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The Classical Music Minute
Steven Hobé, Composer & Host
256 episodes
4 days ago
Send us a text Description Music After World War I: Art in a Shattered World in 60 Seconds. Take a minute to get the scoop! Fun Fact In 1918, Erik Satie described postwar music as needing “fewer perfumes and more reality.” Many composers shared this sentiment, favoring sharp edges and transparency over lush emotion. Audiences weren’t always thrilled—but history proved these reactions marked the birth of modern music, not its collapse. About Steven, Host Steven is a Canadian composer & a...
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Music History
Arts,
Education,
Music,
Performing Arts
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All content for The Classical Music Minute is the property of Steven Hobé, Composer & Host and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
Send us a text Description Music After World War I: Art in a Shattered World in 60 Seconds. Take a minute to get the scoop! Fun Fact In 1918, Erik Satie described postwar music as needing “fewer perfumes and more reality.” Many composers shared this sentiment, favoring sharp edges and transparency over lush emotion. Audiences weren’t always thrilled—but history proved these reactions marked the birth of modern music, not its collapse. About Steven, Host Steven is a Canadian composer & a...
Show more...
Music History
Arts,
Education,
Music,
Performing Arts
Episodes (20/256)
The Classical Music Minute
Music After World War I: Art in a Shattered World
Send us a text Description Music After World War I: Art in a Shattered World in 60 Seconds. Take a minute to get the scoop! Fun Fact In 1918, Erik Satie described postwar music as needing “fewer perfumes and more reality.” Many composers shared this sentiment, favoring sharp edges and transparency over lush emotion. Audiences weren’t always thrilled—but history proved these reactions marked the birth of modern music, not its collapse. About Steven, Host Steven is a Canadian composer & a...
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4 days ago
1 minute

The Classical Music Minute
Bartók: When Folk Music Met Modernism
Send us a text Description Bartók: When Folk Music Met Modernism in 60 Seconds. Take a minute to get the scoop! Fun Fact Bartók wasn’t just inspired by folk music—he treated it like scientific research. Armed with a phonograph, he recorded villagers singing in remote areas, often in harsh conditions. He transcribed songs note by note, preserving traditions that might otherwise have vanished. In the process, he became one of the founders of ethnomusicology—long before the term was widely used....
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1 week ago
1 minute

The Classical Music Minute
The Oratorio: Opera Without the Costumes
Send us a text Description The Oratorio: Opera Without the Costumes in 60 Seconds. Take a minute to get the scoop! Fun Fact When Messiah premiered in Dublin, audiences were asked to leave their swords at home and ladies were encouraged not to wear hoop skirts—so more people could fit in the hall. Even then, Handel was drawing a crowd. The famous tradition of standing during the “Hallelujah” Chorus came later and wasn’t Handel’s idea at all. About Steven, Host Steven is a Canadian composer &a...
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2 weeks ago
1 minute

The Classical Music Minute
Erik Satie: The Unlikely Godfather of Les Six
Send us a text Description Erik Satie: The Unlikely Godfather of Les Six in 60 Seconds. Take a minute to get the scoop! Fun Fact Satie gave his pieces absurd titles like Three Pieces in the Shape of a Pear—a jab at critics who accused him of lacking musical “form.” Les Six adored this irreverence. Poulenc once said Satie proved that “music could smile without losing its intelligence,” a lesson he took to heart. About Steven, Host Steven is a Canadian composer & actor living in Toronto. T...
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3 weeks ago
1 minute

The Classical Music Minute
Les Six: Paris’s Modern Musical Short-Lived Spark
Send us a text Description Les Six: Paris’s Modern Musical Short-Lived Spark in 60 Seconds. Take a minute to get the scoop! Fun Fact Les Six officially collaborated on only one major project, L’Album des Six (1920), before drifting apart. Ironically, the brevity of their partnership helped mythologize them: critics kept the label alive long after the composers stopped meeting, turning a short-lived collaboration into a lasting cultural brand. About Steven, Host Steven is a Canadian composer ...
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1 month ago
1 minute

The Classical Music Minute
Francis Poulenc: The Man and His Music
Send us a text Description Francis Poulenc: The Man and His Music in 60 Seconds. Take a minute to get the scoop! Fun Fact Poulenc adored Parisian cabarets and often slipped their cheeky harmonic twists into his classical works. After a friend accused him of being “too frivolous,” he replied, “You must take me as I am—Ravel for breakfast and a good music-hall number for dessert.” About Steven, Host Steven is a Canadian composer & actor living in Toronto. Through his music, he create...
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1 month ago
1 minute

