Have you ever been hideously late to a gig? I have, regrettably.
This episode is part one of my chat with cellist Madeleine Ridd. We spoke about food, chamber music, touring, teaching, and Maddy's personal insight into her struggle with mental health.
This episode also features a hazy "music college didn't prepare me" experience out in the South Pacific nation of Tonga.
Had an experience music college didn't prepare you for? Tell me! asitcomespodcast@gmail.com
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Episode 35: Egīls Šēfers "This is part of who we are"
Episode 34: Jen Lang "Joining the dots"
Episode 33: Sarah Watkins "Keep those connections happening"
Episode 32: Violeta Vicci "It's our duty to transport people to a different world"
Episode 31: Daniel Rainey "The most important skills you'll probably ever have"
Episode 30: Lucia D'Avanzo-Lewis "Start to be aware of what you're throwing away"
Episode 29: Peter Brathwaite "You can't build your life around just practising"
Episode 28: Xuefei Yang "'Pioneer' sounds really fancy"
Episode 27: Justine Cormack "There's just so much wisdom that our bodies have"
Episode 26: Fred and Lily Scott "The gig goes on"
Episode 25: Nadine Benjamin "We tell stories"
Episode 24: Jennifer Pike "It's a long road"
Episode 23: Leon Bosch "I could either give up, or I could fight"
Episode 22: Fiona Gibbs "Be as creative as possible"
Episode 21: Jessica Cottis "Always music first"
Episode 20: Jessie Grimes "There's no ceiling in what you can do"
Episode 19: Robert and Verity Simmons (Estilo String Quartet) "Sh*t Christmas on the forest floor"
Episode 18: Rocío Bolaños "Open your mind, maybe?"
Episode 17: Amalia Hall "Music improves life quality"
Episode 16: John-Paul Muir "Finding strength, trust and faith in something that anchors you"
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