Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations
Happy Birthday Mozart! Support our great musical programming that brings you Mozart and more year-round with your donation today. Thank you!

Search results for

  • The late Ann Richards was a larger than life governor of Texas. Holland Taylor wrote and starred in the play "Ann" about Richards, which ran on Broadway…
  • “Hey, Dad? You want to have a catch?” Celebrate Father’s Day with music from movies about model fathers, complicated fathers, and father-son wish…
  • James Lapine’s play ACT ONE starred Tony Shalhoub, Andrea Martin and Santino Fontana on Broadway in 2014. Now it’s streaming on Lincoln Center’s You Tube…
  • Just in time for Passover, enjoy selections from a 6-CD set, on the Intrada label, of music from Cecil B. DeMille's The Ten Commandments. This exhaustive…
  • Every time you support The Classical Network, you make a kindly extraterrestrial’s heart glow. Every time you don’t contribute – you risk activating the…
  • There are over 6,000 languages in the world today. Some experts say the majority are on the verge of disappearance. NPR's Dean Olsher considers the rapid deaths of many of the world's languages -- like Papua New Guinea's Arapesh -- and reports on the debate in the linguistic community over the need to intervene and save them.
  • Injustice authors Carol Leonnig and Aaron Davis say following Jan. 6, the cases against the former president were stymied by the FBI's desire to preserve its independence from politics.
  • Among the works that expand the diversity of the New Jersey Symphony Orchestra's programming this season are a pair of compositions by Joseph Bologne…
  • The most popular branch of the Smithsonian will be closing after Labor Day to undergo a planned two-year renovation. The American History Museum wants to update the building's infrastructure and create a better display for the Star Spangled Banner. A painstaking 8-year conservation project on the flag was completed Wednesday.
  • Sixty years ago, a technician working on the Manhattan project took a rare color picture of the first atomic bomb test. Jack Aeby, now 82, remembers the moment he captured the blast on film.
250 of 768