12 今週のお気に入り 06

音楽の泉
週末の朝に、さわやかなクラシック音楽を、やわらかい解説を添えてお届けする「音楽の泉」。クラシック音楽入門番組として1948年に放送を開始、今まで数々の名曲をご紹介してきました。曲の合間に、音楽学者の皆川達夫さんが楽曲の解説や作品にまつわるエピソードなどを分かりやすく、やわらかい語り口でお伝えします。ゆったりと流れる時間のおともに、「音楽の泉」でクラシック音楽をお楽しみください。
http://www.nhk.or.jp/r1/shou/ongaku_izumi.html
放送日: 2012年 2月 4日(土)
放送時間: 午前6:00〜午前6:50(50分)
解説: 皆川達夫

− モーツァルトピアノソナタ −
「ピアノ・ソナタ ヘ長調 K.533」モーツァルト作曲
(ピアノ)アルフレッド・ブレンデル

「ピアノ・ソナタ 変ロ長調 K.570」モーツァルト作曲
(ピアノ)フリードリヒ・グルダ


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://www.nhk.or.jp/fm/sunshine/
放送日: 2012年 2月 4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
01. Johnny Otis Signature / Johnny Otis
ALBUM: Vintage 1950s Broadcasts from Los Angeles
02. Bump on a Log / Lula Reed
ALBUM: Vintage 1950s Broadcasts from Los Angeles
03. One O'Clock Jump / Johnny Otis Band
ALBUM: Vintage 1950s Broadcasts from Los Angeles
04. Mumblin' Mosie / Johnny Otis
ALBUM: The Greatest Johnny Otis Show
05. Dreamer / Etta James
ALBUM: The Dreamer
06. Too Tired / Etta James
ALBUM: The Dreamer
07. Cigarettes & Coffee / Etta James
ALBUM: The Dreamer
08. I've Been Loving You Too Long / Etta James
ALBUM: Love's Been Rough on Me
09. 呆阿津怒哀声音頭 / Niagara Fallin' Stars
ALBUM: Let's Ondo Again
10. 通りすぎれば風の詩 / The Fujii
ALBUM: Anyway What Time Did You Get Up This Morning
11. Rollin' Stone / Muddy Waters
ALBUM: The Best of Muddy Waters
12. Jerusalem Ridge / Casey Driessen
ALBUM: 3D
13. Hummingbirds vs. Yellowjackets / Casey Driessen
ALBUM: Oog
14. Lovesick Blues / The Little Willies
ALBUM: For The Good Times
15. For The Good Times / The Little Willies
ALBUM: For The Good Times
16. Jolene / The Little Willies
ALBUM: For The Good Times
17. Don't Let Me Slide / Tedeschi Trucks Band
ALBUM: Revelator


世界の快適音楽セレクション
"快適音楽"を求めるギターデュオのゴンチチによる、ノンジャンル・ミュージック番組。
http://www.nhk.or.jp/fm/kaiteki/
放送日: 2012年 2月 4日(土)
放送時間: 午前9:00〜午前10:55(115分)
ゴンチチ
渡辺亨

− ホッカホッカの音楽 −
「ホリデイ・ウォーク」 (ゴンチチ)(3分15秒)
ポニーキャニオン PCCA-01512>

「メンフィス・ソウル・シチュー」 (キング・カーティス)(7分30秒)
<ATLANTIC AMCY02905>

「バーベキュー・ブルース」 (バーベキュー・ボブ)(3分09秒)
<DOCUMENT REC.DOCD-5046>

「トランペット協奏曲 変ロ長調 作品7 第3から 第3楽章」アルビノーニ作曲(2分06秒)
(トランペット)アレグロティーネ・ティング・ヘルセット
<SIMAX CLASSICS PSC1292>

「ハウ・スィート・イット・イズ(・トゥー・ビー・ラヴド・バイ・ユー)」(ジェイムス・テイラー)(3分33秒)
<WARNER BROS 7599-27293-2>

