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How German avant-garde composer Stockhausen wrote an opera for each day of the week. Read more
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Then there was Light - Stockhausen's LICHT, his opera for the seven days of the week
How German avant-garde composer Stockhausen wrote an opera for each day of the week.
Staycationing in the style of abroad
Dr Seán Williams explores Little Switzerlands — a long way from the Alps.
Great Scott
A fresh perspective on Sir Walter Scott, more than 250 years on from his birth.
Studio in the Sky
How 9/11 influenced the work of artists who were part of a residency in the Twin Towers.
The Many Diagnoses of Robert Schumann
Phil Hebblethwaite traces the explanations for Schumann‘s illness and death.
How to Rebuild a City
Dr Lisa Mullen tells the story of how postwar Coventry became the City of Tomorrow.
Dear Phillis
The legacy of Phillis Wheatley, the first published African American poet.
The Gorbals - Past and Present
A New Generation Thinker brings their research into the modern mainstream.
Malcolm Arnold, the Tortured Composer
Simon Heffer champions one of Britain’s greatest symphonists, composer Malcolm Arnold.
A Trip to My Grave
Sophie Coulombeau reflects on the contemporary reluctance to face death.
Nuit Blanche
What is it about the night? Artists and writers reveal their nocturnal creative processes.
A Tree Story
Martin Handley traces the journey of a violin from forest to concert hall via its builder.
Afterwords: Simone de Beauvoir
A portrait of Simone de Beauvoir through her own words and those of critics and irers.
Afterwords: Mary Oliver
A dive into the world of American writer Mary Oliver, with recordings of the poet herself.
Afterwords: Stuart Hall
The writer and academic Stuart Hall in his own words and those of irers of his work.
In Search of the Sublime
In Chamonix-Mont-Blanc, artist Emma Stibbon RA explores the idea of the sublime.
This Land of Words and Water
A journey into the Ireland of Louis MacNeice’s poetic imagination.
Aida at 150
Flora Willson tells the story of Verdi's operatic masterpiece from an Egyptian lens.
Tchaikovsky's Island of Inspiration
How a trip to a remote island monastery inspired Pyotr Tchaikovsky's First Symphony.
Breaking the Ice
Seán Williams glides through a brief history of lake skating.
The Pigeons at the British Museum
Will Abberley reconsiders Richard Jefferies's essay The Pigeons at the British Museum.
Hidden Women and Silenced Scores
Leah Broad uncovers the sometimes shocking stories of three marginalised female composers.
The Primitivism of Primitivism
Alastair Sooke reassesses the origins and relevance of primitivism in art history.
The Art of a Day
Why do writers and audiences keep coming back to one-day artworks like Joyce's Ulysses?
A Chinese Odyssey: Artists, Poets and Exiles in Interwar London
Paul French explores a unique moment in British-Chinese solidarity between 1937 to 1945.
Nixon in China
Exploring John Adams' opera on the 50th anniversary of President Nixon's visit to China.
Marian Anderson - Of Thee We Sing
The life and legacy of pioneering contralto Marian Anderson presented by Linton Stephens.
Florence Price’s Chicago and the Black Female Fellowship
How a unique Chicago musical sisterhood helped the music of Florence Price to thrive.
Forbidden Fruit
Why the forbidden fruit is not an apple.
Krishnamurti in England
Paul Purgas reflects on the legacy of spiritual teacher Jiddu Krishnamurti.
I Arrive without Leaving - The Story of Women Surrealist Poets
Alexandra Reza on the early women surrealist poets and writers who shaped the movement.