Moonstruck
Poetry, prose and music about the moon, read by Art Malik and Alexandra Gilbreath. With texts by WB Yeats, Charles Baudelaire and Virginia Woolf, and music by Schumann and Debussy.
Art Malik and Alexandra Gilbreath read poetry and prose that explores our ancient and continuing fascination with the moon, in various guises: as a symbol of purity, as a capricious, changeable being, as an object to reach in the imagination and through scientific exploration. With texts by Ben Jonson, William Shakespeare, Charles Baudelaire, Virginia Woolf and Sylvia Plath, and music from Mendelssohn, Debussy, Schumann, Judy Garland, and Radiohead.
Last on
Music Played
Timings (where shown) are from the start of the programme in hours and minutes
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00:00
Francesco Cavalli
La Calisto - opera in a prologue and 3 acts
Conductor: Ren茅 Jacobs. Performer: Concerto Vocale.- HM.
- HMC-1.
-
Ben Jonson
Hymn to Diana read by Art Malik
00:00Felix Mendelssohn
A Midsummer night's dream - incidental music Op.61
Conductor: Charles Mackerras. Performer: Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment.- VIRGIN CLASSICS.
- VC 7 90725--2.
William Shakespeare
A Midsummer Night's Dream听(opening) read by Art Malik and Alexandra Gilbreath
00:04Gabriel Faur茅
La Bonne chanson Op.61 for voice and piano
Performer: Ian Bostridge. Performer: Julius Drake.- EMI CLASSICS.
- 5 57-609 2.
00:07Richard Strauss
Capriccio - opera in 1 act Op.85 [1940-41]
Conductor: Neeme J盲rvi. Performer: Royal Scottish National Orchestra.- CHANDOS.
- CHAN-7113.
Virginia Woolf
Night & Day (extract from Chapter 5) read by Alexandra Gilbreath
00:10Judy Garland
Burton Lane - Old Devil Moon
- CAPITOL.
- CDR 7-48426 2.
00:13Claude Debussy
Suite bergamasque for piano
Performer: Zolt谩n Kocsis.- PHILIPS.
- 412-118-2.
Charles Baudelaire
The Gifts of the moon read by Art Malik
00:19Anton铆n Dvo艡谩k
Rusalka - lyric fairy tale in 3 acts B.203, Op.114
Conductor: Gianandrea Noseda. Performer: Anna Netrebko. Performer: Vienna Philharmonic.- DEUTSCHE GRAMMOPHON.
- DG 474 240-2.
00:24Camille Saint鈥怱a毛ns
Tarantelle Op.6, arr. for flute, clarinet & piano [orig. for fl, clarinet & orch]
Performer: Nash Ensemble.- HYPERION.
- CDA-67431/2.
WB Yeats
The Cat and the moon听read by Alexandra Gilbreath
00:27Moscow S O
Frank Skinner/Hans Salter - The Wolf Man main title/The Kill (extracts)
Conductor: William T. Stromberg.- MARCO POLO.
- 8-223747.
Curt Siodmak
Even a man who is pure in heart read by Art Malik
Julian Hawthorne
Were-Wolf read by Art Malik
00:27Van Morrison - Moondance
- WARNER.
- 7599-27326 2.
00:32Benjamin Britten
4 Sea interludes [from 'Peter Grimes'] Op.33a [concert version]
Conductor: Benjamin Britten. Performer: Orchestra of the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden.- LONDON.
- 425-659-2.
Federico Garcia Lorca
Moon Rising听read by Art Malik
00:36Santiago de Murcia
Prelude y allegro for guitar [1714]
Performer: William Carter.- LINN RECORDS.
- CKD-288.
Percy Shelley
The Moon听read by Alexandra Gilbreath听
00:38Arnold Schoenberg
Pierrot lunaire Op.21 for voice and ensemble
Conductor: David Atherton. Performer: Mary Thomas. Performer: London Sinfonietta.- DECCA.
- 425-626 2.
Sylvia Plath
The Moon and the yew tree听read by Alexandra Gilbreath听
00:40Robert Schumann
Liederkreis Op.39
Performer: Sir Andr谩s Schiff. Performer: Robert Holl.- DECCA.
- 436-123 2.
00:43Joseph Haydn
Il Mondo della luna - dramma giocoso in 3 acts H.28.7
Conductor: Antal Dor谩ti. Performer: Lausanne Chamber Orchestra.- PHILIPS.
- 432-420-2.
Cyrano de Bergerac
Journey to the Moon (extract) read by Art Malik
00:45Gy枚rgy Ligeti
Atmospheres
Conductor: Claudio Abbado. Performer: Vienna Philharmonic.- DEUTSCHE GRAMMOPHON.
- 429-260-2.
May Swenson
Landing on the Moon ready by Alexandra Gilbreath
00:53Radiohead
Radiohead - Sail to the Moon
- PARLOPHONE.
- 584-543 2.
Carol Ann Duffy
Woman in the Moon read by Alexandra Gilbreath
Producer's Note - Moonstruck
Throughout history the heavens above us have been a source of great fascination, and especially our closest neighbour, the moon.听 It is a perpetual companion in our lives, central to many myths, legends and religions, and it has provided writers and musicians with a rich source of inspiration. The Ancient Greeks allied the moon with Diana, goddess of the hunt, who was seen as pure and chaste and celebrated for her constancy, as invoked by Ben Jonson.
The waxing and waning of the moon鈥檚 cycle give it another character 鈥 that of a capricious being, changeable on a whim, something that can interfere with human events, lives and loves.听 Shakespeare explored this theme many times, including in A Midsummer Night鈥檚 Dream, as haveVirginia Woolf in Night and Day and Baudelaire, in his prose-poem, The Gifts of the Moon.听 Musically, many composers have linked the moon with affairs of the heart, and here we have Dvorak鈥檚 Rusalka, Faure鈥檚 La lune blanche, and the show tune, That old devil moon.
The animal kingdom has not escaped the moon鈥檚 influence either, and WB Yeats finds common traits between a cat and the moon.听 Human transformation is a topic that needs inclusion too 鈥 the superstition of vampires and werewolves during a full moon has given rise to a whole genre of melodramatic fiction, and to a colourful range of films.
Britten鈥檚 Sea Interlude portrays the moon鈥檚 effects on the water, leading on to the effects of the moon on personality. The Greek philosopher Aristotle thought that the brain was the 鈥榤oistest鈥 organ in the body, and therefore highly susceptible to the influence of the moon, thus linking the moon with madness. Unfortunate ladies in the 19th century in particular were portrayed as lunatics, and Percy Shelley reflects this.
Attitudes to the moon have changed with scientific development. The telescope has brought it closer and its surface has been examined and mapped out. Moon travel has been explored in science fiction by Jules Verne and HG Wells among others, but Cyrano de Bergerac got there earlier in 1657, with his Voyage to the Moon, a satirical, and, at the time, blasphemous story, which asks what would happen if the moon was really the earth, and our earth was its moon, as his intrepid explorer discovers. A century later Haydn uses the idea of moon travel as the backdrop to a fanciful comic opera, while the music of Ligeti was famously used by Stanley Kubrick in his film 2001: A Space Odyssey.
May Swenson expresses the anxiety as well as the celebration which accompanied the Apollo landing in 1969, when science fact caught up with science fiction.听 What effect would this have on our relationship with the moon? The final word is left to
Carol Ann Duffy, who looks back askance from the moon to the earth today.
听
Producer: Janet Tuppen
Broadcasts
- Sun 23 May 2010 22:15大象传媒 Radio 3
- Sun 17 Jan 2016 17:30大象传媒 Radio 3