Ana Her celebrates the life and work of Italian composer Tomaso Albinoni, known for his operas and instrumental music, marking the 350th anniversary of his birth on 8 June 1671. It is thought that Albinoni wrote at least 50 operas, although few of them survive. His oboe concertos were the first of their type by an Italian composer to be published, and his instrumental music was admired by Bach, who wrote fugues based on Albinoni's works and also used them in his teaching.
Albinoni today - and a new presenter?
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Albinoni today - and a new presenter?
Ana Her celebrates the life and work of Italian composer Tomaso Albinoni, known for his operas and instrumental music, marking the 350th anniversary of his birth on 8 June 1671. It is thought that Albinoni wrote at least 50 operas, although few of them survive. His oboe concertos were the first of their type by an Italian composer to be published, and his instrumental music was admired by Bach, who wrote fugues based on Albinoni's works and also used them in his teaching.Tags: None
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Originally posted by ardcarp View Posthttps://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m000wsl7
Ana Her celebrates the life and work of Italian composer Tomaso Albinoni, known for his operas and instrumental music, marking the 350th anniversary of his birth on 8 June 1671. It is thought that Albinoni wrote at least 50 operas, although few of them survive. His oboe concertos were the first of their type by an Italian composer to be published, and his instrumental music was admired by Bach, who wrote fugues based on Albinoni's works and also used them in his teaching.It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Originally posted by french frank View Post
Interesting to compare with Lucie Skeaping's 2006 EMS.
Lucie Skeaping profiles the life and music of the Italian Baroque composer Tomaso Albinoni, whose output included not only a large number of oboe concertos, but also a vast amount of choral, orchestral and chamber music, and music for the Venetian theatre.
Any chance of dear old Catherine Bott coming back? Her profile is still (hidden) on the EMS presenter webpage. Perhaps the Swingle Singers just aren't radical enough these days...
Catherine Bott
Catherine Bott grew up listening to the radio (everything from Pied Piper to the Critics, Housewives' Choice to Round the Horne).
As a teenage wannabe actress, she did two seasons with the National Youth Theatre, and was then intending to read English at university, but the discovery that she could sing well enough to win a place at the Guildhall School of Music and Drama made up her mind about a career.
After Guildhall she sang with the Swingle Singers, performing everything from Bach to Berio and developing her gift for improvisation and scat singing. After two years she left to begin a distinguished career in early music. Among her many recordings in this field are Bach's St. John Passion, Monteverdi's L'Incoronazione di Poppaea and Purcell's Dido and Aeneas.
Nowadays she is spreading her musical wings to perform and record works by Jonathan Dove, Joe Duddell and Michael Nyman: her next cd, London Pride, includes a baroque cantata by Joyce Grenfell and Donald Swann and a number by those well-known Early Music virtuosi Kit and the Widow
Back in the radio world, Catherine's never stopped listening: after all, long before television dared to put an authoritative, intelligent woman presenter on screen, radio had Patricia Hughes, Sue MacGregor and Listen with Mother's Julia Lang and Daphne Oxenford - inspirational voices. She's made many guest appearances on In Tune, Woman's Hour and various Radio 3 programmes, and is now relishing the opportunity to learn the very different skills involved in presenting The Early Music Show. You can also hear her in occasional features for Music Matters.
Leisure activities? Well, between singing and broadcasting, she doesn't seem to have a day off at the moment...
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Be careful what you wish for. On CFM, CB seems to have become a Katie D clone, sharing the same mannerisms and flirtatious giggles as her mentor. This is rather tragic, considering the respect she gained on this forum. And in the case of Albinoni, she still appears to think that sumptuous Giazotto Adagio was composed by him.
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Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostBe careful what you wish for. On CFM, CB seems to have become a Katie D clone, sharing the same mannerisms and flirtatious giggles as her mentor. This is rather tragic, considering the respect she gained on this forum. And in the case of Albinoni, she still appears to think that sumptuous Giazotto Adagio was composed by him.
And thanks for educating me on the Giazotto Adagio. Lucie Skeaping certainly knew :-)
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Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostBe careful what you wish for. On CFM, CB seems to have become a Katie D clone, sharing the same mannerisms and flirtatious giggles as her mentor. This is rather tragic, considering the respect she gained on this forum. And in the case of Albinoni, she still appears to think that sumptuous Giazotto Adagio was composed by him.
