colourful soundscapes by Ian Grundage and Tognetti. This scope of musical diversity melds together with surprising continuity, unified by the emotional intimacy created between the audience and landscape. The abrasive accomplishments as a pianist, might have been expected to ensure that Leighton’s music was more highly appreciated. In the way he achieves his effects, lyrical development is less of a concern for Leighton than the power of his mastery over his instruments, a style of controlled drama that you could easily imagine being extended beyond violin and piano, and his ability to create such powerful sonic complexities and tensions using only the two soloists active here is remarkable. The parts played by both of them frequently involve some degree of orderly violence in their tussle for domination as the moods change, which they do constantly right through to the end of Metamorphoses. Both musicians are similarly masterful in their ability to range freely through the full scope of volume and intensity available to them, while interacting What a great title, whatever it means. Composer and guitarist Vonderau alternates his way through this set of solos and duos, tantalising us with a package that reveals nothing about him or what message, if any, he has to impart. It is remarkable, that anyone can come up with such an intriguing title, without explaining what it means. The first strum takes us straight to Spain, nowhere near the moon, and a lazy meander through some anonymous old town, where the only activity is the sun burning down, with everyone hunkered firmly down in a collective siesta - which fairly well sets the scene. Not much else happens. There are no passages of dazzling virtuosity or blurred fingers, no crazed cacophony of castanets; the instruments are presented in
tonal language in the collaborative works of Grandage and Tognetti arouse an overwhelming response of loneliness and anxiety to Ningaloo’s desert plains. In contrast, the waves and pristine depths of the Ningaloo coastal waters offer an illuminating visual journey through delicate interpretations of Bach and Beethoven. Even the grunge-rock style of special guests ‘Alice in Chains’ and the use of electric strings provoke a striking, carefree ambience to the surfers and locals. The Reef DVD recording successfully captures the thrill and energy of the ACO live. Tognetti’s innovative and entrancing performance transcends the concert hall experience and will no doubt inspire more collaborative projects for the future. - Bree Baxter
with their musical partner who is busy doing the same thing. Paling is a long-established English violinist, while Teniswood-Harvey is busy keeping the flag flying high for Tasmania, and their selection to present the work of this underrated composer is a credit to Move. - Phil Vendy much more reserved style, letting the tones come full and rich. Acoustic sensitivity is the well that Vonderau and friends draw from, giving us time to appreciate where they are on their fretboards and keyboards. Guitar and flute spend more than ten minutes on the title track, but remain silent on both Cars and Moon. Nevertheless, time spent listening to this CD is enriching and satisfying. There are no sudden contrasts to break the mood once you have made yourself comfortable, and being immersed in this lazy Spanish setting is a lovely way to spend an afternoon. You are left wanting to know more about what kind of fellow Vonderau is. - PV
CD Reviews The one word that springs to mind immediately after repeated hearings of this CD is ensemble. What a fantastic trio of musicians that can subjugate their individual personalities and create a wonderful ensemble sound which can sometimes feel quite lush despite the scarcity of instruments! There is a feeling of sharing, and although there is no name for this ensemble group, they play with a unity of purpose. SCHUMANN PIANO TRIOS Susan Collins violin, Sue-Ellen Paulsen cello , Duncan Gifford piano ABC Classic PLU990339
✶✶✶ TRIOS by HANDEL, VIVALDI AND TELEMANN Genevieve Lacey, Neal Peres Da costa, Daniel Yeadon ABC Classics 476 5105
✶✶✶✶✶ The CD’s trios and the occasional solo are performed by musicians who originally came from diverse parts of the world but who are now resident in Australia and fully immersed in this country’s music scene. They have impressive backgrounds and have worked all over the world playing as a group since 2003. Of the 10 works or pieces presented here, three have been arranged by the group. As a Handel aficionado I was interested particularly in the arrangement of his aria from Act II of FIVE ROCKS IN A JAPANESE GARDEN Tomoe Kawabata & Aura Go, pianos Master Performers MP 015
✶✶✶✶
The music itself is not Schumann at his best but there are glimpses of ingenuity. Inevitably, there are aspects of Beethoven, Mendelssohn, Brahms and others, for these men were contemporaries and giants of that time. But this is Schumann’s music, with its feeling of introversion coupled with wild fantasy. Surely
there is a link between each of the four movements of each of the three piano trios, but, to me, they might as well be separate pieces to me. His last piano trio feels exactly the same as his first despite the intervening years. What works in this CD’s favour is the quality of the ensemble playing, and that they are Australian musicians. Schumann buffs will want to complete their collection with this high quality performance. The sleeve notes are excellent. – Richard Wong
Tamerlano: Par che mi nasca in seno. It has a delightfully gentle pastoral quality. The only quibble I have is with the Harmonious Blacksmith; the harpsichord sounding as if it was played two studios away. Other Handel compositions include the Sonata in C for recorder and continuo. Among other works in the collection are two trios by Georg Philipp Telemann, who was probably the most popular composer of early decades of the 18th century - at a time when Bach was working away in the backblocks, so to speak, of deepest Germany. Vivaldi’s Concerto for two violins in D minor is one of the works arranged by the group for recorder, organ, harpsichord and cello.
Five Rocks is a metaphorical reference to five Japanese composers, whose activities during the last half century have passed largely unnoticed outside their own country. Which provides us with an opportunity to explore “some exciting new discoveries” in the realm of works for two pianos, and piano duets, in the form of this attractively packaged CD. A French connection is already apparent from the titles, which is attributed to Tomojirö Ikenouchi, who returned from an extended period studying at the Paris Conservatoire to introduce his students to those aspects of French composition that had so captivated him. The influences of both Ravel and Debussy are especially strong, and you could almost believe that had they continued to evolve their unique styles further into the 20th century, these
Having selected works of three of the four most celebrated late Baroque composers, I hope they find the resources to record an album with Bach works presented in the same delightful way as in this recording. - P R Lidbury
may well have been compositions that they would have been happy to add to their own portfolios. It is as if they both brushed against the concepts of atonality and abstraction, without being inclined to adopt either as their own preferred practice. Heard now in another century, these pieces add a touch of modernity beyond the point we are already familiar with. Rocks they may well be in metaphorical terms, but in a more artistic sense these five composers all delight in creating music that sparkles and bubbles without ever evaporating into forgettable triviality. There is little here that sounds overtly Japanese, the two pianists are happy to take their lead from Ikenouchi’s French influences, and complement each other in everything from plaintive atmospherics to full-on virtuosity. - PV May 2013
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Jazz CD REVIEWS
FIVE CLASSIC ALBUMS PLUS: Vic Dickenson Septet Volumes 1-4, Mainstream Jazz, Mainstream Avid Jazz EMSC 1073 ✶✶✶✶✶
By 1953 the 47-year-old trombonist Vic Dickenson with his whimsical and conversational style of playing had enjoyed a successful musical career but it was with the release of the first of these septet sessions on the Vanguard label that boosted him to a fresh peak of achievement. Under the direction of the legendary John Hammond these 10-inch LPs produced at a time when the American record industry was converting to a 12-inch format were surprisingly successful, thanks largely to Dickenson’s presence. The record producers using the LP format re-discovered the musical values of the Swing Era players but if any one musician typified the term “mainstream” it was Dickenson. These albums, the first two recorded on December 19, 1953 and the final
MULTI-PIANO : ROGER DEAN 1978 TO 2012 Jazz, solo live piano and algorithmic ostinato Tall Poppies TP225 ✶✶✶ This double CD set of piano music is arranged in a complex series of sections and tracks, all performed by Dean, all on his own, with the exception of an accompaniment for a single track by a computer musician, Greg White. The track and section listings provide a good guide to where Dean is at any given moment, indeed by organising the music in the way he has, he gives you a head start in working out how to best approach it. It is unlikely that you would want to listen to this straight through from start to finish, as there is no musical or thematic development, each part is a self-contained unit
in itself. So if you think it would be interesting to hear what he plays in Ostinato, or Vestige, easy, you just go straight there. Dean moves from straight modern jazz-blues into more improvisational modes, with studio processing coming into play, which brings more structural variety, rhythmic and percussive effects that extend Dean’s range so he can tackle more modernistic pieces, but he never lets these techniques override the pianistic core of what he is playing. The end result is like attending a demonstration by Dean of all the stages he has been through in a 35 year period, long enough for him to have proved his mastery in covering most, if not all, that there is to cover in the jazz piano genre; by way of exploration, rather than experimentation. - Phil Vendy
two on November 29, 1954, contain some of the finest mainstream jazz ever recorded. With the emphasis on relaxation, the musicians were encouraged to stretch out, resulting in jazz of warmth and spontaneity. Dickenson is in sublime form but Edmond Hall is not far behind him, if at all, emphasising yet again what a great clarinettist he was. Listen to the way he leads off the easy swinging Russian Lullaby followed by the youthful enthusiasm of trumpeter Ruby Braff. But for enjoyment the bluesy version of the folk song When You and I Were Young Maggie is hard to beat. And when former Count Basie sidemen, drummer Jo Jones and that idiosyncratic trumpeter Shad Collins, are added for the second two albums, the results are more than satisfying. - Kevin Jones
May Digital Schedule Time Monday
Tuesday
Wednesday
Thursday
Friday
12:00
The Symphony
Journey to Baroque
At the Keyboard
With the Orchestra
From the 20th Century
14:00
What’s New with Stephen Wilson
In Conversation with Michael Morton-Evans (repeats)
1, 8, 15 May The Voices – the Roles with Angela Cockburn
Treasures of Recorded Music with Randolph Magri-Overend
7 May - Paul Dyer
22 May Countdown to The Ring. Episode 5
3, 17, 24, 31 May Feature artist or Sydney Symphony with Peter Kurti (2nd Fri of month)
Jazz
Jazz
14 May - Arnold Rawls 21 May - James Crabb 28 May - Philip Chu 15:00
Jazz
Jazz
*See www.finemusicfm.com for program details 18
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Jazz
SWINGING ON THE VINE A BROWNING MOMENT
The sun is shining as I raise the bottle to my lips emptying it of the red sustenance, burping with satisfaction I gaze at the large stretch of water which separates my Hunter Valley hideaway from the main homestead. I tear the barbecued chicken in half, toss one half to Little J, and as I gorge on the flesh I imagine the screams of The Voice. “You have the manners of a Neanderthal, you eat like a Neanderthal, you are a Neanderthal!” But a Neanderthal with taste I never fail to add.
on a collective unit; it was based mostly on solos. Collectively, we played great together but individually we were all stylists.” None more so than Lester Young whose solos were based more on melodic than harmonic ideas; solos that were not only spare new melodies but also witty. He was unique and founded a new school of tenor saxophone playing. His most famous disciple was Stan Getz, a marvellous “singer” of great melodies - and melody was what he was always about.
I am marooned on my own piece of paradise with Little J and my prize bulls. Free from the pointed elbows of The Voice interrupting me as I slumber in yawn-opolis during a boring movie and free from the insufferable Clifton, the epitome of our 21st century flaunt yourself pop culture and the ultimate pain in the arts.
Ah but that was yesterday and I can only dream of the days when I too danced to the sounds of the big bands with a woman in my arms. A far cry from today where “dancers” do their best to impersonate demented barnyard fowls on crack. The age of the individual! Victims of the brainwashing tactics which established rock and pop: repetition, repetition and even more repetition aimed at teenage morons with article after article about nonentities.
Yes it really is a (poet) Robert Browning sort of day - “God is in his Heaven, all is right with the world”. I raise another bottle of Bacchus’ gift to civilisation then roar with pleasure as in the background the Count Basie Orchestra of the late 1930s rocks through Swinging The Blues, probably the most attractive riff ever recorded. I pause momentarily to listen to the trumpet of Harry “Sweets” Edison, his solo shooting like a branch from the main trunk of the orchestra. His solos were staccato and pushing in direct contrast to the liquid lyricism of his section mate Buck Clayton. Edison played with many of the major instrumentalist in jazz’s history - Duke Ellington, Benny Carter, Ben Webster and Benny Goodman to name but a few. He perfected the art of playing behind a singer to the benefit of many; from Billie Holiday to Ella Fitzgerald and Barbara Streisand, and also Bing Crosby, Hoagy Carmichael and Nat King Cole. The art? As he once explained: “It’s something you have to do quite a bit. Become acquainted with a singer so you can play when they take a breath. Just enough but not too much.” And there are no better examples of this than his playing with the orchestra of arranger Nelson Riddle on those wonderful Capitol classics of the 1950s with Frank Sinatra, a partnership he described as “like a happy marriage”.
Harry Edison I pause and listen as the Basie band swings through Doggin’ Around and Every Tub, monuments of heat and power. This Basie band had a few arrangements but in Edison’s words “everything else we played we made up; as a consequence you had no set pattern to play.” This was different to the Duke Ellington and Jimmie Lunceford bands or those led by Benny Goodman and Tommy Dorsey which had arrangements where there were a certain number of bars left for solos before the musician rejoined his section and played collectively with the band. But this Basie band, except for the occasional ballads and uptempo standards, had only three kinds of numbers - slow, medium and fast blues. On the latter it achieved a drive and exuberance matched by only Ellington and Lunceford at their best. Edsion described it so well - “After we made up a riff, then played a first chorus, it was all solos and you could play as long as you wanted. Basie’s band wasn’t built
But unlike the dinosaurs, big bands refuse to die. I find there is still hope which sometimes softens my flickering flames of despair. Hearing a recent performance by the New Young North Side Big Band under the direction of trumpeter Geoff Power ignited my musical taste buds for more of that swinging sound I knew so well as a teenager. To hear the thrilling finale, Sing, Sing, Sing, was a joy. It may not have been Benny Goodman causing a riot at the Paramount Theatre in New York on Wednesday, March 3, 1937 but I felt a warm glow all over watching young musicians obviously enjoying what they were doing. The late John Speight, the original founder of the band, would have been proud that his legacy is being carried on in the 21st century. In Geoff Power it has a leader with a respect and knowledge of the tradition, so important in today’s me-too throwaway society. His trumpet playing son James impressed all who heard him. I fill Little J’s bowl. He’s not so little these days. The Swinging Sixties would definitely not have suited him especially after the London newspaper The Daily Express labelled the angular Twiggy the face of the 60s. I feel I am again becoming bitter and twisted so I reach for another bottle . . . - Patrick D Maguire May 2013
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May Program Highlights A Musical Life: Julian Bream Sunday 5 May 6pm The Classical Guitar Society pays tribute to the English Classical guitarist and lutenist Julian Bream. If, like me, you were relatively unaware of Bream - then it seems as though we were part of a rare group of people living inside a cave - because Bream is a worldwide phenomenon. Born in London in 1933, Bream fell in love with the gypsy stylings of the great Django Reinhardt. The development of an immaculately precise technique and periods of study with the likes of Andreas Segovia, saw Bream take off as a true star of guitar during the 1950s.
Igor Stravinsky THE RIOT OF SPRING? THE RITE OF SPRING TURNS 100! Saturday 25 May 4.30pm Tuesday 28 May 10pm Stravinsky’s The Rite of Spring is well known for its riotous premiere, but just how riotous was it? Some accounts offered over the years paint a picture of utter chaos. After reading up on various recollections of those who were there on that fateful 29 May, 1913 a more realistic picture comes into view. ‘Mild protests against the music could be heard from the beginning’ Stravinsky wrote. Remember this is music that is jarring, music that turns almost all musical norms on their heads. The bassoon, frighteningly exposed in its thinnest and least brilliant register, opens the piece. No composer before Stravinsky would have dared to leave a bass woodwind instrument so exposed, not even if it was in its usual register. It’s this completely fresh approach to orchestration that is at first shocking, and later completely fascinating. The piece almost returns to a Baroque-style aesthetic, whereby its rhythm, rather than colouration and harmonic impetus, drives the music. From a compositional viewpoint, I’d say that Stravinsky approached The Rite in a very realistic way, rather than trying to build a highly emotional, vividly coloured, earthy kind of work within a romantic type convention. He instead envelopes the audience in a kaleidoscope of rhythmic exchanges which leave you feeling slightly sick. Common chords stacked on top of one another work to heighten the very real sense of primitive 20
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drama and urgency. Yet this approach, albeit hailed as “oh-so-radical”, is really not so radical at all. Yes, The Rite is the cornerstone which drove modernism in its current direction, and yes it goes about its business in a completely different way to almost everything composed before it – but it doesn’t do this radically. As musicological scholar Richard Taruskin has shown, much of The Rite’s rhythmic uneasiness is derived from the way some folk tunes work. Harmonically, the rite is diatonic – meaning every note Stravinsky used can be fitted into a common scale or chord. The question I put to you now is - was it really the music, or was it perhaps the ballet itself that caused such a ruckus that day? Nijinsky’s choreography was certainly radical when compared with the Les Slyphides that opened the evening. It would appear that a great amount of Nijinsky’s work offended the audience - the raw, uneven movements of the dancers were just as unexpectedly exposed and jarring as that haunting bassoon solo. Accounts report heavy noises, shouting and catcalls throughout the performance. Who then in the audience could properly hear Stravinsky’s score? Perhaps this was more of a Nijinsky riot rather than a Stravinsky one. What I do know is that 100 years on, The Rite of Spring is still as fresh and as mean as ever – it has the power to thrust you into a whirl of primal barbarism and drop you off in the centre of a climactic sacrifice that strikes fear into even the most nerveless of constitutions.
His career flourished as the years went on and he championed all genres of classical guitar music, from the exciting Spanish stylisations to contemporary and even early music. In fact, his long untended interest in Elizabethan music led him to take up the renaissance lute in 1950 - his collaborations with other leading early music exponents of the day such as Peter Pears, Robert Tear, and George Malcolm opened up early music to an even greater audience. Recipient of many honours, Julian Bream is one must hear guitarist. - Troy Fil
Julian Bream CONTINUING SERIES At the Opera: Legendary Met Performances Wednesdays 8 and 15 May 8pm Sunday Night Concert: Beethoven’s Concerti Sunday 12 May 7.30pm New Horizons: Modern Britain -Maxwell and MacMillan Sunday 19 May 9pm Sunday Special: Royal Concertgebouw 2000-2010 - courtesy of Radio Netherlands Worldwide Sunday 19 May 2pm Beyond Romanticism: Bax and Arnold, British Symphonists Tuesday 21 May 10pm
Wednesday 1 May 11:30 BAROQUE SONATAS Prepared by Angela Bell Schmelzer, J. Sonata III, from Sonatae unarum fidium (pub. 1664). Romanesca. Harmonia Mundi HMU 907143 7 Handel, G. Sonata in D, HWV371. Hiro Kurosaki, vn; William Christie, hpd. Veritas 5 45554 2 Corelli, A. Sonata in D. Niklas Eklund, tpt; Wasa Baroque Ensemble. Naxos 8.555099
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12:00 THE SOUND OF JAZZ with Kevin Jones Jazz from the 1930s to the present day, with tracks from the DownBeat archives and recent releases
Yo-Yo Ma
13:00 YOUNG VIRTUOSI with Andrew Bukenya; recorded by Greg Ghavalis Featuring euphonium player Jonathon Ramsay with works by Stojowski, Ponchielli, Brendan Collins, Handel and Philip Wilby Supported by St Catherine’s School and Overs Pianos
0:00 CONTEMPORARY COLLECTIVE 3:00 CLASSICAL TILL DAWN 6:00 FINE MUSIC BREAKFAST including Arts Calendar at 7.30am with Peter Kurti 9:00 DIVERSIONS IN FINE MUSIC Aspects of Baroque Prepared by Chris Blower Capponi, R. Sonata for mandolin and lute. Caterina Lichtenberg, mand; Mirko Schrader, gui. Schwann 3-6435-2 11 Geminiani, F. Sonata no 3 in D. Ede Banda, vc; László Karper, gui; János Sebestyén, hpd. LP Hungaroton SLPX 1201 11 Veracini, F. Sonata in G minor, op 1 no 1 (pub. 1721). Anna McDonald, vn; Tommie Andersson, gui; Erin Helyard, hpd. Artworks AW024 15 Murcia, S. de Folías ytalianas. Paul O’Dette, gui; Pat O’Brien, gui; Steve Player, gui; Andrew Lawrence-King, hp, psaltery; Pedro Estevan, perc. Harmonia Mundi HMX 2907212 7 Bach, J.S. Fugue a 4, BWV542 (1720; arr. Walsh). Guitar Trek. ABC 438 192-2 7 10:00 MORNING CONCERT Prepared by Angela Bell
14:00 IN CONVERSATION with Michael Morton-Evans What exactly does it take to make music? Leading musicians, composers and performers, both local and visiting from overseas, will be talking live on air telling us why they do it and how they do it.
OFFICER OLIM: Joel Grey, voice SEVERIN: William Neill, bar FENNIMORE: Elizabeth Hynes, sop FRAU VON LUBER: Elaine Bonazzi, mezz LOTTERY AGENT/BARON LAUR: Jack Harrold, ten New York City Opera Ch & O/Harold Prince. Nonesuch DB 79003 1:43 Severin, a starving outcast from Silverlake, steals a pineapple, but is shot in the leg by Officer Olim. When Olim wins the lottery, he invites Severin to live with him in a castle, sold by the impoverished Frau von Luber. Baron Laur and his niece Fennimore attend a dinner where Severin slashes a pineapple, cursing the man who shot him. Olim confesses to Fennimore, Frau von Luber threatens to expose him unless he gives back the castle but Severin finds out. He asks to be chained in the cellar because of his rage. Olim is hidden in an attic by Frau von Luber, who forces him to sign the title deeds. Fennimore urges them to reconcile as the police want to destroy Silverlake. Olim decides to abandon the castle to Frau von Luber and the two friends head for Silverlake with sacks of gold plate. Severin’s wound reopens, Olim leaves the gold to carry him through the snow. At Silverlake, winter turns to spring and they reunite with Fennimore on the lake. 22:00 HUNTINGTON MUSIC FESTIVAL 1993 RECORDED BY fine music Hindemith, P. Sonata, op 11 no 4 (1919).
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15:00 A RUSSIAN HOUR Prepared by Rex Burgess
Dvorák, A. Slavonic dance no 8 in A minor 5 (1878; arr. Lindemann).
Taneyev, S. Overture in D minor (1875). Novosibirsk Academic SO/Thomas Sanderling. Naxos 8.570584 15
Jean-Bernard Marie, pf (2 above)
Rimsky-Korsakov, N. Fantasy on Russian themes, op 33 (1887). Lydia Mordkovitch, vn; Royal Scottish NO/Neeme Järvi. Chandos CHAN 10491 17 Balakirev, M. Symphonic poem: Tamara (1882). Philharmonia O/Yevgeny Svetlanov. Hyperion CDA66586 22 16:00 FINE MUSIC DRIVE including Arts Calendar at 5.00pm with David Ogilvie
Wieniawski, H. Étude and caprice in E flat, op 18 no 2 (arr. Lindemann). Colin Cornish, va. 5 Hartmut Lindemann, va (3 above) Prokofiev, S. Sonata in C, op 56 (1932). Mayumi Seiler, vn; Richard Tognetti, vn.
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Mozart, W. Serenade no 12 in C minor, K388 (1782). Anthony Chesterman, ob; Hannah Cooper, ob; Lawrence Dobell, cl; Philip Arkinstall, cl; Peter Moore, bn; Natasha Woodley, bn; Darryl Poulsen, hn; James McCrow, hn. 22
19:00 JAZZ STARS AND STRIPES with Peter Mitchell The stars of American jazz from bebop on, mainly small group low temperature jazz
23:15 TILL MIDNIGHT
Finzi, G. Cello concerto, op 40 (1955). Yo-Yo Ma, vc; Royal PO/Vernon Handley. Lyrita SRCD236 41
20:00 AT THE OPERA Transformations: Der Silbersee renewed Prepared by Elaine Siversen
Ravel, M. Suite from Mother Goose (1908-11; arr. McIntyre). Canberra Wind Soloists. ABC 434 718-2 14
Bax, A. Spring fire (1913). Hallé O/Mark Elder. Hallé HLL 7528 33
Weill, K. Silverlake, a winter’s tale. Opera in two acts. Libretto by Lys Simonette and Hugh Wheeler after Georg Kaiser. First performed New York, 1980.
