Exploring Masterworks for Clarinet with Stuart King - podcast cover

Exploring Masterworks for Clarinet with Stuart King

Stuart King
My guide to understanding, learning and performing the seminal works for clarinet from a performer's perspective. I have over 25 years experience as a performer and teacher based in London, UK. A little bit of background history is essential. After that it's time to look at what the score shows us and my thoughts on what makes these pieces stand out from the pack. There's a bit of analysis and each podcast is followed with a more detailed look at the score on my youtube channel. For more details and links head over to my website www.stuart-king.com
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Episodes

Exploring Claude Debussy's Première Rhapsodie with Stuart King

One of the most influential French composers of the first half of the 20th Century, Claude Debussy wrote music that was quintessentially French. With exquisite timbres and textures, Debussy created music that stood as the antithesis of the prevailing Germanic traditions championed by the 'establishment'. His early music was influenced by Wagner and symbolist poetry but it evolved into a unique French voice synonymous with the Pre-Raphaelite and Impressionist movements that straddled the dawn of ...

Apr 05, 202120 minSeason 2Ep. 7

Exploring Witold Lutoslawski's Dance Preludes with Stuart King

Witold Lutoslawski was one of the foremost composers of the 20th Century. His early life was marred by the loss of his father and eldest brother at the hands of the Bolsheviks and his own brush with death at the hands of Nazis in the Second World War. Thankfully Lutoslawski escaped the clutches of the Germans and found his way back to Warsaw where he forged a living playing in cafés with his friend the composer Andrzek Panufnik. After the war Lutoslawski struggled, like many composer of serious ...

Mar 30, 202121 min

Exploring William Alwyn's Clarinet Sonata with Stuart King

Composer of over 70 scores for film and TV, former flautist with the London Symphony Orchestra under the baton of Edward Elgar, Gustav Holst and William Walton, William Alwyn is one of the most under-rated composers of the 20th Century. His prolific output is over-shadowed by the works of Benjamin Britten and perhaps Malcolm Arnold, another composer a degree more famous than Alwyn in his writing for film. This relatively obscurity is a crying shame as Alwyn developed a beguiling musical voice th...

Mar 01, 202125 minSeason 2Ep. 5

Exploring Arnold Bax's Clarinet Sonata with Stuart King

Born into a wealthy London family, Arnold Bax was able to follow his passions without constraint as a young man. This saw him travel across Europe in the years preceding the Great War absorbing music, ballet and culture from a world that was about to be ripped apart by war. His private income afforded him the luxury of not needing to work for money. This set him apart from most of his peers and may have resulted in a sense of not quite 'fitting in'. Nonetheless he was a prolific composer able to...

Feb 12, 202125 minSeason 2Ep. 5

Exploring John Ireland's Fantasy Sonata with Stuart King

There is something about the clarinet that composers discover or perhaps rediscover when they are in their twilight years. Mozart, Brahms, Poulenc, Howells and this episode's master, John Ireland all wrote their final and arguably best chamber works for the clarinet. It is hard to imagine that at the start of the 20th century the clarinet was still a relative newcomer to the world of classical chamber music. Frederick Thurston, the finest clarinettist of his generation, first learned the instrum...

Feb 09, 202120 minSeason 2Ep. 4

Exploring Francis Poulenc's Clarinet Sonata with Stuart King

Urbane, witty, tragic, spiky and lyrical! Just a few words that give a flavour of the artistry of Francis Poulenc. Singled out as part of a gaggle of artistic friends that hung out in a bookshop on la rive gauche in the 1920s, Les Six, was a master of mélodies whether in Art Song or instrumentally. The death of parents pushed him towards a series of father figure composers and musicians; Ricardo Viñes, Erik Satie, Georges Auric and Igor Stravinsky. Scarcely 19 when he wrote his first published w...

Jan 29, 202117 minSeason 2Ep. 3

Exploring Herbert Howells' Clarinet Sonata with Stuart King

Herbert Howells was composing at a time of tremendous upheaval and turmoil in Europe. Born in Gloucestershire he found his musical education through the church, learning organ and gaining a place as a chorister. Following training at the Royal College of Music, Howells was known primarily as a teacher, chorus master and adjudicator. He held down two major jobs simultaneously, which allowed little time for compositon. We are blessed however with the Clarinet Sonata that dates from 1946-1951. Writ...

Jan 29, 202131 minSeason 2Ep. 4

Exploring Igor Stravinsky's Three Pieces for solo clarinet with Stuart King

Exiled in Switzerland and trying to scrape a living for himself whilst the Great War raged across Europe, Stravinsky wrote the iconic Soldier's Tale. This travelling theatre piece was a huge shift in scale for a composer used to penning works for the grandest ballet company of the time, Les Ballet Russes, in Paris. The Russian folktale of a soldier encountering the devil who tries to trick him into gambling away his precious violin served as an apt moral commentary on the time. The Soldier's Tal...

Jan 15, 202135 minSeason 2Ep. 2

Exploring Paul Hindemith's Clarinet Sonata with Stuart King

Labelled as an 'Atonal Noisemaker' of 'Degenerate Music' Paul Hindemith was forbidden from working in his native Germany in the 1930s. Undeterred he embarked on a series of performance/lecture tours to the USA in 1937 and ultimately emigrated there in 1940. This turbulent time in world history proved fruitful for the prolific Hindemith in spite of the ban on his music under the Nazi regime. The Clarinet Sonata of 1939 is one of 17 Sonatas Hindemith wrote in the 5 years between 1935 and his settl...

Oct 29, 202030 minSeason 2Ep. 2

Exploring Leonard Bernstein's Clarinet Sonata with Stuart King

One of my all time favourite Clarinet Sonatas is that written by the master Leonard Bernstein. This was in fact his first published work and what an Op.1 it is! Composed from the Autumn of 1941 to the Spring of 1942, Bernstein combined influences of the great Paul Hindemith, composer-in-residence at Tanglewood in the Summer of 1940 with his own fresh, vibrant jazz inflected style. There are distinct fore-shadows of West Side Story's punchy Latin grooves and heartfelt lyricism woven throughout th...

Oct 18, 202027 minSeason 2Ep. 1

Exploring Robert Schumann's Fantasiestücke for clarinet and piano Op.73 with Stuart King

Schumann was a sensitive tortured genius, a true romantic with an achingly poetic soul. His passions ran deep and famously found a muse in the guise of Clara Wieck, a virtuoso pianist and formidable character. Schumann poured all of his love into his compositions and littered them with secret signs and symbols that were like love letters woven into the fabric of each new piece. This episode of my Explore series looks at the sublime trilogy of songs without words that Schumann wrote at the height...

Sep 16, 202031 minSeason 1Ep. 3

Exploring Johannes Brahms' Clarinet Sonata Op.120 no.2 with Stuart King

The second episode looking to help and guide clarinetists understand Brahms' second clarinet sonata. I focus on the first movement again in this podcast and share my thoughts on Brahms' compositional language, his particular use of dynamics and some of the principal features of this opening movement that I think are important to examine.

Sep 01, 202029 minSeason 1Ep. 2

Exploring Johannes Brahms' Clarinet Sonata Op.120 no.1 with Stuart King

Brahms' musical language and compositional style can be hard to understand at first. In this podcast I hope to throw some light on some of the most important elements and share my own personal interpretation as a guide to getting to grips with his amazing works for clarinet. First of all there is context: when the Op.120 Sonatas were written, why and for whom they were written, and then it is important to understand the language Brahms uses in these pieces. It is difficult to imagine hearing the...

Aug 17, 202026 minSeason 1Ep. 1
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