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Another Country with Ricky Ross
Ricky Ross enters the landscape of Americana and alternative country. Expect to hear both classic and future classics, with Ricky taking a close look at the stories behind the songs
http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00hh26l

Roddy Hart's Lock-In
Fri 9 Aug 2013
20:05
BBC Radio Scotland
http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b037prtp
Country music is synonymous with the bottle. Roddy Hart sits in for Ricky Ross and hosts a musical lock-in with songs about wine, beer, whisky chasers and the morning after.

Music Played

01. Casino Bad Things
Houndmouth

02. When I Paint My Masterpiece
The Band

03. Frankie’s Gun!
The Felice Brothers

04. You Can’t Help It
Devon Sproule

05. Heart Of Gold
Neil Young

06. Heart Of Gold
Johnny Cash

07. Whole Lotta Shakin’ Goin’ On
Jerry Lee Lewis

08. Let’s All Help The Cowboys Sing The Blues
Waylon Jennings

09. Colors
Simone Dinnerstein and Tift Merritt

10. She Lit A Fire
Lord Huron

11. A Little Bit Of Everything
Dawes

12. Late For The Sky
Jackson Browne

13. Let’s All Go The Bar
Deer Tick

14. The Night I Stole Old Sammy Morgan’s Gin
Hank Snow

15. Pink Champagne
Caitlin Rose

16. On Tap, In The Can Or In The Bottle
Hank Thompson

17. White Winos
Loudon Wainwright III

18. Bluebird Wine
Emmylou Harris & Rodney Crowell

19. Wine Take Me Away
Merle Haggard

20. Tequila Sunrise
Eagles

21. Rye Whiskey
Punch Brothers

22. Tears Will Be The Chaser For Your Wine
Wanda Jackson

23. If Drinkin’ Don’t Kill Me Her Memory Will
George Jones

24. Yes, I Guess They Oughta Name A Drink After You
John Prine

25. I Drink
Mary Gauthier

26. Sunday Morning Coming Down
Kris Kristofferson


Jazz Record Requests
Make a request...
http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b006tnn9
Sat 10 Aug 2013
17:00
BBC Radio 3
Alyn Shipton presents listeners' requests for jazz old and new.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b0385205
Alyn Shipton presents listeners' requests for jazz old and new, with vintage performances from the Quinquaginta Ramblers and Meade Lux Lewis, French jazz from Alix Combelle and Stephane Grappelli, the sound of surprise from Sun Ra and contemporary music from Phil Meadows.

Music Played

01. Skyliner
Charlie Barnet
Composer: Barnet Performers: Charlie Barnet, as, ss, ts; Peanuts Holland, Jack Martel, Jack Mootz, Lyman Vunk, t; Charlie Coolidge, Gerald Foster, Dae hallett, Burt Johnson, tb; Harold Herzone, Joe Meisner, Kurt Bloom, Ed Pripps, Bob Poland, reeds; Dodo Marmarosa, p; Barney Kessel, g; Howard Rumsey, b; Harold Hahn, d. 3 Aug 1944.
The Story of Big Bands, Chant Du Monde, 574 1481.90 CD 6 Track 7 (3.02)

02. Fariboles
Alix Combelle
Composer: Combelle Performers: Charles Suire , Christian Bellest , Jean Lemay, t; Jean-Louis Jeanson, tb; Hubert Rostaing , Pierre Delhoumeau, Alix Combelle, Roby Davis, reeds; Emmanuel Soudieux, b; Roger Chaput, g; Pierre Fouad, d. Paris, July 3, 1942
Alix Combelle 1942-43, Classics, 782 track 3 (2.48)

03. I Can’t Get Started
Stephane Grappelli / Barney Kessel
Composer: Vernon Duke, Ira Gershwin Performers: Stephane Grappeli, v; Barney Kessel, g. 1970.
I remember Django, Black Lion, 208 407.5 Track 3 (3.05)

04. Hours After
Sun Ra
Composer: Sun Ra Performers: Hobart Dotson, t; Bo Bailey, tb; James Spaulding, Marshall Allen, John Gilmore, Pat Patrick, Charles Davis, reeds, perc; Sun Ra, p; Ronnie Boykins, b; William Cochrane d. 6 March 1959.
Jazz in Silhouette, Evidence, Number ECD22012 Track 5 (3.44)

