I had the great joy to do my first ever live edition of Sticky Notes last month with the Aalborg Symphony in Denmark. For this concert, I chose a piece that is extremely close to my heart, Dvorak's New World Symphony. The story of the New World Symphony is a fascinating one. The symphony was the result of an extraordinary series of events, with Dvorak coming to America in 1892, meeting the great singer Harry Burleigh, and falling in love with a totally new, to him, genre of music: Black American and Native American folk music. Listening to Burleigh and other voices around America, Dvorak had discovered a new “American” sound for his music, and even though he would end up staying in the US for just three years, in that time he composed two of his most popular pieces, the American String Quartet, and the New World Symphony
Introduction to Opera + Mozart, Marriage of Figaro (Part 1)
Renaissance Music in 60 Minutes
William Levi Dawson, "Negro Folk Symphony"
Nathan Milstein, Django Reinhardt, Playing with Only Two Fingers, and More, w/ Clayton Haslop
Bartok Divertimento for String Orchestra
Medieval Music in 60 Minutes
Beethoven Violin Concerto
Berlioz, "Symphonie Fantastique"
History of Classical Music in 60 Minutes
Schubert Symphony No. 9, "The Great"
Stravinsky, The Rite of Spring, Part 2
Tchaikovsky, The Nutcracker
Stravinsky, The Rite of Spring, Part 1
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
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Markus Schulz presents Global DJ Broadcast