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Classic FM Arts Daily

 

Monday 1st December

Monday 1st December

Our regular monthly report on the activities of Hear Here - the UK first classical music project dedicated to listening - presented by the Royal Philharmonic Society and Classic FM, supported by the Paul Hamlyn Foundation. In November the project examined hearing and hearing impairment. The featured work was Stravinsky's The Rite of Spring, and the partner ensemble was the Philharmonia, Classic FM's Orchestra on Tour.

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Sunday 30th November

Sunday 30th November

The internationally renowned conductor Richard Hickox died a week ago today. He was a great champion of English music, and was one of the most recorded of composers with some 300 titles to his name. Today we hear tributes to the man from friends, colleagues and critics, and also hear extracts from interviews he made recently with Classic FM.

Saturday 29th November

Saturday 29th November

The new opera Skellig comes to the end of its brief run at the Sage Gateshead this evening. Five weeks of intense rehearsals have been followed by five performances which have received rave reviews. For two young singers at the centre of the story, Matthew Long and Merrin Lazyan, it's been an amazing experience.

Friday 28th November

Friday 28th November

When she died five years ago at the age of 40 the opera singer Susan Chilcott was attaining the greatness she so richly deserved. She'd worked with all the major opera houses in the world, and had gained the adoration of Placido Domingo and Valery Gergiev to name but two. After her death her friends and family decided to set up a trust to provide financial help to aspiring singers, and the latest batch received their awards at a ceremony last night. Chair of the Trustees Jonathan Dimbleby recalls Susan Chilcott, and explains what they are trying to achieve in her name.

Thursday 27th November

Thursday 27th November

A special edition of Classic FM Arts Daily from Newcastle, and the Sage Gateshead, home to Northern Sinfonia. And the venue for the world premier this week of a new opera Skellig, based on the popular children's book by local writer David Almond. He tells how he feels about his work being turned into an atmospheric and powerful operatic work; plus memories in the North East of England of conductor Richard Hickox whose death was announced earlier this week.

Wednesday 26th November

Wednesday 26th November

5 singing teachers from Bournemouth, Stoke, Liverpool, Litchfield and Leeds have scooped a huge record contract with a major record company - not to sing pop music or be the next crossover band, but to sing the very best of Gilbert and Sullivan. The Gala Ensemble released its debut album on Monday, and have now set their sights on chart success.

Tuesday 25th November

Tuesday 25th November

A special edition of Classic FM Arts Daily highlighting the 30th Arts and Business Awards which were were handed out last night at a glittering ceremony at the Victoria and Albert Museum. The awards celebrate excellence in the field of cultural partnerships and sponsorship.

Monday 24th November

Monday 24th November

The Britten Sinfonia is described as one of the most dynamic ensembles in Europe. They're about to embark on their lates At Lunch series, kicking off in Krakow in Poland, and then travelling to Cambridge, London, Birmingham and Norwich. Chief Executive David Butcher brings us up to speed on their activities, and also their nomination for their collaboration with Cambridge University Press in today's Arts and Business Awards.

Sunday 23rd November

Sunday 23rd November

Joby Burgess has been described as one of the most diverse percussionists in the country. He was on stage last night in Edinburgh with his band Powerplant with two new unusual commissions - one which uses fizzy drink bottles, and another which samples speeches from American politicians. It was part of a nine date tour which also takes the show to Birmingham, Dartington, London and Brighton; Plus some alarming news for loud musicians from the pages of this year's Schotts Alamanac.

Saturday 22nd November

Saturday 22nd November

Today we focus on the London Symphony Orchestra's On Track scheme which brings the musicians from the LSO into contact with thousands of children from the East of London. The project takes LSO musicians into schools in some of the most deprived London boroughs to spready their skills and love of music; The orchestra is also up for an award at the Arts and Business Awards on Monday, for their collaboration with Rolls Royce on their recent tour of China.

Friday 21st November

Friday 21st November

We're just over a week away from the launch of Orchestra Europa's new season. The ensemble is made up of some of the most talented young musicians from across Europe. They kick off in Cardiff a week tomorrow - with the Liverpool Phil's Vasily Petrenko at the helm. Artistic Director Scott Ellaway explains the ethos of the Orchestra along with violinist Nicola Benedetti who's guesting with them later in the season; plus a capella octet - Voces8 - gets exited about its latest album release.

