Épisodes

  • What’s Next for Cuba? A Cuban Explains What You Need to Know
    Mar 15 2026

    I was born in Cuba and lived there until I was nineteen years old.

    In this video I reflect on what concepts like international law mean to people who actually live under a dictatorship. Much of the global conversation about Cuba happens in academic, legal, or political circles far removed from the lived experience of the Cuban people.

    For those who grow up under a system where basic rights are routinely violated, international law can often feel distant, abstract, and powerless.

    This is a personal reflection on that reality—and on what might come next for Cuba.

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    11 min
  • Is Timothée Chalamet Right About Opera and Ballet Being Irrelevant?
    Mar 9 2026

    Actor Timothée Chalamet recently suggested that opera and ballet may be becoming irrelevant.

    Standing here at Lincoln Center in New York, between the Juilliard School, the New York City Ballet and the Metropolitan Opera House, I wanted to reflect on that idea.

    Inside Juilliard, musicians who began studying their instruments as children dedicate their lives to mastering their craft. Across the plaza, dancers at New York City Ballet train with extraordinary discipline and sacrifice.

    And tonight at the Met Opera, they are performing Tristan und Isolde — a work that changed the language of music and helped shape the storytelling language of cinema itself.

    Opera and ballet do not become irrelevant because they are old.

    They become irrelevant only when we stop being curious about beauty.

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    5 min
  • Pulitzer Prize Winner Tim Page on Glenn Gould, Dawn Powell & The Future of Music
    Mar 3 2026

    What does genius look like up close? And what does friendship with genius demand?

    In this intimate and candid conversation, Pulitzer Prize winner Tim Page reflects on his profound friendship with Glenn Gould — not just the legendary pianist, but the private, searching human being behind the recordings.

    He also shares the remarkable story of how he rediscovered and helped rescue the writer Dawn Powell from obscurity, and the passion behind his acclaimed biography that restored her place in American literature.

    We speak about the composers he loves most, his lifelong devotion to classical music, his deep commitment to teaching, and his gift for helping others fall in love with the music that shaped him.

    The conversation expands into a larger reflection on the future of music — classical and pop — and what it means to preserve culture in a rapidly changing world.

    A heartfelt exchange about art, loyalty, mentorship, and why great music still matters.

    📚 Tim Page

    The Glenn Gould Reader

    https://a.co/d/0cAIfvri

    Parallel Play

    https://a.co/d/05VhRY4b

    Dawn Powell: A Biography

    https://a.co/d/0cmsqTIO

    Follow Tim Page on Substack

    https://substack.com/@timpage54

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    1 h et 35 min
  • The Immortal Beethoven | Jan Swafford
    Feb 24 2026

    What makes Beethoven immortal?

    In this wide-ranging conversation, pianist Orlando Alonso sits down with acclaimed biographer and composer Jan Swafford to explore the inner life, artistic courage, and spiritual defiance of Ludwig van Beethoven.

    We discuss:

    • The myth and reality of the “Immortal Beloved”
    • The revolutionary force of the late piano sonatas
    • Op. 111 and the transcendence of the Arietta
    • Beethoven’s deafness and artistic will
    • The tension between biography and legend
    • What Beethoven still demands of performers today

    Throughout the episode, we reference and briefly explore musical excerpts that illuminate key moments in Beethoven’s evolution — from storm and struggle to luminous transcendence.

    This is not simply a conversation about a composer.

    It is a meditation on artistic destiny, suffering, and immortality.

    Jan Swafford’s books are available wherever books are sold.

    Highly recommended:

    • Beethoven: Anguish and Triumph
    • Mozart: The Reign of Love
    • Johannes Brahms: A Biography
    • Charles Ives: A Life with Music

    📜 Copyright Note

    Musical excerpts included in this episode are used for purposes of commentary, criticism, and educational discussion. All rights to the recordings remain with their respective copyright holders.

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    2 h et 22 min
  • Bad Bunny's Super Bowl Halftime: What Are We Celebrating?
    Feb 18 2026

    Was Bad Bunny’s Super Bowl halftime show a cultural milestone — or something else?

    In this episode of OAMusic, Orlando Alonso examines the performance through the lens of art, representation, and cultural standards. Beyond politics and social media noise, this is a conversation about what we celebrate — and why.

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    8 min