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was. The and. Was Al Gore's pomp and circumstance March number one performed there by the royal family orchestra on the Normandy and that was specially for a full my guest of the show Adrian Peacock who I know is listening in right now you're listening to classical Cambridgeshire with an a lap words on B.B.C. Radio Cambridgeshire and that was just one of the pieces being worked on when Mark visited the Duxford Saturday workshop this year it takes place in a primary school in Duxford every weekend and sees over 100 children and even more adults getting together to play music for fun and just one lesson every Saturday but what is the right age to start thinking about getting involved in music as Mark found out it can be a family affair and some families start thinking at a very age. I'm here this morning because I've been coming here for 33 years on a Saturday morning and what's being keeping coming here that long I started when my son started. I went No it must be very proud mother save it to go into music and keep coming back it. Just makes you sick. That's music always been a part of a family life is something you try to encourage. And they're both music teachers. Well I think there's 2 big things in the book so you can I throw as I can see. The started. When he started. And I used to. Go to bed. And I decided I'd get one and what type of music do you find the most enjoyable to play I'm a very pool player really but they let me play here. That I play folk music which is. Very good. For me playing. Thanks so how long have you been coming in well I think it must be. 20 plus years and I really wouldn't miss it. It's a lovely friendly atmosphere and. Whatever level you're playing at. The right. People and music and. Yes there's nowhere else but let me play in an orchestra. I'm sure that's my story I'm sure you're doing yourself a disservice OK are you preparing for next week's concert Oh yes. I'm also trying to. That's very difficult. That's quite a combination and I want to switch the ukulele as well. I think there are 2 nights the spare session or. If it's right. So it takes a lot more effort than you realize based on the choices that you can just dip into something that you might try before and then to get it to say have a Saturday morning when you could try any instrument that is here with a lot of people pick up something from that. Anything I do you are still tempted to even even come here for 3 years that maybe I've been listening to try something else so. That is a perfect example lots of. I'm know and I am here because I now because I played a string orchestra although I have in the past. Played in the chassis. I've done various things in my time here but now I've got 2 small children of my own I get to play one thing a week for playing the string orchestra. And then a husband often place trumpet it all starts off with. The family to try and fit music in sometimes yes. And that's why this is a good actually I think because it's quite relaxed you can bring the kids and when my oldest is a lot enough he'll go to many workshops he's not old enough yet so he says he just plays. Hockey when he's old enough he can he can do that and I mean evenings are a bit of a no moment my youngest 6 months old so I don't get out to do my evening orchestral rehearsals are used today so it's lovely to be able to cover the same morning make a family affair in the cafe and me if I never have a nice time with everyone so yeah it's a challenge but it's worth doing. It is a hope that anything is time you will all be here playing instruments on Saturday morning definitely yes that's the plan and I don't yet know when this will say Angus what you want to play it's what unites. Now that. It's hard to trumpet they even play face to face things here OK when you're old enough so yeah that week that we idealize I certainly came here was a child interested thing cycle starts I just really feel confident if you don't get my money and some say I would love to do the same time on there would be. Years and so you're going to give up any family Bailey. That was Mark Herring about the docs that Saturday workshop which welcome students aged 8 to 88 do look them up online if you'd like to find out more now in just a 2nd to be catching up with some more of Mark's favorite travels and interviews from the past 12 months that's coming up straight off the latest on the right it's a cross Cambridge. Cambridge. In Norfolk a Great Yarmouth E A 47 expand access to the A 143 remains closed for recovery work Cambridge a few closes overnight tonight from 9 pm the A 14 is going to be shot between Ellington and Branson junctions 28 and 21 in both directions the 14 westbound closing from 6 mile bottom to junction 36 to 31 and the 814 exit and entry slips closing in both directions of hill junction 29 that's 9 pm tonight till 6 in the morning that's the latest on Adam all. Seen Brady and Cambridge. Man in the morning. To get involved and have your say on the day's big talking points you'll be joined by some great guests and don't forget pencils at the ready for the 11. Weekdays from. Man in the morning Christmas and on B.B.C. Radio in Cambridge 6. Good evening and welcome back to classical Cambridge it with me puts on B.B.C. Radio you can reach it at the moment we're looking back at some of Mark's favorite interviews from off last year on app and earlier this year at Mach paid a visit to the city of P. 2 percent from the orchestra as they prepared for a concert the concert was a bit of a special one as it featured one of their own players playing the whole inside out in the concerts can chat but what is it that so special about the French one also the sort of iced in question