Thursday 20th November

Thursday 20th November

This coming Saturday is St Cecilia's Day. Back in the late seventeenth century it was a day of big celebrations. The baroque ensemble La Nuova Musica and Soprano Lucy Crow are keeping the traditions alive with a concert at St John's Smith Square. Artistic Director David Bates tells Arts Daily about the ensemble and the revolutionary treatise it was named after.

Wednesday 19th November

Wednesday 19th November

With just a few days to go until the prestigious Arts and Business Awards - which celebrate best practice in partnerships between business and arts organisations - we hear how one of the nominees this year - Sage Gateshead, home to Northern Sinfonia, has benefitted from its association with Sage PLC; Plus a visit to the Royal Welsh College of Music and Drama in Cardiff to find out more about its ground breaking Creative Audio department.

Tuesday 18th November

Tuesday 18th November

The problem with writing a history of a country is what and who to include, and when it's written, invariable everything changes. The historian and biographer A. N. Wilson's latest work, Our Times, looks at the last 50 years of the 20th century. He tells Classic FM's Anne-Marie Minhall how he approached the project.

Monday 17th November

Monday 17th November

An operatic feel to Classic FM Arts Daily today. We have a new face to follow at the Guildhall School of Music and Drama in London, albeit a familiar one. Nicky Spence - who's aready tasted the glitz and glamour of showbiz, is in his second year on the conservatoirs's acclaimed opera course; plus we hear about W11 Opera, which since 1971 has strived to engage young people in singing and open the door to performing fame and fortune. They're preparing for their next production at the beginning of December - Song of Rhiannon.

Sunday 16th November

Sunday 16th November

Two big events at London's Guildhall School of Music and Drama this week. The Vaughan Williams commemorations continue with a look at the songs of the great composer and those about him; plus Russian conducting superstar Vasily Petrenko takes a break from the Royal Liverpool Phil to work with the Guildhall Symphony Orchestra at the Barbican.

Saturday 15th November

Saturday 15th November

This is a big month for German born composer Max Richter. Not only is his music part of a collaboration with Wayne McGregor and Julian Opie at the Royal Opera House in London, but he's also written the score for a new animation called Waltz with Bashir, which is released in about a week's time. He talks about these two contrasting pieces, and the kind of work he likes best.

Friday 14th November

Friday 14th November

.When the young singer Mary Costa auditioned for Walt Disney to be the voice of Sleeping Beauty, she couldn't have known how popular the animated feature would be, and that 50 years later, it would be digitally remastered and re-issued on the new Blu-Ray format. She was just 22 at the time, and went on to have a massively successul singing career. She tells Arts Daily about meeting Walt Disney, how a mock English accent secured the role, and how the part changed her life.

Thursday 13th November

Thursday 13th November

For the actress Carol Drinkwater - what started as a passing interest in the olive tree has become a passion if not an obsession. That interest started as a trilogy - and with the publication of the Olive Tree, it's now a five book epic which defies description. Is it a biography, a travelogue, a love story? Carol tells Arts Daily how she sees the stories of an extraordinary phenomena.

Wednesday 12th November

Wednesday 12th November

The Schools Proms - which reaches its climax at the Royal Albert Hall in London this evening - is proof positive that music making is alive and well in schools across the UK. Much is due to the dedication of teachers and workshop leaders who take the enjoyment of music to every corner of the country. One such musician is Luke Crooks, who works with the Philharmonia, Classic FM's Orchestra on Tour. He tells Arts Daily about his work, and how kids respond to it.

Tuesday 11th November

Tuesday 11th November

A new a capella requiem by composer Gabriel Jackson receives its world premier this evening in London, it's performed by the Vasari Singers, described as one of the best choral groups in the world. The composer talks about how the piece evolved; Plus Oscar nominated director Robert Weider tells Classic FM's Anne-Marie Minhall about the Englishness of his latest film `How to Lose Friends and Alienate People'.