OG
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Interested to hear thoughts on this new presenter. Cynical me, but given the amount she seems to have packed into her life so far, I feel that she fits the R3 bill best because of her 'uplifting and fresh sets, mixing all kinds of House, Urban and Pop' rather than what might have been quite a short career with 'various orchestras including the BBC Symphony Orchestra and the Philharmonia'. But if she does this 'specialist' job well …It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Originally posted by Beresford View PostA very clear voice, could be more informal. She was obviously reading from a script, and maybe because of that she was lowering her voice at the end of each sentence. Could learn from Petroc's delivery.
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On the subject of Ms Her, I thought her delivery of the script was very good. (I've no idea what her 'sets' mean.) Ming you, countless adults, old, young or of either sex could have done it just as well. So maybe she was being 'trialled' by the BBC.
On the subject of Albinoni, I thought the music played was well-chosen, displaying as it did his gift for a good melody. I was a bit surprised time was spent at the end of the programme playing 'that piece'. It has long been suspected that the 'fragments' it was based on had nothing to do with Albinoni. If they existed at all. And it was given an uber-Romantic rendidtion by the ECO. Lovelu, of course, but not quite EMS fodder.
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Originally posted by ardcarp View Post
On the subject of Albinoni, I thought the music played was well-chosen, displaying as it did his gift for a good melody. I was a bit surprised time was spent at the end of the programme playing 'that piece'. It has long been suspected that the 'fragments' it was based on had nothing to do with Albinoni. If they existed at all. And it was given an uber-Romantic rendition by the ECO. Lovelu, of course, but not quite EMS fodder.Last edited by Eine Alpensinfonie; 07-06-21, 15:17.
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Originally posted by ardcarp View PostOn the subject of Ms Her, I thought her delivery of the script was very good. (I've no idea what her 'sets' mean.) Ming you, countless adults, old, young or of either sex could have done it just as well. So maybe she was being 'trialled' by the BBC.
On the subject of Albinoni, I thought the music played was well-chosen, displaying as it did his gift for a good melody. I was a bit surprised time was spent at the end of the programme playing 'that piece'. It has long been suspected that the 'fragments' it was based on had nothing to do with Albinoni. If they existed at all. And it was given an uber-Romantic rendidtion by the ECO. Lovelu, of course, but not quite EMS fodder.
Bit disappointed that more recent research on the Adagio wasn't mentioned - an image of the "fragment" is apparently given in a 2007 thesis on Albinoni (I've not seen it & wouldn't know it from butter, but you'd hope someone at the BBC would).
Comparing the 2006 Lucie Skeaping Early Music Show to Ana Her's 2021 one.- Lucie Skeaping had fewer pieces (7 vs. 12) and longer extracts.
- Ana Her had more opera pieces (which I enjoyed).
- LS got the Adagio out of the way at the start, AH finished / lingered on it.
(LS's Concerto for trumpet, 3 oboes, bassoon and strings was a much livelier choice for a final piece.) - LS only played Albinioni* pieces, AH included Bach & Vivaldi (not sure about this).
- I preferred Lucie Skeaping's commentary (& she's also a more familiar voice.)
*Quibble if you mustLast edited by AuntDaisy; 07-06-21, 13:51.
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Originally posted by ardcarp View PostOn the subject of Ms Her, I thought her delivery of the script was very good. (I've no idea what her 'sets' mean.) Ming you, countless adults, old, young or of either sex could have done it just as well. So maybe she was being 'trialled' by the BBC.It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostYes - if they existed at all. I'm as convinced by this as by Nessie and Mr Trump's rants. Who remembers Mozart's Adelaide Concerto?
The Adelaide debacle was new to me (I gave up on the diacritics, a grave mistake).
Some attributions can be fortuitous, e.g. Josquin &/or Bauldeweyn make a fascinating combination on this Tallis Scholars CD along with Peter Phillips' notes.
Josquin des Prés: Missa mater Patris & Noel Bauldeweyn: Missa Da pacem. Gimell: CDGIM052. Buy CD or download online. The Tallis Scholars, Peter Phillips
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