「アイ・ハング・イット・アップ」 (ジュニア・ブラウン)(3分32秒)
MGC CUBE D2-77843>

「ビトゥイーンズ・ザ・バーズ」(テイラー・アイグスティ、ベッカ・スティーヴンス)(4分00秒)
<CONCORD JAZZ CJA-32100-02>

「スーパー・ウォーマー」 (ロウ・イン・ザ・スカイ)(4分14秒)
<abandon building ABR017 PB13>

「エイント・ザット・グッド・ニュース」 (サム・クック)(2分29秒)
RCA VICTOR PCD1-7127>

「シー・ケイム・イン・スルー・ザ・バスルーム・ウィンドウ」(ロス・ロンリー・ボーイズ)(2分55秒)
SONY MUSIC JAPAN SICP3372>

インディアン・サマー」 (サティーマ・ビー・ベンジャミン)(6分22秒)
<CELESTE CMYK-6220>

「ハワイと君」 (カルリーニョス・ブラウン)(4分01秒)
<EMI MUSIC VJCP68013>

「スリープ・ウォーム」 (フランク・シナトラ)(2分46秒)
<CAPITOL 72434 9475625>

「船乗りとタコの友情」 (ゴンチチ)(1分45秒)
<EPIC REC. ESCL3738>

「フロール・ダ・ノイチ」(セルソ・フォンセカ、ホナルド・バストス)(4分32秒)
<ボンバレコード BOM22059>

「フロール・ダ・ノイチ」(セルソ・フォンセカ、ホナルド・バストス)(4分41秒)
<UNIVERSAL 60252771959>

「ノー・ルーム・フォー・ダウト」(リアヌ・ラ・アヴァス、ウィリー・メイスン)(4分02秒)
<LABOUR OF LOVE WEA477TE>

「ザ・サヴェージ・ドーン・イン・ハー・グランス」(キップ・ハンラハン)(5分03秒)
<ewe WEWAC-1061>


Jazz Record Requests
Geoffrey Smith presents a selection of listeners' jazz requests.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b006tnn9
Sat 4 Feb 2012
20:45
BBC Radio 3
Geoffrey Smith presents a selection of listeners' jazz requests.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b01bllzc
Music and featured items
1. Don Harper and Denny Wright — Pretty Trix
Composer: Venuti-Lang Performers: Don Harper (v), Denny Wright (g), Tony Coe (bs), Zack Laurence (p), Lenny Skeat (b), Barry Morgan (d) Recorded: 4 & 5 June 1977
Combo, One-Up OU2202, S2/6 3.14
2. Nellie Lutcher — My Mother’s Eyes
Composer: Gilbert/Bayer Performers: (probably) Nellie Lutcher (v & p), Irving Ashby (g), Billy Hadnott (b), Sidney Catlett (d) Recorded: 1947
With a Song in Our Hearts Again, Music For Pleasure CDDL1266 (2), Disc 2, Track 14 3.13
3. Fats Waller — Shortnin’ Bread
Composer: Traditional, arranged by Waller Performers: Fats Waller (p & voc), John ‘Bugs’ Hamilton (tr), Gene ‘Honeybear’ Sedric (cl & ts), John Smith (g), Cedric Wallace (b), Wilmore ‘Slick’ Jones (d) Recorded: Chicago, 2 January 1941
Ain’t Misbehavin’, Past Perfect PPCD 78118, Track 21 2.42
4. Maria Muldaur — Sweet and Slow
Composer: Harry Warren and Al Dubin Performers: Maria Muldaur (voc), Mac Rebennack (p), Jon Sholle (g), Michael Moore (b), Richard Crooks (d) Recorded: Skyline Studios, NY, 1982
Sweet and Slow, Stony Plain SPCD 1183 (1), Track 5 6.19
5. David Liebman — G.I.G
Composer: Liebman Performers: Dave Liebman (ts), Roberto Tarenzi (p), Paolo Benedettini (b), Tony Arco (d) Recorded: 2005
Negative Space, Universal 0602517321519, Track 2 8.43
6. Gil Evans — Davenport Blues
Composer: Bix Biederbecke Performers: Gil Evans (p & arr.), Johnny Coles, Louis Mucci, Allen Smith (tr), Bill Eaton, Curtis Fuller, Dick Lieb (tb), Bob Northern (fh), Bill Barber (tuba), Steve Lacy (ss), Al Block (reeds), Chuck Wayne (g), Dick Carter (b), Dennis Charles (d) Recorded: New York, 5 February 1959
Great Jazz Standards, Pacific Jazz CDP7468562 (1), Track 1 4.25
7. Bud Powell — It Never Entered My Mind
Composer: Rodgers and Hart Performers: Bud Powell (p), Percy Heath (b), Art Taylor (d) Recorded: Fine Sounds Studios, NY, 10 June 1954
The Best of Bud Powell on Verve, Verve 5233922 (1), Track 7 2.56
8. Art Blakey — Tell It Like It Is
Composer: Wayne Shorter Performers: Art Blakey (d), Lee Morgan (tr), Wayne Shorter (ts), Bobby Timmons (p), Jymie Merritt (b) Recorded: 27 may 1961
The Freedom Rider, Blue Note 8212872 (1), Track 1 7.52
9. Michel Petrucciani — Caravan
Composer: Juan Tizol Performers: Michel Petrucciani (p) Recorded: Paris, 14 November 1994
Au Theatre des Champs Elysees, Dreyfus FDM365702 (2), Disk 2, Track 2 (in at 4.40) 7.1
10. Duke Ellington — Kinda Dukish/Rokin’ in Rhythm
Composer: Duke Ellington Performers: Duke Ellington (p), Cootie Williams, Cat Anderson, Roy Burrows (tr), Ray Nance (cornet & v), Lawrence Brown, Buster Cooper, Chuck Connors (tb), Johnny Hodges (as), Russell Procope (cl & as), Jimmy Hamilton (cl & ts), Paul Gonsalves (ts), Harry Carney (cl & bs), Ernie Shepard (b), Sam Woodyard (d) Recorded: Olympia Theatre, Paris, 1, 2 & 23 February 1963
The Great Paris, Atlantic 7567813032 (2), Disk 1, Track 1-2 5.39