about his lifelong passion for the instrument. My name is Tim around I'm a French horn player by evening and schoolteacher by day I was born and raised in Nebraska in the Midwest of the United States but then after university I joined the Department of Defense teaching corps and so I have been teaching the children of U.S. Military personnel in Germany and then here in the U.K. Since 2001 and all appointed you 1st pick up a French role in the brassica I had attended a small parochial school and then when I was in secondary school my father got a new job and we moved some distance and at the new school it seemed like all the cool kids were in the band and so I asked the band teacher what I might be able to play and he said he offered me French horn or tuba but I walked to and from school about a mile and a half each way and so I chose French art. And that was when I was 13 so I didn't start tell 13 very clearly from another day if you're still playing in now yes yes almost from the moment I started playing it I became somewhat obsessed with it and then through high school I was. I was the sort of student who always earned good marks but wasn't very interested in school does that make sense and thing I was interested in was a French one and I bought a new recordings and met with friends to listen to every little moment of them and that's what I obsessed about in high school and so I was sort of music inspired you most French 000 all confessed the usual answers for French horn players the late Romantic small or broken or these sorts of things and pretty much still do check Koskie that era and that is that music been something is always traveled with the were a few big definitely So when I was in high school I sort of learned all of the pieces and then when I was in university I went to university just west of Chicago during the period when Sergio sheltie was the music director there and they had a world famous brass section and many of my heroes were in the French horn section and so many weekends we drove into Chicago and waited in line for the return tickets and then watched the orchestra and way any time they were playing Mahler or broken or or that sort of music we were there and that was a major part of my college education don't tell the professors. A bit of a French one groupie as well as a player absolutely yes I remember in high school driving about an hour and a half on a school night to see the Chicago Symphony occasionally played downstate as they called it and so we drove to a small town in central Illinois to see them perform and they weren't even playing anything I was all that interested in but I drove over there and I met Dale Clevenger the great principal horn player of the Chicago Symphony and shook his hand and I remember being amazed that he had a mustache. And now after meeting only fantastic plays you are going to be center stage yourself in this concert Yes Honestly I'm a little overwhelmed by it that I haven't have not done something like this since I was at university to be the front and center player and I've really tried to honor the experience they asked me to do it a little over a year ago and once I agreed I started rearranging things and so forth so that pretty much since that time I've been playing significantly more than I had been before and then since the 1st of the year I've I've made an effort to play my horn every day and I can't say I've done it but it's there's a certain degree of athleticism about it you know you have to there's conditioning and so forth and just now we had an hour long rehearsal with me the soloist the whole time a year ago I would not have had the lip for that and so I've I've tried to put in all the quiet hours alone in the you know the practice room to make this pay off because I really think I feel so honored by the experience let's put it that way and so I want to live up to my part of it and how as I 1st wrestle been it's an experience to step out in front of a group who clean it must know quite well. Well it feels a lot better now that it's over. I was I was very nervous my wife has been. Very snippy with me the last couple of days because she's she says you know these people are you know you can play this and but I have I think I've been something of a basket case the last few days I think it was a smart move by Steve Bingham the conductor to schedule this this far in advance so that I could have all the nerves and then you know move forward from here with a sense of hey I can do this and these are actually the feeling of being supported because it's a group of people behind you that you you know and play with regularly Yes that's that is very helpful I was joking during the rehearsal with the violinist the lead violinist oh wow there's a note coming here that I'm likely to miss a beer really convenient for me if you missed it a couple measures earlier so it sounds like it was written that way these sorts of things and and I can do that because as you say I know them and it's they make me feel very comfortable and then presumably also this concert you'll be at least temporarily back in the in the ranks but you're also going to do that as part of this concert you're going to play in the other pieces yes the in the 2nd half of the concert there is a Mendelssohn symphony that has a very challenging 1st part and as we looked around to see who might play it there there wasn't anyone so I'm playing about as well and unfortunately it's we can arrange it so that I I don't play in the 1st half except my piece and then during intermission I can check with friends and and fans and then I will have a few minutes with during the 1st piece of the 2nd half to collect myself and go out and play that yeah it's that's going to be