Main content

Laurence Equilbey

The conductor Laurence Equilbey, Lili Boulanger 100 years after her death, What Opera Means, a book by Christopher Wintle and archive material featuring Stephen Hawking on music.

Presented by Tom Service

Tom talks to the French conductor Laurence Equilbey about her work with Insula Orchestra, a period instrument ensemble at the centre of a recent project, La Seine Musicale, involving the local community in south-west Paris. Also, Caroline Potter, biographer of Lili Boulanger, on the life and legacy of the French composer, in the first centenary of her death. With contributions by the conductors Yan Pascal Tortelier and James Gaffigan too. Tom discusses the new book 'What Opera Means', a selection of essays exploring the psychoanalytic thrust behind words and actions, with author Christopher Wintle as well as opera experts Barbara Eichner and Claire Seymour. And after Stephen Hawking's passing this week we look into the Music Matters archive in search of an interview he gave Tom in 2006 revealing his favourite compositions, and also comparing the nature of Music with the world of Physics.

Available now

44 minutes

Last on

Sat 17 Mar 2018 12:15

Chapters

  • Laurence Equilbey

    Duration: 08:54

  • Stephen Hawking

    Duration: 01:29

  • Stephen Hawking

    Duration: 01:18

  • Lili Boulanger Centenary

    Duration: 14:27

  • Stephen Hawking

    Duration: 01:01

  • What Opera Means

    Duration: 14:45

  • Stephen Hawking

    Duration: 00:37

Broadcast

  • Sat 17 Mar 2018 12:15

Knock on wood – six stunning wooden concert halls around the world

Steel and concrete can't beat good old wood to produce the best sounds for music.

The evolution of video game music

Tom Service traces the rise of an exciting new genre, from bleeps to responsive scores.

Why music can literally make us lose track of time

Try our psychoacoustic experiment to see how tempo can affect your timekeeping abilities.

Podcast