
Erik Satie - the Minimalist Muse
Jude Rogers uncovers the phenomenal legacy of Erik Satie. The iconoclastic composer's influence spans a multitude of genres from classical to synth-pop. But how did this happen?
A century after his death, the peculiar, beautiful music of Erik Satie is well-known and beloved across so much of our culture. You may have heard it for the first time at a concert hall – or a rock gig... Or lifting up an eerie film soundtrack, nostalgic TV advert – or easy listening compilation.
Iconoclastic and uncompromising, Satie's music was a rebellion against Romanticism but his work was often dismissed by the critics of his day as naive or a joke.
'The only amusing thing about his pieces were the whimsical titles he gave them, and that the music itself was often pitifully anaemic and dull.' [Manchester Guardian 1926]
Music journalist and broadcaster Jude Rogers uncovers how and why Satie's minimalist music has posthumously influenced such an astonishing array of composers and musicians - not only from the classical world but genres like prog rock and synth-pop. And discovers why his work is so often seen as a precursor to ambient music, minimalism, film and advert music, conceptual art, and surrealism.
'Satie teaches what, in our age, is the greatest audacity: simplicity.' [Jean Cocteau]
With contributions from composer Roger Eno; concert pianist Joanna MacGregor; Anton Lukoszevieze of Apartment House; biographer Ian Penman; electronic pioneer John Foxx; synth pop legend Gary Numan; Guitarist and former member of prog rock band Genesis, Steve Hackett; Brian Bath of the KT Bush Band; musicologist and John Cage expert James Pritchett; Japanese producer Yoshio Ojima and Pianist Satsuki Shibano.
Snippets of previously unbroadcast KT Band demo tapes are included with kind permission from Kate Bush.
Producer: Victoria Ferran
Exec Producer: Susan Marling
A Just Radio production for BBC Radio 3
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- Sun 29 Jun 2025 19:15BBC Radio 3