05. Moving On
Phil Meadows
Composer: Meadows Performers: Phil Meadows, ss; Laura Jurd, t; Elliot Galvin, p; Conor Chaplin, b; Simon Roth, d. March 2013.
Engines of Creation, Boom Better, 006 Track 2 (3.55)

06. Inauguration
Tamu S.A. Jazz Ensemble
Composer: Alan Cameron Performers: Charlie Sayers, fh; Arthur Matlhatsi, vn; Kelly Petlane, as; Alan Cameron, p; Louis Mhlanga, g; Herbie Tsaoeli, Anthony Eagle, b; Reuben Samuels, Barry van Zyl, Ivor Back, d, perc; Mxolise Mayekane, voc. 1994
Cape Town Jazz, Sheer Sound, SSPCD 061 Track 14 (6.21)

07. Chicago
Quinquaginta Ramblers
Composer: Fisher (arr. Jimmy Dale) Performers: Peter Nicholson, Peter Griffiths t; John Ainsworth, Robert Greenish, Gec Sanders, reeds; John Greening, p; B F Dill-Russell, bj; Briant Aspinall, b; Tony Hadingham, d. 6 May 1933.
Cambridge University Jazz, Jazz Oracle, 8061 Track 23 (3.08)

08. Honky Tonk Train Blues
Meade 'Lux' Lewis
Composer: Lewis Performers: Meade Lux Lewis, p. 7 May 1936
Barrelhouse and Boogie, Bluebird, ND88334 Track 1 (3.01)

09. Time on My Hands
Ahmad Jamal
Composer: Youmans, Adamson, Gordon Performers: Ahmad Jamal, p; James Cammack, b; Idris Muhammad, d. July 2004
After Fajr, Dreyfus Jazz, FDM 36 676 2 Track 7 (7.24)

10. The Old Master Painter
Peggy Lee
Composer: Smith / Gillespie Performers: Peggy Lee, Mel Torme, the Mel-Tones, v; band directed by Sid Feller, including Skeets Herfurt, cl; Buddy Neal, p; Allen Reuss, g; Phil Stephens, b; Irv Cottler, d. 16 Nov 1949.
The Singles Collection, Capitol, 5397562 CD 2 Track 18 (2.50)

11. Dick’s Mood
Tony Lee
Composer: Lee Performers: Tony Lee, p; Tony Archer, b; Martin Drew, d; Tony Utah, cga. Feb 1979.
Street of Dreams, Lee Lambert, LAM 102, S 1, T 4 (7.31)

12. L’il Darlin’
Wigan Youth Jazz Orchestra
Composer: Hefti Performers: Amanda Darrington, Sheila Mason, Matthew Leaver, Andrew Pownall, Sharon Darby, Richard Halliwell, Luke Southern, s; David Hitchen, Georgina Bromilow, Malcolm Melling, Sharon Pennington, Andrea Connell, Stuart Anderson, t; Matthew Gill, Alison Heyes, Saurabh Jmadar, Derek McMahon, Andy Prior, tb; Leslie Chisnall, p; Gary Culshaw, b; Paul Rigby, d; Steven Buckley, g. Ian Darrington, director. September 1989
One More Time, Gateway Records, 006 (4.41)


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 passion for jazz, through an exploration of its great writers, singers and players, as told from his own individual perspective. Having spent more than twenty years as host to Jazz Record Requests, reading listeners' letters and observing their passion for all types of jazz, Geoffrey Smith goes solo in this new series, exploring and illuminating the story of great jazz across its entire range, through personally-selected sequences of tracks.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b01h5z0s

Louis Armstrong
Sun 11 Aug 2013
00:00
BBC Radio 3
Geoffrey Smith celebrates the triumphs of Louis Armstrong's later years.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b038542k
In the week of Louis Armstrong's birthday, Geoffrey Smith celebrates the triumphs of Satchmo's later years, from big band explosions like Swing that Music to such All-Star classics as Muskrat Ramble and On the Sunny Side of the Street.

