Music History Monday
A podcast by Robert Greenberg
192 Episodes
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Music History Monday: Armando Anthony “Chick” Corea
Published: 12/06/2023 -
Music History Monday: Never Eat Anything That Can Bite You Back!
Published: 05/06/2023 -
Music History Monday: Isaac Albéniz
Published: 29/05/2023 -
Music History Monday: Giuseppe Verdi and the Requiem for Alessandro Manzoni
Published: 22/05/2023 -
Music History Monday: All the Music That’s Fit to Print
Published: 15/05/2023 -
Music History Monday: Louis Moreau Gottschalk, or What Happens in Oakland Does Not Stay in Oakland
Published: 08/05/2023 -
Music History Monday: The Enduring Miracle
Published: 01/05/2023 -
Music History Monday: A Voice Like Buttah!
Published: 24/04/2023 -
Music History Monday: I Left My Nerve in San Francisco
Published: 17/04/2023 -
Music History Monday: A Mama’s Boy, and Proud of It!
Published: 10/04/2023 -
Music History Monday: The Death of Johannes Brahms
Published: 03/04/2023 -
Music History Monday: Papa’s Last Appearance
Published: 27/03/2023 -
Music History Monday: The First Night: Gioachino Rossini’s The Barber of Seville
Published: 20/02/2023 -
Music History Monday: A Man for All Symptoms: The Death of Wagner
Published: 13/02/2023 -
Music History Monday: Johannes Ockeghem and the Oltremontani
Published: 06/02/2023 -
Music History Monday: Francis Poulenc: “a bit of monk and a bit of hooligan”
Published: 30/01/2023 -
Music History Monday: Paul Robeson: Truly Larger Than Life
Published: 23/01/2023 -
Music History Monday: The Blockhead – Anton Felix Schindler – and Beethoven’s Conversation Books
Published: 16/01/2023 -
Music History Monday: An Impresario for the Ages: Rudolf Bing
Published: 09/01/2023 -
Music History Monday: Getting Personal: Édith Piaf
Published: 19/12/2022
Exploring Music History with Professor Robert Greenberg one Monday at a time. Every Monday Robert Greenberg explores some timely, perhaps intriguing and even, if we are lucky, salacious chunk of musical information relevant to that date, or to … whatever. If on (rare) occasion these features appear a tad irreverent, well, that’s okay: we would do well to remember that cultural icons do not create and make music but rather, people do, and people can do and say the darndest things.