Christian IV and Kitty Clive plus Handel and more

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  • doversoul1
    Ex Member
    • Dec 2010
    • 7132

    Christian IV and Kitty Clive plus Handel and more

    Saturday
    Catherine Bott talks about some of the composers who worked at the court of the colourful Christian IV of Denmark. The music includes works by imports to the court including Dowland, Bertolusi and Schutz, but also homegrown composers such as Hans Nielsen, Mogens Pederson and Soren Terkelsen. (R)
    Catherine Bott looks at composers who worked at the court of Christian IV of Denmark.


    Sunday
    Lucie Skeaping talks to musicologist Berta Joncus about the one of the 18th Century's colourful characters, the soprano Kitty Clive. Clive was born in London in the early 18th century, and rose to become London's top singer and comic actress, and a celebrity in her day. Berta Joncus is currently writing a book about Kitty Clive, and how she fascinated audiences for decades. The programme includes music she made famous, including Arne's 'Rule Britannia', and also music written for her by Handel.(R)
    Lucie Skeaping and Berta Joncus discuss the colourful 18th-century soprano Kitty Clive.



    CD Review
    With Andrew McGregor. Including Building a Library: Beethoven: Missa solemnis.

    9:05
    Joyce DiDonato - Drama Queens, Royal Arias from the 17th and 18th Centuries
    HANDEL: Alessandro: Max Emanuel Cencic, Xavier Sabata
    MONTEVERDI:: Anne Sophie von Otter (mezzo-soprano), Sandrine Piau (soprano), Susanna Sundberg (contralto), Ensemble Cappella Mediterranea, Leonardo Garcia Alarcon (conductor)
    18th-century Portuguese Love Songs

    10:30
    David Vickers joins Andrew to discuss recent DVD recordings of Baroque opera
    HANDEL: Deidamia
    Pergolesi - Il Prigionier Superbo and La Serva Padrona
    HANDEL: Rodelinda
    SAMS: The Enchanted Island – with music by Handel, Vivaldi, Rameau, Campra, Leclair, Purcell, Rebel and Ferrandini
  • Richard Tarleton

    #2
    Originally posted by doversoul View Post
    Saturday
    Catherine Bott talks about some of the composers who worked at the court of the colourful Christian IV of Denmark. The music includes works by imports to the court including Dowland, Bertolusi and Schutz, but also homegrown composers such as Hans Nielsen, Mogens Pederson and Soren Terkelsen. (R)
    Catherine Bott looks at composers who worked at the court of Christian IV of Denmark.

    Thanks for the prompt dover. This is the strange world evoked in Rose Tremain's excellent novel "Music and Silence", one of the characters being a fictional successor to Dowland. Dowland's "King of Denmark's Galliard" is one of my party pieces

    Comment

    • Richard Tarleton

      #3
      Informative as ever - I had no idea Christian's search for musicians was so widespread. No mention however of the strange musicians' cellar connected by tubes - a 17th century take on piped music!

      The lute version of Dowland's King of Denmark's Galliard is a more elaborate and interesting piece than the little viol consort version we heard at the top of the programme. Dowland adapted it from his earlier Battle Galliard, and it reached its final version in the Varietie of Lute Lessons collection published by his son robert.

      Comment

      • Black Swan

        #4
        A really interesting program. I had many of the CD's reviewed. Anne Sophie von Otter and 18th Century Portuguese Love Songs. Both really good albums. I hear the Portuguese Love Songs live at the 2012 York Early Music Festival. The performance was taped and replayed on the Early Music Show by Catherine.

        Comment

        • vinteuil
          Full Member
          • Nov 2010
          • 13065

          #5
          Originally posted by Richard Tarleton View Post
          . Dowland's "King of Denmark's Galliard" is one of my party pieces
          ... that made me happy - it was one of my pa's party pieces too... Along with the Melancholy Galliard and my Lady Hunsdon's Puffe.

          I had rather thought Tarletone's Riserrectione [Poulton 59] would have been your number...

          Comment

          • Richard Tarleton

            #6
            Originally posted by vinteuil View Post
            ... that made me happy - it was one of my pa's party pieces too... Along with the Melancholy Galliard and my Lady Hunsdon's Puffe.

            I had rather thought Tarletone's Riserrectione [Poulton 59] would have been your number...
            Those too! In the Karl Scheit edns.

            Julian Bream played Tarleton's Riserrectione as his encore at his 25.1.73 concert in the QEH - an all-Dowland recital to coincide with the publication of Diana Poulton's and Basil Lam's collected edn of the lute music. I was sitting in the middle of the front row .

            JB played the lute as he played the guitar -with his nails. Nowadays that is no longer politically correct, one can't do both, hence my brief flirtation with the lute - I play them, and a lot more early music, on the guitar.

            Comment

            • ardcarp
              Late member
              • Nov 2010
              • 11102

              #7
              I enjoyed the programme immensely, especially Italianate madgrigals sung in Danish (at least, I assume that's what it was). I too was waiting with bated breath for a reference to the 'underfloor chamber' as outlined in Sounds and Silence. I did wonder whether that was an invention of Rose Tremaine, but looking at Richard T's link (#3) I see it was not. However, it talks of 'tubes'. Didn't the novel have a trap door? I'm speaking from memory.

              Comment

              • Richard Tarleton

                #8
                I've lent my copy and so can't check, though I do seem to remember tubes.

                Comment

                • ardcarp
                  Late member
                  • Nov 2010
                  • 11102

                  #9
                  Originally posted by Richard Tarleton View Post
                  I've lent my copy and so can't check.
                  Ditto! It's lurking among the family somewhere.

                  Comment

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