Episode details

Radio 3,01 Sep 2023,59 mins
Available for 20 days
Donald Macleod explores the composers who fought to keep light music alive in the wake of dramatic shifts in the social lives of people in Britain. The names of the composers of British light music - Coates, Ketèlby, Farnon, Dring or Tomlinson - might not be as well known as those of Mozart, Beethoven or Bach, but some of their music will be just as familiar to most listeners, and it still provides the soundtrack to many people’s everyday lives through, among other things, the theme music to their favourite TV and radio programmes. Over the course of this week, Donald Macleod tracks the rise and fall of light music in Britain over roughly 100 years, from the mid-19th century to the mid-20th. He’ll be exploring the social history which led to this genre flourishing, from the late-Victorian theatre crowds in want of more popular fare after the successes of Gilbert and Sullivan’s operettas, to the orchestras which sprang up to entertain the burgeoning UK seaside resorts. Along the way, Donald will examine the explosion of music in people’s homes, as at first pianos and other instruments, and then radio and television sets, became affordable to households across the country, and the transition from silent movies to the talkies. Donald will also explore the challenges which the genre faced as audiences moved towards new ways of listening in the 20th century and the pioneers who have sought to keep this music alive. From the 1950s onwards, audiences began to desert light music in the wake of dramatic changes in the social lives of the nation. In Friday’s episode, Donald explores composers such as Madeleine Dring and Ernest Tomlinson who fought to keep light music alive. Madeleine Dring Festival Scherzo for piano and strings Martin Roscoe (piano) Guildhall Strings Ernest Tomlinson Little Serenade Pro Arte Orchestra George Weldon, conductor Ernest Tomlinson (under alias of Alan Perry) Eccentric March Performers unknown Ernest Tomlinson Capability Brown (test card music) Stuttgart Studio Orchestra Ernest Tomlinson Second Suite of English Folk Dances Slovak Radio Symphony Orchestra Ernest Tomlinson, conductor Madeleine Dring (orchestrated by Roderick Williams) Take, O Take Those Lips Away Roderick Williams, baritone Hallé Orchestra Mark Elder, conductor Madeleine Dring Folk Song; Films from Cheapside at Cheapside (From 'Airs on a Shoestring!') Wanda Brister, Courtney Kenny, Nuala Willis, Matt Cooksey (vocals) Courteney Kenny, piano Madeleine Dring Song of a Nightclub Proprietress Felicity Lott, soprano Graham Johnson, piano Eric Coates Last Love BBC Philharmonic John Wilson, conductor
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