15 今週のお気に入り 12

ウィークエンドサンシャイン
ブロードキャスターピーター・バラカンのナビゲートで送るウィークエンド・ミュージックマガジン。独特の嗅覚とこだわりの哲学でセレクトしたグッド・サウンドと、ワールドワイドな音楽情報を伝える。
http://www4.nhk.or.jp/sunshine/
放送日: 2015年 3月21日(土)
放送時間: 午前7:20〜午前 9:00(100分)
ピーター・バラカン

THIS WEEK'S PLAYLIST
http://www4.nhk.or.jp/sunshine/66/
(曲名 / アーティスト名 // アルバム名)
01. My Babe / Little Walter // The Best Of Little Walter
02. (I’m Your) Hoochie Coochie Man / Muddy Waters // The Best Of Muddy Waters
03. Three Hundred Pounds Of Joy / Howlin’ Wolf // The Real Folk Blues
04. I Can’t Quit You Baby / Otis Rush // The Cobra Sessions 1956 - 1958
05. Let Me Love You Baby / Buddy Guy // The Complete Chess Studio Recordings
06. Wang Dang Doodle / Koko Taylor // My Chess Box
07. You Can’t Judge A Book By Its Cover / Bo Diddley // His Best
08. I Just Want To Make Love To You / Etta James // Rocks The House
09. Little Red Rooster / The Rolling Stones // Singles Collection: The London Years
10. You Need Love / Muddy Waters // The Chess Box
11. You Need Loving / The Small Faces // The Anthology 1965 - 1967
12. You Shook Me / Jeff Beck Group // Truth
13. Diddy Wah Diddy / Captain Beefheart & The Magic Band // The Dust Blows Forward: An Anthology
14. Back Door Man / The Doors // The Doors
15. Dead Presidents / J. Geils Band // The J. Geils Band Anthology: Houseparty
16. Bring It On Home / Joan Osborne // Bring It On Home
17. Seventh Son / Mose Allison // Greatest Hits
18. I Love The Life I Live / Georgie Fame & The Blue Flames // Fame At Last!
19. Hidden Charms / Elvis Costello // Kojak Variety
20. Spoonful / Willie Dixon // I Am The Blues
21. Dustin’ Off The Bass / Rob Wasserman w Willie Dixon and Al Duncan // Trios


Travelling Folk
Bruce MacGregor presents Radio Scotland's flagship folk programme and brings you the very best of today's music and song.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00tlyrt

Jerry Douglas
Thu 19 Mar 2015
21:05
BBC Radio Scotland
http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b05q0l3d
Renowned Dobro star and record producer Jerry Douglas joins Bruce Macgregor, for a special edition of Travelling Folk. Jerry full of stories, shares his love of music and brings a few surprises with his music choices.


Jazz Record Requests
Jazz records from across the genre, played in special sequences to highlight the wonders of jazz history. All pieces have been specifically requested by Radio 3 listeners
http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b006tnn9

Sat 21 Mar 2015
17:00
BBC Radio 3
http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b05mq5tb
From requests sent in by listeners, Alyn Shipton selects records by drummer Shelly Manne with Andre Previn at the piano, and saxophonist Lew Tabackin. Plus a contemporary interpretation of a jazz standard by Annie Lennox.

Music Played

01. Clip Joint
Lil Hardin Armstrong & Her Swing Orchestra
Performer: Franz Jackson, Albert Wynn, Bill Martin, Lil Hardin Armstrong, Darnell Howard, Preston Jackson, Booker Washington, Leroi Nabors, George "Pops" Foster
The Living Legends: Lil Hardin Armstrong
Riverside, Tr.5

02. Wouldn't It Be Loverly
Shelly Manne
Performer: Leroy Vinnegar, André Previn, Shelly Manne
MY FAIR LADY
CONTEMPORARY, Tr.4

03. Can't Buy Me Love
Johnny Spence Orchestra & Ella Fitzgerald
Hello Dolly
Verve, Tr.3

04. Death Ray Boogie
Pete Johnson
Performer: Pete Johnson, A. G. Godley, Al Hall
Boogie Woogie
Proper, Tr.22

05. Humoresque
Art Tatum
Complete Original American Decca Recordings
Definitive, Tr.4

06. I'm Glad There Is You
Carmen McRae
Performer: Carmen McRae, Frank Hunter’s Orchestra
Complete Kapp Recordings
Frseh Sound, Tr.5

