International Women's Day on Radio 3
鶹 music education initiative Ten Pieces enters a new phase on International Women’s Day, celebrating its 10th anniversary with the announcement of ten works by women composers across eight centuries. The selection features a broad range of orchestral, vocal and gaming music by Sally Beamish, Hildegard von Bingen, Margaret Bonds, Lili Boulanger, Reena Esmail (鶹 commission), Cassie Kinoshi (a 鶹/ABRSM/Music For Youth co-commission), Marianna Martines, Laura Shigihara, Errollyn Wallen, and Master of the King’s Music Judith Weir.
With support from the European Broadcasting Union, nine of the ten pieces will be featured across the 鶹 Radio 3 schedule as part of its International Women’s Day celebrations, when the station marks the occasion with 24 hours of music only by women composers. Appearing throughout the day in programmes such as Breakfast, Essential Classics, Afternoon Concert, and In Tune, each piece will be presented by 鶹 Ten Pieces ambassador saxophonist and broadcaster Jess Gillam, and introduced by the composer or a champion of the work.
Other highlights of International Women’s Day 2024 on 鶹 Radio 3 include a Lunchtime Concert (13:00 – 14:00) live from Maida Vale Studios, with Sarah Walker introducing a programme of music by Clara Schumann, Cécile Chaminade, Alma Mahler, and Rebecca Clarke (amongst others) performed by current and former Radio 3 New Generation Artists Alim Beisembayev (piano), Kitty Whately (mezzo-soprano) and Michael Pandya (piano). Ian Skelly introduces Radio 3 in Concert (19:30- 22:00) with the 鶹 Singers, guest conductor Ellie Slorach and sitar player Debipriya Das live from St. Martin-in-the-Fields, London. They present a programme including the world premiere of Reena Esmail’s Sun Sandar Sargam, a 鶹 commission and one of the new Ten Pieces, at its heart.
International Women's Day on Radio 3
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0000-0630 Through the Night, presented by Penny Gore
Including the 鶹 National Orchestra of Wales performing Sarah Lianne Lewis’s The Sky didn't Fall, Kaija Saariaho’s Suite from Emilie, and Grace Williams’s Symphony No. 2.
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0630-0900 Breakfast with Petroc Trelawny
As part of the programme, Petroc presents two of the 2024-25 鶹 Ten Pieces: Sally Beamish's Haven from Seavaigers, introduced by the composer; and Hildegard of Bingen's O Euchari in leta via, introduced by Derry Girls actor Siobhan McSweeney.
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0900-1200 Essential Classics with Georgia Mann
As part of the programme, Georgia presents 3 of the 2024-25 鶹 Ten Pieces: Lili Boulanger's D’un matin de printemps, introduced by composer and soprano Héloïse Werner; Judith Weir's Magic from Storm, introduced by the composer; and Laura Shigihara's Grasswalk from Plants vs. Zombies, introduced by the composer.
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1200-1300 Composer of the Week: Johanna Senfter, with Kate MollesonOver the course of this week, Kate Molleson and Prof. Natasha Loges
Johanna Senfter was a pupil of the composer Max Reger. Senfter won the Arthur Nikisch prize for composition in 1910 and went on to be one of the most prolific of all late-Romantic female composers, writing at least 150 works, yet she has all but disappeared from our history books. In between the two World Wars she was very active within the world of music too, founding the Oppenheim Music Society, organizing her own concert series and founding the Oppenheim Bach Society. However, her personal life is shrouded in mystery.
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1300-1400 Radio 3 Lunchtime Concert: New Generation Artists celebrate International Women's Day live from Maida Vale
Sarah Walker presents a very special lunchtime concert celebrating International Women’s Day live from the 鶹’s iconic Maida Vale studios. Featuring both former and current members of Radio 3’s New Generation Artists scheme, the collaborative pianist Michael Pandya and mezzo-soprano Kitty Whately will share the stage with pianist Alim Beisembayev in a programme of live music by composers including Clara Schumann, Cécile Chaminade, Alma Mahler and Rebecca Clarke.
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1400-1630 Afternoon Concert
As part of the programme, Penny Gore presents two of the 2024-25 鶹 Ten Pieces: Marianna Martines's Allegro con spirito from Symphony in C, introduced by conductor Jane Glover; and Errollyn Wallen's Mighty River, introduced by the composer. Also on the programme, highlights from performances by the 鶹 Symphony Orchestra, including a 鶹 commission from Sasha Scott, the 2019 Proms Young Composer winner from 2019.
