1antimuzak
Monday 17th November 2025 (starting this afternoon)
Time: 16:00 to 17:00 (1 hour long)
Prologue. Episode 1.
Donald Macleod explores Richard Wagner's life through the lens of his dreams, musical, romantic and revolutionary, beginning with his early years as a headstrong youth with big ideas and a growing obsession with myth and music. Donald also continues today's centenary tribute to Charles Mackerras by looking at his legacy as a conductor and champion of Wagner's music. Wagner: Die Walküre, Act III, Scene 1: I. Hojotoho! Heiaha! - The Ride of the Valkyries. Royal Philharmonic Orchestra, Charles Mackerras (conductor). Tannhäuser, Overture and Venusberg Music. Melbourne Symphony Orchestra, Charles Mackerras (conductor). Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg, Prelude; Tristan und Isolde, Prelude to Act 1; Götterdämmerung, Prologue: Siegfried's Rheinfahrt. Sydney Symphony Orchestra, Charles Mackerras (conductor).
(Episode 1)
Time: 16:00 to 17:00 (1 hour long)
Prologue. Episode 1.
Donald Macleod explores Richard Wagner's life through the lens of his dreams, musical, romantic and revolutionary, beginning with his early years as a headstrong youth with big ideas and a growing obsession with myth and music. Donald also continues today's centenary tribute to Charles Mackerras by looking at his legacy as a conductor and champion of Wagner's music. Wagner: Die Walküre, Act III, Scene 1: I. Hojotoho! Heiaha! - The Ride of the Valkyries. Royal Philharmonic Orchestra, Charles Mackerras (conductor). Tannhäuser, Overture and Venusberg Music. Melbourne Symphony Orchestra, Charles Mackerras (conductor). Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg, Prelude; Tristan und Isolde, Prelude to Act 1; Götterdämmerung, Prologue: Siegfried's Rheinfahrt. Sydney Symphony Orchestra, Charles Mackerras (conductor).
(Episode 1)
2antimuzak
Monday 1st December 2025 (starting this afternoon)
Time: 16:00 to 17:00 (1 hour long)
London Town. Episode 1.
English composer John Rutter is one of the biggest names in the 20th- and 21st-century choral world, whose music represents the sound of Christmas for many listeners. Also a conductor, editor, arranger and record producer, he describes himself as a musical magpie. This week, Donald Macleod visits John at his home in the Cambridgeshire countryside, amid the celebrations of his 80th birthday, to discuss the twists and turns of his extraordinary career. Today, John speaks to Donald about his relationship with London, where he grew up sharing an address with Sherlock Holmes, revealing the musical experiences that set him on his path, including singing on the premiere recording of Britten's War Requiem, the first carol he wrote as a teenager and the teacher who gave him the best piece of advice he ever received. John Rutter: Four Orchestral Miniatures - Dance to Your Daddy. Royal Philharmonic Orchestra, John Rutter (conductor). London Town - A Choral Celebration: Bells of London. The Cambridge Singers, Taplow Young Voices, Royal Philharmonic Orchestra, John Rutter (conductor). Shepherd's Pipe Carol. Choir of Merton College, Oxford, Oxford Philharmonic Orchestra, Benjamin Nicholas (director). The Lord Bless You and Keep You. Choir of Merton College, Oxford, Charles Warren (organ), Benjamin Nicholas (director). Visions. Kerson Leong (violin), The Temple Boys' Church Choir, Aurora Orchestra, Roger Sayer (director). Cityscapes: Flower of Cities All. Royal Philharmonic Orchestra, John Rutter (conductor).
(Episode 1)
Time: 16:00 to 17:00 (1 hour long)
London Town. Episode 1.
English composer John Rutter is one of the biggest names in the 20th- and 21st-century choral world, whose music represents the sound of Christmas for many listeners. Also a conductor, editor, arranger and record producer, he describes himself as a musical magpie. This week, Donald Macleod visits John at his home in the Cambridgeshire countryside, amid the celebrations of his 80th birthday, to discuss the twists and turns of his extraordinary career. Today, John speaks to Donald about his relationship with London, where he grew up sharing an address with Sherlock Holmes, revealing the musical experiences that set him on his path, including singing on the premiere recording of Britten's War Requiem, the first carol he wrote as a teenager and the teacher who gave him the best piece of advice he ever received. John Rutter: Four Orchestral Miniatures - Dance to Your Daddy. Royal Philharmonic Orchestra, John Rutter (conductor). London Town - A Choral Celebration: Bells of London. The Cambridge Singers, Taplow Young Voices, Royal Philharmonic Orchestra, John Rutter (conductor). Shepherd's Pipe Carol. Choir of Merton College, Oxford, Oxford Philharmonic Orchestra, Benjamin Nicholas (director). The Lord Bless You and Keep You. Choir of Merton College, Oxford, Charles Warren (organ), Benjamin Nicholas (director). Visions. Kerson Leong (violin), The Temple Boys' Church Choir, Aurora Orchestra, Roger Sayer (director). Cityscapes: Flower of Cities All. Royal Philharmonic Orchestra, John Rutter (conductor).
(Episode 1)
3antimuzak
Monday 8th December 2025 (starting this afternoon)
Time: 16:00 to 17:00 (1 hour long)
Blowe, Northerne Wynd. Episode 1.
Donald Macleod explores Christmas music and stories from the Middle Ages, with help from early music expert William Lyons. Celebrations encompassed a great variety of colourful traditions and musical occasions during medieval times, with peasants and nobles alike looking forward to many weeks of festivities, from Advent right through to Candlemas on February 2. Some of those customs we still recognise and celebrate today, while are now lost or significantly altered. Donald and William begin with carols from Finland and winter songs in Old English, and examine the original story of St Nicholas, before he became the Santa Claus figure we know today. Anon: Gaudete. Steeleye Span. Anon: Personent hodie; Gaudete; Omnis mundus jucundetur. Retrover Ensemble, Markus Tapio (director). Perotin: Alleluia Nativitas. The Hilliard Ensemble, Paul Hillier (director). Anon: Miri it is while sumer ilast; Blowe, Northerne Wynd (arr. William Lyons). Voice Trio, The Dufay Collective. Anon: Seint Nicholas was borne in the citee of Patras; Cantu mirro, summa laude; Sainte nicholaes; Salve cleri speculum - Salve iubar presulum. Anonymous 4. Dufay: Ce jour de l'an. Alta Bellezza.
(Episode 1)
Time: 16:00 to 17:00 (1 hour long)
Blowe, Northerne Wynd. Episode 1.