07. Darktown Strutter's Ball
Jack Hylton with Coleman Hawkins
Performer: Benny Daniels, Stan Roderick, Jack Bentley, Al Thomas, Joe Crossman, Billy Ternent, Lew Stevenson, Woolf Phillips, Stanley Howard, Leslie Gilbert, Freddy Schweitzer, Billy Hill, Bruce Trent, George Swift, Jack Hylton, Coleman Hawkins
1927 - 1939, Tr.10

08. My Ideal
Lew Tabackin
Performer: Lew Tabackin, ts; Don Friedman, Shelly Manne, Bob Daugherty.
Dual Nature
Inner City, Tr.5

09. This Is My Story, This Is My Song
Thelonious Monk
Monk Alone
Columbia, Tr.1

10. Gimme Five
John Abercrombie
Performer: Mark Feldman, Adam Nussbaum, Kenny Wheeler, Dan Wall
Open Land
ECM, Tr.4

11. Get Happy
Ken Moule
Performer: Arthur Watts, Roy Sidwell, Dave Usden, Ken Moule, Lennie Breslaw, Don Cooper, Keith Barry
Arranged Ken Moule
DECCA, Tr.1

12. Take The "A" Train
Duke Ellington
Performer: Rex Stewart, Joe Nanton, Barney Bigard, Duke Ellington, Fred Guy, Sonny Greer, Juan Tizol, Otto Hardwick, Ben Webster, Wardell Jones, Jimmy Blanton, Harry Carney, Lawrence Brown, Johnny Hodges
The Indispensible: Vols 7/ 8, Tr.1

13. Mood Indigo
Annie Lennox
Performer: Chris Hill, Nichol Thomson, Simon Finch, Annie Lennox, Mike Stevens, Neil Wilkinson, Steven Hussey
Nostalgia
Island Records, Tr.12


Geoffrey Smith's Jazz
Geoffrey Smith's Jazz does exactly what it says on the tin: a weekly programme in which Geoffrey Smith shares his love of jazz, through an exploration of its great writers, singers and players, as told from his own individual perspective.

Each programme take us through his personally-selected playlist of tracks. It's loosely-themed; maybe a great artist, a jazz style or something more off-the-wall. But that serves as just the start of a fascinating journey to the heart of the music Geoffrey is so passionate about.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b01h5z0s

Joe Henderson
Sun 22 Mar 2015
00:00
BBC Radio 3
http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b05mqbtg
In a class by himself, tenor saxophonist Joe Henderson (1937-2001) combined edginess, abstraction and elegance, with the likes of Horace Silver and in classic recordings of his own. Geoffrey Smith salutes a distinctive voice and a great career.


Private Passions
Guests from all walks of life discuss their musical loves and hates.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b006tnv3

Robert Cohan
Sun 22 Mar 2015
12:00
BBC Radio 3
http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b05mqbtq
Robert Cohan is the founding father of contemporary dance in Britain. Born in Brooklyn in 1925, he was first struck by the power of dance whilst on leave from serving in France during the Second World War, when he was taken to see a ballet at Sadler's Wells. Back in New York in 1946, a single modern dance class at the Martha Graham studio convinced him of his vocation. He worked with Graham for almost two decades before moving to London in the late sixties, to found what became the London Contemporary Dance Theatre. Cohan defined the style of British contemporary dance with his breadth of vision, challenging physical style and inspirational teaching. And virtually all the major figures in 20th-century choreography have been influenced by Cohan - Siobhan Davies and Richard Alston to name just two.

Ahead of his 90th birthday celebrations at The Place, Robert Cohan talks to Michael Berkeley about the music that's inspired him during his extraordinary career. He movingly recalls his time on active duty in France, including the time when a can of ham and eggs saved his life by deflecting shrapnel. He reveals the sometimes tempestuous reality of working with Martha Graham, and shares his plans for his tenth decade in dance.

He shares his love for Elgar, Vivaldi and Prokofiev, but also celebrates the music of less well known composers Barry Guy, Alan Hovhaness, Jon Keliehor, and Eleanor Alberga.

