14 今週のお気に入り 27

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: 2014年 7月 5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. こんな夜 on a night like this / 藤島晃一 // ベスト・通り過ぎれば風の詩
02. Honky Tonk / Bobby Bland // Turn On Your Love Light: The Duke Recordings, Vol. 2
03. That’s The Way I Feel About Cha / Bobby Womack // The Best Of Bobby Womack: The Soul Years
04. Across 110th Street / Bobby Womack // The Best Of Bobby Womack: The Soul Years
05. Harry Hippie / Bobby Womack // The Best Of Bobby Womack: The Soul Years
06. California Dreamin' / Bobby Womack // The Best Of Bobby Womack: The Soul Years
07. Jesus Be A Fence Around Me / Bobby Womack // Back To My Roots
08. American Dream / Bobby Womack // The Poet II
09. It Might As Well Rain Until September / Carole King // Early Girls Volume 1
10. Will You Love Me Tomorrow / Carole King // Tapestry
11. (You Make Me Feel Like) A Natural Woman / Aretha Franklin // Lady Soul
12. Don’t Ever Change / Brinsley Schwartz // Silver Pistol-Please Don’t Ever Change
13. All That You Dream / Little Feat // Live In Holland 1976
14. Cold Cold Cold / Little Feat // Live In Holland 1976
15. Mercenary Territory / Little Feat // The Last Record Album
16. Lightning-Rod Man / Lowell George & The Factory // Lightning-Rod Man
17. Willin' / Robert Palmer // Pressure Drop
18. Heaven / Jimmy Scott // Heaven
19. On Broadway / Jimmy Scott // The Source


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://www4.nhk.or.jp/kaiteki/
放送日: 2014年 7月 5日(土)
放送時間: 午前9:00〜午前11:00(120分)
ゴンチチ
藤川パパQ

− 宇宙の音楽 パート2 −

「漁夫の利」 (ゴンチチ
(3分30秒)
<EPIC/SONY ESCB1309>
スペースウォーカー」 (F)
(5分30秒)
<7EVEN REC. 7EVENCD01>
「フォービドゥン・プラネット」
(デイヴィッド・ローズ&ヒズ・オーケストラ)
(2分28秒)
<ACE REC. CDCHD1371>
「スターマン」 (セウ・ジョルジ)
(3分15秒)
<HOLLYWOOD REC. CTCW-53078>
「トム少佐(カミング・ホーム)」
ウィリアム・シャトナー、ニック・ヴァレンシ)
(5分18秒)
<CLEOPATRA CLP4799-2>
「タロ」 (アルト・ジェイ)
(4分58秒)
<INFECTIOUS MUSIC LTD. LOVECD223>
スター・ウォーズのテーマ」 (冨田勲
(3分06秒)
BMG JAPAN BVCC-37509>
「フライ・ミー・トゥー・ザ・ムーン」
フランク・シナトラカウント・ベイシー
(2分29秒)
<MALPASO/WARNER BROS 9362-47848-2>
「二十絃箏とオーケストラのための宇宙樹 魂の路」
新実徳英・作曲
(二十五絃箏)野坂恵子
管弦楽名古屋フィルハーモニー交響楽団
(指揮)飯守泰次郎
(2分39秒)
<LIVE NOTES WWCC-7284>
「オレは宇宙のファンタジー」 (アリラン明電)
(3分36秒)
<KI/OON KSC2 193>
「ハウス・オブ・ライジング・サン」
(ザ・アルマナック・シンガーズ)
(2分54秒)
NAXOS FOLK 8.120733>
「映画“銀河鉄道の夜”エンドテーマ」 (細野晴臣
(4分14秒)
<TEICHIKU REC. TECN-18035>
「私のまわりの宇宙」 (マリーザ・モンチ
(3分10秒)
<MUSIC FROM EMI 0094635910728>
「宇宙」 (キンテート・グロリア)
(2分40秒)
<VICTOR VICP-63645>
「テーマ・フロム・スタートレック」 (デオダート)
(4分40秒)
<UNIVERSAL 060075300715>
「スターダスト」 (カエターノ・ヴェローゾ
(3分24秒)
<UNIVERSAL UCCM-1063>
「ルネズ・テーマ」(ラリー・コリエル、ジョン・マクラウリン)
(4分10秒)
<ACE/VANGUARD MASTERS VMD7934>
「メイド・オブ・ザ・ムーン」
(ディック・ハイマン&メアリー・メイヨー)
(2分48秒)
<ACE REC. CDCHD1371>
「ア・テンポ」 (ゴンチチ
(3分11秒)
<EPIC/SONY ESCB1309>
「アランフェス協奏曲」
(モダン・ジャズ・カルテット、ローリンド・アルメイダ)
(1分35秒)
PHILIPS 30JD-10093>
「アランフェス協奏曲」 (ニコラス・ペイトン)
(5分06秒)
<BMF REC. BMF002>
「ユー・ウィル」 (ココムジカ)
(3分00秒)
<COCO←MUSIKA REC. CMSK-002>


