Aldeburgh Festival 2013
Tom Service visits Aldeburgh for a staging of Peter Grimes on the beach. Plus the vitality of Welsh music, Ronald Blythe on working with Britten, and Paul Elie's book on Bach.
Tom Service visits the Aldeburgh Festival as it prepares to mark the centenary of the birth of Suffolk composer Benjamin Britten with a staging on the beach of his opera Peter Grimes. Ronald Blythe, the author of Akenfield - the book of rural realism based in Suffolk talks to Tom about his time working with Britten, and as Radio 3 celebrates British music, there's a look at the vitality of Welsh composition both past and present.
Author Paul Elie discusses his new book Reinventing Bach. Conductor and Bach expert Andrew Parrott gives his verdict on the book and its take on Bach as a forerunner of the technological age.
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Chapters
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Grimes on the Beach
Tom visits the set of Grimes on the Beach in Aldeburgh
Duration: 17:30
Ronald Blythe
Tom speaks to author Ronald Blythe about working with Benjamin Britten.
Duration: 11:10
Reinventing Bach
A new book on Bach's music today.
Duration: 08:50
Celebrating British Music: Wales
Composers Paul Mealor and Guto Pryderi Puw discuss Welsh composition both past and present
Duration: 06:45
Grimes on the Beach
Tom Service visits the Aldeburgh Festival as it prepares to mark the centenary of the birth of Suffolk composer Benjamin Britten with a staging on the beach of his opera Peter Grimes.
Tom meets the director Tim Albery, singers Alan Oke and Giselle Allen who are playing Grimes and Ellen Orford, two local schoolboys Fleetwood Daniels and Nathan Hayward who are playing the Apprentice and Simon Reid who has lived in Aldeburgh all his life and works on the local lifeboat, who is playing the role of Dr. Crabbe.ÌýÌý
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Ronald Blythe
Ronald Blythe, author of the book Akenfield, had originally gone to the Suffolk coast in the 1950’s as an aspiring young writer but found himself drawn into Benjamin Britten’s circle and began working for the Aldeburgh Festival. He has now written about this experience in his new book The Time By The Sea. Tom met Ronald Blythe in the garden of his house in Wormingford (which originally belonged to the artist John Nash) to talk about his memories of Benjamin Britten.Ìý
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Reinventing Bach
In Reinventing Bach, Paul Elie tells the story of how musicians including Albert Schwietzer, Pablo Casals, Glenn Gould and ÌýYo-Yo Ma have made Bach’s music new in our time, restoring Bach as a universally revered composer and revolutionizing the ways that music figures in our lives.Ìý Tom talks to the author and reviews the book with the conductor and Bach specialist Andrew Parrott.Ìý
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Celebrating British Music: Wales
As Radio 3 celebrates British music, Tom looks at the vitality of Welsh composition both past and present in the company of two of today’s most prominent Welsh composers Guto Pryderi Puw and Paul Mealor.
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Broadcast
- Sat 8 Jun 2013 12:1591Èȱ¬ Radio 3
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The evolution of video game music
Tom Service traces the rise of an exciting new genre, from bleeps to responsive scores.
Why music can literally make us lose track of time
Try our psychoacoustic experiment to see how tempo can affect your timekeeping abilities.
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Music Matters
The stories that matter, the people that matter, the music that matters