Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra
No piano concerto starts with an air of such hushed anticipation as Prokofiev's 2nd. A hot young talent at the piano, Alexander Gavrylyuk, makes this a very special concert.
With Steve Seel
No piano concerto starts with an air of such hushed anticipation as Prokofiev's 2nd. A hot young talent at the piano, Alexander Gavrylyuk, makes this a very special concert.
A superstar violinist stretches his conducting wings...
Johannes Moser may not be a household name yet, but the fact that this German artist is going to play Shostakovich's First Cello Concerto -- written for no one less than Rostropovich -- with arguably the world's greatest orchestra says it all.
Scott Yoo soloed on violin at 12 with the Boston Symphony, then went on to get a degree in physics from Harvard, and in the last decade has made his name with a conductor's baton. This week, the astonishingly gifted young musician steps on the podium to lead the Saint Paul Chamber Orchestra.
SymphonyCast®, with host Steve Seel, is a two-hour weekly radio program featuring a full-length concert by a major orchestra. Material is drawn from Europe’s premier symphony orchestras, along with U.S. orchestras such as the Los Angeles Philharmonic, the Nashville Symphony and the Cleveland Orchestra.
Steve Seel possesses a broad knowledge of many musical genres, having hosted radio programs ranging from classical to jazz and even avant-garde music at radio stations around the country. Steve began his love affair with public radio at 24 working whatever shifts he could at his hometown station of WUSF-FM in Tampa, Florida, and from there worked his way to snowy Buffalo, New York, and its renowned classical station WNED-FM, where he hosted middays and the weekly experimental-music show Present Tense. In 2005, Steve became one of the founding voices on Minnesota Public Radio's eclectic station, the Current. While there, he hosted afternoons and mornings, and conducted in-depth interviews with pop music luminaries ranging from Brian Eno to David Byrne to Tori Amos. Steve is a basement composer obsessed with all things both minimalist and slow, and might actually be incapable of writing anything that exceeds 75 beats-per-minute.
Daniel Nass is the producer of SymphonyCast®. He is responsible for creating the sound of the show, including choosing music programming and conducting artist interviews. In his nonproducer life, he is an avid runner and an award-winning composer.
Michael "Ozzie" Osborne is the Technical Director for SymphonyCast®. He masters the live and recorded music recordings that are programmed for each SymphonyCast® show. He also enjoys photography, listening to music and bicycling.
Complete playlist information is available for each show. Click on a specific episode to access a detailed playlist.
It’s the opening trumpet fanfare from Steve Heitzeg’s Nobel Symphony.
It’s possible, but not likely. Many of the performances that you hear on SymphonyCast® are not available for purchase because they were played at a live concert. In some cases, the musicians have recorded that same music for a commercial CD. If so, album title and recording label information will be available in the episode playlist.
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