| 00:00 | 00:00Clemmie hosts a special edition as part of Mental Health Awareness Week with Julia Samuel. 00:30Violinist Renaud Capuçon joins the RAI National Symphony Orchestra and Robert Trevino.
| 00:30The Aizuri String Quartet and Alon Goldstein play Beethoven, Haydn, Mozart and Bernstein.
| 00:30Works by Strauss, Bacewicz and Nielsen interspersed with choral interludes
| 00:30Gautier Capuçon performs Shostakovich's First Cello Concerto.
| 00:30Cellist Mariona Camats and pianist Jorge Tabaré in recital at the Catalan talent series.
| | 00:00Corey Mwamba presents new improvised music exploring speculative visions of nature.
| |
|---|
| 01:00 | | | | | | 01:00Emeli Sandé explores music for night-time and sleepless souls.
| 01:00The RAI National Symphony Orchestra are joined by pianist Alexander Malofeev.
| |
|---|
| 02:00 | | | | | | 02:00Splash out with an underwater playlist featuring music from Ecco the Dolphin and more.
| | |
|---|
| 03:00 | | | | | | 03:00Sacred music from medieval northern Europe at the Stockholm Early Music Festival.
| | |
|---|
| 04:00 | | | | | | | | |
|---|
| 05:00 | | | | | | | | |
|---|
| 06:00 | 06:30Petroc Trelawny presents Radio 3's classical breakfast show, featuring listener requests.
| 06:30Petroc Trelawny presents Radio 3's classical breakfast show, featuring listener requests.
| 06:30Petroc Trelawny presents Radio 3's classical breakfast show, featuring listener requests.
| 06:30Petroc Trelawny presents Radio 3's classical breakfast show, featuring listener requests.
| 06:30Petroc Trelawny presents Radio 3's classical breakfast show, including the Friday poem.
| | | |
|---|
| 07:00 | | | | | | 07:00Classical music for breakfast time plus found sounds and the odd unclassified track.
| 07:00Martin Handley presents Breakfast, including a Sounds of the Earth slow radio soundscape.
| |
|---|
| 08:00 | | | | | | | | |
|---|
| 09:00 | 09:00Refresh your morning with a great selection of classical music.
| 09:00Refresh your morning with a great selection of classical music.
| 09:00Refresh your morning with a great selection of classical music.
| 09:00Refresh your morning with a great selection of classical music.
| 09:00Refresh your morning with a great selection of classical music.
| 09:00Laura Tunbridge chooses her favourite recording of Beethoven's String Quartet, Op 18 No 1.
| 09:00Sarah Walker chooses uplifting music to complement your morning.
| |
|---|
| 10:00 | | | | | | | | |
|---|
| 11:00 | | | | | | 11:45Simon Rattle and Magdalena Kožená talk about performing the music of Kurt Weill together.
| | |
|---|
| 12:00 | 12:001/20Donald Macleod considers the effects of Vaughan Williams's character-building childhood.
| 12:002/20Donald Macleod assesses the influence of Vaughan Williams's teachers Parry and Stanford.
| 12:003/20Donald Macleod finds Vaughan Williams adding to his knowledge through studies with Bruch.
| 12:004/20Donald Macleod assesses the importance of Vaughan Williams's period of study with Ravel.
| 12:005/20Donald Macleod and Ceri Owen discuss Vaughan Williams the emerging composer
| 12:30Jess Gillam and harpist Magdalena Hoffman share the music they love.
| 12:00Michael Berkeley is joined by children's author Shirley Hughes.
| |
|---|
| 13:00 | 13:00Celebrating Gershwin with the Julian Bliss Septet.
| 13:00From Edinburgh, the Amatis Trio perform music by Beethoven and Enescu.
| 13:00From Edinburgh, chamber music by Mendelssohn and Schubert.
| 13:00From Edinburgh, the Armida Quartet and friends perform Strauss and Brahms.
| 13:00From Edinburgh, chamber music by Shostakovich and Schoenberg.
| 13:00Hear bass Matthew Rose open up a colourful selection of music from the inside.(R)
| 13:00Celebrating Gershwin with the Julian Bliss Septet.(R)
| |
|---|
| 14:00 | 14:00French cellist Gautier Capuçon plays Dvorak's Romantic Cello Concerto
| 14:00Argentinian cellist Sol Gabetta plays the elegiac late concerto by Edward Elgar.
| 14:00German cellist Lukas Plag plays Shostakovich's First Cello Concerto.
| 14:00Leila Josefowicz plays Alban Berg's Violin Concerto, 'To the Memory of an Angel'.
| 14:00Italian-born Augustin Hadelich performs Max Bruch's evergreen Violin Concerto in G minor.
| | 14:00The RIAS Chamber Choir and Akademie für alte Musik Berlin perform Bach cantatas.
