On Air Now
3MBS Fine Music - Classically Melbourne

Feature Articles

Support the Station that supports Fine Music in Melbourne - 3MBS!

From On Air

Each month, 3MBS's On Air program guide includes feature articles.

Elgar's Gerontius: An enduring masterpiece ahead of its time - Andrew Wailes

The List of Liszts - David Hood celebrates 200 years of Lisztomania

Silent Woods - A profile of cellist Mischa Maisky

A Scotsman takes on Beethoven's 9 Symphonies... - Douglas Boyd

William Barton - Australia's Foremost Didjeridu Performer

Australian Voices - ANAM's Paul Dean on the Project to find Australia's Musical 'Voice'

Working in Austria/Australia - Three expat musicians share their experiences

Life in the Orchestra - Zelman Symphony and Orchestra Victoria Musicians

Tessa Ho - National Young Performer of 2010 - Interview

Choral Music in Melbourne - Jonathon Welch, Andrew Wailes and Jonathan Grieves-Smith share their thoughts

Opera in Australia - Insights from Stuart Greenbaum, Deborah Cheetham and Alan Gilmour

Classically Melbourne – The Other Side of The Microphone by Steve Bullock

Orchestra Victoria's Artistic Director Jo Beaumont in Conversation with Lin Bender

'Matching wine with music...' by Rita Erlich

"3MBS Matters..." to so many people, for so many reasons. Have your say!

"A mother of a job..." Five working Musicians/Mothers speak to Lin Bender

"the musician lurking inside our students..." Two Questions for Four Music Educators

 
10 Years of the Flinders Quartet Owen McKern speaks to cellist Zoë Knighton
 
"...it's the most wonderful and rewarding career" Sopranos Merlyn Quaife and Antoinette Halloran speak to Dr Eamonn Kelly
 
Sir Neville Marriner: Two Personal Perspectives by John Manger and William Hennessy
 
 
 
 
Music Competitions - Who Wins? by Linda Anne Engelhardt
 
Music without the Industry by Norman Lebrecht
 
Peter Sculthorpe at 80 by Rita Erlich
 
Inside the Recital Centre by Dr Eamonn Kelly
 

Vintage Special

"The Thon is Gone, But..." - by Trevor Jarvie From Libretto Vol.1, No.6, June 1984 
 

Back to top