Poster Heart on glass
Heart on glass
Flickr user Polly, via Wikimedia Commons
Performance Today®

Love and music

There's romantic love, of course, but love means so much more than that...familial love, the loyalty of friends, the care for our communities, and even the love we can cultivate for ourselves. Join us today for music that can evoke all these feelings this Valentine’s Day and any other day of the year.

Episode Playlist

Hour 1

Franz Liszt: Liebestraum No. 3
Yundi Li, piano
Album: Yundi Li: Liszt
DG 851

Florent Schmitt: Oriane et le Prince d'Amour
The Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra | JoAnn Falletta, conductor
The Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra, Kleinhans Music Hall, Buffalo NY

Franz Liszt: Ballade No. 2 in B Minor
Clayton Stephenson, piano
Van Cliburn International Piano Competition, TCU Van Cliburn Concert Hall, Fort Worth, TX

Camille Saint-Saens: Fantaisie for violin & harp, Op. 124
Guillaume Sutre, violin | Kyunghee Kim-Sutre, harp
Round Top Music Festival, Festival Concert Hall, Round Top, TX

Hour 2

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart: Serenade for Winds in C minor K. 388 Movement 3 Menuetto in Canone - Trio in Canone al rovescio
Allan Vogel, oboe | Kimaree Gilad, oboe | Anthony McGill, clarinet | Carey Bell, clarinet | Dennis Godburn, bassoon | Frank Morelli, bassoon | Richard Todd, french horn | Brad Warnaar, french horn
Album: Vol. 4: Mozart and Winds

Ludwig van Beethoven: Duo for Clarinet and Bassoon No. 1 in C major
Alcides Rodriguez, clarinet | Andrew Brady, bassoon
Atlanta Chamber Players, First Presbyterian Church of Atlanta, GA

Johannes Brahms: Liebeslieder Waltzes for Piano, Four Hands, Op. 52
Ji Na Kim, piano | Gilbert Kalish, piano
Music@Menlo Chamber Music Festival and Institute, Spieker Center for the Arts, Atherton, CA

Reena Esmail: Saans (Breath) for Piano Trio
Yura Lee, violin | Paul Watkins, cello | Gilles Vonsattel, piano
Bridgehampton Chamber Music, Bridgehampton Presbyterian Church, Bridgehampton, NY

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Latest Performance Today® Episodes

VIEW ALL EPISODES

Latest Performance Today® Episodes

PT Weekend: A Finnish connection

PT Weekend: A Finnish connection

Finnish violinist and conductor Pekka Kuusisto shares a connection with the music and character of his fellow countryman, Jean Sibelius. On today’s program, Kuusisto and the German Symphony Orchestra perform two seldom-heard gems by Sibelius at a concert in Berlin.

1:59:00
Marin Alsop's debut with the Berlin Philharmonic

Marin Alsop's debut with the Berlin Philharmonic

When Marin Alsop was a kid, her parents taught her she could achieve anything she set her heart to; no one was going to stop her. She's now the Music Director of the National Orchestral Institute and Festival and guest conducts orchestras worldwide. On today's program, we'll hear Marin Alsop make her conducting debut with the Berlin Philharmonic at a concert in Germany.

1:59:00
Missy Mazzoli's Sinfonia for Orbiting Spheres

Missy Mazzoli's Sinfonia for Orbiting Spheres

The hurdy-gurdy has strings like a violin, a keyboard, and a hand crank that produces a wheezing drone. Composer Missy Mazzoli was fascinated by this sound and wanted to make a whole orchestra sound like a big hurdy-gurdy.  Tune in for the Sinfonia for Orbiting Spheres by Missy Mazzoli on today’s episode.

1:59:00
Pekka Kuusisto's affinity for Sibelius

Pekka Kuusisto's affinity for Sibelius

Finnish violinist and conductor Pekka Kuusisto shares a connection with the music and character of his fellow countryman, Jean Sibelius. On today’s program, Kuusisto and the German Symphony Orchestra perform two seldom-heard gems by Sibelius at a concert in Berlin.

1:59:00
Shawn Okpebholo

Shawn Okpebholo

As a young man, composer Shawn Okpebholo firmly believed he would someday write music for the Imani Winds. Twenty years later, that wish has come true with a new piece. It's music inspired by justice, hope, and a desire for harmony. The Imani Winds play Rise by Shawn Okpebholo on today’s show.

1:59:00
Joana Mallwitz and the Berlin Philharmonic

Joana Mallwitz and the Berlin Philharmonic

Conductor Joana Mallwitz aims for new concert hall audiences to experience the orchestra's vibrant energy, feeling the floors tremble. In today’s program, we'll hear a result of Mallwitz’s enthusiasm as she leads the Berlin Philharmonic in Paul Hindemith’s “Symphony: Mathis der Maler.”

1:59:00
PT Weekend: Nathalie Stutzmann and the ASO

PT Weekend: Nathalie Stutzmann and the ASO

Three hundred years ago, Johann Sebastian Bach began his role as the music director at St. Thomas Church in Leipzig, a position for which he was only the third choice. To impress his uncertain employers, Bach composed ambitious new cantatas every week during his first few years, including the one we will hear today: the Sinfonia from J.S. Bach's Cantata No. 42, from a concert featuring conductor Nathalie Stutzmann and the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra.

1:59:00
Imogen Cooper's passion for Schubert

Imogen Cooper's passion for Schubert

Pianist Imogen Cooper loves how Franz Schubert's music can shift from moment to moment. She says, “It's as if he takes you by the shoulders, swings you around, and says, 'That was then, this is now.'" Tune in today to hear Cooper's interpretation of Schubert's Impromptus at a recent concert presented by the Frederic Chopin Society in St. Paul, Minnesota.

1:59:00
Transit music

Transit music

People do all kinds of things on the subway to pass the time. When Alan Shulman was 25, he wrote his first major composition… on the New York City subway. Join us today to hear music by Alan Shulman, written in transit between Manhattan and Brooklyn.

1:59:00
Nathalie Stutzmann and the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra

Nathalie Stutzmann and the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra

Three hundred years ago, Johann Sebastian Bach began his role as the music director at St. Thomas Church in Leipzig, a position for which he was only the third choice. To impress his uncertain employers, Bach composed ambitious new cantatas every week during his first few years, including the one we will hear today: the Sinfonia from J.S. Bach's Cantata No. 42, from a concert featuring conductor Nathalie Stutzmann and the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra.

1:59:00
VIEW ALL EPISODES

About Performance Today®

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American Public Media’s Performance Today® is America’s most popular classical music radio program and a winner of the 2014 Gabriel Award for artistic achievement. The show is broadcast on hundreds of public radio stations across the country, including at 1 p.m. central weekdays on Minnesota Public Radio. More information about our stations can be found at APM Distribution.

Performance Today® features live concert recordings that can’t be heard anywhere else, highlights from new album releases, and in-studio performances and interviews. Performance Today® is based at the APM studios in St. Paul, Minnesota, but is frequently on the road, with special programs broadcast from festivals and public radio stations around the country. Also, each Wednesday, composer Bruce Adolphe joins host Fred Child for a classical musical game and listener favorite: the Piano Puzzler.

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