17 今週のお気に入り 44

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: 2017年10月28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. Keep On Keeping On / Curtis Mayfield // Roots
02. While Rome Burns / Rhiannon Giddens // Freedom Highway
03. Carmelita / Warren Zevon // Warren Zevon
04. Lawyers Guns And Money / Warren Zevon // Excitable Boy
05. Melissa / Gregg Allman with Jackson Browne // All My Friends: Celebrating The Songs And Voice Of Gregg Allman
06. I Ain't Gonna Stand For It / Shannon McNally // Black Irish
07. Banshee Moan / Shannon McNally // Black Irish
08. Another Night To Cry / Eilen Jewell // Down Hearted Blues
09. You Know My Love / Eilen Jewell // Down Hearted Blues
10. It Serves Me Right / John Lee Hooker // Whiskey & Wimmen: John Lee Hooker's Finest
11. Como / The Fuji-i // We Pray The Brooze
12. Tyva cherim / Andrei Opei // Bai-Taiganyn oglu-la men わたしはバイタイガの息子
13. Bones Of Saints / Robert Plant // Carry Fire
14. Bluebirds Over The Mountain / Robert Plant feat. Chrissie Hynde // Carry Fire
15. Grey Green / Justin Adams feat. Anneli Drecker // Ribbons
16. In C / Africa Express // Africa Express Presents ... Terry Riley's In C Mali


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: 2017年10月28日(土)
放送時間: 午前9:00〜午前11:00(120分)
ゴンチチ
湯浅学

− ニャーの音楽 −

楽曲

「バード・アンド・キャット」
ゴンチチ
(4分40秒)
<EPIC/SONY 32 8H-5087>

「ザ・キャット・イン・ザ・ウィンドウ」
ペトゥラ・クラーク
(1分57秒)
<BMG 51038>

「ターキー・ダンス」
スヴェン・カシレック
(5分39秒)
PING PUNG PINGPUNG20>

「雨猫もどり」
フェイターン
(4分27秒)
<FATERN FTN-001>

猫ふんじゃった
玉木カルテット・キャッツ
(4分57秒)
東芝EMI TOCE-7976>

「セニョーラ・セニョリーニャ」
グラシーニャ・レポラーセ
(3分46秒)
PHILIPS THCD-278>

「チャイナ・キャット・サンフラワー」
グレイトフル・デッド
(3分40秒)
RHINO R2 74401>

「エミリー」
ウラジミール・シャフラノフ・トリオ
(7分13秒)
<ATELIER SAWANO AS020>

「ブラック・キャット・ホワイト・キャット」
ブラック・キャット・ホワイト・キャット
(3分25秒)
<KOMUNA/ POLYGRAM 559 350-2>

「エル・ガトー・ネグロ」
サンティアゴヒメネス・ジュニア
(4分31秒)
<ROUNDER CD6044>

「ねこの夫婦」
ロス・コンパドレス
(2分36秒)
<ボンバレコード BOM3005>

「チャント・オブ・ザ・レイン」
ザ・キャット・アンド・ザ・フィドル
(2分47秒)
P-VINE PCD-18527>

「ブラック・キャット」
ザディコ・ジョー
(5分41秒)
<ZG REC. ZG0002>

「ウィズアウト・リーム」
ジャンピエーロ・ボネスキー
(3分05秒)
<NO INFORMATION NO INFORMATION>

「キャット・スクラッチ・フィーバー」
モーターヘッド
(3分52秒)
<SILVER LINING MUSIC SLM083P01>

「宇宙を叩け」
遠藤賢司
(2分02秒)
MIDI INC. MDCL-1472>

「アレイ・キャット」
アル・ハート
(2分31秒)
<COLLECTABLES COL-CD-2749>

「猫騒動」
中野忠晴とコロムビア・ナカノ・リズム・ボーイズ
(3分14秒)
コロムビア COCP-36178,36179>

「ザ・キャット・ケイム・バック」
サニー・ジェームス
(2分23秒)
<MCPS NO INFORMATION>

「ファニー・キャット」
ゴンチチ
(1分37秒)
<(株)フライングドッグ VTCL-60434>

「ブラック・キャット・モーン」
ドン・ニックス
(3分36秒)
STAX REC. ENS-1032>

「ホーメージ・トゥー・デリア・ダルビシアー」
マーチン・ハネット
(3分17秒)
<OZITMORPHEUS REC. OZITDANCD9991>


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 28 Oct 2017
16:00
BBC Radio 3
http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b09bwvd4
In this week's pick of requests for jazz in all styles and from all eras, Alyn Shipton's selection includes music from the Sauter-Finegan Orchestra. This band, led by the innovative arrangers Eddie Sauter and Bill Finegan, experimented with instrumentation and texture to create some entirely original big band music in the early 1950s, which was massively influential on subsequent large jazz orchestras.

