Episodes
In the final episode before the summer, Carl looks at a pivotal moment in musical tonality; Wagner's 'unplayable' Tristan und Isolde.
Published 05/30/21
This weeks episode focuses on Beethoven's intense work scored for 2 violins, viola and cello.
Published 05/23/21
In this extra-terrestrial episode, Carl discusses the piece that British composer Gustav Holst is most famous for: his tribute to the planets!
Published 05/16/21
This week's episode focuses in on an aria from Giuseppe Verdi's groundbreaking opera La Traviata.
Published 05/09/21
What would you do if you were asked to write music for a prestigious awards ceremony? Brahms clearly took it to mean 'Write music for a student party'. Which is exactly what he did. Here is his Academic Festival Overture.
Published 05/02/21
Published 05/02/21
This week's episode focuses on Faure's requiem which has a completely different mood and tone to Mozart's requiem in how it views the topic of death.
Published 04/25/21
It's two for the price of one this week. Or is it? Alessandro Marcello may have written a beautiful oboe concerto, but it's Johann Sebastian Bach we have to thank for it's popularity!
Published 04/18/21
Back from his break, Carl looks at Robert Schumann's Symphony in C major which he wrote at a particularly painful time of his life.
Published 04/11/21
On a completely different note (and tone and genre), Carl looks at American Composer George Gershwin's opera 'Porgy and Bess'.
Published 03/28/21
This week, the longest river of the Czech Republic is the subject, thanks so Bedrich Smetana's gripping tone poem all about his homeland.
Published 03/21/21
This week, Carl talks about Rimsky-Korsakov's symphonic suite based on the Middle Eastern tales 'One Thousand and One Nights'.
Published 03/14/21
This week, Piano concertos are back on the menu, this time written by Beethoven. It's his 5th and last Concerto, entitled 'Emperor'.
Published 03/07/21
Elgar's beloved orchestral work is the subject of this weeks episode in which Carl explores the last segment - the composer's self-portrait.
Published 02/28/21
This week, solo piano is on the repertoire, as Carl looks at the music revolutionary, Franz Liszt.
Published 02/21/21
A relatively unrecognised work when it was performed, Mendelssohn's 5th symphony was written in honour of the Confession of Augsburg, a pivotal moment in the life of Martin Luther.
Published 02/14/21
This week, Carl looks at Czech Composer Antonin Dovrak's infamous work, his 'New World' Symphony.
Published 02/07/21
This week comes the 'Händel Largo' with which Carl talks about the raw beauty of something so simplistic.
Published 01/31/21
This week, Carl talks about the music of Dame Ethel Smyth, regarded as the 'Forgotten Woman of Classical Music'.
Published 01/24/21
Mozarts prime time from the last episode gives way to his darkest hours in this episode where Carl looks at the last piece he ever wrote.
Published 01/17/21
This week, Carl chooses a movement from Mahler's 1st symphony with a very familiar tune.
Published 01/10/21
In the first episode of 2021, Carl talks about classical music's greatest foodie, Rossini. And talks about his energetic opera overtures!
Published 01/03/21
In the final episode of 2020, Carl finds himself back where he started - at J. S. Bach, and has chosen his vibrant opening chorus to the Christmas Oratorio. Insta: @classicalmusic_theinsta, Email: [email protected]
Published 12/20/20
For this week, Carl has chosen an incredibly powerful moment from one of Giacomo Puccinis most well known operas.
Published 12/13/20
This week, Carl brings on his first guest, Conor Galvin, and they discuss Conor's favourite piece of all time - the 2nd piano concerto by Rachmaninov.
Published 12/06/20