Produced by Jane Greenwood.
A Loftus Production for BBC Radio 3

Music Played

00:07
Edward Elgar
Sospiri
Orchestra: Academy Of St. Martin In The Fields.
Conductor: Neville Marriner

00:15
Sergei Sergeyevich Prokofiev
Symphony No.1 in D major, Op.25 (Classical) (1st mvt: Allegro)
Orchestra: Scottish National Orchestra
Conductor: Neeme Järvi

00:24
Alan Hovhaness
Tzaikerk (Evening Song)
Performer: Arnold Kobyhyansky, Paul Edmund-Davies, Randy Max
Orchestra: Flanders Orchestra
Conductor: Rudolf Werthen

00:33
Barry Guy
Lysandra
Performer: Maya Homburger

00:41
Antonio Vivaldi
Stabat Mater
Singer: James Bowman
Orchestra: Academy of Ancient Music
Conductor: Christopher Hogwood

00:49
Jon Keliehor
Class
Performer: Robert Harrison, Toni McVey, Jon Keliehor
Conductor: Barrington Pheloung

00:55
Eleanor Alberga
Lingua Franca

00:56
Johann Sebastian Bach
Chaconne in D minor
Performer: Maria Tipo
Music Arranger: Ferruccio Busoni


Words and Music
A sequence of music interspersed with well-loved and less familiar poems and prose read by leading actors
http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b006x35f

A Silver Sea
Sun 22 Mar 2015
17:30
BBC Radio 3
http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b05mqhb1
The waters around the British Isles have inspired artists, writers and composers for centuries. In this edition of Words and Music Julian Glover and Eleanor Tomlinson share the poetic responses alongside music by Ralph Vaughan Williams, Ethel Smyth, Felix Mendelssohn and John Ireland, the sum describing a journey around the British Isles.


A Silver Sea or a circumnavigation of British inshore waters from Deal to Dover by way of the Highlands and Islands.

The seas that surround the British Isles have been a rich inspiration for composers and writers alike. The variation in their moods from stormy to dazzling calm often provide ways into, or backdrop setting for, reflection and story.

The idea of a journey or voyage isn’t a new one for ‘Words and Music’. If this edition differs it is in the precision of the nautical ambition, to chart and describe a particular geographical route.

It begins, after John Masefield and John Ireland have invited us to take to the water, with a feisty Frances Fyfield heroine being lured to the sea to swim. Her exhilaration and ‘freedom to scream’ is picked up by Debussy in the second movement of La Mer ‘Jeux De Vagues’ which he finished while staying at Eastbourne. John Keats’ invitation to ‘feast on the Sea’ isn’t map specific but now, with the accompaniment of Benjamin Britten’s Storm from his Sea Interludes we regain our course finding ourselves ‘Dead to the Kentish Knock’ in Gerard Manley Hopkins dramatic sprung rhythm verse evocation of the ‘Wreck of the Deutschland’. From playful waves to powerful, hurling force, this is the fickle sea that surrounds us and there’s no-one who captures that shift and change better than Britten.

Away from wreck and ravage Joseph Conrad takes us into his world of onboard life in a passage from his autobiographical work ‘The Mirror of the Sea’. Conrad finds in the sea, and perhaps more importantly in the ship, the attraction of routine picked up again by another of Britten’s Sea Interludes, this time ‘Sunday Morning’.

To help navigation I’ve used an anti-clockwise list of the Inshore Sea areas starting from North Foreland and ending the journey with Selsey Bill and North Foreland once again. Now we’re in the North Sea and Christina Rossetti ponders the ‘sheer miracles of loveliness’ which include, in a very Rossetti twist, salt. It was tempting to dwell at the mouth of the Tyne or Tees, Wear or Tweed but our next music is a Scottish folksong by Julie Fowlis. Providing a limited translation of the Gaelic breaks all sorts of rules but I wanted to include some of the gentle imagery as well as indulging in the beauty and clarity of the voice and song.

Northward we go to the Isles beginning with Orkney and Sir Peter Maxwell Davies playing his own Farewell to Stromness. I’ve heard it described as the portrait of the ferry and it certainly has a wonderful sense of effort and steady sea-bound progress while never losing its lilt. Norman Bissell’s ‘Slate, Sea and Sky’ is as much and as little as needs to be said of these places on the rim of the world where ‘light changes everything’.

Hard a port and round to Sir Michael Tippett’s arrangement of ‘Over the Sea to Skye’. The composer never lets us forget that a Sea journey is rarely tranquil, but Kathleen Jamie’s ‘The Glass-hulled Boat’ is a moment of calm looking deep and directly down at the lost internal organs that are jellyfish.

We’re heading south now although Mendelssohn was probably heading north on his journey to Staffa and Fingal’s Cave. The manuscript of this music is held in the Bodleian Library along with records he took while on his journey to Scotland. They suggest that the main theme was inspired more by the boat taking him than the Cave and causeway itself.

Those of a nautical bent will be agonisingly aware that we veer horribly off course in heading, at this point, for Rockall. I couldn’t resist. Here it is celebrated in all its Gannet-infested splendour by Michael Flanders and Donald Swann with the help of the King’s Singers. The reading is from a Plaque fixed to the rock and the grim observation of this desolate place was made by Lord Kennet.

