The advert for our new disc Quickening: songs by Robert Hugill to texts by English and Welsh poets is in the November 2017 issue of Gramophone magazine.
Songs from the disc are being broadcast on WMBR 88.8 FM this afternoon from 4 to 5.30pm ET. As the radio station is based on Connecticut you will be able to listen afterwards on-line.
Quickening contains my songs, setting texts by A.E. Houseman, Christina Rosetti, Ivor Gurney and Rowan Williams performed by Anna Huntley, Johnny Herford, Rosalind Ventris and William Vann and is available from Navona Records.
Monday, 9 October 2017
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Popular Posts this month
-
Brecht & Weill: Rise and Fall of the City of Mahagonny - English National Opera (Photo: Tristram Kenton) Brecht & Weill: Rise and...
-
Operabase CEO, Ulrike Köstinger Since its founding in 1996 by Mike Gibb, the Operabase website has become somewhat ubiquitous in the opera w...
-
Foyer of Wigmore Hall in 1901 when it was Bechstein Hall (Photo courtesy of Wigmore Hall) Like many major cities, London's concert halls...
-
Vinci: Artaserse - Craig Trompeter & orchestra of Haymarket Opera Company (Photo: Elliot Mandel) As Chicago-based Haymarket Opera Com...
-
St Patrick's Cathedral, New York (Photo from the Live Stream ) A Facebook contact very kindly alerted me to the fact that the 10:15am So...
-
Norwich Philharmonic Orchestra and Chorus who perform Walton's Belshazzar's Feast at this year's Festival By far the largest a...
-
Handel: Rinaldo - Agustín Pennino in rehearsal - Royal Academy Opera Handel's Rinaldo was the first opera he wrote for London, in 1711...
-
Boston Lyric Opera (BLO), New England’s largest and most enduring opera company, is in celebratory mood. Founded in 1976, 2026 is its 50th y...
-
Auguste Ottin Polyphemus Surprising Acis and Galatea 1852-63, Luxembourg Gardens Handel: Acis and Galatea (1718), Ode for St Cecilia; Car...
-
Pergolesi's L'Olimpiade at Vache Baroque in 2024 (Photo: Michael Wheatley) - [see my review ] The 17th-century English tradition ...

No comments:
Post a Comment