Music Played

01. Swing Low Sweet Chariot
The Sauter-Finegan Orchestra
Composer: trad arr Sauter
Performers: Al Block, Al De Risi, Bill Finegan, Bobby Nichols, Danny Bank, Danny Finton, Doc Severinsen, Eddie Sauter, Elden Bailey, Gene Allen, Gil Cohen, Harvey Estrin, Harvey Philips, Jay McAllister, Jimmy Thompson, Joe Ferrante, Joe Venuto, John Lesko, Max Bennett, Mousey Alexander, Mundell Lowe, Nick Travis, Raymond Shiner, Romeo Penque, Sunny Russo, Steras Charas, Thomas Mitchell, Trigger Alpert, Verlye Mills, Wally Kane, Walter Rosenberger
Memories of Goodman and Miller
RCA Victor LSP 1634 Tr.4

02. Gone Fishin'
Louis Armstrong & Bing Crosby
Composer: Kenny/ Kenny
Performers: Louis Armstrong, v; Bing Crosby, v; The John Scott Trotter Orchestra
27 April 1951
Highlights From His American Decca Years
GRP 26382 CD2 Tr.5

03. Saratoga Swing
Chris Barber
Composer: Ellington
Performers: Pat Halcox, t; Chris Barber, tb; John Crocker, as, cl; Stu Morrison, bj; John Slaughter, g; Jackie Flavelle, b; Graham Burbidge, d.
26 Nov 1968
Live in East Berlin
Black Lion BLCD-7605 CD1 S2 Tr.1

04. He Loved Him Madly
Miles Davis
Composer: Davis
Performers: Miles Davis, t, org; Dave Liebman, fl; Pete Cosey, Reggie Lucas, Dominque Gaumont, g; Michael Henderson, b; Al Foster, d; Mtume, perc.
June 1974
Get Up With It
Columbia C2K 63970 CD1 Tr.1

05. Happy Feet Blues
Wynton Marsalis
Composer: Marsalis
Performers: Wynton Marsalis, t; Michael White, cl; Wycliffe Gordon, tb; Victor Goines, reeds; Eric Reed, p; Reginald Veal, b; Herlin Riley, d.
1993
Live at the Village Vanguard
Blue Note 604-38 CD5 Tr.4

06. Stately Dance for Miss Primm
Keith Tippett
Composer: Tippett
Performers: Marc Charig, c; Nick Evans, tb; Elton Dean, as; Keith Tippett, p; Jeff Clyne, b; Alan Jackson, d.
1970
You Are Here...I Am There
Polydor 2384004 S2 Tr.5

07. Love Songs of the Nile
Billie & De De Pierce
Composers: Brown/ Freed
Performers: De De Pierce, t; George Lewis, cl; Louis Nelson, tb; Billie Pierce, p, v; Papa John Joseph, b; Abbey Chinee Foster, d.
1962
Atlantic New Orleans Sessions
Mosaic MD4-179 CD3 Tr.1

08. A Night In Tunisia
Dizzy Gillespie
Composers: Gillespie/ Paparello
Performers: Dizzy Gillespie, t; Don Byas, ts; Milt Jackson, vib; Al Haig, p; Bill DeArango, g; Ray Brown, b; J C Heard, d.
1946
Dizzy Gillespie (1946–1949)
RCA Jazz Tribune ND-89763 CD1 Tr.3

09. My Man
Dizzy Gillespie
Composers: Charles/ Pollack/ Willemitz/ Yvain
Performers: Dizzy Gillespie, t; Les Spann, g; Junior Mance, p; Sam Jones, b; Lex Humphries, d.
1959
Have Trumpet, Will Excite
Poll Winners 27343 Tr.2

10. Kush
Dizzy Gillespie
Composer: Gillespie
Performers: Dizzy Gillespie, Clark Terry, Carl Warwick, John Frosk, Nick Travis, t; George Matthews, Arnett Sparrow, Paul Faulise, Britt Woodman, tb; Gunther Schuller, Jim Buffington, John Barrows, Richard Herd, tb; Don Butterfield, tu; Leo Wright, as, fl; Lalo Schifrin, p; Art Davis, b; Chuck Lampkin, d; Ray Barretto, Julio Colazo, Jose Mangual, perc.
March 1961
Gillespiana & Carnegie Hall Concert
Verve 314 519809-2 Tr.9

