 
                
                        Violins
Tara Fitzgerald and Giles Terera explore the art of the violin through the words of Yeats, Amy Lowell and Whitman, with recordings of great violinists like Heifetz and Menuhin.
Producer: Elizabeth Arno
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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 00:00WESTHOFFSonata for violin and continuo no.3, Imitazione delle campane Performer: Daniel Hope (violin), Jonathan Cohen (continuo).- DG 4779165.
- Tr12.
 
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    CONKLINGSummertime (extract  VI), read by Tara Fitzgerald WALT WHITMANThe Tongues of Violins, read by Giles Terera ![]() 00:02 00:02Johann Sebastian BachSarabanda (Partita No.2 in D minor, BWV.1004) Performer: Alina Ibragimova (violin).- HYPERION CDA67691/2.
- CD2 Tr3.
 GARRISONBach in the DC Subway, read by Tara Fitzgerald ![]() 00:06 00:06GRAINGERFree Music No.1 (for four theremins) Performer: Lydia Kavina (theremin).- MODE 199.
- Tr9.
 SAMUEL WARDStradivarius, read by Giles Terera ![]() 00:08 00:08John TavernerIn nomine (Missa Gloria tibi Trinitas) Performer: Fretwork.- HARMONIA MUNDI HMU807554.
- Tr3.
 ![]() 00:10 00:10Trad.Taksim (Lira) Improvisation Performer: Hersperion XXI, Jordi Savall (director).- ALIA VOX AVSA9870.
- Tr10.
 HOWARD SCHWARZElijahs Violin (from Elijahs Violin and Other Jewish Fairy Tales), read by Tara Fitzgerald ![]() 00:12 00:12Johan SvendsenRomance in G major, Op.26 (extract) Performer: Arthur Grumiaux (violin), New Philharmonia Orchestra, Edo de Waart (conductor).- PHILIPS 475 782 5.
- CD6 Tr5.
 GEORGE ELIOTStradivarius (opening extract), read by Giles Terera AMY LOWELLFrom The Cremona Violin, read by Tara Fitzgerald ![]() 00:19 00:19Kay ThompsonI love a violin Performer: Petula Clark (singer).- WARNER ISRC GBURF0911107.
- Tr7.
 ![]() 00:21 00:21MATTHEW HINDSONThe Metallic Violins (extract) Performer: James Cuddeford and Natsuko Yoshimoto (violins).- TALL POPPIES TP207.
- Tr1.
 MAURICE FRANCiS EGANThe Old Violin, read by Tara Fitzgerald ![]() 00:27 00:27Antonín DvořákSlavonic Dance in E minor Performer: Yehudi Menuhin (violin), Marcel Gazelle (piano).- BIDDULPH LAB128.
- Tr13.
 AGHA SHAHID ALIViolins (Eleven Stars Over Andalusia  11.), read by Giles Terera FERLINGHETTIDon't Let That Horse, read by Tara Fitzgerald ![]() 00:34 00:34DINICU arr. MONDVAYHora staccato for cimbalom and ensemble Performer: Patricia Kopatchinskaja (violin), Emilia Kopatchinskaja (violin), Victor Kopatchinsky (cimbalon), Martin Gjakonovski (double bass), Mihaela Ursuleasa (piano).- NAÏVE V5193.
- Tr18.
 EDMONDSLittle Tommy Tiddler, read by Giles Terera and Tara Fitzgerald ![]() 00:36 00:36KREUTZEREtude No.2 for solo violin Performer: Elizabeth Wallfisch (violin).- CPO 999901-2.
 W. S. MERWINThe Notes, read by Giles Terera AYKE AGUSFanfare (Chapter 1, Heifetz As I Knew Him), read by Tara Fitzgerald ![]() 00:39 00:39Henryk WieniawskiRomance: Andante non troppo (Violin Concerto No. 2 in D minor, Op. 22) Performer: Jascha Heifetz (violin), London Philharmonic Orchestra, John Barbirolli (conductor).- NAXOS HISTORICAL 8.110938.
- Tr5.
 ![]() 00:44 00:44JOHNNY BURKE / ERROLL GARNERMisty Performer: Ella Fitzgerald (singer).- WARNER ISRC USF096000390.
- Tr14.
 PAUL LAURENCE DUNBARMy Sweet Brown Gal, read by Giles Terera ![]() 00:48 00:48Klaus SchulzeMilonge - ELIPSIS 3690.
- Tr11.
 MYRA BROOKS WELCHThe Touch of the Master's Hand, read by Tara Fitzgerald JULES FRANCOIS FELIX HUSSON (CHAMPFLEURY), trans. HELEN B. DOLEThe Faience Violin (extract), read by Giles Terera ![]() 00:58 00:58Fritz KreislerTambourin chinois, Op.3 Performer: Fritz Kreisler (violin), Franz Rupp (piano).- NAXOS 8.110992.