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

Nicola Benedetti
Thu 3 Jul 2014
20:05
BBC Radio Scotland
http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b0482y0s
This week Bruce brings you a very special programme looking at the musical crossovers between classical and folk music. This includes an extended interview with Scottish virtuoso violinist, Nicola Benedetti. Nicola talks about her latest foray into folk music, with new interpretations of some Burns classics. Plus, we discover what it was like for her working with folk musicians Phil Cunningham, Aly Bain and Julie Fowlis. And Bruce even gets his fiddle out and has a tune with her.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DwyYoUPjRw4
We also hear tracks from various folk musicians who have classical connections, including Moishe's Bagel, Seth Lakeman and Dougie MacLean.

Music Played

01. Tantz Glassidic
Moishe's Bagel
Salt, Eachday Music

02. Lady of the Sea
Seth Lakeman Live With The BBC Concert Orchestra
Seth Lakeman Live With The BBC Concert Orchestra, Honour Oak Records

03. Green Grow The Rashes, O
Jean Redpath
The Songs of Robert Burns, Volumes 3 & 4, Rounder Records

04. Flying Circus
Sharon Shannon & The RTE Concert Orchestra
Flying Circus, RTE

Various: Homecoming

Various: Homecoming

05. Bruch Finale
Nicola Benedetti
Promo, Promo
http://www.amazon.co.uk/Homecoming-Scottish-Fantasy-Nicola-Benedetti/dp/B00JLZVJSM/ref=pd_rhf_eebr_p_img_1
06. Bruch 3rd Bruch - Andante sostenuto (Scottish Fantasy, 3rd Mvt)
Nicola Benedetti
Promo, Promo

07. Auld Lang Syne
Nicola Benedetti
Promo, Promo

08. The Hurricane Set
Nicola Benedetti
Promo, Promo

09. Johnny & Phil Reels
Silly Wizard
Live Again, Birnam

10. My Love Is Like A Red Red Rose
Nicola Benedetti
Promo, Promo

11. Gentle Light That Wakes Me
Nicola Benedetti & Aly Bain
Promo, Promo

12. Mouth Music & Tunes Set
Nicola Benedetti & Julie Fowlis
Promo, Promo

13. The Spey in Spate
Nicola Benedetti & Bruce Macgregor
BBC Recording, BBC Recording

14. Hurricane
Nicola Benedetti
Promo, Promo

15. Pumphouse
Collectress
fRoots 49, fRoots

16. Am I Blue
Rose Room
Am I Blue, 2013 EmuBands

17. Prelude
Tony McManus
Mysterious Boundaries, Greentrax

18. Lovely Joan
Martin Carthy
Martin Carthy, Topic

19. Sea Of Okhotsk
Treacherous Orchestra
Origins, Navigator


Jazz Record Requests
Make a request...
http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b006tnn9

Sat 5 Jul 2014
17:00
BBC Radio 3
http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b048bgj4
The sound of summer is reflected in this week's selection of listeners' requests. Alyn Shipton plays summery themes from Dave Brubeck and Machito's Afro-Cubans. There's also a memory of Eric Dolphy, and live concert tracks from two very different reed players: New Orleans clarinettist George Lewis and hard bop tenor saxophonist Johnny Griffin.