Jazz Library
Advice and guidance to those interested in building a library of jazz recordings.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b006x41z
Bob Brookmeyer
Sun 5 Feb 2012
00:00
BBC Radio 3
Alyn Shipton meets Bob Brookmeyer to pick the highlights of his recorded work.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b01blm3f
In 2011, trombonist, bandleader and arranger Bob Brookmeyer celebrated his 80th birthday. To mark the event, Alyn Shipton met Brookmeyer to pick the highlights of his recorded work, ranging from his pioneering small group playing with Gerry Mulligan and Stan Getz to his big band contributions to the Mulligan Concert Jazz Band. Alyn also hears about Brookmeyer's New Art Orchestra, based in continental Europe, and discusses recent reissues of Bob's classics such as Traditionalism Revisited, and his trio with Jim Hall and Jimmy Giuffre.

Music played
1. Bob Brookmeyer — Sunny Side of the Street
Composer: Fields/McHugh Performers: Bob Brookmeyer, vtb; Jimmy Rowles, p; Buddy Clark, b; Mel Lewis d. 16 June 1960
Blues Hot and Cold, Lonehill, 10378, Tr 1
2. Gerry Mulligan Quartet — Walkin' Shoes
Composer: Mulligan Performers: Gerry Mulligan, bar; Bob Brookmeyer, vtb; Red Mitchell, b; Frank Isola, d. 1 June 1954
Pleyel Concert 1, BMG/Vogue, 43214 29232, Tr 3
3. Gerry Mulligan Quartet — Open Country
Composer: Brookmeyer Performers: Gerry Mulligan, bar; Bob Brookmeyer, vtb; Bill Crow, b; Dave Bailey, d. 6 Dec 1956
At Storyville, Pacific, CDP 7 94472 2, Tr 5
4. Gerry Mulligan and the Concert Jazz Band — Body and Soul
Composer: Green/Heyman/Sour arr Brookmeyer Performers: Performers: Gerry Mulligan, s,bs,p; Gene Quill, c, as; Bob Donovan, as; Jimmy Reider, ts; Clark Terry, Don Ferrara, Nick Travis, t; Allen Ralph, Willie Dennis, tromb; Bob Brookmeyer, vt; Mel Lewis, d.
At the Village Vanguard, Verve, 589488, Tr 2
5. Jimmy Giuffre — Pony Express (from Western Suite)
Composer: Giuffre Performers: Bob Brookmeyer, vtb; Jimmy Guiffre, ts; Jim Hall g. Dec 1958
Western Suite, Atlantic, 7567 80777-2, Tr 1
6. Thad Jones/Mel Lewis Orchestra — Samba Con Getchu
Composer: Brookmeyer Performers: Thad Jones, trumpet, cornet, flugelhorn); Richard Williams (trumpet); Roland Hanna (piano); Richard Davis (double bass); Sam Herman (guitar, shaker); Jerome Richardson (flute, clarinet, soprano saxophone, alto saxophone); Jerry Dodgion (flute, alto saxophone); Joe Farrell (flute, tenor saxophone); Eddie Daniels (clarinet, tenor saxophone); Pepper Adams (clarinet, baritone saxophone); Marvin Stamm, Snooky Young, Bill Berry, Jimmy Nottingham (trumpet); Garnett Brown, Tom McIntosh, Bob Brookmeyer (trombone); Cliff Heather (bass trombone), Mel Lewis (drums); 24 April 1967
Live at the Village Vanguard, Blue Note, 60438, Tr 6