11. Manteca
Dizzy Gillespie
Composer: Gillespie
Performers: Dizzy Gillespie, Dave Burns, Benny Bailey, Lamar Wright, Elmon Wright, t; William Shepherd, Ted Kelly, tb; John Browb, Howard Johnson, Joe Gayles, George Nicholas, Cecil Payne, reeds; John Lewis, p; Al McKibbon, b; Kenny Clarke, d; Chano Pozo, cga.
2 Feb 1948
Bebop Enters Sweden 1947-49
Dragon 479005 Tr.8


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

Vesna Goldsworthy
Sun 29 Oct 2017
12:00
BBC Radio 3
http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b09bx5km
Thirty years ago, Vesna Goldsworthy fell in love with a young Englishman she met at a summer school in Bulgaria; she moved to England to be with him, much to the disapproval of her parents, arriving in London in 1986. Since then, she's established a reputation as a writer of great wit and originality: with her memoir, Chernobyl Strawberries; with her poetry; and in 2015 with her first novel, Gorsky, which became a best-seller and which was serialized on Radio 4. Vesna Goldsworthy is also a Professor of Creative Writing at the University of East Anglia.

In Private Passions, Vesna Goldsworthy talks to Michael Berkeley about being brought up in Belgrade during the Communist regime. The popular idea is of an era which was grey and philistine - but in fact there was a huge amount of classical music around. And when she moved to England, her friends and family were horrified. They asked, "How could you move to a country where there is no music"? She reveals why she started writing a memoir of her Serbian childhood: because her doctors told her she was dying of cancer, and she wanted to leave a record for her son. Happily, the cancer was cured, but it taught her a lifelong lesson: not to take life too seriously.

Vesna Goldsworthy's music choices include the Romanian-Serbian composer Ion Iovanovici; an Orthodox address to the Virgin by Divna Ljubojevic; the Sephardic song, "Adio Querida", by Yasmin Levy; and a popular Russian song from the Second World War. She ends with Purcell, a composer she discovered only after she moved to a country "with no music".

Produced by Elizabeth Burke
A Loftus production for BBC Radio 3

Music Played

00:05
Iosif Ivanovici
The Danube Waves
Orchestra: Vienna Volksoper Orchestra
Conductor: Franz Bauer-Theussl

00:15
St Nectarios of Aegina
Agni partene (O virgin pure)
Performer: Divna Ljubojević

00:25
Manuel Valls
Adio querida
Performer: Yasmin Levy

00:33
Никита Богословский
Dark is the night
Singer: Dmitri Hvorostovsky
Orchestra: Moscow Chamber Orchestra
Conductor: Constantine Orbelian

00:40
Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky
Marche slave
Orchestra: London Symphony Orchestra
Conductor: Kenneth Alwyn

00:55
Henry Purcell
When I am laid in earth (Dido and Aeneas)
Singer: Lorraine Hunt Lieberson
Orchestra: Philharmonia Baroque Orchestra & Chorale
Conductor: Nicholas McGegan


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

Footloose
Sun 29 Oct 2017
17:30
BBC Radio 3
http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b09bwlrk
Hermione Norris and Robert Bathurst, starring in the current, long-running TV drama series "Cold Feet", read poetry and prose on the subject of ... feet.

The notion of a programme about feet might at first seem comical, but once you begin to look at how the image of the foot is used in literature, a wide range of symbolism reveals itself. Phrases such as "best foot forward", "the world at your feet", "falling at your feet" all evoke power and achievement. "Treading on eggshells", "a foot in the door", "pussy-footing around", "getting cold feet", all point towards hesitation and a lack of confidence. The symbolism of Jesus Christ washing his disciples' feet, re-enacted every Maundy Thursday, is one of the most powerful symbolic acts in the Christian liturgical calendar. Just as powerful is the image of an army marching to war. Children's literature and fairy tales are peppered with footprints, from Cinderella trying on the glass slipper to The Little Mermaid, who has to endure the sensation of dancing on sharp knives in order to become human.

From bare feet to dancing feet and booted feet, with everything in between, the programme features poetry and prose by writers including Cecil Day Lewis, DH Lawrence, Hans Christian Andersen, Pauline Prior-Pitt and Jung Chang, and music by Prokofiev, Victoria, Fats Waller and Kirsty MacColl.

