On the day we’re due to speak she has six hours of train travel on various branch lines: she lives in Brecon, a village in the Welsh hills whose charms don’t include speedy access. This is a book of discovery that speaks of music as a life force, that urges us to live our lives through music. Genre: Biography + Autobiography. She currently presents BBC Radio 3’s New Music Show and Music Matters. This is the impassioned and exhilarating story of the composers who dared to challenge the conventional world of classical music in the twentieth century. She presents BBC Radio 3’s New Music Show and Music Matters. ” He’s looking sheepish, like he’s just acknowledged a big guilty secret. Stravinsky the shapeshifter. The job is more collaborative, more sociable. This survey of ten composers, all basically at one or another extreme of twentieth century music composition, is highly readable. At the age of seven, she became enthralled by a banjo-harp duo she saw busking at a market. Béla Bartók's The Miraculous Mandarin in Building a Library with Kate Molleson and Andrew McGregor. 76 ratings10 reviews. Be ready to look up a lot of very interesting recordings. A celebration of radical creativity. I t’s hard to imagine the Cologne contemporary music collective Ensemble Musikfabrik deliberately timing a. . First published in the Guardian on 14 January, 2016. A minimum of one tooth was observed in each individual. Kate Molleson. This entry was posted in Features on March 11, 2014 by Kate Molleson. The Blind Astronomer. CD review: John McCabe plays John McCabe. This is a book of discovery that speaks of music as a life force, that urges us to live our lives through music. He's the voice of The Listening Service and frequently presents Radio 3's New Music Show, the BBC Proms, and documentaries. This entry was posted in Features on May 6, 2015 by Kate Molleson. First published in The Herald on 25 February, 2015. Kaija Saariaho. . 'Wonderful . Music. However, I’m reserving my greatest excitement for Sound Within Sound: Opening Our Ears to the Twentieth Century (Faber, July), in which Kate Molleson, the Radio 3 presenter, will tell the story. Thu 3 Dec 2015 08. Kate Molleson meets Finnish composer Kaija Saariaho in Paris, the city she has made her home since 1982. Show more. “woman of my age had to bring up the kids. 2015 by Kate Molleson. By nine he was accompanying the school choir and local Eisteddfod (“Mr Richard Jones had me playing for the whole competition, all day long from 9am until 3. First published in the Guardian on 24 March, 2016. Terrible. Best recordings of 2017. was socially prominent as well. ' COSEY FANNI TUTTI By genre: Music > Classical. Buy Sound Within Sound by Kate Molleson from Waterstones today! Click and Collect from your local Waterstones or get FREE UK delivery on orders over £25. Tom Service has presented Music Matters on Radio 3 since 2003. 55 EDT Stravinsky: Symphonies of Wind InstrumentsEpisode 5 of 5. The one thing all readers will discover throughout is that one cannot separate the lives and tribulations these artists faced from. This entry was posted in CD Reviews on August 6, 2017 by Kate Molleson. This entry was posted in Features on December 20, 2017 by Kate Molleson. This entry was posted in Features on April 11, 2017 by Kate Molleson. 03 EDT W hen friends who aren't used to live classical music come with me to concerts, they often ask if they need to behave in a particular way. True, the Australian saxophonist makes chart-topping albums of film music and low-lit love ballads. When Radio 3 presenter and critic Kate Molleson was a child, she would take her Fisher-Price tape machine to bed, clutching it like a cuddly toy, falling asleep to Monteverdi madrigals. First published in the Scottish Chamber Orchestra autumn 2017 newsletter, then in The Herald on 18 October, 2017. Show more. Read 9 reviews from the world’s largest community for readers. Kate Molleson is a Radio 3 presenter and music journalist. We're answering all your Kate Middleton (Duchess of Cambridge) questions—including her age, height, children, birthplace, family, fashion and marriage to Prince William in honor of her birthday. . Kate Molleson and a female throat singer with swan head fiddle Let us know you agree to cookies. She presents BBC Radio 3’s New Music Show and Music Matters. £18. Thu 22 Jun 2017 13. Because since founding the John Wilson Orchestra in 1994, his dedication to the music of Hollywood’s golden age has achieved a two-way thing: on the one side he has enticed fans of light music into the concert hall. Anoushka Shankar learned the good old way. We use. Each week, Tom and Kate will showcase recordings. She has presented documentaries for BBC4 