A compilation of the latest Witness History programmes.
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Mozart Podcasts
Welcome to Mozart and Dorsa's Podcast where amazing things happen
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Whatever I want
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Open format podcast
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For 30 years The Mainly Mozart Festival has been gathering the greatest collection of orchestral players in the United States. This convoclave of musical champions comes together in San Diego every June for five exclusive concerts in the intimate Balboa Theater. Music Director, Michael Francis, is guiding the orchestra in a six year exploration of Mozart as a composer and personality.
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Making artificial intelligence practical, productive & accessible to everyone. Practical AI is a show in which technology professionals, business people, students, enthusiasts, and expert guests engage in lively discussions about Artificial Intelligence and related topics (Machine Learning, Deep Learning, Neural Networks, GANs, MLOps, AIOps, LLMs & more). The focus is on productive implementations and real-world scenarios that are accessible to everyone. If you want to keep up with the lates ...
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Mozart’s world rediscovered in objects of his time. Professor Cliff Eisen looks at Mozart’s world through objects that were close to him. From BBC Radio 3.
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Music, and more particularly singing is always with us. A certain day we may find ourselves moody and with a melody from La forza del destino playing over and over again in our head. Or maybe we feel like a superhero as we've doing great at work and then we feel like Calaf solving the 3 riddles that Turandot has proposed. First, we would like to share that this is not a place for the platitudes that are everywhere, telling my favorite singer is always the greatest in everything he's sung; an ...
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The Worldwide Leader in TV Discussion
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from Bethoven to Mozart and many others
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The Great Composers dives deep into the lives behind some of the greatest music ever written. Host Karla Walker and conductor Scott O'Neil look at the world through the eyes of these gifted artists. Learn about obstacles they overcame, and their loves, losses, successes and failures. You'll feel you know Mozart, Rachmaninov and others as friends.
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Your Mix Sucks is more than just a podcast about audio production—it’s your backstage pass to the real art and science of mixing. Hosted by the team behind the acclaimed Your Mix Sucks book by Marc Mozart, each episode cuts through tired clichés and digs into the unconventional techniques pro engineers swear by. Discover how referencing on a cheap kitchen radio can be a game-changer, why tuning your kick drum can unify your entire low end, and how to tap into the hidden power of harmonic gen ...
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The comedy podcast that takes history seriously. In each episode of You’re Dead to Me from BBC Radio 4, Greg Jenner is joined by a comedian and an expert historian to learn and laugh about the past. History isn’t just about dates and textbooks – it’s about extraordinary characters, amazing stories, and some very questionable fashion choices. How long did it take to build an Egyptian pyramid? What does the Bayeux Tapestry reveal about medieval life? Why did it take nearly half a millennium fo ...
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Matuse Peace and Mohammad 'Mozart' Mayahi tackle popular beliefs and popular culture, having humorous and witty conversations that are as enlightening and lit as a... Burning Bush. In this episode Matuse & Mozart discuss things from the death of Stan Lee to Kanye's Metro Boomin feature save, down to how to find your true self-potential. It's funny, it's deep, it will enlighten you and motivate you. join us and please sub to our Youtube.
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“Mozart, Beethoven y Mas “, hosted by Dr. Octavio Choy, is a program designed to provide the tools to appreciate and enjoy classical music. Dr. Choy requests your comments so please feel free to let him know what you think. Along with the history of classical music and composers, there are descriptions of the most common instruments used in today’s orquestra. The program is conducted in Spanish. En Mozart, Beethoven y Mas, el Dr.Octavio Choy nos ayuda a disfrutar de la musica clasica, a trav ...
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My self indulgent musicwhoring starts here. Indulge my self induglency!
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Weekly conversations about classical music with leading musicians and writers
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Café Concerts
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The Audio Long Read podcast is a selection of the Guardian’s long reads, giving you the opportunity to get on with your day while listening to some of the finest longform journalism the Guardian has to offer, including in-depth writing from around the world on current affairs, climate change, global warming, immigration, crime, business, the arts and much more. The podcast explores a range of subjects and news across business, global politics (including Trump, Israel, Palestine and Gaza), mo ...
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Ideal for opera lovers & people curious about opera music - live & recorded. Here you find Mozart Verdi Wagner Strauss Bizet - even Maria Callas & Janáček. News from round the world
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Host Julie Amacher provides an in-depth exploration of a new classical music release each week.
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This classical music podcast showcases the independent artists and record labels associated with DCD Records. Each program features a mix of familiar and obscure works, but with a common thread; the artists and the labels are presenting music they're passionate about.