Monday 10th November

Monday 10th November

Today sees the start of Music for Youth's Schools Proms. This is the culmination of a year of participatory events involving schools and colleges in every corner of the UK. We hear what's in store at the Royal Albert Hall from new Chief Executive Lincoln Abbots; Plus the latest album by the Swedish barritone Carry Persson which celebrates heroic music.

Sunday 9th November

Sunday 9th November

The Sixteen - the voices of Classic FM - are gearing up for big celebrations next year but you'd be forgiven for thinking they had started early. You don't have to wait long for one of their exuberant and soulful concerts to come round. Their much anticipated annual Messiah is coming up at the beginning of December, and just recently they performed a concert of music devoted to Mary, which included work by composer Margaret Rizza, who explains the attraction of the Marian theme; plus the Royal Welsh College of Music and Drama's 60th celebration plans.

Saturday 8th November

Saturday 8th November

The internationally acclaimed Spanish Guitarist Juan Martin is becoming a regular sight in Liverpool at the moment. He was commissioned as part of the city's year of culture celebrations to write the music for the Liverpool Playhouse's production of the Lorca classic, Blood Wedding. This is his first theatrical encounter. He tells Arts Daily how it came about.

Friday 7th November

Friday 7th November

The Hebrides Ensemble are madly mid-tour at the moment. They've already been to Glasgow and Edinburgh, travel to Fettercairn tonight and then head to Thurso and Inverness. They've teamed up again with mezzo soprano Jane Irwin, for a programme of poems set to music which examine love and loss. It includes a new work by young composer Martin Suckling which is hot off the press; plus celebrity chef John Torode tells Classic FM's Anne-Marie Minhall about his beefy aspirations.

Thursday 6th November

Thursday 6th November

A special edition of Arts Daily from Cardiff, where the Royal Welsh College of Music and Drama has unveiled a campaign to raise enough money to build impressive new facilities on campus, costing more than 22 million pounds. We hear from the principal of the college Hilary Boulding, Architect Jason Flanaghan and the new patron of the fundraising campaign - operatic superstar Bryn Terfel.

Wednesday 5th November

Wednesday 5th November

The Macedonian pianist Simon Trpceski has established himself as one of the most remarkable players of today. He's performed with many of the world's greatest orchestras, including most recently, the CBSO at the Symphony Hall. Simon tells Arts Daily of his hectic globetrotting lifestyle and how home in Macedonia keeps his feet on the ground.

Tuesday 4th November

Tuesday 4th November

Today we meet the Atrium Quartet, a Russian ensemble who came together eight years ago in St Petersburg. Winning a pretigious string competition a few years back catapulted them into the international performing circuit. They talk of Russia, repertoir and roaming the world.

Monday 3rd November

Monday 3rd November

A tale of two cellists today. Young Irish player Brian O'Kane claimed the recent Windsor Festival International String Competition, but already has a hectic round of concerts on the go, including one this evening at the Wigmore Hall; And the more seasoned Richard Jenkinson, principal cello with the CBSO which tomorrow will be paying tribute to conductor Vernon Handley who died earlier in the year. He tells of his varied musical influences.

Sunday 2nd November

Sunday 2nd November

A quick look at the hectic round of events which took place last month under the watchful eye of Hear Here - the UK's first classical music project dedeicated to listening, presented by the Royal Philharmonic Society and Classic FM in association with the Paul Hamlyn Foundation. Pianist Freddy Kempf tells how Rachmaninoff inspired his early exploration of music; we meet the Ghanean musician who's teaching Guidhall percussionists new tricks; and we discover how recording differs from playing live in a concert hall.

Saturday 1st November

Saturday 1st November

Stockhausen is taking centre stage over the next week. There's a day long festival of his music staged by the Royal Northern College of Music in Manchester with the conservatoir's wind orchestra playing Lucifer's Tanz. They are performing it again on the South Bank in London next week during the arts centre's Klang tribute. Head of conducting at the RNCM, Clark Rundell, explains how they are rising to the challenge of Stockhausen.

Friday 31st October

Friday 31st October

Carl Herring is one of a new generation of guitarrists. He's respectful of the heritage of the instrument but also not afraid to push the boundaries to take the instrument where it's never been before. He also likes to point out that both Schubert and Chopin had guitars, and that new repertoir can come from honourable places. He performs at the new Kings Place in London this evening, and explains the impulses behind his second CD, just released.