and BBC World Service, and she teaches music journalism at. The Shetland folk musician is arguing the case for a rougher kind of energy: “you should be firing out the lines at this point,” he urges a quintet of opera singers, who seem more immediately. A mong all the dauntingly good young string quartets currently doing the rounds,. Free standard shipping with $35 orders. In 2022 Catherine became the princess of Wales, a title previous held by her mother-in-law, the late Princess Diana. The Berlin Philharmonic came to Glasgow, twice, for the first time since the 1950s. Kate Molleson is a fine communicator with an excellent appetite for detail. This is the impassioned and exhilarating story of the composers who dared to challenge the conventional world of classical music in the twentieth. First published in the Guardian on 17 December, 2015. It is a difficult field for many: we have watched the transition of Stravinsky’s Rite of Spring from denunciation as chaos to maturing as. Post navigationWe have found 78 people in the UK with the name Molleson. Asked once whether she had any advice for. Time: 5. At the age of seven, she became enthralled by a banjo-harp duo she saw busking at a market. Kate Molleson. He wants to launch orchestral music for the digital age, and sees an incorporation of electronic sounds, samples, field recordings and techno-inspired drum beats as a natural evolution, “like valves in brass instruments once were. Run times may vary by up to 20 minutes as they can be affected by last-minute programme changes, intervals and. Sound — Scotland’s festival of new music, a two-and-a-half-week series of concerts in and around Aberdeen — has announced John De Simone as its inaugural Composer in. St Andrew’s Voices hasn’t even turned two yet, but already the ambitious Fife festival is staging an opera. THE dawn of a new era for the Royal Scottish National Orchestra, with fresh management on the way (yet to be appointed). This survey of ten composers, all basically at one or another extreme of twentieth century music composition, is highly readable. By genre: Factual > Arts, Culture & the Media; Listen live. Number of Pages: 352. Three out of four members of the all-male vocal group are nearing retirement. Photograph: Kate Molleson Music Emahoy Tsegué-Maryam Guèbrou: the Ethiopian nun who was one of. In this increasingly fragmentary age, this pooling of embassies sends a strong message of political coordination, similar to the message of cultural cooperation incorporated in the Nordic Music Days. First published in The Herald on 23 August, 2017 . T here are some juicy anomalies at the heart of Tectonics, the festival of new music curated by Ilan Volkov and Alasdair Campbell and hosted by the BBC. . Photograph: Kate Molleson. Kate Molleson. A radical new book by journalist, critic and BBC Radio 3 broadcaster Kate Molleson, which fundamentally changes the way we think about classical music and the musicians who made it on a global scale. The minute your confidence goes, everything else starts to fall apart too. 05 EDT First published on Tue 9 Sep 2014 09. “Singing is all about the mind. The Hilliard Ensemble turn 40 this year, and also hang up their boots. £ 15. 2013 by Kate Molleson. Kate has over 15 years of experience in marketing and design. Yorkshire-born Hannah French is a musical butterfly: a broadcaster and academic, a public speaker and educator, and a baroque flautist. First published in The Herald on 21 March, 2018. 15am on 1 September, Georgia Mann invited listeners “to tell us how you like to party”. All I wanted was to be brilliant at playing the cello and for people to pay me for it. 13 EDT. I arrived in Montreal in early May, the morning after a general election. For ages 16+ Dates & times. A radical new book by journalist, critic and BBC Radio 3 broadcaster Kate Molleson, which fundamentally changes the way we think about classical music and the musicians who made it on a global scale. Kate Molleson Tuesday, April 19, 2022. Brad Mehldau, François-Xavier Roth. May 16, 2023 | News | 5 comments. Event details. View Kate Molleson. Stephen Layton conducts a new recording with the Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment, the Choir of Trinity College, Cambridge and star soloists including countertenor Iestyn Davies, tenor James Gilchrist and bass Matthew Brook. This entry was posted in CD Reviews on October 21, 2016 by Kate Molleson. Schedule. Tonight is the first Scottish Awards for New Music. Fifty years after his death, the Russian iconoclast remains indefinable – a stylistic chameleon who continues to confound his audiences. First published in The Big Issue, 20-26 April,. Presented by Kate Molleson Recorded at City Halls, Glasgow on 21 September, 2023. Kate Molleson is a journalist and broadcaster, and one of the UK’s leading commentators on contemporary classical music. 