
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Tom Service considers how music can be transcendent. From Wagner's sublime harmonies in Tristan und Isolde, to the hypnotic drumming of shamans, what is it about some kinds of music that can take us to a higher plane? He considers music for contemplation (such as church music by Messiaen, and Fauré's Requiem); music for dancing to oblivion (the techno "Trance" genre, whirling dervishes); music evoking ecstasy (Scriabin, Gospel music); and he discusses the ancient practises of shamans in various cultures, with ethnomusicologist Keith Howard.
By BBC Radio 34.1
5555 ratings
Tom Service considers how music can be transcendent. From Wagner's sublime harmonies in Tristan und Isolde, to the hypnotic drumming of shamans, what is it about some kinds of music that can take us to a higher plane? He considers music for contemplation (such as church music by Messiaen, and Fauré's Requiem); music for dancing to oblivion (the techno "Trance" genre, whirling dervishes); music evoking ecstasy (Scriabin, Gospel music); and he discusses the ancient practises of shamans in various cultures, with ethnomusicologist Keith Howard.

43,986 Listeners

7,713 Listeners

1,066 Listeners

5,472 Listeners

1,806 Listeners

971 Listeners

1,776 Listeners

1,050 Listeners

2,076 Listeners

346 Listeners

51 Listeners

74 Listeners

43 Listeners

2,180 Listeners

986 Listeners

4,167 Listeners

229 Listeners

3,219 Listeners

735 Listeners

15,596 Listeners

16,001 Listeners

3,029 Listeners

753 Listeners

858 Listeners