Donald Macleod explores Christmas music and stories from the Middle Ages, with help from early music expert William Lyons. Celebrations encompassed a great variety of colourful traditions and musical occasions during medieval times, with peasants and nobles alike looking forward to many weeks of festivities, from Advent right through to Candlemas on February 2. Some of those customs we still recognise and celebrate today, while are now lost or significantly altered. Donald and William begin with carols from Finland and winter songs in Old English, and examine the original story of St Nicholas, before he became the Santa Claus figure we know today. Anon: Gaudete. Steeleye Span. Anon: Personent hodie; Gaudete; Omnis mundus jucundetur. Retrover Ensemble, Markus Tapio (director). Perotin: Alleluia Nativitas. The Hilliard Ensemble, Paul Hillier (director). Anon: Miri it is while sumer ilast; Blowe, Northerne Wynd (arr. William Lyons). Voice Trio, The Dufay Collective. Anon: Seint Nicholas was borne in the citee of Patras; Cantu mirro, summa laude; Sainte nicholaes; Salve cleri speculum - Salve iubar presulum. Anonymous 4. Dufay: Ce jour de l'an. Alta Bellezza.
(Episode 1)
4antimuzak
Monday 15th December 2025 (starting this afternoon)
Time: 16:00 to 17:00 (1 hour long)
The Soviet Storyteller. Sergei Prokofiev Episode 1.
Kate Molleson explores the life and music of the Russian composer, beginning with his childhood in rural Ukraine, his first operatic experiments and the teachers who nurtured his creative spark. From homegrown plays to bold juvenile operas, Prokofiev's early years reveal a mind enchanted by stories, a thread that unfolded throughout his life. Prokofiev: Troika - from Lieutenant Kijé Suite, Op 60. National Youth Orchestra of Wales, Owain Arwel Hughes (conductor). Cinderella Suite, Op 87. Olli Mustonen (piano). The Winter Bonfire, Op 122: IV-VIII. New London Orchestra, Ronald Corp (conductor). Music for Children, Op. 65: Nos 1-9. Denis Kozhukhin (piano). Peter and the Wolf, Op 67: The Story Begins to The Duck Is Caught. Philadelphia Orchestra, David Bowie (narrator), Eugene Ormandy (conductor).
(Episode 1)
Time: 16:00 to 17:00 (1 hour long)
The Soviet Storyteller. Sergei Prokofiev Episode 1.
Kate Molleson explores the life and music of the Russian composer, beginning with his childhood in rural Ukraine, his first operatic experiments and the teachers who nurtured his creative spark. From homegrown plays to bold juvenile operas, Prokofiev's early years reveal a mind enchanted by stories, a thread that unfolded throughout his life. Prokofiev: Troika - from Lieutenant Kijé Suite, Op 60. National Youth Orchestra of Wales, Owain Arwel Hughes (conductor). Cinderella Suite, Op 87. Olli Mustonen (piano). The Winter Bonfire, Op 122: IV-VIII. New London Orchestra, Ronald Corp (conductor). Music for Children, Op. 65: Nos 1-9. Denis Kozhukhin (piano). Peter and the Wolf, Op 67: The Story Begins to The Duck Is Caught. Philadelphia Orchestra, David Bowie (narrator), Eugene Ormandy (conductor).
(Episode 1)
5antimuzak
Monday 5th January 2026 (starting this afternoon)
Time: 16:00 to 17:00 (1 hour long)
In the Beginning. Episode 1.
Donald Macleod explores Aaron Copland's life and music, beginning with the Brooklyn department store where the young Aaron balanced family duties with a growing passion for music. From early piano lessons with his sister to secret ambitions and formative encounters with Rubin Goldmark, Donald follow Copland's journey from toy counters to concert platforms. Copland: 4 Dance Episodes from Rodeo: iv. Hoe Down. New York Philharmonic, Leonard Bernstein (conductor). Two Preludes for violin and piano. Peter Zazofsky (violin), Paul Posnak (piano). Four Early Songs - i. Night; ii. A Summer Vacation; iii. My Heart Is in the East; iv. Alone. Barbara Bonney (soprano), Malcolm Martineau (piano). Four Motets - iii. Have Mercy On Us, O My Lord. Polyphony, Stephen Layton (conductor). Three Moods - i. Embittered; ii. Wistful; iii. Jazzy. Leo Smit (piano). Symphony for Organ and Orchestra - ii. Scherzo; iii. Finale: Lento. Simon Preston (organ), Leonard Slatkin (conductor), Saint Louis Symphony Orchestra.
(Episode 1)
Time: 16:00 to 17:00 (1 hour long)
In the Beginning. Episode 1.
Donald Macleod explores Aaron Copland's life and music, beginning with the Brooklyn department store where the young Aaron balanced family duties with a growing passion for music. From early piano lessons with his sister to secret ambitions and formative encounters with Rubin Goldmark, Donald follow Copland's journey from toy counters to concert platforms. Copland: 4 Dance Episodes from Rodeo: iv. Hoe Down. New York Philharmonic, Leonard Bernstein (conductor). Two Preludes for violin and piano. Peter Zazofsky (violin), Paul Posnak (piano). Four Early Songs - i. Night; ii. A Summer Vacation; iii. My Heart Is in the East; iv. Alone. Barbara Bonney (soprano), Malcolm Martineau (piano). Four Motets - iii. Have Mercy On Us, O My Lord. Polyphony, Stephen Layton (conductor). Three Moods - i. Embittered; ii. Wistful; iii. Jazzy. Leo Smit (piano). Symphony for Organ and Orchestra - ii. Scherzo; iii. Finale: Lento. Simon Preston (organ), Leonard Slatkin (conductor), Saint Louis Symphony Orchestra.
(Episode 1)
6antimuzak
Monday 12th January 2026 (starting this afternoon)
Time: 16:00 to 17:00 (1 hour long)
Maestro. Episode 5.
Donald Macleod closes Copland's story with a portrait of his later years - a period of transition from composing to conducting and reflecting on a lifetime in music. As new ideas became harder to come by, Copland embraced the podium, championing his own works and those of his successors. His later career reveals a composer turning outward and a biographer looking inwards, balancing public recognition with a quiet, more contemplative life. Two Pieces for String Quartet: No. 2. Allegro Moderato. RTÉ Vanbrugh Quartet. Piano Quartet: iii. Non troppo lento. The Julliard Quartet. Aaron Copland (piano). Music for a Great City: i. Skyline. London Symphony Orchestra, conductor Aaron Copland. Inscape. New York Philharmonic, conductor Leonard Bernstein. Symphony No. 3: iv. Molto deliberato. Philharmonia Orchestra, conductor Aaron Copland.
(Episode 5)
Time: 16:00 to 17:00 (1 hour long)
Maestro. Episode 5.