Producer's Note
There is something rather comical about feet, and certainly when asked what my subject was for this edition of Words and Music, my reply – “I’m doing a programme about feet” – has invariably resulted in laughter. But think about it. Yes there is definitely a comedy aspect, (and I have not shied away from that in the programme), but feet, like other parts of the body such as the heart and the head, have provided a potent metaphor for every conceivable human emotion over many centuries of literature. Once you begin to think about popular vernacular sayings involving feet, footsteps, toes, running and walking, it becomes obvious just how wide a subject this is.

So, putting my best foot forward, I decided that “Cold Feet” stars Hermione Norris and Robert Bathurst were obvious choices for the readings, which broadly follow the human life span, beginning with baby steps….literally.

Edgar Albert Guest jumps straight in and expresses what most people feel when confronted with the delights of a baby’s feet, whilst DH Lawrence captures the essence of how a small child’s feet interact with nature. Both poems make one want to reach out and touch, and maybe kiss those little pink toes.

There are hundreds, maybe thousands, of pieces of music which relate to steps and the varied movements of feet. So much music is written for dancing and equally as many non-classical songs have been written about feet, dancing, walking or running away, various sports activities, and it has been difficult to choose. However, for the most part, I have opted to pick out the pieces which capture the mood of the poems as well as the broader subject material, or which move on the narrative thread of a person owning those feet as they get older.

Debussy’s “Passpied” sounded, to me, exactly like a little child running about, and Henry Mancini’s iconic “Baby elephant walk”, provides a more comic portrayal.

We move through childhood, where Lawrence Binyon’s evocative picture of two youngsters dancing in a shaft of light particularly struck me, and Warlock’s “Pieds en l’air” captures that feeling perfectly.

Fairy tales, ostensibly, for children, but often rather gruesome, seem to provide many foot related stories. Hans Christian Andersen’s “The Red Shoes” explores religious obligation and the perceived evils of vanity. Young Karen willingly allows her bewitched dancing feet to be cut off, rather than continue to endure the torture of dancing without ceasing. Brian Easdale’s music here is from the 1948 film “The Red Shoes”, which is not, in fact, related to the fairy tale, but which is a story revolving around a ballerina torn between love and her dedication to dance. However the extract I’ve chosen illustrates the fairy tale rather well and I particularly like the eerie magical effect of the ondes martinot.

Shostakovich’s vigourous piano depiction of “Football” introduces a heart-breaking poem by Cecil Day Lewis about the growing independence of a young boy playing his first match.

With maturity comes love and rejection, and a sequence of poems, prose and music explores different aspects of this, ranging from the ecstatic “Ich Scwebe” by Richard Strauss setting the words of Karl Friedrich Henckell “I float as on angel wings and my foot hardly touches the ground”, to John Mole’s searing poem “The Shoes”, where a child is left holding the empty shoes of his father who has walked away and left the family home.

The enchanted Cinderella dances wildly into the night and midnight disaster, to the music of Prokofiev, whilst “The Little Mermaid” (another Hans Christian Andersen heroine), pays the price of a spell which enables her to walk on land make her feel as if she is treading on sharp knives.

Capulet ponders on which of the dancing women suffer from corns in a wearily sexist monologue from Shakespeare’s “Romeo and Juliet”, but then the wonderful, much missed singer song writer Kirsty MacColl gets her own back in a fabulously cynical and funny song “In these shoes”. To a backdrop of infectious, driving Latin rhythms, she depicts various scenarios where men tempt her on journeys promising passion, which she turns down due to her viciously inappropriate footwear.

The appalling practice of binding feet in 19th Century China is vividly described by Jung Chang in her seminal work “Wild Swans”, and Rudyard Kipling manages to capture the monotonous, trance like rhythm of an army marching in boots in his poem “Infantry Columns”.

As life progresses, a philosophical note of regret begins to creep in with Robert Frost’s famous “The Road not taken” and with further thoughts from the Bible and from the music of Bach and Stanford.

For the last section of the programme the mood is lightened by Pauline Prior-Pitt’s lament on lost socks, and Fats Waller’s hilariously insulting tribute to his friend’s enormous pedal extremities.

I hope you enjoy the programme, whether plunging in feet first or merely dipping a toe.