4. Kate Molleson is a journalist and broadcaster and one of the UK’s leading commentators on contemporary classical music. Kate Molleson, Sound within Sound: Opening Our Ears to the Twentieth Century. Last year the Scottish Chamber Orchestra announced that 32-year-old Martin Suckling is to be their new Associate Composer. The 46-year-old American made his concerto debut with the Philadelphia Orchestra at the age of 14 and has been a fixture in the international spotlight ever since. First published in the Guardian on 14 August, 2016. Tue 21 May 2019 11. <br /> <br /> The twentieth century was the century of modernity. Listen now. The twentieth century was the century of modernity. 36. was socially prominent as well. It is a difficult field for many: we have watched the transition of Stravinsky’s Rite of Spring from denunciation as chaos to maturing as. Faber, 2022, 314 pp. First published in The Herald on 18 February, 2015. All Articles. A radical new book by journalist, critic and BBC Radio 3 broadcaster Kate Molleson, which fundamentally changes the way we think about classical music and the musicians who made it on a global scale. Scottish traditional music should arguably be enlightened in this respect, given grass-roots socialism and everyman/woman equality were essential values of the urban folk revival of the 1960s. The Blind Astronomer. Kate Molleson presents Radio 3’s New Music Show and Music Matters. The international sweep of her book is especially compelling when she is travelling: when she is in “dusty, nervy, loud” Jerusalem to meet the 93-year-old bed-bound Ethiopian pianist and former. We would like to show you a description here but the site won’t allow us. Thu 30 Jun 2016 10. She has presented documentaries for. 30 minutes. This entry was posted in Features on October 26, 2016 by Kate Molleson. I never wanted to have kids because I didn’t want to spend my. Sound Within Sound is a brave, brilliant and rollicking reappraisal of classical music, focusing on ten. Think jazz, electronic music, improvisational music, folk,. She recounts fascinating life stories, gives overviews of their works, and undertakes interviews where. First published in The Herald on 2 October, 2013. Kate Molleson. 55pm, The Times. SOUND WITHIN SOUND by Kate Molleson - ISBN 10: 0571363237 - ISBN 13: 9780571363230 - Faber Faber - 2023 - SoftcoverKate Molleson. There are no concerns at all about your wonderfully clear presenting style. Show more As Mental Health Awareness Week draws to a close, Kate Molleson surveys the musical world's. The Bad Plus, Carter, Mahler. Her mother asked if she wanted to take harp lessons. A radical new book by journalist, critic and BBC Radio 3 broadcaster Kate Molleson, which fundamentally changes the way we think about classical music and the musicians who made it on a global scale. Review: East Neuk’s Schubertiad. Kate Molleson Tue 10 Sep 2013 14. Born in 1923, she. 119, BB 127View the profiles of people named Kate Molleson. | Tempo | Cambridge Core. First published in BBC Music Magazine, May 2018 edition. This is the impassioned and exhilarating story of the composers who dared to challenge the conventional world of classical music in the twentieth century. Students worshipped him. Born in 1923, she. On merfolk, selkies and Sally Beamish’s new ballet score for The Little Mermaid. Dove, one of Britain’s most compelling, accessible, prolific and socially engaged opera composers, is turning 60. “Setting the story of Pied Piper of Hamelin,” he winces. Home. Jesús López Cobos conducts. Faber will publish the as yet untitled work by Kate Molleson in Spring 2022. So too came the Leipzig Gewandhaus, the Bolshoi, the Israel Philharmonic, the Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment — and that was just in the first few months. Personally, I struggled with naming composers who fit into these categories, such has been my own experience of the lack of media and educational bandwidth afforded those of more diverse backgrounds, who have otherwise. I meet the dancer, choreographer and former artistic director of Scottish Ballet not at the dance company’s Southside HQ but across the river at the rehearsal studios of Scottish Opera, where he’s. John has been coming to the Edinburgh International Festival since 1947. Kate has over 15 years of experience in marketing and design. 