The British Composers Thread

Started by Mark, October 25, 2007, 12:26:56 PM

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Roy Bland

#1640
Quote from: calyptorhynchus on August 15, 2025, 03:31:07 PMJust got to thinking about Carlo Martelli (born 1935). His Symphony was recorded on Dutton in 2011 and it's very good, and a few of his pieces, including film music, are also available. There is a disc of his String Quartets, but it seems to be OOP, and I have ordered a 2nd hand copy.

If you read his Wikipedia page you'll see he suffered a terrible loss of his manuscripts at one point that makes various other composers (Howells, Brian, Madetoja) who lost MSs of single works seem lucky.

However my question was, is he still alive? If so he must be 90! I'd like to write appreciatively to him if I could find an address.
Here seems alives (89)  should not be exchanged with Henri Martelli (french)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carlo_Martelli
 

kyjo

Quote from: Symphonic Addict on August 14, 2025, 09:22:17 AMTo be released on 7 November:

Works for chamber orchestra



The only works I know by her are the string quartets and they are incredible pieces. Contemporary music with real purpose.

Agreed about her string quartets! I played No. 2 recently and it's a brilliant work which packs a ton of incident into about 15 minutes. Alberga's infectious, syncopated way of handling rhythm often reflects her Jamaican heritage. There's also plenty of soulful lyricism present in her music, along with an occasional "folksy aggression" a la Bartók or Ginastera. Along with those by Carl Vine and Aaron Jay Kernis, Alberga's are some of the most compelling contemporary SQs I know! Must check out her orchestral music next.
"Music is enough for a lifetime, but a lifetime is not enough for music" - Sergei Rachmaninoff

Symphonic Addict

#1642
Quote from: calyptorhynchus on August 15, 2025, 03:24:08 PMA movement from one of her string quartets has as the musical direction 'Swing it man'! :)

Yes, it is the 1st movement (which is hectic, full of ongoing action) of her 1st SQ.
The current annihilation of a people on this planet (you know which one it is) is the most documented and at the same time the most preposterously denied.

Roy Bland


calyptorhynchus

I have just discovered that it now seems impossible for me to access Radio 3 from Australia. Via BBC.com I can listen to Radio 3 live but I can't seem to access schedules to listen to programming from a few days before.
This is a shame as for the last ten years or so I have been recording various pieces that were being broadcast that were either quality new pieces, or pieces from shamefully neglected composers. And I have shared these here and elsewhere.
I don't know if anyone can confirm these changes, which just seem to be part of the general enshittification of things.
I hope people in the UK can keep a look out for pieces that deserve to be shared and continue to do it here.
'Many men are melancholy by hearing music, but it is a pleasing melancholy that it causeth.' Robert Burton

'...is it not strange that sheepes guts should hale soules out of mens bodies?' Benedick in Much Ado About Nothing

Roasted Swan

Quote from: calyptorhynchus on August 31, 2025, 11:59:31 PMI have just discovered that it now seems impossible for me to access Radio 3 from Australia. Via BBC.com I can listen to Radio 3 live but I can't seem to access schedules to listen to programming from a few days before.
This is a shame as for the last ten years or so I have been recording various pieces that were being broadcast that were either quality new pieces, or pieces from shamefully neglected composers. And I have shared these here and elsewhere.
I don't know if anyone can confirm these changes, which just seem to be part of the general enshittification of things.
I hope people in the UK can keep a look out for pieces that deserve to be shared and continue to do it here.

I had a quick look.  I expect you were using "BBC Sounds" as the portal for accessing their content including archived performances.  It says online that from July 21st this has been "closed for international listeners".  Sadly I suspect this is another of those insidious little budget cuts forced onto the BBC by the freezing of the licence and the general politicisation of the broadcast industry.  But this is a good example of a (possibly) peripheral service the BBC has been offering for years - BBC World Service / The Good Food Guide (my favourite!) and much else - that has fallen foul of the budget shortfalls.  I think you can still access it using a VPN and setting your location as "UK" but they might know how to spot that now too

calyptorhynchus

Quote from: Roasted Swan on September 01, 2025, 02:09:54 AMI had a quick look.  I expect you were using "BBC Sounds" as the portal for accessing their content including archived performances.  It says online that from July 21st this has been "closed for international listeners".  Sadly I suspect this is another of those insidious little budget cuts forced onto the BBC by the freezing of the licence and the general politicisation of the broadcast industry.  But this is a good example of a (possibly) peripheral service the BBC has been offering for years - BBC World Service / The Good Food Guide (my favourite!) and much else - that has fallen foul of the budget shortfalls.  I think you can still access it using a VPN and setting your location as "UK" but they might know how to spot that now too

It's unlikely to be budget cuts, as they are still producing BBC Sounds for UK listeners and making it available world-wide costs nothing extra.

More likely their lawyers have told them that something to do with licence agreements with the artists mean that the programming can only be heard live outside the UK...or something. (I spent many years in the Australian Public Service and a constant theme was our lawyers preventing us from doing anything useful because of various nugatory fears like this (oh and bastard politicians not wanting us to do anything useful).)
'Many men are melancholy by hearing music, but it is a pleasing melancholy that it causeth.' Robert Burton

'...is it not strange that sheepes guts should hale soules out of mens bodies?' Benedick in Much Ado About Nothing

Roasted Swan

An interesting and attractive collection in this latest release from EM Records;



Everything is getting its premiere recording and all is very good.  Personally the highlights for me were the unexpectedly dynamic and concise Piano Quartet by Tobias Matthay (who really gave up composing to focus on piano pedagogy - Bax was one pupil amongst MANY!) and another really appealing quartet by J B McEwen - "Nugae".  This is a set of 7 miniatures - think Lyric Pieces for String Quartet but really well composed - concise, effective, attractive.  We need his quartet cycle to be completed.  It might not be the profiundest work in the quartet repertoire but it is lovely I think!