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The Music Show - ABC RN

50 Episodes

54 minutes | Nov 23, 2019
What were David Bowie's favourite books? Plus, The Narlis share the sounds of the Kimberley
What do Finnish birdsong and ancient rain dances have in common? They've both inspired new music written in (and about) Western Australia's Kimberley region. The Narli Ensemble are an all-star band bringing the sounds of remote WA to the rest of Australia and the world. And, three years before he died, David Bowie made a list of the 100 books that had fuelled his creative life - from ‘The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie’ to ‘A Clockwork Orange’, from Orwell’s ‘Nineteen Eighty-Four’ to John Cage’s ‘Silence’.
54 minutes | Nov 22, 2019
The legacy of U2's The Joshua Tree, and ambassador of the Great American Songbook, Michael Feinstein, performs live
With U2 in Australia on the fifth leg of their Joshua Tree Tour, we explore the legacy of their 1987 classic album ‘The Joshua Tree’, and take the temperature of the group once regarded as ’the biggest rock band in the world’. It’s been twelve years since we last caught up with singer, pianist and custodian of The Great American Songbook, Michael Feinstein. In that time he's had his conducting debut, written scores for musicals, formed a foundation to preserve the Songbook and much more. He also manages to perform 150 shows a year, too.
48 minutes | Nov 16, 2019
Robyn Archer's alternative American Songbook, and why Leonard Cohen is Deborah Conway's hero
Robyn Archer’s The (Other) Great American Songbook offers a different portrait of America, covering everything from the Civil War and the Great Depression, poverty, politics, drunkenness and desire. Robyn’s setlist includes Tom Lehrer, Pink and Joni Mitchell, and she performs Stephen Foster’s Hard Times live in the studio for us. And in the final instalment of our Heroes series, Deborah Conway talks about the poetry, beliefs and changing voice of Leonard Cohen.
42 minutes | Nov 15, 2019
Archie Roach, the Armenian roots of Zela Margossian's jazz, and remembering John Curro
With a new double-album produced by Paul Grabowsky, and a memoir - both titled Tell Me Why - Archie Roach reflects on how the songs have changed (and changed him) over time. We meet the Beirut-born pianist of Armenian heritage Zela Margossian whose music combines classical virtuosity, jazz improvisation and Armenian folk traditions. And we remember the late conductor and founder of the Queensland Youth Orchestras, John Curro.
2 minutes | Nov 15, 2019
The Music Show's podcast is changing
The Music Show's podcast is changing. Presenter, Andrew Ford, explains how. Music: Otro Nivel (Instrumental) by Orquesta Akokán
31 minutes | Nov 9, 2019
Michael Tippett – a child of his time
Oliver Soden discusses his biography of the English composer, Michael Tippett.
13 minutes | Nov 9, 2019
Poppy Holden on Border Ballads
Singer Poppy Holden explains the sad and mysterious Border Ballads.
27 minutes | Nov 8, 2019
Nigel Simeone on Janácek
The romantic passion and late masterpieces of Leoš Janáček.
14 minutes | Nov 8, 2019
The Punk Professor Vivien Goldman gives a personal history
The Punk Professor Vivien Goldman gives a very personal history of women in punk from London to Indonesia.
51 minutes | Nov 2, 2019
Heroes: Jon Cleary on Dr John
Mac Rebennack had many stage personae; the Night Tripper, Snake but most famously Dr John. Dr John comes straight out of the great piano tradition of New Orleans that goes back to Jelly Roll Morton, Professor Longhair and more recently Allen Toussaint. Jon Cleary has channelled these legends from an early age and is in to show how their successor Dr John put funk and a taste of voodoo into New Orleans piano.
19 minutes | Nov 1, 2019
The itinerant violin from Szolnok
Daniel Weltlinger’s violin travelled from Szolnok in Hungary to Sydney via Marseille, Casablanca and Berlin. It all began with his grandfather who carried the instrument (and little else) across the globe having left Hungary in 1920. Daniel has collected and composed music that follows the historical line of this instrument and he's in to tell the story in words and music.