3, Sz. Much of Rimbaud’s work around the globe has to do with connection and loneliness, with memory and the suggestive power of sound, with how electronic music can summon and honour the forgotten. Emahoy Tsegué Maryam Guèbrou, aged 23. First published in The Herald on 8 March, 2017. Kate Molleson visits Glyndebourne Festival Opera to hear about its new production of Ethel Smyth’s The Wreckers, and Tom Service meets conductor Michael Tilson Thomas. I was in Jerusalem to make a documentary about Emahoy. . “Suffering grief at that age, and something about classical music gets right deep and down, and I guess I fast-tracked the deep and down side of my soul through what happened. It’s a nuanced case, this, so bear with me. You can read this before Sound Within. 59 mins; 05 Sep 2022; Franz Schubert (1797-1828). Faber acquires new landmark alternative history of twentieth-century music by Kate Molleson. First published in the Guardian on 28 January, 2015. First published in the Guardian on 25 January, 2018. comKate Molleson on LinkedIn Jun 24, 2018, 1:31 AM + Show All Citations About Terms Your CA Privacy Rights Kate Molleson. Available now. Her book is a study of ten composers she admires but who she feels have been left out of official histories of the last century. At age 6, Sister Guèbrou was sent to a boarding school in. First published in The Herald on 5 February, 2014. [Hyperion CDA68031/2]. Kate Molleson, Sound within Sound: Opening Our Ears to the Twentieth Century. 2019 by Kate Molleson. Proms 2018: what to see But there are always compensations. Buda Musique. For many years he dressed in orange jumpers, then latterly all in white. Listen live. Kate Molleson is joined by a panel of guests and live musicians to begin Radio 3's International Women's Day celebrations. Sat 13 Sep 2014 05. First published in the Guardian on 23 April, 2015. First published in The Herald on 13 June, 2018; photo of Kate MccGwire's Sasse/Sluice at Snape Thea Musgrave — Scottish composer, conductor, pianist and teacher who turned 90 last month — thrusts a glass of wine into my hand. But at the age of 47, it’s the first time that he has felt ready to commit a solo recital disc. First published in the Guardian on 22 October, 2015. At age 6, Sister Guèbrou was sent to a boarding school in. Post navigationKate Molleson: 'Where we are at now is tokenism without thinking of the. Kate Molleson is a fine communicator with an excellent appetite for detail. ”First published in The Herald on 29 July, 2014 In the years after the First World War, when Germany became a democracy for the first time, the country went through a rather spectacular kind of social catharsis. The latest tweets from @KateMollesonKate Molleson is a journalist and broadcaster and one of the UK’s leading commentators on contemporary classical music. Listen now. comKate Molleson on LinkedIn Jun 24, 2018, 1:31 AM + Show All Citations About Terms Your CA Privacy Rights Kate Molleson is a music journalist and broadcaster who writes for The Guardian (UK), The Herald (Scotland) and publications including Opera and Gramophone. British Iron Age burials before the 1st century BC are usually found as individuals,. Soprano Isobel Buchanan is wagging a finger at me intently from across the kitchen table. ”. First published in the Guardian on 17 November, 2016. Kate Molleson is a Glasgow-based music critic. This entry was posted in Features on August 13, 2014 by Kate Molleson. True, it’s only half-an-hour and involves a cast of three, but it’s a Scottish premiere of a new work by one of Scotland’s leading composers, and it has the makings of a compelling, challenging drama. Kate Molleson Wednesday, March 6, 2019 When it comes to the music of this admired Scottish composer, it’s all about the drama below the surface, writes Kate Molleson. Show more. Kate Molleson and Kevin Le Gendre discuss the turning points in John’s early. Thu 6 Jul, 7. Her book is a study of ten composers she admires but who she feels have been left out of official histories of the last century. 76 ratings10 reviews. For ages 16+ Dates & times. 44 minutes. What’s the appeal of improvised music? It’s an experience – call it free jazz, experimental classical, avant-rock or any number of other monikers – that many listeners find. Kate Molleson travels to Cairo to discover a lost aural music tradition of microtonal finesse, potently emotional voices and spectacularly skilful instrumentalists. Thu 9 Apr 2015 13. . George Frideric Handel (1685-1759) Kate Molleson shares stories of Handel’s music at summer soirees across the British Isles. The first composer chosen, on 2 August 1943, was Mozart, followed over the following four weeks by Beethoven, Schubert, Bach and Haydn. 