April 23rd
Shakespeare's birthday (possibly) and final day (certainly) - no greater cause for national and international celebration. (Hence World Book Day today - and, indeed, International Pixel-Stained Technopeasant Day ; intended to encourage writers to post "professional quality" works for free on the Internet.)
And St George's Day. Scotland has one of the apostles, Ireland and Wales have local saints ... the English celebrate a saint who largely didn't exist in the sense that he certainly didn't slay any mythical beasts - nor had even heard of a place called England. I blame the Normans - we used to have a native-born national Saint (Edward the Confessor), and we have quite a few to chose from (Alban, Bede, my favourites) but the Normans returning home from the Crusades decided in favour of George. It is, apparently, a good day for picking dandelions to make wine (but only if it's a sunny day) and customarily (until 1917, at any rate) the people of Gloucester would present the monarch with a pie cooked with lampreys caught in the River Severn (not exactly tactful, given Henry I's experiences) on this day. Lots of village parades in older times, in which effigies of the Saint, and of the Dragon his name became embroiled with from the 13th Century - but very little emphasis on the real George, an early 4th Century soldier in the Roman Army from modern-day Turkey, who became a Christian at the time of the Emperor Diocletian's persecution of the faith. George was subjected to "every imaginable torture" but refused to recant, and was eventually beheaded on this date in 303. He's also the Patron Saint of Ethiopia and Georgia.
Also on this Date: Edward III introduces the Order of the Garter (1348); the Bavarian Beer Purity Law is introduced in Ingolstadt (1516); Shakespeare's Merry Wives of Windsor is [possibly] premiered in front of Elizabeth I at a feast for the Order of the Garter (1597); Boston Latin School, the oldest in the United States, opens (1635); the Coronation of Charles II in Westminster Abbey (1661 - a memorable day for Samuel Pepys who records in his Diary But so great a noise, that I could make but little of the Musique; and endeed, it was lost to everybody. But I had so great a list to pisse, that I went out a little while before the King had done all his ceremonies and went round the abby to Westminster-hall, all the way within rayles, and 10000 people, with the ground coverd with blue cloth - and Scaffolds all the way. Into the hall I got - where it was very fine with hangings and scaffolds, one upon another, full of brave ladies. And my wife in one little one on the right hand); the Coronation of Queen Anne also takes place on this date (1702); Mozart's Il Re Pastore is premiered at the Theatre in the Palace of the Archbishop in Salzburg (1775); the main Building of the University of Notre Dame is destroyed by fire (1870); Gilbert & Sullivan's Patience is premiered at the Opera Comique in London (1881 - six months later it moves to the newly-opened Savoy Theatre, the first Theatre completely lit by electricity); the Shakespeare Memorial Theatre is opened (1932 - six years after the previous building had been destroyed by fire); Bartok's [Second] Violin Concerto is premiered by Zoltán Székely with the Concertgebouw Orchestra conducted by Mengelberg (1939); a bombing raid on Exeter begins the "Baedeker Blitz"; a series of bombing raids targetting cultural [rather than industrial] centres in England, in retaliation for successful British aerial bombing of Lubeck and Rostock the previous month (1942); Messiaen gives the premiere of his Livre d'Orgue to inaugurate the new organ at the Villa Berg in Stuttgart (1952); George Stevens' film of Shane with Alan Ladd and Jack Palance is released (1953); students at Columbia University protesting against the Vietnam War seize control of the Administrative buildings and shut the University down (1968); more than 3000 Hindus are murdered as they attempt to emigrate to India by Pakistani troops and Bangladesh civilians opposed to independence in the Jathibhanga district of Bangladesh (1971); Harold Pinter's No Man's Land is premiered at Old Vic Theatre in London (1975); Blair Peach, a 33-year-old teacher is struck on the head by a member of the Metropolitan Police Special Patrol Group as he demonstrates outside a National Front Election meeting - he dies the next day (1979 - an investigation by the Police Complaints Bureau concludes that one of six officers struck the blow, and the remaining five have obstructed the investigation); Coca-Cola releases New Coke, to a "new, improved recipe", announcing that the old recipe will be withdrawn (1985 - public outcry is unanimously against the new recipe, and it is itself withdrawn within three months); and the first ever video appears on YouTube (2005).