Music Played

01. Hotter than That
Louis Armstrong
Composer: Hardin Performers: Louis Armstrong, c, v; Kid Ory, tb; Johnny Dodds, cl; Lil Armstrong, p; Lonnie Johnson, g. 13 December 1927
King Louis, Proper, P1471. Tr. 19 (3.00)

02. Basin Street Blues
Louis Armstrong
Composer: Williams Performers: Louis Armstrong, t, v; Fred Robinson, tb; Jimmy Strong, cl; Earl Hines, p, v; Mancy Carr, bjo, v; Zutty Singleton, d. 4 December 1928
King Louis, Proper, 1472 Tr. 8 (3.11)

03. I Can’t Give You Anything But Love
Louis Armstrong
Composer: Fields , McHugh Performers: Louis Armstrong, t, v; J.C. Higginbotham, tb; Albert Nicholas, Charlie Holmes, as; Teddy Hill, ts; Luis Russell, p; Eddie Condon, bj; Lonnie Johnson, g; Pops Foster, b; Paul Barbarin, d. 5 March 1929
Hot Fives and Sevens: Vol.4, JSP, JSPCD315 (1); Tr. 1 (3.21)

04. Some of These Days
Louis Armstrong
Composer: Armstrong Performers: Louis Armstrong, t,v; Homer Hobson, t; Fred Robinson, tb; Bert Curry, Crawford Wethington, as; Jimmy Strong, cl, ts; Carroll Dickerson, vn, ldr; Gene Anderson, p; Mancy Carr, bj; Pete Briggs, tu; Zutty Singleton, d. 19 July 1929
Hot Fives and Sevens: Vol.4, JSP, JSPCD315 (1); Tr. 8 (3.02)

05. Sweethearts on Parade
Louis Armstrong
Composer: Newman, Lombardo Performers: Louis Armstrong, t, v; Les Hite, c, as bs; George Orendorff, Harold Scott, t; Marvin Johnson, as; Charlie Hones, ts, cl; Henry Price, p; Bill Perkins, bjo; Joe Bailey, tu, b; Lionel Hampton, d. 23 December 1930
Mahogany Hall Stomp, ASV, CDAJA5049 (1); Tr.4 (3.14)

06. Thanks a Million
Louis Armstrong
Composer: Khan, Johnston Performers: Louis Armstrong, v; Gus Aiken, Louis Bacon, Leonard Davis, t; Jimmy Archey, Harry White, tb; Bingie Madison, cl, ts; Charlie Holmes, Henry Jones, as; Greely Walton, ts; Luis Russell, p, cond; Lee Blair, g; Pops Foster, b; Paul Barbarin, d. 3 October 1935
The Ultimate Collection, Verve, 543 699-2. D1, Tr. 9 (2.36)

07. Jubilee
Louis Armstrong
Composer: Carmichael, Adams Performers: Louis Armstrong, v; Henry ‘Red’ Allen, Louis Bacon, Shelton Hemphill, t; Wilbur De Paris, J.C. Higginbotham, GeorgeWashington, tb; Bingie Madison, Albert Nicholas, cl, ts; Pete Clark, Charlie Holmes, as; Luis Russell, p; Lee Blair, g; Pops Foster, b; Paul Barbarin, d; Chappie Willet, arr. 12 January 1938
The Ultimate Collection, Verve, 543 699-2. D1, Tr. 17 (2.35)

08. Swing that Music
Louis Armstrong
Composer: Gerlach, Armstrong Performers: Louis Armstrong, t, v; Leonard Davis, Gus Aiken, Louis Bacon, t; Jimmy Archey, tb; Henry Jones, Charlie Holmes, as; Bingie Madison, cl, ts; Greely Walkton, ts; Luis Russell, p; Lee Blair, g; Pops Foster, b; Paul Barbarin, d. 18 May 1936
Mahogany Hall Stomp, ASV, CDAJA5049 (1); Tr. 5 (2.51)

09. Struttin’ with Some Barbecue
Louis Armstrong
Composer: Hardin Performers: Louis Armstrong, v; Henry ‘Red’ Allen, Louis Bacon, Shelton Hemphill, t; Wilbur De Paris, J.C. Higginbotham, GeorgeWashington, tb; Bingie Madison, Albert Nicholas, cl, ts; Pete Clark, Charlie Holmes, as; Luis Russell, p; Lee Blair, g; Pops Foster, b; Paul Barbarin, d; Chappie Willet, arr. 12 January 1938
Louis Armstrong vol 4, Naxos, 8.120735. Tr. 20 (2.55)