Back we come, squeezing between the coast of Northern Ireland and Cumbria, hearing, in a brand new recording, the voices of ‘Seals and Whales’ by Mary Ann Kennedy, Ruth Keggin, Eoghan Ó Ceannabháin. The song is new but emerges from the Scots Gaelic tradition and is intended to be a haunting call from the Sea by those creatures threatened most by man.

The Isle of Man provides another freshly minted piece, this time from the composer Francis Pott. It’s the third movement of his Viola Sonata played here by the composer himself and Yuko Inoue. The first two movements were inspired by two towers on the Island but this, the last, in the words of the composer himself, ‘admits of no specific connection to a single place, and accordingly has no subtitle; but its primary content suggested itself during an afternoon walk in perfect weather to the coastal point opposite the so-called Calf of Man.’ Surely the feverish rhythms and syncopations speak of wind, sea and spray.

Over on the Cumbrian mainland Norman Nicholson looks out at the dazzle of the sea as the sun sets and wishes it to stay with him in the dark. And then we’re down to the Welsh coast and a young Bryn Terfel singing ‘Y Mor’ by Mansell Thomas, the reflections of a beachcomber and observer of the seas ‘far horizons’.

‘Night and Morning’ by R.S.Thomas once again has the sea moving from one tempest torn extreme to sun slumbering other. The water, as the following folksong tells us, is wide and things tend not to remain as stable as we might wish. The version of ‘O Waly, Waly’ here is by John Rutter from his Suite for Strings.

And so to the seas sailed by blind Captain Cat, the lynchpin of Dylan Thomas’ Llareggub town in Under Milk Wood. Here he’s beguiled by his one true love, Rosie Probert, who wants him to remember that she saw the very best of him. For all its Welshness I invited Eleanor, fresh from her role as Demelza Carne in Poldark, to give her Rosie a Cornish accent, the better to entice Captain Cat to remember and then forget.

The turn is now homeward and ‘Homeward Bound’ from Charles Villiers Stanford’s songs of the Sea captures that mood to perfection.

‘Reasons at Trefusis Point’ brings us to the Cornish coast and Julian May, now a BBC Radio Producer, playfully remembers his young self at the water’s edge and a brief confusion between the creatures of the land and the deep, ending with the beautiful image of a seal bounding away like a Labrador.

The Cornish theme continues with Ethel Smyth’s overture to her opera ‘The Wreckers’. Again the sea is everywhere in its huge variety and her writing and subject invites the second shipwreck of our voyage, this time from the children’s novel ‘Moonfleet’.

Rather than fetching up on Moonfleet beach, it’s to Dover we go and the words of Matthew Arnold hearing in the sea the steady and eternal notes of sadness. The Proms very own humming chorus from Sir Henry Wood’s Fantasia on British Sea Songs and the very best of Kathleen Ferrier calling for a Southerly wind bring us to shore and an echo and end of John Masefield’s Sea Fever. The Fever has now worked itself out and the long, and I hope enjoyable, circumnavigational trick is over.

Producer: Tom Alban

Music Played

00:00
John Ireland
Sea Fever
Performer: Thomas Allen, Roger Vignoles
Hyperion 66165, Tr.1

Frances Fyfield
From the novel ‘Gold Digger’ read by Eleanor Tomlinson

00:01
Claude Debussy
La Mer - II Jeux De Vagues
Performer: Philharmonia Orchestra, Michael Tilson Thomas
CBS Records MDK 44645, Tr.2

John Keats
From the poem ‘On the Sea’ - read by Julian Glover

Gerard Manley Hopkins
From ‘The Wreck of the Deutschland’ - read by Julian Glover and Eleanor
Tomlinson

00:05
Benjamin Britten
Four Sea Interludes, Op.33a: IV. Storm
Performer: London Symphony Orchestra, Steuart Bedford
Naxos, Tr.3

Joseph Conrad
From ‘The Mirror of the Sea’ - Memories and Impressions, read by Julian Glover

00:10
Benjamin Britten
Four Sea Interludes, Op.33a: II. Sunday Morning
Performer: London Symphony Orchestra, Steuart Bedford
Naxos, Tr.2

Inshore Waters - Part 1/4
An anti-clockwise list of British Inshore waters read by Eleanor Tomlinson and Julian Glover

