Kitty Whately, BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra, John Wilson - BBC Music Magazine October 2025 (vol.33 no.13) (2025)

Artist: Kitty Whately, BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra, John Wilson
Title: BBC Music Magazine October 2025 (vol.33 no.13)
Year Of Release: 2025
Label: BBC Music: BBCMM518
Genre: Classical
Quality: FLAC (image+.cue,log,scans)
Total Time: 1:14:40
Total Size: 264 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:Title: BBC Music Magazine October 2025 (vol.33 no.13)
Year Of Release: 2025
Label: BBC Music: BBCMM518
Genre: Classical
Quality: FLAC (image+.cue,log,scans)
Total Time: 1:14:40
Total Size: 264 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
Joseph Canteloube
Chants d'Auvergne
1. L'Aio de rotso
2. Lo Fiolaire
3. Brazairola
Clara Schumann
4. Lorelei
Hector Berlioz
Nuits d'ete
5. I Villanelle
6. II Le spectre de la rose
7. III Sur les lagunes
8. IV Absence
Rebercca Clarke
9. The Seal Man
10. June Twilight
11. The Salley Gardens
12. Tiger Tiger
13. Cardle Song
14. Infant Joy
Hugo Wolf
Mignon Lieder
15. Heiss mich nicht reden
16. Nur wer die Sehnsucht kennt
17. So lasst mich scheinen
18. Kennst du das land
Fanny Mendelssohn
19. Wanderlied
20. Nacht ist wie ein stilles Meer
21. Nach Süden
Northumbrian Folk Songs
22. Come you not from Newcastle
23. Elsie Marley
24. Ma Bonny Lad
25. Bonny at Morn
26. Bonny Shaftoe
This month, on the 90th anniversary of his birth, we salute the genius of Luciano Pavarotti. Adored for his incredible voice and warm persona, Pavarotti enjoyed a unique cult status. As we mark the tenor’s 90th anniversary, Ashutosh Khandekar explains why that popularity hasn’t dimmed.
Elsewhere this issue, it's tango time. From Buenos Aires bars to parks in Denmark, the sizzling passion of the tango holds dance and music lovers worldwide in its grip, reports Claire Jackson.
In slightly more macabre mood, Steve Wright peers into the coffin as he investigates the deceased composers whose bodies continued to go on their own adventures. For example, the time when Chopin’s sister Ludwika honoured his wish – smuggling the composer’s heart from France to Warsaw in a jar of cognac.
Joe Phelan tells the story of The Piano Boat, a unique concert venue where moving recitals take place along the Grand Union Canal. And we also pay tribute to Roger Norrington. Following the death of the great conductor and historically informed performance pioneer, Terry Blain looks back over his life and career.
We've also got a big brass focus this month. We begin with an interview with Norwegian trumpeter Tine Thing Helseth. When she was diagnosed with cancer in 2021, Tine reassessed her life and career - and has emerged with a healthy new outlook, as Rebecca Franks finds. Next, leading trumpeter Matilda Lloyd traces the history of her instrument through ten influential players, from the Tudor era to the present day.
This month's Building a Library is George Gershwin's iconic opera Porgy and Bess.
Fish are jumpin’ and the cotton is high, as Mervyn Cooke recommends the finest recordings of the American composer’s genre-busting opera. And our Composer of the Month is the Italian modernist Luciano Berio. Ivan Hewett celebrates the 100th anniversary of a visionary composer who, in an era of change, took his music in its own distinctive direction
This month's cover CD features a selection of Northumbrian Folk Songs, plus works by Berlioz, Canteloube, Rebecca Clarke, Fanny Mendelssohn, Clara Schumann and Hugo Wolf, performed by Northumbrian mezzo soprano Kitty Whately with accompanists including pianists James Baillieu and Malcolm Martineau, and the BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra conducted by John Wilson. Click here or on the image to see the track details for this month's cover CD.
Elsewhere this issue, it's tango time. From Buenos Aires bars to parks in Denmark, the sizzling passion of the tango holds dance and music lovers worldwide in its grip, reports Claire Jackson.
In slightly more macabre mood, Steve Wright peers into the coffin as he investigates the deceased composers whose bodies continued to go on their own adventures. For example, the time when Chopin’s sister Ludwika honoured his wish – smuggling the composer’s heart from France to Warsaw in a jar of cognac.
Joe Phelan tells the story of The Piano Boat, a unique concert venue where moving recitals take place along the Grand Union Canal. And we also pay tribute to Roger Norrington. Following the death of the great conductor and historically informed performance pioneer, Terry Blain looks back over his life and career.
We've also got a big brass focus this month. We begin with an interview with Norwegian trumpeter Tine Thing Helseth. When she was diagnosed with cancer in 2021, Tine reassessed her life and career - and has emerged with a healthy new outlook, as Rebecca Franks finds. Next, leading trumpeter Matilda Lloyd traces the history of her instrument through ten influential players, from the Tudor era to the present day.
This month's Building a Library is George Gershwin's iconic opera Porgy and Bess.
Fish are jumpin’ and the cotton is high, as Mervyn Cooke recommends the finest recordings of the American composer’s genre-busting opera. And our Composer of the Month is the Italian modernist Luciano Berio. Ivan Hewett celebrates the 100th anniversary of a visionary composer who, in an era of change, took his music in its own distinctive direction
This month's cover CD features a selection of Northumbrian Folk Songs, plus works by Berlioz, Canteloube, Rebecca Clarke, Fanny Mendelssohn, Clara Schumann and Hugo Wolf, performed by Northumbrian mezzo soprano Kitty Whately with accompanists including pianists James Baillieu and Malcolm Martineau, and the BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra conducted by John Wilson. Click here or on the image to see the track details for this month's cover CD.
