15 今週のお気に入り 11

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14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. Flip Flop / Felix Cavaliere // Destiny
02. I’ll Never Give It Up / Richard Thompson // Sweet Warrior
03. If Love Whispers Your Name / Richard Thompson // Dream Attic
04. My Country ’Tis Of Thee / David Crosby // Voyage
05. Delta / Crosby, Stills & Nash // Voyage
06. Traction In The Rain / Crosby & Nash // Voyage
07. Glory / Bobby McFerrin And Esperanza Spalding // Spirityouall
08. Whole World / Bobby McFerrin And Esperanza Spalding // Spirityouall
09. Up Above My Head / Rhiannon Giddens // Tomorrow Is My Turn
10. Tomorrow Is My Turn / Rhiannon Giddens // Tomorrow Is My Turn
11. What A Little Moonlight Can Do / Cassandra Wilson // Coming Forth by Day
12. We Gotta Get Out Of This Place / Animals // The Complete Animals
13. Houston Chicks / Doug Sahm // Groovers’ Paradise
14. Papa Was A Rolling Stone / Marcus Miller // Afrodeezia
15. Let The Good Times Roll / B.B. King & Bobby Bland // Ladies & Gentlemen... Mr. B.B. King
16. To Know You Is To Love You / B.B. King // Ladies & Gentlemen... Mr. B.B. King


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: 2015年 3月14日(土)
放送時間: 午前9:00〜午前11:00(120分)
ゴンチチ
渡辺亨

− きらめきと輝きの音楽 −

「虹」 (ゴンチチ
(2分10秒)
<EPIC/SONY ESCB1829>

「メタル・グルー」 (ティー・レックス)
(2分23秒)
テイチクエンタテインメント TECI-25432>

「ミラージュ2(リフレクティング・スワンズ)」
(グェン・タン・トゥイ)
(6分28秒)
<PHUONG NAM PHIM NO NUMBER>

「ジ・イヴニング・スター」 (ダニー・ノーバリー)
(2分16秒)
<LACIES RECORDS LOVE LACIES003>

「イフ・ヒー・ウォークド・イントゥ・マイ・ライフ」
(トニー・モットーラ)
(4分09秒)
<BLUE MOON BMCD844>

「金髪の女」 (ディック・ファルネイ)
(2分27秒)
<EMI 7954902>

「水の戯れ」 ラヴェル作曲
(ピアノ)サンソン・フランソワ
(6分00秒)
<EMI MUSIC FRANCE 72435 7543729>

「サンシャイン・レディー」 (ディオン)
(2分26秒)
<ACE REC. CDCHD792>

ピアノ・ソロ

ピアノ・ソロ

「ドント・トーク」 (ステファノ・ボラーニ)
(6分15秒)
ECM ECM1964>

“Piano solo” is a modest title for this encyclopaedic recital that romps through the history of jazz and more, and which, in its rapid-fire, quick-witted turnover of ideas, reveals a unique musical personality. Italian pianist Bollani (born 1972) is a major talent, armed with prodigious technique. A taste of this will already have been gleaned from his contributions to Enrico Rava’s “Easy Living” and “Tati” but here his imagination roams widely indeed. Bollani plays a Scott Joplin rag, improvises freely, plays tango music from the early 20th century, plays standards, plays his own compositions. He plays the Beach Boys’ “Don’t Talk” and tunes made famous by Louis Armstrong and Nat King Cole. He improvises on a theme from Prokofiev’s First Piano Concerto... And: he makes this whirlwind journey through the genres seem both logical and necessary.

http://www.ecmrecords.com/Catalogue/ECM/1900/1964.php?cat

http://www.theguardian.com/music/2006/oct/13/jazz.shopping3
http://www.stefanobollani.com/?portfolio=piano-solo&lang=ja
http://www.stefanobollani.com/?page_id=40&lang=ja
http://www.iicosaka.esteri.it/IIC_Osaka/webform/SchedaEvento.aspx?id=240
http://www.amazon.co.uk/Piano-Solo-Stefano-Bollani/dp/B000GQMK6K/
「愛はきらめきの中に(ハウ・ディープ・イズ・ユア・ラヴ)」
(ザ・バード&サ・ビー)
(3分25秒)
<MUSIC FROM EMI TOCP-70325>

