Afternoon on 3 - Simon Rattle & Friends

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  • amateur51
    • Dec 2024

    Afternoon on 3 - Simon Rattle & Friends

    Four concerts in the Afternoon on 3 series (14:00-16:00) w/c 08 July 2013 offer a chance to listen to music-making featuring recent concerts conducted around central Europe by Sir Simon Rattle - mainly (every day) with the orchestra of which he's Chief Conductor, the Berliner Philharmoniker (Berlin Philharmonic), but also with the Vienna Philharmonic and Bavarian Radio Symphony Orchestras. Music from Haydn to Ligeti, via the likes of Beethoven, Schumann, Dvorak, Sibelius and one of this year's centenary composers, Witold Lutoslawski.

    Monday 08 July

    Vaughan Williams: Fantasia on a Theme by Thomas Tallis
    Berlin Philharmonic,
    Conductor Simon Rattle

    2.15pm
    Dvorak: Biblical Songs
    Magdalena Kozená (mezzo-soprano)

    2.35pm
    Beethoven: Symphony No. 6 in F major (Pastoral)
    Berlin Philharmonic,
    Conductor Simon Rattle

    3.25pm
    Ravel:
    Daphnis et Chloé 2
    Berlin Philharmonic
    Conductor Simon Rattle

    3.45pm
    Lutoslawski: Symphony No. 3
    Berlin Philharmonic,
    Conductor Simon Rattle.

    Tuesday 09 July 2013


    Today's performances by the week's featured conductor and orchestra, the top pairing of Simon Rattle and his Berlin Philharmonic, are complemented by a concert conducted at last year's Lucerne Festival by Rattle's equally distinguished predecessor in Berlin, Claudio Abbado. Abbado and his acclaimed Lucerne Festival Orchestra play a Beethovenian hymn to freedom - Egmont - and Mozart's final great masterpiece, his Requiem. Rattle conducts his Berliners in Haydn and Ravel and lets his hair down in Dvorak.
    Presented by Louise Fryer.

    Beethoven: Egmont - complete incidental music
    Juliane Banse (soprano),
    Bruno Ganz (narrator),
    Lucerne Festival Orchestra,
    Conductor Claudio Abbado.

    2.30pm
    Mozart, ed. Franz Beyer and Robert Levin: Requiem
    Anna Prohaska (soprano),
    Sara Mingardo (contralto),
    Maximilian Schmitt (tenor),
    René Pape (bass),
    Bavarian Radio Chorus,
    Swedish Radio Chorus,
    Lucerne Festival Orchestra,
    Conductor Claudio Abbado.

    3.25pm
    Haydn: Symphony no. 95 in C minor
    3.45pm
    Dvorak: Carnival Overture
    3.55pm
    Debussy Jeux, poème dansé pour orchestre

    Wednesday 10 July 2013

    Afternoon on 3 presents Simon Rattle conducting not his own Berlin Philharmonic, but probably Germany's second-best orchestra, the Bavarian Radio Symphony Orchestra. Symphonies by Haydn and Schumann frame the concert, and they're joined by the Canadian soprano Barbara Hannigan in stunning pieces by Sibelius and Ligeti.

    Haydn: Symphony No. 91 in E flat major
    Bavarian Radio Symphony Orchestra,
    Conductor Simon Rattle.

    2.20pm
    Sibelius: Luonnotar
    Ligeti: Mysteries of the Macabre
    Barbara Hannigan (soprano),
    Bavarian Radio Symphony Orchestra,
    Conductor Simon Rattle.

    2.40pm
    Schumann: Symphony no. 2 in C major
    Bavarian Radio Symphony Orchestra,
    Conductor Simon Rattle.

    Thursday 11 July 2013


    Radio 3's celebrations of Verdi's bicentenary continue with his rarely-heard early opera Alzira, starring Ileana Cotrubas, Francisco Araiza and Renato Bruson. It's a would-be tale of blood and thunder in sixteenth-century Peru, with the Incas fighting against Spanish imperial domination - but surprisingly, both sides keep releasing rather than killing each other. Maybe that's why it's never been popular... The Inca princess Alzira is caught at the centre of the conflict, as the Inca leader Zamoro (whom she loves) fights the Spanish Governor Gusmano (whom she doesn't) for her favours. Who will she end up with? Tune in at 2 o'clock to find out.

    Plus, after the opera, Louise Fryer presents a Sibelius Symphony performed by this week's featured performers: Simon Rattle and the orchestra of which he's Chief Conductor, the Berlin Philharmonic.

    Verdi: Alzira
    Alzira, Inca princess ..... Ileana Cotrubas (soprano)
    Zamoro, Inca leader ..... Francisco Araiza (tenor)
    Gusmano, Spanish Governor of Peru ... Renato Bruson (baritone)
    Alvaro, Gusmano's father ... Jan-Hendrik Rootering (bass)
    Ovando, Spanish Duke ... Donald George (tenor)
    Ataliba, Alzira's father ..... Daniel Bonilla (tenor)
    Zuma, her maid ... Sofia Lis (mezzo-soprano)
    Otumbo, Inca warrior ... Alexandru Ionita (tenor)
    Bavarian Radio Chorus,
    Munich Radio Orchestra,
    Conductor Lamberto Gardelli.

