Episodes

  • Beethoven: The Bridge Between Two Worlds
    Feb 23 2026

    Description
    Beethoven: The Bridge Between Two Worlds in 60 Seconds. Take a minute to get the scoop!

    Fun Fact
    By the time Beethoven premiered his Ninth Symphony, he was completely deaf. Unable to hear the applause, he had to be turned around onstage to see the audience cheering. It was a powerful moment—one that perfectly captured his role as a composer who transcended personal limitation and musical tradition alike.

    About Steven, Host
    Steven is a Canadian composer & actor living in Toronto. Through his music, he creates a range of works, with an emphasis on the short-form genre—his muse being to offer the listener both the darker and more satiric shades of human existence. If you're interested, please check out his music website for more. Member of the Canadian League Of Composers.

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    1 min
  • Debussy and the Sound of Impressionism
    Feb 16 2026

    Description
    Debussy and the Sound of Impressionism in 60 Seconds. Take a minute to get the scoop!

    Fun Fact
    Debussy disliked the term “Impressionism,” insisting it was borrowed from painting and misunderstood his music. He preferred to think of his works as “images” in sound. Ironically, the label stuck—and today it’s nearly impossible to imagine Impressionism without Debussy at its center.

    About Steven, Host
    Steven is a Canadian composer & actor living in Toronto. Through his music, he creates a range of works, with an emphasis on the short-form genre—his muse being to offer the listener both the darker and more satiric shades of human existence. If you're interested, please check out his music website for more. Member of the Canadian League Of Composers.

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    1 min
  • The Fugue: Discipline, Drama, and Design
    Feb 9 2026

    Description
    The Fugue: Discipline, Drama, and Design in 60 Seconds. Take a minute to get the scoop!

    Fun Fact
    Bach’s The Art of Fugue was left unfinished at his death, ending abruptly mid-piece. Legend claims he was working on a final fugue spelling his own name in musical notes—B-A-C-H. Whether intentional or not, the idea feels fitting: a composer signing off using pure musical design.

    About Steven, Host
    Steven is a Canadian composer & actor living in Toronto. Through his music, he creates a range of works, with an emphasis on the short-form genre—his muse being to offer the listener both the darker and more satiric shades of human existence. If you're interested, please check out his music website for more. Member of the Canadian League Of Composers.

    Support the show

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    1 min
  • Theme and Variations: Order vs. Imagination
    Feb 2 2026

    Description
    Theme and Variations: Order vs. Imagination in 60 Seconds. Take a minute to get the scoop!

    Fun Fact
    Some variation sets were written as showpieces to prove compositional skill. Brahms once joked that anyone could write a good theme, but only a real composer could write convincing variations. Beethoven agreed—he used the form repeatedly when he wanted to demonstrate both discipline and daring in equal measure.

    About Steven, Host
    Steven is a Canadian composer & actor living in Toronto. Through his music, he creates a range of works, with an emphasis on the short-form genre—his muse being to offer the listener both the darker and more satiric shades of human existence. If you're interested, please check out his music website for more. Member of the Canadian League Of Composers.

    Support the show

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    1 min
  • The Art Song: When Poetry Met Music
    Jan 26 2026

    Description
    The Art Song: When Poetry Met Music in 60 Seconds. Take a minute to get the scoop!

    Fun Fact
    Schubert wrote over 600 art songs, many for informal gatherings with friends called Schubertiades. Performers often sang straight from handwritten manuscripts while the composer turned pages. Some of the most treasured songs in Western music began as living-room experiments rather than formal commissions.

    About Steven, Host
    Steven is a Canadian composer & actor living in Toronto. Through his music, he creates a range of works, with an emphasis on the short-form genre—his muse being to offer the listener both the darker and more satiric shades of human existence. If you're interested, please check out his music website for more. Member of the Canadian League Of Composers.

    Support the show

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    1 min
  • From Court to Concert Hall: The Shift from Patronage to Public Audiences
    Jan 19 2026

    Description
    From Court to Concert Hall: The Shift from Patronage to Public Audiences in 60 Seconds. Take a minute to get the scoop!

    Fun Fact
    Beethoven famously tore the dedication page from his Eroica Symphony when Napoleon crowned himself emperor. The gesture symbolized a larger shift: composers were no longer servants flattering rulers, but artists answering to ideals—and to paying audiences. Independence sounded glorious, but it also meant chasing publishers, patrons, and ticket sales.

    About Steven, Host
    Steven is a Canadian composer & actor living in Toronto. Through his music, he creates a range of works, with an emphasis on the short-form genre—his muse being to offer the listener both the darker and more satiric shades of human existence. If you're interested, please check out his music website for more. Member of the Canadian League Of Composers.

    Support the show

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    1 min
  • Why the Symphony Became a Cultural Symbol
    Jan 12 2026

    Description
    Why the Symphony Became a Cultural Symbol in 60 Seconds. Take a minute to get the scoop!

    Fun Fact
    Beethoven’s Ninth Symphony was the first to include a chorus in a symphony—an audacious move at the time. Critics were baffled. Today, its “Ode to Joy” theme is used as the anthem of the European Union, proving the symphony’s power to move from concert hall to cultural symbol.

    About Steven, Host
    Steven is a Canadian composer & actor living in Toronto. Through his music, he creates a range of works, with an emphasis on the short-form genre—his muse being to offer the listener both the darker and more satiric shades of human existence. If you're interested, please check out his music website for more. Member of the Canadian League Of Composers.

    Support the show

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    1 min
  • Music After World War I: Art in a Shattered World
    Jan 5 2026

    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 & actor living in Toronto. Through his music, he creates a range of works, with an emphasis on the short-form genre—his muse being to offer the listener both the darker and more satiric shades of human existence. If you're interested, please check out his music website for more. Member of the Canadian League Of Composers.

    Support the show

    Show More Show Less
    1 min