「ジュビリー」 (ドン・ペリス)
(3分09秒)
<JEMEZ MOUNTAIN JMD-944>

「ゴー・イージー」 (ジョン・マーチン)
(4分14秒)
<UNIVERSAL/ISLAND REC. IMCD321/983 073-1>

「サンペドロ・ゴールド」 (グレート3)
(4分02秒)
東芝EMI TOCT-9465>

「リヴェンジ」 (テンジャー・マウス&スパークル・ホース、フレーミング・リップス
(4分54秒)
<CAPITOL/PARLOPHONE 6481362>

「シランクス」 ドビュッシー作曲
(フルート)パトリック・ガロワ
(2分18秒)
AVEX ENTERTAMENT AVCL-25796>

「ヒア・カムズ・ザ・サン」 (ニーナ・シモン
(3分37秒)
RCA REC. RJL-2543>

「夕海月」 (ゴンチチ
(3分22秒)
ポニーキャニオン PCCA-01512>

「イタカ」 (ジョー・バルビエリ)
(3分30秒)
<コア・ポート RPOP10008>

「驚きのすべ」 (ジョー・バルビエリ)
(3分41秒)
<コア・ポート RPOP10008>

Mockroot

Mockroot

「トゥー・ラヴ」 (ティグラン・ハマシアン)
(2分01秒)
WARNER MUSIC WPCR-16399>

「カルス1」 (ティグラン・ハマシアン)
(5分24秒)
WARNER MUSIC WPCR-16399>


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

Bella Hardy
http://www.frootsmag.com/content/issue/reviews/
Thu 12 Mar 2015
20:05
BBC Radio Scotland
http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b054tfcn
Award winning singer and songwriter Bella Hardy joins Bruce Macgregor.

With the Dawn

With the Dawn

BELLA HARDY With The Dawn Noe Records NOE08


With The Dawn is a title redolent of new beginnings. Not without reason. This, as the editor would have it, is a Great Leap Forward of a record.

Bella’s voice, like a razor-winged bird in a clear blue sky, speaks for itself. But her writing here is a breath-halter – articulate, earthbound and disarmingly honest. Rather than drawing inspiration from the traditional canon, the songs document, and attempt to make sense of, a turbulent year on the road: a relentless year of displacement, of heartache and of joy. Her intimate observations and revelations are sharply focused and poetically crafted, from the hearth-embrace of friendship in The Darkening Of The Day to the misfit-relationship study of Gifts or the hopeful resolution of And We Begin.

And the writing on With The Dawn explodes into life as a result of the instinctive match of sound to lyrics. Its great, enveloping bigness, its aching starkness and melancholy, its mellifluous loveliness! The artful and intuitive sound-painting of (my new favourite!) producer, Ben Seal is masterly. It sweeps you into Bella’s world, to share not just the blurred landscapes she sees from the trains, the tumbleweed existence of life on the road, but also the moments of revelation in a sunrise, the Damascene clarity of a homecoming, the revised expectations, the making sense of lost and found love, the search for meaning.

The Only Thing To Do is a case in point, matching Bella’s litany of incessant motion, her frenetic physical and raw emotional ride of a year, with anthemic horns and edgy electronic blips and neon buzzes. The wistful First Light Of The Morning (hear it on this issue’s fRoots 53 compilation) builds and drops back from a bare-boned banjo melody and a tsunami-swell of brass, exquisitely framing Bella’s tumbling cascade of a vocal. On the dark and bruised Another Whisky Song, we hear a scratchy gramophone-filtered fiddle and drunken, lurching percussion. And there is also a glorious magpie collection of sounds here to add texture and depth and colour: the rough-edged immediacy of an iPhone-recorded intro on You Don’t Have To Change (But You Have To Choose) bursting into vivid studio crispness; plunky koto-esque sounds; high, reedy violin motifs; rushes of harmonies.

