The Gramophone Classical Music Podcast
Music:Music Interviews
Timothy Ridout won last year’s Concerto category at the Gramophone Awards for his Harmonia Mundi recording, with the BBC Symphony Orchestra and Martyn Brabbins, of Elgar’s Cello Concerto transcribed by Lionel Tertis for viola, alongside the Bloch Suite for Viola and Orchestra. His new HM release continues his exploration of the huge role that Tertis played in the history of the viola, as player, teacher, arranger and champion of the instrument.
Ridout's new double album, for which he's joined by pianists Frank Dupree and James Baillieu, includes sonatas by York Bowen and Rebecca Clarke, as well as many shorter works by powerful links to Tertis. James Jolly met up with Timothy to talk about the album, and the place that Tertis holds for viola-players.
Can Çakmur on Schubert and Krenek
Andrè Schuen on Schubert's Winterreise
Antonello Manacorda on Beethoven's Ninth at 200
Brindley Sherratt on his debut song recital 'Fear No More'
James Ehnes on Leonard Bernstein and John Williams
Nathan Williamson and James Gilchrist on the songs of Thomas Pitfield
Kirill Gerstein on 'Music in the Time of War'
Klaus Mäkelä on recording Stravinsky in Paris: From the Archive
Exploring Schubert
Paavo Järvi on Mendelssohn's symphonies
Rebecca Dale on her new album 'Night Seasons'
Dalia's Mixtape: Anna Meredith's Nautilus
The 12 Ensemble's new album, Metamorphosis
Handel's Theodora, with Jonathan Cohen
Alessandro Fisher on 'A Gardener's World'
Lara Downes on Rhapsody in Blue Reimagined
Edmund Finnis and Clare Hammond on recording Youth
Krystian Zimerman on Szymanowski, conducting and retirement
Jonathan Freeman-Attwood on 'Handel for Trumpet'
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