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Pianist Javier Perianes on Performing Saint-Saëns with the Los Angeles Philharmonic, the Art of the Short Siesta, and His Four-Word Definition of Success

The Spanish pianist Javier Perianes is racking up quite a lot of frequent flyer miles these days.

This season alone, his concert schedule has him zigzagging the globe to perform with the Los Angeles Philharmonic and Dallas Symphony here in the States, Europe's Budapest Festival Orchestra and the Oslo Philharmonic, and a whirlwind trip to Australia for concerts with the Melbourne and Sydney Symphony Orchestras, among many other engagements.

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Rediscovering Mozart: How Soprano Marie-Eve Munger Is Creating a Fuller Picture of the Composer on Her New Album, Maestrino Mozart

In early 2012, the coloratura soprano Marie-Eve Munger received an offer every opera singer dreams of — a lead role in a Mozart opera.

But there was a catch. It wasn't a role in Don Giovanni, or The Marriage of Figaro, or any of the popular Mozart operas performed every season across the globe. The opera was Il sogno di Scipione, which Mozart wrote when he was just 16 years old.

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Leading With Curiosity: Hilary Hahn on Her New Album, Eclipse, Falling for Ginastera, and the Many Wonders of a Facial Massage

For violinist Hilary Hahn, finding success as an international soloist has never been about sticking to the same menu of concertos by Beethoven, Mendelssohn, and Sibelius. Now in the fourth decade of her storied career, the three-time Grammy Award winner has consistently worked to expand the scope of the violin canon — commissioning a slate of new works from composers like Edgar Meyer, Jennifer Higdon, and Lera Auerbach.

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Podcast Jonathan Eifert Podcast Jonathan Eifert

Shades of Light and Dark: Conductor Gary Thor Wedow on Seeing Colors in Music, Leading Handel's Atalanta at Juilliard Opera, and Living the Queens Life

Conductor Gary Thor Wedow has often found inspiration for his music-making in the visual arts. But a recent visit to an exhibition at the Metropolitan Museum of Art gave Wedow, a specialist in Baroque opera, an altogether new view of ancient Greek and Roman art — and early music.

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Spirituality Meets Science: Composer Robot Koch on Reimagining His Album ‘The Next Billion Years’ and Finding Inspiration in the Underwater World of Jacques Cousteau

The life of composer Robert Koch is a study in contrasts.

Raised in the same area of Germany as the Brothers Grimm — with its foggy forests and medieval castles — he now lives among the sunny splendor of Los Angeles. And although Koch leads a monk-like spiritual practice of yoga, meditation, and pranayama breathwork, he relies on digital technologies to produce the lush, atmospheric sounds of his electronic music.

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Podcast Jonathan Eifert Podcast Jonathan Eifert

Questions of Time: Pianist Klaudia Kudełko on Her Debut Album, Finding Inspiration in Fashion, and Her Mission to Make Musical Introductions

When most musicians join me to record the Classical Post podcast, they need a few minutes to settle in. This makes sense — whether they're an instrumentalist, singer, or composer, they're used to communicating through a medium outside of their speaking voice. So it can take some time to shake off the nerves.

But the moment I sat down with pianist Klaudia Kudełko to discuss her stunning debut album, Time, she was fired up and ready to dive into her personal artistic mission: to connect people with classical music.

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Podcast Jonathan Eifert Podcast Jonathan Eifert

Cruising Down the Strange Highway of Life: Composer Gity Razaz on Her Debut Album and Finding Inspiration in the Surreal

The cover art for most classical albums usually relies on a glamorous studio shot of the artist or a generically tranquil landscape that hardly relates to the music we're about to experience.

But that's not at all the case on the cover of The Strange Highway, the debut album from composer Gity Razaz. A pencil and ink drawing depicting a cloaked figure with an arrow through the heart, whose head is a series of celestial orbs and auras, this artwork from Daniel Martin Diaz not only draws us in — it perfectly captures Razaz's sound world, one inspired by the Surrealism art movement of the early 20th century.  

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The Art of Arts Presenting: Jeremy Geffen on Building Community and Making Introductions Through the Performing Arts

The savviest arts administrators know that putting a concert season together is more than programming popular repertoire or bringing big-name soloists to town. For Jeremy Geffen, executive and artistic director of Cal Performances at UC Berkeley, bringing to life all of the organization's artistic and educational activities — about 80 events per season — centers around ideas of building and serving communities across the Bay Area.

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The Pride of Paraguay: Guitarist Berta Rojas on Her New Album, Legado, Classical Guitar's Women Pioneers, and Finding Inspiration in Her Heritage

So much of the way classical musicians perform or even think about music is informed by the work of past generations. But what happens when history books omit certain musicians, often due to their gender, race, or sexuality? How can those gaps in music history — and our shared musical legacy — be restored?

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Podcast Jonathan Eifert Podcast Jonathan Eifert

Music With a Mission: Harpist Yolanda Kondonassis on Her New Album, Five Minutes for Earth, and Connecting Activism and the Arts

Classical musicians are incredibly passionate about their work. But that doesn't mean they can't make room in their hectic lives for other passion projects. For harpist Yolanda Kondonassis — one of the world's greatest soloists and head of the harp departments at the Cleveland Institute and Oberlin Conservatory — earth conservation has been the focus of her activism for more than 20 years. And it's led her down some fascinating roads both inside and outside the music world.

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Reframing Classical Music's History: Gillian Friedman Fox and Shawn Okpebholo on the 2022 Newport Classical Festival and Enriching a Legacy of Black Composers in America

How does a storied summer music festival thrive in the 21st century? Especially one located in a town best known for its 19th-century gilded glamor and magnificent mansions? For Newport Classical's executive director, Gillian Friedman Fox, it's all about finding ways to respect history and tradition while forging new paths for access and inclusion. "For Newport Classical, people are looking for a classical music and arts experience that you just can't find anywhere else," Friedman Fox says in the latest episode of the Classical Post podcast.

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