BBC4: the arts channel....not

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  • Bax-of-Delights
    Full Member
    • Nov 2010
    • 745

    #31
    I thought it was mildly interesting but could have done without the hyperbole of SK.
    I'm not sure VW spent much time at Leith Hill Place and was only living there as a child before being packed off to boarding school/RCM/University. SK gave the viewer the impression that VW did his composing there which was not the case.
    LH's espousal of Coleridge Taylor was possibly overcooked. The "British Mahler"? Er....
    O Wort, du Wort, das mir Fehlt!

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    • Cockney Sparrow
      Full Member
      • Jan 2014
      • 2284

      #32
      Tonight, BBC4 9pm. A John Bridcut film - Janet Baker - In Her Own Words
      (AT LAST! Something original and worthwhile on BBC 4. iPlayer has no previous broadcast dates….)
      In her first documentary for more than 35 years, the great British classical singer Dame Janet Baker talks more openly and emotionally than ever before about her career and her life today. With excerpts of her greatest stage roles (as Dido, Mary Stuart, Julius Caesar and Orpheus), as well as of her appearances in the concert hall and recording studio (works by Handel, Berlioz, Schubert, Elgar, Britten and Mahler), she looks back at the excitements and pitfalls of public performance.
      She tells the film-maker John Bridcut about the traumatic loss of her elder brother when she was only ten years old, and how that experience coloured her voice and her artistry. She explains why she felt the need to retire early some thirty years ago and discusses the challenges she and her husband have to face in old age. She also gives tantalizing clues to the question her many fans often ask: does she still sing today at the age of 85?
      Among the other contributors to the film are conductors Raymond Leppard, Jane Glover and André Previn (in one of his last interviews before his death in March), the singers Joyce DiDonato and Dame Felicity Lott, the opera producer John Copley, the pianist Imogen Cooper, and the actress Dame Patricia Routledge. This feature-length film is a Crux production for the BBC, following the award-winning ‘Colin Davis - in His Own Words’ in 2013……….

      Comment

      • Bryn
        Banned
        • Mar 2007
        • 24688

        #33
        Originally posted by Cockney Sparrow View Post
        Tonight, BBC4 9pm. A John Bridcut film - Janet Baker - In Her Own Words
        (AT LAST! Something original and worthwhile on BBC 4. iPlayer has no previous broadcast dates….)
        In her first documentary for more than 35 years, the great British classical singer Dame Janet Baker talks more openly and emotionally than ever before about her career and her life today. With excerpts of her greatest stage roles (as Dido, Mary Stuart, Julius Caesar and Orpheus), as well as of her appearances in the concert hall and recording studio (works by Handel, Berlioz, Schubert, Elgar, Britten and Mahler), she looks back at the excitements and pitfalls of public performance.
        She tells the film-maker John Bridcut about the traumatic loss of her elder brother when she was only ten years old, and how that experience coloured her voice and her artistry. She explains why she felt the need to retire early some thirty years ago and discusses the challenges she and her husband have to face in old age. She also gives tantalizing clues to the question her many fans often ask: does she still sing today at the age of 85?
        Among the other contributors to the film are conductors Raymond Leppard, Jane Glover and André Previn (in one of his last interviews before his death in March), the singers Joyce DiDonato and Dame Felicity Lott, the opera producer John Copley, the pianist Imogen Cooper, and the actress Dame Patricia Routledge. This feature-length film is a Crux production for the BBC, following the award-winning ‘Colin Davis - in His Own Words’ in 2013……….

        Comment

        • LMcD
          Full Member
          • Sep 2017
          • 8460

          #34
          This programme now has its own thread.

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