Music Played

01. Bucabu
MACHITO AND HIS AFRO CUBANS
Performer: Gene Johnson. Performer: Fred Skerritt. Performer: Flip Phillips. Performer: Brew Moore. Performer: Leslie Johnakins. Performer: Frank Davilla. Performer: Bobby Woodlen. Performer: Howard McGhee. Performer: Mario Bauzá. Performer: René Hernández. Performer: Jose Mangual. Performer: Ubaldo Nieto.
Bucabu, Musica Latina, 15

02. Strange Meadow Lark
The Dave Brubeck Quartet
Performer: Paul Desmond. Performer: Gene Wright. Performer: Dave Brubeck. Performer: Joe Morello.
Time Out, Columbia, 2

03. Deep Night
Art Tatum
Performer: Art Tatum. Performer: Buddy DeFranco. Performer: Red Callender. Performer: Bill Douglas.
Art Tatum Group Masterpieces Vol. 7, Pablo, 8

04. St. Philip Street Breakdown
George Lewis with Ken Colyer's Jazzmen
Performer: George Lewis. Performer: Ken Colyer. Performer: Geoff Cole. Performer: Johnny Bastable. Performer: Bill Cole. Performer: Bryan Hetherington.
George Lewis with Ken Colyer's Jazzmen 1966, Lake, 8

05. Fables of Faubus
Charles Mingus
Performer: Johnny Coles. Performer: Eric Dolphy. Performer: Clifford Jordan. Performer: Jaki Byard. Performer: Dannie Richmond.
The Jazz Workshop Concerts 1964-5, Mosaic, 4

06. Moonshine Dancer
John Surman
Performer: John Taylor. Performer: Chris Laurence. Performer: John Marshall.
Stranger Than Fiction, ECM, 6

07. Tried and Tested
Lorna Reid
Performer: Colin Steele. Performer: Euan Stevenson. Performer: Ed Kelly. Performer: Graeme Stephen. Performer: Dave Swanson.
Falling Like Dew, Lorna Reid, 2

08. Penthouse Serenade
Nat King Cole
Performer: JOHN COLLINS. Performer: Charlie Harris. Performer: Norris "Bunny" Shawker.
Penthouse Serenade, Capitol, 1

09. Rhythm-a-ning
Thelonious Monk
Performer: Johnny Griffin. Performer: Ahmed Abdul-Malik. Performer: Roy Haynes.
Thelonious in Action, Riverside, 3


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

Music in the Great War: Pat Barker
Sun 6 Jul 2014
12:00
BBC Radio 3
http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b03nc688
Writer Pat Barker is fascinated by the First World War; for twenty years now, her award-winning novels have returned again and again to the trauma and grief and erotic intensity of wartime. Her novels draw on the experiences of real people: Siegfried Sassoon, Wilfred Owen, and in particular the army doctor W.H. Rivers, a pioneering psychiatrist who treated victims of shell shock. As this centenary year opens, with all its commemorations of the First World War, Pat Barker talks about why and how we should remember War - and about the power of fiction to tell historical truth.

She reveals that her fascination with war began as a child; she was brought up by her grandparents, and her grandfather had a bayonet wound which she saw every time he washed at the kitchen sink. 'Through my grandfather and my stepfather, I have a direct link through to the world before the war - for me it's not simply reading history.' Pat Barker herself was a war baby - born in 1943 after her mother, a Wren, had a one-night stand with a man in the RAF. She never traced her father, and that central mystery in her life, 'half my identity missing', was part of what drove her to write. She talks about the stigma her mother faced as an unmarried mother, and in a moving section of the interview she wishes she could speak to her mother now to tell her 'It doesn't matter'.

Pat Barker's music choices include her grandfather's favourite music hall song - his party piece as a boy in the 1890s; Anton Lesser reading two poems by Wilfred Owen, and Benjamin Britten's setting of Wilfred Owen in his 'Nocturne'; Butterworth's 'The Banks of Green Willow'; original cast recordings from Joan Littlewood's 'Oh What a Lovely War'; and Elgar's Cello Concerto, in the famous recording by Jacqueline du Pré.

First broadcast 05/01/2014.