Whilst all the songs bear witness to Bella’s year, two songs fit in a slightly different capacity: the moving Jolly Good Luck To The Girl That Loves A Soldier (from the WWI-themed Songs For The Voiceless project) and the traveller’s eyes of Time Wanders On, co-written with Cara Luft as part of a Canadian exchange project.

Just as with the Unthanks’ wonderful blurring of musical boundaries, the 6Music market surely beckons for Bella, as well as reaffirming her status as a shining star in the folk scene’s firmament. With The Dawn feels like a game-changer.

Sarah Coxson


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

New and classic Americana and alternative country
Fri 13 Mar 2015
20:05
BBC Radio Scotland
http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b054tfl3
Ricky Ross introduces new and classic Americana and alternative country.

Music Played

01. Fool for Love
Lord Huron

02. Evil on your Mind
Jan Howard

03. Let It Rain (On Me)
The Mavericks

04. The One You're Leaving
The Jellyman's Daughter

05. Gospel Train
Front Country

06. No Matter What Tammy Says
My Darling Clementine

07. The Sea and The Shore
Amy Speace

08. The One That Lives Too Far
John Fullbright

09. Gonna Get It Wrong
Allison Moorer

10. Will The Circle Be Unbroken
Roebuck "Pops" Staples

11. Shady Grove
Doc Watson

12. Sedona
Houndmouth

13. We're Gonna Hold On
George Jones & Tammy Wynette

14. Everything Changed
Lindsay Lou & The Flatbellys

15. You Should've Gone To School
BC Camplight

16. Hold My Hand
Brandy Clark

17. When I Get My Hands On You
The New Basement Tapes
http://www.theguardian.com/music/2014/nov/20/lost-on-the-river-the-new-basement-tapes-review-bob-dylan
18. One Day At A Time
Blue Rose Code

19. An American Trilogy
Elvis Presley

20. Funny Familiar Forgotten Feelings
Don Gibson

21. She Even Woke Me Up To Say Goodbye
Mickey Newbury

22. San Francisco Mabel Joy
Kenny Rogers

23. Lie Awake
Angel Snow

24. Corn Pone Refugee
Jim White VS The Packway Handle Band


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 14 Mar 2015
17:00
BBC Radio 3
http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b05202hp
In this week's selection of listeners' requests, Alyn Shipton focuses on the New Orleans style of jazz clarinet, with music by Omer Simeon, Joe Darensbourg and George Lewis. Plus avant garde sounds from tenor saxophonist Archie Shepp, and the contemporary jazz of London-based trumpeter Laura Jurd.

Music Played

01. Liza
Ruby Braff & George Barnes Quartet
Performer: Wayne Wright, g; Ruby Braff, George Barnes, Michael Moore, b.
Live at the New School.
Chiaroscuro, Tr.13.

03. Walkin'
Phineas Newborn, Jr.
Performer: Sergio Pissi, Phineas Newborn, Jr., Carlo Loffredo.
Phineas Newborn Plays Again.
Fresh Sound, Tr.6.

03. Burgundy Street Blues
George Lewis
Performer: Slow Drag Pavageau, Lawrence Marrero, George Lewis, Alton Purnell, Jim Robinson, Joe Watkins, Kid Howard.
Complete Blue Note Recordings of George Lewis.
Mosaic, Tr.9.

04. Grand Boubousse
Omer Simeon
Performer: Omer Simeon, Sammy Price, Zutty Singleton.
The Rarest and Greatest Tracks 1927 - 1954.
Jazz Crusade, Tr.19.

05. Rebecca
Jerome Richardson
Performer: Charlie Persip, Flip Ricard, Jerome Richardson, Doug Watkins, Coleman Hawkins, Big Joe Turner, Vic Dickenson, Jimmy Jones
Big Joe Rides Again.
Atlantic, Tr.5.

06. Lil Darlin'
Count Basie
Performer: Charlie Fowlkes, Al Grey, Ed Young, Thad Jones, Marshall Royal, Freddie Green, Frank Foster, Eddie "Lockjaw" Davis, Henry Coker, Sonny Payne, Count Basie, Frank Wess, Harry Edison, Wendell Culley, Joe Newman, Eddie Jones, Benny Powell.
Count Basie Jazz Master.
Tr.20.

