
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


One way composers help make ends meet is to accept commissions for occasional pieces — works written for some special occasion, a private or public celebration or anniversary of some event, large or small. Sometimes these works go on to have a life of their own apart from the special occasion that prompted their creation, so that subsequent audiences might not even be aware of the original event at all.
In 1959, English composer Benjamin Britten accepted a commission from Swiss conductor Paul Sacher for a cantata to celebrate the 500th anniversary of the University of Basel in Switzerland. The texts selected for the cantata were all in Latin, the old academic language of universities 500 years ago, and included excerpts from the founding charter of the institution as well as medieval odes in praise of the university written by its students and faculty.
Britten’s score, which premiered at the University of Basel on today’s date in 1960, was quite literally, an academic exercise — and it’s amusing to note that apparently he wrote out the text for the work in the pages of one of his old school exercise books.
Benjamin Britten (1913-1976): Cantata Academica (Carmen Basiliense); Jennifere Vyvyan, soprano; Helen Watts, mezzo-soprano; Peter Pears, tenor; Owen Brannigan, bass; London Symphony Chorus and Orchestra; George Malcolm, conductor; Decca 4251532
By American Public Media4.7
176176 ratings
One way composers help make ends meet is to accept commissions for occasional pieces — works written for some special occasion, a private or public celebration or anniversary of some event, large or small. Sometimes these works go on to have a life of their own apart from the special occasion that prompted their creation, so that subsequent audiences might not even be aware of the original event at all.
In 1959, English composer Benjamin Britten accepted a commission from Swiss conductor Paul Sacher for a cantata to celebrate the 500th anniversary of the University of Basel in Switzerland. The texts selected for the cantata were all in Latin, the old academic language of universities 500 years ago, and included excerpts from the founding charter of the institution as well as medieval odes in praise of the university written by its students and faculty.
Britten’s score, which premiered at the University of Basel on today’s date in 1960, was quite literally, an academic exercise — and it’s amusing to note that apparently he wrote out the text for the work in the pages of one of his old school exercise books.
Benjamin Britten (1913-1976): Cantata Academica (Carmen Basiliense); Jennifere Vyvyan, soprano; Helen Watts, mezzo-soprano; Peter Pears, tenor; Owen Brannigan, bass; London Symphony Chorus and Orchestra; George Malcolm, conductor; Decca 4251532

90,931 Listeners

38,507 Listeners

6,790 Listeners

8,760 Listeners

3,996 Listeners

9,197 Listeners

3,628 Listeners

924 Listeners

1,389 Listeners

520 Listeners

182 Listeners

1,226 Listeners

13,675 Listeners

3,086 Listeners

247 Listeners

28,298 Listeners

13,236 Listeners

5,486 Listeners

2,170 Listeners

14,106 Listeners

1,144 Listeners

6,335 Listeners

2,514 Listeners

229 Listeners

634 Listeners