| |
|---|
| 15:00 | | | | | | 15:00A look at the wild and beautiful world of Japanese gaming.
| 15:00Live from the Chapel of St John’s College, Cambridge.(R)
| |
|---|
| 16:00 | 16:30The Mithras Trio play one of Brahms's last piano trios.
| | 16:00Live from the Chapel of St John’s College, Cambridge.
| | 16:30The elephant in the room? No, the Double Bass is much more.(R)
| 16:00Lopa Kothari with new tracks from across the globe.
| 16:00Alyn Shipton presents jazz records of all styles as requested by you.
| |
|---|
| 17:00 | 17:00Sean Rafferty is joined by the Aquinas Piano Trio who perform live in the studio.
| 17:00Pianist Fumiya Koido performs live in the studio, and Sean speaks to Christopher Hampson.
| 17:00Sean Rafferty meets Paula Sides and Sergey Rybin from English Touring Opera.
| 17:00Sean Rafferty is joined in the studio by the Consone Quartet and violinist Irène Duval.
| 17:00Sean Rafferty is joined in the studio by sitar player Jasdeep Singh.
| 17:00The late Pee Wee Ellis live in concert, plus Madeleine Peyroux’s musical inspirations.(R)
| 17:00From composers to composters: how and why do composers re-use their own music? 17:30From deep ocean fish to Hampstead ponds and EM Forster's pool party in Room with a View.
| |
|---|
| 18:00 | | | | | | 18:30From the Met: Puccini’s Turandot, conducted by Marco Armiliato.
| 18:45Alastair Sooke reassesses the origins and relevance of primitivism in art history.
| |
|---|
| 19:00 | 19:00In Tune Mixtape celebrating the arrival of May. 19:30René Jacobs conducts Caldara's 1700 oratorio, Maddalena ai piedi di Cristo, in Freiburg.
| 19:00An eclectic mix featuring classical favourites from Poulenc to Rachmaninov. 19:30Sir Mark Elder conducts the Hallé in Vaughan Williams's Symphony No 6 and A Sea Symphony.
| 19:00In Tune Mixtape: an eclectic mix of classical favourites and some unknown gems. 19:30The London Symphony Orchestra and Simon Rattle play Dvořák, Schumann and George Walker.
| 19:00An eclectic mix featuring classical favourites, lesser-known gems and a few surprises. 19:30Countertenor Jakub Józef Orliński and Il Pomo d'Oro perform at London's Wigmore Hall.
| 19:00An eclectic mix featuring classical favourites, lesser-known gems and a few surprises. 19:30Edward Gardner conducts the London Philharmonic Orchestra in Birtwistle and Mahler.
| | 19:30Simon Russell Beale stars in Elizabeth and Essex, with the music of Korngold played live.(R)
| |
|---|
| 20:00 | | | | | | | | |
|---|
| 21:00 | | | | | | | 21:10Hannah French presents more from the freshest recordings in classical music.
| |
|---|
| 22:00 | 22:00Violinist Leila Josefowicz talks about Bach and a new work by Matthias Pintscher.(R) 22:45Adjoa Osei celebrates Elsie Houston, who mixed Afro-Brazilian folk with European opera.
| 22:00Japanese cultural experimentation: painter Kyōsai 1831-1889 and writer Mishima 1925-1970. 22:45Vid Simoniti considers eco-art from Olafur Eliasson to videos by Bo Zheng.
| 22:00From Rear Window to stained glass, TB to paintings at Dulwich. Shahidha Bari hosts. 22:45Julia Hartley asks why we call Alexander the Great.
| 22:00Linda Grant and Boris Dralyuk discuss the writer Isaac Babel with Matthew Sweet. 22:45Fariha Shaikh reads accounts from Thomas de Quincey (1821) to Timothy Mo and Amitav Ghosh.
| 22:00Ian McMillan talks to Margaret Atwood about her writing process. 22:45Florence Hazrat looks at the history of punctuation marks (such as brackets) and emojis.
| 22:00New Music Show at Tectonics Glasgow, hosted last weekend by Ilan Volkov and the BBC SSO.
| | |
|---|
| 23:00 | 23:00Sara Mohr-Pietsch with an adventurous, immersive soundtrack for late-night listening.
| 23:00Sara Mohr-Pietsch with an adventurous, immersive soundtrack for late-night listening.
| 23:00Sara Mohr-Pietsch with an adventurous, immersive soundtrack for late-night listening.
| 23:00Sara Mohr-Pietsch with a magical sonic journey for late-night listening 23:30Elizabeth Alker with a mix of ambient and experimental music that welcomes in the light
| 23:00Jennifer Lucy Allan digs deep to serve up two hours of sonic adventuring.
| | 23:00Anoushka Shankar takes us on a journey through the music of north India.
| |
|---|