7. Bob Brookmeyer and Jim Hall — Darn That Dream
Composer: Van Heusen/DeLange Performers: Bob Brookmeyer, vtb; Jim Hall g. 1979
Live at the North Sea, Challenge, 70063, Tr 7
8. Bob Brookmeyer New Art Orchestra — Celebration Jig
Composer: Brookmeyer Performers: Bob Brookmeyer (conductor); Marko Lackner, Stefan Pfeifer, as; Paul Heller, Nils Van Haften, ts; Marcus Bartelt, bs; Thorsten Benkenstein, Torsten Mass, Sebastian Strempel, Ralf Hesse, Jorg Engels, t; Ludwig Nuss, Ansgar Striepens, Christian: Jakso, tromb; Edward Partyka, btromb; Kris Goessens, p; Jurgen Grimm, k; Ingmar Heller, b; John Hollenbeck, d; Christopher Dell, perc.
New Works / Celebration, Challenge, 70066, Tr 1
9. Bob Brookmeyer — I Should Care
Composer: Stordahl/Weston Performers: Bob Brookmeyer, p; Mats Vinding, b; Alex Riel, d. 2001
Plays Piano, Challenge, 70103, Tr 6
10. Bob Brookmeyer — Sweet Like This
Composer: Oliver/Nelson Performers: Bob Brookmeyer, vtb; Jimmy Giuffre, cl; Jim Hall, g; Joe Benjamin, b; and Dave Bailey d. 1957.
Traditionalism Revisited, Essential Jazz Albums, 048, Tr 5


Desert Island Discs
Desert Island Discs was created by Roy Plomley in 1942, and the format is simple: a guest is invited by Kirsty Young to choose the eight records they would take with them to a desert island
http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b006qnmr
http://www.bbc.co.uk/radio4/features/desert-island-discs

Denise Lewis
Sun 5 Feb 2012
11:15
BBC Radio 4
Denise Lewis, Olympic medallist, is interviewed by Kirsty Young.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b01bkylm
Denise Lewis, Olympic gold medallist, is Kirsty Young's castaway.

Her discipline was the heptathlon and it was at the 2000 Sydney Olympics that she leapt, threw, sprinted and hurdled her way on to the winner's podium. An only child of a single mother, she says her mum had always had ambition for her - and was there to witness her success. She said: "Her face said it all, there were tears in her eyes and for me it felt like, yes mum, we've done it together".

Producer: Leanne Buckle.

Music played
1. Diana Ross — Ain’t No Mountain High Enough
Composer: Nickolas Ashford/Valerie Simpson
One Woman Diana Ross: The Ultimate Collection, EMI
2. Bob MarleyIs this Love
Composer: Marley
Legend, Island/Tuff Gong
3. a-ha — Take On Me
Composer: Waaktaar/Furuholmen/Harket
Now 1985, NOW
4. Whitney Houston — One Moment in Time
Composer: Hammond/Bettis
Whitney Houston: The Greatest Hits, ARISTA
5. Lauryn Hill — To Zion
Composer: Hill
The Miseducation Of Lauryn Hill, RUFF HOUSE
6. JLS — She Makes Me Wanna
Composer: JLS, BeatGeek, Jimmy Joker, Teddy Sky
Jukebox, Epic
7. India.Arie — Ready for Love
Composer: Arie/Miller
Acoustic Soul, Motown
8. Mariah Carey — It’s Like That
Composer: Carey/Dupri/Seal/Austin
It’s Like That