- Tr2.
 HAFIZ, trans. DANIEL LADINSKYWhen the Violin, read by Tara Fitzgerald ![]() 01:01 01:01LACHENMANN / AISHA ORAZBAYEVAToccatina / Russian song Performer: Aisha Orazbayeva (violin).- NONCLASSICAL NONCLSS013.
- Tr12.
 GEORGE MEREDITH / JOHANN N. VOGLTo an Old Gypsy, read by Giles Terera and Tara Fitzgerald ![]() 01:06 01:06ROBERT PARRETTIrish Lament (Album: Hearing Voices) Performer: ROBERT PARRETT.- Tr32.
 YEATSThe Fiddler of Dooney, read by Giles Terera ![]() 01:07 01:07FIRSOVAMoonlight over the sea (Munch Suite) Performer: Henning Kraggerud (violin).- SIMAX CLASSICS PSC1322.
- Tr8.
 PATRICK LEIGH-FERMORThe Violins of Saint-Jacques (extract), read by Tara Fitzgerald ![]() 01:12 01:12Peter WarlockPavane (Capriol Suite) Performer: Royal Philharmonic Orchestra, Clio Gould (violin / director).- APEX 256462114-2.
- Tr8.
 HARDYAt Madame Tussaud's in Victorian Years, read by Giles Terera and Tara Fitzgerald Producer noteThis edition of Words and Music is a celebration of the violin and begins with the beguiling arpeggios of the Imitazione delle campane from Westhoff’s Sonata for violin and continuo, No.3, which reflect the words of Elsa Conkling’s depiction of the violin making brown music ‘like bees and honey’. The Westhoff leads into the Pavane from the Partita No.2 in D minor by Bach that is mentioned in David Lee Garrison’s poem, Bach in the DC Subway.
 Very often there are references in literature to the soul of the violin. I have chosen two texts to represent the violin’s soul, the first of which is Samuel Ward’s poem, Stradivarius, which is followed by John Tavener’s In Nomine played by the viol consort Fretwork, viols being the ancestors of the violin family. A single lira playing a traditional taksim segues from the Tavener into Howard Schwartz’s fairy tale, Elijah’s Violin, which tells the story of a princess who lures her prince by playing a magic violin.
 Great violins, and particularly those made by Stradivarius and Guarneri del Gesu, fascinate the world with their increasing values. George Eliot wrote a lengthy poem on Stradivarius, the opening of which is included in the programme and coupled with Amy Lowell’s poem, the Cremona Violin. Matthew Hindson’s fast-paced violin duet, The Metallic Violin, recreates an auction as the two actors, Tara Fitzgerald and Giles Terera, read out the names of some of the most famous violins to have been sold under the hammer.
 I have also included some poems about travelling violins, from Agha Shahid Ali’s poem, Violins, about violins ‘weeping with gypsies going to Andalusia’, to Lawrence Ferlighetti’s humorous portrayal of Chagall’s mother warning her son not to let ‘that horse eat that violin’. Patricia Kopatinskaja’s virtuosic performance of Dinicu’s Hora staccato with cimbalom accompaniment reflects these images of gypsy violinists. Later in the programme, there are more travelling violins in George Meredith’s poem, To an Old Gipsy, Yeats’ the Fiddler of Dooney, and Patrick Leigh-Fermor’s haunting tale of The Violins of Saint-Jacques, as they sing from the bottom of the sea accompanied by Firsova’s Moonlight over the sea for solo violin and the Pavane from Warlock’s Capriol Suite.
 Kreutzer’s Etude No.2 begins a sequence of poems and texts about learning and teaching the violin, from Edmonds’ well-loved verse Little Tommy Tiddler to W. S. Merwin’s poem The Notes and Ayke Agus’s recollections of Heifetz’s devotion to teaching the art of the violin. The programme captures the many styles of violin playing from Heifetz in Wieniawski to Menuhin in Dvorak, Kreisler playing his own Tambourin chinois and Grumiaux in Svendsen. These old masters are included alongside Aisha Orazbayeva playing Helmut Lachenmann’s Toccatina and the electronic strains of violins in Klaus Schulze’s Melange, plus songs about violins: Ella Fitzgerald singing Johnny Burke’s Misty and Petula Clarke singing Kay Thompson’s I love a violin.
 Producer: Elizabeth ArnoBroadcasts- Sun 16 Oct 2016 17:30ѿý Radio 3
- Fri 4 Jan 2019 16:30ѿý Radio 3
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