Epiphany
Texts and music related to epiphany, with readings by Joanna David and Bertie Carvel. Including TS Eliot, Carol Ann Duffy and Wole Soyinka, plus Bach, Menotti, Lennox Berkeley.
In the Christian tradition, The Epiphany marked one of the first manifestations of God to mankind - to the gentiles - when the Magi or Wise Men were presented to the new-born Christ. It was a moment of revelation, of insight and understanding, as Christ's divinity was revealed.
Richard Strauss's Die heiligen drei Könige opens this edition of Words and Music with its mournful and subdued strings. Introducing the religious theme, the piece describes the epic and starlit voyage of the three Magi as they sought the Christ child.
George Mackay Brown's Epiphany Poem, read by Joanna David, describes the horror of this journey: the Magi 'Suffered salt, snow, skulls'. But at the end, the revelation of God to man brings hope and salvation; the first word is made flesh. Strauss expresses the movement from suffering to salvation through the modulation from minor to major key.
The Epiphany has been interpreted by many composers including Jonathan Dove, Judith Bingham and Richard Trunk whose work we hear in this programme.
In contrast, TS Eliot's The Journey of the Magi, read by Bertie Carvel, is a dramatic monologue from the point of view of one wise man. The anguished narrator, rather than expounding the joy of the birth or the beauty of the Eastern star, explains that the coming of Christ brought about the end of his world, 'the old dispensation'. The birth was 'bitter agony for us, like Death, our death.'
In Queen Herod, Carol Ann Duffy subverts the Epiphany story. The poem tells the tale of three queens whose visitation brings a warning: the eastern star heralds the birth of 'a swaggering lad' who will break her daughter's heart. Stansilaw Baranczak's The Three Magi introduces a secular aspect to the theme of epiphany, transposing the story to Communist Poland and the arrest of a dissident: the gold of a watch and the frankincense of cigarette smoke serve as substitutions for the Magi's gifts: 'what is this myrrh, anyway / you'd have to finally look it up / someday.'
Beethoven's Symphony No.3 expresses a secular epiphany in the finale, as its headlong rush is interrupted with a slow section, building to an overwhelming climax; Janacek's Taras Bulba describes a similar epiphanic movement.
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Music Played
Timings (where shown) are from the start of the programme in hours and minutes
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00:00
Richard Strauss
Die heiligen drei Könige
Performer: Elisabeth Schwarzkopf, Radio Symphonie Orchester Berlin, George Szell
- EMI 7243 5 66908 2 0.
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George Mackay Brown
Epiphany Poem, read by Joanna David
Robert Fitzgerald
Epiphany, read by Bertie Carvel
00:07Jonathan Dove
The Three Kings
Performer: The Choir of Westminster Abbey, Robert Quinney, James O’Donnell
- Hyperion CDA 67716.
WB Yeats
The Magi, read by Joanna David
TS Eliot
Journey of the Magi, read by Bertie Carvel
00:14Lennie Tristano
Requiem
Performer: Lenni Tristano
- FiveFour.
Carol Ann Duffy
Queen Herod, read by Joanna David
00:23Charles Koechlin
Le Buisson ardent
Performer: Radio Sinfonieorchester Stuttgart des SWR, Heinz Holliger
- Hanssler Classic CD93045.
Stanislaw Baranczak
The Three Magi, read by Bertie Carvel
00:29Judith Bingham
Epiphany
Performer: the Choir of St Paul’s Cathedral, Huw Williams, John Scott
- Helios, CDH55443.
Matthew Arnold
Dover Beach, read by Joanna David
00:35Leos JanáÄek
Rhapsody for Orchestra 'Taras Bulba'
Performer: Vienna Philharmonic, Sir Charles Mackerras
- DECCA 4101382.
Robert Frost
Revelation, read by Joanna David
00:40Ludwig van Beethoven
Symphony No.5 in C minor
Performer: Philharmonia Orchestra, Otto Klemperer
- EMI Classics CDM 7638682.
Arthur Rimbaud
Lives, translated by Wyatt Mason, read by Bertie Carvel
Marcel Proust
Swann’s Way, translated by Scott Moncrieff and Kilmartin, read by Joanna David
00:51Peter Ilyich Tchaikovsky
'Manfred' op.58
Performer: Russian National Orchestra, Mikhail Pletnev
- Deutsche Grammophon 4398912.
William Shakespeare
Twelfth Night, read by Joanna David
00:59Richard Trunk
Die heiligen drie Könige
Performer: Olaf Bär, Helmut Deutsch
- EMI CDC5562042.
01:01Coleman Hawkins
Don't Blame Me
Performer: Coleman Hawkins, Barry Harris, Robert Cranshaw, Edward Locke
- Pablo CD2310707.
Wole Soyinka
In the Small Hours, read by Bertie Carvel
WH Auden
Well so that is that, read by Bertie Carvel
01:06Leos JanáÄek
Sinfonietta
Performer: Vienna Philharmonic, Sir Charles Mackerras
- DECCA 4101382.
Broadcasts
- Sun 8 Jan 2012 18:30Â鶹ԼÅÄ Radio 3
- Sat 1 Sep 2012 18:15Â鶹ԼÅÄ Radio 3