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The history, philosophy, and future of the greatest music in the world: Heavy Metal... Also there's jokes!
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Overshadowed is a podcast about the siblings and spouses of people who changed the world. Have you ever felt overlooked or irrelevant because of your sibling’s accomplishments? How do you think Asia Booth felt after her brother assassinated Abraham Lincoln? Pretty bad! It overtook her life, and she even wrote a memoir trying to humanize John. ”He was so nice to everyone, I have no idea how this could’ve happened!” kind of stuff. Check out episode one to learn more (and try to overlook its ”e ...
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Each week three people from the Minnesota arts community talk about a performance, opening, or event they're excited to see or want others to check out.
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The Music Post is music, mostly new, mostly piano, delivered to you. Old episodes and occasional future episodes will explore a piece or a musical trend in more depth, and may feature conversations with other musicians.
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Informal and Laugh out ,Chat, Comedy, Topical, Snacks, Puzzles, Coffee.
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Coolclassic is a podcast about classical music that aims to bring music lovers most especially classical music enthusiastic who find joy in listening to beautiful rhythm and sound that keeps the soul at peace. Coolclassic will bring to you classical pieces from Baroque Period to the Romantic periods from composers like Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Joseph Hadyn, George Frideric Handel, Ludwig van Beethoven, Antonio Vivaldi, Frederic Chopin, Andrea Bochelli and many more other great legends of cla ...
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Conversations from the world of classical music hosted by Presto Music's Paul Thomas, David Smith, Rob Cowan, Matt Ash and more. Guests have included artists such as Jess Gillam, Anna Lapwood and Patricia Kopatchinskaja, and respected writers and critics like Rob Cowan, David Hurwitz and Andrew Mellor. Visit us at www.prestomusic.com
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Cancer diagnosis? Been there twice. Here I share daily bite-size (2 to 5 minutes) tools to get you healthy physically and mentally. Subscribe and tune in for tips on diet, exercise, yoga, mindset, and the power of prayer. See you inside!
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What if your favorite artist had a story you never fully heard? From Mozart to Mitski, AI Oughta Listen delivers deep, emotionally rich audio biographies of the most fascinating musicians on Earth. Their origins. Their sound. Their ripple effects. Written like a love letter. Told like a secret. Researched like an obsession.
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A podcast containing a wide variety of subject matter. It usually consists of creative writing, creative songwriting (more on the experimental, instrumental side), discussions on great bands, comedic relief and other odd bits and pieces that are mused upon by the ones who live.
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Operatic gems, secret live recordings, and honestly a little filth... from the collection of Christopher Corwin. Presented by: https://parterre.com
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An exciting new podcast by Marc Eliot Stein of Literary Kicks. Why is opera relevant today? This sometimes-lost art form hides a fascinating, vibrant world. In our first episode, we discuss whether Verdi's Otello is better than Shakespeare's Othello, whether Othello had PTSD, and what it means that Mozart's Le Nozze di Figaro is an Italian opera by a German Austrian and a Venetian Jew based on a French play that takes place in Spain. Welcome to the first episode of Lost Music: Exploring Lite ...
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Sticky Notes is a classical music podcast for everyone, whether you are just getting interested in classical music for the first time, or if you've been listening to it and loving it all your life. Interviews with great artists, in depth looks at pieces in the repertoire, and both basic and deep dives into every era of music. Classical music is absolutely for everyone, so let's start listening! Note - Seasons 1-5 will be returning over the next year. They have been taken down in order to be ...
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Two women. Half the population. Several thousand years of history. About an hour. Join us on an award-winning journey through herstory! The History Chicks celebrates the lives of remarkable women from ancient times to the modern day, exploring women’s history in engaging episodes full of deep research, pop culture references, and the occasional tumble down a rabbit hole.
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Welcome to The Library! These great halls are filled with the stories of our world's great musical minds, from the masters across ancient civilizations to the champions of our digital age. In this library, Menken, Powell, Zimmer, and Williams share shelves with Mozart, Beethoven, Tchaikovsky, and Wagner, and the tales of composers not as widely known are told with the same enthusiasm as their famous colleagues. Our Curator, Stephen Trygar, invites you to explore this wonderous library with h ...
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Composers Datebook™ is a daily two-minute program designed to inform, engage, and entertain listeners with timely information about composers of the past and present. Each program notes significant or intriguing musical events involving composers of the past and present, with appropriate and accessible music related to each.
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The Drag: Stories showcases excellent audio storytelling from students at the University of Texas at Austin.
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Naxos Classical Spotlight explores the world of classical music. Along the way host Raymond Bisha shares the stories about the music, and the musicians who make it.
