Explore ‘Dalia’s Mixtape’ with the Gramophone Podcast
- Friday, May 10, 2024
Follow Dalia Stasevska's mixtape project with a new podcast as each new track is released
Follow Dalia Stasevska's mixtape project with a new podcast as each new track is released
With exam season well under way, we've compiled 10 recordings that will help you on your revision journey
Richard Osborne traces the evolution of this great work over nearly a century of recordings
The Italian conductor believes that, in his final symphony, Beethoven reached beyond humanity
We owe it to Maddalena Casulana to bring her music into the present and by recording it and publishing a modern score for further live performances, sending it into the future
Twenty great Puccini recordings, featuring Victoria de los Ángeles, Luciano Pavarotti, Angela Gheorghiu, Renata Tebaldi, Maria Callas, Leontyne Price and more
In the summer of 2025, musicians will unite in the city for one of the most wide-ranging, comprehensive and star-studded festivals of Shostakovich’s music ever convened
Julian Lloyd Webber celebrates the artistry of a legendary fellow cellist, Mstislav Rostropovich, a Russian musician who was an outspoken advocate of human rights and an inspiration for many composers
Ten outstanding recordings of Tippett's music from Colin Davis, Andrew Davis, Martyn Brabbins, Richard Hickox, Heath Quartet and more
All of these outstanding classical albums were Editor's Choices in Gramophone magazine and are highly recommended. If you are searching for an inspirational new recording, look no further
From the age of 15, Michael Tippett's music was a source of profound inspiration for Andrew Davis
A selection of just a few of Sir Andrew Davis's finest moments on record, featuring music by Elgar, Vaughan Williams, Delius, Walton and Tippett
Clarity and colour are key in the music of this Finn who has a penchant for orchestral forms such as the concerto
The 20th Malko Competition highlighted a generational shift in what we think of as ‘a conductor’ - is the end nigh for the age of the maestro?
Sir Neville Marriner, who would have celebrated his 100th birthday this April, was a central pillar of post-war British music-making, maintaining consistency and distinction despite the shifting sands of a rapidly changing musical landscape
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