Poster Man in a blue suit and bow-tie with white background
Composer James Lee III
© Roy Cox Photography
Performance Today®

James Lee III

Performance Today - August 14, 2025

James Lee III is the composer of over 80 works for orchestra, chamber ensemble, piano, vocals, choral ensemble, and more. Lee is currently composer-in-residence with the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra. In today's program, we'll take you to a concert in South Carolina* to hear Anthony McGill and the Pacifica Quartet play the Quintet for Clarinet and String Quartet by James Lee III.

Episode Playlist

Hour 1

Sergei Rachmaninoff: The Muse
Sheku Kanneh-Mason, cello | Isata Kanneh-Mason, piano
Album: Muse
London/Decca 4851630

Sergei Rachmaninoff: Piano Concerto No. 3 in D minor, Op. 30: Mvt 1 Allegro ma non tanto
Jonathan Mamora, piano | Hilton Head Symphony Orchestra | John Morris Russell, conductor
Hilton Head International Piano Competition, First Presbyterian Church, Hilton Head Island, SC

James Lee III: Quintet for Clarinet and String Quartet
Anthony McGill, clarinet | Pacifica Quartet
Lillian & Robert Utsey Chamber Music Series, Brooks Center for the Performing Arts, Clemson University, Clemson, SC

Mark Buller: John the Revelator
Steven A. Newberry, organ | ROCO | Mei-Ann Chen, conductor
ROCO, St. John the Divine Church, Houston, TX

Hour 2

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart: Overture to La Clemenza di Tito
Lausanne Chamber Orchestra | Yehudi Menuhin, conductor
Album: The Classics - Mozart: Overtures
Virgin Classics 63284

Antonín Dvořák: Symphonic Poem: The Noon Witch, Op. 108
Berlin Radio Symphony Orchestra | Ruth Reinhardt, conductor
EBU, Konzerthaus, Berlin, Germany

Benjamin Horne: I Remember You
Atlanta Chamber Players
Peachtree Road United Methodist Church, Atlanta, GA

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart: Horn Quintet in E-flat Major, K. 407
Stewart Rose, French Horn | Arturo Delmoni, violin | Katarzyna Bryla-Weiss, viola | Michael Roth, viola | Peter Sanders, cello
Central Vermont Chamber Music Festival, Chandler Center for the Arts, Randolph, VT

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Latest Performance Today® Episodes

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Latest Performance Today® Episodes

James Lee III

James Lee III

James Lee III is the composer of over 80 works for orchestra, chamber ensemble, piano, vocals, choral ensemble, and more. Lee is currently composer-in-residence with the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra. In today's program, we'll take you to a concert in South Carolina* to hear Anthony McGill and the Pacifica Quartet play the Quintet for Clarinet and String Quartet by James Lee III.

1:59:00
Respighi's Pines of Rome

Respighi's Pines of Rome

In 1924, Ottorino Respighi captured Rome's pine forests in a tone poem, complete with a recorded nightingale that still sings in performances today. Join us at a concert in Round Top, Texas, to hear Respighi’s musical postcard, The Pines of Rome.

1:59:00
Kevin Puts: Home

Kevin Puts: Home

For composer Kevin Puts, the key of C major is a sonic representation of "home." It's familiar and comforting. In 2019, Puts wrote a string quartet that begins with that familiar key, but goes on to what Puts calls "the search for new and unfamiliar harmonic terrain." He wanted the music to explore the sonic possibilities, but then return to his musical idea of home. Puts knew that, however he got there, the feeling of home would be changed by the journey. Join us today to hear the Miro Quartet play Home by Kevin Puts.

1:59:00
Young Artist in Residence: Samuel Frois

Young Artist in Residence: Samuel Frois

We’re proud to introduce violinist Samuel Frois, the next member of our 2025 cohort of PT Young Artists in Residence. Samuel recently joined Fred Child in our St. Paul studio. Listen to the music and the entire interview here.

37:49
Samuel Frois

Samuel Frois

It's time for our next 2025 Young Artist in Residence: violinist Samuel Frois. On today's show, Samuel joins Fred Child at our studio in Saint Paul to perform works by Brazilian composers Heitor Villa-Lobos and Andre Mehmari.

1:59:00
PT Weekend: Gabriela Montero

PT Weekend: Gabriela Montero

In 2016, pianist and composer Gabriela Montero wrote a concerto reflecting how people perceive Latin America. She says it's not an overtly political piece, but it does express the light and dark sides of the subject. Today, we'll hear Gabriela Montero play her “Latin Concerto” with the Swedish Radio Symphony Orchestra in Stockholm. Plus, Bruce Adolphe has this week’s Piano Puzzler.

1:59:00
Lucas Debargue

Lucas Debargue

Pianist Lucas Debargue quit piano lessons in 2005 when he was 15 years old. As recently as 2015, he worked as a cashier at a supermarket. Then, he made an out-of-nowhere splash at the 2015 Tchaikovsky competition in Russia and has had a lively career ever since. Tune in today to hear Lukas Debargue play Ravel’s Piano Concerto in G Major at a concert in Stockholm, Sweden.

1:59:00
Music for a 'dearly beloved brother'

Music for a 'dearly beloved brother'

Johann Sebastian Bach wrote only one piece of keyboard music that was programmatic, meaning it tells a story. The 19-year-old Bach composed this piece for his older brother Johann Jakob when he left home to join the Swedish Army band as an oboist. On today's show, we'll hear Bach's musical description of the occasion: the Capriccio on the Departure of his most Dearly Beloved Brother.

1:59:00
Victor Ni

Victor Ni

We're pleased to present clarinetist Victor Ni, one of our next 2025 PT Young Artists in Residence. On today's program, Victor joins Fred Child for music and conversation in our Saint Paul studio.

1:59:00
The rise of Alexandre Kantorow

The rise of Alexandre Kantorow

Alexandre Kantorow enjoyed piano lessons as a boy, but he also spent plenty of time on the playground. It wasn't until high school that he started to take the piano seriously, and things happened quickly for him after that. In 2019, at age 22, he won both a Gold Medal and the Grand Prize at the Tchaikovsky Competition in Russia. Today, Alexandre Kantorow joins Germany's WDR Symphony Orchestra to perform Franz Liszt's Piano Concerto No. 2.

1:59:00
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About Performance Today®

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American Public Media’s Performance Today® is America’s most popular classical music radio program and a winner of the 2014 Gabriel Award for artistic achievement. The show is broadcast on hundreds of public radio stations across the country, including at 1 p.m. central weekdays on Minnesota Public Radio. More information about our stations can be found at APM Distribution.

Performance Today® features live concert recordings that can’t be heard anywhere else, highlights from new album releases, and in-studio performances and interviews. Performance Today® is based at the APM studios in St. Paul, Minnesota, but is frequently on the road, with special programs broadcast from festivals and public radio stations around the country. Also, each Wednesday, composer Bruce Adolphe joins host Fred Child for a classical musical game and listener favorite: the Piano Puzzler.

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