Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
In late 1987, Macleod was presenting Midweek Choice on BBC Radio 3. [5] In 1990 he was presenting various programmes for BBC Radio 3. [6] For four years prior to 1996, Macleod was in charge of presentation at BBC Radio 3. [3] From May 1996 onwards, Macleod presented Through The Night on BBC Radio 3. [7] He joined Composer of the Week in 1999. [8]
Composer of the Week is a biographical music programme produced by BBC Cymru Wales and broadcast on BBC Radio 3.It is broadcast daily from Monday to Friday at 4pm for an hour, with each week's programmes being a self-contained series of five dedicated to a particular composer or a group of related composers.
Crosse was born in Bury, Lancashire on 1 December 1937, [1] and in 1961 graduated from St Edmund Hall, Oxford with a first class honours degree in music, where his tutors included Egon Wellesz. [2] He then undertook two years of postgraduate research on early fifteenth-century music before beginning an academic career at the University of ...
Molleson presented BBC Radio 3 concerts from 2015 onwards [5] and first presented Breakfast on BBC Radio 3 in May 2021. [6] Molleson has presented documentaries for BBC Radio 4 and the BBC World Service. [7] In 2023, she began presenting some editions of Composer of the Week on BBC Radio 3, [8] with Donald Macleod presenting the other editions ...
For BBC Radio 3, Talkington has presented and produced a wide variety of programmes such as Late Junction, [1] Composer of the Week (working with trumpeter John Wallace on a series on John Philip Sousa and Scott Joplin), Radio 3 Requests, the BBC Proms, Breakfast, Sacred and Profane, Afternoon on 3 and Womad.
In 2015, Kendall was noted as one of the "brilliant female composers under the age of 35". [3] She featured on BBC Radio 3's Composer of the Week . [ 4 ] All five composers of the week were women and this was part of Radio 3's International Women's Day celebrations, which were highlighted in The Guardian . [ 5 ]
The first BBC broadcast of Choral Evensong came from Westminster Abbey in 1926. The first edition was relayed by the British Broadcasting Company from Westminster Abbey on 7 October 1926. [1] [3] The programme continued on the BBC Home Service, later BBC Radio 4, until 8 April 1970, when it moved to BBC Radio 3.
Radio 3 is the successor station to the Third Programme which began broadcasting on 29 September 1946. [8] The name Radio 3 was adopted on 30 September 1967 when the BBC launched its first pop music station, Radio 1 [9]: 247 and rebranded its national radio channels as Radio 1, Radio 2 (formerly the Light Programme), Radio 3, and Radio 4 (formerly the Home Service).