Carlo Rovelli
Michael Berkeley’s guest is Italian physicist Carlo Rovelli. With music by Beethoven, Vivaldi, Bach and Schubert.
As we start a new year, our thoughts turn towards the year ahead with all its plans and resolutions. And yet of course it is irrational to make this complete distinction between December and January; in fact, the more you think about it, the more you realise that everything about time is strangely slippery.
The slippery nature of time is something that preoccupies Carlo Rovelli, a theoretical physicist who has worked in Italy and the United States and who is currently directing the quantum research group at the Centre for Theoretical Physics in Marseille. His books “Seven Brief Lessons on Physics”, “Reality is Not What it Seems” and “The Order of Time” have become international best-sellers, outselling “Fifty Shades of Grey”.
In Private Passions, Carlo Rovelli talks to Michael Berkeley about how music has helped him think about time, and how memory of the past and expectation of the future come into constant play when we listen to music: “We don’t live in the present, we live a little bit in the future and a little bit in the past – we live in a clearing in the forest of time.” He looks back to his childhood, growing up in Verona, and hearing Vivaldi played every week in the local church. He discusses Philip Glass’s “Einstein on the Beach”, a work he admits he likes particularly for its title. He thinks about how Mozart represents the end of time in his “Dies Irae”, music he loves to listen to at full volume when his partner is out of the house. Other choices include Schubert, Arvo Pärt, Beethoven’s Missa Solemnis and the Bach cantata he discovered as a teenager that still astonishes him.
A Loftus production for ѿý Radio 3
Produced by Elizabeth Burke
Last on
Music Played
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Ludwig van Beethoven
Benedictus (Missa Solemnis)
Orchestra: New York Philharmonic. Conductor: Bruno Walter. -
Antonio Vivaldi
Violin Concerto in B flat major, Rv.583
Performer: Piero Toso. Orchestra: I Solisti Veneti. Conductor: Claudio Scimone. -
Arvo Pärt
Fur Alina
Performer: Jeroen van Veen. -
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
Dies Irae (Requiem)
Choir: New College Oxford Choir. Orchestra: Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment. Conductor: Edward Higginbottom. -
Philip Glass
Knee Play 5 (Einstein on the Beach)
Ensemble: Philip Glass Ensemble. Conductor: Michael Riesman. -
Franz Schubert
Piano Trio no.2 in E flat major (2nd mvt: Andante)
Ensemble: Beaux Arts Trio. -
Johann Sebastian Bach
Wir eilen mit schwachen (Cantata no.78: Jesu, der du meine Seele)
Singer: Julianne Baird. Singer: Allan Fast. Ensemble: Bach‐Collegium Stuttgart. Conductor: Joshua Rifkin.
Broadcast
- Sun 5 Jan 2020 12:00ѿý Radio 3
Podcast
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Private Passions
Guests from all walks of life discuss their musical loves and hates