10. Muskrat Ramble
Louis Armstrong
Composer: Ory Performers: Louis Armstrong, t, v; Jack Teagarden, tb; Barney Bigard, cl; Dick Cary, p; Arvell Shaw, b; Sid Catlett, d. 30 November 1947
Louis Armstrong, C’est Ci Bon, Proper, P1195. Tr. 13 (6.13)

11. On the Sunny Side of the Street
Louis Armstrong
Composer: Fields, McHugh Performers: Louis Armstrong, t, v; Jack Teagarden, tb; Barney Bigard, v; Dick Cary, p; Arvell Shaw, b; Sid Catlett, d. 30 November 1947
Louis Armstrong, C’est Ci Bon, Proper, P 1196, Tr.4 (6.47)

12. Loveless Love
Louis Armstrong
Composer: Handy Performers: Louis Armstrong, t, v; Trummy Young, tb; Barney Bigard, cl; Billy Kyle, p; Arvell Shaw, b; Barrett Deems, d; Vema Middleton, v. 12 July 1954
Louis Armstrong Plays W.C. Handy, Columbia/Legacy, CK 64925. Tr.13 (5.54)

13. I’m Just a Lucky So and So
Duke Ellington
Composer: Ellington, David Performers: Louis Armstrong, t, v; Duke Ellington, p; Trummy Young, tb; Barney Bigard, cl; Mort Herbert, b; Danny Barcelona, d. 3 – 4 April 1961
The Great Summit: The Master Takes, Roulette, 7243 5 24547 2 3. Tr. 2 (3.05)


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

Adam Nicolson
Sun 11 Aug 2013
12:00
BBC Radio 3
Writer Adam Nicolson talks to Michael Berkeley about his life and his favourite music.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b038542t
Adam Nicolson has the privilege, and the burden, of an extraordinary inheritance: Sissinghurst, that quintessentially English house and garden created by his grandparents Harold Nicolson and Vita Sackville-West. In his own right, he?s the author of a series of highly esteemed history books and television series, about the making of the King James Bible, about the English gentry, and most recently about 17th-century writers. But it?s that Sissinghurst connection which fascinates us all: growing up with bohemian writers and artists, there must have been music going on there all the time? Not at all - Adam reveals that his family were musical philistines. His father hated music because it moved him, and made him emotional ? so for an Englishman of that generation and class it was deeply suspect. It?s only in middle age that Adam is discovering music, and he admits cheerfully that his musical taste is 'dreadful'. He also talks about walking 6000 miles round Europe, about his love for the Hebrides, and about his disastrous 'open' marriage. Adam and his wife had a deal ? they were allowed to have two affairs a year, as long as they were abroad. This too was the legacy of Sissinghurst, and a father who urged him to have as many affairs as possible. What followed was predictable, and messy, but with a happy ending - as Adam?s choice of music reveals.

A light-hearted programme, which includes music by Mozart, Mendelssohn, Eric Whitacre, Prokofiev, Roberta Flack, and a reading by Alec Guinness of T.S.Eliot's 'Little Gidding'.

Music Played

00:05
Felix Mendelssohn
The Hebrides Overture (Fingal's Cave) Op.26

00:11
Sergei Prokofiev
Peter and the Wolf, Op.67

00:20
Joseph Canteloube
Bailero (Chants d'Auvergne)

00:29
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
Symphony No.41 (Jupiter)(2nd mvt: Andante Cantabile)

00:46
Ewan MacColl
The first time ever I saw your face

00:49
Eric Whitacre
Lux Aurumque

00:55
Traditional
Bi Lamban


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
There Will Be Blood
Sun 11 Aug 2013
18:15
BBC Radio 3
Texts and music on the theme of blood, with readings by Indira Varma and Rory Kinnear.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b0385432
The theme is blood and the anticipation of it being spilled: whether in war, sacrifice or murder.

Indira Varma and Rory Kinnear read poems and prose by John Webster, Bram Stoker, Carol Ann Duffy and Seamus Heaney. Music is by Monteverdi, Gesualdo, Gluck, Bartók, Barber, Alessandro Scarlatti, Gavin Bryars and Harrison Birtwistle.

