PODCAST: John Dante Prevedini leads a discussion about Classical Music and Visual Disability, including contributions from Charlotte Hardwick, Robert McCarney, Halida Dinova and Giuseppe Pennisi.
SPONSORED: Ensemble. Last Gasp of Boyhood. Roderic Dunnett investigates Jubilee Opera's A Time There Was for the Benjamin Britten centenary.
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British scientist and writer Michael Francis Tremberth was born before World War II to Cornish parents in the UK's West Midlands. His early interest in music was owed to parental influence and the Essays in Musical Analysis of Donald Francis Tovey. Early attempts to play piano (taught by the late Edgar Morgan, a former conductor of the BBC Midland Singers), violin and clarinet contributed to the cultivation of the musical garden, aided by choral singing and art song. Study of the natural sciences, particularly of physics, clarified some basic aspects of note production, though not necessarily of the subtleties of tonality.
Michael Tremberth lived in Cornwall until his sudden death at his home in St Erth on 24 February 2016, aged seventy-eight.
Jaqueline Tu, Ensemble 111 and Thibauld Back de Surany
J S Bach's Suites for solo cello
The Gould Piano Trio