January 24th
Fancy a bit of plate smashing? Today is St Paul's Eve, "traditionally" celebrated by smashing pieces of pottery - in Cornwall, in the late 19th Century, miners would have the day off, and use the occasion to throw stones at a water pitcher until it was completely broken, club together to buy a new jug, and fill (and refill) it with beer. They called the activity "Paul Pitcher Day". Other traditions was for children to throw the broken bits of crockery at the doors of people's houses - or, into the Hallway, if anyone's door was open (in January???)
Makes one grateful for the invention of telly.
Today is also St Cadoc's Day, celebrating the Welsh priest whose activities include encounters (not always friendly) with King Arthur; and in Romania, today is celebrated as Unification Day (the union of Moldavia and Wallachia in 1859). The discovery of gold in Sacramento today in 1848 sparks the Californian Gold Rush, and in 1984 (!), Apple puts the Macintosh Personal Computer on sale.
Birthdays of Emperor Hadrian (76), Frederick the Great (1712), Pierre Beaumarchais (1732), and Edith Wharton (1862) - and Eliane Radigue is 87 today.
Caligula died in 41, as did both Randolph Churchill (1895) and, exactly seventy years later, his son, Winston; Edwin Fischer (1960).
And, forty years ago today on R3 before noon:
Your Midweek Choice: Mozart, Schumann, the entire Symphony 67 by Haydn, Parry, Delius, and Rubbra's Fifth Symphony (all of it)
This Week's Composers (continuing the "Court of Frederick the Great" - presumably mentioning the anniversary of the monarch's death)
Music for Organ: Franck, Piet Kee, and a new work by Michael Barlow
Music for French Horn & Piano: Whettam (another new work), Danzi, McCabe (another new work)
BBCSSO/Bryden Thomson: Dvorak "Czech Suite"; John Maxwell Geddes, "Lacuna" (guess what!); Dvorak Fourth Symphony (every last semiquaver of it)
Fancy a bit of plate smashing? Today is St Paul's Eve, "traditionally" celebrated by smashing pieces of pottery - in Cornwall, in the late 19th Century, miners would have the day off, and use the occasion to throw stones at a water pitcher until it was completely broken, club together to buy a new jug, and fill (and refill) it with beer. They called the activity "Paul Pitcher Day". Other traditions was for children to throw the broken bits of crockery at the doors of people's houses - or, into the Hallway, if anyone's door was open (in January???)
Makes one grateful for the invention of telly.
Today is also St Cadoc's Day, celebrating the Welsh priest whose activities include encounters (not always friendly) with King Arthur; and in Romania, today is celebrated as Unification Day (the union of Moldavia and Wallachia in 1859). The discovery of gold in Sacramento today in 1848 sparks the Californian Gold Rush, and in 1984 (!), Apple puts the Macintosh Personal Computer on sale.
Birthdays of Emperor Hadrian (76), Frederick the Great (1712), Pierre Beaumarchais (1732), and Edith Wharton (1862) - and Eliane Radigue is 87 today.
Caligula died in 41, as did both Randolph Churchill (1895) and, exactly seventy years later, his son, Winston; Edwin Fischer (1960).
And, forty years ago today on R3 before noon:
Your Midweek Choice: Mozart, Schumann, the entire Symphony 67 by Haydn, Parry, Delius, and Rubbra's Fifth Symphony (all of it)
This Week's Composers (continuing the "Court of Frederick the Great" - presumably mentioning the anniversary of the monarch's death)
Music for Organ: Franck, Piet Kee, and a new work by Michael Barlow
Music for French Horn & Piano: Whettam (another new work), Danzi, McCabe (another new work)
BBCSSO/Bryden Thomson: Dvorak "Czech Suite"; John Maxwell Geddes, "Lacuna" (guess what!); Dvorak Fourth Symphony (every last semiquaver of it)
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