Private Passions
Guests from all walks of life discuss their musical loves and hates.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b006tnv3
Lucy Worsley
Sun 5 Feb 2012
12:00
BBC Radio 3
Michael Berkeley's guest is TV historian and curator Lucy Worsley.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b01blm3p
Michael Berkeley welcomes the lively TV historian and Chief Curator of Historic Royal Palaces Lucy Worsley. Her popular TV series 'If Walls Could Talk: A History of the Home' found her peering into the forgotten domestic corners of history, finding out how people in past centuries really lived - how they slept, ate, cooked, bathed and disposed of their waste - by recreating the experience. She has also presented 'Elegance and Decadence: The Age of the Regency' for BBC4.

Lucy takes an equally practical, no-nonsense approach to music, and unusually, her choices for 'Private Passions' are nearly all pieces she has played or sung herself. They range from piano works by Erik Satie, Mozart, Bach and Liszt, to Verdi's Requiem (in which she sang as a tenor!) ; Jerome Kern's 'Long ago', which she performed at a Society of Antiquaries' dinner when she took the injunction to 'sing for her supper' quite literally; and Joseph Winner's Little Brown Jug, in which she has played the tenor sax solo in a big band arrangement.

Music played
1. Erik Satie — Gymnopedie no. 3
Performers: Anne Queffélec (piano)
VIRGIN CLASSICS VC7 90754-2 T5
2. Giuseppe Verdi — [the final] Libera me [from the Requiem]
Performers: Sharon Sweet (soprano), Ernst Senff Choir, Berlin PO/Carlo Maria Giulini
DG 423 674-2, CD2 T5
3. Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart — Piano Sonata in B flat major, K. 570 [second movement, Adagio]
Performers: Mitsuko Uchida (piano)
PHILIPS 420 185-2, T5
4. Jerome Kern — Long ago (and far away)
Performers: Jo Stafford (singer)
CAPITOL CDP 0777 7 99469-2, T12
5. Johann Sebastian Bach — Prelude and Fugue in C sharp major [from The Well Tempered Clavier book 1]
Performer: Angela Hewitt (piano)
HYPERION CDA67301/2, CD1 T5-6
6. Joseph Winner — Little Brown Jug
Arranger: Bill Finegan Performers: The Glenn Miller Band
BLUEBIRD ND 90412, CD1 T5
7. Franz Liszt — Sonnet 104 of Petrarch [from the Années de pèlerinage, 2nd year, Italy]
Performers: Jorge Bolet (piano)
DECCA 410 161-2, T5
8. Leonard Bernstein — Tonight [from West Side Story]
Performers: Larry Kert (Tony), Carol Lawrence (Maria), original Broadway cast recording, conducted by Max Goberman
COLUMBIA CK32603, T5


Words and Music
A sequence of classical music mixed with well-loved and less familiar poems and prose.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b006x35f

Different Trains
Sun 5 Feb 2012
18:30
BBC Radio 3
Texts and music celebrating railways, with readings by Jonathan Pryce and Eleanor Bron.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b01blmcr
In 1830, the first railway passenger service in the world was established between Manchester and Liverpool - ever since railways have exerted their special fascination, not least with writers and musicians. They can evoke adventure and romance, excitement, power and fear. Dickens, for example, had a strong dislike of trains, but couldn't ignore them in his fiction.

The path of a train can mirror a journey through life. The 19th century Parisian railway provided a powerful backdrop to Emile Zola's exploration of the darker side of human nature in La Bête Humaine; while for the American novelist Nathaniel Hawthorne, the train was the means of carriage for a soul's symbolic journey towards spiritual fulfilment. Arthur Honegger famously used an orchestra to mimic the sound of a great continental steam train, while Rossini - who detested the railway - took a certain pleasure in creating a musical depiction of a hypothetical railway accident. Trains mean rendezvous, departure, loss and transportation. For some, the incessant drive of a great steam engine is potent expression of a mechanised industrialized world. For one poet, the clickety-clack of metal wheels on metal rails evokes something primeval.