Thursday 30th October

Thursday 30th October

Today we meet children from Ysgol Pen-y-Bryn in Colwyn Bay who've benefitted from Music Quest, organised through the Children and the Arts Foundation, which brings top flight musicians into remoter communities to engender an enduring interest in classical music; Plus a final reflection on the Two Moors Festival for this year from artistic Director Penny Adie.

Wednesday 29th October

Wednesday 29th October

Today - as part of Arts & Kids week on Classic FM Arts Daily - we hear from the children of Sandal Magna School in Wakefield in West Yorkshire, who were given the chance to visit the town's art gallery to get some hands on experience of art, thanks to the Children and the Arts Foundation.

Tuesday 28th October

Tuesday 28th October

We continue our focus on the work of the Children and the Arts Foundation today by speaking to Wakefield Arts Gallery in West Yorkshire and the Fitzwilliam Museum in Cambridge - both heavily involved in projects to bring kids into an enduring relationship with Art.

Monday 27th October

Monday 27th October

This is Arts and Kids week. A chance to celebrate the work of the Children and the Arts Foundation, and get involved with the many events up and down the country aimed at exposing kids to the arts and music. The Foundation was inspired by the Prince of Wales, and works especially in areas of social, economic and geographical isolation. Today we hear about how it came into being in the first place from its director Rebecca Eastmond.

Sunday 26th October

Sunday 26th October

Letters Home - Voices from Iraq is a play devised from letters, emails and postings gathered by an Ohio State University Drama director Jimmy Bohr. He says he wanted to find the `Warrior's Truth'. The show was presented recently in London where he made an appeal to find British input into the project; plus a new website that aims to bring the classical music community closer together.

Saturday 25th October

Saturday 25th October

This week sees a special concert celebrating the life and works of Howard Blake. The composer himself - who's just turned 70 - will conduct the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra in several works including his Piano Concerto. Chinese pianist William Chen has made study of Blake's music, and will perform on the night. He explains his fascination.

Friday 24th October

Friday 24th October

Today is Everybody Writes Day! It's a scheme run by the Book Trust to get everyone - especially kids, involved in the reading and writing habit. The aim is to show that it is easily done. Alison Judge is in charge of the project and explains how it works to Classic FM Arts Daily; plus the final concert of the Two Moors Festival was described as a collaborative event. Artistic Director, Penny Adie, explains what it was all about.

Thursday 23rd October

Thursday 23rd October

The young a cappella octet Voces8 is making a big name for itself at the moment. They already have a string of awards to their name. They'll be appearing with the Philharmonia and Brian Blessed at the Royal Festival Hall next month, and are off to tour northern Spain this weekend.

Wednesday 22nd October

Wednesday 22nd October

A piano theme to today's show. We start with nervous moments at the Two Moors Festival where it's Piano, Lights Action; plus a look ahead to Piano 2008 - a festival at the Bridgewater Hall in Manchster which plays tribute to the instrument, uniting the finest soloists, orchestras and conservatoirs. Internationally renowned pianist Barry Douglas is the artistic director.

Tuesday 21st October

Tuesday 21st October

Think Bach meets Liberace meets Scissor Sisters and you'll come close to envisaging the phenomenon that is Cameron Carpenter - the self styled Maverick Organ Play of New York. He's playing at the Royal Albert Hall this evening, and explains to Classic FM Arts Daily what appears to be a love hate relationship with his instrument.

Monday 20th October

Monday 20th October

The Two Moors Festival came to an end over the weekend. Another successful year thanks to the musicians and organisors and also the many volunteers and behind the scenes people. Today we meet Bert who looks after Oakhampton Church, one of the venues used this year. Plus musical favourite La Cage aux Folles gets a dusting off for a new West End run this week, starring comedy favourite Paula Wilcox who tells Arts Daily why it's a musical for our credit crunch times.

Sunday 19th October

Sunday 19th October

US Singer Idina Menzel is the woman of the moment. She's just brought out a new CD called I stand; She performed for Sir Andrew Lord Webber at his 60th birthday celebrations; and her song A Hero Comes Home used in Beowulf has been nominated for the World Sound Track Awards. She's equally at home in the studio, on the road and on the stage, with memorable appearances in Wicket and Rent. But which does she prefer?