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Music plus reflections on faith and culture from a seat of Catholic learning since the 13th century. Chavagnes International College was first a medieval Benedictine monastery, then a seminary in the wake of the French Revolution and now an international Catholic boarding school for boys with its own Liberal Arts university college. Our podcast includes music from our liturgy (mostly the boys' choir singing chant and sacred polyphony, with some Bach and Mozart), plus talks from conferences a ...
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You’ll love Open Rehearsal in London! This exciting programme of events, running from Friday 29th September to Sunday 1st October '06, will enable you to sample the world-class music, theatre and dance that London offers - for free. If you’ve never set foot inside a concert hall, or you’d like a bit of inspiration about what to do, here’s a cut-out-and-keep A to Z guide to classical music and the Open Rehearsal weekend. For more information, visit www.openrehearsal.co.uk
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Matthew Miranda discusses the most meaningful stories from the world of sports, both on and off the field. Find the show on Twitter @JacobinSports!
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Two professional violists, Liz O'Hara and Stephanie Knutsen, explore diverse perspectives in the music field through conversations together and with friends. Whether gaining fresh insights from industry innovators or laughing their way through a show like Mozart in the Jungle, Liz and Steph hope to inspire musicians, particularly freelancers, to feel a sense of agency in their lives. **Note: This podcast was formerly titled the ViolaCentric podcast**
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We play in places and spaces you'd never expect to find an orchestra, from sheds to warehouses, foyers to art deco cinemas and aeroplane hangers! We perform music from Mozart to Metallica, Björk to Beethoven and everything in between. Our mission is 'Music for Everyone' and by taking the orchestra out of the concert hall and into communities across WA, we are proud to have performed to over 350,000 people so far.
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If you’re looking for stories, strategies and actionable advice on how entrepreneurial careers start, then you’ve come to the right place. In every episode, we sit down with world-class entrepreneurs, startup experts, and thought leaders to deconstruct what it takes to get a startup off the ground.
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Stinker Madness is a bad movie podcast that loves horrible films that might actually be wonderful little gems. Or they could suck. Cult, budget and "bad" movies twice a week.
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Clarinet Corner is an exploration of music involving the clarinet. The show features music across genres including: classical, jazz, world, film music, and rock. And the lively conversation includes topics such as: musical history and practice, social justice, playing in a film orchestra, and colorful stories about jazz players. You don't have to be a clarinet player or a musician to join in, host Tim Phillips makes the show accessible to everyone!
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This is it, folks – the episode where the overall title of this astonishing series of podcasts is revealed! And, this time Richard and Mark have chosen the famous Mozart bar as the location for their latest natter. So, drop in and learn about their strategies on how to win at a unique version of Monopoly. (Who knows – when you pop in to see them yo…
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Synopsis During her lifetime, pianist Nadia Reisenberg was regarded as one of this country’s finest concert artists. She performed at Carnegie Hall 22 times, often with the New York Philharmonic. But she made history on today’s date in 1939 as she embarked on a series of concert performances encompassing of all 27 of the Mozart Piano Concertos. The…
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Can classical music support our health?
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Mozart: Le nozze di Figaro (New York 1968)
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2:45:06Contessa Almaviva: Ilva Ligabue Susanna: Graziella Sciutti Cherubino: Biancamaria Casoni Marcellina: Silvana Zanolli Barbarina: Emilia Ravaglia Figaro: Rolando Panerai Conte Almaviva: Tito Gobbi Bartolo: Angelo Nosotti Basilio: Florindo Andreolli Curzio: Mario Carlin Antonio: Giorgio Onesti Conductor Carlo Maria Giulini Teatro dell'Opera di Roma at…
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Best of 2025 … so far: ‘The Mozart of the attention economy’: why MrBeast is the world’s biggest YouTube star
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37:14Every Wednesday and Friday in August we will publish some of our favourite audio long reads of 2025, in case you missed them, with an introduction from the editorial team to explain why we’ve chosen it. This week, from June: he’s spent 24 hours immersed in slime, two days buried alive – and showered vast amounts of cash on lucky participants. But a…
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The Heaviest Songs of the Universe (Part 2) Side A: Cult of Luna, Mozart, Voivod, Crowbar, and Black Sabbath...
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45:04Quinn explores OUTER SPACE thanks to element number 96, Curium, named for one of the greatest figures in all of world history. There are a lot of reasons to be scared of space... and butt parasites are just the beginning.
