Petroc Trelawny presents Radio 3's classical breakfast show, featuring listener requests. Email 3breakfast@bbc.co.uk Show more
Refresh your morning with a great selection of classical music, presented by Ian Skelly. Show more
Donald Macleod looks at the great psychological crisis that befell Beethoven in his early 30s, and the extraordinary letter to posterity he penned as a result. Show more
Radio 3 Lunchtime Concert
Cheltenham Festival 2016
Halvorsen, Mozart and Ravel from the 2016 Cheltenham Music Festival
55 minutes on BBC Radio 3
Chamber music from 2016's Cheltenham Music Festival, today featuring works by Halvorsen, Mozart and Ravel. Show more
The BBC Philharmonic perform British music by Vaughan Williams, Bax and Rubbra, and a world premiere by Martin Suckling. A tribute to Gerard Schurmann completes the afternoon. Show more
From Sheffield Cathedral. Show more
Jazz bassist Misha Mullov-Abbado's latest album unveiled and a Liszt etude from Mariam Batsashvili. Show more
Sean Rafferty talks to William Hunt on new release In Chains of Gold Volume 2, plus a Home Session by organist Stephen Farr. Show more
In Tune's specially curated playlist, including music by Byrd, Humperdinck and Sarasate. Show more
Radio 3 in Concert
Under the Shadow of the First World War: Sir Andrew Davis Conducts the BBC Symphony Orchestra and Chorus
2 hours, 28 minutes on BBC Radio 3
Music written during or just after World War I by Edward Elgar and Lilian Elkington. Baritone Roderick Williams joins for the London premiere of a song cycle by Raymond Yiu. Show more
In 2012 Frank Cottrell-Boyce worked with Danny Boyle to create a vision of Britain for the London Olympics. He reflects on what has changed since lockdown. Matthew Sweet presents. Show more
How does the experience of disability and access to healthcare change the way Ella Parry-Davies thinks about the experiences of migrant domestic workers? Show more
Sara Mohr-Pietsch presents an adventurous, immersive soundtrack for late-night listening, from classcal to contemporary and everything in between.
From his complete Beethoven piano series, Louis Lortie plays five sonatas. Presented by John Shea. Show more