Schedule
HostsWays to Give
HomePlaylistSchedule
HostsEventsOn DemandOur StoryOur TeamWays to Give Become a Sponsor
How to ListenVisit Help CenterContact Us

Find Us on Social Media:

Logo image

Find Us on Social Media:

Download Our Mobile App:

google play icon

About

HomePlaylistSchedule
HostsOn DemandOur StoryOur Team

Community

EventsWays to Give Become a SponsorPressDiversity StatementCareersAnnual EEO ReportDigital Accessibility

Help

How to ListenVisit Help CenterContact Us

©2025 Classical California

Sweepstakes RulesFCC ComplianceLocal Public FilesCPB ComplianceAnnual EEO ReportPrivacy PolicyCode of Integrity

Why We Love It

Content image

During the end-of-year encore broadcast of Classical California’s Ultimate 101, three pieces a day were introduced by Brian Lauritzen’s “Why We Love It” features -- mini-deep dives about specific pieces that pull together history, culture, and a little musicology for a textured exploration of why we still love these great masterpieces. Now, you can listen to each one demand below:

Why We Love It: Ludwig van Beethoven - Choral Fantasy

How is Beethoven like a New Year’s Resolution? In this episode of Why We Love It, Brian explores this question (that’s probably never been asked) and together we find a composer who was so skillful at closing the book on the past and looking to the future. Even in a lesser-known work like his Choral Fantasy, Beethoven is looking backwards and forwards all while managing to level-up, musically and philosophically.

00:00
Why We Love It: Antonín Dvořák - American String Quartet (String Quartet No. 12 in F major)

What if we told you some of the most quintessentially American classical music wasn’t even written by an American composer? You might say, well yeah, I already knew that. I am aware of Dvorak’s New World Symphony after all. There’s more from Dvorak’s time in the United States. What he heard in our music was a longing for home, a search for identity, the coexistence of many cultures, and the beauty of voices rising from the margins. In this episode of Why We Love It, Brian explores the sound of home through the lens of Dvorak’s “American” String Quartet.

00:00
Why We Love It: Peter Tchaikovsky - Symphony #6 "Pathetique"

Have you ever felt like an outsider? Like you just didn’t fit in? But more than that. Have you ever felt like you don’t belong? In this episode of Why We Love It, Brian explores the heart-wrenching Symphony No. 6, by Tchaikovsky. A symphony which begins and ends in the depths of despair, ultimately leaving us empty and without any glimmer of hope. But a symphony which also allows us to contemplate a composer at his most vulnerable and whose vulnerability reminds us that we are never alone in ours. Tchaikovsky's 6th is a symphony which gives us space to practice empathy, honesty, and emotional courage.

00:00
Why We Love It: Camille Saint-Saëns - the Swan from Carnival of the Animals

Is there such a thing as absolute serenity? Peace, unsullied by modern life and the stresses and pressures that it brings? In this episode of Why We Love It, Brian explores a beloved tender moment tucked away near the end of a delightfully silly piece of music by Camille Saint-Saens: The Swan, from Carnival of the Animals. It is a delicate, intimate encounter with beauty. Beauty that asks nothing of us. Beauty that just is.

00:00
Why We Love It: Richard Strauss - Also sprach Zarathustra

How do you feel about questions that don’t have answers? Do you love the conjecture, the discussion, the possibility? Or do questions without answers just bug the you-know-what out of you? In this episode of Why We Love It, Brian explores a piece of music we ALL know the first two minutes of…and one that most of us haven’t heard the remaining 31 minutes of. It’s musical and philosophical ambiguity that, in the end, reaches a beautiful lack of conclusion.

00:00
Why We Love It: Johann Pachelbel - Canon in D

If we told you there was a piece of music that consists of the same musical idea 28 times in a row, would you want to listen to it? That music does exist and it is one of the most popular pieces of classical music ever written: Pachelbel’s Canon. In this episode of Why We Love It, Brian explores how the monotony of repetition creates possibility and the opportunity for beautiful creativity. Also, how Pachelbel’s Canon is like pizza.

00:00
Why We Love It: Sergei Rachmaninoff - Piano Concerto #2

Ever wonder what life would be like without the music we love? That’s not a super happy thought, but in the case of Rachmaninoff’s Piano Concerto No. 2, it almost didn’t exist. In this episode of Why We Love It, Brian explores the inspirational story of Rachmaninoff’s personal triumph over crippling self-doubt and how this comeback piece might be the most powerful reminder to us today that our darkest moments do not define us.

00:00
Why We Love It: Aaron Copland - Appalachian Spring

Is it possible to find hope in darkness? What does that look like? What does that feel like? What does that sound like? Some of the most optimistic American music comes from the dark uncertainty of World War II. In this episode of Why We Love It, Brian explores Copland’s iconic ballet Appalachian Spring and its simple gift of patient, quiet optimism in moments of uncertainty.

00:00
Why We Love It: Claude Debussy - Clair de lune

Can we have memories of places we’ve never been? Can we be nostalgic for moments we haven’t experienced? Seems unlikely, but in this episode of Why We Love It, Brian explores how Debussy uses music and poetry to take us to a place that we’ve never been before but how still somehow feels familiar and comforting.

00:00
Why We Love It: Beethoven's Symphony No. 9
00:00