Donald Macleod closes Copland's story with a portrait of his later years - a period of transition from composing to conducting and reflecting on a lifetime in music. As new ideas became harder to come by, Copland embraced the podium, championing his own works and those of his successors. His later career reveals a composer turning outward and a biographer looking inwards, balancing public recognition with a quiet, more contemplative life. Two Pieces for String Quartet: No. 2. Allegro Moderato. RTÉ Vanbrugh Quartet. Piano Quartet: iii. Non troppo lento. The Julliard Quartet. Aaron Copland (piano). Music for a Great City: i. Skyline. London Symphony Orchestra, conductor Aaron Copland. Inscape. New York Philharmonic, conductor Leonard Bernstein. Symphony No. 3: iv. Molto deliberato. Philharmonia Orchestra, conductor Aaron Copland.
(Episode 5)
7antimuzak
Monday 19th January 2026 (starting this afternoon)
Time: 16:00 to 17:00 (1 hour long)
Family Man. Episode 1.
Kate Molleson explores aspects of life that were central to Antonin Dvorák's convictions and music, beginning with his devotion to his nearest and dearest. Family was one of the guiding forces in everything he did and created, from his roots in a dynasty of music-loving butchers and innkeepers, to building his own brood of six children. He wasn't the sort of composer to lock himself away and loved nothing more than the happy chaos of his domestic life, and Kate reveals how his family inspired some of his purest music, and how they factored into some of his biggest career dilemmas. Dvorák: Gypsy Songs Op 55 No 4 - Songs My Mother Taught Me arr. for cellos by Kian Soltani. Kian Soltani (cello), Cellists of Staatskapelle Berlin. Berceuse (Two Piano Pieces, No 1). Ivo Kahanek (piano). Symphony No 1 - Bells of Zlonice (3rd movement). Royal Scottish National Orchestra, Neeme Jarvi (conductor). Cypresses Nos 1 and 2. Hagen Quartett. Symphony No 9 - From the New World (2nd movement). Chineke! Orchestra, Kevin John Edusei (conductor). Sonatine (1st and 2nd movements). Jack Liebeck (violin), Katya Apekisheva (piano). Humoresque in G flat. Stephen Hough (piano).
(Episode 1)
Time: 16:00 to 17:00 (1 hour long)
Family Man. Episode 1.
Kate Molleson explores aspects of life that were central to Antonin Dvorák's convictions and music, beginning with his devotion to his nearest and dearest. Family was one of the guiding forces in everything he did and created, from his roots in a dynasty of music-loving butchers and innkeepers, to building his own brood of six children. He wasn't the sort of composer to lock himself away and loved nothing more than the happy chaos of his domestic life, and Kate reveals how his family inspired some of his purest music, and how they factored into some of his biggest career dilemmas. Dvorák: Gypsy Songs Op 55 No 4 - Songs My Mother Taught Me arr. for cellos by Kian Soltani. Kian Soltani (cello), Cellists of Staatskapelle Berlin. Berceuse (Two Piano Pieces, No 1). Ivo Kahanek (piano). Symphony No 1 - Bells of Zlonice (3rd movement). Royal Scottish National Orchestra, Neeme Jarvi (conductor). Cypresses Nos 1 and 2. Hagen Quartett. Symphony No 9 - From the New World (2nd movement). Chineke! Orchestra, Kevin John Edusei (conductor). Sonatine (1st and 2nd movements). Jack Liebeck (violin), Katya Apekisheva (piano). Humoresque in G flat. Stephen Hough (piano).
(Episode 1)
8antimuzak
Monday 9th February 2026 (starting this afternoon)
Time: 16:00 to 17:00 (1 hour long)
Discovery of a Talent. Episode 1.
Donald Macleod explores the life of and music of the 17th-century German composer, beginning with his early years when his musical talents were discovered by an aristocrat. Donald follows Henrich Schütz on his journey to being offered a prominent position at the court in Dresden, as well as a dream coming true when he went to study with Gabrieli in Venice. Schütz: Wohl denen, die ohne Wandel leben, SWV 482. La Capella Ducale, Musica Fiata, Roland Wilson (director). Tugend ist der beste Freund, SWV 442 Dorothee Mields (soprano), Isabel Schicketanz (soprano), Margaret Baumhartl (violin), Wolfgang von Kessinger (violin), Andreas Arend (theorbo), Matthias Müller (viola da gamba), Beate Rölleke (chamber organ), Hans-Christoph Rademann (director). O primavera, SWV 1; O dolcezze amarissime, SWV 2; Ride la primavera, SWV 7. Miriam Allan (soprano), Hannah Morrison (soprano), Mathilde Ortscheidt (mezzo), Sean Clayton (tenor), Jonathan Sells (bass-baritone), Les Arts Florissants, Paul Agnew (director). Wohl dem der ein tugendsam Weib hat, SWV 20. Cantus Cölln, Knabenchor Hannover, Musica Fiata, Roland Wilson (director). Zion spricht, der Herr hat mich verlassen, SWV 46; Alleluja, lobet den Herrn, SWV 38. Aurore Bucher (soprano), Andrea Brown (soprano), Rolf Ehlers (countertenor), Beat Duddeck (countertenor), Michael Feyfar (tenor), Nils Giebelhausen (tenor), Ekkehard Abele (baritone), Benoit Arnould (baritone), La Chapelle Rhenane, Benoit Haller (director). En novus Elysiis, SWV 49 (Syncharma Musicum). Maria Skiba (soprano), Heidi Maria Taubert (soprano), Dorothea Wagner (soprano), David Erler (alto), Tobias Hunger (tenor), Stephan Gähler (tenor), Ingolf Seidel (baritone), Clemens Heidrich (bass), Matthias Lutze (bass), Cappella Sagittariana Dresden, Norbert Schuster (director).
(Episode 1)
Time: 16:00 to 17:00 (1 hour long)
Discovery of a Talent. Episode 1.
Donald Macleod explores the life of and music of the 17th-century German composer, beginning with his early years when his musical talents were discovered by an aristocrat. Donald follows Henrich Schütz on his journey to being offered a prominent position at the court in Dresden, as well as a dream coming true when he went to study with Gabrieli in Venice. Schütz: Wohl denen, die ohne Wandel leben, SWV 482. La Capella Ducale, Musica Fiata, Roland Wilson (director). Tugend ist der beste Freund, SWV 442 Dorothee Mields (soprano), Isabel Schicketanz (soprano), Margaret Baumhartl (violin), Wolfgang von Kessinger (violin), Andreas Arend (theorbo), Matthias Müller (viola da gamba), Beate Rölleke (chamber organ), Hans-Christoph Rademann (director). O primavera, SWV 1; O dolcezze amarissime, SWV 2; Ride la primavera, SWV 7. Miriam Allan (soprano), Hannah Morrison (soprano), Mathilde Ortscheidt (mezzo), Sean Clayton (tenor), Jonathan Sells (bass-baritone), Les Arts Florissants, Paul Agnew (director). Wohl dem der ein tugendsam Weib hat, SWV 20. Cantus Cölln, Knabenchor Hannover, Musica Fiata, Roland Wilson (director). Zion spricht, der Herr hat mich verlassen, SWV 46; Alleluja, lobet den Herrn, SWV 38. Aurore Bucher (soprano), Andrea Brown (soprano), Rolf Ehlers (countertenor), Beat Duddeck (countertenor), Michael Feyfar (tenor), Nils Giebelhausen (tenor), Ekkehard Abele (baritone), Benoit Arnould (baritone), La Chapelle Rhenane, Benoit Haller (director). En novus Elysiis, SWV 49 (Syncharma Musicum). Maria Skiba (soprano), Heidi Maria Taubert (soprano), Dorothea Wagner (soprano), David Erler (alto), Tobias Hunger (tenor), Stephan Gähler (tenor), Ingolf Seidel (baritone), Clemens Heidrich (bass), Matthias Lutze (bass), Cappella Sagittariana Dresden, Norbert Schuster (director).