    3.35pm
    Sibelius: Symphony no. 4 in A minor
    Berlin Philharmonic,
    Conductor Simon Rattle.

    Friday 12 July 2013

    Jonathan Swain rounds off her week [it says here] featuring Simon Rattle and great central European orchestras with him conducting the Vienna Philharmonic as well as his own Berlin Philharmonic. There's Schumann's large-scale cantata 'Paradise and the Peri' from Vienna, and Beethoven's Seventh Symphony to end the week from Berlin.

    Ligeti: Atmospheres
    Wagner: Prelude to Act 1 of Lohengrin
    Berlin Philharmonic,
    Conductor Simon Rattle.

    2.15pm
    Schumann: Das Paradies und die Peri
    Annette Dasch (soprano),
    Susan Gritton (soprano),
    Bernarda Fink (contralto),
    Topi Lehtipuu (tenor),
    Andrew Staples (tenor),
    Florian Boesch (bass),
    Arnold Schoenberg Chorus,
    Vienna Philharmonic,
    Conductor Simon Rattle.

    3.45pm
    Beethoven: Symphony no. 7 in A major
    Berlin Philharmonic,
    Conductor Simon Rattle.
  • cloughie
    Full Member
    • Dec 2011
    • 22180

    #2
    Originally posted by amateur51 View Post
    Four concerts in the Afternoon on 3 series (14:00-16:00) w/c 08 July 2013 offer a chance to listen to music-making featuring recent concerts conducted around central Europe by Sir Simon Rattle - mainly (every day) with the orchestra of which he's Chief Conductor, the Berliner Philharmoniker (Berlin Philharmonic), but also with the Vienna Philharmonic and Bavarian Radio Symphony Orchestras. Music from Haydn to Ligeti, via the likes of Beethoven, Schumann, Dvorak, Sibelius and one of this year's centenary composers, Witold Lutoslawski.

    Monday 08 July

    Vaughan Williams: Fantasia on a Theme by Thomas Tallis
    Berlin Philharmonic,
    Conductor Simon Rattle

    2.15pm
    Dvorak: Biblical Songs
    Magdalena Kozená (mezzo-soprano)

    2.35pm
    Beethoven: Symphony No. 6 in F major (Pastoral)
    Berlin Philharmonic,
    Conductor Simon Rattle

    3.25pm
    Ravel:
    Daphnis et Chloé 2
    Berlin Philharmonic
    Conductor Simon Rattle

    3.45pm
    Lutoslawski: Symphony No. 3
    Berlin Philharmonic,
    Conductor Simon Rattle.

    Tuesday 09 July 2013


    Today's performances by the week's featured conductor and orchestra, the top pairing of Simon Rattle and his Berlin Philharmonic, are complemented by a concert conducted at last year's Lucerne Festival by Rattle's equally distinguished predecessor in Berlin, Claudio Abbado. Abbado and his acclaimed Lucerne Festival Orchestra play a Beethovenian hymn to freedom - Egmont - and Mozart's final great masterpiece, his Requiem. Rattle conducts his Berliners in Haydn and Ravel and lets his hair down in Dvorak.
    Presented by Louise Fryer.

    Beethoven: Egmont - complete incidental music
    Juliane Banse (soprano),
    Bruno Ganz (narrator),
    Lucerne Festival Orchestra,
    Conductor Claudio Abbado.

    2.30pm
    Mozart, ed. Franz Beyer and Robert Levin: Requiem
    Anna Prohaska (soprano),
    Sara Mingardo (contralto),
    Maximilian Schmitt (tenor),
    René Pape (bass),
    Bavarian Radio Chorus,
    Swedish Radio Chorus,
    Lucerne Festival Orchestra,
    Conductor Claudio Abbado.

    3.25pm
    Haydn: Symphony no. 95 in C minor
    3.45pm
    Dvorak: Carnival Overture
    3.55pm
    Debussy Jeux, poème dansé pour orchestre

    Wednesday 10 July 2013

    Afternoon on 3 presents Simon Rattle conducting not his own Berlin Philharmonic, but probably Germany's second-best orchestra, the Bavarian Radio Symphony Orchestra. Symphonies by Haydn and Schumann frame the concert, and they're joined by the Canadian soprano Barbara Hannigan in stunning pieces by Sibelius and Ligeti.

    Haydn: Symphony No. 91 in E flat major
    Bavarian Radio Symphony Orchestra,
    Conductor Simon Rattle.

    2.20pm
    Sibelius: Luonnotar
    Ligeti: Mysteries of the Macabre
    Barbara Hannigan (soprano),
    Bavarian Radio Symphony Orchestra,
    Conductor Simon Rattle.

