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May 1, 2026 - 50:37
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The great and somewhat controversial conductor Leopold Stokowski said this about Tchaikovsky: "His musical utterance comes directly from the heart and is a spontaneous expression of his innermost feeling. It is as sincer...
Tchaikovsky Symphony No. 6 (Part 1) is an episode from Sticky Notes: The Classical Music Podcast by Joshua Weilerstein. The great and somewhat controversial conductor Leopold Stokowski said this about Tchaikovsky: "His musical utterance com...
This episode belongs to Sticky Notes: The Classical Music Podcast.
Use the player on this page to stream the episode online.
Published Mar 21, 2026, 50:44 long, audio available.
The great and somewhat controversial conductor Leopold Stokowski said this about Tchaikovsky: "His musical utterance comes directly from the heart and is a spontaneous expression of his innermost feeling. It is as sincere as if it were written with his blood." I couldn't agree more with Stokowski, because I think he hits on a word that has made Tchaikovsky's music so powerful to almost every audience that encounters it: sincere. Tchaikovsky's music is so profoundly moving because you feel as if there is no gap between the music and Tchaikovsky's emotions. It's as if he is earnestly speaking to you through his music. But paradoxically, this ability that Tchaikovsky had made him a punching bag of critics and cynics throughout his career and even into today. Even though Tchaikovsky remains one of the most popular composers in the Western Classical canon, his name is still not treated with the respect of a composer like Beethoven or Brahms or other luminaries. I understand that, but I also think Tchaikovsky's skills as a composer are extremely underrated, which brings me to Tchaikovsky's 6th and final symphony, nicknamed the "Pathetique." Tchaikovsky's 6th symphony essentially rewrites the traditional symphonic form. It is one of the few 19th century symphonies that end quietly, and that ending is one of the most extraordinary and daring in the entire repertoire. It is a piece of remarkable complexity and brilliant construction, and it packs an emotional wallop that leaves you walking out of the hall slightly changed from the way you walked in. In fact, this piece is so multi-layered that I wanted to devote some extra time to it, so I've decided to make this a two-part episode. This week, we're going to talk about the controversies over Tchaikovsky's emotional state as he composed this symphony, and the first two movements of the piece: a massive, 17-minute first movement that ingeniously melds multiple different symphonic forms into one long breath, and a waltz with a twist. We'll get into a lot more detail than we usually do, giving us a chance to really give Tchaikovsky the respect he deserves.
You can listen to Tchaikovsky Symphony No. 6 (Part 1) online on Radio and Podcast. Open the player on this page to stream the available audio.
Tchaikovsky Symphony No. 6 (Part 1) is an episode from Sticky Notes: The Classical Music Podcast by Joshua Weilerstein.
This episode is 50:44 long.
This episode was published on Mar 21, 2026.
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You can listen to Tchaikovsky Symphony No. 6 (Part 1) on this page when the episode audio is available from the podcast feed.
Tchaikovsky Symphony No. 6 (Part 1) is from Sticky Notes: The Classical Music Podcast by Joshua Weilerstein.
Published Mar 21, 2026 and 50:44 long