The Classical Music Minute
Echoes Along the Nile: Music in Ancient Egypt
Send us a text Description Echoes Along the Nile: Music in Ancient Egypt in 60 Seconds. Take a minute to get the scoop! Fun Fact The sistrum—a sacred rattle associated with the goddess Hathor—was believed to ward off evil spirits. Priests shook it during ceremonies to “awaken” the gods. Archaeologists have found beautifully ornamented versions made of bronze and faience, proving even ancient noisemakers could be objects of stunning craftsmanship. About Steven, Host Steven is a Canadian compo...
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1 month ago
1 minute

The Classical Music Minute
The Musician’s Life in the Romantic Era
Send us a text Description The Musician’s Life in the Romantic Era in 60 Seconds. Take a minute to get the scoop! Fun Fact Franz Liszt was the 19th-century equivalent of a rock star. Fans reportedly fought over his discarded gloves and hair strands, a frenzy dubbed Lisztomania. While his performances caused swooning in concert halls, his income often relied more on teaching and touring than on the sale of his compositions. About Steven, Host Steven is a Canadian composer & actor living i...
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1 month ago
1 minute

The Classical Music Minute
Mozart’s Piano: The Enlightenment’s Favourite Sound Machine
Send us a text Description Mozart’s Piano: The Enlightenment’s Favourite Sound Machine in 60 Seconds. Take a minute to get the scoop! Fun Fact Mozart loved his personal fortepiano so much he took it on tour. It still survives today in Salzburg. Unlike modern pianos, its keys are wood-topped, not ivory, and its sound is surprisingly intimate—more like a lively conversation than a thunderous recital. You could almost imagine it gossiping in Viennese. About Steven, Host Steven is a Canadian com...
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2 months ago
1 minute

The Classical Music Minute
Harmony Behind Stone Walls: Life in the Medieval Cloister
Send us a text Description Harmony Behind Stone Walls: Life in the Medieval Cloister in 60 Seconds. Take a minute to get the scoop! Fun Fact The earliest Western musical notation emerged in monasteries, where scribes invented “neumes”—tiny marks above text to guide singers. This humble invention paved the way for modern sheet music. So, the next time you read a score, thank a monk with very steady handwriting. About Steven, Host Steven is a Canadian composer & actor living in Toronto. Th...
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2 months ago
1 minute

The Classical Music Minute
Benjamin Britten’s The Young Person’s Guide to the Orchestra: A Musical Who’s Who
Send us a text Description Benjamin Britten’s The Young Person’s Guide to the Orchestra: A Musical Who’s Who in 60 Seconds. Take a minute to get the scoop! Fun Fact When The Young Person’s Guide to the Orchestra premiered, Britten wasn’t sure audiences would take it seriously. He needn’t have worried—it’s now one of the most-performed orchestral works ever written for education. Ironically, it’s also one of the most sophisticated fugues in the entire 20th-century repertoire. About Steven, Ho...
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2 months ago
1 minute

The Classical Music Minute
The Pulse Redefined: Rhythmic Complexity in 20th-Century Music
Send us a text Description The Pulse Redefined: Rhythmic Complexity in 20th-Century Music in 60 Seconds. Take a minute to get the scoop! Fun Fact When The Rite of Spring premiered in Paris, 1913, its jarring rhythms helped cause a near riot. Audience members shouted, booed, and even fought. A century later, the same rhythms are considered masterpieces of modernity—proof that innovation often sounds like chaos before it becomes art. About Steven, Host Steven is a Canadian composer & actor...
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2 months ago
1 minute

The Classical Music Minute
Breaking the Spell: Reaction Against Romanticism in Early 20th-Century Music
Send us a text Description Breaking the Spell: Reaction Against Romanticism in Early 20th-Century Music” in 60 Seconds. Take a minute to get the scoop! Fun Fact When Stravinsky’s Pulcinella premiered in 1920, audiences were puzzled—was it parody, homage, or rebellion? Stravinsky called it “a look backward with a smile,” summing up the entire neoclassical spirit: modern sensibility dressed in old-fashioned clothes. About Steven, Host Steven is a Canadian composer & actor living in Toronto...
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2 months ago
1 minute

