This is another episode where I highly recommend listening to Part 1 from last week before listening to this episode! It was a great honor to speak with the critic and cultural historian Jeremy Eichler about his remarkable new book "Time's Echo." In today's episode, we speak about Richard Strauss' Metamorphosen, as well as the complicated and hotly debated questions about Strauss' activities during World War II. We also talk about Shostakovich and his 13th Symphony, entitled "Babi Yar," a piece of memorial for a place where no memorial had stood for decades. Finally, we speak about Benjamin Britten and his War Requiem. We talk about Britten's devout pacificism, about his visit to the Belsen Displaced Persons camp after World War II, and why his War Requiem seems to have more connection with World War I than with World War II. It was truly a joy to talk to Jeremy about all of these different great composers, as well as the memories they created with their works. Join us!
Mahler Symphony No. 3, Part 3 (Season 6 Finale)
Mahler Symphony No. 3, Part 2
Copland "Appalachian Spring" (Re-Upload)
A Conversation with Harry Christophers, Founder and Director of The Sixteen
Mahler Symphony No. 3, Part 1
A Conversation with Composer and Violinist Jesse Montgomery
Politics in Classical Music
Mozart Symphony No. 40
"Wagnerism" with Alex Ross
Johannes Brahms and Clara Schumann: A Love Story
Tchaikovsky Violin Concerto
Bruckner Symphony No. 4
Stravinsky Pulcinella
The Music of William Grant Still
Mozart Symphony No. 36, "Linz"
Caroline Shaw on Composing, Performing, and Letting Go
Goldberg Variations Mini-Episode + Announcement
Bach, The Goldberg Variations
"Chasing Chopin," with Annik LaFarge
Brahms Requiem
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
Irish Songs with Ken Murray
Immediately Kinfolk
Turned On
Resident by Hernan Cattaneo
Markus Schulz presents Global DJ Broadcast