a challenge and we'll see. Musical life increase through and they say in general it does if you look for the opportunities to be playing Yes here's another place where I have to bring up my wife gives me rather too many opportunities to places she says. I play. Full time as a regular member in the Huntsville as well the Huntington harmonic and then I play in a variety of small groups French horn is the sort of thing where there are lots of parts you know the music is written to include it quite often but there aren't a lot of players and so now that people know me I tend to get asked a lot and I've actually had to start turning down some things. Keep things OK on the home front. So it's really different from group we have a fringe when we do if you're not careful as well yes yes exactly yeah she's she's she's honestly very supportive she comes to the concerts she played violin at university as well so she knows something about the music and always has a rather sharp opinion about what went well and what didn't but but she does get a little tired of me being at rehearsal every evening too so. Was Tim Roush a member of the city of Peterborough Symphony Orchestra as moch spoke to him before his 1st episode I with the orchestra and the fast concert of the season will be on October 13th and will feature Beethoven's 5th Symphony Sabaidee is valid in contrast say and this classic work by Greek. Absolutely. Girls. With. Perro war. That was the opening of Greek's pagan suite number one performed there by the Berlin Film on it orchestra directed by Herbert von Karajan and you're listening to classical Cambridge too with me and a lot of boards on B.B.C. Radio Cambridge chair now Mark has spoken to orchestras and choirs of all shapes and sizes over the past year and for his 1st show as our host in December he went along to one of the county's smaller choirs to hear them in concert he spoke to the tapestry singers and then musical director Jeremy barrios and started off by asking him a little about his musical background. Well I was born into a musical family my dad was of a very keen singer I'm told he's the only person who sang it to cathedral consecrations in the 20th century Coventry in Guilford and I just always wanted to sing basic from a very young age I went to my church choir for a year but I ended up going simples cathedral with a chorus of age 8 and you cynically don't constrain the county is that right. Yes I well I I I do it's called Depp in it because the eagle and Peter are. Quite regular as are both in the last week and that's where you turn up and you just have to pick up the music and often as rehearsal get ready and then sing it it must be something to be in that kind of demand then to be able to do it or just drop in and sing at the drop of a hat it's very nice it is a question of managing your whole life but it's a great privilege at my age to be able to sing with such good choirs and well pretty tapestry thing is to be a singer 1st of all Caroline Jones a wonderful lady who used to sing with us lived in the village and she taught my daughter piano and one day she asked me to go along and sing and Lindsay I didn't auditioned and they very kindly asked me to join so and rather more than Stadio now leading the group from the front it was a little bit of hand waving Yes that's very new to me I don't think I'd really done any before 2 years ago I maybe could with Caroline's acknowledgement conducted one or 2 pieces in concert and she was perhaps more in charge but yes I've learnt and it's been a real thrill because I've never done it before and I seem to be doing OK I think so it's fun I really enjoy it well organized groups everything to be keeping time this evening so they must be doing something right there I did notice as well when you're conducting ceiling there's still a few pieces that you might to sing a little bit as well so difficult to completely let go outside. I suppose I'd be happy to completely let go of it but at the moment we we expanded the choir from 12 to 16 and so on one of the 4 bases so I I.I. I'm sort of I think sort of needed on the bass line but I can step out because the bass is. Very good and reliable so I but it is something I do a bit of multitasking I suppose and in terms of the this set up of the CO I think so you're all for 2 apart and then is it pretty much dead men's boots if someone leaves then you're looking for a placement and someone can audition that sort of thing yes tenors are always an interesting commodity but we did manage to get 4 tonight and and that was great. But we do have we have now is a short list of people that we know who are local and they sometimes former members or other singers who live locally and they sometimes will come in and join us for a few rehearsals and then a concert as well as conducting a year then helping set the musical direction a temporary thing is there is a more collaborative effort I think it always was a collaborative effort I was asked to be the musical director 2 years ago when before that it'd been notionally. Work as collective shall we say I think it's fair to say we still encourage suggestions from all the singers of even had one from the audience tonight for next year and I will try and incorporate all of those we have a small repertoire committee of 3 or 4 of us who meet and decide what actually goes into each program and that I do sort of try to retain a veto if I think something's not going well enough just to keep the standard up but there's very little of that nothing I think it's reasonably. Corporate if you'll pardon the pun a close knit group. I think we are we do more social now than we used to and one of the one highlight for next year is we're going to York for the weekend we're