Birthdays Today include (besides, possibly, the Bard's): Robert Fayrfax (1464); Ruggero Leoncavallo (1857); Max Planck and Ethel Smyth (both 1858); Michel Fokine (1880); Albert Coates (1882); Ngaio Marsh (1895 - speaking of A Surfeit of Lampreys); Lee Miller (1907); Simone Simon (1910); Shirley Temple (1928); Roy Orbison (1937); Victoria Glendinning (1938); Ed Stewart (1941); Bernadette Devlin McAliskey (1947); Michael Moore (1954); Barry Douglas (1960); John Hannah (1962); Gianandrea Noseda (1964); ... and George Steiner is 90 today
Final Days for (ditto): Aethelred the Unready (1016); Boris Godunov (1605); Henry Vaughan (1695); William Wordsworth (1850); Rupert Brooke (1915); Buster Crabbe (1983); Otto Preminger (1986); Paulette Goddard (1990); Satyajit Ray (1992); Robert Farnon and John Mills (both 2005); Boris Yeltsin (2007); Peter Porter (2010); John Sullivan (2011);
And the Radio 3 schedules for the morning of Sunday, 23rd April, 1989 were:
Tudor Church Music 4th in a series of 16 programmes (Wylkynson Salve regina; Sheppard Verbum caro & Reges Tharsis)
Smetana Quartet 5th of 6 programmes (Schubert Scherzo from the Trout 5tet; Brahms Adagio from Clar 5tet; Mozart S5tet K515)
Your Concert Choice: Shostakovich October; Mozart Piano Concerto No 17 in F (K 453); Vaughan Williams Ten Blake Songs; Schubert String Quartet in G minor (D 173); George Lloyd Symphony No 9
Music Weekly: features on Dichterliebe, Herbert Howells, a Letter from Russia, and a conversation with Jane Manning.
BBCWSO conducted by Tadaaki Otaka (Beethoven Coriolan Ovt; Strauss Tod & Verk; Brahms Pno Conc #1 [with Peter Donohoe] - plus an Interval Reading)
Shakespeare's birthday (possibly) and final day (certainly) - no greater cause for national and international celebration. (Hence World Book Day today - and, indeed, International Pixel-Stained Technopeasant Day ; intended to encourage writers to post "professional quality" works for free on the Internet.)
And St George's Day. Scotland has one of the apostles, Ireland and Wales have local saints ... the English celebrate a saint who largely didn't exist in the sense that he certainly didn't slay any mythical beasts - nor had even heard of a place called England. I blame the Normans - we used to have a native-born national Saint (Edward the Confessor), and we have quite a few to chose from (Alban, Bede, my favourites) but the Normans returning home from the Crusades decided in favour of George. It is, apparently, a good day for picking dandelions to make wine (but only if it's a sunny day) and customarily (until 1917, at any rate) the people of Gloucester would present the monarch with a pie cooked with lampreys caught in the River Severn (not exactly tactful, given Henry I's experiences) on this day. Lots of village parades in older times, in which effigies of the Saint, and of the Dragon his name became embroiled with from the 13th Century - but very little emphasis on the real George, an early 4th Century soldier in the Roman Army from modern-day Turkey, who became a Christian at the time of the Emperor Diocletian's persecution of the faith. George was subjected to "every imaginable torture" but refused to recant, and was eventually beheaded on this date in 303. He's also the Patron Saint of Ethiopia and Georgia.
