Poster Fred Child
Fred Child
MPR

Performance Today®

with host Fred Child

All Episodes

Elizabeth Aoki at Aspen

Elizabeth Aoki at Aspen

Even though she's only 9 years old, Elizabeth Aoki was one of the standouts at the 2012 Aspen Music Festival and School. You can hear this extraordinary young violinist as she gives her first-ever interview and plays part of a Wieniawski concerto, a piece that's challenging for soloists of any age.

18:18
The Sound of Evolution

The Sound of Evolution

Evolutionary theory holds that life evolves from the simple to the complex. Over the course of eons, new life forms weave in and, more often than not, out of existence. Composer Fung Lam knew this when he wrote his new piece for orchestra, "Endless Forms." The title is a quote from Charles Darwin. Lam creates a number of musical ideas, some of which don't survive. Others, he says, "blossom into very different and contrasting creatures." We'll hear the world premiere, from a concert last month in London.

The Sound of Evolution

The Sound of Evolution

Evolutionary theory holds that life evolves from the simple to the complex. Over the course of eons, new life forms weave in and, more often than not, out of existence. Composer Fung Lam knew this when he wrote his new piece for orchestra, "Endless Forms." The title is a quote from Charles Darwin. Lam creates a number of musical ideas, some of which don't survive. Others, he says, "blossom into very different and contrasting creatures." We'll hear the world premiere, from a concert last month in London.

La Valse

La Valse

Maurice Ravel was 31 when he began writing a piece that he called simply, "La Valse," a light tribute to carefree Viennese waltzes. He set the piece aside, then saw the agony of World War I firsthand. When the 45-year-old Ravel came back to his waltz, the world was different place. He was a different man. And La Valse was no longer a light tribute. In 13 minutes, you can hear the waltz slowly go delirious, spin out of control, and finally, fly apart into chaos.

Happy Birthday Claude Debussy

Happy Birthday Claude Debussy

How to sum up Claude Debussy in just a few words? A man who revolutionized 20th century music. Who broke all the rules for composing. Who said, in fact, that there was only one rule, and that was pleasure. A man who explored musical moods and colors and textures in a way no one ever had before. Today is Claude Debussy's 150th birthday. We'll celebrate with some of his greatest works, including a performance of La Mer from San Francisco.

A Pupil of Claude Monet

A Pupil of Claude Monet

Claude Debussy once said that he hated the term impressionism. And yet, he also wrote to a friend, "You do me a great honor by calling me a pupil of Claude Monet." Conductor David Robertson shares his thoughts on the parallels between Debussy's music and Monet's painting, and leads the New York Philharmonic in a ravishing performance of Debussy's "Prelude to the Afternoon of a Faun."

The Colors of Debussy

The Colors of Debussy

Fred Child hosted a very special live event in Boston recently. A three-hour tribute to the music of Claude Debussy, featuring pianist Marc-Andre Hamelin, clarinetist Richard Stoltzman, and saxophonist Kenneth Radnofsky. We'll hear highlights today and tomorrow, and lots of Debussy all week long, in honor of his 150th birthday on Wednesday.

The Benedict Music Tent

The Benedict Music Tent

They call it a tent, but it's really much more than that. It has a solid roof, and can seat nearly 2,000 people. But it's the movable side panels that make the Benedict Music Tent such a favorite of Aspen concertgoers. When the weather is nice, those panels open up and allow the gorgeous sounds to waft out over the lawn. You can bring a picnic, bring the kids, even the family dog. Today, we'll meet some folks on the lawn outside the Benedict Tent, and hear highlights from the great concerts inside.

Elizabeth Aoki

Elizabeth Aoki

Here at PT, we're in the business of bringing you amazing performances every day. But once in a while, we hear one that stops us in our tracks. Today, we'll hear from a young lady who brought down the house with her recent performance at the Aspen Festival, 9-year-old violinist Elizabeth Aoki. She sits down with host Fred Child for her first-ever interview. And with a future as bright as hers, it certainly won't be her last.