(Episode 1)
9antimuzak
Monday 16th February 2026 (starting this afternoon)
Time: 16:00 to 17:00 (1 hour long)
Ivanovka. Episode 1.
Sergei Rachmaninov was born 150 years ago this week, one of the finest pianists of his generation who toured the world in the 1920s and '30s as a musical megastar. Composing had been his real passion since childhood, and towards the end of his time in Russia before the Revolution, it was farming. Though St Petersburg and then Moscow was his base for much of his early life, it was Ivanovka - a country estate deep in the Russian countryside - that formed him. The house and the land surrounding it were a major source of his creative inspiration until his last visit in 1917. Donald Macleod explores how important Ivanovka was to Rachmaninov, and how he carried the precious memory of it with him when he left it behind for a life of exile. n today's programme, Donald tells the story of Rachmaninov's first visit to Ivanovka, the country estate of his cousins, as a teenager. He initially found the landscape around it boring and oppressive, but soon came to love this sleepy place, wrote his first piano concerto there, and when he got married was gifted a house on the estate. Rachmaninov: Lilacs, Op 21 No 5: Siren. Sergei Rachmaninov (piano). Piano Concerto No 1 (mvt 1). Leif Ove Andsnes (piano), Berliner Philharmoniker, Antonio Pappano (conductor). Dances from Aleko. Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra, Vasily Petrenko (conductor). Cello Sonata in G minor (mvt 1). Bruno Philippe (cello), Jerome Ducros (piano). Vesna. Chorus of the Mariinsky Theatre, BBC Philharmonic, Gianandrea Noseda (conductor).
(Episode 1)
Time: 16:00 to 17:00 (1 hour long)
Ivanovka. Episode 1.
Sergei Rachmaninov was born 150 years ago this week, one of the finest pianists of his generation who toured the world in the 1920s and '30s as a musical megastar. Composing had been his real passion since childhood, and towards the end of his time in Russia before the Revolution, it was farming. Though St Petersburg and then Moscow was his base for much of his early life, it was Ivanovka - a country estate deep in the Russian countryside - that formed him. The house and the land surrounding it were a major source of his creative inspiration until his last visit in 1917. Donald Macleod explores how important Ivanovka was to Rachmaninov, and how he carried the precious memory of it with him when he left it behind for a life of exile. n today's programme, Donald tells the story of Rachmaninov's first visit to Ivanovka, the country estate of his cousins, as a teenager. He initially found the landscape around it boring and oppressive, but soon came to love this sleepy place, wrote his first piano concerto there, and when he got married was gifted a house on the estate. Rachmaninov: Lilacs, Op 21 No 5: Siren. Sergei Rachmaninov (piano). Piano Concerto No 1 (mvt 1). Leif Ove Andsnes (piano), Berliner Philharmoniker, Antonio Pappano (conductor). Dances from Aleko. Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra, Vasily Petrenko (conductor). Cello Sonata in G minor (mvt 1). Bruno Philippe (cello), Jerome Ducros (piano). Vesna. Chorus of the Mariinsky Theatre, BBC Philharmonic, Gianandrea Noseda (conductor).
(Episode 1)
10antimuzak
Monday 23rd February 2026 (starting this afternoon)
Time: 16:00 to 17:00 (1 hour long)
Becoming Mrs Beach. Episode 1.
Donald Macleod explores the life and music of Amy Beach, one of the most original, distinctive and gifted American musicians of the early 20th century. Donald begins by looking at how Beach journeyed from a child piano prodigy to becoming a respected composer, despite the sexism of her time. He reveals how Beach's marriage acted both as an advantage and a restriction in her attempts to become recognised as a serious musician. Beach: Young Birches. Shani Diluka (piano). Valse - Caprice, Op 4. Joanne Polk (piano). 3 Songs, Op 2 No 3 - Empress of Night. Katherine Kelton (mezzo), Catherine Bringerud (piano). Eilende Wolken, segler der Lufte, Op 18. Anglea Brower (mezzo), Munchner Symphoniker, Joseph Bastian (conductor). Violin Sonata, Op 34 - I. Allegro Moderato. Tasmin Little (violin), John Lenehan (piano), Quartet for Strings in One Movement. The Lark Quartet.
(Episode 1)
Time: 16:00 to 17:00 (1 hour long)
Becoming Mrs Beach. Episode 1.
Donald Macleod explores the life and music of Amy Beach, one of the most original, distinctive and gifted American musicians of the early 20th century. Donald begins by looking at how Beach journeyed from a child piano prodigy to becoming a respected composer, despite the sexism of her time. He reveals how Beach's marriage acted both as an advantage and a restriction in her attempts to become recognised as a serious musician. Beach: Young Birches. Shani Diluka (piano). Valse - Caprice, Op 4. Joanne Polk (piano). 3 Songs, Op 2 No 3 - Empress of Night. Katherine Kelton (mezzo), Catherine Bringerud (piano). Eilende Wolken, segler der Lufte, Op 18. Anglea Brower (mezzo), Munchner Symphoniker, Joseph Bastian (conductor). Violin Sonata, Op 34 - I. Allegro Moderato. Tasmin Little (violin), John Lenehan (piano), Quartet for Strings in One Movement. The Lark Quartet.
(Episode 1)
11antimuzak
Monday 2nd March 2026 (starting this afternoon)
Time: 16:00 to 17:00 (1 hour long)
National Defiance in Music. Episode 1.
Kate Molleson explores the life and music of Jean Sibelius, beginning by examining the influences that had an impact on his early symphonies, including the romantic music of Tchaikovsky, and themes of nationalism. Although both his First and Second symphonies demonstrate clear links to the political situation of the times in Finland, No 2 was also very much inspired by a trip to Italy and its scenery. Sibelius: Symphony No 2 in D, Op 43 (excerpt). BBC Philharmonic, John Storgårds (conductor). Song of My Heart, Op 18 No 6. YL Male Voice Choir, Matti Hykki (director). Symphony No 1 in E minor, Op 39 (excerpt). Lahti Symphony Orchestra, Okko Kamu (conductor). The Diamond on the March Snow, Op 36 No 6 Jorma Hynninen (baritone), Gothenburg Symphony Orchestra Jorma Panula (conductor). Sunrise, Op 37 No 1. Mari Anne Häggander (soprano), Gothenburg Symphony Orchestra, Jorma Panula (conductor). Symphony No 2 in D, Op 43 (excerpt). BBC Philharmonic, John Storgårds (conductor).
