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BBC Podcasts - A History of Mozart

Interesting and informative podcasts from BBC, "A History of Mozart in a Dozen Objects."


What's it all about?


The  series of podcasts provide Mozart's world rediscovered in objects of his time.  Professor Cliff Eisen, a leading expert on Mozart's life, looks at the composer's 18th century world through objects that were close to him.

BBC - Podcasts - A History of Mozart in a Dozen Objects


www.bbc.co.uk

The 10 Podcasts / Recent Episodes:



(Downloads for non-commercial use are available from the BBC Radio3 podcasts. Please be guided by BBC policy for downloading podcasts. Thank you.)


  • Prog. 11 Objects: Blood letting device


    (Duration: 12 mins.)


    In this final episode Cliff Eisen focuses on medicine in the second half of the 18th century, and contemporary views on science and death. We explore today's object: a scarifier,used to bleed Mozart's mother before her death in Paris, and hear a moving account of Mozart's death in 1791 as recalled by his sister-in-law.


  • Prog. 10 Objects: Leopold's books and Mozart's tea chest


    (Duration: 11 mins.)


    Cliff Eisen talks about travel in the 18th Century, and discovers the books Leopold Mozart picked up in London as well as the tea chest that Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart carried with him on his travels.


  • Prog. 9 Objects: A Masonic periodical published in Vienna in the 1780s


    (Duration:  11 mins.)
     

    In this episode Cliff Eisen explores Mozart's Masonic links in Vienna, and the relationship between the Masons and Emperor Joseph II. The object, a Masonic Journal from the 1780s, gives clues about some of the pieces with Masonic symbols that Mozart wrote, like the Magic Flute, and works he composed for Masonic Lodges.


  • Prog. 8 Objects: A window from Mozart’s flat in Vienna


    (Duration:  12 mins.)


    A window from Mozart's flat in Vienna inspires Cliff Eisen to visit the actual place – the Figarohaus, today a museum dedicated to the composer, who tried to earn his life as a free-lance musician in the Imperial Capital – but what challenges did he face?


  • Prog. 7 Objects: Salzburg’s executioner’s sword


    (Duration:  14 mins.)

    Cliff Eisen starts with an executioner’s sword dating back from the days when Salzburg embraced capital punishment. This episode explores crime and punishment in Mozart’s time and how this was reflected in some of his operas from the 1780s.


  • Prog. 6 Objects: A telescope and a musical clock


    (Duration: 11 mins.)


    In this episode Cliff Eisen concentrates on a 18th-Century state-of-the-art telescope and on a musical clock as a sign of the Mozarts’ interest in science and technology – a typical concern of the time, which Wolfgang reflected in his music.


  • Prog. 5 Objects: The Mozarts’ Games


    (Duration:  12 mins.)


    Cliff Eisen focuses on the role of game-playing in Mozart's life, and takes a look at a range of games including card games painted by Leopold Mozart himself, and a board game which featured the characters of Mozart's Magic Flute.


  • Prog. 4 Objects: Mozart’s own piano


    (Duration:  10 mins.)


    Cliff Eisen explores some of the many types of piano Mozart played during his life, along with specially-recorded excerpts to illustrate the features he wanted to exploit as he wrote music for the instrument.


  • Prog. 3 Objects: A model of the Church of the Holy Sepulchre


    (Duration:  10 mins.)


    Cliff Eisen focuses on a model of the Church of the Holy Sepulchre, a Renaissance piece at the British Museum in London, which Nannerl Mozart mentions in her diary among the most remarkable things she saw during the Mozarts' stay in England.

  • Prog. 2 Objects: Portraits of Mozart


    (Duration:  11 mins.)

    Cliff Eisen introduces the second in a series of programmes exploring Mozart's world through objects associated with him. Today, two of the most important portraits of Mozart: the Stock and the Lange portraits in Salzburg.


Source:  


BBC Podcasts: A History of Mozart in a Dozen Objects.  Accessed  January 28, 2012.  Retrieved second time, October 15, 2013

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