going to announce concert and we've got some contacts there and it will have a very nice social weekend up there and I believe we're all 16 of us all signed up for that so that should be nice and ever expanding then in terms of your movement around the county in the country is there something important about still singing in venues like this because a group place of if had members in County Hall could easily be I'm sure feeling the news in Cambridge so is imported still be singing contests in a place like science and singing local meat Oh absolutely we love singing locally where. I mean the Free Church concert is a lot of people's highlight of the year in within tapestry we always sing something at all and whole again it's a big charity fundraiser in God Manchester and that's another regular fixture and we like singing around Huntington's and our lives but we saw in Sydney it's this year we've done more in Cambridge and over burble So we are basically in Cambridge it's just been an opportunity to reason and rather walk tonight it seemed rude not to give it a go that was marked chatting to Jeremy Bowers from the tapestry singers and when Mark originally played that interview he included sort of bits and pieces from the singers concert but he introduced the whole interview with the piece that we're going to play next and the Sing is actually liked it so much that they've asked to add it to this year's repertoire this is McMillan a radiant dough. Well the. The . Old the the. Old the. The with. The. The oh the. The. The oh the. The the the the the. The the. the Ready ready ready the. The the. The A road a loaded or earth the local the road the that closed a low the a home with the load the Aloha the road alone oh. Oh the woman would know it would. Hit the Road Home. Was Radiant Dawn from James McMillan Strathclyde motorheads you were listening to classical Cambridge share with me Anil upwards on the B.B.C. Radio Cambridge chair where actually going to have the conductor of that last group on the show next week that was the 16 directed by Harry Christopher's and he has just released a new book alongside Sarah more peach I'm going to be hearing more about that on next week's show so do tuning in. Now we're celebrating Mark's favorite interviews in his travels around Cambridge share over the course of the past 12 months and as well as performing to bring music to the is of audiences around Cambridgeshire many concerts also raise funds for good causes and Marcus spoken to a number of the charities who've benefited from these efforts when he spoke to the Cambridge wind band one of their members also for the charity being supported Mark asked Sam Barclay about the connection yet we always try to support a local charity and the chairperson has got connections with a current clinical director of clinical services so I think that's where the connection came about with our thank office charity and telephone about the hospice charity what your role and what attracted us authorising spin we've recently got a new building so we've been at the new site for about 2 years and it's a purpose built hospice with space for 21 patients we got 21 beds and the idea is that people who are in their final days or weeks of life can have treatment and we look after people quite often right up until they do pass away and it's all about making sure that they're pain free and we look after not just the patients but also their families so it's trying to really meet the needs of each individual in the last few days and weeks of life and presumably that can be a tough time for those families as well going through the experience definitely I think quite often families come it's often a complete shock that their loved one's got this diagnosis and everything is taking quite a while to compute which is you know everyone reacts to these things differently so I think quite often families are very distressed but the hospice is such a quiet and peaceful environment is very different from your average any people do realise and actually say it's so peaceful here you know my loved one can actually get a good night's sleep without being woken all the time so I think after after a while people do settle in and we get. You know this the patients and family really quite well over the time that their loved one stays with us so welcome services does the hospital provide what a lot of people think in a hospice all we do is kind of browse and hold hands but it's so much more than that get and you know get pain medication if a patient's in discomfort but we offer complete holistic care so we've got a chaplain we've got a myriad of doctors and nurses and a lot of A.C.'s who can provide and actually take the time that's the thing that people find in a hospital setting where you've got so many more patients that everything is done had to be has to be done so much more quickly whereas in a hospice if a patient needs to take more time safe we get if we're helping them with a wash then we can we can give them that time is not a case of we've had to 10 minutes we've got to go on to the next person so providing that holistic care to people who are dealing with very very difficult diagnoses in very difficult circumstances that that time that we can give them means so much to our patients which is great that we can we can provide that service and then spending that time with them I guess you must form a really close relationship with the most inspirational Yes And you know that they will you know patients sometimes time lost difficult questions kind of so I had one this week saying I don't know how to handle that I'm dying you know I've I've been told I don't have that long left and I don't know what to do and it's actually a lot of people think