07. Lester Leaps In
Cyril Stapleton
Performer: Cyril Stapleton, Tommy Whittle.
Lester Leaps In.
Decca, Tr.1.

08. Up Late
Paul Edis
Performer: Graham Hardy, Graeme Wilson, Chris Hibbard, Mick Shoulder, Adam Sinclair.
There Will Be Time.
Jazzaction, Tr.12.

09. My Funny Valentine
Archie Shepp
Performer: Annette Lowman, David Burrell, Herman Wright, Stephen McCraven.
Lover Man.
Timeless, Tr.5.

10. Pirates
Laura Jurd
Performer: Lauren Kinsella, Alec Roth, Corrie Dick, Chris Batchelor, Colm O'Hara, Mick Foster.
Human Spirit.
Chaos Collective, Tr.5


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

Andy McNab
Sun 15 Mar 2015
12:00
BBC Radio 3
http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b05202t7
Andy McNab is very lucky to be alive today; in fact from the beginning his life has been characterised by exceptional risk and danger. As a baby, he was found abandoned in a Harrods carrier bag on the steps of Guy's Hospital. By the time he was a teenager, he was in trouble with the police. Joining the army at 16, he served in the SAS, and in 1991, during the First Iraq war, he led a secret mission to infiltrate behind enemy lines. It was a disaster: he was captured, and tortured savagely. Three of his fellow soldiers didn't survive.

Andy McNab's account of his captivity and eventual escape, Bravo Two Zero, became a world-wide best-seller and launched him on a career as a writer. Since then there have been more than 30 thrillers, with sales totalling 32 million. So the baby who was left in a carrier bag is not just a survivor, he's hugely successful.

In Private Passions Andy McNab reveals the central place of music in his life, and particularly his passion for opera. Opera, he says, is the only thing that makes him cry: he chooses Wagner, Verdi and Puccini. McNab reveals too his love of the calm reflective music of Gregorian chant, which he first heard sung by the Benedictine monks of Belmont Abbey, when he was training for the SAS in Herefordshire. He talks movingly about his imprisonment and torture, and about how the particular sounds of that time are burned into his memory: the jangle of keys, the rattle of doors. To escape those dark memories, he chooses one of the most joyful pieces of music ever written: Handel's Messiah.

A Loftus production for BBC Radio 3

Produced by Elizabeth Burke

Music Played

00:02
Richard Wagner
Die Walkure (Ride of the Valkyries)
Orchestra: Bayreuth Festival Orchestra
Conductor: Pierre Boulez

00:12
Genesis
Los Endos (A Trick of the Tail)

00:20
Plainchant
Crux Fidelis
Choir: Benedictine Monks of Belmont Abbey

00:28
Clannad
Theme from Harry's Game

00:36
George Frideric Handel
The People that walked in darkness...For unto us a child is born (Messiah)
Orchestra: Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra
Choir: Huddersfield Choral Society
Conductor: Malcolm Sargent
Singer: James Milligan

00:49
Giuseppe Verdi
Sempre Libera (La Traviata)
Orchestra: National Symphony Orchestra of Ireland
Conductor: Gabriele Santini
Singer: Maria Callas
Singer: Francesco Albanese

00:55
Giacomo Puccini
Nessun Dorma (Turandot)
Orchestra: Great Symphony Orchestra of the All-Union Radio
Conductor: Vladimir Fedoseyev
Singer: Andrea Bocelli


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

Look to the Skies
Sun 15 Mar 2015
17:30
BBC Radio 3
http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b05202tk
Music, poetry and prose which gaze at the sky and the objects in it. Readings by Emilia Fox and Anthony Calf
Producer Harry Parker

Producer's Notes
The sky is everything above us, all that is not earth or sea; a vast vault of seeming nothingness which stretches from where we are to the horizon and upwards beyond the limits of the atmosphere and into space. Unless we are indoors or underground we can always see it, although in a sense it is invisible. We cannot touch it although we can feel its effects. But the sky is not empty. It is made of the air that we breathe and blows as the wind, water vapour that forms the clouds and gives us the rain and it is scattered with all manner of objects. Leaving aside the sun, which colours the sky by its presence - or absence, there are all the other bodies of the firmament, the moon, the planets, the stars., And then there are things that fly, both natural and man made.

