Afternoon and Overnight Classics on WVTF Music
Join Classical 24 hosts Julie Amacher, Andrea Blain, Scott Blankenship, Jeff Esworthy, Ward Jacobson, Valerie Kahler, Jillene Kahn, Elizabeth Lyon, Kevin O'Connor, Melissa Ousley, Mindy Ratner, Elena See, Steve Seel, Steve Staruch and Lynne Warfel for the best in classical music every day and night.
You can catch WVTF's Classical Programming during these times:
Monday - Friday:
- 12 AM - 9 AM
- 2 PM - 6 PM
Saturday:
- 12 AM - 9 AM
- 11 AM - 1 PM
Sunday:
- 12 AM - 7 AM
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A union representing 800 backstage workers began a publicity campaign today urging donors and government entities to withdraw support for the company because of a labor dispute.
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The duo, famed for enmeshing classical and hip-hop, looks back at America's past year and toward its near future on a new song, "Time to Shine."
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The new documentary tells the story of the roles women played — and continue to play — in the creation and development of electronic music, from theremin virtuoso Clara Rockmore to today.
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As a student, the young baritone was never really introduced to any Black composers. Liverman's latest album, Dreams of a New Day, features an abundance of them.
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Watch the composer, in a bucolic southern England setting, play six of his most tranquil, yet probing pieces.
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In his newest work, Falling Out of Time, composer Osvaldo Golijov explores a painful subject — the death of a child. He was inspired by a unique literary work by Israeli writer David Grossman.
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This car choir solution is one that accomplished baritone David Newman came up with so that ensembles could sing "together." The method uses microphones, a mixer, an FM transmitter and car radios.
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Meet internationally-acclaimed author Alexander McCall Smith and award-winning composer James Ross, who collaborated on song cycle These Are The Hands.
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NPR Music's classical editor traces the high points of a year spent listening to new albums that offered comfort and confrontation in counterpoint with the relentless world outside the headphones.
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Growing up in a progressive city, Ludwig van Beethoven embraced the ideals of the Enlightenment, the philosophical movement that shook Europe and helped shape the composer's music.