Jonathan Pryce and Eleanor Bron read poems and texts celebrating our relationship with trains by Emile Zola, Nathaniel Hawthorne, Charles Dickens, Wilfred Owen, Thomas Hardy, Philip Larkin, Leo Tolstoy and Primo Levi; alongside archive recordings from TS Eliot and John Laurie. Featured "Train" music includes musical thoughts from Arthur Honegger, Percy Grainger, Gioachino Rossini, Heitor Villa-Lobos, Mikhail Glinka, Charles Ives, Benjamin Britten, Rued Langgaard, Simon Bainbridge, Meade "Lux" Lewis and Elvis Presley.

Producer note
In 1830, the first railway passenger service in the world was established between Manchester and Liverpool - ever since railways have exerted their special fascination, not least with writers and musicians. They can evoke adventure and romance, excitement, power and fear. Dickens, for example, had a strong dislike of trains, but couldn't ignore them in his fiction.

The path of a train can mirror a journey through life. The 19th century Parisian railway provided a powerful backdrop to Emile Zola's exploration of the darker side of human nature in La Bête Humaine; while for the American novelist Nathaniel Hawthorne, the train was the means of carriage for a soul's symbolic journey towards spiritual fulfilment. In music, Arthur Honegger famously used an orchestra to mimic the sound of a great continental steam train, while Rossini - who detested the railway - took a certain pleasure in creating a musical depiction of a hypothetical railway accident.

Trains mean rendezvous, departure, loss and transportation. For some, the incessant drive of a great steam engine is a potent expression of the mechanised industrialized world. For one poet, the clickety-clack of metal wheels on metal rails, evokes something pre-industrial, even primeval.

Jonathan Pryce and Eleanor Bron read poems and texts celebrating our relationship with trains by Emile Zola, Nathaniel Hawthorne, Charles Dickens, Wilfred Owen, Thomas Hardy, Philip Larkin, Leo Tolstoy and Primo Levi; alongside archive recordings from TS Eliot and John Laurie. Featured "train" music includes musical thoughts from Arthur Honegger, Percy Grainger, Gioachino Rossini, Heitor Villa-Lobos, Mikhail Glinka, Charles Ives, Benjamin Britten, Rued Langgaard, Simon Bainbridge, Meade "Lux" Lewis and Elvis Presley.

Chris Wines (producer)