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

Aftermath
Sun 6 Jul 2014
17:30
BBC Radio 3
http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b048bh2w
From shellshock to women's suffrage, homecomings to war memorials, the League of Nations to Spanish flu, a sequence of poems, prose and music reflecting a world changed by war. James Wilby and Helen Baxendale read poems by Sassoon, Whitman and Gurney and excerpts from Pat Barker, Woodrow Wilson and contemporary documents, while the music includes works by Elgar, Ravel and Tippett.

Producer Note
For this final part of our trilogy of Words and Music in the Great War, we have followed on from ‘Outbreak’ and ‘Displacement’ to explore the legacy of war in ‘Aftermath’. It’s a big subject; indeed, who’s to say where it ends? Nearly 100 years after the First World War, we are still living in its shadow, rerunning it in our minds in an uneasy combination of fascination and horror. Its long political reach continues to shape our world today, and its emotional scars still haunt us.

To keep it within some sort of bounds, I’ve picked a clutch of issues that affected the first postwar decades. They include timelessly repeating states of mind such as mourning, reconciliation, hope for a better world and disillusionment, but also focus on others more specific to the decades following the Great War, such as the 1919 Spanish flu pandemic, shellshock and facial disfigurement.

Relief followed by mourning were understandably the most immediate reaction to the November 1918 armistice, and the programme opens with Sebastian Faulks’s memorable description of a dazed and drained Stephen Wraysford, the central character of his hugely popular novel Birdsong, surfacing from days trapped underground to find the war over and the battlefield deserted. Bob Chilcott’s choral setting of Siegfried Sassoon’s armistice poem Everyone Sang offers a more grateful response, if still tinged by sadness and regret. In between come the moving opening chorus of John Foulds’s solemnly pacifist World Requiem, composed in a rush of emotion in the last months of 1918, and first heard at a massive remembrance service in the Royal Albert Hall in 1923. There is also a short extract from a private soldier’s letter home, looking forward to a quiet homecoming with no questions.

Many minds were exercised in the immediate postwar period as to how the millions of war dead could most fittingly be memorialised. This was when the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier, the Commonwealth War Graves and several hundred village war memorials came into being – not without controversy, as it happens – and the poems I have chosen by William Alexander Percy, Ivor Gurney and Charlotte Mew, while earnest in their compassion, are each mindful in their own way of over-simplification of remembrance. They are complemented by musical elegiacs by Ravel, Elgar and Holst.

Hopes of a new and better world surface in a diary account by ‘An Austrian Middle-Class Woman’ documenting her son’s new-found egalitarianism, fired by anger at society’s upper echelons, and in a section from one of President Woodrow Wilson’s speeches in favour of the establishment of the League of Nations, an organisation which sadly failed to achieve its aims, and whose proposals, intended to put the brakes on irresponsible warmongering, today seem if anything further than ever from being realised.

What joy and relief there was at the end of hostilities was brief for some when a Spanish influenza pandemic took a further 50-100 million lives in 1918-9. The responses I have found to it may be essentially light-hearted, but it is black humour none the less.

Many who survived both war and flu, however, went on to live blighted lives, either as a result of shellshock, the condition now known as combat stress reaction which was only then beginning to be understood. Siegfried Sassoon saw shellshock sufferers at first hand during his own recuperation period at Craiglockhart War Hospital, and pictured them memorably in his poem ‘Survivors’, while Gilbert Frankau, an interwar campaigner for shellshocked servicemen, made one the eponymous main character of his novel Peter Jameson. Their evocations of the terrors that never go away, even when combat itself is a distant memory, are complemented by Bruce Springsteen’s post-Vietnam song Turn out the Light. A world where heroes’ deeds are soon forgotten and the little man overlooked once more is evoked in one of the 1930s’ most poignant popular songs, ‘Brother, can you spare a dime?’, before an extract from Pat Barker’s 2012 novel Toby’s Room depicts the shattered life of one of the many soldiers whose survival came at the expense of terrible and debilitating facial disfigurement.