Producer: Helen Garrison

Music Played

00:00
Paul Whiteman
Happy Feet
Performer: Paul Whiteman & His Orchestra

Edgar Albert Guest
The Baby's Feet read by Hermione Norris

00:00
Claude Debussy
Suite bergamasque for piano, Passepied
Performer: Jean-Efflam Bavouzet (piano)
Chandos CHAN10467

DH Lawrence
Baby Running Barefoot read by Robert Bathurst

Tennessee Williams
Heavenly Grass read by Hermione Norris

Joseph C Lincoln
Little Bare Feet read by Robert Bathurst

00:00
Henry Mancini
Baby Elephant Walk
Performer: Richard Armstrong Orchestra, Richard Hayman
Naxos 8 557825

Laurence Binyon
The Little Dancers read by Hermione Norris

00:00
Peter Warlock
Capriol suite for strings or full orchestra; Pieds en l'air
Performer: Royal Philharmonic Orchestra, Clio Gould
Apex 2564621142

The Gospel according to Mark
Chapter 9: v45 read by Hermione Norris

Hans Christian Andersen
The Red Shoes (extract) by Robert Bathurst

00:00
Brian Easdale
The Red shoes - ballet suite (extract)
Performer: BBC National Orchestra of Wales, Rumon Gamba (conductor)
Chandos CHAN10636

00:00
Traditional Mexican
Tarantella
Performer: Aquarelle Guitar Quartet
Chandos CHAN10609

00:00
Dmitri Shostakovich
Football, from Russian river - suite (from the incidental music) Op.66
Performer: Rustem Hayroudinoff (piano)
Chandos CHAN 9907

Cecil Day-Lewis
Walking Away read by Hermione Norris

00:00
Richard Strauss
Lieder, Op. 48, TrV 202; Ich Schwebe
Performer: Camilla Tilling (soprano), Paul Rivinius (piano)
BIS BISSACD1709

John Mole
The Shoes read by Hermione Norris

00:00
Sergei Prokofiev
Cinderella [Zolushka] - suite no. 1 Op.107: Cinderella's waltz; Midnight
Performer: St Petersburg Philharmonic Orchestra, Yuri Temirkanov
Signum SIGCD214

Dorothy Aldis
Feet read by Hermione Norris

Billy Collins
Walking Across the Atlantic by Robert Bathurst

00:00
Frank Bridge
The Sea - suite for orchestra (H.100), no.3; Moonlight (Adagio ma non troppo)
Performer: BBC National Orchestra of Wales, Hickox
Chandos CHAN10729

Hans Christian Andersen
The Little mermaid (extract) read by Hermione Norris

00:00
Tomás Luis de Victoria
Quam pulchri sunt gressus tui
Performer: The Sixteen, Harry Christophers
Coro CORSACD16033

William Shakespeare
Romeo and Juliet (extract) read by Robert Bathurst

00:00
Sergei Prokofiev
Romeo and Juliet - Dance of the knights
Performer: London Symphony Orchestra, Gergiev
LSO Live LSO0682

00:00
Kirsty MacColl
In These Shoes

00:00
Zhao Jiping
Raise the Red Lantern (music from the film sound track)
Milan 73138 35670-2

Jung Chang
Wild Swans (extract) read by Hermione Norris

Rudyard Kipling
Infantry Columns read by Robert Bathurst

00:00
Eric Coates
The Eighth Army March
Performer: Royal Artillery Band, Major Geoffrey Kingston
Naxos 8.554488

00:00
Hugo Wolf
Mörike-Lieder: Fußreise
Performer: Werner Güra (tenor), Jan Schultsz (piano)
Harmonia Mundi HMC901882

Robert Frost
The Road Not Taken read by Hermione Norris

00:00
Charles Villiers Stanford
O for a closer walk with God
Performer: Choir of Trinity College - Cambridge, Stephen Layton, Alexander Hamilton (organ)
Hyperion CDA68174

Gospel according to John
Chapter 13: vv5-14 read by Robert Bathurst

Anonymous
Footprints in the Sand read by Hermione Norris

00:01
Johann Sebastian Bach
Johannespassion (BWV.245), Part 1; Ich folge dir gleichfalls (Aria)
Performer: Dunedin Consort, John Butt, Joanne Lunn (soprano)
Linn CKD419

00:01
Bob Chilcott
The Runner (from The Modern Man I Sing)
Performer: Tenebrae, Nigel Short
Signum SIGCD904

Pauline Prior-Pitt
Odd Socks read by Hermione Norris

00:01
Leroy Anderson
March of the Two Left Feet
Performer: BBC Concert Orchestra, Slatkin
Naxos 8 559356

00:01
Fats Waller
Your Feet’s Too Big
Performer: Fats Waller and his Rhythm Band