it's you know a bit like some counseling sessions where you have to talk it all through but actually what they want is just someone to sit there hold their hand and actually listen because they they've often actually got ideas of what will happen and what you know planning for a funeral service had a patient a few months ago he sadly died she said I want to plan my own funeral and I don't know if I'm allowed to do that and actually it's a case of she actually had everything planned she'd written it all up what she wanted but it was more a case of someone just saying with an open ear to what she had to say but I'm going to constantly thank you them the work that you're doing and work and I think that you looking to do the job well at the moment I think it cost something like. 8000000 pounds to make the care that we give to patients free so they to the users so the money that will raise will go directly towards not just the inpatient unit but we run a day clinic we have a limb for Damer unit so people who've had treatment often get them for demons which can be very painful and difficult to manage so we offer to care for those people and there's also a hospice at home service so care that people can have in their own homes overnight to get their loved ones are rescued looking after a loved $12047.00 is incredibly tiring and specially if someone is that mountain difficult to look after so that rest bite is very valuable and then alongside that is the inpatient unit as well so we offer a wide range of resources to the people that need the people who need them and certainly challenging that but presumably very rewarding as well it can be very difficult sometimes after a long shift you think gosh that was quite a quite a long day but it is incredibly rewarding you know you get people who who say you know you've made this transition now and palliative that you've made it so much easier and we get to know people really well if they stay for a while and actually build up that report and that level of trust it takes time to build that but it is incredibly rewarding work and even if you know sadly a patient has just passed away the family often come to us even on the day that their loved one has died and said thank you for everything that you've done because we've supported them as well and then mutual for you to have something like this to come to to put aside that that demanding work definitely I finished quite a hectic shift even it was just yesterday and we had our rehearsal last night and I did sit down I thought this is just what I need 2 hours of not not at work not in work mode and I can just switch off from that and have 2 hours of making great music with a lot of lovely people so it's a great kind of waiter to unwind after a stressful shift how did you 1st got. into music than is is they been an life on the cli it has actually i think i started of having recorder lessons it genius school and then i switched to the oboe when i came to seen your school and my love of music was definitely health by fish when i joined how when bans when i was a student at the purse and it something that's just continued ever since so when i got the invite from 50 join seat every bay i am jumps on that and yeah 1st rehearsal there we go 6 years down if fills like what couple weeks but said now it's been a gray 6 years of yamit lovely make make a music that was mark herring from sam barkley a member of the cambridge winds bands about his hospice work in cambridge chair and you're listening to classical game would say with me our lap words on b.b.c. Radio who came for a chair now the cambridge when band were has on thursday evenings so might not be listening right now but arts they're working towards a concept in November which going to take place at sin faiths school in their 1st concert of a last season they played an arrangement of this piece in a cowboy themed concent I've. You do is holiday by it leave Henri Anderson and you listening to classical Cambridge share with me and a lot words on B.B.C. Radio Cambridgeshire Now in just a 2nd we'll be revisiting the time that mock interviewed me about the organ that's coming up straight off the latest on the right it's a cross Cambridge. C.B.C. Radio Cambridge. In Norfolk a Great Yarmouth the A $47.00 eastbound exit slip to be a 143 remains closed to full recovery work Cambridge or a few closes overnight tonight from 9 pm the a full team is going to be shuttling Ellington a BRENDAN HUTCHENS 20 and 21 in both directions the A 14 westbound closing from 6 mile bottom to Girton junction 36 T. 31 and the 814 exit and entry slips closing in both directions at Bar Hill junction 29 us 9 pm tonight till 6 in the morning that's the latest time at a mall. Good evening and welcome back to classical Cambridge share with me and a lot put on the B.B.C. Radio campaign for a chat now over the course of the last hour mark has been revisiting some of his favorite interviews from the 1st year of our shower and as our best day in a couple of weeks it seemed an ideal time to listen again to the time that Mark asked if he could interview me. Now I do have a bit of a musical life going on outside the show and it was a time when I was preparing for quite a few different events Marc came and joined me at the organ of Pembroke College where I walk the rest of the time so that we could talk a little bit more about how an organ actually works now in Classic me style I put mark on the spot straight away when I asked him what his favorite chord was as part of a bit of a demonstration so now for the 1st time 28 years I have to play a chord on the organ which chord thing that's a question a record. I mean Decisions decisions actually government right choice. Leaving out of this moment