So, Hear Me Out – the classical music podcast
Can music provide hope when freedom has been taken away? Ethel Smyth’s March of the Women rang out as a rallying cry for imprisoned suffragettes, its rhythms defiant and unifying. Olivier Messiaen’s Quartet for the End of Time, composed and first performed in a Nazi POW camp in 1941, fused faith, birdsong, and dazzling visions of colour into music that offered hope and transcendence to prisoners and guards alike. Gillian Moore and Linton Stephens explore how these works — and many others — testify to the resilience of creativity. Gillian also recalls her own encounters with music behind bars, where moments of song broke down walls both physical and emotional. Episode highlights 00:00 Welcome to So Hear Me Out 02:03 Exploring music's role in prisons 03:42 Personal experiences with music in prisons 08:33 Introducing Ethel Smyth's March of the Women 11:33 The impact and legacy of March of the Women 21:12 More notable music behind bars 22:38 The iconic title and its significance 23:14 Introduction to Olivier Messiaen 24:24 The Quartet for the End of Time: background and composition 24:57 A unique orchestration and instrumentation 27:55 Messiaen's religious and natural inspirations 29:14 The First Movement: Abyss of the Birds 32:27 Synesthesia and Messiaen's colorful music 39:27 The first performance in the prison camp 40:56 The emotional heart of The Quartet… 44:46 Music as emancipation and resistance 46:23 Closing thoughts and farewell Featured music: * Quartet for the End of Time (1941) Olivier Messiaen * March of the Women (1910) Ethel Smyth * * * *
10 episodios
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