Christina Rossetti
Poem ‘By the Sea’ read by Eleanor Tomlinson

00:14
Scottish Pipe tune arr. Julie Fowlis
Tha mo ghaol air aird a’ chuain / My Love’s on the High Seas
Performer: Julie Fowlis
SKYE SKYECD33, Tr.2

My Love’s on the High Seas
Verses 1 & 4 of My Love’s on the High Seas by Julie Fowlis read by Eleanor Tomlinson

00:17
Sir Peter Maxwell Davies
Farewell to Stromness
Performer: Sir Peter Maxwell Davies
Unicorn-Kanchana DKP(CD)9070, Tr13

Norman Bissell
Slate, Sea and Sky
Poem read by Julian Glover

00:20
Sir Michael Tippett
Over the Sea to Skye - from Choral Images
Performer: BBC Singers - 1956 Premier
Signum Classics SIGCD092, Tr.11

Kathleen Jamie - ‘The Glass’hulled Boat
Poem by Kathleen Jamie read by Eleanor Tomlinson

00:24
Felix Mendelssohn
Overture ‘The Hebrides’ or Fingal’s Cave
Performer: L’Orchestre Symphonique de Montreal, Charles Dutoit
DECCA 417 541-2, Tr.6

Inshore Waters - Part 2/4
An anti-clockwise list of British Inshore waters read by Eleanor Tomlinson and Julian Glover

Nursery Rhyme - A Sailor went to sea, sea, sea!
Nursery Rhyme read by Julian Glover and Eleanor Tomlinson

00:34
Flanders and Swann
Rockall - Verse 1
Performer: The King’s Singers
EMI EMC 3196, Tr.4

Writing on a Plaque on the Island of Rockall
Plaque read by Eleanor Tomlinson

00:35
Flanders and Swann
Rockall - Verse 2
Performer: The King’s Singers
EMI EMC 3196, Tr.4

Lord Kennet
Comment in 1971
Read by Julian Glover

00:36
Folk
Ròin is Míolta Móra (Seals and Whales)
Performer: Mary Ann Kennedy, Ruth Keggin, Eoghan Ó Ceannabháin
Watercolour Music WCMCD059, Tr.2

Inshore Waters - Part 3/4
An anti-clockwise list of British Inshore waters read by Eleanor Tomlinson and Julian Glover

00:38
Francis Pott
Sonata for Viola and Piano (Tooryn Vannin - The Towers of Man)
Performer: Yuko Inoue, Francis Pott
EM Records EMR CD028, Tr.3

Norman Nicholson - ‘Seat to the West’
Poem by Norman Nicholson read by Julian Glover

00:46
Mansell Thomas
Y Môr'/ The Sea
Performer: Bryn Terfel, Annette Bryn Parri
Sain SCD9099, Tr.8

R.S.Thomas
Night and Morning
Poem read by Eleanor Tomlinson

00:48
John Rutter
Suite for Strings - O Waly, Waly
Performer: Royal Philharmonic Orchestra, John Rutter
Universal Classics, Tr.9

Dylan Thomas
Under Milkwood
Extract with Captain Cat and Rosie Probert, read by EleanorTomlinson and Julian Glover

00:53
Sir Charles Villiers Stanford
Songs of the Sea, Op.91 No 4 Homeward Bound
Performer: Gerarld Finley, BBC National Chorus of Wales, BBC National Orchestra of Wales, Richard Hickox
Chandos, Tr.15

Julian May
Reasons at Trefusis Point
Poem read by Eleanor Tomlinson

01:01
Ethel Smyth
Overture ‘The Wreckers’
Performer: Scottish National Orchestra, Sir Alexander Gibson
EMI, Tr.1

Inshore Waters - Part 4/4
An anti-clockwise list of British Inshore waters read by Eleanor Tomlinson and Julian Glover

From ‘Moonfleet’ by J.Meade Falkner
Extract from Chapter 18 ‘In the Bay’
From ‘On Dover Beach’ by Matthew Arnold
Extract from Poem read by Eleanor Tomlinson

01:08
Sir Henry Wood
From ‘Fantasia on British Sea Songs’
Performer: BBC Symphony Orchestra, James Loughran
BBC Rado Classics 1565691912, Tr.17

01:10
Folk song
Blow the Wind Southerly, British Songs
Performer: Kathleen Ferrier
DECCA, Tr.3

From ‘Sea Fever’ by John Masefield
Extract ‘Sea Fever’ read by Julian Glover and Eleanor Tomlinson

01:13
John Ireland
Sea Fever
Performer: Thomas Allen, Roger Vignoles
Hyperion 66165, Tr.1