    2.40pm
    Schumann: Symphony no. 2 in C major
    Bavarian Radio Symphony Orchestra,
    Conductor Simon Rattle.

    Thursday 11 July 2013


    Radio 3's celebrations of Verdi's bicentenary continue with his rarely-heard early opera Alzira, starring Ileana Cotrubas, Francisco Araiza and Renato Bruson. It's a would-be tale of blood and thunder in sixteenth-century Peru, with the Incas fighting against Spanish imperial domination - but surprisingly, both sides keep releasing rather than killing each other. Maybe that's why it's never been popular... The Inca princess Alzira is caught at the centre of the conflict, as the Inca leader Zamoro (whom she loves) fights the Spanish Governor Gusmano (whom she doesn't) for her favours. Who will she end up with? Tune in at 2 o'clock to find out.

    Plus, after the opera, Louise Fryer presents a Sibelius Symphony performed by this week's featured performers: Simon Rattle and the orchestra of which he's Chief Conductor, the Berlin Philharmonic.

    Verdi: Alzira
    Alzira, Inca princess ..... Ileana Cotrubas (soprano)
    Zamoro, Inca leader ..... Francisco Araiza (tenor)
    Gusmano, Spanish Governor of Peru ... Renato Bruson (baritone)
    Alvaro, Gusmano's father ... Jan-Hendrik Rootering (bass)
    Ovando, Spanish Duke ... Donald George (tenor)
    Ataliba, Alzira's father ..... Daniel Bonilla (tenor)
    Zuma, her maid ... Sofia Lis (mezzo-soprano)
    Otumbo, Inca warrior ... Alexandru Ionita (tenor)
    Bavarian Radio Chorus,
    Munich Radio Orchestra,
    Conductor Lamberto Gardelli.

    3.35pm
    Sibelius: Symphony no. 4 in A minor
    Berlin Philharmonic,
    Conductor Simon Rattle.

    Friday 12 July 2013

    Jonathan Swain rounds off her week [it says here] featuring Simon Rattle and great central European orchestras with him conducting the Vienna Philharmonic as well as his own Berlin Philharmonic. There's Schumann's large-scale cantata 'Paradise and the Peri' from Vienna, and Beethoven's Seventh Symphony to end the week from Berlin.

    Ligeti: Atmospheres
    Wagner: Prelude to Act 1 of Lohengrin
    Berlin Philharmonic,
    Conductor Simon Rattle.

    2.15pm
    Schumann: Das Paradies und die Peri
    Annette Dasch (soprano),
    Susan Gritton (soprano),
    Bernarda Fink (contralto),
    Topi Lehtipuu (tenor),
    Andrew Staples (tenor),
    Florian Boesch (bass),
    Arnold Schoenberg Chorus,
    Vienna Philharmonic,
    Conductor Simon Rattle.

    3.45pm
    Beethoven: Symphony no. 7 in A major
    Berlin Philharmonic,
    Conductor Simon Rattle.
    Looks good - don't think I've heard Rattle conducting a Schumann Symphony before and his Beethoven cycle on EMI is with the VPO.

    Comment

    • Sir Velo
      Full Member
      • Oct 2012
      • 3258

      #3
      Thanks for the Heads Up Ammy!

      VW on a Rattle concert? Is he finally embracing the grand old man's music?

      Comment

      • amateur51

        #4
        On Monday I missed the RVW but managed to catch Magdalena Kozená in Dvorak Biblical Songs which I enjoyed, particularly her dark-hued voice and its sexy fast vibrato.

        An interesting (but not entirely convincing to these ears) performance of Beethoven symphony no 6 by Rattle/BPO followed but the Lutoslawski symphony no 3 was triffic - I realised that the first time I heard it 'live' was with CBSO/Rattle, in RFH I guess, many years ago. Daphnis et Chloé was in BSO/Munch-class I thought

        Comment

        • BBMmk2
          Late Member
          • Nov 2010
          • 20908

          #5
          Ah, I hadnt been paying much attention to the schedules. I've missed monmdays but thank heavens for iplayer.
          Don’t cry for me
          I go where music was born

          J S Bach 1685-1750

          Comment

          • Nick Armstrong
            Host
            • Nov 2010
            • 26569

            #6
            I heard the first half of the Mozart Requiem today - absolutely terrific, not sure I've ever heard those early movements better played or sung!
            "...the isle is full of noises,
            Sounds and sweet airs, that give delight and hurt not.
            Sometimes a thousand twangling instruments
            Will hum about mine ears, and sometime voices..."

            Comment

            • BBMmk2
              Late Member
              • Nov 2010
              • 20908

              #7
              I am sorely tempted to subscribe to their Digitalo Concert Hall, but at the moment, my bidget wouldnt satretch that far. It's either that or less cd buying!!
              Don’t cry for me
              I go where music was born

              J S Bach 1685-1750

              Comment

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