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‘The forest had gone’: the storm that moved a mountain
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46:22On a small ledge in the Swiss mountains, 200 people were enjoying a summer football tournament. As night fell, they had no idea what was coming By Jonah Goodman. Read by Evelyn Miller. Help support our independent journalism at theguardian.com/longreadpodBy The Guardian
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By American Public Media
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The fight against sexual harassment in Egypt and Omar Sharif enters the world stage
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59:58Max Pearson presents a collection of the week’s Witness History episodes, all with an Egyptian theme. We find out more about the 2014 fight against sexual harassment. And we hear from Professor Nicola Pratt, an expert on Middle East feminism about the significance of that moment in the fight for women's rights. Also, we go to the 1960s when antiqui…
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Synopsis Today’s date commemorates the death, in 1957, of the most famous Finnish composer of modern times, Jean Sibelius. Born in 1865, Sibelius studied at the University of Helsinki, developed a strong sense of nationalism in the 1890s, and achieved world fame in the first years of the 20th century. He wrote little after the World War I, however,…
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One of natures most powerful little fruits.
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In the middle of a bustling city, there is serenity at Mueller Lake Park. On a Tuesday afternoon, all ages were present enjoying the diverse activities. Join our reporter, Emma Rikalo as she asks Austinites what attracts them to Mueller Lake Park.
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Anastasia Kobekina on Bach's Cello Suites | Gramophone Podcast
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38:25In this week's Gramophone Podcast, cellist Anastasia Kobekina talks about her new recording of one of the most revered series of works for her instrument - Bach's Solo Cello Suites. While the album isn't released by Sony Classical until next Friday (September 26), three movements are already available as singles, and in this side ranging conversati…
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Synopsis On today’s date in 2002, a little over one year after two passenger jetliners had crashed into the twin towers of the World Trade Center in New York City, the New York Philharmonic gave the premiere performance of a new work by American composer John Adams. On the Transmigration of Souls, this high-profile commission sought to address a na…
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Life in a ‘sinking nation’: Tuvalu’s dreams of dry land
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42:36With sea levels rising, much of the nation’s population is confronting the prospect that their home may soon cease to exist. Where are they going to go? By Atul Dev. Read by Mikhail Sen Check out Between Moon Tides documentary at theguardian.com. Help support our independent journalism at theguardian.com/longreadpod…
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Alexandria: city of knowledge and culture
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56:33Greg Jenner is joined in Egypt by historian Professor Islam Issa and comedian Athena Kugblenu to learn all about the history of science and philosophy in the city of Alexandria. Founded by ancient conqueror Alexander the Great, Alexandria from its earliest days was a city at the forefront of scientific discoveries, philosophical enquiry and religio…
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The Heaviest Songs of the Universe (Part 2- Side C): Sleep, High On Fire, Om
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35:34The AV4A Sleep-dive continues with the introduction of Matt Pike's High On Fire.
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Art Hounds: Two retrospectives and a comedic cabaret
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3:57From MPR News, Art Hounds are members of the Minnesota arts community who look beyond their own work to highlight what’s exciting in local art. Their recommendations are lightly edited from the audio heard in the player above. Want to be an Art Hound? Submit here. Honoring Marley Kaul’s legacy in book and gallery Visual artist Paula Swenson remembe…
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Prokofiev and Leifs agree: 'There's no place like home!'
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2:00Synopsis On this day in 1918, Russian composer Serge Prokofiev arrived in America to give a recital of his piano works in New York. He told interviewers that despite the revolution in his homeland and widespread conditions of famine, Russian musicians continued to work. Prokofiev, however, stayed away from his homeland for years. His opera The Love…
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Synopsis In 1962, American jazz composer, performer and bandleader Duke Ellington was 63 — an acknowledged master, but trends in American jazz were changing, and there were much younger figures emerging, with more challenging styles. Take, for example, bassist Charles Mingus, Jr., a master of collective improvisation, and drummer Max Roach, a pione…
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Sharon Isbin performs music by LeFrak on new album
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26:59On the latest episode of ‘New Classical Tracks,’ guitarist Sharon Isbin fulfills her dream of performing a Latin American-inspired guitar concert on her latest album, ‘Romántico,’ featuring music by Karen LeFrak. Listen now with host Julie Amacher!By American Public Media
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From the archive: Sewage sleuths: the men who revealed the slow, dirty death of Welsh and English rivers
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42:24We are raiding the Guardian long read archives to bring you some classic pieces from years past, with new introductions from the authors. This week, from 2022: A tide of effluent, broken laws and ruthless cuts is devastating the nation’s waterways. An academic and a detective have dredged up the truth of how it was allowed to happen – but will anyt…
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If you don’t think one person can make a difference, look at the events of this past week
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Renowned Korean Clarinetist Wonkak Kim - September 16th, 2025
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49:00Tim Phillips's latest guest, Wonkak Kim, is the first Korean clarinetist to have performed Mozart’s Clarinet Concerto on basset clarinet in a nationally broadcasted concert with Seungnam Philharmonic Orchestra in South Korea. Kim has played around the world and is currently an associate professor of clarinet at the University of Oregon.…
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Synopsis British composer Sally Beamish was born in London and studied music there and in Germany, but more recently has come to be associated with both Scotland and Sweden due to successful composer residencies in those two countries. Her saxophone concerto, The Imagined Sound of Sun on Stone, is a perfect example of this association. “The piece b…
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What we think is insignificant, God made for healing.
