Skip to main content
Listening Through Time

Listening Through Time

By New York Philharmonic

In this podcast series we go inside the orchestra comparing how New York Philharmonic musicians over time played certain licks or passages in a variety of works. Are they the same or different and why? Our guides in this journey are the Philharmonic players themselves in conversation with the Orchestra’s Archivist and Historian Emerita Barbara Haws.
Available on
Apple Podcasts Logo
Google Podcasts Logo
Overcast Logo
Pocket Casts Logo
PodBean Logo
RadioPublic Logo
Spotify Logo
Currently playing episode

Joseph Alessi (Principal Trombone), Listening Through Time

Listening Through TimeJan 22, 2018

00:00
01:07:03
Joseph Alessi (Principal Trombone), Listening Through Time
Jan 22, 201801:07:03
Orin O’Brien (Bass), Listening Through Time
Dec 07, 201754:25
Stanley Drucker (Clarinet), Listening Through Time
Oct 27, 201751:12
Philip Smith (Trumpet) Listening Through Time

Philip Smith (Trumpet) Listening Through Time

Listening Through Time features the New York Philharmonic’s former Principal Trumpet Philip Smith in conversation with the Orchestra’s Archivist and Historian Barbara Haws, considering how trumpet performance practices, instruments, and interpretations have changed… or remained the same over the decades. Works discussed are the entrance of Mahler’s Symphony No. 5, Richard Strauss’s Ein Heldenleben, Mussorgsky’s Pictures at an Exhibition, Stravinsky’s Rite of Spring, Wagner’s Overture to The Flying Dutchman, Scriabin’s Poem of Ecstasy, and the post horn solo from Mahler’s Symphony No. 3. Philharmonic trumpet players discussed are William Vacchiano, Harry Glantz, Max Schlossberg, and John Ware. Recorded July 14, 2017. Conceived by Barbara Haws. Inspired by Sony Classical New York Philharmonic 175th Anniversary box set with recordings from 1917 to 1996. Recorded by Larry Rock, assisted by Ian Good. Edited by Charles Van Tassel. 

Sep 13, 201758:34