Gaspard de la nuit (1908). Michael Kieran Harvey, pf. Program Promotions PP1 1991
Mozart, W. Adagio and fugue in C minor, K546 (1788). English CO/Benjamin Britten. BBC BBCB 8010-2
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Scarlatescu, I. Bagatelle (1916). Jane Peters, vn; Rachel Valler, pf. 3 MBS 27 CD
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Thursday 2 May 0:00 CONTEMPORARY COLLECTIVE
11:30 CHOPIN IN SONG Prepared by Michael Morton-Evans
3:00 CLASSICAL TILL DAWN 6:00 FINE MUSIC BREAKFAST including Arts Calendar at 7.30am with Simon Moore
Chopin, F. There where she loves, op 74 no 5 (1830); Charms (1830); Dumka (1848). Annette Celine, sop; Felicia Blumenthal, pf. Olympia OCD 629 4
9:00 DIVERSIONS IN FINE MUSIC Composer focus Prepared by Michael Morton-Evans
Songs, op 74: no 6, Melody (1847); no 12, My darling (1837); no 13, There is no need (1845). Robert Tear, ten; Philip Ledger, pf. Belart 461 6262 10
Massenet, J. Suite no 1, mvt 4 (1865). Hong Kong PO/Kenneth Jean. Naxos 8.555986 7
The maiden’s wish, from Chants polonais, op 74 no 1 (1829; arr. Liszt). Sergei Rachmaninov, pf. Telarc 80491 3
Elegy, op 10 no 5 (1866). Sharon Kam, cl; Itamar Golan, pf. Berlin 0016342BC 2
Variations on Non più mesta, from Rossini’s Cinderella (arr. Adams, Giacomantonio). Genevieve Lacey, rec; Karin Schaupp, gui. ABC 476 5249 7
Overture to The king of Lahore (1875-76). West Australian SO/Werner Andreas Albert. ABC 434 713-2 8 Il est doux, il est bon, from Hérodiade (1881). Angela Gheorghiu, sop; Turin Regio Theatre Ch & O/John Mauceri. Decca 452 417-2 5
13:00 SHAKESPEARE AND LOVE Prepared by Randolph Magri-Overend
Adieu notre petite table, from Manon (1884). Kathleen Battle, sop; Paris Opéra-Bastille Ch & O/Myung-Whun Chung. DG 447 114-2 4
Tchaikovsky, P. Hamlet, fantasy overture after Shakespeare, op 67a (1888). Philadelphia O/Riccardo Muti. EMI CDC 7 49859 2 19
Je suis seul! Ah! Fuyez douce image, from Manon. Plácido Domingo, ten; London SO/ Nello Santi. Sony 88697526902 5
Humperdinck, E. Shakespeare suite no 2 (1907-08). Bamberg SO/Karl Anton Rickenbacher. Schwann 3-1197-2
Meditation, from Thaïs (1894). Carl Pini, vn; Albert Landa, pf. Axis 7017
Quilter, R. Three Shakespeare songs, op 6: Come away, death; O mistress mine; Blow, blow thou winter wind (1905). Bryn Terfel, bass-bar; Malcolm Martineau, pf. DG 477 5336 6
Valse très lente (1901). Aldo Ciccolini, pf. EMI CDM 7 64277 2
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12:00 JAZZ, PURE AND SIMPLE with Maureen Meers Covering the many aspects of jazz from Swing to Mainstream with the Great American Songbook making regular appearances
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Overture to Phèdre (1900). Detroit SO/Paul Paray. Mercury 475 6268 9
Puccini, G. Love and music, from Tosca (1900). Kiri Te Kanawa, sop; NZ Broadcasting Corp Little SO/Juan Matteucci. Decca 430 325-2 3
10:00 MORNING CONCERT Prepared by Michael Morton-Evans
Liszt, F. Liebesträume (1845-49). Marilyn Meier, pf. Mala-Daki MAM 29464 16
Dukas, P. La Péri, ballet (1912). Cincinnati SO/ Jésus López-Cobos. Telarc 80515 18
Berlioz, H. Love scene, from Romeo and Juliet, op 17 (1839). Sydney SO/Robert Pikler. Chandos CHAN 6587 17
Balakirev, M. Suite in D minor after Chopin (1910). USSR SO/Yevgeny Svetlanov. Melodiya C10 234-5 001 22
14:30 MAD, BAD AND DANGEROUS TO KNOW Prepared by Chris Blower
Chopin, F. Piano concerto no 1 in E minor, op 11 (1830). Nikolai Demidenko, pf; Philharmonia O/Heinrich Schiff. Hyperion CDA66647 41
Holbrooke, J. Byron, op 39 (1904). Slovak Philharmonic Choir; Czecho-Slovak RSO/ Adrian Leaper. Marco Polo 8.223446
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Schumann, R. Overture to Manfred, op 115 (184849). Polish National RSO/Johannes Wildner. Naxos 8.550608 11 Koehne, G. Three poems of Byron (1993). Elizabeth Connell, mezz; Adelaide SO/János Fürst. ABC 442 349-2 12 Berlioz, H. Harold in Italy, op 16 (1834). Nobuko Imai, va; London SO/Colin Davis. Philips 442 290-2
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16:00 FINE MUSIC DRIVE including Arts Calendar at 5.00pm with Debbie Scholem 19:00 JAZZ VIBES with Matt Bailey Contemporary and modern sounds of now in jazz from all corners of the globe 20:00 EVENINGS WITH THE ORCHESTRA Dvorák 1892-1895: the American years Prepared by Stephen Wilson Dvorák, A. Silent woods, op 68 no 5 (1883-84; orch. 1893). Russian PO/Dmitry Yablonsky, vc & dir. 6 Naxos 8.557352 Te Deum, op 103 (1892). Maria Helenita Olivares, sop; Gianni Maffeo, bar; Czech Philharmonic Ch; Prague SO/Vaclav Smetacek. LP Supraphon 112 0981/2 19 Rondo, op 94 (1893). Russian PO/Dmitry Yablonsky, vc & dir. Naxos 8.557352
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Symphony no 9 in E minor, op 95, From the New World (1893). London PO/Mstislav Rostropovich. EMI 5 65705 2 49 Humoresque, op 101 no 7 (1894). Isaac Stern, vn; Columbia SO/Milton Katims. Sony SMK 64 537 4 Suite in A, op 98b, American (1895). Prague Philharmonia/Jakub Hrusa. Supraphon SU 3882-2 23 22:00 CHAMBER SOIRÉE Prepared by Sheila Catzel Smetana, B. Quartet no 1 in E minor, From my life (1880). Lindsay String Quartet. ASV DCA 777 27 Weber, J. Septet in E, From my life (1899). Consortium Classicum/Dieter Klöcker, cl & dir. Orfeo C 182 891 A 32 Zemlinsky, A. Piano trio in D minor, op 3 (1896). Beaux Arts Trio. Philips 434 072-2 28
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Dohnányi, E. Piano quintet no 2 in E flat minor, op 26 (1914). Schubert Ensemble of London. Hyperion CDA66786 25
Friday 3 May 0:00 CONTEMPORARY COLLECTIVE
13:00 LEHÁR WITHOUT A WALTZ Prepared by Francis Frank
3:00 CLASSICAL TILL DAWN
Lehár, F. Overture to Viennese women. Zurich Tonhalle O/Franz Lehár. Naxos 8.110857 9
6:00 FINE MUSIC BREAKFAST including Arts Calendar at 7.30am with Janine Burrus 9:00 DIVERSIONS IN FINE MUSIC Small forces Prepared by Brian Drummond
Danilo and widow; Finale, from The merry widow ballet. Adelaide Singers; Adelaide SO/ John Lanchbery. EMI 754163 2 6
Mozart, W. Quintet in E flat, K407 (1782). Barry Tuckwell, hn; Kenneth Sillito, vn; Kenneth Essex, va; Ian Jewel, va; Kenneth Harvey, vc. Decca 421 393-2 19
Tone poem: Fieber (1915). Robert Gambill, ten; Volker Worlitzsch, vn; Hanover RPO/ Klauspeter Seibel. cpo 999 423-2
Duvernoy, F. Nocturne no 2. Sören Hermansson, hn; Erica Goodman, hp. BIS CD-648
Excerpts from The Count of Luxemburg (1909). Soloists, Ch & O Lyrique of the ORTF/Adolphe Sibert. Naxos 8.111010 25
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Brahms, J. Trio in E flat, op 40 (1865). Peter Damm, hn; Manfred Scherzer, vn; Amadeus Webersinke, pf. Berlin Classics 0012882BC 29 10:00 MORNING CONCERT Prepared by Elaine Siversen Dussek, F. Sinfonia in F (c1760). Helios 18/ Marie-Louise Oschatz. Naxos 8.555878 22 Kozeluch, L. Sinfonia concertante in E flat. Jean-Paul Leroy, tpt; Leonardo Colonna, db; Bonifacio Bianchi, mand; Franco Angeleri, pf; I Solisti Veneti/Claudio Scimone. LP Erato STU 71305 32 Dvorák, A. String quartet in F, op 96, American (1893; orch. Rosenkrans). Royal PO/ Charles Rosenkrans. Telarc 80610 28 11:30 VOICES FROM BOHEMIA Prepared by Elaine Siversen Dvorák, A. Psalm 149, op 79 (1879). Prague Philharmonic Choir; Czech PO/Jirí Belohlávek. Chandos CHAN 8985/6 9 Benda, G. Cantata: Bald wird ihn die himmlische Jugend empfangen (1761). Dorothy Mields, sop; Britta Schwarz, cont; Jörn Lindemann, ten; Andreas Post, ten; Klaus Mertens, bass; Telemann CO/Ludger Rémy. cpo 999 650-2 16 12:00 NOONTIME JAZZ with Peter Mitchell Accessible in-the-hammock jazz to ease you into the weekend
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14:00 SCHUMANN FAVOURITES Prepared by Robert Small Schumann, R. Concert piece in F, op 86 (1849). American Horn Quartet; Sinfonia Varsovia/ Dariusz Wisniewski. Naxos 8.557747 17 Three fantasy pieces, op 111 (1851). Mariana Izman, pf. Radio Nederland MCCP123
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Overture to Hermann and Dorothea, op 136 (1851). Swedish CO/Thomas Dausgaard. BIS SACD-1619 9 Piano concerto in A minor, op 54 (1841-45). Claudio Arrau, pf; Royal Concertgebouw O/ Eugen Jochum. Radio Nederland RCO 06004 34 Symphony no 2 in G (1845-46). O Revolutionnaire et Romantique/John Eliot Gardiner. Archiv 457 591-2 37 16:00 FINE MUSIC DRIVE including Arts Calendar at 5.00pm with James Hunter 19:00 FRIDAY JAZZ SESSION with Sally Cameron A focus on the current Sydney jazz scene mixed with a range of international jazz stars and a weekly a cappella item
Anton Bruckner Bruckner, A. Symphony no.1 in C minor (1866). Staatskapelle Dresden/Eugen Jochum. Brilliant 92084 47 Brahms, J. String quintet no 2 in G, op 111 (arr.). Silke-Thora Matthies, pf; Christian Köhn, pf. Naxos 8.554412 33 Bottesini, G. Passioni amorose (1870). Thomas Martin, db; Franco Petracchi, db; London SO/ Matthew Gibson. Naxos 8.570398 11 22:00 BAROQUE AND BEFORE Prepared by Robert Small Handel, G. Alceste, HWV45 (1750). Emma Kirkby, sop; Judith Nelson, sop; Patrizia Kwella, sop; Cristina Pound, sop; Margaret Cable, mezz; Paul Elliott, ten; David Thomas, bass; Academy of Ancient Music/Christopher Hogwood. L’Oiseau-Lyre 421 479-2 58 Telemann, G. Recorder concerto in C major (c1730). Peter Holtslag, rec; Parley of Instruments/Peter Holman. Hyperion CDA66413 15 Rameau, J-P. Deuxième concert, from Pièces de clavecin en concert (pub. 1741). Lars Fryden, vn; Nikolaus Harnoncourt, bass viol; Gustav Leonhardt, hpd. Vanguard 08 2023 71 13 Couperin, F. Leçon de Tenebres: Deuxième et Troisième leçons (1713-17). Concerto Vocale/ René Jacobs. Harmonia Mundi HMC 901133 26
20:00 THE ROMANTIC CENTURY Prepared by Robert Small Bottesini, G. Concertino in C minor. Thomas Martin, db; London SO/Franco Petracchi. Naxos 8.570398 17
May 2013
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Saturday 4 May 0:00 CLASSIC-ALL THROUGH THE NIGHT
12:00 JAZZ THEN AND NOW with Michael Cooper A diverse range of jazz from days gone by up to the present with wonderful Australians featured
6:00 SATURDAY MORNING MUSIC with Stephen Wilson 9:00 WHAT’S ON IN MUSIC Our weekly guide to musical events in and around Sydney 9:30 SPOTLIGHT ON MSTISLAV ROSTROPOVICH Prepared by Barrie Brockwell Vivaldi, A. Largo, from Cello concerto in G, RV413 (c1740). Zurich Collegium Musicum/Paul Sacher. DG 429 098-2 4 Schubert, F. Sonata in A minor, D821, Arpeggione (1824). Benjamin Britten, pf. Decca 443 575-2
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Mstislav Rostropovich, vc (2 above) Tchaikovsky, P. Lullaby: Had I but known (1872). Galina Vishnevskaya, sop; Mstislav Rostropovich, pf. EMI 56716 2 10 Francesca da Rimini, op 32 (1876). London PO/ Mstislav Rostropovich. EMI 5 65709 2 25 Bach, J.S. Gigue, from cello suite no 4 in E flat, BWV1010 (c1720). EMI 5 55363 2 2 Bach, J. Christian Trio in C. Jean-Pierre Rampal, fl; Isaac Stern, vn. Sony SK 44568
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Mstislav Rostropovich, vc (2 above) Tchaikovsky, P. Dance of the Mirlitons; Arabian dance; Chinese dance; Trepak, from The nutcracker (1888-9). Berlin PO/Mstislav Rostropovich. DG 429 097 2 19 Dvorák, A. Finale, from Cello concerto in B minor, op 104 (1895). Mstislav Rostropovich, vc; Berlin PO/Herbert von Karajan. DG 447 413-2 13
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Langford, G. A west country fantasy. City of London Brass/Geoffrey Brand. LP RCA LFL1 5072 6 Bellstedt, H. Napoli. Band of Her Majesty’s Royal Marines, Plymouth/John Perkins. EMI 7243-5-21450 6
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14:00 MUSICAL EXPLORATIONS Pole to pole Prepared by Stephen Schafer Anon. Yuzuki. Tokiwazu Kiyowada, Tokiwazu Waei-Dayu, voices; Kishizawa Shikisa Xi, shamisen; Kishizawa Shikimatsu, shamisen; Fukuhara Tsurusuke, narimono. Naïve YZZ6129 5
19:00 THE MAGIC OF STAGE AND SCREEN Prepared by Derek Parker Strauss, J. II Excerpts from Eine Nacht in Venedig. Lisa Otto, sop; Annelies Herrfurth, sop; Ursula Schirrmacher, mezz; Rudolph Schock, ten; Fritz Wunderlich, ten; Karl-Ernst Mercher, ten; George Völker, bar; Berliner SO/ Fried Walter. LaserLite 16 045 39 Fall, L. Excerpts from Der fidele Bauer. Christine Görner, sop; Sonia Knittel, sop; Brigitte Fassbaender, mezz; Heinz Hoppe, ten; Fritz Wunderlich, ten, Benno Kusche, bar; Graunke SO/Carl Michalski. LaserLite 16 044 18
Puccini, G. Excerpts from Madama Butterfly (1904). Svetlana Katchour, sop; Bruce Rankin, ten; Uwe Eikötter, ten; Heikki Kilpeläinen, bar; Bremen Theater Ch, Bremen Philharmonic State O/Günter Neuhold. Naxos 8-660078-79 17
20:00 LIVE AND LOCAL 2012 Sydney Symphony Fellows: emerging composers Recorded by Greg Ghavalas for FINE MUSIC
Matsumura, T. To the night of Gethsemane (2002/03-05). RTÉ National SO/Takuo Yuasa. Naxos 8.570337 14
Britten, B. Sinfonietta for flute, oboe, clarinet, bassoon, horn, two violins, viola, cello and double-bass, op 1. 16
Boyd, A. Meditations on a chinese character (1996). David Barmby, ct; Sydney Spring International Festival of NSW Music Instrumental Ensemble. ABC Classics 462 007-2 22
Skipworth, L. Nezasa for oboe, clarinet, bassoon, horn, violin, viola, cello and double6 bass.
Puccini, G. Finale to Act II of Turadot (compl. Berio 2001). Eva Urbanova, sop; Maria Fontosh, sop; Dario Volonte, ten; Mario Luperi, bar; O Sinfonica di Milano Giuseppe Verdi/Riccardo Chailly. Decca 475320-2 23 15:30 MUSIC FOR WORDS Prepared by Rex Burgess Coleridge-Taylor, S. Hiawatha’s wedding feast. Helen Field, sop; Arthur Davies, ten; Bryn Terfel, bass-bar; Welsh National Ch & O/ Kenneth Alwyn. Decca 458 591-2 34
11:30 ON PARADE Music that’s band Prepared by Owen Fisher Tchaikovsky, P. 1812 Overture. Allentown Band/Ronald Demkee. AMP 94141
13:00 CHINESE MOSAIC + POSTCARDS FROM SHANGHAI Prepared by Paolo Hooke A monthly exploration of the best of Chinese classical, traditional and film music, incorporating material specially provided by Shanghai Radio
18:00 FOCUS ON FOLK Folk Federation of NSW with Paul Jackson
Mendelssohn, F. String octet in E flat, op 20. 33
Schoenberg, A. Chamber symphony no 1 in E, op 9. 23 2012 Sydney Symphony Fellows; members of Sydney SO; Sydney Sinfonia and Fellowship Alumni (all above) 21:30 BRITISH LIGHT MUSIC Prepared by Randolph Magri-Overend Binge, R. The watermill. Ruth Scott, ob. Hyperion CDA66868
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Sailing by (c1960). New London O/Ronald Corp (2 above)
Satie, E. Three pieces in the form of a pear (1903). Frank Glazier, Richard Deas, pf. Vox CDX 5107 14
Coates, E. The enchanted garden (1938). Sydney SO/John Lanchbery. ABC 446 282-2
Elgar, E. Scenes from the saga of King Olaf, op 30 (1894-96). Theresa Cahill, sop; Philip Langridge, ten; Brian Rayner Cook, bass; London Philharmonic Choir; London PO/ Vernon Handley. EMI CDS 7 47659-8 1:33
22:00 AFTER HOURS with Kevin Jones Laid back late night music to give a wonderfully smooth end to the busy day; lie back, relax and enjoy
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Sunday 5 May 0:00 CLASSIC-ALL THROUGH THE NIGHT
Copland, A. El salón México (1934-36). Detroit SO/Antal Doráti. Decca 414 273-2 10
6:00 SUNDAY MORNING MUSIC with Terry McMullen
Rodrigo, J. Concierto de Aranjuez (1939). John Williams, gui; English CO/Daniel Barenboim. CBS M2YK 45610 21
9:00 CELESTIAL NOTES Prepared by Rex Burgess Bruckner, A. Vexilla regis prodeunt (1892); Virga Jesse floruit (1885).
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Afferentur regi; Ave Maria (1861).
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Freibourg Vocal Ensemble/Wolfgang Schäfer (2 above) Christophorus 74501
17:00 HOSANNA Prepared by Meg Matthews Hymns: Hail the day that sees him rise; Bright the vision that delighted. Cantus Choro; Norman Kaye, org; Peter Chapman, cond. 6 Move MD 3062 Zubin Mehta. Photo - Wilfried Hösl
Psalm 150 (1892). Christiane Delze, sop; Bamberg Symphony Choir & O/Karl Anton Rickenbacher. Virgin 7 91481-2 9
Saint-Saëns, C. Introduction and rondo capriccioso, op 28 (1863). Maxim Vengerov, vn; Israel PO/Zubin Mehta. Teldec 9031-73266-2 9
Mass no 3 in F minor (1868). Maria Stader, sop; Claudia Hellman, alto; Ernst Haefliger, ten; Kim Borg, bass; Bavarian Radio Choir & SO/Eugen Jochum. DG 423 127-2 58
Alfvén, H. Swedish rhapsody no 2, op 24, Uppsala rhapsody (1907). Royal Scottish NO/ Niklas Willén. Naxos 8.553962 11
10:30 CHAMBER MASTERWORKS Prepared by Frank Morrison Mozart, W. Quartet no 3 in C, K285b (1777). Andreas Blau, fl; Members of Amadeus Quartet. DG 437 138-2 17 Honegger, A. Sonatina (1921). Thomas Friedli, cl; Ulrich Koella, pf. Claves 50-9322 5 Dvorák, A. String quartet no 12 in F, op 96, American (1893). Vlach Quartet Prague. Naxos 8.553371 28 Chopin, F. Piano trio in G, op 8 (1829). Trio Chausson. Mirare MIR 089 30 12:00 SPEAK EASY, SWING HARD with Richard Hughes The Golden Era of jazz, as seen through the knowledge and experience of one of Australia’s leading exponents 13:00 WORLD MUSIC: Whirled Wide with Johan Rahman Traditional and contemporary music from around the globe 14:00 SUNDAY SPECIAL Blessed with a long life Prepared by Frank Morrision Verdi, G. Overture to La forze del destino (1869). BBC PO/Edward Downes. Chandos CHAN 9788 8
Goldmark, K. Overture: In the spring, op 36 (1888). Irish National SO/Stephen Gunzenhauser. Naxos 8.550745
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Vaughan Williams, R. Suite in G (1920). Peter Jacobs, pf. TRAC Classique TRXCD 126 13 Strauss, R. Till Eulenspiegel’s merry pranks, op 28 (1895). London SO/Claudio Abbado. DG 429 492-2 15 Sibelius, J. Six songs, op 88 (1917). Anne Sofie von Otter, mezz; Bengt Forsberg, pf. BIS CD-457 8 Kreisler, F. Violin concerto in C in the style of Vivaldi (c1905). Gil Shaham, vn; Orpheus CO. DG 439 933-2 11
Hymns: Love’s redeeming work is done; The head that once was crowned; O thou that camest from above. Choir of Trinity College, Cambridge/Richard Marlow. GMN C 0107 7 Bach, C.P.E. Gott fähret auf mit Jauchzen, from The ascension of Jesus (1777-8). Rheinische Kantorei Choir; Das Klein Konzert/ Hermann Max. Capriccio 10 206/207 9 Victoria, T. de Ascendens Christus in aetum. Choir of King’s College, Cambridge/Stephen Cleobury. EMI 50999 6 09004 2 5 Brahms, J. Wo ist ein so herrlich Volk, op 110 no 2 (1890). Chamber Choir of Stuttgart/ Frieder Bernius. Carus 83.201 5 Sullivan, A. O Israel (1855). Choir of Ely Cathedral; David Price, org, Paul Trepte, cond. Cantoris CRCD 2368 4 Finzi, G. God is gone up (1951). Choir of St Paul’s Cathedral; Andrew Lucas, org; John Scott, cond. Hyperion CDA 66374 5 18:00 CLASSICAL GUITAR SOCIETY A musical life: Julian Bream Prepared by Dan Sharkey Granados, E. Valses poeticos. RCA Victor 09026 61608-2
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Stravinsky, I. Concerto in E flat, Dumbarton Oaks (1937-38). Montreal Sinfonietta/Charles Dutoit. Decca 440 327-2 15
Aguado, D. Introduction and rondo, op 2 no 3. RCA Victor 09026 61607-2 10
Kodály, Z. Sonatina (1921-22). David Pereira, vc; David Bollard, pf. Tall Poppies TP010 8
Vivaldi, A. Concerto in D for lute and strings. Julian Bream Consort. RCA Victor 09026 61589-2 10
Andriessen, H. Chorale no 1 in F sharp minor (1913). Johan van Dommele, org. NCRV 9090 8 Menotti, G. Ricercare and toccata on a theme from The old maid and the thief (1953). Silva Costanzo, pf. Nuova Era 7122 9
Juliam Bream, gui (2 above)
Villa-Lobos, H. Three etudes: nos 1, 5 and 7 (1929). RCA Victor 09026 61589-2 7 Pujol, E. Tango espagño; Guajira. RCA Victor 09026 61909-2
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Juliam Bream, gui (2 above) May 2013
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Monday 6 May
Sunday 5 May
0:00 CLASSIC-ALL THROUGH THE NIGHT
19:00 OPERA HIGHLIGHTS Prepared by Randolph Magri-Overend Bellini, V. Casta diva ... Ah! bello me ritorna, from Norma (1831). Maria Callas, sop; La Scala Ch & O/Tulio Serafin. EMI 5 666 282 6 Thomas, A. Elle ne croyait pas, from Mignon (1866). Jerry Hadley, ten; English CO/Richard Bonynge. RCA 09 026 68030 2 4 Donizetti, G. Quando, rapito in estasi, from Lucia di Lammermoor (1835). Maria Calla s, sop; Anna Maria Canali, mezz; O del Maggio Musicale Fiorentino/Tulio Serafin. EMI 5 666 282 8 Amici miei, from La figlia del reggimento (1840). Juan Diego Flórez, ten; O de la Comunitat Valenciana/Daniel Oren. Decca 478 0314
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19:30 SUNDAY NIGHT CONCERT Danzi, F. Symphony in D minor, op 24. Kurpfälzisches Kammerorchester/Klaus-Peter Hahn. Mediaphon MED 72-103 18 Hummel, J. Bassoon concerto in F (1805). Claudio Gonella, bn; Italian International O/ Diego Dini-Ciacci. Naxos 8.554280 27 Beethoven, L. Overture and incidental music to Goethe’s Egmont, op 84 (1810). Sylvia McNair, sop; New York PO/Kurt Masur. apex 85173 89078-2 38 21:00 NEW HORIZONS Austrian horizons Prepared by Phil Vendy Holewa, H. Concertino IX (1987). Magnus Andersson, gui; Ensemble/Claes Merithz. Phono Suecia PSCD 49 Schwertsik, K. Tree songs, op 65 (1992). Adelaide SO/David Porcelijn. ABC 476 227-3
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Gruber, HK. Divertimento macchiato, op 99 (2007). Håkon Hardenberger, tpt; Swedish CO/ Heinz Gruber. BIS 1884 27 Ligeti, G. Piano concerto (1985-86). Pierre-Laurent Aimard, pf; Ensemble InterContemporain/Pierre Boulez. DG 439 808-2 22:30 ULTIMA THULE Ambient and atmospheric music: www. ultimathule.info for detailed playlist 26
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Rossini, G. Sonata à quattro no 5 in E flat (1804). I Musici. Philips 422 259-2 15
6:00 FINE MUSIC BREAKFAST including Arts Calendar at 7.30am with Robert Small
Puccini, G. Quartet in D (1880). Raphael String Quartet. Etcetera KTC 1050 8
9:00 DIVERSIONS IN FINE MUSIC Inspired by opera Prepared by Jan Brown
Crisantemi (1890).
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Tchaikovsky, P. Lensky’s aria, from Eugene Onegin (1879; arr. Maisky). Mischa Maisky, vc; Orpheus CO. DG 453 460-2 7
Verdi, G. String quartet, in E minor (1873). 22
Prutsman, S. Fantasy extract on themes from Richard Strauss’s Der Rosenkavalier. Livia Sohn, vn; Benjamin Loeb, pf. Naxos 8.570202 16
14:30 BRAHMS IN CONCERT Prepared by Stephen Wilson
Giuliani, M. Variations on a theme from Tancredi, op 87. Ricardo Gallén, gui. Naxos 8.555284
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Rossini, G. Il barbiere di Siviglia (arr. Wenzel, Sedlak). Netherlands Wind Ensemble. Philips 442 654-2 23 10:00 MORNING CONCERT Prepared by Angela Bell Holst, G. A Hampshire suite, op 28 no 2 (1911). Munich SO/Douglas Bostock. Classico CLASSCD 284 12 Dietrich, A. Violin concerto in D minor, op 30 (1874). Hans Maile, vn; Berlin RSO/Jésus LópezCobos. Schwann CD11622 31
Giovane Quartetto Italiano (2 above) Claves 50-9114
Brahms, J. Tragic overture in D minor, op 81 (1881). Royal Concertgebouw O/Nikolaus Harnoncourt. Radio Nederland RCO11004 14 Neue Liebeslieder Walzer, op 65 (1874). Barbara Bonney, sop; Anne Sofie von Otter, mezz; Kurt Streit, ten; Olaf Bär, bar; Helmut Deutsch, Bengt Forsberg, pf. EMI 5 55430 2 20 Symphony no 2 in D, op 73 (1877). Vienna PO/ Leonard Bernstein. DG 410 082-2 49 16:00 FINE MUSIC DRIVE including Arts Calendar at 5.00pm with David Brett 19:00 SPIRIT OF JAZZ with Susan Gai Dowling
Dukas, P. Symphony in C (1895). Monte Carlo O/Lawrence Foster. Claves 50-9102 39
20:00 STORMY MONDAY with Austin Harrison and Garth Sundberg
11:30 ELEGY AND ROMANCES Prepared by Elaine Siversen
Glazunov, A. The forest, op 19 (1882-87). Aurora Piano Quartet. Naxos 8.557717D
Poulenc, F. Elegy (1960). Pascal Rogé, pf; JeanPhilippe Collard, pf. Decca 443 968-2 7 Guastavino, C. Three Argentinian romances. Martha Argerich, pf; Mauricio Vallina, pf. EMI 3 58472 2 18 12:00 SWING SESSIONS with John Buchanan Featuring bands of the 1930s swing era and the dance bands of the 1920s taken from radio broadcasts, transcriptions and recording sessions 13:00 OPERA COMPOSERS’ QUARTETS Prepared by Sheila Catzel Cherubini, L. String quartet no 3 in D minor (1834). Quartetto David. BIS CD-1004 29
22:00 KEYBOARD CONTRASTS
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Debussy, C. L’isle joyeuse (1903-04). Ronan O’Hara, pf. 6 Tring TRP 068 Tchaikovsky, P. Piano trio in A minor, op 50 (1881-82). Solomon Trio. IMP MCD 52 46 Beethoven, L. Sonata no 22 in F, op 54 (1804). Jenö Jandó, pf. 9 Naxos 8.550167 Bach, J.S. Suite no 5 in G, BWV816, French (1724-5). Robert Aldwinkle, hpd. IMP PCD 817 20 Clementi, M. Sonata in G, op 37 no 2 (1797). Donatella Failoni, pf. White Label HRC 092 13
Tuesday 7 May 11:30 VERDI OPERAS ARRANGED Prepared by Chris Blower Liszt, F. Concert paraphrase from Verdi’s Rigoletto (1859). Barbara Moser, pf. Gramola 98820
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Hugues, L. Grand concert fantasy on themes from Verdi’s Un ballo in maschera, op 5. JeanPierre Rampal, fl; Claudi Arimany, fl; John Steele Ritter, pf. Delos DE 3212 9 Thalberg, S. Grand concert fantasy on Verdi’s La Traviata, op 78. Francesco Nicolosi, pf. Marco Polo 8.223367 10
Claudi Arimany 0:00 CONTEMPORARY COLLECTIVE
12:00 JAZZ RHYTHM with Jeannie McInnes An eclectic blending of agreeable rhythm and melody from the New Orleans jazz roots through to recent decades including many Australian bands
3:00 CLASSICAL TILL DAWN 6:00 FINE MUSIC BREAKFAST including Arts Calendar at 7.30am with Julie Simonds 9:00 DIVERSIONS IN FINE MUSIC Pianist of choice: Glenn Gould Prepared by Howard Pritchard
13:00 MAKE MINE MOZART Prepared by Rex Burgess
Byrd, W. Hughe Ashton’s ground. Philips 456 808-2
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Mozart, W. Six German dances, K509 (1787). Vienna Mozart Ensemble/Willi Boskovsky. Philips 422 643-2 13
Brahms, J. Ballade, op 10 no 4 (1854). Sony 88697417292
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Haydn, J. Sonata no 59 in E flat, Hob.XVI:49 (1789-90). Philips 456 808-2 18 Bach, J.S. Concerto in F, BWV971, Italian (1735). Sony 88697417292 13 Glenn Gould, pf (all above)
Exsultate, jubilate, K165 (1773). Barbara Bonney, sop; English Concert/Trevor Pinnock. Archiv 445 353-2 16 Piano concerto no 12 in A, K414 (1782). Berlin PO/Daniel Barenboim, pf & dir. Teldec 0630-13162-2 24 14:00 NOT STRICTLY BALLROOM Prepared by Randolph Magri-Overend
10:00 MORNING CONCERT Prepared by Raj Gopalakrishnan
Borodin, A. Polovtsian dances, from Prince Igor (1887). Sydney SO/Stuart Challender. ABC CD5 434 715-2 10
Gershwin, G. A symphonic portrait of Porgy and Bess (1935/43; arr. Bennett). Montreal SO/ Charles Dutoit. Decca 425 111-2 24
Beethoven, L. Minuets nos 1-12, WoO7 (1795). Ensemble Bella Musica of Vienna. Harmonia Mundi HMA 1901017 25
Mozart, W. Flute concerto no 2 in D, K314 (1778). James Galway, fl; New Irish CO/André Prieur. RCA RD 60450 20 Prokofiev, S. Symphonic suite from Semyon Kokto, op 81bis (1939). Scottish NO/Neeme Järvi. Chandos CHAN 8803 37
Debussy, C. Iberia, from Images bk 2 (1905-12). Suisse Romande O/Ernest Ansermet. Decca 478 3156-67 18 Copland, A. Cuban dance (1945). James Tocco, pf; Lukas Foss, pf. Pro Arte CDD 183 7 Dvorák, A. Slavonic dance in A flat, op 72 no 8 (1886). Scottish NO/Neeme Järvi. Chandos CHAN 8406 7
Michael Tilson Thomas Smetana, B. Souvenirs of Bohemia in the form of polkas, op 13 (1859-60). András Schiff, pf. 8 Teldec 3984-21261-2 Palomo, L. The Flamenco stage. Pepe Romero, gui, Seville RSO/Rafael Frühbeck de Burgos. 7 Naxos 8.557135 Bernstein, L. Symphonic dances, from West Side story (1957). London SO/Michael Tilson Thomas. DG 439 926-2 22 16:00 FINE MUSIC DRIVE including Arts Calendar at 5.00pm with Brendan Walsh 19:00 THE JAZZ BEAT with Lloyd Capps Smooth small group jazz from the 50s on and with a visit from Miles Davis each week 20:00 RECENT RELEASES with Derek Parker 22:00 BEYOND ROMANTICISM Polish composers Prepared by Phil Vendy Zarzycki, A. Mazurka in G, op 26. Wanda Wilkomirska, vn; Paul Dan, pf. Ambitus amb 97 830
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Regamey, C. Quintet (1942-44). Marleen Asberg, vn; Daniël Esser, vc; Jacques Meertens, cl; Gustavo Nüñez, bn; Gerard Bouwhuis, pf. RN Music MCCN120 32 Melcer-Szczawinski, H. Piano concerto no 1 in E minor (1892-94). Jonathan Plowright, pf; BBC Scottish SO/Christoph König. Hyperion CDA67630 29 Karlowicz, M. Symphony in E minor, op 7, Rebirth (1900-02). Warsaw PO/Antoni Wit. Naxos 8.572487 47 May 2013
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Wednesday 8 May
Lorin Maazel
Edith Yam
0:00 CONTEMPORARY COLLECTIVE
11:30 CHAMBER SONATAS Prepared by Paul Hopwood
3:00 CLASSICAL TILL DAWN 6:00 FINE MUSIC BREAKFAST including Arts Calendar at 7.30am with Peter Kurti
Rossini, G. Sonata à quattro no 1 in G (1804). Herrmann Klemeyer, fl; Hans Schöneberger, cl; Olaf Klamand, hn; Josef Peters, bn. Calig CAL 50850 12
9:00 DIVERSIONS IN FINE MUSIC Aspects of Baroque Prepared by Philip Lidbury
Bach, C.P.E. Trio sonata in A, Wq145 (1731/47). Le Nouveau Quatuor. Amon Ra CD-SAR 44 15
Handel, G. Concerto grosso in A, op 6 no 11 (1739). Emanuel Hurwitz, vn; Raymond Keenlyside, vn; Keith Harvey, vc; Leslie Pearson, hpd; English CO/Raymond Leppard. Philips 426 465-2 18
12:00 THE SOUND OF JAZZ with Kevin Jones
Arne, T. Frolic and free. Richard Morton, ten; Parley of Instruments/Roy Goodman. Hyperion CDA66237 9 Boyce, W. Trio sonata no 8 in E flat (pub. 1747). Collegium Musicum 90. Chandos CHAN 0648 11
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13:00 YOUNG VIRTUOSI Emerging young artists with Andrew Bukenya; recorded by Greg Ghavalis Featuring organist Edith Yam, pianist Daisy Ou and violinist Yejin Min Supported by St Catherine’s School and Overs Pianos
Handel, G. Suite from The water music (1717; arr. Egarr). Brussels PO; O of Flanders/Richard Egarr. Glossa GCDSA 922209 15
14:00 IN CONVERSATION with Michael Morton-Evans What exactly does it take to make music? Leading musicians, composers and performers, both local and visiting from overseas, will be talking live on air telling us why they do it and how they do it.
