Laura Samuel, BBC Singers, National Youth Coir of Scotland, BBC Scottish Symphony, Sofi Jeannin - BBC Music Magazine July 2025 (vol.33 no.10) (2025)

Artist: Laura Samuel, BBC Singers, National Youth Coir of Scotland, BBC Scottish Symphony, Sofi Jeannin
Title: BBC Music Magazine July 2025 (vol.33 no.10)
Year Of Release: 2025
Label: BBC: BBCMM515
Genre: Classical
Quality: FLAC (image+.cue,log,scans)
Total Time: 1:04:22
Total Size: 255 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:Title: BBC Music Magazine July 2025 (vol.33 no.10)
Year Of Release: 2025
Label: BBC: BBCMM515
Genre: Classical
Quality: FLAC (image+.cue,log,scans)
Total Time: 1:04:22
Total Size: 255 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
Requiem in D minor K626
1. Requiem
2. Kyrie
3. Dies irae
4. Tuba mirum
5. Rex tremendae
6. Recordare
7. Confutatis
8. Lacrimosa
9. Amen
10. Domine Jesu
11. Hostias
12. Sanctus
13. Benedictus
14. Agnus Dei
15. Lux aeterna
16. Cum sanctis tuis
Vaughan Williams
17. The Lark Ascending
This month, we're all about the 2025 BBC Proms. And let's say it off the bat: there’s something of the night about this year’s Proms. From Claudia Winkleman’s ‘The Traitors’, celebrating scheming and treachery in classical music, to Anna Lapwood’s all-night ‘From Dark Till Dawn’, there’s a mischievously macabre vein running throughout the eight-week programme.
But if, thematically, the world’s greatest festival of music is treading a dark path, there’s still plenty of sunny, passionate and uplifting music to suit all tastes, as revealed in our full Proms Listings on page 24. Plus, if you’ve ever wondered what it takes to perfectly synchronise camera and sound during the dazzlingly complicated Proms televised broadcasts, on page 32 Andrew Green meets the producers and technicians on hand to catch that crucial flute solo or cymbal crash.
BBC Music Magazine July 2025 cover
Elsewhere in the issue we look at some incredible social applications for music – from the professional singers joining with prison inmates to put on brilliant stage productions (p54) to musicians performing in hospitals to supplement medical treatments for anxiety and chronic pain (p48). And for those with strong nerves, Jeremy Pound investigates the history of castrati singers on page 36 – and asks, was the distinct tone and range of these 17th- and 18th-century celebrities really worth the chop?
Allesandro Moeschi last castrato
Allesandro Moeschi, the last of the Castrati. Pic: Hulton-Deutsch Collection/CORBIS/Corbis via Getty Images
Joe Matera explores why rock bands and symphony orchestras make surprisingly successful collaborators, while for this month's travel feature our editor Charlotte Smith heads to Vancouver. No, not that one - we're talking Vancouver, Wahsington State, USA here. Host of a vibrant Arts and Music Festival every summer, Vancouver, WA is starting to make its mark, much in the vein of its neighbour across the Columbia River, Portland.
Oliver Sykes from Bring Me the Horizon performs at the Royal Albert Hall. We look at the fertile cross currents between orchestras and metal this month. Pic: Rob Ball/Redferns via Getty Images
For Composer of the Month, we salute the heroism of Henriëtte Bosmans. Amid the terrors of Nazi oppression, the Dutch-Jewish composer showed admirable fearlessness and passion, says Rebecca Franks. Our Building a Library choice is Busoni’s prodigious Piano Concerto. So fiendishly difficult that for many years even the best pianists avoided it, the Italian’s five-movement masterpiece is admired by Claire Jackson. And we hear from the great Ludovico Einaudi on the music that shaped him.
But if, thematically, the world’s greatest festival of music is treading a dark path, there’s still plenty of sunny, passionate and uplifting music to suit all tastes, as revealed in our full Proms Listings on page 24. Plus, if you’ve ever wondered what it takes to perfectly synchronise camera and sound during the dazzlingly complicated Proms televised broadcasts, on page 32 Andrew Green meets the producers and technicians on hand to catch that crucial flute solo or cymbal crash.
BBC Music Magazine July 2025 cover
Elsewhere in the issue we look at some incredible social applications for music – from the professional singers joining with prison inmates to put on brilliant stage productions (p54) to musicians performing in hospitals to supplement medical treatments for anxiety and chronic pain (p48). And for those with strong nerves, Jeremy Pound investigates the history of castrati singers on page 36 – and asks, was the distinct tone and range of these 17th- and 18th-century celebrities really worth the chop?
Allesandro Moeschi last castrato
Allesandro Moeschi, the last of the Castrati. Pic: Hulton-Deutsch Collection/CORBIS/Corbis via Getty Images
Joe Matera explores why rock bands and symphony orchestras make surprisingly successful collaborators, while for this month's travel feature our editor Charlotte Smith heads to Vancouver. No, not that one - we're talking Vancouver, Wahsington State, USA here. Host of a vibrant Arts and Music Festival every summer, Vancouver, WA is starting to make its mark, much in the vein of its neighbour across the Columbia River, Portland.
Oliver Sykes from Bring Me the Horizon performs at the Royal Albert Hall. We look at the fertile cross currents between orchestras and metal this month. Pic: Rob Ball/Redferns via Getty Images
For Composer of the Month, we salute the heroism of Henriëtte Bosmans. Amid the terrors of Nazi oppression, the Dutch-Jewish composer showed admirable fearlessness and passion, says Rebecca Franks. Our Building a Library choice is Busoni’s prodigious Piano Concerto. So fiendishly difficult that for many years even the best pianists avoided it, the Italian’s five-movement masterpiece is admired by Claire Jackson. And we hear from the great Ludovico Einaudi on the music that shaped him.