After all this, and looking around at the constant state of conflict in the world today, it was hard to end in optimistic vein. The Offertorium from Benjamin Britten’s War Requiem, troped by Wilfred Owen’s poem outlining a tragic alternative ending to the Biblical story of Abraham and Isaac, hammers home how often we waste lives even when given the chance not to; Sassoon’s Cenotaph meditation reveals his fears for a dark future; and the opening chorus from A Child of our Time, Michael Tippett’s Second World War oratorio inspired by Nazi pogroms, bleakly depicts a world ‘turning on its dark side’. Yet I have at least chosen to end on a quiet note of hope, with a poem by Walt Whitman written in the aftermath of the American Civil War, celebrating one positive course that will always be open to us – reconciliation.

Lindsay Kemp
Producer

Music Played

Sebastian Faulks
Birdsong, read by James Wilby

00:01
John Foulds
Requiem aeternam (A World Requiem)
Performer: Gerald Finley (baritone), Crouch End Festival Chorus, Philharmonia Chorus, BBC Symphony Chorus, BBC Symphony Orchestra, Leon Botstein (conductor).
Chandos CHSA5058, CD1 Tr1

Letter by Private Charles T. Green, King’s Royal Rifle Corps
Read by James Wilby

00:11
Bob Chilcott
Everyone Sang
Performer: Wellensian Consort, Christopher Finch (conductor).
Naxos 8.573158, Tr3

William Alexander Percy
Poppy Fields – France, 1918, read by Helen Baxendale

00:14
Maurice Ravel
Fugue (from ‘Le Tombeau de Couperin’)
Performer: Steven Osborne (piano).
Hyperion CDA 677312, CD2 Tr2

Ivor Gurney
To his Love, read by James Wilby

00:18
Edward Elgar
Cello Concerto in E minor, Op. 85 (1st movement) (excerpt)
Performer: Jacqueline Du Pré (cello), London Symphony Orchestra, John Barbirolli (conductor).
EMI CDC 747 3292, Tr1

Charlotte Mew
The Cenotaph, read by Helen Baxendale

00:27
Gustav Holst
Ode to Death (excerpt)
Performer: London Symphony Chorus, Richard Hickox (conductor).
Chandos CHAN 2416, CD2 Tr10

Woodrow Wilson
Speech in favour of the League of Nations. Pueblo, 25 September 1919 (excerpt). Read by James Wilby

00:35
George and Ira Gershwin
The League of Nations (from ‘Of Thee I Sing!’)
Performer: New York Choral Artists, Orchestra of St Lukes, Michael Tilson Thomas (conductor).
CBS M2K 42522, CD2 Tr17

Anna Eisenmenger
Blockade –- The Diary of an Austrian Middle-Class Woman 1914-24, read by Helen Baxendale

00:39
Dmitri Shostakovich
Symphony No. 12 ‘'The Year 1917' (3rd movt) (excerpt)
Performer: Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra, Vassily Petrenko (conductor).
Naxos 8.572658, Tr6

Anon
Influenza, read by Helen Baxendale

00:40
Essie Jenkins
Influenza Blues
Performer: Essie Jenkins (voice).
Arhoolie CD510, Tr8

Walt Mason
The Influenza, read by James Wilby

Siegfried Sassoon
Survivors, read by Helen Baxendale

00:45
Bruce Springsteen
Turn out the Light
Performer: Bruce Springsteen.
Columbia 492 605 2, CD2 Tr17

Gilbert Frankau
Peter Jameson -– A Modern Romance, read by Helen Baxendale

00:51
Yip Harburg & Jay Gorney
Brother, can you spare a dime?
Performer: Bing Crosby, Lennie Heyton and his orchestra.
ASV CDAJA 5183, Tr16

Pat Barker
Toby’s Room (excerpt), read by Helen Baxendale

00:00
Benjamin Britten
Offertorium (from ‘A War Requiem’) (excerpt)
Performer: Philip Langridge (tenor), John Shirley-Quirk (baritone), Choristers of St Paul’s Cathedral, London Symphony Chorus, London Symphony Orchestra, Richard Hickox (conductor).
Chandos CHAN 8983/4, CD1 Tr3

Siegfried Sassoon
At the Cenotaph, read by James Wilby

01:04
Sir Michael Tippett
The world turns on its dark side (from ‘A Child of Our Time’)
Performer: London Symphony Chorus, London Symphony Orchestra, Colin Davis (conductor).
LSO LIVE LSO 0670, Tr1

Walt Whitman
Reconciliation, read by James Wilby