Martin Handley presents Radio 3's classical breakfast show.
With Andrew McGregor. Including Building a Library: Puccini: Turandot; Concertos and solo piano music: Rachmaninov; Shostakovich; Disc of the Week: Elgar: Cello Concerto.
4 Extra Debut. Conductor Matthew Rowe explores the enduring appeal of the Scarborough Spa Orchestra, drawing the crowds since 1912. From 2011. Show more
Lucie Skeaping presents highlights of a concert of Monteverdi madrigals given by the acclaimed vocal ensemble La Venexiana as part of this year's Gregynog Festival in Wales. Show more
Live from Wigmore Hall, the Pavel Haas Quartet perform Janacek's Second Quartet and Smetana's First Quartet. Show more
Evelyn Glennie presents a programme featuring composers who pushed the boundaries of percussion and who influenced her own playing. Show more
Among the listeners' jazz requests played this week by Alyn Shipton are pieces by Ella Fitzgerald, Lester Young and Teddy Wilson. Show more
Clemency Burton-Hill introduces recordings by the young German cellist Nicolas Altstaedt, a BBC New Generation Artist since 2010. Show more
The John Wilson Orchestra performs Lerner and Loewe's classic Broadway musical My Fair Lady. Anthony Andrews plays Professor Higgins and Annalene Beechey is Eliza. Show more
A hundred years after it was written, Professor Roy Foster and biographer Michael Holroyd discuss George Bernard Shaw's Pygmalion, the play which inspired My Fair Lady. Show more
The John Wilson Orchestra performs Lerner and Loewe's classic Broadway musical My Fair Lady. Anthony Andrews plays Professor Higgins and Annalene Beechey is Eliza. Show more
Robert Worby presents Giles Swayne, Hugh Wood, and Michael Nyman recorded by the Castalian String Quartet at the Cheltenham Festival. Plus Helmut Lachenmann's Mouvement. Show more
Geoffrey Smith considers the career of one of the aristocrats of jazz trumpet, Art Farmer, from his bebop beginnings to becoming one of the most respected players on the scene. Show more
Daniele Gatti conducts the Orchestre National de France in an all-French programme of orchestral show pieces by Faure, Saint-Saens, Debussy and Ravel. Recorded in Paris. Show more