(Episode 1)
Time: 16:00 to 17:00 (1 hour long)
National Defiance in Music. Episode 1.
Kate Molleson explores the life and music of Jean Sibelius, beginning by examining the influences that had an impact on his early symphonies, including the romantic music of Tchaikovsky, and themes of nationalism. Although both his First and Second symphonies demonstrate clear links to the political situation of the times in Finland, No 2 was also very much inspired by a trip to Italy and its scenery. Sibelius: Symphony No 2 in D, Op 43 (excerpt). BBC Philharmonic, John Storgårds (conductor). Song of My Heart, Op 18 No 6. YL Male Voice Choir, Matti Hykki (director). Symphony No 1 in E minor, Op 39 (excerpt). Lahti Symphony Orchestra, Okko Kamu (conductor). The Diamond on the March Snow, Op 36 No 6 Jorma Hynninen (baritone), Gothenburg Symphony Orchestra Jorma Panula (conductor). Sunrise, Op 37 No 1. Mari Anne Häggander (soprano), Gothenburg Symphony Orchestra, Jorma Panula (conductor). Symphony No 2 in D, Op 43 (excerpt). BBC Philharmonic, John Storgårds (conductor).
(Episode 1)
12antimuzak
Monday 16th March 2026 (starting this afternoon)
Time: 16:00 to 17:00 (1 hour long)
Onwards and Upwards. Episode 1.
Wth almost 70 operas to his name, Donizetti was one of Italy's most prolific tunesmiths, whose arias still cut straight to the heart today. All this week, Donald Macleod follows his rise, from a child brought up in a dark, cramped cellar to becoming a pioneering master of the style known as bel canto. He begins by revealing how Donizetti was plucked from the cramped underground cellar of his birthplace to become a choirboy, finding a musical father figure who transformed his prospects. Despite a plague of bad luck in his early stage productions, he was hailed as a new hope for Italian opera. Donizetti: L'Elisir d'amore - Cantiam, facciam brindisi. English Chamber Orchestra, Richard Bonynge (conductor). Sinfonia for Winds in G minor Camerata Budapest, László Kovács (conductor). Gloria (from Messa di Gloria). Siri Karoline Thornhill (soprano), Marie-Sande Papenmeyer (mezzo), Mark Adler (tenor), Martin Berner (baritone), Simon Mayr Chorus, Bayerischer Staatsopernchor, Concerto de Bassus, Franz Hauk (conductor). String Quartet No 5 in E minor (1st and 2nd movements). Quartet Pleyel Köln. Enrico di Borgogna, Act I: Care augette che spiegate. Della Jones (soprano), Philharmonia Orchestra, David Parry (conductor). Waltz in G. Larissa Kondratjewa (piano), Reinhard Schmiedel (piano). Zoraida, Act I: Finale - Il silenzio.....qual tradimento. Bruce Ford (tenor: Almuzir), Majella Cullagh (soprano: Zoraida), Paul Austin Kelly (tenor: Abenamet), Matthew Hargreaves (bass: Ali), Dominic Natoli (tenor: Almanzor), Cristina Pastorello (soprano: Ines), Academy of St Martin-in-the-Fields, David Parry (conductor).
(Episode 1)
Time: 16:00 to 17:00 (1 hour long)
Onwards and Upwards. Episode 1.
Wth almost 70 operas to his name, Donizetti was one of Italy's most prolific tunesmiths, whose arias still cut straight to the heart today. All this week, Donald Macleod follows his rise, from a child brought up in a dark, cramped cellar to becoming a pioneering master of the style known as bel canto. He begins by revealing how Donizetti was plucked from the cramped underground cellar of his birthplace to become a choirboy, finding a musical father figure who transformed his prospects. Despite a plague of bad luck in his early stage productions, he was hailed as a new hope for Italian opera. Donizetti: L'Elisir d'amore - Cantiam, facciam brindisi. English Chamber Orchestra, Richard Bonynge (conductor). Sinfonia for Winds in G minor Camerata Budapest, László Kovács (conductor). Gloria (from Messa di Gloria). Siri Karoline Thornhill (soprano), Marie-Sande Papenmeyer (mezzo), Mark Adler (tenor), Martin Berner (baritone), Simon Mayr Chorus, Bayerischer Staatsopernchor, Concerto de Bassus, Franz Hauk (conductor). String Quartet No 5 in E minor (1st and 2nd movements). Quartet Pleyel Köln. Enrico di Borgogna, Act I: Care augette che spiegate. Della Jones (soprano), Philharmonia Orchestra, David Parry (conductor). Waltz in G. Larissa Kondratjewa (piano), Reinhard Schmiedel (piano). Zoraida, Act I: Finale - Il silenzio.....qual tradimento. Bruce Ford (tenor: Almuzir), Majella Cullagh (soprano: Zoraida), Paul Austin Kelly (tenor: Abenamet), Matthew Hargreaves (bass: Ali), Dominic Natoli (tenor: Almanzor), Cristina Pastorello (soprano: Ines), Academy of St Martin-in-the-Fields, David Parry (conductor).
(Episode 1)
13antimuzak
Monday 23rd March 2026 (starting this afternoon)
Time: 16:00 to 17:00 (1 hour long)
A Meteoric Rise. Thomas Ades. Episode 1.
Donald Macleod talks to the composer, pianist and conductor, beginning with his early years and the influence of his parents on his creative path and the emotional impact of his very first encounter with opera in the music of Bizet's Carmen. They also discuss the composer's first opera Powder Her Face, the music that first propelled him to stardom while he was still in his twenties. Thomas Adès: Hotel Suite from Powder Her Face (Overture). Finnish Radio Symphony Orchestra, Nicholas Collon (conductor). Gefriolsae Me, Op 3B. Choir of King's College Cambridge, Robert Quinney (organ), Stephen Cleobury (director). Arcadiana (excerpt). Calder Quartet. Chamber Symphony. Birmingham Contemporary Music Group, Thomas Adès (conductor). ...but all shall be well. City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra, Thomas Adès (conductor). Powder Her Face (Act 1, excerpt). Valdine Anderson (soprano: Waitress), Almeida Ensemble, Thomas Adès (conductor).
(Episode 1)
Time: 16:00 to 17:00 (1 hour long)
A Meteoric Rise. Thomas Ades. Episode 1.
