Hey I see Cerys is giving us a spot of Dezuriks this morning though she's struggling with the pronunciation - perfect for a Sunday morning.
A quick glance around the schedules
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Lateralthinking1
Oh no, I remembered it at 7.30am, 8.30am and 9.30am, then forgot. It is on now. Thanks for the cue.
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Lateralthinking1
Ditto JC. Loved the Christy Moore track. I knew a little of the Jonathan Wilson cd - Gentle Spirit particularly. Pretty good.
(My phone rang towards the end so I was destined only to hear segments. There is always the I-Player for what I missed!)
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Originally posted by Lateralthinking1 View PostDitto JC. Loved the Christy Moore track. I knew a little of the Jonathan Wilson cd - Gentle Spirit particularly. Pretty good.
(My phone rang towards the end so I was destined only to hear segments. There is always the I-Player for what I missed!)
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Originally posted by johncorrigan View PostGlobal - I wondered if you had spotted this from the schedules.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b019pmvl
Here's a couple of possibly interesting R3 upcoming programmes, not particularly WM, but then what isn't....
Sunday 5 February
8.30-10.30pm
BBC RADIO 3
Drama On 3 – My Generation
A family saga covering four decades, My Generation offers a window into the drugs and pop-fuelled protest movement inspired by writer Alice Nutter’s own experience of the protest movement.
As part of the band Chumbawamba, Alice lived in a squat in Leeds for many years. Initially inspired by bands as diverse as The Fall, Wire, and Adam and the Ants and politically by the anarchist stance of Crass, Chumbawamba were at the forefront of the 1980s anarcho-punk movement, frequently playing benefit gigs in squats and small halls for various causesThe best of the BBC, with the latest news and sport headlines, weather, TV & radio highlights and much more from across the whole of BBC Online
and
Tuesday 7 February
8.10-8.30pm
BBC RADIO 3
Abigail Williams uncovers the lost story of Walter Harding, a British-born Chicagoan ragtime pianist who amassed the world's largest collection of popular songbooks and then left them to the Bodleian Library in Oxford.
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Lateralthinking1
Thank you for highlighting the play, Global. This is the one of the season that stood out when the list was issued. I hadn't realised that the broadcast was imminent. Alice Nutter's "Snow in July" was very good.
I listened to this programme after GQT yesterday and thought it had its moments - http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b01b8yy8
The oddly titled "Soul Music" returns soon, I think tomorrow, and the first edition features Gerry Rafferty's "Baker Street".
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When you're gone...
Originally posted by johncorrigan View PostI really enjoyed this - and I liked Jocelyn too.
Music composed specially for the programme, which provided a powerful and haunting counterpoint throughout
She started with a mournful list of the dead who had gone from her life.
This included her mother, who she recorded before her death at the age of 90.
Then some vox pop interviews - the music behind this, as her interviewees contemplated the inevitable, enhanced what could otherwise have been heard as mundane comments ....as the programme continued, the music became more emotionally affecting. Or maybe that's just how it affected this daft old bloke.
The big white nothingI worry about itthe coldness of the universeI worry about it
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Now this is bound to feature on a few people's schedules...
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handsomefortune
lots of interesting nam es involved in the line up. i would certainly like 'dub me tender' it to be in my collection ... hope the (double) album is featured on one of the r3 progs soon.
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Folk music on r3 Breakfast show? Open to interpretation...
The last track that Sara Mohr-Pietsch played this morning was a lovely song from Maddy Prior, plus a guitar player and an oud player.
Here is Maddy Prior and ensemble doing it live...
Pleasant to hear a bit of tune re-use...
If you could hie to Kolob...
Enjoy the videos and music you love, upload original content, and share it all with friends, family, and the world on YouTube.
Kingsfold
A woodwind quintet based on the old English folk tune "Kingsfold" transcribed by Ralph Vaughan Williams. Several popular church hymns use this tune such as "...
Clamanda (Sacred Harp version)
and the best known (in these parts)
Last edited by Globaltruth; 07-02-12, 11:39.
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