22 minutes | Nov 1, 2019
Dyson Stringer Cloher
Three of our most experienced female musicians unite with a new album and tour. Mia Dyson, Liz Stringer and Jen Cloher have voices which blend effortlessly in a set of new songs emphasising arresting harmonies and driving guitars.
54 minutes | Oct 26, 2019
Heroes: Paul Grabowsky on Bud Powell
Bud Powell was the father of modern jazz piano, and pianist and composer Paul Grabowsky sits down at the piano in The Music Show's studio to demonstrate why. Grabowsky breaks down Bud Powell’s influences, and demonstrates his technique, hand by hand. He talks about Powell’s musical relationships with contemporaries such as Charlie Parker and Fats Navarro, and his later influence on fellow pianists McCoy Tyner, Bill Evans, Chick Corea and Grabowsky himself.
23 minutes | Oct 25, 2019
Brett Dean's 'Approach to Bach'
London based composer Brett Dean explains how he composed a companion piece to a concerto by one of the creative geniuses of all time, J.S. Bach.  Brett’s Approach (Prelude to a Canon) is part of the current Australian Chamber Orchestras homage to Bach series. Brett also ponders whether he's a modernist composer and if he's ever self-censored his work.
27 minutes | Oct 25, 2019
Reclaiming Clara Schumann
Clara Schumann was born 200 years ago and it's high-time to bring this extraordinary musician into the spotlight. Frances Falling from the Schumann-Haus in Leipzig reclaims Clara’s past;  virtuoso pianist, composer at nine, defiant daughter and mother of eight whose famous husband became afflicted by mental illness and died at 46.
34 minutes | Oct 19, 2019
Heroes: Brian Ritchie on Charlie Haden
Bass luminary Charlie Haden was singing in the Haden family radio show at two years of age. After he discovered jazz he became a member of Ornette Coleman's ground breaking quartet and their improvising duets were legendary. But while jazz was Charlie's real passion his musical interests were wide open; he loved country, played Portuguese folk music and his Liberation Music Orchestra was born out of his stance against the armed conflicts in Spain, Cambodia and Vietnam. Charlie Haden never stopped revisiting the music of his childhood including spirituals and hymns and what he called "contemporary impressionistic Americana". Brian Ritchie, bass player in the Violent Femmes explores this rich life and musical legacy in this week's Heroes.
19 minutes | Oct 19, 2019
Mike and Ruthy on the thriving folk tradition in New York state
Mike Merenda and Ruth Ungar (Mike + Ruthy) are a husband and wife folk music duo from Upstate New York. Armed with a fiddle and guitar they're back on The Music Show to talk about writing modern protest songs and the thriving folk music scene in their Woodstock community. They'll perform a couple of songs live for us, including Jay Ungar's (Ruth's father) famous Ashokan Farewell, the theme tune for Ken Burns’ Civil War series.
4 minutes | Oct 18, 2019
Daniel Weltlinger's violin - bonus podcast
From a new CD comes the story of Daniel's grandfather's violin from Szolnok in Hungary and its remarkable journey to Sydney via Vienna, Marseilles and Casablanca. It's also about the importance of time, continuity and moving forward.
25 minutes | Oct 18, 2019
Métis poet and master of the loop pedal, Moe Clark
Moe Clark is a Métis spoken word poet, musician, educator, activist and performer from Canada. She uses a microphone and a looping pedal to bring a talking circle to life on stage, in workshops and in radio studios. Moe also travels with an elk skin frame drum and performs a blend of poetry and song. Moe's in Sydney for Story-Fest and is performing at the Australian Poetry Slam Finals.
21 minutes | Oct 18, 2019
Nitin Sawhney's England in 1999 and now
Nitin Sawhney is a producer, DJ and composer and was there when Anglo Asian music hit the mainstream in Britain during the late 1990's His seminal album Beyond Skin was partly responsible and Nitin Sawhney talks about how 20 years on, its themes of race, religion and identity still resonate.
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