10:00 MORNING CONCERT Prepared by Derek Parker
15:00 ROMANTIC TRIOS Prepared by Jessie Tang
Offenbach, J. Overture to Maître Péronilla. Philharmonia O/Antonio de Almeida. Philips 422057-2 6
Schumann, C. Trio in G minor, op 17 (1846). Joseph Silverstein, vn; Colin Carr, vc; Veronica Jochum, pf. Pro Arte CDD 395 28
Field, J. Piano concerto no 2 in A flat (1811). Míceál O’Rourke, pf; London Mozart Players/ Matthias Bamert. Chandos CHAN 9368 35
Mendelssohn, F. Trio no 1 in D minor, op 49 (1839). Trio Wanderer. Harmonia Mundi HMC 901961 27
Tchaikovsky, P. Suite no 3 in G, op 55 (1884). Vienna PO/Lorin Maazel. Decca 476 2723 41
16:00 FINE MUSIC DRIVE including Arts Calendar at 5.00pm with Andrew Dziedzic
fineMusic 102.5
May 2013
19:00 JAZZ STARS AND STRIPES with Peter Mitchell
Luciano Pavarotti 20:00 AT THE OPERA Legendary Met performances: 17 December 1983 Prepared by Michael Tesoriero Verdi, G. Ernani. Opera in four Acts. Libretto by Francesco Piave. First performed Venice, 1844. ERNANI: Luciano Pavarotti, ten ELVIRA: Leona Mitchell, sop DON CARLO: Sherill Milnes, bar DON RUY GOMEZ DE SILVA: Ruggero Raimondi, bass Metropolitan Opera O & Ch/James Levine. Legends Recorded Opera LRO 544 2:28 Ernani, once a duke punished by his King Carlo, has become a bandit chief. He loves and is loved by Elvira, who against her will is betrothed to Silva. King Carlo also loves her. Ernani, disguised as a pilgrim, is offered the ancient laws of hospitality by Silva who refuses to hand him over to Carlo. Instead he hands Elvira to the King as hostage and informs Ernani that his life is now forfeited to him. Ernani hands Silva a silver horn, vowing that when it is sounded he will kill himself. Carlo pardons his enemies and blesses the union of Ernani and Elvira. Their happiness is brief as the silver horn sounds three times. Disengaging himself from his beautiful bride, Ernani stabs himself and dies in Elvira’s arms 23:00 AN 18th CENTURY CONCERT Prepared by Jessie Tang Mozart, W. Overture to The marriage of Figaro, K492 (1786). Staatskapelle Berlin/Otmar Suitner. 4 Berlin Classics 0300249BC Haydn, J. String quartet in D minor, op 76 no 2, Fifths (c1799). Jerusalem Quartet. Harmonia Mundi HMX 2908601.30 22 Beethoven, L. Piano concerto no 2 in B flat, op 19 (1793-95). Steven Lubin, fp; Academy of Ancient Music/Christopher Hogwood. L’Oiseau-Lyre 421 408-2 27
Thursday 9 May
Nikita Koshkin 0:00 CONTEMPORARY COLLECTIVE 3:00 CLASSICAL TILL DAWN
14:30 ‘ONE WORK’ COMPOSERS Prepared by Stephen Wilson
Glinka, M. O sweet, beautiful maiden; I was bewitched. Nicolai Gedda, ten; Lija Mogilevskaja, pf. LP Melodiya/Eurodisc 203284-366
Humperdinck, E. Overture no 2, from Marriage against their will. Bamberg SO/Karl Anton Rickenbacher. Schwann 3-1197-2 12
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Sviridov, G. It is snowing (1966). Gnesins Institute Boys’ Choir; Female voices of RSFSR Yurlov Academic Choir; Moscow Radio Large SO Chamber Players/Gennady Rozhdestvensky. LP Melodiya CM 01943-03542 9
Moszkowski, M. Piano concerto in E, op 59 (1898). Piers Lane, pf; BBC Scottish SO/Jerzy Maksymiuk. Hyperion CDA66452 37
Mussorgsky, M. Where art thou, little star? (1858); The he-goat (1867). Nicolai Gedda, ten; Lija Mogilevskaja, pf. LP Melodiya/Eurodisc 203284-366 6
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I have supreme power, from Boris Godunov (1874). Ezio Pinza, bass; Metropolitan Opera O/ Emil Cooper. LP CBS OD 2012 5
6:00 FINE MUSIC BREAKFAST including Arts Calendar at 7.30am with Simon Moore
12:00 JAZZ, PURE AND SIMPLE with Maureen Meers
9:00 DIVERSIONS IN FINE MUSIC Composer focus Prepared by Troy Fil Koshkin, N. Ave Maria, from Oratorium lacrimae. Stein-Erik Olsen, fl; Gro Sandvik, gui. Simax Classics PSC1268 3 Excerpts from The prince’s toys suite (1980). Artyom Dervoed, gui. Naxos 8.570447 19 Magaron concerto, mvts 2 and 4 (2005). Elena Papandreou, gui; Singapore SO/Lan Shui. BIS CD-1846 17 The elves, op 26 (1984). Brian Luckett, gui. Clear Note CN-74399
11:30 VOICES OF RUSSIA Prepared by Elaine Siversen
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Liszt, F. Sospiri! (1879); Romance oubliée (1880). Leslie Howard, pf. Hyperion CDA66445 Saint-Saëns, C. Romance in D flat, op 37 (1871). Jean-Pierre Rampal, fl; Marielle Nordmann, hp. Sony SK 44552
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Schumann, R. Piano concerto in A minor, op 54 (1841-45). Angela Hewitt, pf; German SO/ Hannu Lintu. Hyperion CDA 67885 31
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10:00 MORNING CONCERT Prepared by Di Cox
13:30 THE MATURE HOROWITZ Prepared by Denis Patterson
Mendelssohn, F. Symphony no 3 in A minor, op 56, Scottish (1842). Chamber Orchestra of Europe/Nikolaus Harnoncourt. Apex 2564 67391-0 40
Schubert F. Moment musical in F minor, D780 (1823-28). 2 Liszt, F. Ständchen, after Schubert (1838-39). 6 Soirées de Vienne, valses-caprices (1852): no 7 in A; no 6 in A minor. 14 Mozart, W. Sonata no 3 in B flat, K281 (1775). 18 Adagio in B minor, K540 (1788); Rondo in D, K485 (1786). 14 Vladimir Horowitz, pf (all above) DG 474 370-2
20:00 EVENINGS WITH THE ORCHESTRA The symphonies of Mendelssohn Prepared by Elaine Siversen
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Tchaikovsky, P. Valse-scherzo, op 34 (1877). Boris Belkin, vn; Berlin RSO/Vladimir Ashkenazy. Decca 476 7488 8
Shostakovich, D. Cello concerto no 1, op 107 (1959). Mstislav Rostropovitch, vc; Hugh Seenan, hn; London SO/Seiji Ozawa. Erato ECD 75485 26
19:00 JAZZ VIBES with Matt Bailey
Wagner, R. Overture: Columbus (1835). Royal Scottish NO/Neeme Järvi. 8 Chandos CHSA 5092
Polka Papandreou (2005). Elena Papandreou, gui; Singapore SO/Lan Shui. BIS CD-1846 1
Suk, J. Fantastické scherzo, op 25 (1903). Czech PO/Jirí Belohlávek. Chandos CHAN 8897 14
16:00 FINE MUSIC DRIVE including Arts Calendar at 5.00pm with Marilyn Schock
Mendelssohn, F. Overture: Die schöne Melusine, op 32 (1833). Gewandhaus O Leipzig/ Kurt Masur. Berlin Classics 0300249BC 11
13:00 ROMANTIC DELIGHTS Prepared by Marilyn Schock Rachmaninov, S. Romance, from String quartet no 1 (1889). Borodin Quartet. apex 0927 49815 2
Reznicek, E. Symphony in D (pub. 1918). Philharmonia Hungarica/Gordon Wright. Schwann 11091
Mendelssohn, F. Symphony no 2 in B flat, op 52, Hymn of praise (1840). Barbara Bonney, sop; Edith Wiens, sop; Peter Schreier, ten; Leipzig Radio Choir; Michael Schönheit, org; Gewandhaus O/Kurt Masur. Teldec 244 178-2 58 22:00 CHAMBER SOIRÉE Prepared by Angela Bell Franck, C. Quintet in F minor (1878-79). Richard Friedman, vn; Steven Smith, vn; Christopher Wellington, va; Ross Pople, vc; Pascal Rogé, pf. ASV DCA 769 34 Bax, A. Fantasy sonata (1917). Alison Nicholls, hp; Ashan Pillai, va. Naxos 8.554507 23 Mozart, W. Keyboard trio no 1 in G, K496 (1786). Florestan Trio. Hyperion CDA67609 23 Mendelssohn, F. Sonata no 1 in B flat, op 45 (1838). Zoe Knighton, vc; Amir Farid, pf. Move MD 3338 31 May 2013
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Friday 10 May 0:00 CONTEMPORARY COLLECTIVE
13:00 NUMBERS Prepared by Randolph Magri-Overend
3:00 CLASSICAL TILL DAWN
Scott, C. Early one morning (1930-31/62). Howard Shelley, pf; BBC PO/Martyn Brabbins. Chandos CHAN 10376 14
6:00 FINE MUSIC BREAKFAST including Arts Calendar at 7.30am with Janine Burrus
Rossini, G. Comic duet for two cats (1816). Elisabeth Söderström, sop; Kerstin Meyer, mezz; Jan Eyron, pf. BIS CD-17 4
9:00 DIVERSIONS IN FINE MUSIC Small forces Prepared by Sheila Catzel Puccini, G. Crisantemi (1890). Giovane Quartetto Italiano. Claves 50-9114
Chabrier, E. Three romantic waltzes (1880-83). Kathryn Stott, pf; Elizabeth Burley, pf. Unicorn-Kanchana DKP 9158 14 6
Schubert, F. Adagio in E flat, D897, Notturno (c1828). Beaux Arts Trio. Philips 442 9375 13 Schumann, R. Märchenerzählungen, op 132 (1853). Peter Schmidl, cl; Heinrich Koll, va; Madoka Inui, pf. Naxos 8.557606 14
22:00 BAROQUE AND BEFORE Rameau and predecessors Prepared by Philip Lidbury
Schubert, F. Overture to The magic harp, D644 (1820). Cleveland O/George Szell. Sony SBK 60267
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Variations on an original theme, D968a (c1824). Jenö Jandó, Zsuzsa Kollár, pf. Naxos 8.554513 10
Tinel, E. Feast in the temple of Jupiter, op 21 no 3 (1881). Belgian NO/Daniel Sternefeld. LP Cultura 5074-2 19
Das Wandern; Morgen Gruss; Der Müller und der Bach; Des Baches Wiegenlied, from Die schöne Müllerin, D795 (1823). Jonas Kaufman, ten; Helmut Deutsch, pf. Decca 478 1528 20
Belgian Radio & Television CO/Edgard Doneux (2 above) LP EMI 4C161-9589/900 Franck, C. Symphony in D minor (1887-88). French NRO/Thomas Beecham. EMI 5 62948 2 38
Introduction and variations in E minor on a theme from Die schöne Müllerin, D802 (1824). Emmanuel Pahud, fl; Eric le Sage, pf. naïve V 4863 20 Symphony no 4 in C minor, D417, Tragic (1816). Royal Concertgebouw O/Nikolaus Harnoncourt. Teldec 4509-91184-2
19:00 FRIDAY JAZZ SESSION with Sally Cameron
Franck, C. Prelude, fugue and variation in B minor, op 18 (1860-62). Francis Grier, org. ASV QS 6175 10
20:00 THE ROMANTIC CENTURY Prepared by Chris Blower
12:00 NOONTIME JAZZ with Peter Mitchell fineMusic 102.5
May 2013
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16:00 FINE MUSIC DRIVE including Arts Calendar at 5.00pm with Brendan Walsh
11:30 ORGAN SPLENDOUR Prepared by Elaine Siversen
Chorale no 3 in A minor (1890). Fernando Germani, org. EMI 5 69328 2
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14:00 SCHUBERT PANORAMA Prepared by Jan Brown
10:00 MORNING CONCERT Prepared by Elaine Siversen
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Gröndahl, A. Novelettes, op 25 no 1; Gavotte, op 25 no 2; Intermezzo, op 25 no 3; Laendler, op 36 no 7. Solveig Funseth, pf. Swedish Society SCD 1043 14 Grieg, E. Incidental music to Sigurd Jorsalfar, op 22 (1872). Håkan Hagegård, bar; Bergen Vocal Ensemble; Bergen PO/Ole Kristian Ruud. BIS CD-1740/42 35
Sonata no 3 in G minor, D408 (1816). Midori Seiler, vn; Jos van Immerseel, pf. Harmonia Mundi ZZT060501 16
The snows of Antan, op 23 (arr. J. Ysaÿe). Rudolph Werthen, vn.
Sinding, C. Suite in A minor, op 10 (1906). Andrej Bielow, vn; NDR Radiophilharmonie Hannover/Frank Beermann. cpo 777 114-2 13
Strauss, R. Four last songs, op posth (1948). Birgit Nilsson, sop; Swedish RSO/Leif Segerstam. Bluebell ABCD 009 20
Dvorák, A. Terzetto in C, op 74 (1887). The Lindsays. ASV DCS 446 19
Ysaÿe, E. Elegiac poem, op 12 (orch. J. Ysaÿe). Carlo van Neste, vn. 13
Svendsen, J. String quartet in A minor, op 1 (1865). The Kontra Quartet. BIS CD-753 26
Svendsen, J. Norwegian rhapsody no 4, op 22 (1877). Bergen SO/Karsten Andersen. NKFCD 50009-2 13 Sinding, C. Songs, op 1: How bright the moon shines; My eyes shine; Little Rose bit into the apple; Alle mein Weisheit. Bodil Arnesen, sop; Erling Ragnar Eriksen, pf. Naxos 8.553905 8
Rameau, J-P. Orchestral suite, from Les indes galantes (c1736). La Chapelle Royale O/Philippe Herreweghe. Harmonia Mundi HMP 390808 15 Josquin Desprez. O domine Jesu Christe. Sydney Chamber Choir/Nicholas Routley. Tall Poppies TP141
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Rameau, J-P. Concert no 1 (pub. 1741). Ryo Terakado, vn; Kaori Uemura, va da gamba; Christophe Rousset, hpd. Harmonia Mundi HMC 901418 12 Gaultier, E. Pieces in D minor. Jakob Lindberg, lute. BIS CD-201 11 Lully, J-B. Ballet des plaisirs (1655). Aradia Baroque Ensemble/Kevin Mallon. Naxos 8.554003
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Couperin, F. La Raphaéle, from Huitième ordre (pub. 1717). Angela Hewitt, pf. Hyperion CDA67440
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Mouret, J-J. Second suite, from Suite of symphonies (c1729). Paul Kuentz CO/Paul Kuentz. Archiv 453 169-2
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Rameau, J-P. In convertendo, motet (1713-15). Véronique Gens, sop; Isabelle Desrochers, sop; Jean-Paul Fouchécourt, ct; Hervé Lamy, bar; Peter Harvey, bass-bar; Marcos Louriero de Sa, bass-bar; Stephan Imboden, bass; Le Concert Spirituel/Hervé Niquet. Virgin 5 61526 2 23
Saturday 11 May 0:00 CLASSIC-ALL THROUGH THE NIGHT 6:00 SATURDAY MORNING MUSIC with David Garrett 9:00 WHAT’S ON IN MUSIC Our weekly guide to musical events in and around Sydney
Halévy, F. Rachel, quand du Seigneur, from The jewish girl (1835). Roberto Alagna, ten; Royal Opera House O/Bertrand de Billy. EMI 5 57012 2 7 Berlioz, H. Overture to Benvenuto Cellini, op 23 (1834-37). Polish State PO/Kenneth Jean. Naxos 8.550231 10 Franck, C. Symphonic poem: Les éolides (1875-6). Suisse Romande O/Ernest Ansermet. Decca 452 890-2 11 Saint-Saëns, C. Cello concerto no 1 in A minor, op 33 (1872). János Starker, vc; London SO/Antal Dorati. Mercury 432 010-2 19
Sarasate, P. de Magic flute fantasy. Gil Shaham, vn; Akira Eguchi, pf. DG 447 640-2
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Duparc, H. Extase (1874). Shura Gehrman, bass; Adrian Farmer, pf. Nimbus NI 5396 6 Debussy, C. Sonata for flute, viola and harp (1915). Members of Nash Ensemble. Virgin VC 7 91148-2 17 Ravel, M. Tzigane (1924). Leila Josefowicz, vn; Academy of St Martin in the Fields/Neville Marriner. Philips 454 440-2 9
13:00 HISTORIC RECORDINGS Prepared by Randolph Magri-Overend
Kats-Chernin, E. Four rags for IM (1996). Ian Munro, pf. Tall Poppies TP186 11
Wagner, R. Leb’ wohl du kühnes herzliches Kind, from Die Walküre (1854-56). George London, bar; Vienna PO/Hans Knappertsbusch. Decca 467 904-2 18 Brahms, J. Alto rhapsody, op 53 (1869). Marian Anderson, cont; San Francisco SO/Pierre Monteux. RCA GD 87911 13
Schultz, A. Violin concerto, op 55 (1996). Jennifer Pike, vn; Tasmanian SO/Richard Mills. ABC 476 4519 34 19:00 THE MAGIC OF STAGE AND SCREEN Prepared by Maureen Meers
Bach, J.S. Air, from Suite no 3, BWV1068 (c1731; arr. Stokowski). O/Leopold Stokowski. HMV 5740492 7 14:00 LISTENERS’ CHOICE with Christina MacGuinness Phone 9439 4777 or go to finemusicfm.com and follow the links to choose your music
Lehár, F. Excerpts from Guiditta (1934). ORTF soloists, Ch & O/Adolf Sibert. Naxos 8.111010 14
15:30 AT THE MOVIES Prepared by Pat Hopper Rodgers, R. Excerpts from Victory at sea. Cincinnati Pops O/Erich Kunzel. Telarc 80175 12 Vaughan Williams, R. Suite, from Scott of the Antarctic (1948). Merryn Gamba, sop; Sheffield Philharmonic Ch; BBC PO/Rumon Gamba. Chandos CHAN 10007 41 16:30 ARTS IN FOCUS with Metro Orchestra Produced by Simon Moore 17:00 COLOURS OF THE KING Program of the Organ Music Society of Sydney Prepared by Andrew Grahame Campbell, S. Gaudeamus; Canterbury interlude. 7
Bach, J.S. Fugue in G Major, BWV577, Jig fugue. 3 Harris, W. Pastorale, from Three preludes (1952). 3 2
Rheinberger, J. Alla marcia, op 167 no 8, from 12 Meditations (1891). 6
Gregson, E. Connotations (1977). John Foster Black Dyke Mills Band/Peter Parkes. Chandos CHAN 4510 12
Langlais, J. Incantation for a saint’s day (1954). 5
Strauss, R. Festmusik der Stadt Wien (1943). Summit Brass. Pro Arte CDD 318 11
Edwards, R. Binyang (1996). Peter Jenkin, cl; Daryl Pratt, perc. 7 Tall Poppies TP126
Novello, I. Excerpts from The dancing years (1939). Ivor Novello, Dunstan Hart, Mary Ellis, Olive Gilbert, voices; Drury Lane TO/Charles Prentice. Naxos 8.120781 20
Walond, W. Voluntary no 5 in G major (1760). 5
11:30 ON PARADE Prepared by Robert Small Dukas, P. Fanfare to La Peri (1912). Summit Brass. Pro Arte CDD 318
18:00 AUSTRALIAN COMPOSERS’ HOUR Prepared by Janie Fitch
Bach, J.S. Passacaglia and fugue in C minor, BWV582 (c1712; arr Stokowski). SO/Leopold Stokowski. HMV 5740492 15
9:30 SPOTLIGHT ON Alumni of the Paris Conservatoire Prepared by Frank Morrison
Bizet, G. Variations chromatiques (1868). Glenn Gould, pf. Philips 456 808-2
12:00 JAZZ THEN AND NOW with Michael Cooper
John Porter, org (6 above) Willan, H. Introduction, passacaglia and fugue (1916). David Hill, org. 17 Priory PRCD913 (all above)
Grainer, R. Excerpts from Robert and Elizabeth (1964). June Bronhill, sop; Keith Michell, voice; Ch & O/Alexander Faris. EMI 0946 389 1632
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20:00 LIVE AND LOCAL Postcards from Prague Recorded by Roger Doyle for FINE MUSIC Ford, A. Spirit of the staircase (2011).
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Mozart, W. Symphony no 38 in D, K504, Prague (1786; arr. Hummel). Diana Doherty, ob. 24 Dvorák, A. Piano trio no 4 in E minor, op 90, Dumky (1891). 31 Martinu, B. Quartet (1947). Diana Doherty, ob. 12 Seraphim Trio (all above) 21:30 AUSTRALIAN TEARS AND SYMPATHY Prepared by Randolph Magri-Overend Kats-Chernin, E. Tears from above, from Phoenix story (2007). Pei-Sian Ng, vc; Pei-Jee Ng, vc. Melba MR 301113 10 Broadstock, B. Symphony no 4, Born from good angels’ tears (1995). Tasmanian SO/Ola Rudner. ABC 476 8041 15 22:00 AFTER HOURS with Kevin Jones May 2013
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Sunday 12 May 0:00 CLASSIC-ALL THROUGH THE NIGHT
Bax, A. A mountain wood (1915). Eric Parkin, pf. 6 Chandos CHAN 9561
6:00 SUNDAY MORNING MUSIC with Robert Small
Hovhaness, A. Symphony no 20, op 223, Three journeys to a holy mountain (1969). Royal Scottish Academy of Music and Drama Wind O/Keith Brion. Naxos 8.559207 21
9:00 WAGNER AND FRIENDS Power and magic in the Ring Prepared by Barbara Brady Wagner, S. Wie der Himmel, from Rainulf und Adelasia (1922). Frank van Aken, ten; Florian Prey, bar; Stuttgart Choristers; Rheinland-Pfalz State PO/Werner Andreas Albert. cpo 777 017-2 4 Wagner, R. Lugt; Schwestern, from Das Rheingold (1853-54). Natalie Jones, sop; Donna-Maree Dunlop, sop; Zan McKendree-Wright, mezz; John Wegner, bass-bar; Adelaide SO/Asher Fisch. Melba 301089-90 5 Nibelheim, from Das Rheingold (arr. Vlieger). Netherlands RPO/Edo de Waart. Fidelio 9201 2
Boyd, A. Cloudy Mountain (1981). Geoffrey Collins, fl; David Miller, pf. 8 Tall Poppies TP127
Natalie Jones 10:30 CHAMBER MASTERWORKS Glinka, M. Trio pathétique in D minor (1832). Copenhagen Clarinet Trio. Scandinavia Classics 220588-304 17 Fauré, G. Berceuse, op 16 (1879). Thelma Owens, hp; Philippa Davies, fl. IMP PCD 835
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Riesenwurm, from Das Rheingold. Set Svanholm, ten; George London, bass-bar.
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Bin ich nun frei? from Das Rheingold.