Music and featured items
Timings are shown from the start of the programme in hours and minutes.
00:00
Arthur Honegger — Pacific 231 (excerpt)
Performer: Czech Philharmonic Orchestra, Vaclav Neumann (conductor)
Praga PR250001, Tr3
00:04
Émile Zola, trans. Roger Whitehouse
La Bête Humaine (The Beast Within) (excerpt), reader Jonathan Pryce
00:06
Jacques Offenbach — La Vie Parisienne - Act 1 Chorus: Nous sommes employés de la ligne de l'Ouest
Performer: Orchestre et Choers du Capitole de Toulouse, Michel Plasson (conductor)
EMI CDS7471548, CD1 Tr1
00:07
Robert Louis Stevenson
From A Railway Carriage, reader Eleanor Bron
00:08
Percy Grainger — Train Music (1901)
Performer: CBSO, Simon Rattle (conductor)
EMI Classics 556412, Tr5
00:09
Meade 'Lux' Lewis — Honky Tonk Train Blues
Performer: Meade "Lux" Lewis (piano)
Atlantic 7816942, Tr17
00:10
Kenneth Graham
The Wind in the Willows - Toad's Adventures (excerpt), reader Jonathan Pryce
00:12
Carson Robison and Robert E Massey — The Runaway Train
Performer: Michael Holliday (singer)
EMI 360029, Tr9
00:14
Simon Garfield
The Last Journey of William Huskisson (excerpt), reader Eleanor Bron
00:15
Gioachino Rossini — Un petit train de plaisir (excerpt)
Performer: Aldo Ciccolini (piano)
HMV 290978, Side 1 Tr1
00:16
Simon Garfield
The Last Journey of William Huskisson (excerpt continued), reader Eleanor Bron
00:18
Gioachino Rossini — Un petit train de plaisir (excerpt continued)
Performer: Aldo Ciccolini (piano)
HMV 290978, Side 1 Tr1
00:19
William McGonagall
The Tay Bridge Disaster, reader John Laurie
00:22
Heitor Villa-Lobos — The Little Train of Caipira
Performer: Morton Gould and His Orchestra
SKU 158054, Tr20
00:26
Jay Appleton
Clickety-Clack, reader Eleanor Bron. From Jay Appleton’s collection 'Shadows of the Evening' published by Wildhern Press. Used with permission.
00:27
Joseph Haydn — Symphony No 23 in G - Mvt 4 Presto assai
Performer: The Hanover Band, Roy Goodman (director)
Hyperion CDA 66536, Tr8
00:28
Charles Ives — Symphony No 4 - mvt II (excerpt)
Performer: NYPO, Michael Tilson-Thomas (conductor)
DG 42322432, Tr5
00:29
Nathaniel Hawthorne
The Celestial Railway (excerpt), reader Jonathan Pryce
00:30
Charles Ives — Symphony No 23 in G - Symphony No 4 - mvt II (excerpt continued)
Performer: NYPO, Michael Tilson-Thomas (conductor)
DG 42322432, Tr5
00:33
Steve Reich — Different Trains – 3rd Mvt (excerpt)
Performer: Kronos Quartet
ECD130, Tr28
00:37
Michael Nyman — MGV (excerpt)
Performer: Michael Nyman Band and Orchestra
ARGO 443 382-2, Tr5
00:39
Benjamin Britten (words by W. H. Auden) — Night Mail
Performer: Nigel Hawthorne (narr), The Nash Ensemble, Lionel Friend (conductor)
Hyperion CDA66845, Tr28
00:43
T. S. Eliot
Shimbleshanks – The Railway Cat (excerpt), reader T. S. Eliot
00:44
Rued Langgaard — String Quartet No 2 - Mvt 2 (“Train Passing By”)
Performer: Kontra Quartet
Marco Polo DCCD9302, Tr2
00:46
Charles Dickens
Mugby Junction (excerpt), reader Eleanor Bron
00:47
Benjamin Britten — Winter Words "Midnight On The Great Western – The Journeying Boy"
Performer: Peter Pears (tenor), Benjamin Britten (piano)
DECCA 4259962, Tr17
00:52
Junior Parker/Sam Phillips — Mystery Train
Performer: Elvis Presley
RCA PD86414, Tr9
00:53
Philip Larkin
The Whitsun Weddings (excerpt), reader Jonathan Pryce
00:56
Francis Poulenc — Improvisation No 15
Performer: Pascal Roge (piano)
DECCA 417 438, Tr28
00:57
Wilfred Owen
The Send Off, reader Eleanor Bron
00:58
Sergei Sergeyevich Prokofiev — Winter Bonfires - Prelude
Performer: New London Orchestra, Ronald Corp (conductor)
Hyperion Helios CDH5517, Tr1
01:01
Thomas Hardy
On the Departure Platform, reader Jonathan Pryce
01:01
Sergey Vasilievich Rachmaninov — Piano Concerto No 2 in C minor – 1st Mvt (excerpt)
Performer: Vladimir Ashkenazy (piano), Moscow Philharmonic Orchestra, Kyril Kondrashin (conductor)
DECCA 466 3752, Tr1
01:02
Mikhail Ivanovich Glinka — "Poputnya Pesnya"- A Farewell to St Petersburg
Performer: Sergei Leiferkus (bass), Semion Skigin (piano)
CONIFER 75605512642, Tr6
01:05
Leo Tolstoy
Anna Karenin, (Trans. Rosemary Edmunds) reader Eleanor Bron
01:05
Constant Lambert — Music for the film “Anna Karenin” (excerpt)
Performer: National Philharmonic Orchestra, Bernard Hermann (conductor)
LONDON 4489542, Tr2
01:07
Simon Bainbridge — Ad Ora Incerta – “Buna” (excerpt))
Performer: BBCSO, Martyn Brabbins (conductor)
NMC NMCD059, Tr4
01:08
Primo Levi, trans. Ruth Feldman and Brian Swann
Ad Ora Incerta - "Lunedi" (Ad Ora Incerta - "Monday"), reader Jonathan Pryce
01:09
Simon Bainbridge — Ad Ora Incerta – “Lundi”
Performer: BBCSO, Martyn Brabbins (conductor)
NMC NMCD059, Tr3
01:12
Katrina Porteous
If My Train Will Come, reader Eleanor Bron