mercredi 12 décembre 2012

RN Music Newsletter

ABC Radio National
MUSIC NEWSLETTER
Thursday 13 December 2012


The Daily Planet
With Lucky Oceans
Monday to Thursday 11:20pm
http://www.abc.net.au/radionational/programs/dailyplanet/
Tonight, Lucky has Brass and Vintage Taj Mahal
It's an almost all-brass first part, with Hot 8 Brass Band, The Unthanks, David Byrne and St. Vincent, then some previously unreleased Taj Mahal live and studio tracks after midnight.

The Inside Sleeve
Robbie Buck
Monday to Friday 3pm (8pm in WA)
http://www.abc.net.au/radionational/programs/insidesleeve/

Music Deli
With Alice Keath
Friday 8pm (7pm in WA) Repeated: Sunday 4pm
http://www.abc.net.au/radionational/programs/musicdeli/
Billy Bragg brought characteristic passion and irreverence to Hamer Hall in October as part of Melbourne Festival, for an evening of songs and stories celebrating the life and music of folk icon Woody Guthrie.Hear highlights from the performance in this week's show.

The Music Show
With Andrew Ford
Saturday 10am Repeated: Sunday 2am
http://www.abc.net.au/radionational/programs/musicshow/
Bernie McGann is a singular voice on alto sax in Australian jazz. He started on drums and piano in Western Sydney then finally moved to sax and the jazz venues of Kings Cross and inner Sydney. At 75 he's still playing long and strong and talks about 60 years in the business. Elliott Carter died last week aged 103 and was composing to the very end with new pieces still to be heard. He was a musical titan of the 20th Century and we hear again an interview done in Mr Carter's Greenwich Village apartment in 2005. Michael Hooper and Christopher Mark are authors of books on Australian composers David Lumsdaine and Roger Smalley The composers come from quite different musical backgrounds, live in opposite parts of the world from each other but have a common musical aesthetic.

The Rhythm Divine
With Geoff Wood
Sunday 6am Repeated: Monday 1am 
http://www.abc.net.au/rn/rhythmdivine/
The Friar's voice from Assisi
Fra Alessandro Brustenghi is Franciscan friar from Assisi in Italy, the birthplace of St Francis. He's the very first friar ever to land a major record deal. Fra Alessandro is not a conservatorium-trained singer and only pursued singing seriously after entering the Order of Friars Minor at the age of 19. Following a series of auditions, aged 34 he now has a debut album of spiritual songs and hymns called Voice From Assisi, produced by Mike Hedges, best-known for his work with U2 and The Cure. From the Porziuncola, the small church where St Francis founded his Order in the early 13th century, Fra Alessandro talks about reconciling his religious and musical life.

Sound Quality
With Tim Ritchie
Friday 11:20pm
http://www.abc.net.au/radionational/programs/soundquality/
Whole ltta Zep
Forty-six tracks in 25 minutes! And they are themed around Led Zeppelin. It's a Solid Steel Radio Show mix by DJ Cheeba. That plus so much from Pool you'll need a towel. And another track from one of my favourite albums of the year - White+; and new Efterklang.

The Weekend Planet
With Doug Spencer
Saturday 10pm and Sunday 10pm
http://www.abc.net.au/radionational/programs/weekendplanet/
Oregon: 'Family Tree'
In marked contrast to the Rolling Stones  - one of their few peers as 'band is still here, after so many years' - Oregon still offers lots of vital, new, original music on 21st century releases. Family Tree is Oregon's 28th album - the latest fruit of the quartet's '2nd youth.' Nothing on 'our' moon has any particular connection to The Rolling Stones; two of its craters are named after compositions by a member of Oregon. The quartet is almost a genre unto itself: 'a unique synthesis of European classical instrumentation, American jazz harmony, and ethnic influences from around the globe.' Oregon's one non-founder member - drummer-percussionist Mark Walker - has been on board for 15 years. The most famous - Ralph Towner - is equally a master of piano, classical and 12-string guitars. He and double bassist Glen Moore began their musical relationship and friendship 52 years ago, as undergraduates at the University of Oregon. Oregon as such began in 1971, although Ralph, Glen and fellow-founder- Paul McCandless were already working together a little earlier. At first, Paul played oboe and English horn almost exclusively; he now plays many reeds and winds.

Into The Music
Saturday 4pm
http://www.abc.net.au/radionational/programs/intothemusic/
A woeful sinner's fall: ballads of execution.
This truly gruesome program explores the phenomenon of the execution ballad—the printed pamphlet telling, in song, the story of the crime and of the condemned.  These songs tell of the descent into vice, give account of the crime in all its appalling detail and purport to give voice to the true repentance of the doomed sinner.  In what was a profitable line of business for early printers, the songs were declaimed by the ballad seller and spruiked to the crowd who'd gathered to see the offender put to death.

Quiet Space
With Paul Gough
Sunday and Monday at Midnight
http://www.abc.net.au/radionational/programs/quietspace/


RN Breakfast Album of the Year
http://www.abc.net.au/radionational/programs/breakfast/album-of-the-year-with-robbie-buck-and-tim-ritchie/4417954

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