BBC Music Magazine is a must for anyone with a passion for classical music. Classical music connoisseurs and new enthusiast alike will enjoy the fascinating features and reviews of over 120 new works in every issue.
THIS MONTH’S CONTRIBUTORS
Welcome
BBC Music Magazine
Have your say…
LETTER of the MONTH
Live music returns to concert halls and opera houses • Tentative steps are being made to bring performance back to venues
A very different season
Revealing the roots of a great composer
THE MONTH IN NUMBERS
Sound Bites
Rising Stars • Three to look out for…
Elgar lends his composing talents to the Polish cause
Also in July 1915
German pianist puts himself in the driving seat
DÉJÀ VU • History just keeps on repeating itself…
Jennifer Higdon • Over the last two decades Jennifer Higdon has become one of the busiest and most-performed composers in the US, as well as the winner of a Pulitzer Prize and three Grammys. Several recordings are in the pipeline, not to mention the forthcoming Philadelphia premiere of her new chamber opera, Woman With Eyes Closed.
Studio Secrets • We reveal who’s recording what and where...
REWIND Great artists talk about their past recordings • This month: SANDRINE PIAU Soprano
Buried Treasure
Vive la différence!
FAREWELL TO…
Music to my ears • What the classical world has been listening to this month
READERS’ CHOICE
READERS’ CHOICE
Our Choices • The BBC Music Magazine team’s current favourites
Richard Morrison • Coronavirus is going to change the world’s classical music scene forever
The great adventurer • Whether exploring the Silk Road or ranging from Bach to bluegrass, there are few paths that cellist Yo-Yo Ma fears to tread. As he tells Helen Wallace, crossing musical and cultural boundaries are as important to him as ever
Yo-Yo Ma: the story so far • A colourful career in brief
A joyful musical partnership • Kathryn Stott on 35 years in tandem
Paavo Järvi
The Pärnu Music Festival • Top concerts on the Baltic coast
The Perfectstorm • Musical storms, real and metaphorical, are often a composer’s calling card says Malcolm Hayes, who guides us through some of the most vivid
Big bangs • Some tools of the trade
Home comforts • Leading classical musicians explain to us how they have faced up to the coronavirus lockdown by shifting the concert stage to their own living rooms
A Manns for all seasons • Andrew Green tells how the arrival of a workaholic German conductor at Crystal Palace in 1854 gave classical music in the UK a major boost
A blazing finale • Crystal Palace succumbs to fire
Major minors • Whether they were little darlings or complete tearaways, all of these children grew up to be great composers. Can you name them?
Tetbury England • When summer turns to autumn, a fine festival welcomes classical music fans to this characterful Cotswold town, reports Jeremy Pound
A region of riches
Franz Lehár • George Hall looks at the life and music of a composer who brought both huge popularity and a new respect to the world of operetta
Lehár’s style
LEHÁR Life&Times
Romeo and Juliet Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky • From the sound of flashing blades to one of music’s most recognisable love themes, Jessica Duchen revels in Tchaikovsky’s fantasy-overture
The composer
A heart-on-sleeve experience
Three other great recordings
Continue the journey… • We suggest works to explore after Tchaikovsky’s Romeo and...