as well what's your favorite chord it will dribble 3 Start message. Or indeed 088-0996 or tweet cams this might give you the time to think about it I'm just gonna go for playing a chord of a major I think is the. Right what would you play then come on I don't know but I wouldn't go for a manger. And everybody majors. Think I was going to go for a flat next so all right you can watch like I want to yes so I think this is the demonstration of actually how the organ is dependent on the electrics and what actually going through it there which is used to be depend so what we're saying is that when you turned it in this case you'd have an actress do off the blower stops working slowly so it's like bellows are gradually kind of losing their power but it used to be done by hand so there'd be someone standing there and pumping it and this is what would happen if that person suddenly got bored and decided to go to the pub instead of instead of doing their job which it would be me in this case right so your article the court might be surprised if I know what notes are in which of course it was a little bit kind of play Thanks. Oh. Almost courses are places I actually use that So there are places where you have to catch me you have to time they were going off just before the end and so it will gradually die out that's quite cool I've actually got a story about that because like a member many is going to the anvil music festival where such a piece was played and I think it was composed by off account yes it was oh yeah. Yes he was in the audience listening at the time oh gosh don't present I'm going to talk to the auditor about it so you saw some organs I like this one so if you turn it off the action still works because it's not that trick action but on the organ I was doing on a big concert when you turn the power off the keys no longer sort of transmitted to the to the thing which makes that stop sound basically So we had to fake it and basically just like people will poke put all the stops in and try and fake the sound of it turning off it and work wise while there's this authentic instrument and there is some tension to actually come and play with everything turned off just to have a feel of the notes when you're 1st starting out I think when often you will hear some plunking from upstairs before the Ogletree and that's the organist just because you can play it without any doubt and then it makes no sound and it just goes like. That that's. Quite out of status and I suppose another question to ask you about the various sets of sounds How do you decide which are the best to play for a particular part of music. Oh well that's a difficult question you don't I mean you don't get it easy just because it's mean to be not afraid that well some some composers specify but the top I mean say for example messing up is extremely specific details play missing out on this one but message is extremely specific with what sound he wants other conversion is less specific and the recut like Bach there are sort of historically appropriate sounds that you can use but then again because every organ is different and sometimes not quite being in tune with another stop because the cheating is very fragile and if the weather changes then that will go out can go out of tune and it is not that quick to just tune it again so it tends to be based on circumstance how you're feeding on that particular particular day I mean I play a piece of bar where sometimes I'm going to need to play really really really loudly. Was at times if I'm in a bit of a sort of silly or sort of that playful mood or I just want a different thing in a recital and I play like this. And sensory different thing because then it changes the speed and it changes the articulation and that's what I got when the fun things about it know you can you can perform at a 1000000 different ways if you want to and it's also exciting to experience for us the player because when you're playing and I quietly You can almost hear the keys yourself as loudly as they please yeah you have an answer it's a different side this is down in the chat here this is on the ground of the sound that we. Watch the much heavier action so that if it sings is wild. And for those who were given these kind of things you have opened up plays and principal recorder and furniture to make sound so there so that sort of different if we look very briefly I realize this is turning into a massive organ thing but I love it so I think it's nice not having. I would say this is why this is my evening off I don't know what to do with it is often happens it's not about spending it's never never tell me of any off ever again so this is kind of the basic sort of one of the basic sounds doesn't. Middle C. Sound as middle C. And then you've got going to stop you there so am I correct in thinking that the reason it's going 8 1st top is that that middle C. Poppies are actually a phenomenon Yeah very basically a fiddle and then challenge. You don't already hear it when it's when it's kind of put together into a chord and that sort of starts to give you any sound and you get a mixture which basically makes all those things together. And that's the sort of that again we're getting to the stereotypical organ sound I guess then I think just to make the point to understand can you just play one note on the keyboard for us again just so we can hear how many different playing when you do. It's quite a mix of sounds just by putting these various things together exactly but again and slowly your ear blends it all into one thing some people are really sensitive to particular perfect pitch if I were to be playing something on there. They would hear all the and they would hear the 3 individual notes in there and they