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Synopsis If you’ve ever witnessed a spectacular display of the Northern Lights, you’ll know the feeling: jaw-dropping wonder at the powerful forces unleashed in the vast spaces of the night sky. American composer Henry Brant experienced something like that in St. Paul, Minnesota, in 1982 during a visit, and later translated the experience into his …
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Very British bribery: the whistleblower who exposed the UK’s dodgy arms deals with Saudi Arabia
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51:36When Ian Foxley found evidence of corruption while working at a British company in Riyadh, he alerted the MoD. He didn’t know he’d stumbled upon one of its most closely guarded secrets By David Pegg. Read by Shane Zaza. Help support our independent journalism at theguardian.com/longreadpodBy The Guardian
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Why fiber is the unsung hero of cancer prevention and overall health.
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Synopsis The year 2002 marked the 10th anniversary of BBC Music Magazine and to celebrate the magazine’s editor asked British composer Colin Matthews to coordinate a bold commissioning idea: a set of seven orchestral variations on a theme by Henry Purcell: Hail, Bright Cecilia. The resulting suite, Bright Cecilia Variations, had its premiere on tod…
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Join Richard and Mark for the pilot edition of their new podcast series, in which they will be chatting about everything and anything, in a variety of locations and being joined by special guests in future episodes. Click the start button to hear the pilot episode from Crystal Palace Park, where the conversation encompasses a huge variety of topics…
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S9E6 Music was born with life: (Somewhere) over the rainbow
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51:02Send us a text What a better way to express our emotions than music? This season is a tour around a number of very well-known popular songs, so popular that many Opera singers have made them part of their repertoire. How well do they achieve it? Thumbs-up or down? For this season we are having Raffa co-hosting these episodes. He has an immense pass…
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Synopsis On today's date in 1993, the first gala preview screening of a new film, The Age of Innocence, based on the novel by Edith Wharton, took place at the Ziegfield Theater in Manhattan, as a benefit for the New York Historical Society. That was only appropriate, since Wharton’s historical novel describes upper-class New York society of the 187…
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Nigeria’s Festac’77 and Gander’s generosity during 9/11
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1:00:31Max Pearson presents a collection of the week's Witness History interviews from the BBC World Service. Our guest is Lucy Durán, a Spanish ethnomusicologist, record producer and Professor at the School of Oriental and African Studies in London. We start with an African American artist who recounts exhibiting her work at Nigeria's largest ever festiv…
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Community is medicine. It helps her hearts, our minds, and our bodies.
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‘People pay to be told lies’: the rise and fall of the world’s first ayahuasca multinational
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49:41Alberto Varela claimed he wanted to use sacred plant medicine to free people’s minds. But as the organisation grew, his followers discovered a darker reality. By Sam Edwards. Read by Sid Sagar. Help support our independent journalism at theguardian.com/longreadpodBy The Guardian
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India between empires: the long 18th century
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57:18Greg Jenner is joined in early modern India by historian Dr Jagjeet Lally and comedian Nish Kumar to learn all about the subcontinent’s dynamic eighteenth century. From the sixteenth century, the dominant power in India was the Mughal Empire. According to the traditional narrative, when the Mughals began to decline in the eighteenth century, the su…
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In this Fully Connected episode, we dig into the recent MIT report revealing that 95% of AI pilots fail before reaching production and explore what it actually takes to succeed with AI solutions. We dive into the importance of AI model integration, asking the right questions when adopting new technologies, and why simply accessing a powerful model …
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Art Hounds: Queer Muslim friendship, children’s literature and front-porch jams
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5:00From MPR News, Art Hounds are members of the Minnesota arts community who look beyond their own work to highlight what’s exciting in local art. Their recommendations are lightly edited from the audio heard in the player above. Want to be an Art Hound? Submit here. Queer Muslim coming-of-age on stage Anita Chikkatur of Minneapolis is an educator and…
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