KXTR Classic 1660 Halloween special
Philosophy

KXTR Classic 1660 Halloween special



Patrick Neas is KXTR's Program Director and Morning Show Host from 6am to10am, Monday through Friday. Patrick has been waking up Kansas City area music lovers for more than ten years with a lively mix of uplifting and inspiring classical music, traffic, news, weather and interviews with creative and artistic personalities. All of this plus Patrick's offbeat observations make for a highly entertaining morning show. Because smart people need morning radio too!

Tune in this Friday for a full day of Halloween related classical music and a reading of Edgar Allen Poe's "The Raven" by Basil Rathbone. All classical music is available online 24 hours a day.

Visit
KXTR and click the "listen" icon.




- Rock 101: We Do Need Some Education
TheWife is not a popular music person, so around the house we tend to play world, jazz, or classical. But as Christmas approached, she voiced the concern that the kids might be alienated from their peers because they aren't listening to anything pop....

- Stephen Fry - Classical Music Is Not Irrelevant To Youth
Apparently there was some sort of debate in Cambridge recently in which the motion was that "classical music is irrelevant to today's youth." The first question a philosopher might ask at the outset is to explain what we mean by the word "irrelevant."...

- Deceased--kxtr
This is a personal and regional note but reflects the "radio biz"...if a station cannot turn a profit, then its survival is questionable. The arts do suffer. KXTR [Kansas City, Missouri] began broadcasting about 47 years ago. I used to listen to it on...

- Luna Trio
This has nothing to do with the Moon or philosophy or science...just three teens [Jennifer Wey (violin). Mayumi Tsuchida (piano) and Tessa Seymour (cello)] from San Francisco who love classical music. PBS's From the Top Season 2 Episode 9 They...

- Space Music...soothing And Mysterious
I suppose that there are number of people interested in this genre of music. It is quite creative and not bad to listen to when writing papers. It's called Space Music according to the promoter Stephen Hill but Wikipedia offers something a bit different....



Philosophy








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