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1630 -1700 The Listening Service
Tom Service surveys the 13 extraordinary string quartets of Elizabeth Maconchy. "For me, the best music is an impassioned argument." So said one of Britain's greatest 20th-century composers, Elizabeth Maconchy. With a cultural resurgence in all things mid-century, Tom Service chats to Janell Yeo of the Bloomsbury Quartet and considers whether the time is now ripe for a reclamation of Elizabeth's place at our musical top table.
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1700-1900 In Tune, with Sean Rafferty
As part of the programme, Sean presents one of the 2024-25 鶹 Ten Pieces: Margaret Bonds's March and Dawn in Dixie from Montgomery Variations, introduced by pianist and musicologist Samantha Ege.
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Classical Mixtape
Expand your horizons with classical music: take time out with a 30-minute soundscape of classical music, today featuring exclusively the work of women composers.
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1930 - 2200 R3 in Concert: The 鶹 Singers live from St. Martin-in-the-Fields, London, presented by Ian Skelly
The 鶹 Singers and guest conductor Ellie Slorach celebrate International Women’s Day 2024 with a second collaboration with the celebrated sitar player Debipriya Das. The programme is a choral journey of music marking the passing of night through to the anticipation and joy of the new day, interspersed with traditional Indian music alongside works which combine choir and sitar. At the heart of the programme is a 鶹 commission, the world premiere of Reena Esmail’s Sun Sandar Sargam, one of the 鶹’s Ten Pieces.
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2200-2245 The Verb, with Ian McMillan
Ian McMillan is joined by poets Joelle Taylor, Rommi Smith, Kim Moore and Shirley May to explore how women poets are using poetry and writing to explore and challenge sexism and to empower women through words. There's also music from soul singer, Sarah-Jane Morris, and musician, Tony Remy, from their new album Sisterhood. Rommi Smith reads a poem specially written for The Verb celebrating the colour purple; in The Night Alphabet, Joelle Taylor's first novel, one woman’s tattoos are each portals to a story of repression and women’s resistance, violence and justice; Kim Moore's poetry explores and exposes everyday sexism, gender, class and also performance as a female poet; Shirley May writes from the perspective of the Caribbean diaspora and reflects on stories of the women who came before her, and the young women poets finding their voices now.
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2245-2300 The Essay: Edith Piaf in 5 Songs
Continuing the “...In 5 songs” format, The Essay presents Edith Piaf's life and work deconstructed across five songs. Today, Elizabeth Alker explores Non, je ne regrette rien, a song that has come to define Piaf even though it wasn't meant for her and she almost turned it down. By 1960 Piaf was crippled by rheumatism, buoyed by painkillers and alcohol and had defied the obituarists after falling into a coma. Doctors warned her that taking to the stage again would kill her. An inauspicious context for song writer Charles Dumont to hit her up with a new ballad. Actually an old ballad, written in 1956 for Rosalie Dubois. But with a change in title Dumont thought the song the perfect vehicle for Piaf's soulful destruction and defiance. Elizabeth Alker celebrates the song that has come to define Piaf ever more.
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2300-0100 Late Junction, with Verity Sharp
Bringing to a close Radio 3's International Women's Day celebrations, Verity Sharp presents the fruits of Late Junction’s latest exclusive collaboration session, improvised in a studio over the course of just a few hours. The Late Junction sessions are a chance for two artists who have never worked together before to create new spontaneous music with each other. In this episode, Mongolian vocalist Enji works with French violinist Agathe Max. Elsewhere, Verity plays a whole host of exciting new releases, including lava-inspired drones from Melbourne trio Panghalina, obsessive avant-garde spoken word from Montreal-based Swedish vocalist and composer Erika Angell, and thirteen ways of looking at a blackbird from Cork multi-instrumentalist Roslyn Steer.
Highlights of Radio 3
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Ten women composers you should know this International Women's Day.
Meet the ten women composers from across the ages whose work has been chosen to join the 鶹 Ten Pieces collection for 2024.
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Explore and learn more about women composers
Listen to programmes and clips on women composers and learn more.
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Sound of Cinema Sunday
Full details of Radio 3's special day devoted to film music, ahead of the 2024 Oscars.
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Moon River: The story of the 1962 Oscars Best Song winner
"Wherever you're going, I'm going your way..." The story of Henry Mancini's unmistakable and Oscar-winning theme to Breakfast at Tiffany’s, which starred Audrey Hepburn.