The Classical Music Minute
Mozart in Miniature: Master of Chamber Music
Send us a text Description Mozart in Miniature: Master of Chamber Music in 60 Seconds. Take a minute to get the scoop! Fun Fact Mozart’s publisher worried that his Piano Quartet in G minor (1785) was too difficult for amateurs—the intended market for chamber music. Sales flopped at first, but the piece later became a cornerstone of the repertoire. It’s a reminder that Mozart sometimes wrote not for popularity, but for pure artistry. About Steven, Host Steven is a Canadian composer & acto...
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3 months ago
1 minute

The Classical Music Minute
Form, Function, and Flourish: The Classical Sonata
Send us a text Description Form, Function, and Flourish: The Classical Sonata in 60 Seconds. Take a minute to get the scoop! Fun Fact Beethoven’s “Moonlight” Sonata wasn’t named by him at all—the nickname came years later, when a critic compared its first movement to moonlight on Lake Lucerne. Beethoven might have rolled his eyes, but the title stuck, and today it’s one of the most famous (and misinterpreted) sonatas ever written. About Steven, Host Steven is a Canadian composer & actor ...
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3 months ago
1 minute

The Classical Music Minute
Back to the Future: Neoclassicism in Music
Send us a text Description Back to the Future: Neoclassicism in Music in 60 Seconds. Take a minute to get the scoop! Fun Fact Stravinsky admitted that Pulcinella wasn’t just homage—it was liberation. “It was a backward look, of course,” he said, “but it was a look in the mirror too.” By reworking 18th-century melodies with his own twists, he essentially invented neoclassicism—proving that recycling old material can still create something revolutionary. About Steven, Host Steven is a Canadian...
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3 months ago
1 minute

The Classical Music Minute
Faraway Fantasies: Exoticism in Opera
Send us a text Description Faraway Fantasies: Exoticism in Opera in 60 Seconds. Take a minute to get the scoop! Fun Fact When Carmen premiered, critics complained it was too scandalous and “vulgar” for the Paris stage. Yet the opera’s Spanish flair and exotic energy soon captivated Europe. Ironically, Bizet never visited Spain—the rhythms and melodies came from French collections of “Spanish” tunes. Authentic or not, it became a timeless hit. About Steven, Host Steven is a Canadian composer ...
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3 months ago
1 minute

The Classical Music Minute
Showtime with Strings Attached: The Romantic Concerto
Send us a text Description Showtime with Strings Attached: The Romantic Concerto in 60 Seconds. Take a minute to get the scoop! Fun Fact Franz Liszt’s piano concertos were so demanding that critics sometimes accused him of showing off. He didn’t mind—he once said performing should “transport the listener.” Paganini caused similar uproar: audiences whispered he’d sold his soul to the devil to master the violin. Marketing hype, 19th-century style. About Steven, Host Steven is a Canadian compos...
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4 months ago
1 minute

The Classical Music Minute
Bigger, Louder, Wilder: The Romantic Orchestra Arrives
Send us a text Description Bigger, Louder, Wilder: The Romantic Orchestra Arrives in 60 Seconds. Take a minute to get the scoop! Fun Fact Wagner was so ambitious he built his own opera house in Bayreuth just to fit the expanded orchestra he envisioned. His pit design hid the musicians from the audience—so all you saw was drama on stage while an enormous, unseen orchestra unleashed waves of sound beneath. About Steven, Host Steven is a Canadian composer & actor living in Toronto. Through ...
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4 months ago
1 minute

The Classical Music Minute
Berlioz & the Program Symphony: When Music Told the Whole Story
Send us a text Description Berlioz & the Program Symphony: When Music Told the Whole Story in 60 Seconds. Take a minute to get the scoop! Fun Fact Berlioz claimed Symphonie fantastique was inspired by his infatuation with Irish actress Harriet Smithson, whom he later married—briefly. She didn’t attend the premiere, but when she finally heard it, she was impressed… and a little alarmed. Courtship tip: maybe don’t include a beheading scene when wooing your future spouse. About Steven, Host...
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4 months ago
1 minute

The Classical Music Minute
Send us a text Description Music After World War I: Art in a Shattered World in 60 Seconds. Take a minute to get the scoop! Fun Fact In 1918, Erik Satie described postwar music as needing “fewer perfumes and more reality.” Many composers shared this sentiment, favoring sharp edges and transparency over lush emotion. Audiences weren’t always thrilled—but history proved these reactions marked the birth of modern music, not its collapse. About Steven, Host Steven is a Canadian composer & a...