Donald Macleod talks to the composer, pianist and conductor, beginning with his early years and the influence of his parents on his creative path and the emotional impact of his very first encounter with opera in the music of Bizet's Carmen. They also discuss the composer's first opera Powder Her Face, the music that first propelled him to stardom while he was still in his twenties. Thomas Adès: Hotel Suite from Powder Her Face (Overture). Finnish Radio Symphony Orchestra, Nicholas Collon (conductor). Gefriolsae Me, Op 3B. Choir of King's College Cambridge, Robert Quinney (organ), Stephen Cleobury (director). Arcadiana (excerpt). Calder Quartet. Chamber Symphony. Birmingham Contemporary Music Group, Thomas Adès (conductor). ...but all shall be well. City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra, Thomas Adès (conductor). Powder Her Face (Act 1, excerpt). Valdine Anderson (soprano: Waitress), Almeida Ensemble, Thomas Adès (conductor).
(Episode 1)
14antimuzak
Composer of the Week: Hildegard of Bingen and Isabella Leonarda
Monday 30th March 2026 (starting this afternoon)
Time: 16:00 to 17:00 (1 hour long)
Visionary. Episode 1.
As Christians around the world prepare for Easter, Donald Macleod explores the life and music of two nuns who were also composers. Though Hildegard of Bingen and Isabella Leonarda lived five centuries apart, their stories and music are connected by their shared faith and vocations. Both lived cloistered lives, shut away in convents and cut off from the everyday concerns of the societies in which they lived. Yet, they also enjoyed a profoundly rich and human connection with the world and with their God, revealed in the music and poetry they created and sent into the world. Donald begins by focusing on Hildegard of Bingen's story with biographer Fiona Maddocks, examining how her seemingly unremarkable existence in a provincial German monastery was rapidly transformed after she confessed to receiving visions from God. Hildegard: Spiritus Sanctus Vivificans. Anna Sandstrom (soprano), Armonico Consort Christopher Monks (director). Leonarda: Sonata, Op 16 No 8. Ensemble Giardino Di Delizie, Ewa Anna Augustynowicz (director). Hildegard: Columba Aspexit. Grace Davidson (soprano); Hildegard (ed. Wishart): O frondens virga. Emily Burn (voice), Clemmie Franks (voice), Emily Levy (voice), Victoria Couper (voice), Jocelyn West (voice), Vivien Ellis (voice), Stevie Wishart (director), O frondens virga (instrumental). Augsburg Early Music Ensemble. Leonarda: In Sanguine Gloria, Op 6 No 12. Guilhem Worms (bass-baritone), Ensemble Il Caravaggio, Camille Delaforge (director). Hildegard: O quam mirabilis; O virga ac diadema. Margriet Tindemans (fiddle), Sequentia, Barbara Thornton (director).
(Episode 1)
Monday 30th March 2026 (starting this afternoon)
Time: 16:00 to 17:00 (1 hour long)
Visionary. Episode 1.
As Christians around the world prepare for Easter, Donald Macleod explores the life and music of two nuns who were also composers. Though Hildegard of Bingen and Isabella Leonarda lived five centuries apart, their stories and music are connected by their shared faith and vocations. Both lived cloistered lives, shut away in convents and cut off from the everyday concerns of the societies in which they lived. Yet, they also enjoyed a profoundly rich and human connection with the world and with their God, revealed in the music and poetry they created and sent into the world. Donald begins by focusing on Hildegard of Bingen's story with biographer Fiona Maddocks, examining how her seemingly unremarkable existence in a provincial German monastery was rapidly transformed after she confessed to receiving visions from God. Hildegard: Spiritus Sanctus Vivificans. Anna Sandstrom (soprano), Armonico Consort Christopher Monks (director). Leonarda: Sonata, Op 16 No 8. Ensemble Giardino Di Delizie, Ewa Anna Augustynowicz (director). Hildegard: Columba Aspexit. Grace Davidson (soprano); Hildegard (ed. Wishart): O frondens virga. Emily Burn (voice), Clemmie Franks (voice), Emily Levy (voice), Victoria Couper (voice), Jocelyn West (voice), Vivien Ellis (voice), Stevie Wishart (director), O frondens virga (instrumental). Augsburg Early Music Ensemble. Leonarda: In Sanguine Gloria, Op 6 No 12. Guilhem Worms (bass-baritone), Ensemble Il Caravaggio, Camille Delaforge (director). Hildegard: O quam mirabilis; O virga ac diadema. Margriet Tindemans (fiddle), Sequentia, Barbara Thornton (director).
(Episode 1)
15antimuzak
Monday 6th April 2026 (starting this afternoon)
Time: 16:00 to 17:00 (1 hour long)
Melting Pot. Episode 1.
Donald Macleod explores the early life of George Gershwin, the composer who became one of the defining voices of a new America in the swinging '20s and the glory days of Hollywood in the 1930s. Rhapsody in Blue. Jean Yves Thibaudet (piano), Baltimore Symphony Orchestra, Marin Alsop (conductor). Let's Call the Whole Thing Off. Sarah Vaughan (vocal), Hal Mooney (piano). Swanee. Frank Braley (piano). Our Love is Here to Stay. Nigel Kennedy (violin). Lullaby. Cleveland Orchestra, Riccardo Chailly (conductor). Somebody Loves Me. Kiri Te Kanawa (soprano). Suite from Blue Monday (arr. Jeanneau). Katia Labeque and Marielle Labeque (pianos). Rhapsody in Blue. Jean Yves Thibaudet (piano), Baltimore Symphony Orchestra, Marin Alsop (conductor).
(Episode 1)
Time: 16:00 to 17:00 (1 hour long)
Melting Pot. Episode 1.
Donald Macleod explores the early life of George Gershwin, the composer who became one of the defining voices of a new America in the swinging '20s and the glory days of Hollywood in the 1930s. Rhapsody in Blue. Jean Yves Thibaudet (piano), Baltimore Symphony Orchestra, Marin Alsop (conductor). Let's Call the Whole Thing Off. Sarah Vaughan (vocal), Hal Mooney (piano). Swanee. Frank Braley (piano). Our Love is Here to Stay. Nigel Kennedy (violin). Lullaby. Cleveland Orchestra, Riccardo Chailly (conductor). Somebody Loves Me. Kiri Te Kanawa (soprano). Suite from Blue Monday (arr. Jeanneau). Katia Labeque and Marielle Labeque (pianos). Rhapsody in Blue. Jean Yves Thibaudet (piano), Baltimore Symphony Orchestra, Marin Alsop (conductor).
(Episode 1)
16antimuzak
Monday 13th April 2026 (starting this afternoon)
Time: 16:00 to 17:00 (1 hour long)
One Way Ticket. Episode 1.