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Schubert, F. String quartet no 1 in C minor. Melos Quartet. Mediaphon 25407-138 18
Gustav Neidlinger, bar; Vienna PO/Georg Solti (2 above) Decca 414 101-2
Krommer, F. Partita in E flat, op 79. Rotterdam Philharmonic Wind Ensemble. Brilliant Classics 93759 22
Bruckner, A. Adagio (1876). New PO of Westphalia/Johannes Wildner. Naxos 8.555928/9
Hummel, J. Piano quintet in E flat, op 87 (1802). Melos Ensemble. Decca 476 2447
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12:00 CLASSIC JAZZ AND RAGTIME with John Buchanan The early days of jazz and ragtime as recorded during the first 30 years of the 20th century
Tausig, C. Transcription of Wagner’s Kaisermarsch (1871). Dennis Hennig, pf. Etcetera KTC 1076
13:00 WORLD MUSIC: Whirled Wide with Anna Tranter 10
Rüstet euch wohl, from Götterdämmerung. Duccio dal Monte, bass; State Opera of South Australia Ch. 6 Adelaide SO/Asher Fisch (2 above) Melba MR 301099-102 Magic fire music, from The Valkyrie (1854-56, arr. Henk de Vieger). Cleveland O/George Szell. CBS M2YK 46466 5
fineMusic 102.5
May 2013
Grieg, E. Haugtussa, the mountain maid, song cycle, op 67 (1895). Anne Sofie von Otter, mezz; Bengt Forsberg, pf. DG 437 521-2 26 d’Indy, V. Symphony on a French mountain air, op 25 (1886). François-Joël Thiollier, pf; NSO of Ireland/Antonio de Almeida. Naxos 8.550754 26 Mussorgsky, M. A night on Bare Mountain (1867; orch. Rimsky-Korsakov 1886). Royal Liverpool PO/Charles Mackerras. Virgin VC 7 91174-2 11 17:00 HOSANNA Prepared by Heather Sykes
Wagner, R. Hoho! hoho! Notung! from Siegfried (1856-71). Reiner Goldberg, ten; Günter Kurth, ten; Staatskapelle Berlin/Siegfried Kurz. Capricorn 10 056 6
Wagner, R. Hast du, Gunther ... Blühenden Lebens, from Götterdämmerung (1869-74). Timothy Mussard, ten; Jonathan Summers, bar. 6
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Haas, P. String quartet no 2, op 7, From the Monkey Mountain (1923; arr. Tognetti). Australian CO/Richard Tognetti. Chandos CHAN 10016 33
14:00 SUNDAY SPECIAL Climb every mountain Prepared by Rex Burgess Ives, C. From the steeples and the mountains (1901-02). London Gabrieli Brass Ensemble/ Christopher Larkin. Hyperion CDA66517 4 Liszt, F. Symphonic poem no 1: What is heard on the mountain (1848-49/50/54). New Zealand SO/Michael Halász. Naxos 8.557846 29 Lassus, O. de Where no other mountain casts its shadow (1567). Alsfelder Vocal Ensemble/ Wolfgang Helbich. Teldec 4509 93685-2 3
Hymns: Praise to the Lord; The church’s one foundation; Crown Him with many crowns; Love divine, all loves excelling. Choir of King’s College, Cambridge; Richard Farnes, org; Stephen Cleobury, cond. Decca 452 252-2 12 Anon. Ascension. Scholars of the Hofburg Chapel, Vienna/P. Hubert Dopf. Decca 478 4671 10 Bach, J.S. Cantata, BWV11: Lobet Gott in seinen reichen, Ascension Oratorio (c1735). Paul Esswood, ct; Kurt Equiluz, ten; Max van Egmond, bass; Vienna Boys’ Choir; Chorus Viennensis; Concentus Musicus Vienna/ Nikolaus Harnoncourt. Teldec 8.35029 29 18:00 SYDNEY SCHUBERT SOCIETY Prepared by Jan Brown Schubert, F. Schwanengesang, D957 (1828). Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau, bar; Alfred Brendel, pf. Philips 411 051-2 50
Monday 13 May
Sunday 12 May 19:00 OPERA HIGHLIGHTS Prepared by Giovanna Grech Verdi, G. Overture to I masnadieri (1847). La Scala PO/Riccardo Muti. Sony SBK 89738 5 Mozart, W. Ich baue ganz auf deine Stärke, from The abduction from the seraglio, K384 (1782). Richard Conrad, ten; New SO of London/Richard Bonynge. Decca 448 594-2 6 Offenbach, J. Lettre de la périchole, from La périchole (1868). Frederica von Stade, mezz; Scottish CO/Antonio de Almeida. RCA 09026 68116 2 6 Massenet, J. Ah! Salomé! Dans ce palais, il est doux, il est bon, from Hérodiade (1881). Renée Fleming, sop; Kenneth Cox, bass; San Francisco Opera Ch & O/Valery Gergiev. Sony SK 61 965 6 19:30 SUNDAY NIGHT CONCERT Prepared by Troy Fil Massenet, J. Suite no 4: Scènes pittoresques (1874). Monte Carlo National Opera O/John Eliot Gardiner. Erato 2292-45859-2 17 Beethoven, L. Piano concerto no 4 in G, op 58 (1805-06). Artur Schnabel, pf; London PO/ Malcolm Sargent. Philips 456 961-2 31 Spiers, C. Divertimento for strings (1987). Queensland SO/Vladimir Ponkin. ABC 426 424-2 36 21:00 NEW HORIZONS Scales of joy and sorrow Prepared by Troy Fil Mozetich, M. Scales of joy and sorrow (2007). Gryphon Trio. Centrediscs CMCCD 14009 18 Byrne, M. In a winter landscape (2009). Peter Sheridan, fl; elec. Move MD 3349 5 Levaillant, D. Drama symphony (1994-95). Commande de L’lna-GRM; Radio France PO/ David Davies. DLM Editions 2512 28 Harvey, J. The summer cloud’s awakening (2001). Latvian Radio Choir; Ilona Meija, fl; Arne Deforce, vc; Jonathan Harvey, elec; Carl Faia, elec; Clive Williamson, synthesizer; Kaspars Putnins, cond. Hyperion CDA67835 31 22:30 ULTIMA THULE
0:00 CLASSIC-ALL THROUGH THE NIGHT
Mozart, W. Madamina, il catalogo e questo, from Don Giovanni (1787). Bryn Terfel, bassbar; Metropolitan Opera O/James Levine. DG 445 866-2 6
6:00 FINE MUSIC BREAKFAST including Arts Calendar at 7.30am with James Hunter
Rubinstein, A. Don Quixote, humoresque for orchestra, op 87 (1870). Slovak PO/Michael Halász. Marco Polo 8.220359 21
9:00 DIVERSIONS IN FINE MUSIC Inspired by opera Prepared by Elaine Siversen Glinka, M. Divertimento on themes from Bellini’s La sonnambula (1832). Bolshoi TO Soloists/Alexander Lazarev. Le Chant du Monde LDC 288 068 13
Verdi, G. Il l’ho perduta! Dio, che nell’alma infondere, from Don Carlo (1867). Jussi Björling, ten; Robert Merrill, bar; Emil Markow, bass; RCA Victor Symphony O/Renato Cellini. RCA GD 87799 10
Creti de Rocchis, M. Fantasia on Casta diva from Bellini’s Norma. Claudia Antonelli, hp. Naxos 8.554252 9
Strauss, R. Don Juan, op 20 (1888). Detroit SO/ Antal Dorati. Decca 400 085-2 17
Pasculli, A. Fantasia on Donizetti’s Poliuto. Ivan Paisov, ob; Natalia Shcherbakova, pf. Naxos 8.570567 14
15:00 IN THE SALON Prepared by Alice Higgins
Liszt, F. Reminiscences of Meyerbeer’s Robert le Diable (1841). Leslie Howard, pf. Hyperion CDA66861/2 17 10:00 MORNING CONCERT Prepared by Sheila Catzel Milhaud, D. Le boeuf sur le toit, op 58 (1919). New London O/Ronald Corp. Hyperion CDA66594 20 Korngold, E. Violin concerto in D, op 35 (1945). Gil Shaham, vn; London SO/André Previn. DG 439 886-2 25 Brahms, J. Symphony no 2 in D, op 73 (1877). Vienna PO/Carlos Kleiber. Artists FED 013/14 37 11:30 CONCERT ENCORE Prepared by Sheila Catzel Brahms, J. Three intermezzi, op 117 (1892). Hélène Grimaud, pf. Erato 0630-14350-2
Rachmaninov, S. Vocalise (1912; arr. Gingold, Press). Itzhak Perlman, vn; Samuel Sanders, pf. EMI Classics 4769572 5 Haydn, J. String quartet, op 33 no 2, The joke (1781). Borodin Quartet. Onyx 4069 17 Ravel, M. Kaddisch, from Two Hebrew melodies (1914; arr. Apituley). Esther Apituley, vn; Rie Tanaka, pf. Challenge Classics CC 72156 6 Debussy, C. Quartet in G minor, op 10 (1893). Chilingarian String Quartet. EMI Classics 50999 7051 2359 26 16:00 FINE MUSIC DRIVE including Arts Calendar at 5.00pm with Tom Forrester-Paton 19:00 SPIRIT OF JAZZ with Susan Gai Dowling
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20:00 STORMY MONDAY with Austin Harrison and Garth Sundberg
Milhaud, D. Scaramouche (1937). Guitar Trek. ABC 442 508-2 10
22:00 KEYBOARD CONTRASTS Prepared by Judy Ekstein
12:00 SWING SESSIONS with John Buchanan
Mendelssohn, F. Sonata in E, op 6 (1826). Benjamin Frith, pf. Naxos 8.550940 26
13:00 MUSICAL DONS Prepared by Randolph Magri-Overend Ibert, J. Suite from Don Quichotte (1933). Slovak RSO/Adriano. Marco Polo 8.223287
Rachmaninov, S. Variations on a theme of Corelli, op 42 (1931). Duncan Gifford, pf. ABC 438 827-2 20 11
Glinka, M. Serenade on themes from Donizetti’s Anna Bolena (1832). Bolshoi TO Soloists/Alexander Lazarev. Le Chant du Monde LDC 288 068 17 Liszt, F. Fantasy on themes from Mozart’s The marriage of Figaro and Don Giovanni (1842). Leslie Howard, pf. Hyperion CDA66861/2 22
Schumann, R. Adagio and allegro in A flat, op 70 (1849). James Sommerville, hn; Rene Sharon, pf. Marquis ERAD 157 9 Prokofiev, S. Sonata no 8 in B flat, op 84 (1944). Peter Donohoe, pf. EMI 7 54281 2 29 Ravel, M. Gaspard de la nuit (1908). Louis Lortie, pf. Chandos CHAN 7004/5 24 May 2013
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Tuesday 14 May Novák, V. Moravian-Slovak suite, op 32 (1903). Brno PO/Karel Sejna. Supraphon 11 0682-2 27 Boccherini, L. Sinfonia in D minor, op 12 no 4, La casa del Diavolo (pub. 1771). Australian CO/ Richard Tognetti. Sony SK62855 22 11:30 SONATAS FOR TWO Prepared by Paul Hopwood Agnew, R. Sonata symphonique. Larry Sitsky, pf. Canberra School of Music CSM:19 11 Medtner, N. Sonata reminiscenza in A minor, from Forgotten melodies, op 38 no 1 (c1918). Grigory Ginsburg, pf. Philips 456 802-2 14
Victor Herbert 0:00 CONTEMPORARY COLLECTIVE 3:00 CLASSICAL TILL DAWN
12:00 JAZZ RHYTHM with Jeannie McInnes
6:00 FINE MUSIC BREAKFAST including Arts Calendar at 7.30am with Julie Simonds
13:00 A POETIC CYCLE Prepared by Phil Vendy
9:00 DIVERSIONS IN FINE MUSIC Pianists of choice: Clifford Curzon Prepared by Barrie Brockwell
Eller, H. Tone poem: Dawn (1918). John Digney, ob; Scottish NO/Neeme Järvi. Chandos CHAN 8525 8
Liszt, F. Liebestraum no 3 in A flat (1850). Decca 452 306-2
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Sibelius, J. Tone poem: Tapiola, op 112 (1926). Royal PO/Thomas Beecham. EMI 1 66451 2 18
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Lehár, F. Tone poem: Fever (1915). Robert Gambill, ten; Volker Worlitzsch, vn; Hanover RPO/Klauspeter Seibel. cpo 999 423-2 13
Schubert, F. Theme and variations, from Quintet in A, D667, Trout (1819). Amadeus String Quartet. BBC BBCL 4009-2
Brahms, J. Intermezzi: in E flat, op 117 no 1; in C, op 119 no 3 (1892). Decca 417 641-2 7 Liszt, F. Valse oubliée no 1 (1881-85); Gnomenreigen, (1849-81). Decca 452 306-2
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14:00 FRUITFUL VACATIONS Prepared by Brian Drummond
Schubert, F. Fantasy in C, D760, Wanderer (c1823). Philips 456 758-2 21
Elgar, E. Overture: In the south, Alassio, op 50 (1903). Royal PO/Andrew Litton. Virgin VC 7 90727-2 21
Clifford Curzon, pf (all above)
Tchaikovsky, P. Suite no 3 in G, op 55 (1884). Vienna PO/Lorin Maazel. Decca 476 2723 41
10:00 MORNING CONCERT Prepared by Barrie Brockwell Dvorák, A. Overture to Kate and the Devil, op 112 (1899). CSSR State PO/Robert Stankovsky. Marco Polo 8.223272 9 Herbert, V. Cello concerto no 2 in E minor, op 30 (1894). Yo-Yo Ma, vc; New York PO/Kurt Masur. Sony SK 67173 21 34
Chadwick, G. Tone poem: Angel of death (1918). Nashville SO/Kenneth Schermerhorn. Naxos 8.559117 14
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Brahms, J. Rhapsody in G minor, op 79 no 2 (1879). Glenn Gould, pf. CBS 37800 6 Sibelius, J. Symphony no 2 in D, op 43 (1902). Royal Concertgebouw O/George Szell. Radio Netherlands RCO 05001 42
Jiˇrí Bˇelohlávek 16:00 FINE MUSIC DRIVE including Arts Calendar at 5.00pm with Michael Morton-Evans 18:00 SYDNEY SYMPHONY 2013 Produced by Peter Kurti
What’s on in concerts during the next month 19:00 THE JAZZ BEAT with Lloyd Capps 20:00 RECENT RELEASES with Charles Barton 22:00 BEYOND ROMANTICISM Prepared by Frank Morrison Janácek, L. Taras Bulba (1917). Czech PO/ Jiˇrí Bˇelohlávek. Chandos CHAN 9080 23 Bloch, E. Schelomo: Hebraic rhapsody (191516). Mstislav Rostropovich, vc; French NO/ Leonard Bernstein. EMI 5 65701 2 23 Poulenc, F. Le travail du peintre (1958). Thomas Allen, bar; Roger Vignoles, pf. Virgin VC 5 45053
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Bartók, B. Quartet no 3 (1927). Levon Chilingirian, vn; Mark Butler, vn; Louise Williams, va; Philip de Groote, vc. Chandos CHAN 8634
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Skryabin, A. Fantasy, op 60 (1893; arr. Rozhdestvensky). Viktoria Postnikova, pf; Hague Residentie O/Gennady Rozhdestvensky. 9 Chandos CHAN 9728 Sibelius, J. Symphony no 3 in C, op 52 (1907). Royal Scottish NO/Alexander Gibson. Chandos CHAN 6557 26
Wednesday 15 May 11:30 SILHOUETTES Prepared by Elaine Siversen Saint-Saëns, C. Scherzo, op 87 (1889). Christian Ivaldi, pf; Noël Lee, pf. Arion ARN 68011
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Arensky, A. Suite no 2, op 23, Silhouettes (1892). Stephen Coombs, pf; Ian Munro, pf. Hyperion CDA66755 15 12:00 THE SOUND OF JAZZ with Kevin Jones 13:00 YOUNG VIRTUOSI with Andrew Bukenya; recorded by Greg Ghavalis Featuring pianist Sabina Im with works by Schumann, Grainger and Ginastera Supported by St Catherine’s School and Overs Pianos
Alexander Glazunov 0:00 CONTEMPORARY COLLECTIVE
14:00 IN CONVERSATION with Michael Morton-Evans What exactly does it take to make music? Leading musicians, composers and performers, both local and visiting from overseas, will be talking live on air telling us why they do it and how they do it.
3:00 CLASSICAL TILL DAWN 6:00 FINE MUSIC BREAKFAST including Arts Calendar at 7.30am with Peter Kurti 9:00 DIVERSIONS IN FINE MUSIC Aspects of Baroque Prepared by Frank Morrison Zelenka, J. Capriccio no 1 in D (1729). Camerata Bern. Archiv 469 842-2 15 Biber, H. Representative violin sonata (1669). Elizabeth Wallfisch, vn; Rosanne Hunt, vc; Linda Kent, hpd. ABC 465 269-2 11 Benda, G. Sinfonia no 11 in F. Prague CO/ Christian Benda. Naxos 8.553409
Eleanor Steber
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Stamitz, J. Sinfonia a quattro in D (bef. 1750). New Dutch Academy CO/Simon Murphy. PentaTone PTC 5186 028 15 10:00 MORNING CONCERT Prepared by Anne Irish Mendelssohn, F. Overture: The Hebrides, op 26, Fingal’s Cave (1830). Sydney SO/Stuart Challender. ABC 446 279-2 10 Ries, F. Piano concerto in A flat, op 151, Gruss an den Rhein (1826). Christopher Hinterhuber, pf; New Zealand SO/Uwe Grodd. Naxos 8.557638 29 Glazunov, A. Symphony no 8 in E flat, op 83 (1906). Moscow SO/Alexander Anissimov. Naxos 8.553660 43
15:00 SCHERZO, SARABANDE AND SYMPHONY Prepared by Brian Drummond Dvorák, A. Scherzo capriccioso, op 66 (1883). London SO/István Kertész. Decca 417 724-2 12 Debussy, C. Sarabande (1894; arr. Ravel). Lausanne CO/Alberto Zedda. Virgin VC 7 91098-2
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Rimsky-Korsakov, N. Symphony no 3 in C, op 32 (1886). Bergen PO/Dmitri Kitaienko. Chandos CHAN 9229 37 16:00 FINE MUSIC DRIVE including Arts Calendar at 5.00pm with James Hunter 19:00 JAZZ STARS AND STRIPES with Peter Mitchell 20:00 AT THE OPERA Legendary Met performances: May 1949 Prepared by Michael Tesoriero Puccini, G. Madame Butterfly. Opera in two acts. Libretto by Giuseppe Giacosa and Luigi Illica. First performed Milan, 1904. BUTTERFLY: Eleanor Steber, sop PINKERTON: Richard Tucker, ten SHARPLESS: Giuseppe Valdengo, bar SUZUKI: Jean Madeira, mezz GORO: Alessio de Paolis, ten Metropolitan Opera Ch & O/Max Rudolf. Sony 62765 2:21
Lieutenant Pinkerton of the US navy becomes engaged to the geisha Butterfly during a visit to Japan despite the warnings of his friend Sharpless. Butterfly, believing in her marriage to Pinkerton, takes care of their child with her maid Suzuki, renounces her religion and is abandoned by her family. Three years later, the marriage broker Goro wants to introduce her to a prince. Butterfly is not interested, insisting that she is still married to Pinkerton. She waits excitedly for him when his ship arrives in the harbour that day. Pinkerton brings a wife, wanting to take the child to America. Butterfly refuses, asks him to leave and promises they can return later for the child. She then takes her father’s sword and kills herself. 23:00 TROMBONE AND ORGAN Recorded by Kerry Joyner for FINE MUSIC Fauré, G. After a dream (1878); In prayer (1889). 6 Gregory van der Struik, tb. Pierné, G. Prelude, op 29 no 1.
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Godard, B. Berceuse de Jocelyn (1888).
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Schumann, R. Six canonic studies, op 5 (1845; arr. Breuer). 11 Gregory van der Struik, tb (2 above) Vivaldi, A. Concerto in G minor, op 3 no 2 (arr. 9 Lasala). Rachmaninov, S. Vocalise, op 34 no 14 (1915). 5 Vivaldi, A. Sonata in A minor, RV43 (arr. Kolmeder).
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Gregory van der Struik, tb (2 above) Pastór de Lasala, org (all above) May 2013
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Thursday 16 May 0:00 CONTEMPORARY COLLECTIVE
13:00 LES APACHES Prepared by Ross Hayes
3:00 CLASSICAL TILL DAWN
Borodin, A. Symphony no 2 in B minor, mvt 1 (1869-76; rev. Rimsky-Korsakov, Glazunov). London SO/Jean Martinon. Decca 455 632-2 7
6:00 FINE MUSIC BREAKFAST including Arts Calendar at 7.30am with Simon Moore
Ravel, M. Miroirs (1905). Jean-Yves Thibaudet, pf. Decca 433515-2 30
9:00 DIVERSIONS IN FINE MUSIC Composer focus Prepared by Keith Glendinning Korngold, E. Sonata no 1, mvts 1 and 3 (190809). Geoffrey Tozer, pf. Chandos CHAN 9389 13 Mariettalied, from Die tote Stadt, op 12 (1920). Barbara Hendricks, sop; Philadelphia O/Franz Welser-Möst. EMI 5 56169 2 5 Sonata no 3, op 25, mvt 3 (1931). Geoffrey Tozer, pf. Chandos CHAN 9389
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Cello concerto in C, op 37 (1946). Peter Dixon, vc; BBC PO/Matthias Bamert. Chandos CHAN 9508 13 Suite: The adventures of Robin Hood (1938). National PO/Charles Gerhardy. RCA Victor GD 80912 50 10:00 MORNING CONCERT Prepared by Michael-Morton Evans Verdi, G. Ballet music from Il trovatore (1853). Monte Carlo National Opera O/Antonio de Almeida. Philips 422 846-2 22 Karlowicz, M. Serenade for string orchestra, op 2 (1897). BBC PO/Gianandrea Noseda. Chandos CHAN 10171 21 Mozart, W. Symphony no 41 in C, K551, Jupiter (1780). Symphony Nova Scotia/Georg Tintner. Naxos 8.557239 40 11:30 CHAMBER MINUETS Prepared by Chris Blower Puccini, G. Three minuets (pub. 1892). Raphael String Quartet. Etcetera KTC 1050 9 Bach, J.S. Two minuets from Partita no 1 for harpsichord. Alturas Duo. Con Brio CBR21143 3 Schubert, F. Five minuets with six trios, D89 (1813). Eduard Melkus Ensemble. Archiv 439 964-2 13 12:00 JAZZ, PURE AND SIMPLE with Maureen Meers 36
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Delage, M. A Roussel for flute, voice and piano. Margaret Cable, mezz; William Bennett, fl; Margaret Fingerhut, pf. Chandos CHAN 8578 4 Schmitt, F. Sonatine en trio, op 85 (1935). Emmanuel Pahud, fl; Paul Meyer, cl; Eric Le Sage, pf. EMI 5 57948 2
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Stravinsky, I. Scherzo fantastique, op 3 (1908). Sydney SO/Edo de Waart. ABC 456 670-2 13 Falla, M. de Interlude and dance, from La vida breve (1913). Suisse Romande O/Ernest Ansermet. Decca 478 3156-67 7 Ravel, M. Pavane pour une infante défunte (1899). Melbourne SO/Jorge Mester. ABC 438 611-2 7 Delage, M. Quatre poèmes hindous, op 37 (1898). Janet Baker, mezz; Melos Ensemble. Decca 476 7091 10 Stravinsky, I. Symphony in E flat, op 1, mvt 3 (1905-07). Suisse Romande O/Neeme Järvi. Chandos CHAN 9240 10 Schmitt, F. French rhapsody, op 53 (1903-04). Huseyin Sermet, pf; Kun Woo Paik, pf. Auvidis V 4679 5 Ravel, M. Sérénade grotesque (c1893). Gordon Fergus-Thompson, pf. ASV DCA 809 4 15:00 MOZART’S CONTEMPORARIES Prepared by Jan Brown Mozart, L. Sinfonia in F (c1750). New Zealand CO/Donald Armstrong. Naxos 8.553347 12 Salieri, A. Concerto in C. Richard Adeney, fl; James Brown, ob; English CO/Richard Bonynge. ABC 475 070-2 18 Krumpholtz, J-B. L’amante abandonée. Isabelle Poulenard, sop; Stephanie Paulet, vn; Sandrine Chatron, hp. Ambroisie AM 179 4 Pleyel, I. Serenade no 1 in F (1790). Wind Octet of the Strasbourg PO. LP Erato STU 71278 18
16:00 FINE MUSIC DRIVE including Arts Calendar at 5.00pm with Stephen Wilson 19:00 JAZZ VIBES with Matt Bailey 20:00 EVENINGS WITH THE ORCHESTRA Creative links: Latin influences Prepared by Judy Ekstein Rodrigo, J. Concierto de Aranjuez (1939). John Williams, gui; English CO/Daniel Barenboim. CBS M2YK 45610 21 Lecuona, E. Three Cuban songs and dances: Malagueña; La comparsa; Gitanerias (1916). O/ Richard Hayman. Naxos 8.555026 12 Falla, M. de Nights in the gardens of Spain (1907-16). Artur Rubinstein, pf; Philadelphia O/ Eugene Ormandy. RCA 5666-2 RC 21 Castelnuovo-Tedesco, M. Guitar concerto no 1 in D, op 99 (1939). John Williams, gui; English CO/Charles Groves. CBS M2YK 45610 21 Malipiero, G. Vivaldiana (1952). Veneto PO/ Peter Maag. Naxos 8.555515 15 Martinu, B. The frescoes of Piero della Francesca (1955). Prague RSO/Charles Mackerras. Supraphon 10 3393-2031
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22:00 CHAMBER SOIRÉE Prepared by Phil Vendy Feld, J. Sonata (1957). James Galway, fl; Phillip Moll, pf. RCA RD 87802 18 Novák, V. Trio quasi una ballata in D minor, op 27 (1902). Smetana Trio. Supraphon SU 3810-2 16 Reicha, A. Quintet in B flat (1820). Wolfhard Pencz, cl; Amati Quartet. Divox CDX 29105 27 Weber, B. Sextet no 4 in F. Horns of Czech PO. Supraphon 11 0780-2 16 Moscheles, I. Melodic contrapuntal study, op 137 no 8, after J.S. Bach (1864). Jirí Bárta, vc; Hamish Milne, pf. 2 Hyperion CDA67521 Septet in D, op 88 (1832). Walter Hermann, cl; Christoph Moinian, hn; Mayumi Shimizu, vn; Jaap Zeijl, va; Christoph Groth, vc; Volker Donandt, db; Caroline Weichert, pf. Koch Schwann 3-1178-2 29
Friday 17 May 0:00 CONTEMPORARY COLLECTIVE 3:00 CLASSICAL TILL DAWN 6:00 FINE MUSIC BREAKFAST including Arts Calendar at 7.30am with Janine Burrus 9:00 DIVERSIONS IN FINE MUSIC Small forces Prepared by Jan Brown Bottesini, G. Gran duetto no 3 (1836-39). Joel Quarrington, db; Harold Hall Robinson, db. Naxos 8.557042 12 Martinu, B. Promenades (1939). Bonita Boyd, fl; Charles Castleman, vn; Barbara Harbach, hpd. Albany TROY 041 8 Mozart, W. Divertimento no 12 in E flat, K252 (1776). Amadeus Winds. L’Oiseau-Lyre 425 819-2 11 Schubert, F. String quartet no 7 in D, D94 (c1811). Quatuor Sine Nomine. Erato 2292-45484-2 18 10:00 MORNING CONCERT Prepared by Angela Bell Glazunov, A. Serenade no 1 in A, op 7 (1883). Royal PO/Yondani Butt. ASV DCA 903 5 Rakov, N. Violin concerto in A minor (1963). Oleg Kagan, vn; USSR RSO/Neeme Järvi. LP Melodiya C 10-05261-62 18 Strong, G. Symphony no 2 in G minor, op 50, Sintram (1887-88). Moscow SO/Adriano. Naxos 8.559018 59 11:30 SIBELIUS IN SONG Prepared by Elaine Siversen Sibelius, J. The lover, op 14 (1893/1911). Estonian Philharmonic Chamber Choir/Paul Hillier. Harmonia Mundi HMU 807485 6 The diamond in the March snow, op 36 no 6 (1899); Lost in the forest, op 17 no 4 (1891-98); Sigh, rushes, sigh, op 36 no 4 (1899); Was it a dream?, op 37 no 4 (1898-1902); The girl came home from meeting her lover, op 37 no 5 (1899). Barbara Bonney, sop; Antonio Pappario, pf. Decca 466 762-2 10 Finlandia, op 26 (1899-90). Laulun Ystavat Male Choir; Gothenburg SO/Neeme Jarvi. BIS CD-314 9
Australian Ballet’s Firebird (2009)- Kevin Jackson & Lana Jones. Photo – Alex Makayev 20:00 THE ROMANTIC CENTURY Written in America Prepared by Heather Sykes
12:00 NOONTIME JAZZ with Peter Mitchell 13:00 MAKE MINE MOZART Prepared by Rex Burgess Mozart, W. Sonata no 22 in A, K305 (1778). Oleg Kagan, vn; Sviatoslav Richter, pf. Live Classics LCL 122 15 Bella mia fiamma, addio! … Resta, oh cara, K528 (1787). Kiri Te Kanawa, sop; Vienna CO/György Fischer. Decca 432 300-2 9 Double concerto in C, K299 (1778). Jane Rutter, fl; Louise Johnson, hp; Sydney Bach O/Richard Bonynge. ABC 476 6475 29 14:00 MUSIC FROM DALLAS Prepared by Chris Blower Reed, H. La fiesta Mexicana (1949). Dallas Wind Symphony/Howard Dunn. Reference RR-38CD
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Rutter, J. Praise ye the Lord; The Lord is my light and my salvation. Turtle Creek Chorale; Dallas Women’s Ch; Joel Martinson, org; Timothy Seelig, cond. Reference Recordings RR-57CD 11 Stravinsky, I. Ballet: The firebird (1910). Dallas SO/Eduardo Mata. Pro Arte CDD 443 49
19:00 FRIDAY JAZZ SESSION with Sally Cameron
Dvorák, A. Cello concerto in B minor, op 104 (1895). Yo-Yo Ma, vc; New York PO/Kurt Masur. Sony SK 67173 41 Chadwick, G. Symphonic sketches (18951904). Eastman-Rochester O/Howard Hanson. Mercury 434 337-2 31 Rachmaninov, S. Capriccio on gypsy themes, op 12 (1892/94). Queensland SO/Vladimir Verbitsky. ABC 438 880-2 20 22:00 BAROQUE AND BEFORE For chamber and theatre Prepared by Elaine Siversen Locke, M. Music for His Majesty’s sagbutts and cornetts. Fine Arts Brass Ensemble. Nimbus NI 5546 11
MacDowell, E. Piano concerto no 2 in D minor, op 23 (1884-86). André Watts, pf; Dallas SO/Andrew Litton. Telarc CD-80429 26
16:00 FINE MUSIC DRIVE including Arts Calendar at 5.00pm with Lloyd Capps
Joplin, S. Piano rags (1916). Scott Joplin, player piano rolls. Foné 90 F 16 18
Duos in C minor (1652). Wieland Kuijken, bass viol; Sigiswald Kuijken, bass viol; Robert Kohnen, hpd. 5 Accent ACC 10014 Songs from The tempest (1674). La Rêveuse. The Theatre of Musick K617194 8 Incidental music for Thomas Shadwell’s operatic version of The tempest (1674). Parley of Instruments; Renaissance Violin Band/Peter Holman. Hyperion CDA66667 16 Purcell, H. Sonata no 6 in G minor, Ciaccona (pub. 1697). Rachael Beesley vn; Julia Fredersdorff, vn; Rosanne Hunt, vc; Jaqueline Ogeil, hpd, org. Tall Poppies TP194 8 Excerpts from King Arthur, semi-opera (pub. 1691). Deller Consort; Deller Choir; The King’s Musick/Alfred Deller. Harmonia Mundi HM 90.252 1:00 May 2013
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Saturday 18 May 0:00 CLASSIC-ALL THROUGH THE NIGHT
13:00 CLASSIC VOICES
6:00 SATURDAY MORNING MUSIC with Stephen Wilson
Canteloube, J. Bailèro; Tchut, chut; from Songs of the Auvergne (1922-30). Patricia Rozario, sop; Philharmonia O/John Pritchard. IMP PCD 938 9
9:00 WHAT’S ON IN MUSIC Our weekly guide to musical events in and around Sydney
Leoncavallo, R. Prologue, from Pagliacci (1892). Tito Gobbi, bar; La Scala Ch & O/Tullio Serafin. Opera 54058 5
9:30 SPOTLIGHT ON AUSTRALIAN PERFORMERS David Pereira Prepared by Oscar Foong Bach, J.S. Cello suite no 1 in G, BWV1007 (1720). Tall Poppies TP144 21 Mozart, W. Grand sextet in concertante style (1779; arr from Sinfonia concertante in E flat, K364). Hartmut Lindemann, va; Australia Ensemble. ABC 438 199-2 31 Falla, M. de Suite populaire espagnole (191415). David Bollard, pf. Tall Poppies TP078 13 Westlake, N. Music for the film Antarctica (1991). Christine Douglas, sop; Philippe Anquetil, treb; Dene Olding, vn; Louise Johnson, hp; Timothy Kain, gui; Studio O/Carl Vine. Tall Poppies TP012 37 Bach, J.S. Prelude, from Cello suite no 6 in D, BWV1012 (c1720). Tall Poppies TP144 5
Handel, G. The soft complaining flute and sharp violins proclaim their jealous pangs, from Ode for Saint Cecilia’s Day (1739). Jill Gomez, sop; Robert Tear, ten; English CO/Phillip Ledger. ASV DCA 512 9 Humperdinck, E. Hansel und Gretel, Act 1 (1893). Barbara Bonney, sop; Anne Sofie von Otter, mezz; Hanna Schwarz, mezz; Andreas Schmidt, bar; Bavarian RSO/Jeffrey Tate. EMI CDC 7 54327-2 18 14:00 MUSICAL EXPLORATIONS Influence of folk traditions: Hungary Prepared by Judy Ekstein
David Pereira, vc (all above) 11:30 ON PARADE Music that’s band Prepared by Owen Fisher
Liszt, F. Hungarian rhapsody no 5 in E minor (pub. 1853). Jeno Jandó, pf. Naxos 8.554480 8
Parry, J. Overture: Tydfil. Cyfartfa Band/Simon Wright. Nimbus NI 5470 12
Kodály, Z. Háry János suite, op 15 (1927). South-West German SO/José Serebrier. BIS CD-875
Riccardo, S. Alicanta. Hanwell Band/Eric Bravington. LP Damont MER 413
15:30 PHILHARMONIA IN CONCERT with Peter Bell
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Sousa, J.P. The freelance march. Men o’Brass; Fairey Aviation Band; Fodens Motor Body Works Band; City of Coventry Band/Harry Mortimer. LP Columbia TWO 385 4 12:00 JAZZ THEN AND NOW with Michael Cooper fineMusic 102.5
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Henry Mancicin 18:00 FOCUS ON FOLK Folk Federation of NSW 19:00 THE MAGIC OF STAGE AND SCREEN The movie music of Marricone, Mancini and Mercer Prepared by Sue Jowell Contrasts the musical style of Ennio Merricone with that of Henry Mancini and Johnny Mercer, who collaborated from time to time. 20:00 LIVE AND LOCAL Classic Spain Recorded by Jayson McBride for FINE MUSIC Arriaga, J. Overture to The happy slaves. 8
Joachim, J. Violin concerto no 2 in D minor, op 11, In the Hungarian style (1861). Suyoen Kim, vn; Staatskapelle Weimar/Michael Halász. Naxos 8.570991 46
Fucik, J. Florientina march. Allentown Band/ Ronald Demkee. AMP WWEM 1 4
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Schubert, F. Five songs after Friedrich Gottlieb Klopstock. Simone Nold, sop; Marcus Ullmann, ten; Thomas Bauer, bar; Ulrich Eisenlohr, pf. Naxos 8.557371 11
Rodrigo, J. Concierto de Aranjuez, Slava Grigoryan, gui.
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Howes, A. Madrigal 4 (2012).
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Beethoven, L. Symphony no 1 in C, op 21. 27 Willoughby SO/Warwick Potter (all above) 21:30 SOUNDS OF BEETHOVEN Prepared by David Rossell
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17:30 PLUCKED KEYBOARDS Prepared by Phil Vendy Blow, J. Suite no 4 in C (pub.1698). Christopher Kite, virginals. Hyperion CDA66067 5 Byrd, W. The barley breake (arr. Byrd). Sophie Yates, virginals. Chandos CHAN 0574 8 Soler, A. Concerto no 2 in A minor. Bernard Brauchli; clvd; Esteban Elizondo, clvd. Titanic Ti-152 12
Beethoven, L. Romance no 1 in G, op 40 (c1802; arr. Müller-Schott). Daniel MüllerSchott, vc; Australian CO/Richard Tognetti. 6 Orfeo C 080 031 A Adelaïde, op 46 (bef. 1796). Stephan Genz, bar; Roger Vignoles, pf. 6 Hyperion CDA67055 Sonata no 22 in F, op 54 (1804). John Lill, pf. ASV QS 6061 13 22:00 AFTER HOURS with Kevin Jones
Sunday 19 May 0:00 CLASSIC-ALL THROUGH THE NIGHT
Boito, A. Son lo spirito che nega sempre tutto, from Mefistofele (1868). Nicolai Ghiaurov, bass; National PO/Oliviero de Fabritiis. 3 ABC 480 5513
6:00 SUNDAY MORNING MUSIC with Nicholas Chaplin
Puccini, G. Tu, tu, amore? from Manon Lescaut (1893). Renata Tebaldi, sop; Franco Corelli, ten; Suisse Romande O/Anton Guadagno. 7 Decca 467 918-2
9:00 CELESTIAL NOTES Prepared by Heather Sykes Alwood, P. The coronation of the first Elizabeth. Magnificat/Philip Cave; Forbury Consert/Alan Cumpler; King’s Trumpeters/ Crispin Steele-Perkins. Griffin GCCD 402 1:19 10:30 CHAMBER MASTERWORKS Prepared by Di Cox Mozart, W. Quintet in G minor, K516 (1787). Katharine Brockman, va; Australian String Quartet. Tall Poppies TP087 35 Beethoven, L. Sextet in E flat, op 71 (1796). European CO Wind Soloists. ASV COE 807 20 Franck, C. Sonata in A (1886). Shlomo Mintz, vn; Yefim Bronfman, pf. DG 477 5448 28 12:00 SPEAK EASY, SWING HARD with Richard Hughes 13:00 WORLD MUSIC: Whirled Wide with Linda Marr 14:00 SUNDAY SPECIAL The Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra 2000-2010 By courtesy of Radio Netherlands Worldwide Prepared by Elaine Siversen Schubert, F. Symphony no 3 in D, D200 (1815). Iván Fischer, cond. 20 Mahler, G. Das Lied von der Erde (1908-9). Anna Larsson, cont; Robert Dean Smith, ten; Fabio Luisi, cond. 1:01 Diepenbrock, A. Elektra, symphonic suite (1919; arr. Reeser 1952). Claus Peter Flor, cond. 23 Hindemith, P. Concert music for strings and brass, op 50. Kurt Masur, cond. 16 Strauss, R. Sinfonia domestica, op 53 (1902-3). Lorin Maazel, cond. 46 Royal Concertgebouw O (all above) Radio Netherlands RCO 12004
19:30 SUNDAY NIGHT CONCERT Prepared by Angela Bell
Anna Larsson
Dvorák, A. Scherzo capriccioso, op 66 (1883). Baltimore SO/Marin Alsop. Naxos 8.570995 15
17:00 HOSANNA Prepared by Keith Glendinning
Benda, F. Flute concerto in E. Patrick Gallois, fl; Karl-Phillip Emanuel Bach CO/Peter Schreier. DG 439 895-2 21
Hymns: Let all mortal flesh keep silence; The strife is o’er; When morning gilds the skies; The Lord ascendeth up on high; Spirit of mercy, truth and love. Choir of St John’s College, Cambridge; Brian Runnett, org; George Guest, cond. Decca 450 011-2 13
Tchaikovsky, P. Symphony no 5 in E minor, op 64 (1888). Russian Federation State SO/ Yevgeny Svetlanov. Emergo Classics EC 3625-2 46
Sumsion, H. Evening service in G (1942). Choir of St Paul’s Cathedral, London; Christopher Dearnley, org; John Scott, cond. Helios CDH 55402 8 Bairstow, E. Lord thou hast been our refuge (1917). Choir of Canterbury Cathedral; Michael Harris, org; Allan Wicks, cond. Guild GMCD 7116 10 Haydn, J. Et resurrexit; Sanctus; Benedictus; Agnes dei; Dona nobis pacem, from Mass in D minor, Hob.XXII:11, Nelson mass (1798). Julie Kennard, sop; Ashley Stafford, ct; Alan Green, ten; Maurice Bevan, bar; Choir of St Paul’s Cathedral; John Scott, org; Christopher Dearnley, org; London Bach O/Barry Rose. Guild GMCD 7104 19 18:00 A FIELD OF TALL POPPIES with Julie Simonds A monthly program of recordings selected from the Tall Poppies label 19:00 OPERA HIGHLIGHTS Prepared by Jan Brown Haydn, J. Al tuo seno fortunato, from L’anima del filosofo, Hob.XXVIII:13 (1791). Sara Macliver, sop; Tasmanian SO/Ola Rudner. ABC 480 5514 6 Mozart, W. Fuor del mar, from Idomeneo, K366 (1781). Anthony Rolfe Johnson, ten; English Baroque Soloists/John Eliot Gardiner. ABC 480 5512 6
21:00 NEW HORIZONS Modern Britain: Maxwell and MacMillan Prepared by Oscar Foong MacMillan, J. Father, forgive them for they know not what they do; Woman, Behold thy son! ... Behold thy Mother! from Seven last words from the Cross (1993). Dmitri Ensemble/ Graham Ross. Naxos 8.570719 12 Maxwell Davies, P. Renaissance and Baroque realisations: Three early Scottish motets (after John Dunstable) (1968-76). Fires of London. Unicorn-Kanchana UKCD 2044 10 MacMillan, J. Verily I say unto thee, to-day shalt thou be with me in Paradise; Eli, Eli, lama sabachthani? from Seven last words from the Cross. Dmitri Ensemble/Graham Ross. Naxos 8.570719 15 Maxwell Davies, P. Maxwell’s Reel, with northern lights. Royal PO/Peter Maxwell Davies. Collins 15202 11 MacMillan, J. I thirst; It is finished, from Seven last words from the Cross. Dmitri Ensemble/Graham Ross. Naxos 8.570719
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Maxwell Davies, P. Veni sancte, veni creator Spiritus, after John Dunstable (1972). Fires of London. Unicorn-Kanchana UKCD 2044 10 MacMillan, J. Father, into Thy hands I commend my spirit, from Seven last words from the Cross. Dmitri Ensemble/Graham Ross. 7 Naxos 8.570719 22:30 ULTIMA THULE May 2013
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Monday 20 May 0:00 CLASSIC-ALL THROUGH THE NIGHT 6:00 FINE MUSIC BREAKFAST including Arts Calendar at 7.30am with Robert Small 9:00 DIVERSIONS IN FINE MUSIC Inspired by opera Prepared by Giovanna Grech Bizet, G. Scènes bohémiennes, from La jolie fille de Perth (1866). Montreal SO/Charles Dutoit. Decca 452 102-2 13
Kuhlau, F. Overture to William Shakespeare (1826). Odense SO/Eduard Serov. Unicorn-Kanchana DKP 9132 10 Holmboe, V. Quintet, op 79 (1961). Swedish Brass Quintet. BIS CD-78 13 Riisager, K. Fools’ paradise, suite I, op 33 (1936). Helsingborg SO/Thomas Dausgaard. Marco Polo 8.224082 16
Liszt, F. Sacred dance and final duet, after Verdi’s Aida (1879). Leslie Howard, pf. Hyperion CDA66371/72 11
Lumbye, H. The sandman galop fantastique (1851). Odense SO/Peter Guth. Unicorn-Kanchana DKP 9089 11
Cherubini, L. Sinfonia, from Medea (1797; arr Triebensee). Amphion Wind Octet. Accent ACC24232 8
14:00 LOAVES AND FISHES Prepared by Randolph Magri-Overend
Boito, A. Ave Signor, from Mephistopheles (1868). Samuel Ramey, bass; Munich RO/Julius Rudel. Naxos 8.555355 4 Mozart, W. Ballet music from Idomeneo, K367 (1781). Cleveland Baroque O/Jeannette Sorrell. Apollo’s Fire AV2159 16 10:00 MORNING CONCERT Prepared by Jan Brown Rossini, G. Overture to Semiramide (1823). Melbourne SO/Hiroyuki Iwaki. ABC 434 713-2 12 Hummel, J. Double concerto in G, op 17 (c1805). Hagai Shaham, vn; London Mozart Players/Howard Shelley, pf & dir. Chandos CHAN 9687 32 Haydn, J. Symphony in D, Hob.I:31, Hornsignal (1765). Nicolaus Esterházy Sinfonia/Béla Drahos. Naxos 8.554405 32 11:30 CHORAL INTERLUDE Prepared by Elaine Siversen Bruckner, A. Libera me in F minor (1854). Choir of St Bride’s Church/Robert Jones. Naxos 8.550956 6 Te Deum in C (1884). Frances Yeend, sop; Martha Lipton, mezz; David Lloyd, ten; Mack Harrel, bar; Westminster Choir; New York PO/ Bruno Walter. Sony SMK 64 480 20 12:00 SWING SESSIONS with John Buchanan 40
13:00 DANISH ODYSSEY Prepared by Francis Frank
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Hultquist, A. The queen went into the parlour eating bread and honey. JP Nyströms; Norrbotten CO/Petter Sundkvist. Swedish Society SCD 1130 12 Schubert, F. The trout, D550 (c1817-20). Bryn Terfel, bass-bar; Malcolm Martineau, pf. DG 445 294-2 2 Bizet, G. Au fond du temple saint, from The pearl fishers (1863). Jerry Hadley, ten; Thomas Hampson, bar; Welsh National Opera O/Carlo Rizzi. Teldec 9031-73283-2 8 Stanford, C. Villiers Irish rhapsody no 4, op 141, The fisherman (1913). Ulster O/Vernon Handley. Chandos CHAN 7002 18 Grainger, P. Fisher’s boarding house (1899). Melbourne SO/John Hopkins. LP HMV OASD 430 000 7 Debussy, C. Gold fish, from Images, bk 2 (1907). Artur Rubinstein, pf. RCA RD 85670
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Schubert, F. Who has never eaten his bread with tears?, D480/2 (arr. Reger). Michael Lewis, bar; Adelaide SO/David Porcelijn. ABC 456 362-2 4 Satie, E. The dreamy fish (1901). Jean-Yves Thibaudet, pf. Decca 470 290-2
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Mahler, G. St Anthony and the fishes. Florence Taylor, cont; Loretta Cunningham, pf; Stephanie James, pf; Dorothy White, pf. Private recording 3
Marc-André Hamelin Schumann, R. Who never ate his bread in tears?, op 98a no 4 (1849). Simon Keenlyside, bar; Graham Johnson, pf. 3 Hyperion CDJ33102 Schubert, F. Quintet in A, D667, The trout (1819). Ronan O’Hora, pf; Royal Philharmonic Chamber Ensemble. Tring TRP016 34 16:00 FINE MUSIC DRIVE including Arts Calendar at 5.00pm with David Brett 19:00 SPIRIT OF JAZZ with Susan Gai Dowling 20:00 STORMY MONDAY with Austin Harrison and Garth Sundberg 22:00 KEYBOARD CONTRASTS Prepared by Phil Vendy Chopin, F. Andante spianato and grande polonaise, op 22 (1834). Milos Mihajlovic, pf. Bel Air Music BAM2046 14 Haydn, J. Sonata no 33 in C minor, Hob.XVI:20 (1771). Alain Planès, pf. Harmonia Mundi HMX 2908601.30 18 Vivaldi, A. Concerto in C, RV178. Monika Kornel, hpd; Diana Weston, hpd. Private recording
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Godowsky, L. Sonata in E minor (1910-1). MarcAndré Hamelin, pf. Hyperion CDA67300 47 Alkan, C-V. Trio in G minor, op 30 (1840). Dong-Suk Kang, vn; Yvan Choffoleau, vc; Olivier Gardon, pf. Timpani IC 1013
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Tuesday 21 May 11:30 SEASONS Prepared by Heather Sykes Albéniz, I. Autumn waltz, op 170 (c1890). Alberto Guinovart, pf. Harmonia Mundi HMI 987007
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Piazzolla, A. Porteño summer; Porteño autumn, from Four Porteño seasons (1969). Macquarie Trio. ABC 980 678-0 12 12:00 JAZZ RHYTHM with Jeannie McInnes Maurizio Pollini 0:00 CONTEMPORARY COLLECTIVE
Mozart, W. Adagio and rondo in C, K617 (1791). Marc Grauwels, fl; Dennis James, glass armonica; Brussels Virtuosi. Hyperion CDA66392 13
3:00 CLASSICAL TILL DAWN 6:00 FINE MUSIC BREAKFAST including Arts Calendar at 7.30am with Julie Simonds
Quartet in F, K370 (1781). Paul Goodwin, ob; Terzetto. Harmonia Mundi 907220 18
9:00 DIVERSIONS IN FINE MUSIC Pianist of choice: Maurizio Pollini Prepared by Di Cox Schumann, R. Arabeske in C, op 18 (1838). Philips 456 937-2
Galina Vishnevskya
13:00 MAKE MINE MOZART Prepared by Rex Burgess
6
Symphony no 40 in G minor, K550 (1788). New York PO/Bruno Walter. Sony SMK 64 477 24
Chopin, F. Polonaise in F sharp minor, op 44. Philips 456 940-2 11
14:00 GARDENS OF MUSICAL DELIGHT Prepared by Brian Drummond
Stravinsky, I. Three movements from Petrushka (1921). Philips 456 937-2
Delius, F. In a summer garden (1908). Welsh National Opera O/Charles Mackerras. Argo 430 202-2 14
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Rimsky-Korsakov, N. A musical picture: In the woods; The Tsar’s hunt; Storm, from The maid of Pskov (1871). USSR SO/Yevgeny Svetlanov. 8 Melodiya 10-00171 Shostakovich, D. The storm; Secret signs; Music, op 127 (1967). Galina Vishnevskaya, sop; Ulf Hoelscher, vn; Mstislav Rostropovich, vc; Vasso Devetzi, pf. EMI 5 65716 2 13 Berlioz, H. Royal hunt and storm, from The Trojans (1856-58). Detroit SO/Paul Paray. 9 Mercury 432 014-2 16:00 FINE MUSIC DRIVE including Arts Calendar at 5.00pm with David Ogilvie 19:00 THE JAZZ BEAT with Lloyd Capps
Beethoven, L. Sonata no 26 in E flat, op 81a, Les adieux (1810). DG 427 642-2 16
Bax, A. The princess’s rose garden (1915). Ashley Wass, pf. Naxos 8.557769
Maurizio Pollini, pf (all above)
Brumby, C. Gardens of the Villa Taranto (1991). Jane Rayner, fl; Peter Lynch, gui. CBCD 0104 10
22:00 BEYOND ROMANTICISM Bax and Arnold, British symphonists Prepared by Troy Fil
Falla, M. de Nights in the gardens of Spain (1907-16). Artur Rubinstein, pf; Philadelphia O/ Eugene Ormandy. RCA 5666-2 RC 21
Harty, H. In Ireland (1915). Colin Fleming, fl; Denise Kelly, hp; Ulster O/Bryden Thomson. 9 Chandos CHAN 6583
15:00 STORM Prepared by Randolph Magri-Overend
Arnold, M. Symphony no 3, op 63 (1957). London SO/Richard Hickox. Chandos CHAN 9290
Tchaikovsky, P. Overture to The storm, op 76 posth (1864). London SO/Gennady Rozhdestvensky. IMP PCD 878
Harty, H. Piano concerto in B minor (1922). Peter Donohoe, pf; Ulster O/Takuo Yuasa. Naxos 8.557731 30
10:00 MORNING CONCERT Prepared by Heather Sykes Copland, A. Appalachian spring (1945). Cincinnati Pops O/Erich Kunzel. Telarc CD-80339
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Weber, C.M. Clarinet concerto no 1 in F minor, op 73 (1811). Oskar Michallik, cl; Staatskapelle Dresden/Kurt Sanderling. Berlin 0012862BC 24 Raff, J. Symphony no 10 in F minor, op 213, In autumn (1879). Slovak State PO/Urs Schneider. Naxos 8.555491 32
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Vivaldi, A. Recorder concerto in F, RV 433, Sea Storm (1728-29). Eckart Haupt, fl; Dresden Baroque Soloists/Peter Schreier. Berlin Classics 0012872BC 6
20:00 RECENT RELEASES with David Garrett
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Bax, A. Symphony no 2 in E minor (1926). Royal Scottish NO/David Lloyd Jones. Naxos 8.554093 41 May 2013
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Wednesday 22 May
Richard Wagner, born this day in 1813
Die Walküre. Photo - Ken Howard, Metropolitan Opera
0:00 CONTEMPORARY COLLECTIVE
11:30 CHAMBER SCHERZOS Prepared by Chris Blower
3:00 CLASSICAL TILL DAWN 6:00 FINE MUSIC BREAKFAST including Arts Calendar at 7.30am with Peter Kurti
Brahms, J. Scherzo in C minor, from FAE sonata (1853). Simon Fischer, vn; Raymond Fischer, pf. Biddulph 80229-2
9:00 DIVERSIONS IN FINE MUSIC Aspects of German Baroque Prepared by Paul Hopwood
Debussy, C. Scherzo. Jean-Guihen Queyras, vc; Alexandre Tharaud, pf. Harmonia Mundi HMC 902012 5
Bach, C.P.E. Sinfonia in E minor, Wq177 (1756). English CO/Raymond Leppard. Philips 426 081-2 11
Mendelssohn, F. Scherzo, from Four pieces for string quartet, op 81 (pub. 1849). Sorrel Quartet. Chandos CHAN 9555 3
Buxtehude, D. Sonata in B flat for violin, viola da gamba and continuo, BuxWV273. Musica Antiqua Cologne. Archiv 437 089-2 14
Pasculli, A. Ricordo di Napoli: scherzo brillante. Ivan Paisov, ob; Natalia Shcherbakova, pf. Naxos 8.570567 9
Wagner, R. Die Walküre. Opera in three acts. Libretto by composer. First performed Munich, 1870.
12:00 THE SOUND OF JAZZ with Kevin Jones
SIEGMUND: Stuart Skelton, ten SIEGLINDE: Deborah Riedel, sop HUNDING: Richard Green, bass WOTAN: John Bröcheler, bar BRÜNNHILDE: Lisa Gasteen, sop FRICKA: Elizabeth Campbell, mezz Adelaide SO/Asher Fisch. Melba MR301091-94
Telemann, G. Double concerto in E minor (c1718). Academy of Ancient Music/Christopher Hogwood. L’ Oiseau-Lyre 411 949-2 14 10:00 MORNING CONCERT Prepared by Derek Parker Ravel, M. Ma mère l’oye (1911). Royal Concertgebouw O/Bernard Haitink. Radio Nederland RCO11004
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Handel, G. Suite no 1 in F, HWV348 (171517/36). Aradia Ensemble/Kevin Mallon. Naxos 8.557764 29 Britten, B. Symphonic suite from Gloriana, op 53a (1954). Keiron Moore, ob; Osian Ellis, hp; London SO/Steuart Bedford. Naxos 8.557196 27
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13:00 YOUNG VIRTUOSI Emerging young artists with Andrew Bukenya; recorded by Greg Ghavalis Featuring violinist Josephine Chung, soprano Rachael Fullston and cellist Caleb Wong Supported by St Catherine’s School and Overs Pianos 14:00 IN CONVERSATION with Michael Morton-Evans What exactly does it take to make music? Leading musicians, composers and performers, both local and visiting from overseas, will be talking live on air telling us why they do it and how they do it. 15:00 FROM LATVIA Prepared by Francis Frank Vitols, J. Overture: Spriditis, op 37 (1908). Latvian NSO/Dmitry Yablonsky. Marco Polo 8.223756
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Einfelde, M. A cycle of Bärda poems (2003). Choir of Trinity College Cambridge/Stephen Layton. Hyperion CDA67747 13
19:00 JAZZ STARS AND STRIPES with Peter Mitchell 20:00 AT THE OPERA Prepared by Colleen Chesterman 1813
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16:00 FINE MUSIC DRIVE including Arts Calendar at 5.00pm with Brendan Walsh
200 th Anniversary
WAGNER
2013
Hammerschmidt, A. Dance suite. Edward Tarr Brass Ensemble. Christophorus CHR 74562 12
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Ivanovs, J. Symphony no 20 in E flat (1981). Moscow SO/Dmitry Yablonsky. Naxos 8.555740 26
3:43
Siegmund, illegitimate son of Wotan, king of the gods, finds his long-lost twin sister Sieglinde married to violent Hunding. They fall in love and flee. Hunding pursues them. Wotan orders his daughter, the valkyrie Brünnhilde, to assist Siegmund but Fricka, Wotan’s wife, demands his death because of his adultery and incest. Wotan orders Brünnhilde not to interfere, but moved by his love for Sieglinde, she helps him. Wotan breaks Siegmund’s sword with his spear so Hunding kills him, then is killed by Wotan. Brünnhilde brings Sieglinde, carrying Siegmund’s child, to her sister valkyries. Sieglinde escapes, but furious Wotan punishes Brünnhilde by locking her in sleep, to be victim of the first man to find her. He relents to her pleas and surrounds her with a wall of fire which only a man without fear, a hero, can cross.
Thursday 23 May
Margaret Fingerhut
Jane Glover
0:00 CONTEMPORARY COLLECTIVE 3:00 CLASSICAL TILL DAWN 6:00 FINE MUSIC BREAKFAST including Arts Calendar at 7.30am with Simon Moore 9:00 DIVERSIONS IN FINE MUSIC Name the composer Be the first to identify the mystery composer and win a CD. All other correct answers go in a draw for a second CD: 9439 4777 10:00 MORNING CONCERT Prepared by Angela Bell Hindemith, P. Symphonia serena (1946). BBC SO/Jan Pascal Tortelier. Chandos CHAN 9217 30 Bottesini, G. Passioni amorose (1870). Thomas Martin, db; Franco Petracchi, db; London SO/ Matthew Gibson. Naxos 8.570398 11 Czerny, C. Symphony no 2 in D, op 781. Brandenburg State O/Nikos Athidäos. Christophorus CHE 0140-2
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11:30 FOR THE PIANO Prepared by Paul Hopwood Busoni, F. Sonata in C (1876). Cristiano Rossi, vn; Marco Vincenzi, pf. Dynamic CDS 87 12 Devienne, F. Sonata in F, op 70 no 2 (1798-99). Peter Bree, ob; Roderick Shaw, fp. Etcetera KTC 1084 13 12:00 JAZZ, PURE AND SIMPLE with Maureen Meers
13:00 THINGS AND NOTHINGS Prepared by Elaine Siversen
20:00 EVENINGS WITH THE ORCHESTRA Prepared by Denis Patterson
Locke, M. Five-part things for cornetts. Edward Tarr Brass Ensemble. Christophorus CHR 74562
Mozart, W. Symphony no 33 in B flat, K319 (1779). London Mozart Players/Jane Glover. ASV DCA 717 20
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Mozart, W. Ballet: Les petits riens, K299b (1778). Vienna Mozart Ensemble/Willi Boskovsky. Decca 436 782-2 21 Suk, J. Things lived and dreamt, op 30 (1909). Margaret Fingerhut, pf. Chandos CHAN 9026/7 39 Castelnuovo-Tedesco, M. Overture: Much ado about nothing, op 164 (1953). West Australian SO/Andrew Penny. Naxos 8.572501 10 14:30 AN ENGLISH CONCERT Prepared by Angela Bell Tippett, M. Fantasia concertante on a theme of Corelli (1953). Bournemouth SO/Richard Hickox. Chandos CHAN 9233 19 Smyth, E. Double concerto (1926). Sophie Langton, vn; Richard Watkins, hn; BBC PO/ Odaline de la Martinez. Chandos CHAN 9449 28 Sullivan, A. Symphony in E, Irish (1866). Royal Liverpool PO/David Lloyd-Jones. Naxos 8.570351 35 16:00 FINE MUSIC DRIVE including Arts Calendar at 5.00pm with Marilyn Schock 19:00 JAZZ VIBES with Matt Bailey
Shostakovich, D. Ballet suite: The age of gold, op 22a (1927). New Zealand SO/Christopher Lyndon-Gee. Naxos 8.553126 17 Beethoven, L. Piano concerto no 2 in B flat, op 19 (1793/95). Gerard Willems, pf; Sinfonia Australis/Antony Walker. ABC 980 046-2 29 Prokofiev, S. Symphony no 5 in B flat, op 100 (1944). Sydney SO/Vladimir Ashkenazy. Exton EXCL-00042 42 22:00 CHAMBER SOIRÉE Moscheles, I. Grande sonate concertante, op 44 (1819). Caroline Weichert, pf; Hans-Udo Heinzmann, fl. Koch Schwann 3-1178-2 26 Quantz, J. Trio sonata for oboe, viola da gamba and harpsichord in G. Berliner BarockTrio. Capriccio 10142 7 Smetana, B. String quartet no 2 in D minor (1882-3). Trávnicek Quartet. Point Classics 267187-2 18 Stamitz, C. Clarinet quartet in E flat, op 814. Salzburger Solisten. Onyx 66582 12 Saint-Saëns, C. Fantasy, op 95 (1893; transcr. Kondonassis). Yolanda Kondonassis, hp. Telarc 80581 9 Schubert, F. Trio in E flat, D897 (c1828). Stuttgart Piano Trio. Naxos 8 550132
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Spohr, L. Nonet in F for strings and wind, op 31 (1813). Bell’Arte Ensemble Stuttgart. VMK Globe 100.41855 28 May 2013
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Friday 24 May 0:00 CONTEMPORARY COLLECTIVE 3:00 CLASSICAL TILL DAWN 6:00 FINE MUSIC BREAKFAST including Arts Calendar at 7.30am with Janine Burrus 9:00 DIVERSIONS IN FINE MUSIC Small forces Mozart, W. Piano trio in G, K 564 (1788). Trio Kreisleriana. Mediaphon MED 72 118 16 Stanley, J. Concerto No 4 in C (1815). Bernard Partridge, vn; Antonia Bialis, vn; Ian Spencer, bass viol; Heather Harrison, vc; Jennifer Bate, org. Allegro PCD 1030 13 Weber, C.M. Quintet in B Flat, op 34 (1815). David Glazer, cl; Kohen Quartet. Award AWPD 31950 24 10:00 MORNING CONCERT Prepared by Frank Morrison Suppé, F. Overture to The jolly robbers (1867). Vienna PO/Zubin Mehta. CBS MK 44932 6 Mozart, W. Piano concerto no 23 in A, K488 (1786). Clifford Curzon, pf; London SO/Istvan Kertész. Decca 468 491-2 27 Tchaikovsky, P. Symphony no 5 in E minor, op 64 (1888). Bournemouth SO/Andrew Litton. Virgin VC 7 91140-2 49 11:30 CHOPIN IN CHAMBER Prepared by Elaine Siversen Chopin, F. Variations in E on a theme of Rossini, op posth (1824). Sharon Bezaly, fl; Ervin Nagy, pf. BIS CD-1039 5 The handsome lad; Melody; My darling, from Polish songs, op 74 (1837). Annette Celine, sop; Felicia Blumenthal, pf. Olympia OCD 629 7 Grand duo concertant in E on themes from Meyerbeer’s Robert le Diable (1831). Maria Kliegel, vc; Bernd Glemser, pf. Naxos 8.553159 13 12:00 NOONTIME JAZZ with Peter Mitchell 13:00 SELECT YOUR CLASSICS with Stephen Schafer New and recent releases from Select AudioVisual Distribution 44
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15:00 CONCERT HALL Prepared by Stephen Schafer Vieuxtemps, H. Greeting to America, op 56 (1843-4). Chloë Hanslip, vn; Royal Flemish PO/ Martyn Brabbins. Hyperion CDA 67878 13 Tchaikovsky, P. Symphony no 2 in C minor op 17, Little Russian (1872/79-80). London SO/ Valery Gergiev. LSO Live 710 35 16:00 FINE MUSIC DRIVE including Arts Calendar at 5.00pm with Derek Parker
La guerra. Ensemble Clément Janequin/ Dominique Visse. Harmonia Mundi HMC 901627
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Sanz, G. El pajarillo.
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Murcia, S. de El cielito lindo.
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Montserrat Figueras, sop; Tembembe Ensamble Continuo; Capella Reial de Catalunya; Hesperion XXI/Jordi Savall (2 above) Alia Vox AVSA 9876
19:00 FRIDAY JAZZ SESSION with Sally Cameron 20:00 THE ROMANTIC CENTURY Prepared by Denis Patterson Dargomyzhsky, A. Overture to Rusalka (1856). Bolshoi TO/Yevgeny Svetlanov. Melodiya MEL 10011824 6 Franck, C. The accursed huntsman (1882). Paris O/Daniel Barenboim. DG 476 2800 16 Berwald, F. Serious symphony in G minor (1842). Royal PO/Ulf Björlin. EMI 5 65303 2 27 Hummel, J. Oberons Zauberhorn, op 116 (1829). Christopher Hinterhuber, pf; Gävle SO/ Uwe Grodd. Naxos 8.557845 19 Boïeldieu, A. Overture to La dame blanche (1825). London SO/Richard Bonynge. Decca 466 431-2 7 Halévy, F. Rachel, quand du Seigneur, from The jewish girl (1835). Ben Heppner, ten; London Voices; London SO/Myung-Whun Chung. DG 471 372-2 11 Saint-Saëns, C. Cello concerto no 1 in A minor, op 33 (1872). Liugi Piovano, vc; Marrucino TO/Piero Bellugi. Eloquentia EL 1024
Flecha, M. El Viejo The joust. Isabel Palacios, mezz; Andrew King, ten; Michael George, bar; Simon Grant, bass; New London Consort/ Philip Pickett. L’Oiseau-Lyre 444 810-2 14
Brudieu, J. En los mon sou dotada del set goigs. Ensemble Clément Janequin/Dominique Visse. 9 Harmonia Mundi HMC 901627 Valente, A. Gallarda; Jarabe loco.
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Murcia, S. de Maria Chuchena.
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Fernandes, G. Xicochi Conetzintle, Xochipitzhuatl.
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Garcia de Zespedes, J. Ay que me abraso, El 3 Arrancazacate. Montserrat Figueras, sop; Tembembe Ensamble Continuo; Capella Reial de Catalunya; Hesperion XXI/Jordi Savall (4 above) Alia Vox AVSA 9876 Flecha, M. El Viejo La Bomba. Ensemble Clément Janequin/Dominique Visse. Harmonia Mundi HMC 901627
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Jubilate. Christopher Robinson, ct; Andrew King, ten; Michael George, bar; Simon Grant, bass. 7 L’Oiseau-Lyre 444 810-2 Ortiz, D. Recerdadas 1 and 2.
2
22:00 BAROQUE AND BEFORE Ensaladas from Spain and the New World Prepared by Oscar Foong
Matteis, N. La Dia Spagnola (arr. Pluhar).
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Murcia, S. de Fandango.
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Anon. All here are black people (arr. Pluhar). 4
Ruiz de Ribayaz, L. Jácaras (arr. Pluhar, Habichuela).
4
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Ortiz, D. Sebastian (arr. Pluhar).
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Anon. Falalán.
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Trad. The weeping woman (arr. Pluhar).
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King’s Singers; L’Arpeggiata/Christina Pluhar (4 above) naïve V 5055
L’Arpeggiata/Christina Pluhar (4 above) naïve V 5055
Saturday 25 May 0:00 CLASSIC-ALL THROUGH THE NIGHT
18:00 AUSTRALIAN COMPOSERS’ HOUR Prepared by Janie Fitch
6:00 SATURDAY MORNING MUSIC with Peter Bell
Sutherland, M. Violin concerto (1954). Leonard Dommett, vn; Melbourne SO/Patrick Thomas. ABC 426 993-2 25
9:00 WHAT’S ON IN MUSIC Our weekly guide to musical events in and around Sydney
Dean, B. Ariel’s music (1995). Paul Dean, cl; Melbourne SO/Markus Stenz. ABC 476 160-6 25
9:30 SPOTLIGHT ON THE RPO Prepared by Chris Blower Handel, G. The gods go a’begging (arr. Beecham 1928). Royal PO/Thomas Beecham. EMI CDM 7 63374 2 19 Tavener, J. The protecting veil (1989; arr. Dickson). Amy Dickson, sax; Royal PO/Mikel Toms. Sony 88697376792 15 Liszt, F. Totentanz (arr. Kennedy, St John). Lara St John, vn; Royal PO/Sarah Ioannides. Ancalagon ANC 133 15 Delius, F. Prelude to Irmelin (1890-92). Royal PO/Thomas Beecham. Naxos 8.110982/83 5 Rutter, J. Suite antique (1979). Andrew Nicholson, fl; John Birch, hpd; Royal PO/John Rutter. ucj 476 124-2 18
Howard Shore
Koehne, G. To His servant Bach God grants a final glimpse: The morning star (arr. McGuire). Marshall McGuire, hp. 4 Tall Poppies TP071
12:00 JAZZ THEN AND NOW with Michael Cooper
19:00 THE MAGIC OF STAGE AND SCREEN Prepared by Maureen Meers
13:00 IN A SENTIMENTAL MOOD with Maureen Meers Nostalgic music and artists from the 30s, 40s and 50s and occasionally beyond, in a trip down many memory lanes
Wise, J. Excerpts from Dames at sea (1966). Tina Doyle, Josephine Blake, Sandra Dickerson, Paul Robinson, Paul Grunert, Brian Cant, voices; O/Malcolm Newton. TER Mus C N30 18
14:00 LISTENERS’ CHOICE with Christina MacGuinness Phone 9439 4777 or go to finemusicfm.com and follow the links to choose your music 15:30 AT THE MOVIES Prepared by Nicholas Chaplin
Beethoven, L. Piano concerto no 3 in C minor, op 37 (c1800). Royal PO/Vladimir Ashkenazy, pf & dir. RPO 8021 37
Shore, H. Original soundtrack: The Hobbit, an unexpected journey (2012). Studio O/Howard Shore. Decca 3715565 54
11:30 ON PARADE Prepared by Paul Hopwood
16:30 AT THE BALLET The riot of spring Prepared by Raj Gopalakrishnan
Grainger, P. Over the hills and far away.
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Hurst, M. Pacific haven.
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Concert Band of RAN/G.D.C. Coxon (2 above) LP EMI SCXO 8015 Fernie, A. Scottish rhapsody. Sellers Engineering Band/Douglas Blackledge. Chandos CHAN 4511 Alford, K. Colonel Bogey march (1914). Australian Army Band/Craig Johnson. ABC 476 4862
Chopin, F. Les sylphides (arr. Douglas 1909). National PO/Richard Bonynge. Decca 452 772-2 28 Stravinsky, I. The rite of spring, 1913 version (1911-13). National YO of Great Britain/Simon Rattle. Decca 4783729 34
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Trad. The ash grove (arr. Langford). Jonathon Beatty, tb; Sellers Engineering Band/Douglas Blackledge. Chandos CHAN 4511 4
Weber, C.M. Invitation to the dance (1819; orch. Berlioz). Vienna PO/Willi Boskovsky. Decca 436 781-2 9 Borodin, A. Polovtsian dances, from Prince Igor (1890). Kiev Chamber Choir; Ukraine National RSO/Theodore Kuchar. Naxos 8.557456 11
Goldrich, Z. Excerpts from Dear Edwina (2008). Kerry Butler, Danny Burstein, Rebecca Luker, Andrea Burns; voices. PS Classics PS-871 14 Bricusse, L. Excerpts from Goodbye Mr Chips (1969). John Mills, Robert Meadmore, Richard Freeman, voices; O/John Owen Edwards. TER Mus C N48 18 20:00 LIVE AND LOCAL Recorded by Jayson McBride for FINE MUSIC The Concourse, Chatswood Luting, H. Evening party (1934).
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Hua Yan-jun. The moon reflected on second 5 spring. Stanhope, P. Fantasia on a theme of Vaughan Williams. 16 Palmer, G. Piano concerto, Reflections on a poem by Han Yu. William Chen, pf. 21 Commission - Fine Music 102.5. Tchaikovsky, P. Symphony no 5 in E minor, op 64. 44 Sydney Youth O/Max McBride (all above) Soloist; William Chen, pf. 21:40 SUITE ENCORE Prepared by Elaine Siversen Tchaikovsky, P. Ballet suite from The nutracker (1892; arr. Pletnev). Alexei Volodin, pf. ABC 476 160-1 18 22:00 AFTER HOURS with Kevin Jones May 2013
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Sunday 26 May 12:00 CLASSIC JAZZ AND RAGTIME With John Buchanan
0:00 CLASSIC-ALL THROUGH THE NIGHT 6:00 SUNDAY MORNING MUSIC with David Garrett
13:00 WORLD MUSIC: Whirled Wide with Clarissa Mulas
9:00 WAGNER AND FRIENDS Prepared by Barbara Brady Wagner, R. Prelude to Act 1; Weia! Waga! Woge, du welle! from Das Rheingold (1853-54). Natalie Jones, sop; Donna-Maree Dunlop, sop; Zan McKendree-Wright, cont; Adelaide Melba 301089-90 SO/Asher Fisch 7 Strauss, R. Introduction to Also sprach Zarathustra, op 30 (1895-96). Samuel Magad, vn; Chicago SO/Pierre Boulez. DG 457 649-2 2 Wagner, R. Entrance of the Gods into Valhalla, from Das Rheingold. Natalie Jones, sop; DonnaMaree Dunlop, sop; Zan McKendree-Wright, mezz; Andrew Brunsdon, ten; Christopher Doig, ten; Timothy duFore, bar; John Bröcheler, bass; Adelaide SO/Asher Fisch. Melba MR 301089 90 11 Forest murmurs, from Siegfried (1856-71). Philadelphia O/Eugene Ormándy. RCA Victrola VD87819
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The woodbird with Siegfried, from Siegfried. Catherine Gayer, sop; Jess Thomas, ten; Berlin PO/Herbert von Karajan. DG 415 150-2 6 Pelude to Act I of Die Walküre (1854-56). Adelaide SO/Asher Fisch. Melba MR 301091-94
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Dvorák, A. Overture: In nature’s realm, op 91 (1891). Vienna State Opera O/László Somogyi. Westminster 471 266-2 15 Humperdinck, E. When at night I go to sleep, from Hansel and Gretel (1893). Anthony Way, treb; Barbara Bonney, sop; English Sinfonia/Neil Page. Decca 476 2649 9 Wagner, R. Dawn and Siegfried’s Rhine journey, from Twilight of the gods (1869-74). Cleveland O/George Szell. CBS M2YK 46466 12 10:30 CHAMBER MASTERWORKS Prepared by Judy Ekstein Beethoven, L. Sonata no 5 in F, op 24, Spring (1800-01). Itzhak Perlman, vn; Vladimir Ashkenazy, pf. Decca 421 453-2 24 Brahms, J. Trio in A minor, op 114 (1891). Alan Hacker, cl; Jennifer Ward Clarke, vc; Richard Burnett, pf. Amon Ra CD-SAR 37 24 Schumann, R. Quintet in E flat, op 44 (1842). Richard Burnett, pf; Fitzwilliam String Quartet. Amon Ra CD-SAR 54 30 46
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18:00 WHAT’S ON AT THE CON with Julie Simonds A monthly program of music, news and interviews from the Sydney Conservatorium 19:00 OPERA HIGHLIGHTS
14:00 SUNDAY SPECIAL Richard Hickox Prepared by Stephen Schafer Dyson, G. In honour of the City (1928). London Symphony Ch & O. Chandos CHAN 241-43
Bizet, G. Au fond du temple saint, from The pearl fishers (1863). Léopold Simoneau, ten; René Bianco, bar; Lamoureux O/Jean Fournet. Philips 462287-2 5 15
Purcell, H. Timon of Athens, masque (1678). Iestyn Davis, treb; Christopher de la Hoyde, treb; James Bowman, alto; John Mark Ainsley, ten; Michael George, bass; Collegium Musicum 90. Chandos CHAN 0569/70 19 Holst, G. Suite de ballet op 10 (1899). Bradley Creswick, vn; Norhern Sinfonia. Chandos CHAN 10725X 19 Haydn, J. Missa Cellensis, Hob.XXII:5, Missa Sancta Caecilia (1766). Susan Gritton, sop; Pamela Helen Stephen, mezz; Mark Padmore, ten; Stephen Varcoe, bass; Collegium Musicum 90. Chandos CHAN 0667 1:04 Bridge, F. The sea (1911). BBC NO of Wales. Chandos CHAN 10729 22 Holst, G. The wandering scholar, op 50 (192930). Ingrid Attrot, sop; Neill Archer, ten; Alan Opie, bar; Donald Maxwell, bass; Northern Sinfonia. Chandos CHAN 10725 25 Richard Hickox, cond (all above) 17:00 HOSANNA Prepared by Warwick Bartle Hymns: Holy, holy, holy; I bind unto myself today; Come holy ghost. Choir of Wells Cathedral; Robert Gough, org; Malcolm Archer, cond. Hyperion CDP 12103 10
Myslivecek, J. Sarò quel è il torrente, from Antigona (1773). Magdalena Kozená, mezz; Prague PO/Michel Swierczewski. 8 DG 471 334-2 Verdi, G. Bella figlia dell’amore, from Rigoletto (1851). Bella Jasper, sop; Juan Perez, ten; Rudolf Knoll, bar; Ernst Wiemann, bass; Nürnberger SO/Hans Zanotelli. 4 Pilz 160248 Wagner, R. Liebestod; Mild und leise, from Tristan und Isolde (1857-59). Elizabeth Connell, sop; Queensland O/Muhai Tang. 7 ABC 476 6500 19:30 SUNDAY NIGHT CONCERT Prepared by Paul Hopwood Brahms, J. Tragic overture, op 81 (1880/81). Vienna PO/Leonard Bernstein. DG 410 084-2 14 Schubert, F. Concerto in A minor, D821, Arpeggione (1824; arr.). Alexander Labko, va d’amore; RIAS Sinfonietta/Jirí Stárek. Musica Mundi 316 023 F1 23 Tchaikovsky, P. Symphony no 5 in E minor, op 64 (1888). West Australian SO/Vladimir Verbitsky. ABC 446 058-2 45 21:00 NEW HORIZONS Prepared by Robert Small
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Simpson, R. Volcano, symphonic study for brass band (1978). John Foster Black Dyke Mills Band/Peter Parkes. Chandos CHAN 4522 11
Howells, H. Magnificat; Nunc dimittis. Choir of St John’s College, Cambridge/Christopher Robinson. Naxos 8.557-557-1 12
Gruber, HK. Busking (2007). Håkn Hardernberger, tpt; Mats Bergström, banjo; Claudia Buder, accordion; Swedish CO/Heinz Gruber. BIS 1884 31
Tavener, J. The lamb; The Lord’s prayer. Sydney Symphonic Choir & PO/Antony Walker. Naxos 8.557-557-1 7
Williams, J. Tuba concerto (1985). Øystein Baadsvik, tuba; Singapore SO/Anne Manson. BIS CD-1515 17
Anthems and hymns: The heavens are telling; O for a thousand tongues; Let all the world. Massed choirs; Martin How, org; Michael Laird Brass Ensemble/Lionel Dakers. Argo 421 418 16
Nyman, M. Trombone concerto. Christian Lindberg, tb; BBC SO/Michael Nyman. EMI 5 56487 2 22
Handel, G. Zadok the priest. Sydney Symphonic Choir & PO/Antony Walker. ABC 4762877
22:30 ULTIMA THULE
Monday 27 May
Howard Griffiths
Roger Norrington
0:00 CLASSIC-ALL THROUGH THE NIGHT 6:00 FINE MUSIC BREAKFAST including Arts Calendar at 7.30am with James Hunter 9:00 DIVERSIONS IN FINE MUSIC Inspired by opera Prepared by Elaine Siversen
Brahms, J. Symphony no 3 in F, op 90 (1883). London Classical Players/Roger Norrington. EMI 5 56118 2 34
12:00 SWING SESSIONS with John Buchanan
Dahl, I. Saxophone concerto (1948). John Harle, sax; New World SO/Michael Tilson Thomas. Argo 444 459-2
13:00 PRINCE OF DENMARK Prepared by Randolph Magri-Overend
Weber, C.M. Overture to Der Freischütz (1821). Alexander Paley, pf; Brian Zeger, pf. Naxos 8.553308 8 Wagner, R. Trauersinfonie on motifs from Euryanthe by Weber (1844). Dresden PO/ Michel Plasson. EMI 5 56358 2
Bach, C.P.E. Trio sonata in A, Wq145 (1731/47). Le Nouveau Quatuor. Amon Ra SAR 44 15
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Saint-Saëns, C. Fantasy after Weber’s Oberon (1850). Philippe Graffin, vn; Pascal Devoyon, pf. Hyperion CDA67285 16 Grainger, P. Fantasy on Porgy and Bess. Katia Labèque, pf; Marielle Labèque, pf. LP EMI 27 0122-1 22 10:00 MORNING CONCERT Prepared by Keith Glendinning Strauss, R. Romanze in F (1883). Raphael Wallfisch, vc; Royal Scottish NO/Neeme Järvi. Chandos CHAN 10236 10 Finzi, G. Cello concerto in A minor, op 40 (1951-52). Tim Hugh, vc; Northern Sinfonia/ Howard Griffiths. Naxos 8.555766 37 Sibelius, J. Symphony no 5 in E flat, op 82 (1915/19). Gothenburg SO/Neeme Järvi. BIS CD-222 34 11:30 STRINGS AND PIANO Prepared by Paul Hopwood Rossini, G. Sonata à quattro no 1 in G (1804). Herrmann Klemeyer, fl; Hans Schöneberger, cl; Josef Peters, bn; Olaf Klamand, hn. Calig CAL 50850 12
Tchaikovsky, P. Hamlet, fantasy overture after Shakespeare, op 67a (1888). Philadelphia O/Riccardo Muti. EMI CDC 7 49859 2 19 Berlioz, H. Funeral march for the final scene of Hamlet, op 18 no 3 (1848). NSW Conservatorium School of Opera; Sydney SO/ Robert Pikler. Chandos CHAN 6587 9 Thomas, A. A vos jeux, from Hamlet (1869). Emma Matthews, sop; Monte Carlo PO/Brad Cohen. DG/ABC 476 3555 12 Liszt, F. Symphonic poem no 10: Hamlet (1858). London PO/Bernard Haitink. Philips 438 754-2
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14:00 BORN IN HAMBURG Prepared by Stephen Wilson Praetorius, M. Dances from Terpsichore (1612). Early Music Consort of London/David Munrow. Virgin 5 61289 2 22 Mattheson, J. Suite no 6 (pub. 1714). Bradford Tracey, hpd. LP EMI 065-99 875 12 Mendelssohn, F. Piano concerto no 1 in G minor, op 25 (1831). Murray Perahia, pf; Academy of St Martin in the Fields/Neville Marriner. CBS MK 42401 20
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16:00 FINE MUSIC DRIVE including Arts Calendar at 5.00pm with Tom Forrester-Paton 19:00 SPIRIT OF JAZZ with Susan Gai Dowling 20:00 STORMY MONDAY with Austin Harrison and Garth Sundberg 22:00 KEYBOARD CONTRASTS Prepared by Frank Morrison Schubert, F. Sonata in B, D575 (1817). Gerhard Oppitz, pf. Hänssler 98.520 25 Bach, J.S. Organ concerto in G, BWV592 (c1714). Marie-Claire Alain, org. Erato 2292-45561-2
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Holland, D. Trio (1944). Shirin Lim, vn; Claire Oremland, vc; Greg Roberts, pf. Jade JADCD 1027 17 Casella, A. Pagine di guerra, op 25 (1915). Sandro Ivo Bartoli, pf; Marcello Guerrini, pf. 8 ASV DCA 1023 Mozart, W. Sonata in D, K448 (1781). Murray Perahia; pf; Radu Lupu, pf. Sony MK 39511 22
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Tuesday 28 May Bloch, E. Schelomo: Hebraic rhapsody (1915-16). Natalie Clein, vc; BBC Scottish SO/Ilan Volkov. Hyperion CDA67910 20 Edwards, R. Symphony, Da pacem, Domine (1992). Sydney SO/David Porcelijn. ABC 438 610-2 29 11:30 CHAMBER WALTZES Prepared by Chris Blower Dvorák, A. Two waltzes for string quartet, op 54 nos 1 and 4 (1880). The Lindsays. ASV DCS 446 7 Strauss, R. Waltzes, from Der Rosenkavalier (1911; arr. Prihoda). Gil Shaham, vn; Akira Eguchi, pf. DG 447 640-2 7
Vladimir Ashkezany. Photo - Keith Saunders 0:00 CONTEMPORARY COLLECTIVE 3:00 CLASSICAL TILL DAWN
Giuliani, M. Introduction and variations on a favourite waltz, op 103 (pub. 1819). Ensemble Urs Mächler. Nuova Era 7194 10
6:00 FINE MUSIC BREAKFAST including Arts Calendar at 7.30am with Julie Simonds
12:00 JAZZ RHYTHM with Jeannie McInnes
Sculthorpe, P. Kakadu (1988). William Barton, didjeridoo; Queensland O/Michael Christie. ABC 476192-1 16 Beethoven, L. Symphony no 6 in F, op 68, Pastoral (1808). London SO/Bernard Haitink. LSO Live LS00582 42
13:00 CARNIVAL OF MUSIC Prepared by Randolph Magri-Overend
Joachim, J. Violin concerto in G minor in one movevent, op 3 (1851). Suyoen Kim, vn; Staatskapelle Weimar/Michael Halász. Naxos 8.570991 20
Berlioz, H. Overture: Roman carnival, op 9 (1844). Philharmonia O/Herbert von Karajan. EMI CDM 1 66434-2 9
16:00 FINE MUSIC DRIVE including Arts Calendar at 5.00pm with Michael Morton-Evans
Britten, B. Canadian carnival, op 19 (1939). Wesley Warren, tpt; City of Birmingham SO/ Simon Rattle. EMI 5 55394 2 14
19:00 THE JAZZ BEAT with Lloyd Capps
Tchaikovsky, P. Serenade, op 65 no 1 (1888); The sun has set, op 73 no 4 (1893). Elisabeth Söderström, sop. Decca 436 204-2 4
Dvorák, A. Overture: Carnival, op 92 (1893). Scottish NO/Neeme Järvi. Chandos CHAN 9002 9
22:00 BEYOND ROMANTICISM Sacrebleu! A riot of a birthday Prepared by Oscar Foong
Rachmaninov, S. Italian polka (1906). Alastair Mackie, tpt; Vovka Ashkenazy, pf. Decca 470 291-2 2
Paganini, N. Variations on The Carnival of Venice (1829). Franco Mezzena, vn; Adriano Sebastiani, gui. Dynamic CDS 03 13
Stravinsky, I. The rite of spring (1913/47). Cleveland O/Riccardo Chailly. Decca 473 731-2
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Dyson, G. Concerto da chiesa (1949). Chandos CHAN 9076
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9:00 DIVERSIONS IN FINE MUSIC Pianist of choice: Vladimir Ashkenazy Prepared by Jennifer Foong Schumann, R. Abegg variations, op 1 (1830). Decca 443 322-2 8 Shostakovich, D. Prelude and fugue in A minor, op 87 no 2 (1950-51). Decca 466 066-2
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Skryabin, A. Sonata no 6, op 62 (1911). Decca 414 353-2
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Chopin, F. Sonata no 2 in B flat minor, op 35, Funeral march (1839). Decca 448 123-2 25 Vladimir Ashkenazy, pf ( all above) 10:00 MORNING CONCERT Prepared by Michael Field
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Bernard Haitink
Liszt, F. Hungarian rhapsody no 6 in D, Carnival in Pest (1846-85). London SO/Antal Dorati. Mercury 432 015-2 12 Saint-Saëns, C. Carnival of the animals (1886). Nash Ensemble. Virgin 5 61782 2 20
Haydn, J. Divertimento in D, Hob.X:1 (1775). Haydn Sinfonietta. Schwann 3-1250-2 16
14:30 RECOLLECTIONS OF COUNTRY LIFE Prepared by Alice Higgins
Fauré, G. Suite from Pelléas et Mélisande, op 80 (1898). Suisse Romande O/Ernest Ansermet. Decca 461 343-2 17
Enescu, G. Impressions d’enfance, op 28 (1940). Leonidas Kavakos, vn; Peter Nagy, pf. ECM Records B0000CNVFL 25
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20:00 RECENT RELEASES with Stephen Wilson
Children’s suite after Walter de la Mare (1924). Chandos CHAN 9369 19 Concerto leggiero (1951). Eric Parkin, pf. Chandos CHAN 9076
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City of London Sinfonia/Richard Hickox (3 above) Ligeti, G. Duo. Patrica Kopatchinskaja, vn.
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Doina and Hora for cymbalom. Victor Kopatchinsky, cimbalom. naïve V5193 (2 above)
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Wednesday 29 May 11:30 ENCORE IN CHAMBER Prepared by Sheila Catzel Janácek, L. Pohádka, fairy tale. Mikael Ericsson, vc; Frantisek Maly, pf. Naxos 8.553895
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Krommer, F. Quartet no 1 in C, op 8 (c1795). Paul Goodwin, ob; Terzetto. Harmonia Mundi 907220 15 12:00 THE SOUND OF JAZZ with Kevin Jones Howard Shelley 0:00 CONTEMPORARY COLLECTIVE 3:00 CLASSICAL TILL DAWN 6:00 FINE MUSIC BREAKFAST including Arts Calendar at 7.30am with Peter Kurti 9:00 DIVERSIONS IN FINE MUSIC Aspects of Baroque Prepared by Chris Blower Purcell, H. Suite of musicks and dances, from The fairy queen (1692; arr Balsom). Alison Balsom, tpt; English Concert/Trevor Pinnock. EMI 4 40329 2 14 Scarlatti, A. Su le sponde del Tebro. Deborah York, sop; Crispian Steele-Perkins, tpt; King’s Consort/Robert King. Helios CDH55354 16 Loeillet de Gant, J.B. Sonata à une flute et basse in B flat, op 3 no 9 (1715). Ludwig Güttler, tpt; Friedrich Kircheis, org. Berlin Classics 0012892BC 13 Tartini, G. Trumpet concerto in D. Maurice André, tpt; Academy of St Martin in the Fields/Neville Marriner. Erato 2292 45062-2 10 10:00 MORNING CONCERT Prepared by Sheila Catzel Janácek, L. Sinfonietta (1926). Czech PO/Jirí Belohlávek. Chandos CHAN 8897 23 Moscheles, I. Piano concerto no 3 in G minor, op 58 (c1822). Tasmanian SO/Howard Shelley, pf & dir. Hyperion CDA67276 30 Krommer, F. Symphony in D, op 40 (pub. 1803). Prague CO/Frantisek Vajnar. LP Supraphon 1110 2809 G 28
13:00 YOUNG VIRTUOSI with Andrew Bukenya; recorded by Greg Ghavalis Featuring violinist Phoebe Gardner with works by Mozart, Poulenc,Debussy Saint-Saens and Wilfred Lehmann Supported by St Catherine’s School and Overs Pianos 14:00 IN CONVERSATION with Michael Morton-Evans What exactly does it take to make music? Leading musicians, composers and performers, both local and visiting from overseas, will be talking live on air telling us why they do it and how they do it. 15:00 ON THE CARDS Prepared by Chris Blower Suppé, F. Overture to The queen of spades. Montreal SO/Charles Dutoit. Decca 414 408-2 8 Trad. Queen of hearts (arr. Gascoigne). John Williams, gui; The Gascoigne Band. CBS MK 37825 4 Mayerl, B. Ace of diamonds; Ace of hearts; The joker, from the Four aces suite (1933). Eric Parkin, pf. Chandos CHAN 8560 6 Tchaikovsky, P. Overture; I do not know her name; Forgive me, heavenly creature, from The queen of spades (1890). Ukraine RSO/Vladimir Sirenko. Naxos 8.554843 10 Stravinsky, I. Ballet: Jeu de cartes (1935-36). Philharmonia O/Robert Craft. Naxos 8.557506 23 16:00 FINE MUSIC DRIVE including Arts Calendar at 5.00pm with Oscar Foong 19:00 JAZZ STARS AND STRIPES with Peter Mitchell
Majella Cullagh 20:00 AT THE OPERA Prepared by Brendan Walsh Balfe, M. Falstaff. Opera in two acts. Libretto by Maggioni, based on Shakespeare’s Merry wives of Windsor. First performed London, 1838. FALSTAFF: Marcel Vanaud, bar FORD: Anthony Michaels-Moore, bar MRS FORD: Majella Cullagh, sop ANETTA: Tara Erraught, mezz MRS PAGE: Victoria Massey, mezz National Chamber Choir of Ireland; Irish RTO/ Marco Zambelli. RTE Lyric 119 2:24 Falstaff has a habit of borrowing money and not repaying it, but broods on the fact that no one will lend him money which he considers a fate worse than death. He gives letters to Mrs Ford, Mrs Page and Annetta. All three ladies discover that he has sent the same letter to each of them and vow revenge. Mrs Ford, Annetta and servants are gathered around a laundry basket and Mrs Ford tells the servants to throw the basket in the river. Falstaff, to avoid being seen by Mr Ford, hides in the basket covered by linens. The servants throw the contents in the river. Falstaff is rumoured dead, but approaches covered in mud. Mrs Ford suggests she and Falstaff meet in Windsor Forest at midnight, he disguised with 2 antlers. He embraces his ‘doe’ only to find that it is her husband. Mrs Ford and the townspeople admonish Falstaff, who repents saying it was lesson he will always remember. 23:00 TIMOTHY YOUNG PLAYS SCHUMANN AND LISZT Recorded by Kerry Joyner for FINE MUSIC Schumann, R. Carnival jest from Vienna, op 26 (1839). 22 Liszt, F. Sonata in B minor, S178 (1853). Timothy Young, pf (2 above) May 2013
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Thursday 30 May 0:00 CONTEMPORARY COLLECTIVE 3:00 CLASSICAL TILL DAWN 6:00 FINE MUSIC BREAKFAST including Arts Calendar at 7.30am with Simon Moore 9:00 DIVERSIONS IN FINE MUSIC Composer focus Prepared by Oscar Foong Wagner, R. Overture to Tannhäuser (1845). Berlin PO/Claudio Abbado. Decca 476 2457 14 Der Engel, from Wesendonck Lieder (1857-58). Cheryl Studer, sop; Staatskapelle Dresden/ Giuseppe Sinopoli. DG 439 865-2 3 Isoldes Liebestod, from Tristan und Isolde (1857-59). Birgit Nilsson, sop; Bayreuth FO/Karl Böhm. Decca 476 2457 6 Prelude to Act I of Lohengrin (1848). Vienna PO/Zubin Mehta. Decca 475 7470 9 Brünnhilde’s immolation scene, from Götterdämmerung (1869-74). Birgit Nilsson, sop; Sydney SO/Charles Mackerras. ABC 476 6440 19 10:00 MORNING CONCERT Prepared by Frank Morrison Massenet, J. Orchestral suite no 3: Scènes dramatiques (1873). Monte Carlo Opera O/John Eliot Gardiner. Erato 2292-45858-2 19 Spohr, L. Clarinet concerto no 4 in E minor (1828). Michael Collins, cl; Swedish CO/Robin O’Neill. Hyperion CDA67561 25 Bartók, B. Concerto for orchestra (1943). Royal PO/Rafael Kubelik. EMI CZS 5 68223 2 37 11:30 LITTLE SONATAS Prepared by Elaine Siversen Lloyd Webber, W. Sonatina. Philip Dukes, va; Sophia Rahman, pf. ASV DCA 961 8 Karg-Elert, S. Sonatina in A minor, op 14 no 3 (1906). Johannes Matthias Michel, harmonium d’art. cpo 999 611-2 17 50
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12:00 JAZZ, PURE AND SIMPLE with Maureen Meers 13:00 THREE THREES Prepared by Derek Parker Salieri, A. Triple concerto in D (c1770). Heinz Holliger, ob; Thomas Demenga, vc; Camerata Bern/Thomas Füri, vn & dir. Archiv 410 599-2 25 Bach, J.S. Triple concerto in A minor, BWV1044. Emmanuel Pahud, fl; Marco Rizzi, vn; Christiane Jacottett, hpd; Brescia and Bergamo Festival CO/Agostino Orizio. Fonè 90F 18-1 21 Beethoven, L. Triple concerto in C, op 56 (1803-04). Renaud Capuçon, vn; Mischa Maisky, vc; Martha Argerich, pf; Swiss-Italian O/ Alexandre Rabinovitch-Barakovsky. EMI 5 57773 2 35
Gianandrea Noseda. Photo - Ramella & Giannese. 19:00 JAZZ VIBES with Matt Bailey 20:00 EVENINGS WITH THE ORCHESTRA Prepared by Paul Hopwood
14:30 RUSSIAN STEPS Prepared by Angela Bell
Cherubini, L. Overture to The crescendo (1810). Tuscan O/Donato Renzetti. Europa 350-221 12
Glier, R. Russian sailor’s dance, from Red poppy suite, op 70 (1927). Utah SO/Maurice Abravanel. Everyman OVC 5010 3
Respighi, O. Roman festivals (1924). Leslie Pearson, org; Philharmonia O/Yan Pascal Tortelier. Chandos CHAN 8989 24
Rachmaninov, S. Oriental dance, op 2 no 2 (1892). Alexander Ivashkin, vc; Ingrid Wahlberg, pf. Manu MANU 1426 6
Locatelli, P. Violin concerto in D, op 3 no 12 (pub. 1733). Elizabeth Wallfisch, vn; Raglan Baroque Players/Nicholas Kraemer. Hyperion CDS44391/3 24
Glinka, M. Oriental dances in Chernomor’s castle, from Ruslan and Ludmila (1842). USSR SO/Yevgeny Svetlanov. Melodiya SUCD 10-00166 7 Medtner, N. Two canzonas with dances, op 43 (1924). Laurence Kayaleh, vn; Paul Stewart, pf. Naxos 8.570299 17 Borodin, A. Polovtsian dances, from Prince Igor (1890). Kiev Chamber Choir; Ukraine National RSO/Theodore Kuchar. Naxos 8.557456 11 Prokofiev, S. Dance of the girls with lilies, from Romeo and Juliet, op 75 (1937). Boris Berman, pf. Chandos CHAN 8851
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Rachmaninov, S. Symphonic dances, op 45 (1940). London SO/Eugene Goossens. Price-Less D 22654 31 16:00 FINE MUSIC DRIVE including Arts Calendar at 5.00pm With Stephen Wilson
Casella, A. Symphony no 2 in C minor, op 12 (1910). BBC PO/Gianandrea Noseda. Chandos CHAN 10605 49 22:00 CHAMBER SOIRÉE Prepared by Paul Hopwood Arriaga, J. String quartet no 3 in E flat (182122). Chilingirian Quartet. CRD 33123 29 Brahms, J. Trio in B, op 8 (1853/89). Itzhak Perlman, vn; Lynn Harrell, vc; Vladimir Ashkenazy, pf. EMI 7 54725 2 35 Beethoven, L. Sextet in E flat, op 71 (1796). Mozzafiato/Charles Neidich, cl & dir. Sony SK 53367 18 Spohr, L. Nonet in F, op 31 (1813). Nash Ensemble. crd 3354
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Friday 31 May 0:00 CONTEMPORARY COLLECTIVE 3:00 CLASSICAL TILL DAWN 6:00 FINE MUSIC BREAKFAST including Arts Calendar at 7.30am with Janine Burrus 9:00 DIVERSIONS IN FINE MUSIC Small forces Prepared by Judy Ekstein Beethoven, L. Fourteen variations in E flat, op 44 (c1792). Pinchas Zukerman, vn; Jacqueline du Pré, vc; Daniel Barenboim, pf. EMI CMS 7 63124-2 15
13:00 BICENTENARY RECOLLECTIONS Prepared by Derek Parker Mercadante, S. Flute concerto in E (1813). Jean-Pierre Rampal, fl; English CO/Claudio Scimone. Erato STU71320 21 Field, J. Sonata no 4 in B (1813). Pietro Spada, pf. Arts 47178-2 12 Meyerbeer, G. Quintet in E flat (1813). Dieter Klöcker, cl; Berlin Philharmonia Quartet. Orfeo C 213 901 A 21 14:00 BEYOND THE SHORE Prepared by Randolph Magri-Overend
J. Christoph Bach
Castelnuovo-Tedesco, M. Sonatina, op 205. Virginia Taylor, fl; Timothy Kain, gui. Tall Poppies TP003 13
Bridge, F. Suite: The sea (1911). Ulster O/ Vernon Handley. Chandos CHAN 8473
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Skryabin, A. Sonata no 3 in F sharp minor, op 23 (1897-98). Gordon Fergus-Thompson, pf. ASV DCA 882 21
Fauré, G. Sonata in A, op 13 (1875-76). Miki Tsunoda, vn; Caroline Almonte, pf. ABC 465 694-2 23
Elgar, E. Sea pictures, op 37 (1897-99). Janet Baker, mezz; London SO/John Barbirolli. EMI CDC 7 47329-2 24
Tchaikovsky, P. Fantasy overture: Hamlet, op 67a (1888). SO of Russia/Veronika Dudarova. Olympia OCD 512 21
10:00 MORNING CONCERT Prepared by Giovanna Grech
Britten, B. Four sea interludes, from Peter Grimes, op 33a (1944-45). Ulster O/Vernon Handley. Chandos CHAN 8473 16
22:00 BAROQUE AND BEFORE Prepared by Paul Hopwood
Nathan, I. Overture to Don John of Austria (1846; arr. Mackerras). Sydney SO/Charles Mackerras. ABC 434 713-2 9 Martinu, B. Pamáník Lidicím, memorial to Lidice (1943). Czech Philharmonic Ch & O/Jirí Belohlávek. Chandos CHAN 9138 8 Schumann, R. Cello concerto in A minor, op 129 (1850). Truls Mørk, vc; French RPO/Paavo Järvi. Virgin 5 45664 2 25 Dvorák, A. Symphony no 8 in G, op 88 (1889). London PO/Vernon Handley. Chandos CHAN 7123 37 11:30 NOT ONLY LIEDER Schubert, F. Hymn to the Holy Ghost, D948 (1827). Monteverdi Choir; O Révolutionnaire et Romantique/John Eliot Gardiner. Philips 456 578-2 9 Scene from Alfonso and Estrella, D732 (1822). Elly Ameling, sop; Claes Ahnsjö, ten; Rotterdam PO/Edo de Waart. LP Philips 9500 170 15 12:00 NOONTIME JAZZ with Peter Mitchell
Delius, F. Sea drift (1903-04). Thomas Hampson, bar; Welsh National Opera Ch & O/ Charles Mackerras. Argo 430 206-2 25 Debussy, C. La mer (1905). Royal Concertgebouw O/Bernard Haitink. Philips 438 742-2
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16:00 FINE MUSIC DRIVE including Arts Calendar at 5.00pm With Oscar Foong
Telemann, G. Quartet no 2 in A minor (1738). Wilbert Hazelzet, fl; Monica Huggett, vn; Sarah Cunningham, va; Mitzi Meterson, hpd. Virgin VC 7 91450-2 20 Gaultier, E. Pieces in D minor. Jakob Lindberg, lute. BIS CD-201 11 Corbett, W. Suite in D. Frank de Bruine, ob; Mark Bennett, tpt; Michael Laird, tpt; Parley of Instruments/Peter Holman. Hyperion CDA66817 14
19:00 FRIDAY JAZZ SESSION with Sally Cameron 20:00 THE ROMANTIC CENTURY Prepared by Judy Ekstein Schubert, F. Sonata no 3 in G minor, D408 (1816). Isaac Stern, vn; Daniel Barenboim, pf. Sony SM2K 64528 17 Liszt, F. Venice and Naples, from supplement to Années de Pèlerinage, vol. 2 (1859). Leslie Howard, pf. Hyperion CDA67107 19 Hummel, J. Piano trio in E flat no 7, op 96 (c1822). Borodin Trio. Chandos CHAN 9529 20 Sullivan, A. Overture di ballo (1870). Philharmonia O/Charles Mackerras. Decca 468 810-2
Bach, J. Christoph Wie bist du denn, O Gott? Michael Schopper, bass; Members of Musica Antiqua, Cologne/Reinhard Goebel. Archiv 419 253-2 12
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Stanley, J. Organ concerto no 2 in B minor (pub. 1775). Antonio Frigé, org; Ensemble Pian e Forte. Nuova Era 7019 13 Couperin, F. Seventeenth suite, from the Third book of harpsichord pieces (pub. 1722). Alan Cuckston, hpd. Naxos 8.550461 14 Handel, G. Concerto no 3 in F, HWV334 (174647). Academy of St Martin in the Fields/Neville Marriner. Decca 480 1388 16 Albinoni, T. Double concerto in C, op 7 no 5 (pub. 1715). Anthony Camden, ob; Alison Alty, ob; London Virtuosi/John Georgiadis. 8 Naxos 8.553035 May 2013
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The following composers have works of at least five minutes on the May dates listed Agnew, R. 1891-1944 14 Aguado, D. 1784-1849 5 Albéniz, I. 1860-1909 21 Albinoni, T. 1671-1751 31 Alfvén, H. 1872-1960 5 Alkan, C-V. 1813-1888 20 Alwood, P. 16th c 19 Andriessen, H. 1892-1981 5 Arensky, A. 1861-1906 15 Arne, T. 1710-1778 8 Arnold, M. 1921-2006 21 Arriaga, J. 1806-1826 18,30
1895-1968 16,23,31 Chabrier, E. 1841-1894 10 Chadwick, G. 1854-1931 14,17 Cherubini, L. 1760-1842 6,20,30 Chopin, F. 1810-1849 2,5,20,21,25,28 Clementi, M. 1752-1832 6 Coates, E. 1886-1957 4 Coleridge-Taylor, S. 1875-1912 4 Copland, A. 1900-1990 5,7,21 Corbett, W. c1675-1748 31 Corelli, A. 1653-1713 1 Couperin, F. 1668-1733 3,10,31 Bach, C.P.E. 1714-1788 5,8,22,27 Creti de Rocchis, M. Bach, J. Christian 1735-1782 4 c1822-c1890 13 Bach, J. Christoph 1642-1703 31 Czerny, C. 1791-1857 23 Bach, J.S. 1685-1750 d’Indy, V. 1851-1931 12 1,6,7,11,12,18,27,30 Dahl, I. 1912-1970 27 Bairstow, E. 1874-1946 19 Danzi, F. 1763-1826 5 Balakirev, M. 1837-1910 1,2 Dargomyzhsky, A. 1813-1869 24 Bartók, B. 1881-1945 14,30 Dean, B. b1961 25 Bax, A. 1883-1953 1,9,12,21 Beethoven, L. 1770-1827 5,6,7,8, Debussy, C. 1862-1918 6,7,11,13,22,31 12,18,19,21,23,25,26,28,30,31 Delage, M. 1879-1961 16 Bellini, V. 1801-1835 5 Delius, F. 1862-1934 21,31 Bellstedt, H. 1858-1926 4 Devienne, F. 1759-1803 23 Benda, F. 1709-1786 19 Diepenbrock, A. 1862-1921 19 Benda, G. 1722-1795 3,15 Dietrich, A. 1829-1908 6 Berlioz, H. 1803-1869 Dohnányi, E. 1877-1960 2 2,11,21,27,28 Donizetti, G. 1797-1848 5 Bernstein, L. 1918-1990 7 Dukas, P. 1865-1935 2,6 Berwald, F. 1796-1868 24 Duparc, H. 1848-1933 11 Biber, H. 1644-1704 15 Dussek, F. 1766-1816 3 Binge, R. 1910-1979 4 Duvernoy, F. 1765-1838 3 Bizet, G. 1838-1875 11,20,26 Dvorák, A. 1841-1904 2,3,4,5,7,10, Bloch, E. 1880-1959 14,28 11,14,15,17,19,26,28,31 Boccherini, L. 1743-1805 14 Dyson, G. 1883-1964 26,28 Boïeldieu, A. 1775-1834 24 Borodin, A. 1833-1887 7,16,25,30 Bottesini, G. 1821-1889 3,17,23 Edwards, R. b1943 11,28 Einfelde, M. b1939 22 Boyce, W. 1711-1779 8 Elgar, E. 1857-1934 4,14,31 Boyd, A. b1946 4,12 Eller, H. 1887-1970 14 Brahms, J. 1833-1897 Enescu, G. 1881-1955 28 3,6,7,11,13,14,22,26,27,30 Bricusse, L. b1931 25 Fall, L. 1873-1925 4 Bridge, F. 1879-1941 26,31 Britten, B. 1913-1976 4,22,28,31 Falla, M. de 1876-1946 16,18,21 Fauré, G. 1845-1924 15,28,31 Broadstock, B. b1952 11 Bruckner, A. 1824-1896 3,5,12,20 Feld, J. b1925 16 Fernie, A. 20th c 25 Brudieu, J. c1520-1591 24 Field, J. 1782-1837 8,31 Brumby, C. b1933 21 Finzi, G. 1901-1956 1,5,27 Busoni, F. 1866-1924 23 Buxtehude, D. 1637-1707 22 Flecha, M. El Viejo 1481-1553 24 Franck, C. 1822-1890 9,10,11,19,24 Byrd, W. 1543-1623 7,18 Byrne, M. 20th c 12 Gaultier, E. 1575-1651 10,31 Geminiani, F. 1687-1762 1 Campbell, S. 20th c 11 Gershwin, G. 1898-1937 7 Canteloube, J. 1879-1957 18 Giuliani, M. 1781-1829 6,28 Capponi, R. c1608-1688 1 Glazunov, A. 1865-1936 6,15 Casella, A. 1883-1959 27,30 Glinka, M. 1804-1857 12,13,30 Castelnuovo-Tedesco, M.
Godowsky, L. 1870-1938 20 Goldmark, K. 1830-1915 5 Goldrich, Z. 20th c 25 Grainer, R. 1924-1981 11 Grainger, P. 1882-1961 20,25,27 Granados, E. 1867-1916 5 Gregson, E. 20th c 11 Grieg, E. 1843-1907 10,12 Gröndahl, A. 1847-1907 10 Gruber, HK. b1943 5,26 Guastavino, C. 1912-2000 6 Haas, P. 1899-1944 12 Halévy, F. 1799-1862 11,24 Hammerschmidt, A. c16121675 22 Handel, G. 1685-1759 1,3,8,18,22,25,26,31 Harty, H. 1879-1941 21 Harvey, J. b1939 12 Haydn, J. 1732-1809 7,8,13,19,20,26,28 Herbert, V. 1859-1924 14 Hindemith, P. 1895-1963 1,19,23 Holbrooke, J. 1876-1958 2 Holewa, H. 1905-1991 5 Holland, D. 1913-2000 27 Holmboe, V. 1909-1996 20 Holst, G. 1874-1934 6,26 Honegger, A. 1892-1955 5 Hovhaness, A. 1911-2000 12 Howells, H. 1892-1983 26 Howes, A. b1992 18 Hua Yan-jun. 20th c 25 Hugues, L. 1836-1913 7 Hultquist, A. b1955 20 * Hummel, J. 1778-1837 5,12,20,24,31 Humperdinck, E. 1854-1921 2,9,18,26 Hurst, M. b1925 25 Ibert, J. 1890-1962 13 Ivanovs, J. 1906-1983 22 Janácek, L. 1854-1928 14,29 Joachim, J. 1831-1907 18,28 Joplin, S. 1868-1917 17 Josquin Desprez. c1440-1521 10 Karg-Elert, S. 1877-1933 30 Karlowicz, M. 1876-1909 7,16 Kats-Chernin, E. b1957 11 Kodály, Z. 1882-1967 5,18 Koehne, G. b1956 2 Korngold, E. 1897-1957 13,16 Kozeluch, L. 1747-1818 3 Kreisler, F. 1875-1962 5 Krommer, F. 1759-1831 12,29 Kuhlau, F. 1786-1832 20
Langford, G. b1930 4 Langlais, J. 1907-1991 11 Lecuona, E. 1896-1963 16 Leh‡r, F. 1870-1948 3,11,14 Levaillant, D. b1952 12 Ligeti, G. 1923-2006 5 Liszt, F. 1811-1886 2,7,9,12,13,14,18, 20,25,27,28,31 Lloyd Webber, W. 1914-1982 30 Locatelli, P. 1695-1764 30 Locke, M. c1621-1677 17,23 Loeillet de Gant, J.B. 1688c1720 29 Lully, J-B. 1632-1687 10 Lumbye, H. 1810-1874 20 MacDowell, E. 1860-1908 17 MacMillan, J. b1959 19 Mahler, G. 1860-1911 19 Malipiero, G. 1882-1973 16 Martinu, B. 1890-1959 11,16,17,31 Massenet, J. 1842-1912 2,12,30 Matsumura, T. b1929 4 Mattheson, J. 1681-1764 27 Maxwell Davies, P. b1934 19 Mayerl, B. 1902-1959 29 Medtner, N. 1880-1951 14,30 Melcer-Szczawinski, H. 18691928 7 Mendelssohn, F. 1809-1847 4,8,9,13,15,27 Menotti, G. 1911-2007 5 Mercadante, S. 1795-1870 31 Meyerbeer, G. 1791-1864 31 Milhaud, D. 1892-1974 13 Moscheles, I. 1794-1870 23,29 Moszkowski, M. 1854-1925 9 Mouret, J-J. 1682-1738 10 Mozart, L. 1719-1787 16 Mozart, W. 1756-1791 1,3,5,7,9,11,1 2,13,16,17,18,19,20,21,23,24,27 Mozetich, M. b1948 12 Murcia, S. de c1682-1740 1,24 Mussorgsky, M. 1839-1881 9,12 Myslivecek, J. 1737-1781 26 Nathan, I. 1790-1864 31 Nov‡k, V. 1870-1949 14,16 Novello, I. 1893-1951 11 Nyman, M. b1948 26 Offenbach, J. 1819-1880 8,12 Paganini, N. 1782-1840 28 Palmer, G. b1947 25 Palomo, L. b1938 7 Parry, J. 1841-1903 18 Pasculli, A. 1842-1924 13,22 Piazzolla, A. 1922-1992 21 Pleyel, I. 1757-1831 16 Poulenc, F. 1899-1963 6,14
Praetorius, M. c1571-1621 27 Prokofiev, S. 1891-1953 1,7,13,23 Prutsman, S. b1960 6 Puccini, G. 1858-1924 4,6,10,16,19 Pujol, E. 1886-1980 5 Purcell, H. 1659-1695 17,26,29 Quantz, J. 1697-1773 23 Quilter, R. 1877-1953 2 Rachmaninov, S. 1873-1943 9,13,17,30 Raff, J. 1822-1882 21 Rakov, N. 1908-1990 17 Rameau, J-P. 1683-1764 3,10 Ravel, M. 1875-1937 1,11,13,16,22 Reed, H. b1910 17 Regamey, C. 1907-1982 7 Reicha, A. 1770-1836 16 Respighi, O. 1879-1936 30 Reznicek, E. 1860-1945 9 Rheinberger, J. 1839-1901 11 Ries, F. 1784-1838 15 Riisager, K. 1897-1974 20 Rimsky-Korsakov, N. 1844-1908 1,15,21 Rodgers, R. 1902-1979 11 Rodrigo, J. 1901-1999 5,16,18 Rossini, G. 1792-1868 6,8,20,27 Rubinstein, A. 1829-1894 13 Rutter, J. b1945 17,25 Saint-Saëns, C. 1835-1921 5,9,11,15,23,24,27,28 Salieri, A. 1750-1825 16,30 Sanz, G. 1640-1710 24 Sarasate, P. de 1844-1908 11 Satie, E. 1866-1925 4,20 Scarlatti, A. 1659-1725 29 Schmelzer, J. c1620-1680 1 Schmitt, F. 1870-1958 16 Schoenberg, A. 1874-1951 4 Schubert, F. 1797-1828 4,10,12,14,1 6,17,18,19,20,23,26,27,31 Schultz, A. b1960 11 Schumann, C. 1819-1896 8 Schumann, R. 1810-1856 2,3,9,10,13,15,21,26,28,29,31 Schwertsik, K. b1935 5 Scott, C. 1879-1970 10 Sculthorpe, P. b1929 28 Shore, H. b1946 25 Shostakovich, D. 1906-1975 9,21,23 Sibelius, J. 1865-1957 5,14,17,27 Simpson, R. 1921-1997 26 Sinding, C. 1856-1941 10 Skipworth, L. b1982 4 Skryabin, A. 1872-1915 14,28,31 Smetana, B. 1824-1884 2,7,23 Smyth, E. 1858-1944 23
Soler, A. 1729-1783 18 Spiers, C. b1957 12 Spohr, L. 1784-1859 23,30 Stamitz, C. 1745-1801 23 Stamitz, J. 1717-1757 15 Stanford, C. Villiers 1852-1924 20 Stanhope, P. b 1969 25 Stanley, J. 1712-1786 24,31 Strauss, J. II 1825-1899 4 Strauss, R. 1864-1949 5,10,11,13,19,27,28 Stravinsky, I. 1882-1971 5,16,17,21,25,28,29 Strong, G. 1856-1948 17 Suk, J. 1874-1935 9,23 Sullivan, A. 1842-1900 23,31 Sumsion, H. 1899-1995 19 Suppé, F. 1819-1895 24,29 Sutherland, M. 1897-1984 25 Svendsen, J. 1840-1911 10 Sviridov, G. 1915-1998 9 Taneyev, S. 1856-1915 1 Tartini, G. 1692-1770 29 Tausig, C. 1841-1871 12 Tavener, J. b1944 25,26 Tchaikovsky, P. 1840-1893 2,4,6, 8,9,14,19,21,24,25,26,27,29,31 Telemann, G. 1681-1767 3,22,31 Thalberg, S. 1812-1871 7 Thomas, A. 1811-1896 27 Tinel, E. 1854-1912 10 Tippett, M. 1905-1998 23 Vaughan Williams, R. 18721958 5,11 Veracini, F. 1690-1768 1 Verdi, G. 1813-1901 5,6,13,16 Victoria, T. de 1548-1611 5 Vieuxtemps, H. 1820-1881 24 Villa-Lobos, H. 1887-1959 5 Vitols, J. 1863-1948 22 Vivaldi, A. 1678-1741 5,15,20,21 Wagner, R. 1813-1883 9,11,12,26,27,30 Walond, W. c1725-1770 11 Weber, B. 1766-1842 16 Weber, C.M. 1786-1826 21,24,25,27 Weber, J. 1854-1906 2 Westlake, N. b1958 18 Willan, H. 1880-1968 11 Williams, J. b1932 26 Wise, J. 20th c 25 Ysaÿe, E. 1858-1931 10 Zarzycki, A. 1834-1895 7 Zelenka, J. 1679-1745 15 Zemlinsky, A. 1871-1942 2
Key Music duration is shown after the record and citation SO: Symphony Orchestra Orchestra bshn: basset horn
PO: Philharmonic Orchestra NO: National Orchestra RO: Radio Orchestra FO: Festival Orchestra CO: Chamber Orchestra TO: Theatre Orchestra RSO: Radio Symphony Orchestra RTO: Radio & Television 52
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bass: bass bn: bassoon bass-bar: bass-baritone cl: clarinet clvd: clavichord cont: contralto cora: cor anglais ct: counter-tenor db: double bass
dbn: double bassoon elec: electronic eng horn: English horn fl: flute fp: fortepiano gui: guitar hn: French horn hp: harp hpd: harpsichord mand: mandolin
mar: marimba mezz: mezzo-soprano narr: narrator ob: oboe org: organ perc: percussion pf: piano rec: recorder sax: saxophone sop: soprano
tb: trombone ten: tenor timp: timpani tpt: trumpet treb: treble voice va: viola vc: cello vle: violone vn: violin
Fine music tours
Calling all lovers of live music performance! Academy Travel is delighted to present three special tours, featuring outstanding performances by some of the world’s best singers and musicians.
Tosca, English National Opera
The Great Composers: Budapest, Vienna and Prague
All these tours are led by Robert Gay, one of Australia’s most experienced and respected music educators and tour leaders.
Sep 26 – Oct 12, 2013, from $8,200 per person Explore the Central European cities where the likes of Mozart, Beethoven, Schubert, Hummel, Liszt, Dvorak and Bartok lived and worked. Performances at the Vienna State Opera and by the Czech Philharmonic, Vienna Philharmonic and more. Only three places remaining!
A winter musical journey: Munich to Dresden December 5-21, 2013, from $8,350 per person Enjoy a ‘Winterreise’ through central Germany, with breathtaking winter landscapes and the festive atmosphere of the traditional Christmas Markets. Nine outstanding operas and concerts, including the Bavarian State Opera, Bamberg Symphony, Semperoper Dresden, Leipzig Gewandhaus Orchestra and the St Thomas’ Choir, Leipzig.
London Music and Theatre
Keep in touch! Contact Academy Travel to register your interest for these tours and to receive regular updates of our unique tour program. www.academytravel.com.au
January 13-21, 2014, from $5,450 per person Take a break from the Australian summer with our nine-day program, packed with music and theatre performances. Includes the Royal Opera, the English National Opera, the Royal Shakespeare Company, the London Philharmonic Orchestra, Wigmore Hall and more.
tailored small group Journeys › Expert tour leaders › Maximum 20 in a group › Carefully planned itineraries
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May 2013
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personnel MUSIC BROADCASTING SOCIETY OF NEW SOUTH WALES CO-OPERATIVE LTD
Owner and operator of Australia’s first community operated stereo FM station, 2MBS-FM now known as Fine Music 102.5. The Objects of the Society are primarily to broadcast fine music and operate one or more FM broadcasting stations for the encouragement of music. Another is to be part of Sydney’s cultural landscape networking with musical and arts communities to support and encourage local musicians and music education and to use our technical and broadcast resources to further this aim. Our mission is to be Sydney’s preferred fine music broadcaster. Member of the Community Broadcasting Association of Australia.
DIRECTORS David Brett - Chairman, Lloyd Capps - Vice-Chairman, Peter Kurti - Secretary, Nicholas Chaplin - Treasurer, Jacqui Axford, Maureen Meers, Roger Doyle, David Ogilvie. STAFF Liz Terracini - General Manager, Peter Bailey - Technical Manager, Sue Ferguson - Financial Administrator, Michael Guilfoyle- Production Coordinator, Lizzie Herbert - Marketing PR Manager, Steve-Marc McCulloch - Program Coordinator, Denise Schoupp - Sponsorship & Sales Manager COMMITTEE CHAIRS Broadcasting - Robert Small, Programming - Paul Hopwood, Presenters - Ross Hayes, Technical - Max Benyon, Volunteers - Sue Nicholas, Finance - Ron Walledge, Jazz - Kevin Jones, Library- Bob Hallahan, Youth Development - Judy Deacon FRIENDS OF FINE MUSIC ADMINISTRATOR Allen Ford MAGAZINE DISTRIBUTION Sissi Stewart INTERNSHIP COORDINATOR Janine Burrus PROGRAM SUBEDITORS Jan Akers, Chris Blower, Di Cox, Colleen Chesterman, Susanne Hurst, Simon Kung, Frank Morrison, John Nowlan, Jill Wagstaff VOLUNTEER RECORDING ENGINEERS Peter Bell, Roger Doyle, Greg Ghavalas, Kerry Joyner, Jayson McBride, Tim Saddler, Greg Simmons VOLUNTEER PROGRAMMERS AND PRESENTERS Matt Bailey, Warwick Bartle, Charles Barton, Angela Bell, Peter Bell, Chris Blower, Barbara Brady,
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May 2013
FINE MUSIC FRIENDS Benefactors
Mr Michael Ahrens, Mr Robert O Albert, Dr David Block, Mr Johann Bosch, Mr J D O Burns, Hon Mr Justice D Davies SC, The Berg Family Foundation, The Holden Family Foundation, Frank Family Foundation, Ms Carolyn Gibbs, Prof Jacqueline Goodnow AC, Miss J E Hamilton, Mrs Freda Hugenberger, Ms AM Mackie, Dr Bill McKee, Mr John & Mrs Judith McKernan, Mrs Greta Moran, Ms Nola Nettheim, Hon Mr Justice B S O’Keefe AM, Mrs Renee Pollack, Dr Peter E Power, Prof Jack Richards, Mrs Joyce Sproat, The Garrett Riggleman Trust, Mr R Walledge, Dr Richard Wingate, Anonymous 2
Patrons
Mr Chris Abbott, Mr Anthony Bartley, Dr H Bashir, Prof Peter Bayliss, Mr John Benecke, Mr David Brett, Mr Maximo Buch, Ms Judith Byrnes-Enoch, Mr Lloyd Capps, Mr Robert E S Clark, Mr Noel Craven, Mrs Dorothy Curtis, Prof C E Deer, Ms Frances Farmer, Mrs Flora Fisk, Mrs Susan Gabriel, Mr Heinz Gager, Mrs Alison H Hale, Mr John Hastings, Miss Elizabeth Hawker, Mr Geoffrey Hogbin, Mr Allan Hough, Mrs Freda Hugenberger, Mrs Evelyn H Inglis, Mr David Levitan, Mr E Lister, Mr Ian K Lloyd, Mr Diccon Loxton, Mr Philip Maxwell, Dr D S Maynard, Mr Ian & Mrs Pam McGaw, Mrs Patricia McLagan, Mr J S Milford, Dr Yugan & Dr Abby Mudalier, Mr John Nowlan, Mr Michael Peck, Dr Brian Quinn, Fed Magistrate K Raphael, Mid Winter Recital Group, Mr Kenneth Reed, Mr David Rothery, Dr Janice Russell, Mr Nigel Scott-Miller, Lady (Marie) Shehadie, Mr W & Mrs E Sheldon, Mrs Ruth A Staples, Mrs Mary Stening, Mr Peter Titley, Dr J O Ward, Mrs Beatrice L Watts, Mr P M Weate, Hon Mr Justice A G Whealy, Ass Prof Gerard Willems AM, Anonymous 11.
Platinum
Dr Anthony Adams, Mr Brian Adams, Mr Geoffrey Ainsworth, Evans Webb & Associates Pty Ltd, Mr John Bagnall, Mr Graham Barr, Mr M T Beck, Dr Kathrine Becker, Mr Russell Becker, Mr Max Benyon OAM, Mr Anthony R Berg, Mrs Joan & Mr Ross Berglund, Mr David E W Blackwell, Mr M & Mrs L Blomfield, Dr Nancy Brennan, Mr Geoffrey Briot, Ms Jill Brown, Mr Mark Bryant, Mr Stephen Buck, Prof Elizabeth Burcher, Mr Rex Burgess, Ms Janine Burrus, Mrs E A Burton, Mr G K Burton SC, Mr Philip Butt, Mr Ian Cameron, Mrs Judith Campbell, Mrs L Alison Carr, Ms Chris Casey, Ms Deanne Castronini, Miss Emily Chang, Mr Roger Chapman, Dr Stephen K Chen, Mr Roger Cherry, Mr Peter Chorley, Dr Peter Chubb, Mr Gordon Clarke, Mr K G Coles, Mr Bernard Coles QC, Mr Phillip Cornwell, Mr Robin Cumming, Miss Sheila Darling, Mrs Susan Davey, Hon Mr Justice David Davies SC, Mr Geoffrey De Groen, Mr Lawrence D Deer, Mr Timothy Denes, Mr D J & Mrs C Dignam, Mr Alan Donaldson, Mrs Jennifer Dowling, Mr Peter Downes, Mr Peter Dunn, Mr Emyr Evans, Ms Elizabeth Evatt, Mr John Fairfax, Mr Ian Fenwicke, Mr Hugo D Ferguson, Prof Michael Field, Mr David Fisher, Dr Geoffrey Ford, Mr Francis Frank, Dr Sid French, Mr Ross Gittins, Mrs Inez Glanger, Mrs Betty Goh, Prof J Goodnow AC, Mr Gavin Gostelow, Mr Ray Grannall, Mr Michael J Guilfoyle, Mrs E W Hamilton, Mrs Emesini Hazelden, Mr Paul Hense, Ms Jill L N Hickson, Dr Peter Hook, Mr Roger Howard-Smith, Mr David E Hunt, Mr Robert Hunt, Mr David Hurwood, Mr John Hyde, Dr C P Ingle, Mrs Virginia Jacques, Ms Ruth Jeremy, Mr Ken Johnstone, Mr Christopher Joscelyne, Mr Michael Joseph, Dr Thomas E Karplus, Dr Keith Keen, Mr Paul L Kelly, Mrs Christine Kelly, Ms Patricia Kennedy, Prof Clive Kessler, Mr Roger Kingcott, Mr R J Lamble AO, Mr Stewart Lamond, Ms Sophie Landa, Mrs Sarah Lawrence, Mr Gregory Layman, Ms Judy Lee, Ms Annette Lemercier, Ms Karen Loblay, Dr David C Ludowici, Mrs Ruth G MacLeod, Mr Joseph Malouf, Mrs Anita Masselos, Miss Lynne Matarese, Mr J T McCarthy, Ms Elizabeth McDonald, Miss H M McElhone, Mr Phillip McGarn, Mr Alain G Middleton, Mr Nick Minogue, Mrs Greta Moran, Ms Bernice Murphy, Mr Hal Myers, Mr Christopher John Nash, Ms Natasha Ng, Mr Mark Nichols, Mr Ken Nielsen, Ms Christina O’Faillbhe, Hon Mr Justice B S O’Keefe AM, Asst Prof Robert Osborn, Prof Earl R Owen AO, Ms Susan Pearson, Mr Michael Pope, Prof R G H Prince, Dr Neil A Radford, Mr Thomas Douglas Randall, Ms Elsina Rasink, Mrs Angela M Raymond, Mr Brian L Regan, Mr Alex & Mrs Pam Reisner, Mr Grahame Reynolds, Mr Bruce Richardson, Mr R E Rowlatt, Mrs Mitzi L Saunders, Mrs Clara Schock, Ms Marilyn Schock, Mr John Sharpe, Mrs Linda Shoostovian, Dr William Thomas Sidwell, Mr John Simpson, Mr Alan Slade, Dr J M Stern, Mr John Stevenson, Mr I R Stubbin, Miss Jozy Sutton, Mr Mark Swan, Ms Catharine Swart, Mr Edmund Sweeney, Baroness Taube-Zakrzewski, Australian Elizabethan Theatre Trust, Mrs H F Thomas, Mr P A Thomas M. B. E., Miss Margaret Thompson, Mr Iain M Thompson, Mr Christopher A Thorndike, Dr Robin Torrence, Mrs Margaret Tuckson, Mrs Helen J Tweeddale, Mr Ronald Walledge, Mrs June Walpole, Dr Duff Watkins, Mr Roy Watterson, Ms Ellen M Waugh, Ms C A Webster, Drs Lourdes & Spencer White, Mr Neville Wilkinson, Mrs Elizabeth Wilkinson, Mr Cameron Williams, Ms Jocelyn Woodhouse, Mrs Robin Yabsley, Mr Nicholas Yates, Anonymous 12
Gold
Mr James Allsop, Mr Robert Baume, Dr Frances Booth, Mrs Barbara Brady, Sir Ron Brierley, Prof Colin Chesterman, Ms Elizabeth Collins, Prof Roger Covell, Mr Noel Craven, Dr Mark Cross, Mr Peter Deakin, Ms Pauline Duncan, Mrs Rosemary Dunstan, Dr Nita Durham, Mr Richard Farago, Ms Frances Farmer, Mr John Gibson, Mrs Anna E Gillespie, Prof Jacqueline Huie, Mr Rod Hyland, Mrs Alison King, Mr Peter Kolbe, Mr Nicholas Korner, Mr Ian Lansdown, Mr Warren Lazer, Prof Norelle Lickiss, Mr Goldwyn Lowe, Ms Carmel Maguire, Mr Peter McGrath, Mrs E M McKinnon, Dr Andrew Mitterdorfer, Tom Molomby, Mr Michael Morton-Evans OAM, Mr John Niland, Mr G Palmer, Mr Trevor Parkin, Mr Tim Perry, Dr Tri Pham, Mr Pino Re, Dr Janice Russell, Mr Kenneth Shirriff, Mrs Petrina Slaytor, Mrs J R Strutt, Dr S Morris & Ms M Sullivan, Dr Phillip Taplin, Mrs Judy Timms, Mr Gary Vassallo, Mrs Xenia Voigt, Mr D & Mrs C Wall, Mrs C & Mr L Welyczko, Ms Ann Whyte, Mr Richard Wilkins, Hon F L Wright QC, Ms Denise Yim, Anonymous 4
Silver
Mr & Mrs Charles Abrams, Mr Robert O Albert, Ms Meredith Ash, Mrs Patricia Azarias, Ms Fiona Barbouttis, Dr R & Mrs H Barnard, Mrs Norma Barne, Mr William J Barry, Ms Josephine M Bastian, Mr Jim Bates, Ms Sandra Batey, Mr Richard Bawden, Mr & Mrs J & M Beardow, Mr J & Mrs M Beattie, Dr David Bell, Mr John Boden, Mr Stephen Booth, Mrs Jan Bowen, Mr David Brett, Mrs Halina Brett, Rev Peter G Carman, Ms Joan Childs, Mr John Clayton, Prof Bruce Conolly, Mrs Jennifer Cook, Ms Margaret Coventry, Mrs Susana Cubas, Prof & Mrs S J Dain, Mrs Rhonda Dalton, Mr Brett Ayron Davies, Ms Julie Dean, Prof C E Deer, Mr Joseph Deschamps, Mrs Elizabeth Donati, Dr Marie Dreux, Mrs Margaret Duguid, Hon J R Dunford QC, Mr Elwyn Dyer, Mr Paul Evans, Mr William G Fleming, Ms Helen Fleming, Mr Stephen Fortescue, Ms Eleonore Fuchter, Mr Roger Giles, Mrs M A Grant, Mr David Green, Mr R N Greenwell, Miss J E Hamilton, Dr A H Hardy, Ms Margaret Hext, Mr Peter Hillery, Mr Paolo Hooke, Mrs Diana R Hooper, Mr Paul Hopwood, Dr David Jeremy, Mr Andrew Kaldor, Mr Mustafa Kandan, Dr Elvira Kefford, Miss Linda Kepitis, Mr Gerhard Koller, Ms M Laurie, Mr David Levitan, Dr Carolyn Lowry OAM, Mrs Meryll Macarthur, Mr D M C Madden, Mrs Christina Marks, Dr Jim Masselos, Mrs Patricia McAlary, Mr T M McDougall, Dr R McGuinness, Mr John & Mrs Judith McKernan, Mr Kevin McVicker, Ms Maureen Meers, Ms Judith Miller, Mr Andrew Nelson, Mr John Nowlan, Ms Maryanne Ofner, Mr Pieter Oomens, Mr Julius Opit, Mr G C Osborne, Mr Bradley Oyston, Dr Gordon H Packham, Mr Michael Paul, Mr Bert Percy, Ms Barbara Peretz, Ms Anne Pickles, Mrs Mavis Pirola, Mr Roger Porter, Mr James Poulos QC, Dr John G Richards, Mrs Gail Robison, Mr A & Mrs E Roth, Mr Gabriel Roy, Mrs Robin J Ruys, Mr Harvey Sanders, Mr D J Schluter, Dr Gideon Schoombie, Mr Eric Scott, Ms Rosalind Searle, Dr Vivian Shanker, Mr William Sharpe, Dr Michael Shellshear, Mr R A Stark, Prof Peter Stopher, Ms Lora Stopic, Mrs Caroline Storch, Mr Douglas G Thompson, Ms Kathryn Tiffen, Mrs Janine M Tindall, Mr Peter Van Raalte, Mrs Ilda Wade, Mr Alex Walter, Mr Robin Wever, Ass Prof Gerard Willems AM, Mr J Gerald Wilson, Mr Geoffrey L Winter, Mrs Dorothy Wood, Mrs Helen Xiao, Prof Klaus A Ziegert, Mr Peter Zipkis, Anonymous 4 May 2013
fineMusic 102.5
55
crossword
Compiled by Nevil Anderson
Name:_______________________________________________ Address: _____________________________________________ Tel:______________ Email_______________________________ To go in the draw to win The Australian Chamber Orchestra’s The Reef DVD, email your answers to competitions@finemusicfm, or post to the below address by 20 May. The Crossword 72-76 Chandos Street St Leonards NSW 2065
Across 1 Worry that the old liner is in good shape. (6) 5 So happy bus fills the bill. (8) 9 Maybe run those into confederate lands (8) 10 Judge little twitch after endless crib (6) 11 Indian moon amusedly discarded by atheists and modernists in the current era. (4,6) 12 Was aware of fresh sounds being identical, so to speak. (4) 13 Elgar ((plus Aussie value added tax)) become untidy (8) 16 Sunburn free gestation shows conceitedness (6) 17 Rushed, messily identify person within Helenic borderlines. (6) 19 Cacography is a board game if only one swaps A and I (8) 21 Banish the gypsies and moneymaker becomes submissive (4) 22 Ton awaits when XC1X shows on the board (6-4) 25 Silky hair product of Namibian capital and old Greek marketplace (6) 26 May say every hit an act of predation (8) 27 Operate space for atelier (8) 28 Portrayals lost the plot as impressive displays (6)
To go in the draw to win the Recomposed By Max Richter CD, email your answers to competitions@finemusicfm, or post to the below address by 20 May. The Quiz Master 72-76 Chandos Street St Leonards NSW 2065 April TRIVIA ANSWERS: 1.(a)2 weeks, 2. Gustav Mahler, 3. La Gioconda, 4. Ralph Vaughan Williams, 5. Haydn. His Symphony No 43 in Eb., 6. Josephine, 7. Bohuslav Martinu, 8. Friedrich von Schiller fineMusic 102.5
Crossword Solution -April 2013
MUSICAL TRIVIA with Michael Morton-Evans How well do you know the world of classical music? Test your knowledge with these musical brain teasers from Fine Music 102.5 presenter, Michael Morton-Evans. 1. Name the assassin in Verdi’s opera, Rigoletto. 2. For the rededication of which cathedral was Benjamin Britten’s War Requiem written? 3. Who wrote the choral work The Bells? 4. Franz Lehar was the first member of his family to show any aptitude for music. Until then, for generations, the Lehar family had been involved in what business? 5. Which composer, on hearing that the proposed Beethoven monument in Bonn was about to fall through due to lack of funds, decided to raise the money by returning to the life of a travelling virtuoso? 6. To whom was he referring when Khachaturian said, “he was the conscience of Soviet music?” 7. There are three 18th century operas entitled Orlando. Handel wrote one, who wrote the other two? 8. By what name is the Air from Handel’s Harpsichord Suite no.5 in E better known?
56
Down 2 From which a great oak may grow (5) 3 Test nothing in heated confrontation (3-2) 4 For example, enrol - soon! (7) 5 Good French bombardment on Guy Fawkes night. (7) 6 Lean towards corporate demarcation (7) 7 Nasty aroma - body odour emanating from medical graduate might well explode ! (5,4) 8 One little university ornamental letter everywhere (9) 14 Send rotten hue to that place? (9) 15 Confusingly, no ink tack should be considered when one’s car engine makes funny noises (9) 18 Giving Kelly the big miss, covenanted Latin American currency (7) 19 Mixed up inability inside reckoning a very private place (7) 20 With a bit of a juggle, eye membranes become delicious wine (7) 23 From the very first, Nancy emphatically voiced every reason, but not any more ! (5) 24 Though often quite tense, I never expected to be kicked out of a vinery (5)
May 2013
Across: 6 Wrongly, 7 Evade, 9 Only, 10 Unexampled, 11 Dynamite, 13 Treaty, 15 Lark, 17 Naiad, 18 Ford, 19 Turret, 20 Titmouse, 23 Tea service, 26 Torn, 27 Yokes, 28 Eardrum. Down: 1 Nosy-parker, 2 Agouti, 3 Gybe, 4 Departed, 5 Lamp, 6 Wonky, 8 Elector, 12 Edict, 14 Effrontery, 16 Acutely, 17 Notarise, 21 Theory, 22 Scrum, 24 Sake, 25 Iced.
-March 2013
(In the last edition, the incorrect set of solutions was included. Apologies for inconvenience to our crossword fans. Ed.)
Across: 8 Land, 9 Implacable, 10 Attend, 11 November, 12 Beriberi, 14 Gantry, 16 Then, 17 Roots, 18 Tiff, 19 Opiate, 21 Yearning, 23 Synopsis, 26 Miasma, 27 Dumbwaiter, 28 Line. Down: 1 Battleship, 2 Adhesion, 3 Tie-dye, 4 Spin, 5 Las Vegas, 6 Batman, 7 Aloe, 13 Irony, 15 Refinement, 17 Rheostat, 18 Tentacle, 20 Amoeba, 22 Admire, 24 Your, 25 Sate.
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