Producer's Note
The programme begins with music from Verdi’s version of Macbeth, perhaps one of our bloodiest tales, and a song from John Webster’s murderous masterpiece, the Duchess of Malfi, anticipating the deaths to come. Later we meet Cassandra the doomed Trojan prophetess whose visions are of the ongoing bloodshed unleashed in the House of Atreus, by the sacrifice of Iphegenia.

The creep of blood described in Tennyson’s In Memoriam is one of dread but the excitement of anticipation is not straightforward. Here in an extract from Bram Stoker’s Dracula we peep, with the protagonist, through his lashes and experience his delicious horror at the voluptuous approach of the vampire.

Blood’s association with love and desire is longstanding. Those of a sanguine temperament were said to be amorous and today we might refer to those of a lustier disposition as being hot-blooded. The final, beautiful duet of Monteverdi’s Coronation of Poppea sees “love” triumph over “fortune” or “virtue” but those with a historical understanding will know that the Roman Emperor Nero and his second wife Poppea’s honeymoon was short-lived. He would go on to cause her death with a kick to the stomach. Likewise, the exquisite beauty of Carlo Gesualdo’s madrigals belie his notoriety as murderer of his wife and her lover.

After a circulation boosting polka from Johann Strauss II we meet women with blood on their hands: Lady Macbeth and Medea and, in Carol Ann Duffy’s Salome’s case, a woman with an unexpected head on her pillow. There’s reference to the very first recorded murder – that of Abel by Cain and there’s beastly power in the depiction of the Greek warrior Hector as an East African lion about to spring with deadly intent and in Melville’s description of the Maldive Shark’s charnel maw.

The murder of Cock Robin is matched with a song, The Cutty Wren, about the old English tradition of a ritual Boxing Day hunt of a wren and we hear, from Seamus Heaney, of Actaeon’s horrible transformation to a stag and his death: torn apart by his own hounds. The turn of the year is also a time of magical bloodshed and it is amidst the feasting and celebration of King Arthur’s court that the great Green Knight appears and demands his head be sliced from his shoulders.

Traditionally, of course, the cuckoo is the herald of spring but its call is also one of the most certain signs of impending death. The cuckoo chick, hatched in the nest of another bird, swiftly dispatches the other eggs, sacrificing its companions the better to survive itself. Stravinsky’s Rite of Spring is set alongside a cool, contemporary account of the practice of Aztec sacrifice during the sixteenth century and La Llorona, the legendary weeping-woman of South American legend, sometimes linked with the conquest of the Aztecs, sings for her lost children.

Wilfred Owen refashions the Old Testament story of Abraham and Isaac for a World War I context. In the original story the obedient Abraham prepares to sacrifice his son Isaac as God has instructed him, an angel intervenes at the last moment and a ram is sacrificed in Isaac’s stead. Here Abraham refuses to slaughter the Ram of Pride and kills his son and “half the seed of Europe, one by one.”

Blood plays a vital part in Christian symbolism: Jesus’ blood shed to redeem the sinners of the world and remembered in the ritual of the Eucharist, prayers and hymns. Here there’s a verse from William Cowper’s There is a Fountain Filled with Blood and a remarkable piece by Gavin Bryars which uses a looped recording of a homeless man singing a religious song: Jesus Blood Never Failed Me Yet to extraordinary emotionally powerful effect.

Producer: Natalie Steed


Music and featured items
Timings (where shown) are the time of the day

18:15
Giuseppe Verdi
Macbeth, Preludio
Performer: Core e Orchestra del Teatro alla Scala, cond Claudio Abbado
DEUTSCHE GRAMMOPHON, tr 01

John Webster
from The Duchess of Malfi, reader Indira Varma

18:18
Béla Bartók arranged by Zoltán Székely
Romanian folk dances no.3; Transylvanian stamping dance
Performer: violin Ida Haendel, piano Vladimir Ashkenazy
DECCA, tr 11

Bram Stoker
from Dracula, reader Rory Kinnear

18:21
Claudio Monteverdi
L’incoronazione di Poppea, Pur ti miro
Performer: The English Baroque Soloists, cond John Eliot Gardiner, Syvia McNair, Dana Hanchard
ARCHIV 4470882, tr 10 (3)

18:25
Johann Strauss II
Leichtes Blut, polka
Performer: London Philharmonic Orchestra, cond Theodor Guschlbauer
EMI, tr 01

