Classical Music
All day, all night
Classical 88.7 features a stellar collection of music from throughout the ages, presented by hosts with backgrounds deeply rooted in the music of the masters. Program hosts include Pat Alexander, Julie Amacher, Steve Blatt, Bob Christiansen, Dan Drayer, jeff Esworthy, Valerie Kahler, Gillian Martin, Mindy Ratner, David Rutherford, Charlie Samson, Monika Vischer, Stephanie Wendt, and John Zech.
Performance Today
Weekdays & Saturday, 6:00 - 8:00 p.m. (program schedule)
"Classical music is a living, breathing art form with meaning and resonance for our lives today something always changing and evolving and astounding and, at its best, revolutionary," says Performance Today host Fred Child. This award-winning radio program features the finest live contemporary performances from around the nation and makes the concert hall experience immediate and accessible for well over one million Americans.
Exploring Music
Weekdays, 8:00 - 9:00 p.m. (program schedule)
Exploring Music with Bill McGlaughlin will enlighten, educate and entertain you, enriching your listening experience. Peabody Award winning host, Bill McGlaughlin with his in-depth knowledge of and deep passion for classical music along with his enthusiasm, imagination and spontaneity, guides you through a new musical theme each week, devoting five days to a single topic. Bill has been everything in music, from educator, performer, conductor, and music director, to broadcast host and his most challenging career of all, that of composer.
Metropolitan Opera
Saturday, 12:00 - 4:00 p.m. / starting times vary (program schedule)
The Metropolitan Opera's 78th season of world-class performances can be heard over Classical 88.7 every Saturday afternoon. The longest-running classical music series in American broadcast history, these Matinee Broadcasts bring the greatest singers, conductors, and artists in the world to millions of radio listeners worldwide.
Margaret Juntwait returns for her fifth season as host of the broadcasts. The Met continues its long-standing tradition of thoughtful intermission features and interviews that capture the excitement of live opera. The live Backstage Interviews; Met Cameos, and Met Memories, recorded by singers and audience members alike; and the popular Toll Brothers-Metropolitan Opera Quiz, hosted by a variety of artists, return this season as part of the Met Broadcast intermission features. Met singers, directors, and designers visit the broadcast booth to discuss their current productions with the company.
SymphonyCast
Saturday, 8:00 - 10:00 p.m. (program schedule)
Each week SymphonyCast presents a full-length concert by a national or international symphony orchestra. Concerts are drawn from Europe’s leading ensembles, along with U.S. orchestras, including the Los Angeles Philharmonic, The Philadelphia Orchestra and The Cleveland Orchestra. SymphonyCast is currently heard on more than 90 public radio stations across the county each week. Host Brian Newhouse won a Peabody Award in May 2000 for writing "The Mississippi: River of Song," a seven-part music documentary distributed by Public Radio International.
New York Philharmonic
Sunday, 1:00 - 3:00 p.m. (program schedule)
This concert broadcast represents virtually the Orchestra's entire 2007-08 season. The New York Philharmonic is by far the oldest symphony orchestra in the United States, and one of the oldest in the world. Founded in 1842 by a group of local musicians led by American-born Ureli Corelli Hill, the Orchestra currently plays some 180 concerts a year. On December 18, 2004, the Philharmonic gave its 14,000th concert - a milestone unmatched by any other orchestra in the world.
American conductor Lorin Maazel began his tenure as Music Director at the beginning of the 2002-03 season, 60 years after making his debut with the orchestra at the age of 12 at Lewisohn Stadium in New York, then the orchestra's summer venue. A second-generation American, born in 1930 in Paris, Mr. Maazel was raised and educated in the United States. He has conducted throughout Europe, Australia, North and South America, Japan, the former Soviet Union, and at most international festivals and opera houses, and has appeared with all the major symphony orchestras. His numerous recordings include complete symphonic cycles of Beethoven, Brahms, Mahler, Sibelius, Rachmaninoff, and Tchaikovsky, as well as extensive operatic repertoire. He was the first American to appear at Bayreuth (in 1960), and was inducted into the American Classic Music Hall of Fame in 2002.
From The Top
Sunday, 6:00 - 7:00 p.m. (program schedule)
From the Top, with host Christopher O'Riley, is a weekly radio series that showcases the nation's most outstanding young classical musicians. Each one-hour program presents pre-collegiate musicians whose stunning individual performances are combined with lively interviews, unique pre-produced segments, lighthearted sketches and musical games. (program website)
Wind & Rhythm
Sunday, 7:00 - 8:00 p.m. (program website)
Playing ‘in-the-band’ is often the highest achievement in a musician’s experience. Sure, many leave the Wind Ensembles and Symphonic Bands for other musical expressions. But for many, band was the first experience of learning to play together... nicely. Wind and Rhythm is a weekly broadcast of pure band music, produced in Tulsa with host Doug Brown. The program features selections from Concert Bands and Wind Ensembles to Brass Bands and Percussion Ensembles.
Chicago Symphony Orchestra
Sunday, 8:00 - 10:00 p.m. (symphony website)
The BP Chicago Symphony Orchestra Radio Broadcast Series features concerts from Symphony Center, the home of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra.
Hosted by Lisa Simeone, this weekly, two-hour series offers a unique format of engaging and lively content, including features providing insight into the music and programmatic themes found within the CSO’s concert season; interviews with CSO musicians, guest artists, and composers; and an exploration of the stories found within the CSO’s rich heritage of recordings and the Orchestra’s illustrious history in Chicago.




