BBC Radio 3 celebrates all aspects of classical singing across three weeks of special broadcasts, in a special season of programmes focusing on The Classical Voice on 15 June - 4 July, including a three-day residency in Cardiff.
Kiri Te Kanawa seems to be the main guest rather than the honourably one.
Did you know that we were listening to one of the programmes of the project?
On CD Review (Saturday, 9am-12.15pm) as part of the Classical Voice season, Building a Library puts the spotlight on Monteverdi’s Il ritorno d’Ulisse
Apart from the Early Music Show and the BaL we’ve already had, plus a couple of cursory nods to Bach (JS) and Handel, there is no chant, no polyphony (apart from being included in the EMS), no motet, no madrigal, no chamber or secular/sacred cantata, and no Baroque opera. I expect all these will be scattered through Breakfast, Essential Classics and In Tune but I don’t quite fancy sitting through to find out.
Still, I shall look out for some interesting discoveries, and I think this is much better programming than all those fests we had in the last few years.
Incidentally, how does this fit in?
Carousel by Rodgers and Hammerstein (4 July, 9am-12pm).
Kiri Te Kanawa seems to be the main guest rather than the honourably one.
Did you know that we were listening to one of the programmes of the project?
On CD Review (Saturday, 9am-12.15pm) as part of the Classical Voice season, Building a Library puts the spotlight on Monteverdi’s Il ritorno d’Ulisse
Apart from the Early Music Show and the BaL we’ve already had, plus a couple of cursory nods to Bach (JS) and Handel, there is no chant, no polyphony (apart from being included in the EMS), no motet, no madrigal, no chamber or secular/sacred cantata, and no Baroque opera. I expect all these will be scattered through Breakfast, Essential Classics and In Tune but I don’t quite fancy sitting through to find out.
Still, I shall look out for some interesting discoveries, and I think this is much better programming than all those fests we had in the last few years.
Incidentally, how does this fit in?
Carousel by Rodgers and Hammerstein (4 July, 9am-12pm).
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