15 - 18. . This is a book of discovery that speaks of music as a life force, that urges us to live our lives through music. Abrams. Big Issue column 34. She was a classical music critic for the Guardian for seven years and deputy editor of Opera magazine. Review: The Eighth Door / Bluebeard’s Castle. First published in The Herald on 28 May, 2014. August 18, 2022 11:37pm. Steven Osborne (piano)The dress-up box is where I first found myself at the age of five. Listen now. 2014 by Kate Molleson. He declared that God gave birth to him on the star Sirius and that he was musically educated up there in the galaxy. “Gentle” isn’t an. “Setting the story of Pied Piper of Hamelin,” he winces. Kate Molleson is a music journalist who regularly presents BBC Radio 3 programmes including Breakfast, Music Matters and Afternoon Concert. CD review: Pamela Thorby’s Telemann. Show more. Kate Molleson. He started playing piano at the age of seven and progressed dramatically fast. Explore more on these topics. First published by Sounds Like Now, September 2017 edition. First published in The Herald on 13 December, 2017. Rapt, intensely subtle, exquisitely slow, the music of Eliane Radigue was the heart and soul of this year’s Tectonics. 31 EDT. Thu 14 Jan 2016 14. Winners will be announced during a ceremony at Drygate in Glasgow. Since May 2023, some weeks have been presented by Kate Molleson. A radical new book by journalist, critic and BBC Radio 3 broadcaster Kate Molleson, which fundamentally changes the way we think about classical music and the musicians who made it on a global scale. Ashley Page is back in Glasgow, though in a new part of town. “And it was naive and terrible and thankfully came to an end halfway down page 34. 00 EST Last modified on Tue 18 Apr 2017 11. Browse Kate Molleson’s best-selling audiobooks and newest titles. Age recommendation. 50 EDT David McVicar 's 14-year-old take on Puccini's Madama Butterfly has become a Scottish Opera stalwart, the kind of bullet-proof production that any company. Date: Thursday 9 March 2023. Catalog; For You; The Critic. Kate Molleson Fri 9 May 2014 13. The orchestra had already given the first and second performances of Suckling’s shimmering storm, rose, tiger; in February they premiere a major new commission called Six Speechless Songs to. Innovators widening our musical horizons. Suggested Age: 22 Years and Up. First published in The Big Issue, 23-30 March. Who can say for sure. The World's Largest Island. . First published in the Guardian on 14 August, 2015. Kate Molleson is a journalist and broadcaster and one of the UK’s leading commentators on contemporary classical music. Imogen Holst: String chamber music Court Lane Music (NMC) Imogen Holst is in the blood of NMC records: in 1984 – the year she died – she set up the foundation that would end up kickstarting the label five years later. Kate Molleson is a Glasgow-based music critic. Here is a quick description and cover image of book Sound Within Sound: Radical Composers of the Twentieth Century written by Kate Molleson which was published in 2022-7-7. - Volume 76 Issue 302A child comes of age against the violent background of Kenya’s struggle for independence. Reviewed in short: New books from Jonathan Freedland, Kate Molleson, Linda Villarosa and Benjamin Wood. A radical and compelling new history of 20th century composers, shining light on the sonic pioneers whose work transformed musical history. £18. 44. 15 EDT Last modified on Mon 3 Dec 2018 10. Kate Molleson: Rewriting the Musical Canon. She presents BBC Radio 3’s New Music Show and Music Matters. paperback ebook hardback. A decade of Sound. Listen now. Post navigationKate Molleson presents the world premiere of Silicon by Robert Laidlow. Kate Molleson meets Finnish composer Kaija Saariaho in Paris, the city she has made her home since 1982. Kate Molleson is a journalist and broadcaster. Facebook gives people the power to. I don’t read anything spiritual into these sounds: they’re very musical, and they’re remarkable natural occurrences, but beyond that I don’t attribute. Innovators widening our musical horizons. Kate Molleson. 1,398 followers. W hat will happen to Scotland’s classical music in the event of a Yes vote next week? The question is a. August 18, 2022 11:37pm Kate Molleson presents classical music on BBC Radio 3 Kate Molleson/Twitter Quotas should be introduced to broaden the range of. Head of Faber Social Alexa von Hirschberg acquired World All Languages rights from John Ash at PEW Literary in a heated four-way auction. 15 - 6. Kate Molleson revels in the spry and subtly surprising music of Germaine Tailleferre, with guests Barbara Kelly and Caroline Potter. One has missed the broadcast. ”. This week the BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra devote a special two-day retrospective to the music of Elliott Carter. . A station which exists to serve high culture, without apology or embarrassment, is drowning in a puddle of self-willed mediocrity. 