We invest the sky and its contents with significance real or imaginary. Gustav Holst in his suite 'The Planets' ascribed psychological qualities to seven of the planets and 'Jupiter' was seen as the 'Bringer of Jollity', possibly because the deity was associated with wine festivals. He was also the god of the heavens and the Roman poet Horace used his name as a synonym for sky.

'He Wishes for the Cloths of Heaven' by WB Yeats conjures the concept of the sky at night as a celestial embroidery which might be brought down and laid on the earth as a carpet while 'The Plough of Time' by the American beat poet Lawrence Ferlinghetti speaks of the link between the light of the stars and the land.

In many religions the sky is also notionally the location of heaven. Handel's 'Waft Her Angels Through the Skies' from the oratorio Jephtha, here an instrumental interlude, sees it as the domain of the heavenly hosts. Patrick Gowers, who sadly died recently, wrote 'Viri Galilaei' for the consecration of the Bishop of Oxford in 1987. Viri Galilaei is a church on the Mount of Olives in Jerusalem said to be the spot where Jesus ascended into heaven accompanied, according to this text, by the sound of the trumpet and choirs of angel voices. And the ascension of a man's soul to heaven,or possibly not, is the subject of the 'Himalayan' poem which Rudyard Kipling places at the beginning of his ghost story 'At the End of the Passage', only this time the noise is that of the cholera-horn.

The fascination of clouds is given three different treatments next. Claude Debussy's impressionistic nocturne 'Nuages', said to be inspired by the paintings of Whistler, evoking, as he himself put it,“the slow, solemn movement of the clouds dissolving in grey tints lightly touched with white” whilst Django Reinhardt's jazz guitar take on 'Nuages' is even more languid. He recorded his composition many times in a variety of arrangements this being an early one with the Quintette du Hot Club de France. 'The Cloud', as interpreted by Percy Bysshe Shelley in this extract, is much more a shaker of nature and a maker of weather.

We often see the sky as the metaphorical home of fanciful notions; blue sky thinking, the sky's the limit and pie in the sky. Roger McGough turns the latter idea on its head with his 'Sky in the Pie' and asks for the moon - which is supplied by Walter de la Mare in the poem 'Silver'. The light of the silvery moon has been an inspiration for the fanciful notions of poets and composers for ever. The arietta 'Vaga Luna Che Inargenti' by Vincenzo Bellini and sung by Cecilia Bartoli tells of the moon as a messenger of love, looking down on romance and longing while Henry David Thoreau's poem 'The Moon' deals with lunar indifference to human fate.

The aspirational aspects of the sky are also reflected in 'Reach for the Sky', the title of Lewis Gilbert's 1956 film about flying ace Douglas Bader, for which John Addison provided the score. Man only took to the the air just over a century ago but the conquest has provided plenty of inspiration for writers and musicians since. One pioneer pilot was Antoine de Saint-Exupéry , famous as the author of The Little Prince but also for his aviation memoir 'Terre des Hommes', known in English as 'Wind, Sand and Stars'. Saint-Exupéry disappeared in 1944 on a reconnaissance mission in a Lockheed Lightning fighter. A very different kind of aircraft is involved in the Helikopter-Streichquartett by Karlheinz Stockhausen which not only involves the chopper-like playing of the expected string quartet but the presence and sound of a less expected quartet of actual helicopters. Contemporary poet Colette Bryce has a rather ambivalent attitude to them in her poem 'Helicopters'.

Charlie Barnet's swingband composition 'Skyliner' has a more upbeat approach. Perhaps the title just refers to the horizon but equally it seems to anticipate the dawning of the jet age when a line in the sky 'The Vapour Trail', the subject of James Fenton's poem, would come to be a common sight in the sky.

