Dictation & Shadowing
Link copied!

Part 12: Cam14 - Test 3 - Part 4

0:00
0:00
Auto-next

Dictation

Fill in what you hear

Asyou
know,theuniversityisplanninganartsfestivalforlaterthisyear,
Progress
Part 120%
Cam14 - Test 3 - Part 4

Segments

Active dialog line

As you all know, the university is planning an arts festival for later this year,

Pending dialog line

and here in the music department we've planned three concerts.

Pending dialog line

These will be public performances, and the programme has just been finalised.

Pending dialog line

The theme of the festival is links between the UK and Australia,

Pending dialog line

and this is reflected in the music:

Pending dialog line

each concert will feature both British and Australian composers.

Pending dialog line

I'll tell you briefly about the Australian music,

Pending dialog line

as you probably won't be familiar with that.

Pending dialog line

The first concert will include music by Liza Lim,

Pending dialog line

who was born in Perth, Western Australia, in 1966.

Pending dialog line

As a child, Lim originally learned to play the piano - like so many children -

Pending dialog line

and also the violin.

Pending dialog line

But when she was 11 her teachers encouraged her to start composing.

Pending dialog line

She found this was her real strength,

Pending dialog line

and she studied and later taught composition,

Pending dialog line

both in Australia and in other countries.

Pending dialog line

As a composer, she has received commissions from numerous orchestras,

Pending dialog line

other performers and festivals in several countries.

Pending dialog line

Liza Lim's compositions are vibrant and full of energy,

Pending dialog line

and she often explores Asian and Australian Aboriginal cultural sources,

Pending dialog line

including the native instrument, the didgeridoo:

Pending dialog line

this is featured in a work called The Compass.

Pending dialog line

Her music is very expressive,

Pending dialog line

so although it is complex,

Pending dialog line

it has the power of connecting with audiences and performers alike.

Pending dialog line

In the festival we're going to give a semi-staged performance of The Oresteia.

Pending dialog line

This is an opera in seven parts,

Pending dialog line

based on the trilogy of ancient Greek tragedies by Aeschylus.

Pending dialog line

Lim composed this when she was in her mid-20s,

Pending dialog line

and she also wrote the text, along with Barrie Kosky.

Pending dialog line

It's performed by six singers, a dancer,

Pending dialog line

and an orchestra that, as well as standard orchestral instruments, includes electric guitar,

Pending dialog line

and a traditional Turkish stringed instrument.

Pending dialog line

Lim wrote that because the stories in the tragedies are not easy to tell,

Pending dialog line

the sounds she creates are also disturbing,

Pending dialog line

and they include breathing, sobbing, laughing and whistling.

Pending dialog line

The work lasts around 75 minutes,

Pending dialog line

and the rest of the concert will consist of orchestral works by the British composers

Pending dialog line

Ralph Vaughan Williams and Frederick Delius.

Pending dialog line

Moving on now to our second concert,

Pending dialog line

this will begin with instrumental music by British composers - Benjamin Britten and Judith Weir.

Pending dialog line

After the interval we'll go to Australia for a piece by Ross Edwards:

Pending dialog line

The Tower of Remoteness.

Pending dialog line

According to Edwards, the inspiration for this piece came from nature,

Pending dialog line

when he was sitting alone in the dry bed of a creek,

Pending dialog line

overshadowed by the leaves of palm trees,

Pending dialog line

listening to the birds and insects.

Pending dialog line

The Tower of Remoteness is scored for piano and clarinet.

Pending dialog line

Edwards says he realised years after writing the piece

Pending dialog line

that he had subconsciously modelled its opening phrase on a bird call.

Pending dialog line

Ross Edwards was born in 1943 in Sydney, Australia,

Pending dialog line

and studied at the Sydney Conservatorium of Music

Pending dialog line

and the universities of Adelaide and Sydney.

Pending dialog line

He's well known in Australia,

Pending dialog line

and in fact he's one of the country's most performed composers.

Pending dialog line

He's written a wide range of music,

Pending dialog line

from symphonies and concertos to some composed specifically for children.

Pending dialog line

Edwards's music has been described as being 'deeply connected to Australia',

Pending dialog line

and it can be regarded as a celebration of the diversity of cultures that Australia can be proud of.

Pending dialog line

The last of the three Australian composers to be represented in our festival is Carl Vine.

Pending dialog line

Born in 1954, Vine, like Liza Lim, comes from Perth, Western Australia.

Pending dialog line

He took up the cornet at the age of five, switching to the piano five years later.

Pending dialog line

However, he went to university to study physics, before changing to composition.

Pending dialog line

After graduating he moved to Sydney and worked as a freelance pianist and composer.

Pending dialog line

Before long he had become prominent in Australia as a composer for dance,

Pending dialog line

and in fact has written 25 scores of that type.

Pending dialog line

In our third concert,

Pending dialog line

Vine will be represented by his music for the flag hand-over ceremony of the Olympics held in 1996.

Pending dialog line

This seven-minute orchestral piece was of course heard by millions of people worldwide,

Pending dialog line

and we'll hear it alongside works written by British composers Edward Elgar and, more recently, Thomas AdĆØs.