Poster Chemistry
Chemistry Flasks
Joe Sullivan
Performance Today®

The Chemistry of Alexander Borodin

Two American scientists won the Nobel Prize for chemistry on Wednesday. Something about "G-protein-coupled receptors." It's all very mysterious and important and hard to understand. If only Alexander Borodin was still alive, he could translate for us. Borodin was perhaps the only professional chemist and composer. He never won a Nobel Prize, but did have an important chemical reaction named for him. History remembers him more for his music, though. We'll hear his Symphony No. 2, from a concert in Amsterdam.

Episode Playlist

Hour 1

Alexander Borodin: Scherzo from String Quartet No. 2 in D
The Emerson String Quartet

Joseph Haydn: Sonata in B Minor, Hob. XVI:32
Christian Zacharias, piano
Chopin and his Europe International Music Festival, Warsaw, Poland

Giovanni Perluigi da Palestrina: Exultate Deo
The Odhecaton Ensemble, Paolo da Col, director
Regensburg Early Music Days, Regensburg, Germany

Alexander Borodin: Symphony No. 2 in B Minor
The Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra, Karel Mark Chichon, conductor
The Concertgebouw, Amsterdam, the Netherlands

Hour 2

Sergei Rachmaninoff: Prelude in G Minor, Op. 23, No. 5
The Vancouver Symphony Orchestra, Sergiu Comissiona, conductor

Anonymous (arranged by Milos Valent): A New Hornpipe
Solamente Naturali, Milos Valent, violin and director
Boston Early Music Festival, Boston

Biagio Marini: L'Aguzzona from Affetti Musicali
Quicksilver
Boston Early Music Festival, Boston

Perfchat with Jonathan Biss, Part 3: Perfchat

Robert Schumann: Fantasie in C, Op. 17
Jonathan Biss, piano
NPR Studio 4A, Washington, D.C.

Benjamin Britten: Four Sea Interludes from Peter Grimes, Op. 33a
The Vancouver Symphony Orchestra, Bramwell Tovey, conductor
Orpheum Theatre, Vancouver, British Columbia

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