Main content

The sounds of Christmas

Tom Service talks to two of the country's most successful composers, Patrick Doyle and Rachel Portman.

Tom Service hears from one of the most successful British film composers of all time, Patrick Doyle. With a career spanning 50 years and over 60 movies – including Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire, Henry V, and Rise of the Planet of the Apes – he talks to Tom about composing the Coronation March for the Coronation of Their Majesties The King and The Queen Consort earlier this year, and shares more about his innate feeling for musical drama.

Pianist, composer, and Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ’s Russia Editor, Steven Rosenberg, files a dispatch from Moscow where he reflects on the festive idyll of a song which has come to epitomise Christmas for generations of Russians, the discordant beauty of the capital’s wintery landscape with the reality of the conflict with Ukraine. He shares a specially composed piece he’s written in response to the lived experience of many this yuletide in Moscow.

Tom is also joined by the Academy Award winning composer Rachel Portman who reveals, among other things, how she goes about summoning the sound world of Christmas in the scores of TV adverts she’s penned, and how she evokes a festive mood in a matter of seconds.

And the author, speaker, advocate for music education, and mother to seven virtuosic children, Kadiatu Kanneh-Mason, tells Music Matters how her musical family celebrates Christmas.

Available now

44 minutes

Last on

Sat 23 Dec 2023 11:45

Broadcast

  • Sat 23 Dec 2023 11:45

Knock on wood – six stunning wooden concert halls around the world

Steel and concrete can't beat good old wood to produce the best sounds for music.

The evolution of video game music

Tom Service traces the rise of an exciting new genre, from bleeps to responsive scores.

Why music can literally make us lose track of time

Try our psychoacoustic experiment to see how tempo can affect your timekeeping abilities.

Podcast