Main content

Tom Service explores brevity in music in the company of sonic artist JLIAT who has made a piece lasting 1/44100th of a second.

Tom Service ponders brevity in music - how short you can go? From Beethoven bagatelles to Webern's chamber miniatures, short doesn't need to mean lightweight. Short pieces may be intricate as a netsuke or as simple as a sonic doodle. Or suggest a fragment of something larger. Tom talks to sonic artist JLIAT, who has made a piece lasting 1/44100 of a second. But he's thinking of shorter pieces.

Available now

29 minutes

Last on

Sun 27 May 2018 17:00

Music Played

  • Ludwig van Beethoven

    Bagatelle, Op 119, No 10 Allegrament

    Performer: Stephen Kovacevich.
    • Bagatelles (6) for piano, Op. 126.
    • Philips.
  • Carl Stalling

    Wind-Up Doll

    Performer: Carl Stalling.
    • The Carl Stalling Project Volume 2 More Music From Warner Bros. Cartoons 1939-19.
    • Warner Bros. Records β€Ž.
  • Erik Satie

    Le Prisonnier Maussade

    Performer: Jean‐Yves Thibaudet.
    • Satie - The Complete Solo Piano Music.
    • Decca.
  • Joby Talbot

    League of Gentlemen Theme Tune

    Performer: Joby Talbot.
  • Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart

    Allegro in C major, K.1b

    Performer: Cyprien Katsaris.
    • The Mozart Family.
    • PIANO21.
  • Johannes Haessler

    Etude from 360 Etudes

    Performer: Johannes Haessler.
  • Robert Schumann

    Mit Humor (Davidsbuenldertaenze)

    Performer: Maurizio Pollini.
    • DG.
  • John Zorn

    Obeah Man

    Performer: John Zorn.
    • Naked City.
    • Elektra Nonesuch.
  • Anton Webern

    3 Little Pieces op 11 No. 2

    Performer: Clemens Hagen. Performer: Oleg Maisenberg.
    • DG.
  • Pierre Boulez

    Notations - no 2

    Performer: Chen Pi-hsien.
    • CBS.
  • Pierre Boulez

    Notations - no 10

    Performer: Chen Pi-hsien.
    • CBS.
  • FrΓ©dΓ©ric Chopin

    Prelude, No. 11, Op. 28 in B Major

    Performer: Maurizio Pollini.
    • Chopin: Preludes (24), Op. 28.
    • DG.
  • Johann Sebastian Bach

    The Goldberg Variations - Canon in unison (No.3)

    Performer: Richard Egarr.
    • Bach: Goldberg Variations BWV 988 - 14 Canons BWV 1087.
    • Harmonia Mundi.
  • Judith Weir

    Mountain Air 3

    Performer: Judith Weir.
  • Napalm Death

    You Suffer

    Performer: Napalm Death.
    • Scum.
    • Earache Records.
  • Napalm Death

    The Kill

    Performer: Napalm Death.
    • Scum.
    • Earache Records.
  • John Zorn

    Igneous Ejaculation

    Performer: John Zorn.
    • Naked City.
    • Elektra Nonesuch.
  • BΓ©la BartΓ³k

    Dragon's Dance from Mikrokosmos - no 72

    Performer: JenΕ‘ JandΓ³.
    • Bartok - Mikrokosmos.
    • Naxos.
  • GyΓΆrgy KurtΓ‘g

    Microludes no. 2

    Performer: Hagen Quartett.
    • DG.
  • GyΓΆrgy KurtΓ‘g

    Microludes no. 3

    Performer: Hagen Quartett.
    • DG.
  • JLIAT

    one bite piece [CLICK]

    Performer: JLIAT.
  • GyΓΆrgy Ligeti

    Sippal Doppal Nagihegeduval - VII

    Performer: Amadinda Percussion Group. Performer: Katalin KΓ‘rolyi.
    • The Ligeti Project III.
    • Teldec.

Broadcasts

  • Sun 26 Mar 2017 17:00
  • Sun 27 May 2018 17:00

Why do we call it 'classical' music?

Tom Service poses a very simple question (with a not-so-simple answer).

Six of the world's most extreme voices

From babies to Mongolian throat singers: whose voice is the most extreme of all?

How did the number 12 revolutionise music?

How did the number 12 revolutionise music?

How Schoenberg opened a new cosmos for composers and listeners to explore.

Why are we all addicted to bass?

Why are we all addicted to bass?

Bass is everywhere, but why do we enjoy it? Join Tom Service on a journey of discovery.

Watch the animations

Join Tom Service on a musical journey through beginnings, repetition and bass lines.

When does noise become music?

We like to think we can separate β€œnoise” from β€œmusic”, but is it that simple?

Podcast