Saturday 18th October

Saturday 18th October

The film music composer Patrick Doyle has penned literally hundreds of scores. So many in fact that he keeps losing them! His latest project, the music for an animated feature called Igor, has taken him into new territory. Classic FM's Anne-Marie Minhall talks to the composer about his work, and how he's trying to find his missing pieces; and another trip to the Two Moors festival focussing on a rather unique offering - a Church Crawl with music.

Friday 17th October

Friday 17th October

The Two Moors Festival are very well aware that every cloud has a silver lining. Quite apart from the origins of the festival in the desperate days of the foot and mouth outbreak on Exmoor and Dartmoor, a tragic piano delivery accident, meant they were gifted a splendid Bosedorfer. Artistic Director Penny Adie meets three participants who've benefitted from access to this magnificant instrument. Plus Manchester Art Gallery's first exhibition of the work of William Holman Hunt in forty years.

Thursday 16th October

Thursday 16th October

Classically British is unique project aiming to showcase modern and classical ballet by dancers of minority ethnic origin. It was started five years ago by Mark Elie, who cut his teeth at the Ballet Rambert and the dance Dance Theatre of Harlem, and who went on to have a successful career as a member of Hot Gossip and West end Shows. But his passion now is to present quality dance to act as a role model for young black and asian dancers.

Wednesday 15th October

Wednesday 15th October

It was a big day yesterday at the Two Moors Festival. Four very talented young musicians - the winners of the festival's Young Musicians Platform competition performed in front of Her Royal Highness the Countess of Wessex in the beautuful setting of St Andrew's Church in Ashburton in Devon. We hear their plans, the views of pianist Harvey Davies, and details of another action packed day from festival Artistic Director Penny Adie.

Tuesday 14th October

Tuesday 14th October

Timing is everything when you're publishing a book. On the surface, Lord Chris Patten - former Conservative Minister, European Commissioner and last British Governor of Hong Kong - was spot on. His new work `What Next, Surviving the 21st Century' expresses concern about the future of the world, economic, environmental and social. But in a world where frames of reference change so quickly - did he hanker after the chance to add a few more chapters?

Monday 13th October

Monday 13th October

100 years ago this month, the author Kenneth Grahame published Wind in the Willows which went on to become a great favourite with children and adults alike. He also resigned as Secretary at the Bank of England. A new display at the Bank's museum reveals the drama surrounding his resignation. Curator John Keyworth tells us more.

Sunday 12th October

Sunday 12th October

The latest event from the team that bring you Lake District Summer Music reaches a climax later today. Florilegium will perform Bolivian Baroque as part of the Music from a Foreign Land series at Ulverston's Coronation Hall. We hear from some of the unsung heroes who make both festivals a great success.

Saturday 11th October

Saturday 11th October

Bonn in Germany is recovering from this year's Beethovenfest during which you'd have been forgiven for thinking that the great composer was the only kid on the block. Not so, as Schumannhaus Museum hopes to point out. We visit the building where Robert Schumann spent his final days.

Friday 10th October

Friday 10th October

If you find yourself seeing top flight chamber orchestral ensembles in Egremont, Ludlow, Stamford, Dartington or Chatham over the weekend, then you have Orchestras Live to thank for it. New Chief executive Henry Little explains how Orchestras Live works and it's hopes for the future.

Thursday 9th October

Thursday 9th October

The start of the English Consort's London season is just under a week away. Under the direction of Harry Bicket, David Daniels will sing sacred arias from Bach, and dramatic arias from Handel. Shortly after they set off on a European tour, and then next year they travel to the States. Harry Bicket tells Classic FM Arts Daily, what makes the Consort special.

Wednesday 8th October

Wednesday 8th October

Scottish Opera's 5:15 project proved to be such an overwhelming success that they've decided to do it again. They idea is to partner some of the biggest names in the Scottish artistic community - sometimes creative extraordinarily imaginative partnerships. The General Director of Scottish Opera Alex Reedijk looks ahead; plus with just a few days to go until the start of the Canterbury Festival on Saturday, Festival Director Rosie Turner says it's all systems go.