hate it and sometimes if you're doing it lower down I mean if you. Can hear the French. That can be a bit off putting some people like me with perfect pitch is actually you know sitting down says like make it stop. Apologies to any of our listeners who also have perfect pitch you have my sympathies because I mean that love. That was me each other was a mark earlier this year head of Pembroke College talking about how the organ works you're listening to classical Cambridge share with me and that puts on B.B.C. Radio Cambridgeshire and if anything in the last hour has particularly inspired you or if you're already involved in some form of music making around Cambridge share then please do be in touch because Mark would love to come to visit you and to find out more you can contact us here at the show by any of the usual methods so you can send us a text on a one triple 3 starting a master of the web cam or give us a ring 180859596 you could send either of us an email just look at up online and you can send us a tweet as well I'm sure that Mark will soon be knocking on your door if you do next week the door on which he'll be knocking belongs to Reginald so of the same needs Choral Society Now still to come in the next hour I'm tracing this little piece of Gregorian chant from its origins around the 13th century through some amazing huge works of the 19th centuries of classical canon into the realm of film music we've got some of my favorites coming up we've got the lion king nor the rings and maybe a bit of Jurassic Park that's all still to come on classic Cambridge. Cambridge in an essay on Ze'evi on B.B.C. Sounds ZAVIS is B.B.C. Radio Cambridge. B.B.C. News at 9 on more Alderson Boris Johnson says he would rather be dead in a ditch than go to Brussels to ask for another delay to banks that the prime minister has insisted again that a general election is the only way to deal with the deadlock he's criticised the Labor leader German Koeppen for refusing to back a snap poll until a no deal breaks it has been ruled out but these labor activists in Wakefield say they don't want a vote on Mr Johnson's terms either it's not that I want the target stay in or a doubt one of the election are worried about an election it's just it just feels like it's been pushed on somebody else's agenda I want to see him fail on the 31st of October want to see that the promises were all false there was no detail to the negotiations and he comes away empty handed there's got to be an election it's just a question of turning elsewhere the prime minister has praised his brother Joe Johnson who's announced his resignation from the government and confirmed he's stepping down as an M.P. Bars Johnson says his brother has been a brilliant minister but acknowledge they disagree over the E.U. David Cameron's former director of communications to Craig all of a says the resignation could be damaging for the PM Joe Johnson having a great debate on the cabinet and then they'll say look I'm sorry I just can't stomach it it's a serious problem for them the question is how much is that punching through outside Westminster and I think that story well we saw what happened with Ed Miliband and his brother David it's a kind of thing that when there's a fraternal family here that it really cuts through so I don't think they'll be enjoying that number 10 tonight in other news the Royal Navy has begun delivering aid to communities in the Bahamas after Hurrican Dorian caused widespread devastation there and left at least 20 people dead and it's now my. Going towards the east coast of America with warnings of life threatening storm surges Jamie Lange says he's absolutely devastated to drop out of this year's Strictly Come Dancing the Made in Chelsea star injured his foot while recording the launch show it's not yet known if he'll be replaced Amazon has been forced to apologize after it mistakenly sent out hundreds of copies of a highly anticipated novel ahead of its official release Margaret Atwood's The testaments is a follow up to her hugely successful the handmade stale it should have been under lock and key until next Tuesday but around 800 fans in the United States were sent their copy early Benedict a page from the bookseller magazine says it's all a bit awkward it does throw a spoke in the works of what's been a very carefully planned campaign by the publisher So in terms of the US publication of this book it is a bad thing and it's very upsetting for the independent booksellers but I don't think we should overstate it the appetite for this book is enormous people are very excited and a look ahead at tonight's weather and the rain in the northwest of the country will become more widespread tonight and then move slowly southwards staying largely drying clear in the southern half of the country overnight lows of between 11 and 10 degrees Celsius B.B.C. News It's 3 minutes past 9 across Cambridge classical Cambridge shared B.B.C. Radio OK. Good evening and welcome back to classical Cambridge it was me and on that point on B.B.C. Radio Cambridgeshire. Coming up over the next hour we're off to the movies I'm going to be tracing this little piece of Gregorian chant from its origins around the 13th century through some of its apparent says in $1000.00 centric classical music and then into some of its most famous apparent says in the wild a film music if there's a death in a film you will probably hear this motif you just might. not of noticed it but i'm morning you as soon as you stopped harriet you won't be able to inherit we've got everything from the danny elfman soundtracks to old favorite some trees the lot of the rings stall walls and even that law and wow wow wow wow

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