18:28
Richard Strauss
Salome, Dance of the Seven Veils
Performer: Orchester der Deustchen Oper Berlin, cond Giuseppe Sinopoli
DEUTSCHE GRAMMAPHON 4318102, tr 02 (2)

Carol Ann Duffy
Salome, reader Indira Varma

18:37
Samuel Barber
Medea Ballet Suite, Choros. Medea and Jason
Performer: Royal Scottish National Orchestra, cond Marin Alsop
NAXOS 8559088, tr 05

William Shakespeare
from Macbeth, reader Indira Varma

Christopher Logue
from All Day Permanent Red, reader Rory Kinnear

18:42
John Williams
The Shark Cage Fugue
Performer:
Herman Melville
The Maldive Shark, reader Indira Varma

18:15
Alessandro Scarlatti
Il Primo Omicidio, Spiritoso
Performer: Akademie für Alte Musik, Berlin, Konzertmeister Bernhard Forck
HARMONIA MUNDI HMC90164950, tr 01

Anon
Who Killed Cock Robin?, reader Rory Kinnear

18:47
Ferguson, Hunter, Bruce, Dunst, Darren,Hamer, Watts, Whalley, Abbott, Nutter
The Cutty Wren
Performer: Chumbawamba
One Little Indian, tr 01

18:15
Alan Abbott
Alla caccia arr. for horn and piano [orig. for horn and orchestra]
Performer: Michael Thompson, horn, Philip Fowke, piano
EMI Classics CDC 7 54220 2,, tr 01

Seamus Heaney
Actaeon, reader Indira Varma

18:52
Heinrich Ignaz Franz von Biber
Sonata violino solo representativa for violin and continuo in A major, Cucu
Performer: Andrew Manze, violin, Nigel North lute, John Toll harpsichord
Harmonia Mundi, tr 11

18:52
Igor Stravinsky
Le sacre du printemps, II Le Sacrifice, Action rituelle des ancêtres
Performer: London Philharmonic Orchestra, conductor Bernard Haitnik
PHILIPS 4204912, tr12

José de Acosta
Human Sacrifice among the Aztecs c 1520, reader Rory Kinnear

18:56
Luis Mars
La Llorona
Performer: Chavela Vargas
DECCA 4741502, TR 16

18:59
Hans Erdmann, arranged by Gillian B Anderson and James Kessler
Nosferatu, A Symphony of Horror, Theme I
Performer: The Brandenburg Philharmonic Orchestra, conductor Gillian B Anderson
RCA 09026681432, 02

Aeschylus, trans. Richard Lattimore
Cassandra, from Agamemnon, reader Indira Varma

19:01
Christoph Willibald Gluck
Iphigénie en Tauride, O malheureuse Iphigénie!
Performer: Monteverdi Choir, Orchestre de L’Opéra de Lyon, conductor John Elliot Gardiner
PHILIPS 4161482, tr 14

Wilfred Owen
The Parable of the Old Man and the Young, reader Rory Kinnear

19:07
Michael John Harvey, Nicholas Edward Cave,Thomas Wydler
Red Right Hand
Performer: Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds
Mute Records Limited, tr 02

19:12
Sir Harrison Birtwistle
Gawain’s Journey, Introduction, The Opening of the Door
Performer: Philharmonia Orchestra, conductor Elgar Howarth
NMC NMCD088, tr 11, 12

Simon Armitage
Sir Gawain and the Green Knight, reader Rory Kinnear

Ted Hughes
King of Carrion, reader Indira Varma

19:16
Carlo Gesualdo
Fifth Book of Madrigals for Five Voices, T’amo, mia vita!
Performer: Consirt of Musicke Anthony Rooley
OISEAU LYRE 4101282, tr 21

Alfred Lord Tennyson
In Memoriam, Be Near Me When My Light is Low, reader Rory Kinnear

19:19
Gavin Bryars
Jesus’ Blood Never Failed Me Yet
Performer: Orchestra: Cockpit Ensemble, Derek Bailey, Michale Nyman, John Nash, John White, Sandra Hill, conductor Gavin Bryars
VENTURE CDVE938, tr 02

William Cowper
There is a Fountain Filled With Blood , reader Rory Kinnear