
Music on the Brink
The world on the brink of war in poetry, letters, diaries and music. The readings, by Samuel West and Carolyn Pickles, include work by Proust, Stefan Zweig, John Masefield, Isaac Rosenberg, Adelaide Mack and Edmund Gosse with music by Satie, Ravel, Zemlinsky, Berg, Rachmaninov and Webern.
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Music Played
Timings (where shown) are from the start of the programme in hours and minutes
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00:00
Erik Satie
Chapitres tournés en tous sens
Performer: Jeanâ€Yves Thibaudet.- Decca 4736202.
- Tr17.
-
Stefan Zweig
The World of Yesterday read by Carolyn Pickles
00:02Charles Koechlin
Sonata for Piano and Flute op 52
Performer: Philippe Racine and Daniel Cholette.- Claves CD509003.
- Tr4.
Marcel Proust
from In Search of Lost Time read by Samuel West
00:09Maurice Ravel
±Ê°ùé±ô³Ü»å±ð
Performer: Steven Osborne.- Hyperion CDA6777312.
- Tr11.
00:10Ferré and Apollinaire
Le Pont Mirabeau
Performer: Yvette Giraud.- Marianne Melodie.
- Tr9.
Adelaide Mack
Magnetic Paris read by Carolyn Pickles
00:15Leo Orstein
Three Moods - Joy
Performer: Daniele Lombardi.- Nuova Era 7240.
- Tr12.
Karl Jung
Letter from Jung to Freud read by Samuel West
00:19Alexander von Zemlinsky
String Quartet no 2 op 15
Performer: LaSalle Quartet.- Deutsche Grammophon 4274212.
- Tr5.
D.H. Lawrence
Ben Hennef read by Carolyn Pickles
00:23Charles Tomlinson Griffes
Three Tone Pictures
Performer: Victoria Bogdashevskaya and the Seattle Symphony Orchestra.- Naxos 8559724.
- Tr11.
Edmund Gosse
Letter to Lord Spencer read by Samuel West
00:25Edward Elgar
Carissima
Performer: Northern Sinfonia of England.- EMI CDC7476722.
- Tr14.
Rainer Maria Rilke
Before Summer Rain read by Carolyn Pickles
00:38Alban Berg
Stücke fur Klarinette und Klavier
Performer: Sabine Meyer and Oleg Maisenberg and Kremerata Musica.- Deutsche Grammophon 4471122.
- Tr9.
James Joyce
Extract from The Dead read by Samuel West
00:33John Tavener
To a Child Dancing in the Wind
Performer: Patricia Rozario.- Collins Classics 14282.
- Tr3.
Georg Trakl
De Profundis read by Samuel West
00:36Sergey Rachmaninov
Sonata for Piano op 36
Performer: Vladimir Ashkenazy.- Decca 4144172.
- Tr12.
00:43Anton Webern
Cello-Sonate
Performer: Clemens Hagen.- Deutsche Grammophon 4471122.
- Tr16.
Gottfried Benn - Translated by David Paisey
Express-Train read by Samuel West
00:45Ferruccio Busoni
Nocturne Symphonique
Performer: Rundfunk-Sinfonieorchester Berlin.- Capriccio 10479.
- Tr2.
00:53Leo Orstein
Three Moods - Grief
Performer: Daniele Lombardi.- Nuova Era 7240.
- Tr11.
Isaac Rosenberg
On Receiving the First News of the War read by Carolyn Pickles
Stefan Zweig
The World of Yesterday read by Samuel West
00:58Ernest Bloch
Nigun
Performer: Itzhak Perlman.- RCA 82876625172.
- Tr16.
John Masefield
August 1914 read by Samuel West and Carolyn Pickles
01:06George Butterworth
The Banks of Green Willow
Performer: London Symphony Orchestra.- Chandos Chan9902.
- Tr1.
Producer's Note – Music on the Brink
This Words and Music forms part of Radio 3’s Music on the Brink week. The idea is to give a cultural snapshot of Europe in the period when the threat of war became an increasing possibility, a time of both great excitement and great fear. The programme opens with a reading from Stefan Zweig’s ‘The World of Yesterday’, one of the greatest memoirs of the twentieth century. His recollection of the optimism and unlimited promise of the pre-war years is heard alongside Koechlin’s Sonata for Piano and Flute. A belief in progress, in ideas, in openness was the mood in those years. And, in 1913, the year before the outbreak of war, saw the publication of one of the great novels of the century, Proust’s ‘Remembrance of Time Past’ and hear we hear the famous madeleine moment of his lost youth. We remain in Paris for a reading from Adelaide Mack’s breathless travelogue of the city followed by Yvette Giraud’s setting of Apollinaire’s poem, ‘Le Pont Mirabeau’.
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The first conversation between Freud and Jung is reported to have lasted for 13 hours. In 1908 they toured America together but, by 1913, their friendship had become strained. A letter in which Jung accuses Freud of reducing everyone to the level of children demonstrates how embittered Jung felt by this point. A firmer and more touching friendship is heard in Edmund Gosse’s letter to Lord Spencer, written in the days before the declaration of war, in which he acknowledges that the world will never be the same again and heard alongside Elgar’s melancholic ‘Carissima’, the first work of the composer’s to be recorded.
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Storm clouds are gathering in Rainer Maria Rilke’s dreamlike poem, ‘Before Summer Rain’ in which an impending storm heralds the approach of an unknown terror. The music too anticipates the war to come with Webern’s ‘Cello Sonate’ and Rachmaninov’s ‘Sonata no 2’ (1913 version). The programme ends with John Masefield’s ‘August 1913’written on the very eve of war and George Butterworth’s ‘On the Banks of Green Willow’, both exploring in their own ways ideas of Englishness and what was to be lost in the conflict to come. During the war Masefield, considered too old for active duty, worked as a hospital orderly in France. The concert premiere of ‘On the Banks of Green Willow’ was in 1914, the final time Butterworth heard his own music. George Butterworth was killed in the Battle of the Somme. As Philip Larkin described it in his poem, ‘MCMXIV’, ‘Never such innocence, never before or since…..never such innocence again’.
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- Sun 5 Jan 2014 17:30ÃÛÑ¿´«Ã½ Radio 3
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