
Opera on the terraces
High art and the beautiful game: Oskar Cox Jensen discovers that music can be both difficult and popular.
Should the soundtrack of the 2026 Football World Cup be full of Classical music? British fans have been chanting to Verdi, humming along to Puccini and Handel - so why do we resist to label this music popular? Oskar Cox Jensen, a historian of song, discovers how the eighteenth-century composer and travel writer Charles Burney might help explain how we define and label the music.
Dr Oskar Cox Jensen, who leads a major project on mainstream song from 1520 to the present day at the University of Newcastle, speaks to Dr Katherine Hambridge, Associate Professor of Musicology at Durham University and to Professor Paul Whitty, composer and sound researcher at Oxford Brookes University.
Producer: Ruth Watts
Oskar Cox Jensen has been on the New Generation Thinkers scheme which is run by the BBC and the Arts and Humanities Research Council to share research on the radio.
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- Sun 24 May 202619:30BBC Radio 3