Tuesday 7th October

Tuesday 7th October

Dougie Boyd has signed up again for another few years as Artistic Director of Manchester Camerata. He's already overseen a period of immense change in the chamber orchestra which now has its HQ within the Royal Northern College of Music. Dougie explains his vision along with Chief Executive Bob Riley.

Monday 6th October

Monday 6th October

Pianist Sophie Cashell almost didn't become a musician at all. Her performing aspirations almost came to a sticky end when her first instrument, a violin, came to a sticky end and was hidden under the sofa after a childhood mishap! Luckily she took up the more robust piano, and we meet her now, an award winning performer, with a new CD out today, and soon to grace the stage of IndigO2, as part of the Classic FM series at one of London's newest venues.

Sunday 5th October

Sunday 5th October

The 30th Chiddingly Festival in Sussex comes to an end today. It's been a hectic few weeks of remarkably high quality performances, workshops, drama, plus a beer festival. Today we hear from some of the people who make it what it is - an amazing heartfelt event.

Saturday 4th October

Saturday 4th October

The novel The Girl with the Pearl Earring by Tracy Chevalier has been through several incarnations, the latest being a stage play which has recently transferred to the West End. The music has been written especially by multi BAFTA and Novello award winner Christopher Gunning who talks about the trials and tribulations of writing for live theatre.

Friday 3rd October

Friday 3rd October

If you sat next to a cello case on a transatlantic flight recently, you may well have encountered the Amaryllis Fleming Cello jetting off on a whistle stop world tour in advance of its auction at the end of this month. It's expected to fetch over a million pounds! Plus there's still time to catch the Latin beat at the Oxford Chamber Music Festival, including the world premier of a new tango this evening.

Thursday 2nd October

Thursday 2nd October

Autumn is a season of fruitfulness, especially in the music world, with many ensembles and venues announcing their new seasons. Bridgewater Hall in Manchester is no exception, and what a season they have - a plethora of European Orchestras, Bryn Terfel, Sir Willard White and much much more. The venue's artistic advisor Peter Davison brings us up to date. Plus the angst of Turner Prize winner Martin Creed who premiered a new piece with the CBSO in Birmingham last week.

Wednesday 1st October

Wednesday 1st October

The latest DVD from the documentary film maker Christopher Nupen hits the shops today. It features an intimate portrait of the eminent conductor Vladimir Ashkenazy. Nupen tells Arts Daily about the magic of the film, and why he believes its almost impossible to create its like again.

Tuesday 30th September

Tuesday 30th September

Hear Here is the UK's first classical music project dedicated to listening, presented by the Royal Philharmonic Society along with Classic FM, and supported by the Paul Hamlyn Foundation. The listening focus this month was how memory, familiarity, change and preconceptions shape our listening enjoyment.

Monday 29th September

Monday 29th September

The Facebook Four are back with a vengeance - the latest CD from Blake hits the shops today. It again displays the eclectic song choice of the i-pod generation. Stephen, Ollie, Jules and Dominic tell Arts Daily why they've been nervously awaiting today!

Sunday 28th September

Sunday 28th September

Tomorrow evening YCAT - Young Concert Artists Trust presents several of their new faces. The organisation scoops up the best young soloists and ensembles and shepherds them through the early stages of their professional lives. We hear from two of them - Romanian pianist Alexandra Dariescu and the Heath Quartet.

Saturday 27th September

Saturday 27th September

Sometimes watching music being made is just as fascinating as attending a concert. Today at the Purcell Room on the Southbank in London there's a chance to hear two of the most interesting exponents of the Chamber Pop genre - Ted Barnes and the North Sea Radio Orchestra. They have an open rehearsal during the daytime - which is free to attend - and then they have a concert in the evening. Composer and Musician Ted Barnes explains the Chamber Pop genre to Arts Daily.

Thursday 25th September

Thursday 25th September

The composer York Bowen gets a run out this evening at the Wigmore Hall in London thanks to Endymion who've been at the forefront of reviving English music. Plus a performers eye view of the Windsor Festival.