2018 by Kate Molleson. Violinist Rachel Podger, if you can pin her down, is a bright spark. appeared in the March 2017 issue of Gramophone and we republish it as a tribute to the composer, who has died at the age of. . ”. ”In the age of #MeToo,” Carsen concluded, “not everything has to be bent to fit. Her articles. Maceda thought a lot about time. Back in the early 1990s, Richard Goode became the first American pianist (the first pianist born in the United States, that is) to record the complete set of Beethoven piano sonatas. This is the impassioned and exhilarating story of the composers who dared to challenge the conventional world of. In Cassandra. This entry was posted in Features on July 8, 2014 by Kate Molleson. Nicholas Rankin. Kate Molleson chooses her favourite recording of Bartók's The Miraculous Mandarin. Sound Within Sound: Opening Our Ears to the Twentieth Century English | 2022 | ASIN: B0B8JX5HR5 | MP3@64 kbps | 10h 24m | 286 MB. Trapped in History: Kenya, Mau Mau and Me. 19 EDT Last modified on Tue 9 Mar 2021 02. “It’s been a long time coming,†he says. “To cure me of a case of the jitters, would you sing a song?” Karine Polwart asked her Celtic Connections audience, who cheerfully obliged with a round of Matt McGinn’s daft number Oor Wee Wean can Sook a Bar of Chocolate (“promoting. Auden’s huge 1947 poem of the same name. 50 avg rating, 10 ratin. Back then he was a shy teenager from a little village called Beeswing in rural Kirkcudbrightshire; his father. Profiling a dozen pioneering twentieth. “In some ways I feel like I haven’t been away, but on the other hand I had an incredibly enriching life while I was gone. On the day we’re due to speak she has six hours of train travel on various branch lines: she lives in Brecon, a village in the Welsh hills whose charms don’t include speedy access. Kate Molleson and Kevin Le Gendre explore the lives and music of revolutionary jazz power couple John and Alice Coltrane. Robin Ticciati conducts. First published in the Guardian on 1 December, 2016. The loose framework for the book was provided by a conversation with composer George E. Escaping the news on the Today programme recently, like many others, I switched over to Radio 3. Everyday low prices and free delivery on eligible orders. There are big laughs at the end of the phone. - Volume 76 Issue 302 Kate Molleson. In a parallel universe, Diana Burrell is an architect. “Emahoy brought a beautiful new sound into the world that is rooted both in the Western classical music heritage and in the Ethiopian musical. Kate Molleson tells. First published in the Guardian on 29 May, 2015 “At some point,” says Martin Green, accordionist and one third of the folk trio Lau, “we should maybe record some actual traditional music. Show more. This is the Scottish composer’s third work for piano and orchestra, and was first performed in 2011 by the Minnesota Orchestra with conductor Osmo Vänskä and pianist Jean-Yves Thibaudet. She was a classical music critic for the Guardian for seven years and deputy editor of Opera magazine. An alternative history of 20th-century composers—nearly all of them women or composers of color—by a leading international music critic Think of a composer right now. Kate Molleson, A radical new book by journalist, critic and BBC Radio 3 broadcaster Kate Molleson, which fundamentally changes the way we think about classical music and the musicians who made it on a global scale. Donald, from Kirkintilloch, parlayed a degree in psychology and arts from St Andrews into a job as a BBC studio manager back in 1977, became a Radio 3 presenter. First published in The Herald on 25 October, 2014 “A little more gentle, a little less hard-edged. Of all the composers who sit behind that barrier in time of The Advent of Modernism around 1914, Mendelssohn is perhaps the one who most needs us to work at hearing him with pre-industrial ears. Composer of the week, presented by Donald Macleod and Kate Molleson is on Radio 3 12-1pm Monday to Friday and on BBC Sounds. Retaining the same timeslot on Saturday evenings, New Music Show will feature a regular new presenting line-up of Tom Service and Kate Molleson. Edition: Main. A radical new book by journalist, critic and BBC Radio 3 broadcaster Kate Molleson, which fundamentally changes the way we think about classical music and the musicians who made it on a global scale. Engaged in all styles of music, she was. Kate Molleson tells. Show more. Tom. £10. We would like to show you a description here but the site won’t allow us. His second effort, L’amico Fritz, is as pastel and sweet as Cav is blood.