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Tippett's The Ice Break, Music under German Occupation, Inside Song, Robert Lloyd at 75

Petroc Trelawny previews Birmingham Opera Company's new production of Tippett's opera The Ice Break and looks at Music under German Occupation. Cliff Eisen delves Inside Song with Schubert's Der Zwerg and Petroc talks to the bass Robert Lloyd who has just turned 75.

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45 minutes

Last on

Sat 28 Mar 2015 12:15

Chapters

  • TIPPETT’S “THE ICE BREAK” BY BIRMINGHAM OPERA COMPANY

    Duration: 13:03

  • MUSIC UNDER GERMAN OCCUPATION

    Duration: 11:22

  • INSIDE SONG – CLIFF EISEN ON SCHUBERT’S “DER ZWERG”

    Duration: 08:56

  • ROBERT LLOYD AT 75

    Duration: 09:41

TIPPETT’S “THE ICE BREAK” BY BIRMINGHAM OPERA COMPANY

TIPPETT’S “THE ICE BREAK” BY BIRMINGHAM OPERA COMPANY

Michael Tippett’s 1977 opera The Ice Break was written after he had spent time in America, where he became fascinated by jazz, blues and even 70s rock. In the current climate of inter-cultural, political and economic turbulence the themes addressed in Tippett’s opera are extremely relevant today. Petroc Trelawny visits rehearsals for Birmingham Opera Company’s new production of The Ice Break which is being performed in an inner-city warehouse. ĚýPetroc meets the director Graham Vick along with the professional principals and local community volunteer chorus. Tippett’s belief that opera should be socially inclusive and his belief that every artist and work has a social responsibility mirrors the objective of Birmingham Opera Company’s work.

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Photo: Chrystal E Williams (Hannah) and Ta’u Pupu’a (Olympion) in Birmingham Opera Company’s The Ice Break

MUSIC UNDER GERMAN OCCUPATION

MUSIC UNDER GERMAN OCCUPATION

Following their entry into Austria and the Sudetenland in the late 1930s, the Germans pursued a policy of cultural imperialism in the countries they occupied during the Second World War. As a result, the arts in the occupied lands came under Nazi control, or were subject to severe scrutiny and censorship.Ěý A forthcoming conference in Manchester considers how the Nazi regime used music as propaganda, infiltrating the cultural life of countries including Belgium, Denmark, Hungary and Greece.Ěý ĚýPetroc Trelawny discusses music in Denmark under occupation with Niels Krabbe and Michael Fjeldsoe.Ěý The choices made by musicians under these conditions demonstrate the difficulties they faced.Ěý Gershwin’s Porgy and Bess was performed as an act of resistance, while the composer Paul von Klenau who worked in Germany and Austria until 1940 still has a controversial reputation today.

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Photo:ĚýRichard Strauss conducting at the first Reichsmusiktage in Dusseldorf in 1938.Ěý Photo: ©Stadtarchiv Dusseldorf

INSIDE SONG – CLIFF EISEN ON SCHUBERT’S “DER ZWERG”

INSIDE SONG – CLIFF EISEN ON SCHUBERT’S “DER  ZWERG”

The next instalment in the occasional series for Music Matters in which Professor Cliff Eisen goes 'Inside Song,' forensically examining the music and lyrics of some of the greatest songs in musical history, and telling the stories behind the melodies.

Today, Schubert’s song “Der Zwerg” (The Dwarf) is in the spotlight. This setting of the Viennese poet Matthaus von Collin’s “Betrayal” is put in context with nineteenth century tales about dwarves by Oscar Wilde and the Brothers Grimm which appear in an opera by Alexander Zemlinsky and Walt Disney’s Snow White.

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Ěý

ROBERT LLOYD AT 75

ROBERT LLOYD AT 75

Robert Lloyd, who turned 75 earlier this month, was appointed Principal Bass at the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden in 1972. He achieved this position via a roundabout route that encompassed a history degree at Oxford, three years in the Royal Navy and a lectureship in current affairs at the National Police Staff College before he started studying singing. Petroc talks to Robert about his distinguished career, including his most prominent roles, his thoughts on working with directors, and semi-retirement.

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ĚýĚý

Photo: ©Les Campbell

Credits

Role Contributor
Presenter Petroc Trelawny
Interviewed Guest Cliff Eisen
Interviewed Guest Robert Lloyd

Broadcast

  • Sat 28 Mar 2015 12:15

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