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Landmarks Music History Podcasts

The Treasures of Carnegie Hall

Carnegie Hall is one of America’s greatest and most enduring cultural landmarks, enchanting audiences and making history since its opening night on May 5, 1891, when Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky appeared there in his first performance in the United States.

This groundbreaking performance space (originally known simply as “Music Hall”) is in fact a trio of distinct venues, all nestled within a single, opulent Italian Renaissance–style building.

Although its benefactor Andrew Carnegie and his fellow Gilded Age elites had moved their grand residences farther up Fifth Avenue, New York’s established cultural institutions, like the venerable Academy of Music, still lingered well to the south. Carnegie Hall helped shift that center of gravity uptown.

Yet the true history of Carnegie Hall lives inside its walls—within the experiences of the audiences and the artists, and, for this week’s show, within the archives themselves. Tom and Greg have been invited into the Carnegie Hall archives for an exclusive, unprecedented encounter with the story of American music.

Kathleen Sabogal and Robert Hudson of the Rose Museum & Archives guide the Bowery Boys through the Hall’s past, using some of their collection’s most cherished artifacts: a clarinet, mysterious locks, ledger books, stickpins, suffrage buttons, beaded jackets, photographs, and autograph books that together bring the spirit of Carnegie Hall vividly to life.

And in the end — they even take to the stage!

This episode was proudly sponsored by Carnegie Hall. Visit CarnegieHall.org for information on upcoming shows, including the United in Sound: America at 250festival, a multifaceted reflection of the United States 250 years since the signing of the Declaration of Independence.

LISTEN TODAY: THE TREASURES OF CARNEGIE HALL


United in Sound: America at 250

Carnegie Hall’s 2025–2026 season festival is a multifaceted reflection of the United States 250 years since the signing of the Declaration of Independence.

In more than 35 concerts at the Hall, audiences will experience Broadway, jazz, film music, rock ‘n’ roll, hip-hop, bluegrass, classical, and so much more, showcasing the very best of the American spirit through music.

Events at top cultural institutions across New York further expand the festival’s scope, offering new avenues for discovery as we explore our nation’s vibrant and complex past, present, and future.

Visit their website to find a list of current events and locations.


Carnegie Hall, 1891. Main entrance to Carnegie Hall on 57th street. The front stairs were removed in 1920 when 57th street was widened to add two additional traffic lanes.

Courtesy Carnegie Hall Rose Archives

The speakeasy lock! Double-lock used to gain entry to Club Richman, a speakeasy located on the Carnegie Hall property, 1924

Courtesy of Carnegie Hall Rose Archives

Judy Garland at Carnegie Hall 1961

Courtesy of John Fricke
Courtesy Bowery Boys

The Beatles at Carnegie Hall, February 12, 1964

Courtesy of Carnegie Hall Rose Archives

FURTHER LISTENING

After taking in the story of Carnegie Hall, take a dive into these past Bowery Boys episodes to learn more about some of the topics mentioned in the show, including some forays into New York City musical history

Categories
Music History

The NY Phil Story: A New Podcast Series from WQXR featuring the Bowery Boys

Here’s a podcast that we think you’ll love — The NY Phil Story: Made In New York, produced by WQXR and the New York Philharmonic.

And one of the guest voices through the series is Greg Young of the Bowery Boys podcast!

Here’s the trailer for the series:

The New York Philharmonic Club, a chamber ensemble of Philharmonic musicians, clowning for their public-relations photograph in 1887: (left to right) Richard Arnold, Philip Faerber, Emil Schenck, August Kalkhof, Friedhold Hermmann, Eugene Weiner.

Greg is prominently featured in the newest episode:

During New York City’s Gilded Age, the NY Philharmonic pushed the boundaries of American”classical music with the ground-breaking premier of Dvořák’s  “New World Symphony.”

Over 100 years later, the NY Phil made it to Pyongyang, North Korea, revisiting those same questions of what it means to perform American music — and once again, making history.

Listen to the episodes here and on your favorite podcast players.


For more than 180 years, the New York Philharmonic has been making history here in the city we call home. The NY Phil Story: Made in New York is a podcast about the people, the music, and the city behind America’s oldest orchestra.

Host Jamie Bernstein (the daughter of Leonard Bernstein) takes you backstage and into the archives to hear the untold stories of the Philharmonic–right from the very beginning. Each episode, the show will go behind the scenes of an iconic performance, speak to current Philharmonic musicians about how they carry on the orchestra’s legacy, and hear the music that inspired it all.

Listeners will hear recordings from the NY Phil’s rich audio archives, including their broadcast in the aftermath of John F. Kennedy’s assassination, recordings of urban planner and city official Robert Moses discussing San Juan Hill’s destruction, Leonard Bernstein’s live radio debut, and other treasures from the archives.

The series features interviews with historians, scholars, and New York Philharmonic musicians, including:

  • Deborah Borda, President and CEO of the New York Philharmonic
  • Erica Buurman, director of the Ira F. Brilliant Center for Beethoven Studies at San JoséState University
  • Etienne Charles, performer, composer, and storyteller
  • Abraham Lincoln historian Harold Holzer
  • Alex Kaminsky, band director at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School at the time of theParkland shooting
  • Virginia Sánchez Korrol, historian and professor emerita in the Department of PuertoRican and Latino Studies at Brooklyn College, CUNY
  • Doug Shadle, Dvořák scholar and chair of musicology and ethnomusicology at VanderbiltUniversity’s Blair School of Music
  • Beethoven scholar, author, and composer Jan Swafford
  • Shanta Thake, chief artistic officer for Lincoln Center
  • Jaap van Zweden, music director of the New York Philharmonic and the Hong KongPhilharmonic
  • The Bowery Boys podcast host Greg Young
Here’s the first episode but you can subscribe to The NY Phil Story at the same places you get the Bowery Boys Podcast: