Episodes
Episode | Title | First Broadcast | Comments |
---|---|---|---|
01 | Part 1 | 20100312 | Live Presented by Louise Fryer The BBC Philharmonic performs 20th century classics in a live concert from the Bridgewater Hall, Manchester with the young French conductor Ludovic Morlot, who made an exciting debut with the orchestra last year. While Stravinsky was still living in Europe, he received a commission from America for a chamber work, which became his Bach-inspired concerto, Dumbarton Oaks. Another composer looking to the USA was the young Benjamin Britten, who wrote his piano concerto the year before his American sojourn, and it is a work full of directness, agitation and intensity of expression. Britten was the soloist at the premiere, and tonight Steven Osborne takes the solo role in a work for which he has already received critical acclaim. Two nautical works follow. The fluidity of Debussy's score is a tribute to the infinite variation of the waves, while Sibelius, writing to an American commission like Stravinsky, conjurs up a mysterious mythological underwater world. Stravinsky: Concerto in E flat 'Dumbarton Oaks Britten: Piano concerto 19.55 - Interval Sibelius: Oceanides, Op.73 Debussy: La mer Steven Osborne (piano) conductor Ludovic Morlot. The BBC Philharmonic conducted by Ludovic Morlot perform music by Stravinsky and Britten. Performance on 3 has been replaced by Radio 3 Live in Concert. |
02 | Part 2 | 20100312 | Live Presented by Louise Fryer The BBC Philharmonic performs 20th century classics in a live concert from the Bridgewater Hall, Manchester with the young French conductor Ludovic Morlot, who made an exciting debut with the orchestra last year. While Stravinsky was still living in Europe, he received a commission from America for a chamber work, which became his Bach-inspired concerto, Dumbarton Oaks. Another composer looking to the USA was the young Benjamin Britten, who wrote his piano concerto the year before his American sojourn, and it is a work full of directness, agitation and intensity of expression. Britten was the soloist at the premiere, and tonight Steven Osborne takes the solo role in a work for which he has already received critical acclaim. Two nautical works follow. The fluidity of Debussy's score is a tribute to the infinite variation of the waves, while Sibelius, writing to an American commission like Stravinsky, conjurs up a mysterious mythological underwater world. Sibelius: Oceanides, Op.73 Debussy: La mer Steven Osborne (piano) conductor Ludovic Morlot. And continuing our theme of Bach: Two Chorale Preludes (Dies sind die heil'gen zehn Gebot' I BWV678; Dies sind die heil'gen zehn Gebot' II BWV679) David Sanger (organ) Garniston's Church, Copenhagen Meridian Records CDE 84377 Tr 11-12 Henri Mulet: Byzantine Sketches no 10: Tu es petra Christopher Herrick (Organ) Letourneau organ in the Concert Hall of The Winspear Centre, Edmonton, Canada Hyperion 67458 BBC Philharmonic under Ludovic Morlot. Sibelius: Oceanidies, Op 73. Debussy: La mer. Performance on 3 has been replaced by Radio 3 Live in Concert. |