Donald Macleod explores Polish composer Frédéric Chopin's years in Paris, the epicentre of culture at the time and the stage where most of his all-too-short life was acted out. In the years that Chopin lived there, the 1830s and '40s, Paris suffered political turmoil and deadly epidemics, while drawing artists, writers and musicians from all over the world. Following Chopin's many house moves, Donald reveals how the young composer made his name among the city's most prestigious salons, established himself as the go-to teacher in town, and rubbed shoulders with fellow creatives, including a long and stormy relationship with novelist George Sand. Donald begins with the wunderkind from Warsaw arriving at his new Parisian address before an anticlimactic meeting with his hero inspired him to forge his own path, examining Chopin's mixed first impressions of the city as he tried to make his own impression on the exclusive salon circuit. Chopin: 12 Etudes, Op 10 No 12, in C minor - The Revolutionary. Murray Perahia (piano). Nocturne No 4 in F, Op 15 No 1. Elizabeth Leonskaja (piano). Piano Concerto No 1 in E minor - ii. Romance. Krystian Zimerman (piano), Polish Festival Orchestra. Ballade No 4 in F minor, Op 52. Maurizio Pollini (piano). Piano Concerto No 2 in F minor - iii. Allegro vivace. Fumiko Shiraga (piano), Yggdrasil String Quartet, Jan-Inge Haukås (double bass). Grande Valse Brillante in E flat, Op 18. Stephen Hough (piano).
(Episode 1)
Time: 16:00 to 17:00 (1 hour long)
One Way Ticket. Episode 1.
Donald Macleod explores Polish composer Frédéric Chopin's years in Paris, the epicentre of culture at the time and the stage where most of his all-too-short life was acted out. In the years that Chopin lived there, the 1830s and '40s, Paris suffered political turmoil and deadly epidemics, while drawing artists, writers and musicians from all over the world. Following Chopin's many house moves, Donald reveals how the young composer made his name among the city's most prestigious salons, established himself as the go-to teacher in town, and rubbed shoulders with fellow creatives, including a long and stormy relationship with novelist George Sand. Donald begins with the wunderkind from Warsaw arriving at his new Parisian address before an anticlimactic meeting with his hero inspired him to forge his own path, examining Chopin's mixed first impressions of the city as he tried to make his own impression on the exclusive salon circuit. Chopin: 12 Etudes, Op 10 No 12, in C minor - The Revolutionary. Murray Perahia (piano). Nocturne No 4 in F, Op 15 No 1. Elizabeth Leonskaja (piano). Piano Concerto No 1 in E minor - ii. Romance. Krystian Zimerman (piano), Polish Festival Orchestra. Ballade No 4 in F minor, Op 52. Maurizio Pollini (piano). Piano Concerto No 2 in F minor - iii. Allegro vivace. Fumiko Shiraga (piano), Yggdrasil String Quartet, Jan-Inge Haukås (double bass). Grande Valse Brillante in E flat, Op 18. Stephen Hough (piano).
(Episode 1)
17antimuzak
Monday 20th April 2026 (starting this afternoon)
Time: 16:00 to 17:00 (1 hour long)
The Esterhaza Opera. Episode 1.
Donald Macleod explores how Joseph Haydn grew to become the most famous composer in the world despite being holed up on the remote Hungarian estate of the Esterhazy family. He begins by looking at the close-knit Esterhaza community and the relationships that flourished there, revealing how a catastrophic fire burnt the Esterhaza opera house to the ground, destroying many of Haydn's instruments in the process. Haydn: Baryton Trio No 126 - Finale. Eszterhazy Ensemble. Philemon und Baucis - Triumph, dem Gott der Gotter! (chorus). Christoph Genz (tenor: Philemon), Jan Petryka (tenor: Aret), Maren Engelhardt (mezzo: Baucis), Alexandra Reinprecht (soprano: Narcissa), Vocalforum Graz, Haydn Sinfonietta Wien, Manfred Huss (conductor). Il mondo della luna - Overture. Tasmanian Symphony Orchestra, Ola Rudner (conductor). Il mondo della luna - Non aver di me sospetto. Thomas Quasthoff (baritone: Buonafede), Genia Kühmeier (soprano: Lisetta), Freiburger Barockorchester, Gottfried von der Golz (conductor). SymphonyNo 59 in A, Hob I:59, Fire. Il Giardino Armonico, Giovanni Antonini (conductor). Armida - Se pietade avete, oh numi. Simona Houda-Saturova (soprano: Armida) NDR Radiophilharmonie, Alessandro de Marchi (conductor). L'isola disabitata - Fra un dolce deliro. Patricia Petibon (soprano: Silvia), Concerto Koln, Daniel Harding (conductor).
(Episode 1)
Time: 16:00 to 17:00 (1 hour long)
The Esterhaza Opera. Episode 1.
Donald Macleod explores how Joseph Haydn grew to become the most famous composer in the world despite being holed up on the remote Hungarian estate of the Esterhazy family. He begins by looking at the close-knit Esterhaza community and the relationships that flourished there, revealing how a catastrophic fire burnt the Esterhaza opera house to the ground, destroying many of Haydn's instruments in the process. Haydn: Baryton Trio No 126 - Finale. Eszterhazy Ensemble. Philemon und Baucis - Triumph, dem Gott der Gotter! (chorus). Christoph Genz (tenor: Philemon), Jan Petryka (tenor: Aret), Maren Engelhardt (mezzo: Baucis), Alexandra Reinprecht (soprano: Narcissa), Vocalforum Graz, Haydn Sinfonietta Wien, Manfred Huss (conductor). Il mondo della luna - Overture. Tasmanian Symphony Orchestra, Ola Rudner (conductor). Il mondo della luna - Non aver di me sospetto. Thomas Quasthoff (baritone: Buonafede), Genia Kühmeier (soprano: Lisetta), Freiburger Barockorchester, Gottfried von der Golz (conductor). SymphonyNo 59 in A, Hob I:59, Fire. Il Giardino Armonico, Giovanni Antonini (conductor). Armida - Se pietade avete, oh numi. Simona Houda-Saturova (soprano: Armida) NDR Radiophilharmonie, Alessandro de Marchi (conductor). L'isola disabitata - Fra un dolce deliro. Patricia Petibon (soprano: Silvia), Concerto Koln, Daniel Harding (conductor).
(Episode 1)
18antimuzak
Monday 4th May 2026 (starting this afternoon)
Time: 16:00 to 17:00 (1 hour long)
The Apple. Episode 1.
Donald Macleod explores the life and music of Hungarian composer Béla Bartók, whose fellow countryman pianist Andras Schiff called one of the giants in the history of music. Bartók was also one of the founders of what is now called ethnomusicology, spending much of his time immersed in peasant life and collecting folk songs. As around him Europe was torn apart by conflict, Bartók found relief in rural life and took inspiration from these traditional tunes, incorporating them into his own compositions. Donald begins by exploring Bartók's early years and the chance encounter that changed the trajectory of his composing. Bartók: Romanian Folk Dances. BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra, Thomas Dausgaard (conductor). Rhapsody for piano, Op 1, BB36a, Sz 26. Alexandre Kantorow (piano). Kossuth Symphonic Poem, Sz21. Hungarian National Philharmonic Orchestra, Zoltan Kocsis (conductor). Szekely Folksong, BB 34, Piros alma. Andrea Meláth (mezzo), Emese Virág (piano).
