Out now: our October issue, featuring Beethoven, Bruckner, JoAnn Falletta... and the joy of musicals!

Out now: our October issue, featuring Beethoven, Bruckner, JoAnn Falletta... and the joy of musicals!

This month, we celebrate the joy of the musical - not such a distant cousin to 'higher-brow' opera as you might think. Plus, Bruckner, female composers, and Beethoven's astonishing late flowering

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Published: September 3, 2024 at 1:03 pm

Welcome to BBC Music Magazine's October 2024 issue! This month, we're off to the musicals. No, really.

After all, what's the difference between Puccini's Tosca and Rodgers and Hammerstein's Carousel? Actually, not as much as you might think. As conductor John Wilson explains this issue, 20th-century stage musicals - from Leonard Bernstein's West Side Story to Loewe's My Fair Lady - are as musically sophisticated as any popular opera of the previous century.

And yes, they may be sung in the vernacular - often with wonderfully astute lyrics - but musicals' best composers almost invariably hail from a classical background. For our main feature, James Inverne investigates the relationships between so-called 'high art' operas and 'low-art' musicals.

For something of a contrast, we dive deep into the life and music of one of classical music's most divisive composers, Anton Bruckner. To mark the composer's 200th anniversary this year, Stephen Johnson makes a case for this obsessive, troubled and endlessly polarising composer.

Love or hate the Bruckner symphonies? Stephen has lived with them, and taken great comfort from them, for years - and he makes a compelling case for their deeply spiritual appeal and sometimes overwhelming emotional power.

Elsewhere this issue, Misha Donat reveals how in his later years, amid deafness and deteriorating health, Beethoven somehow scaled unprecedented heights of creativity. And for Building a Library, Mikel Toms seeks out the best recordings of Má vlast, Smetana's captivating, evocative portrait of his Bohemian homelands.

Conductor JoAnn Falletta talks to Clive Paget about her 25 years leading the way at the Buffalo Philharmonic, while Jessica Duchen assesses whether female composers are enjoying anything close to equality in the concert hall. And composer Adrian Sutton tells Michael Beek why a terminal illness diagnoses has proved a major creative spur.

Author, musician and screenwriter Daniel Handler, who under the nom de plume Lemony Snicket has created the acclaimed children's books A Series of Unfortunate Events, chooses the five pieces of music that have had the most lasting impact on him, from Bizet via Morton Feldman to Prince. We've also got our indispensable new season guide, with details of the 2024/25 season's best concerts and opera right across the UK, Europe, USA and Canada, and the wider world.

Click here to access the inlay for this month's cover CD.

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