![]() | Ivan Hewett is a writer on music for the Daily Telegraph, broadcaster on BBC Radio 3, and teacher at the Royal College of Music. He studied music at Oxford University, went on to study composition at the Royal College of Music, and spent a fascinating year in commercial music, where he rose to the dizzy heights of scoring the music for a TV cat-food advertisement. After an abortive attempt to set up a music festival, he started working in arts television, researching Granada TV's 'Man and Music' series, and helping to bring Jonathan Miller's dramatisation of Bach's St. Matthew Passion to the screen. By then he'd already started presenting on BBC Radio 3, and in 1993 was entrusted with Radio 3's weekly magazine show 'Music Matters'. Through the 80s and 90s he was a regular contributor to the Musical Times, Prospect and other magazines. Since the late 90s he's taught at the Royal College of Music, and in 2003 published a very personal view of 20th century music, entitled Music: Healing the Rift (pub. Continuum). Nowadays he writes on music and blogs on culture for the Daily Telegraph, and from time to time presents BBC Radio 3's new music series 'Hear and Now'. |
Tuesday 13 October 2009, 6.00pm Notre Dame University, London
Divining art? Culture and the sacred in the 21st century
Saturday 31 October 2009, 2.30pm Henry Moore Gallery
A cultured ear: why does listening to music matter?
Music: healing the rift (Continuum, 2005)
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Raymond Tallis, emeritus professor of geriatric medicine, Manchester University