The relationship between the air and the human spirit is explored in John Martyn's 'Solid Air' about his friend the musician Nick Drake suffering from depression at the time and later to die of an overdose while Sylvia Plath in her poem 'I Am Vertical' imagines lying on the ground and being in conversation with the sky.

'The Lark Ascending' by Ralph Vaughn Williams also has a conversation with the sky at its heart; a musical one. The lark is called the skylark because of its practice of soaring while singing, until the sky is 'drenched with song', as the children's author Edith Nesbit puts it in her poem 'The Nest'. The urge to ascend spiritually and literally is also given voice in Edward Thomas's 'The Lofty Sky' .

The sky as place of escape, for bluebirds if not for us, is sung simply and effectively in the impromptu version of 'Over the Rainbow' by the late Hawaiian ukulele star Israel Kamakawiwo'ole while it is larks again that provide the soundtrack to Emily Bronte's description of heavenly happiness from 'Wuthering Heights'.

But it is the night sky, with its nocturnal flying creatures, that is the finale to the sequence; the overture to Johann Strauss's 'Die Fledermaus'. The reference in the opera is to a man dressed as a bat, perhaps a prototype for the superhero Batman, but hinting at the human wish to waltz through the skies.

Harry Parker

Music Played

00:00
Gustav Holst
Jupiter the Bringer of Jollity
Performer: Members of the Stuttgart Radio Symphony Orchestra
Hanssler Classic 93043, Tr.4

WB Yeats
He Wishes for the Cloths of Heaven read by Anthony Calf

00:08
George Frideric Handel
Waft Her Angels Through The Skies
Performer: Collegium Musicum 90
Chandos CHAN 0685, Tr.17

Lawrence Ferlinghetti
The Plough of Time read by Emilia Fox

00:12
Patrick Gowers
Viri Galilaei
Performer: Choir of Queens’ College Cambridge
Guild GMCD7287, Tr.14

Rudyard Kipling
From “At the End of the Passage” read by Anthony Calf

00:19
Claude Debussy
Nuages
Performer: Les Phil’Art’Cellists
Saphir LVC 1186, Tr.13

Percy Bysshe Shelley
The Cloud read by Emilia Fox

00:26
Django Reinhardt
Nuages
Performer: Quintette du Hot Club de France
RCA PD71298, Tr.14

Roger McGough
Sky in the Pie read by Anthony Calf

Walter de la Mare
Silver read by Emilia Fox

00:32
Vincenzo Bellini
Vaga Luna Che Inargenti
Performer: Cecilia Bartoli
Decca 4555132, Tr.2

Henry David Thoreau
The Moon read by Anthony Calf

00:37
John Addison
Reach for the Sky
Performer: BBC Concert Orchestra cond. Rumon Gamba
Chandos CHAN 10418, Tr.6

Antoine de Saint-Exupéry
From “Wind, Sand and Stars” read by Anthony Calf

00:41
Karlheinz Stockhausen
Helicopter Quartet
Performer: Arditti Quartet
Montaigne MO782097, Tr.1

Colette Bryce
Helicopters read by Emilia Fox

00:42
Charlie Barnet
Skyliner
Performer: Charlie Barnet and His Orchestra
Empress RAJCD898, Tr.1

James Fenton
The Vapour Trail read by Anthony Calf

00:46
John Martyn
Solid Air
Performer: John Martyn
Island IMCD274, Tr.1

Sylvia Plath
I Am Vertical read by Emilia Fox

00:53
Ralph Vaughan Williams
The Lark Ascending
Performer: BBC Symphony Orchestra cond. Andrew Davis. Violin, Tamsin Little
Teldec 9031731272, Tr.6

Edith Nesbit
The Nest read by Emilia Fox

Edward Thomas
The Lofty Sky read by Anthony Calf

01:00
Harold Arlen and Yip Harburg
Somewhere Over the Rainbow
Performer: Israel Kamakawiwoʻole
Hot BBCD5901, Tr.14

Emily Bronte
From “Wuthering Heights” read by Emilia Fox

01:05
Johann Sebastian Strauss
Overture to Die Fledermaus
Orchestra: Bratislava Radio Symphony Orchestra