Friday 26th September

Friday 26th September

The Fictionist is a collaboration between the musician and composer Surinder Sandhu and the Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra. It's been described as Led Zeppelin meets Star Wars, but even that wild description fails to comprehend the influences that went into creating the work, part commissioned for Liverpool's European City of Culture celebrations. The composer explains his relationship with the RLPO and how the piece came about.

Wednesday 24th September

Wednesday 24th September

We're just a week away from the opening of London's latest concert venue. And the organisors of Kings Place have pulled out all the stops to celebrate with 100 concerts in the first five days, three of which are curated by violist and composer John Metcalf, whose own band launches a new CD today.

Tuesday 23rd September

Tuesday 23rd September

Esa Pekka Salonen takes up the reigns as the Philharmonia's new principal conductor and artistic advisor, and talks to Anne-Marie Minhall about the orchestra's new season; and Jonathan Brett, conductor of the English Classical Players champions the Watford Colosseum.

Monday 22nd September

Monday 22nd September

The Mystery of York Bowen - described by some as the English Rachmaninoff, and yet so rarely played. He was tremendously popular before the first world war, but then has been largely ignored by the musical community. And a visit to the Windsor Festival's literary side?

Sunday 21st September

Sunday 21st September

Kiwi new boy Will Martin releases his debut CD this week. He was unleashed onto a British public earlier this year, with his own brand of home grown and international favourites. He talks to Arts Daily about his first six months in the public eye.

Saturday 20th September

Saturday 20th September

A quick check on two festivals to see how they're coming on. The Windsor Festival is in full swing at the moment, and we discover how an Austrian built piano is helping the Two Moors Festival on its way.

Friday 19th September

Friday 19th September

The Arts & Business awards are celebrating their 30th this year, against a backdrop of enormous economic uncertainty. With their glitzy ceremony fast approaching, Chief Executive Colin Tweedy, expresses his confidence in business and industry realising the long term benefits of working in partnership with the Arts.

Thursday 18th September

Thursday 18th September

This evening at St John's Smith Square in London sees the start of the 9th Rosenblatt Recitals series which aims to bring the very best operatic talent to a UK audience. Kicking off the series is American Bel Canto singer Gregory Kunde, who tells Classic FM Arts Daily how he likes to push the boundaries of the Rossini genre.

Wednesday 17th September

Wednesday 17th September

The Boy in the Striped Pyjamas tells the story of the eight year old Bruno, the son of a Nazi camp comandant, who strikes up a forbidden relationship with a jewish boy held in a camp. Classic FM's Anne-Marie Minhall speaks to screenplay writer Mark Herman, and the actor David Thewlis who plays Bruno's father.

Tuesday 16th September

Tuesday 16th September

Amongst the great plethora of festivals in this country - the name of Chiddingly may not be uppermost in your mind. And yet this event in a small East Sussex village has been going strong for 30 years! Three weeks of music and drama, literary events, puppet shows and this year also a beer festival, attracting some of the best talent around. The organisors tell us more.

Monday 15th September

Monday 15th September

It's to pin down Mario Frangoulis. The Greek tenor has enjoyed a successful stage and recording career not just in the UK but across the world for the past 20 years or more - appearing in West End musicals, and as a highly successful soloist. That's where you'll find him this Friday, as he takes to the stage of the Royal Albert Hall for a vocal spectacular with special guests Natasha Marsh, Justin Hayward, Steve Balsamo, Lara Fabian and Anthony Inglis.

Sunday 14th September

Sunday 14th September

The Kalichstein Laredo Robinson Trio have a long an distinguished pedigree. one of their first engagements was for President Carter at his inauguration back in 1977. Since then they've had more than 30 years of unbroken collaboration which marks them out as one of the most durable of ensembles today. Pianist Joseph Kalichstein outlines their mammoth undertaking at the Wigmore Hall starting today, to play Beethoven's piano trios in just three concerts.

Saturday 13th September

Saturday 13th September

The finishing touches are being put to this year's Windsor Festival. The opening parade through the town kicks off tomorrow afternoon, and there then follows two weeks of top notch music, literary events and heritage walks - 82 events in all. Festival Director Martin Denny explores the highlights, this year's International String Competition and the upcoming Cultural Olympiad.