Also on this Date: Edward III introduces the Order of the Garter (1348); the Bavarian Beer Purity Law is introduced in Ingolstadt (1516); Shakespeare's Merry Wives of Windsor is [possibly] premiered in front of Elizabeth I at a feast for the Order of the Garter (1597); Boston Latin School, the oldest in the United States, opens (1635); the Coronation of Charles II in Westminster Abbey (1661 - a memorable day for Samuel Pepys who records in his Diary But so great a noise, that I could make but little of the Musique; and endeed, it was lost to everybody. But I had so great a list to pisse, that I went out a little while before the King had done all his ceremonies and went round the abby to Westminster-hall, all the way within rayles, and 10000 people, with the ground coverd with blue cloth - and Scaffolds all the way. Into the hall I got - where it was very fine with hangings and scaffolds, one upon another, full of brave ladies. And my wife in one little one on the right hand); the Coronation of Queen Anne also takes place on this date (1702); Mozart's Il Re Pastore is premiered at the Theatre in the Palace of the Archbishop in Salzburg (1775); the main Building of the University of Notre Dame is destroyed by fire (1870); Gilbert & Sullivan's Patience is premiered at the Opera Comique in London (1881 - six months later it moves to the newly-opened Savoy Theatre, the first Theatre completely lit by electricity); the Shakespeare Memorial Theatre is opened (1932 - six years after the previous building had been destroyed by fire); Bartok's [Second] Violin Concerto is premiered by Zoltán Székely with the Concertgebouw Orchestra conducted by Mengelberg (1939); a bombing raid on Exeter begins the "Baedeker Blitz"; a series of bombing raids targetting cultural [rather than industrial] centres in England, in retaliation for successful British aerial bombing of Lubeck and Rostock the previous month (1942); Messiaen gives the premiere of his Livre d'Orgue to inaugurate the new organ at the Villa Berg in Stuttgart (1952); George Stevens' film of Shane with Alan Ladd and Jack Palance is released (1953); students at Columbia University protesting against the Vietnam War seize control of the Administrative buildings and shut the University down (1968); more than 3000 Hindus are murdered as they attempt to emigrate to India by Pakistani troops and Bangladesh civilians opposed to independence in the Jathibhanga district of Bangladesh (1971); Harold Pinter's No Man's Land is premiered at Old Vic Theatre in London (1975); Blair Peach, a 33-year-old teacher is struck on the head by a member of the Metropolitan Police Special Patrol Group as he demonstrates outside a National Front Election meeting - he dies the next day (1979 - an investigation by the Police Complaints Bureau concludes that one of six officers struck the blow, and the remaining five have obstructed the investigation); Coca-Cola releases New Coke, to a "new, improved recipe", announcing that the old recipe will be withdrawn (1985 - public outcry is unanimously against the new recipe, and it is itself withdrawn within three months); and the first ever video appears on YouTube (2005).
Birthdays Today include (besides, possibly, the Bard's): Robert Fayrfax (1464); Ruggero Leoncavallo (1857); Max Planck and Ethel Smyth (both 1858); Michel Fokine (1880); Albert Coates (1882); Ngaio Marsh (1895 - speaking of A Surfeit of Lampreys); Lee Miller (1907); Simone Simon (1910); Shirley Temple (1928); Roy Orbison (1937); Victoria Glendinning (1938); Ed Stewart (1941); Bernadette Devlin McAliskey (1947); Michael Moore (1954); Barry Douglas (1960); John Hannah (1962); Gianandrea Noseda (1964); ... and George Steiner is 90 today
Final Days for (ditto): Aethelred the Unready (1016); Boris Godunov (1605); Henry Vaughan (1695); William Wordsworth (1850); Rupert Brooke (1915); Buster Crabbe (1983); Otto Preminger (1986); Paulette Goddard (1990); Satyajit Ray (1992); Robert Farnon and John Mills (both 2005); Boris Yeltsin (2007); Peter Porter (2010); John Sullivan (2011);
And the Radio 3 schedules for the morning of Sunday, 23rd April, 1989 were:
Tudor Church Music 4th in a series of 16 programmes (Wylkynson Salve regina; Sheppard Verbum caro & Reges Tharsis)
Smetana Quartet 5th of 6 programmes (Schubert Scherzo from the Trout 5tet; Brahms Adagio from Clar 5tet; Mozart S5tet K515)
Your Concert Choice: Shostakovich October; Mozart Piano Concerto No 17 in F (K 453); Vaughan Williams Ten Blake Songs; Schubert String Quartet in G minor (D 173); George Lloyd Symphony No 9
Music Weekly: features on Dichterliebe, Herbert Howells, a Letter from Russia, and a conversation with Jane Manning.
BBCWSO conducted by Tadaaki Otaka (Beethoven Coriolan Ovt; Strauss Tod & Verk; Brahms Pno Conc #1 [with Peter Donohoe] - plus an Interval Reading)
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