(Episode 1)
Time: 16:00 to 17:00 (1 hour long)
The Apple. Episode 1.
Donald Macleod explores the life and music of Hungarian composer Béla Bartók, whose fellow countryman pianist Andras Schiff called one of the giants in the history of music. Bartók was also one of the founders of what is now called ethnomusicology, spending much of his time immersed in peasant life and collecting folk songs. As around him Europe was torn apart by conflict, Bartók found relief in rural life and took inspiration from these traditional tunes, incorporating them into his own compositions. Donald begins by exploring Bartók's early years and the chance encounter that changed the trajectory of his composing. Bartók: Romanian Folk Dances. BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra, Thomas Dausgaard (conductor). Rhapsody for piano, Op 1, BB36a, Sz 26. Alexandre Kantorow (piano). Kossuth Symphonic Poem, Sz21. Hungarian National Philharmonic Orchestra, Zoltan Kocsis (conductor). Szekely Folksong, BB 34, Piros alma. Andrea Meláth (mezzo), Emese Virág (piano).
(Episode 1)
19antimuzak
Monday 11th May 2026 (starting this afternoon)
Time: 16:00 to 17:00 (1 hour long)
Florence Price: Columbused. Episode 1.
Kate Molleson is joined by pianist and scholar Samantha Ege to explore the American composer and pianist's life and music, beginning with Price's early years. They look at her childhood in Little Rock, Arkansas, her family, education and the political climate that shaped her formative years, tracing how Price learned her craft and how her ambitions developed in a society increasingly hostile to black success. Price: Negro Folksongs in Counterpoint - No 4 Shortnin' Bread. Catalyst Quartet. Violin Concerto No 2. Randall Goosby (violin), The Philadelphia Orchestra, Yannick Nézet-Séguin (conductor). Symphony No 4 in D minor - II. Andante cantabile. The Philadelphia Orchestra, Yannick Nézet Séguin (conductor). Scenes in Tin Can Alley - The Huckster; Children at Play; Night. Josh Tatsuo Cullen (piano). Fantasie Nègre No 1 in E minor. Samantha Ege (piano).
(Episode 1)
Time: 16:00 to 17:00 (1 hour long)
Florence Price: Columbused. Episode 1.
Kate Molleson is joined by pianist and scholar Samantha Ege to explore the American composer and pianist's life and music, beginning with Price's early years. They look at her childhood in Little Rock, Arkansas, her family, education and the political climate that shaped her formative years, tracing how Price learned her craft and how her ambitions developed in a society increasingly hostile to black success. Price: Negro Folksongs in Counterpoint - No 4 Shortnin' Bread. Catalyst Quartet. Violin Concerto No 2. Randall Goosby (violin), The Philadelphia Orchestra, Yannick Nézet-Séguin (conductor). Symphony No 4 in D minor - II. Andante cantabile. The Philadelphia Orchestra, Yannick Nézet Séguin (conductor). Scenes in Tin Can Alley - The Huckster; Children at Play; Night. Josh Tatsuo Cullen (piano). Fantasie Nègre No 1 in E minor. Samantha Ege (piano).
(Episode 1)
20antimuzak
Monday 18th May 2026 (starting this afternoon)
Time: 16:00 to 17:00 (1 hour long)
Rome, Here I Come. Episode 1.
Sixteenth-century Italian composer Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina was one of the most influential composers in European classical music. With his countless masses, motets and madrigals, infused with a deep sense of spirituality and musical beauty, Palestrina was named the Saviour of Church Music at a revolutionary time when Rome was rewriting the rules of music composition. But what is known about this mysterious character, between historical fact and hagiographic myth? Donald Macleod follows the clues to reconstruct the story of Palestrina, beginning in a small town east of Renaissance Rome. Palestrina: Sicut cervus - I. Sicut cervus; II. Sitivit anima mea. Stile Antico. Laudate pueri - I. Laudate pueri Dominum; II. Quis sicut Dominus Deus; El León de Oro, Peter Phillips (conductor). Pueri hebraeorum (arr for dobro). Noël Akchoté (dobro guitar). Puer qui natus est. The Sixteen, Harry Christophers (conductor). Missa Assumpta est Maria - I. Kyrie; II. Gloria. La Chapelle Royale, Philippe Herreweghe (director). Josquin des Prez: O virgo prudentissima - I. O virgo prudentissima. The Gesualdo Six, Owain Park (director); Fortuna d'un gran tempo. La Reverdie. Festa: Sancta Maria succurre miseris. Cantica Symphonia, Kees Boeke (director). Palestrina: Sacred Madrigals, Book 2 (Delle madrigali spirituali libro secondo). Città di Dio, Corvina Consort, Zoltán Kalmanovits (director). Ricercar del primo tuono. Jean Rondeau (harpsichord). Magnificat Primi toni. Voces8.
(Episode 1)
Time: 16:00 to 17:00 (1 hour long)
Rome, Here I Come. Episode 1.
Sixteenth-century Italian composer Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina was one of the most influential composers in European classical music. With his countless masses, motets and madrigals, infused with a deep sense of spirituality and musical beauty, Palestrina was named the Saviour of Church Music at a revolutionary time when Rome was rewriting the rules of music composition. But what is known about this mysterious character, between historical fact and hagiographic myth? Donald Macleod follows the clues to reconstruct the story of Palestrina, beginning in a small town east of Renaissance Rome. Palestrina: Sicut cervus - I. Sicut cervus; II. Sitivit anima mea. Stile Antico. Laudate pueri - I. Laudate pueri Dominum; II. Quis sicut Dominus Deus; El León de Oro, Peter Phillips (conductor). Pueri hebraeorum (arr for dobro). Noël Akchoté (dobro guitar). Puer qui natus est. The Sixteen, Harry Christophers (conductor). Missa Assumpta est Maria - I. Kyrie; II. Gloria. La Chapelle Royale, Philippe Herreweghe (director). Josquin des Prez: O virgo prudentissima - I. O virgo prudentissima. The Gesualdo Six, Owain Park (director); Fortuna d'un gran tempo. La Reverdie. Festa: Sancta Maria succurre miseris. Cantica Symphonia, Kees Boeke (director). Palestrina: Sacred Madrigals, Book 2 (Delle madrigali spirituali libro secondo). Città di Dio, Corvina Consort, Zoltán Kalmanovits (director). Ricercar del primo tuono. Jean Rondeau (harpsichord). Magnificat Primi toni. Voces8.
(Episode 1)
Join to post

