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Israeli strike kills paramedic, says Lebanese Red Cross – as it happened Scottish Premiership: Rangers hit Falkirk for six to keep pace with Hearts and Celtic Cameron Young reels in Rory McIlroy with pack on their tails for Masters finale Sensational Scheffler reminds everyone why he is still No 1 with Masters masterclass | Andy Bull The Masters day three: Rory McIlroy level with Cameron Young after losing outright lead – as it happened Golden eagles could be reintroduced to England after more than 150 years Tyson Fury beats Arslanbek Makhmudov by unanimous decision – as it happened Tyson Fury returns with unanimous points win over Makhmudov and wants Joshua next The xx at Coachella review – indie trio reunites for spellbinding, rangy set Brian Cox: ‘We don’t know how powerful AI is going to become – it’s both exciting and potentially a problem’ Real talk: Chelsea punished Enzo Fernández for exposing project’s fatal flaw | Jonathan Wilson Leinster blow away Sale to set up Champions Cup semi-final with Toulon Liverpool 2-0 Fulham: Premier League – as it happened Rio Ngumoha sparks Liverpool win over wasteful Fulham with first Anfield goal French man charged with keeping nine-year-old son locked in van since 2024 Mullins makes fiendish Grand National puzzle look simple with third win in a row | Sean Ingle Grand National 2026: I Am Maximus wins big race for second time at Aintree – as it happened Championship roundup: Ipswich tighten grip on second but Coventry made to wait More than 500 people arrested at Palestine Action protest in London Dewsbury-Hall strikes late for Everton to deny Brentford after Igor Thiago double Mats Wieffer doubles up as Brighton push Burnley closer to the drop Bournemouth expose Schrödinger’s Arsenal, a team that could be either dead or alive | Paul MacInnes Kimberly’s story: the tragedy that changed British legal history UK forced to shelve Chagos Islands legislation after US dropped support ‘A big punch in the face’: Mikel Arteta apologises after defeat by Bournemouth I Am Maximus joins Grand National greats by regaining crown to emulate Red Rum Suspect in New York subway machete attack shot and killed by police ‘We feel this incredible tension at all times’: what happened to small-town USA when extremists moved in Trump reportedly says he’ll issue mass pardons at end of his presidential term Arsenal 1-2 Bournemouth: Premier League – as it happened Sabrina Carpenter at Coachella review – madcap maximalism from pop savant Woman, 19, dies after being attacked by dog at property in Essex US man in Bahamian jail after wife disappears into Atlantic waters during boat trip Eamonn Holmes recovering in hospital after a stroke Alex Scott and Bournemouth deal blow to nervy Arsenal’s title hopes Matildas next generation take charge in Fifa Series rout over Malawi Tories would reinstate two-child benefit cap to fund defence, says Badenoch ‘Casual without being sloppy’: why flannel shirts are making a comeback What on Earth is Melania Trump thinking? | Arwa Mahdawi ‘He cares about Hungarians’: the small Ukrainian town divided over Orbán ‘The party was chilled until police sent in the riot squad’: when a Dorset free rave turned violent Jubilant return of Artemis II shadowed by ‘extinction-level’ cuts to Nasa: ‘It’s discordant’ New York Times investigates reporter Dianna Russini’s Vrabel coverage amid photo uproar ‘It has your name on it, but I don’t think it’s you’: how AI is impersonating musicians on Spotify Workers at LA stadium threaten World Cup strike amid anger over ICE Man charged over deaths of four people trying to cross Channel ‘Endless war’: inside an Israeli kibbutz near Lebanon’s volatile border For Trump and Hegseth, the Iran war is a game | Judith Levine Native Americans were gambling with dice 6,000 years earlier than anyone else, study says A ‘weird dream’ of an arts festival began 10 years ago in the California desert – can it survive its growing popularity? 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From penalties to Pavarotti and Beckham to Bruckner: classical music and football are closer than you might think
https://www.theguardian.com/profile/tomservice · 2026-06-17 · via The Guardian

France ’98, when Scotland last faced Morocco at a World Cup – as they do this Friday – and lost a crucial game three-nil. (John McGinn’s winner against Haiti in Boston on Sunday rewrites all the recent records and sets the team on a path to almost certain glory this time around. Obviously.)

But you could have read the runes of Scottish doom in that World Cup by the tunes that Scotland fans had in their ears. Scotland’s song that year was Del Amitri’s masterpiece of melancholy, Don’t Come Home Too Soon, the most downbeat, honest, and lyrical World Cup song ever written – alas, the team didnae listen. And there was the BBC’s World Cup titles for 1998: Fauré’s Pavane, which lifted the moodometer from melancholic all the way to apathetic. (Not that England did much better, despite the surreal street party of Vindaloo, Engerland’s unofficial anthem, and the self-satisfaction of Three Lions, they went out in the round of 16, after David Beckham’s red-card against Argentina.)

In using Fauré for football, the BBC were building on a long history of the beautiful game and classical music, which have always gone together like Scott McTominay and majestic overhead kicks. Edward Elgar’s contribution to Wolverhampton Wanderers’ musical heritage sadly isn’t still sung on the terraces, but his scoring of “He Banged the Leather for Goal!”, setting words he’d read in a match report about his beloved Wolves, might be the first bespoke football chant by a major composer, written in 1898. (It’s also a harmonically dense and chromatically complex wee tune.) Dmitri Shostakovich’s football obsession – he was devoted to the team that’s now called Zenit St Petersburg – was marked in 2016 when Zenit celebrated their 90th anniversary with a Shostakovich-themed pre-match show, inspiring them to beat Spartak Moscow 4-2. And listen to the Football March movement from Shostakovich’s ballet The Golden Age from 1930 to hear how Shostakovich created the drama and noisy energy of a team in orchestral sound, starting with the referee’s whistle and plunging into chaos on the park.

An 1894 photograph of Dmitri Shostakovich plays football with his son Maxim in Komarovo.
An 1894 photograph of Dmitri Shostakovich plays football with his son Maxim in Komarovo. Photograph: Heritage Images/Getty Images

But the moment when football and classical music became indelibly linked was the summer of 1990, when the BBC used Luciano Pavarotti’s rendition of Nessun Dorma as the theme tune for its coverage. Puccini’s aria from his final opera, Turandot, (Nessun Dorma means none shall sleep) tells of Calaf’s plea for insomnia. Princess Turandot has a single night to learn his name. If she succeeds, she can execute him, if she remains ignorant of her suitor’s actual name, she has to marry him and Calaf will be victorious. (Spoiler alert – Calaf wins Turandot’s heart by the end of the show.)

But none of that context was important for the significance of the high As and Bs at the end of the aria (also sung by the Three Tenors as a triple-headed Calaf at their concert on the eve of the final of Italia 90 in Rome) It’s a freak of performance practice, by the way, that the highest and most famous note in the whole aria, that final high B, was marked by Puccini in the score as a slightly slowed-down semiquaver – it should be a very short note. But that “vinceroo-oooo” (I will win) is extended by Pavarotti et al into a whole bar and more, dozens of times longer than Puccini intended. Tenors gonna sing, tenors gonna milk it. Germany duly did win, beating Argentina 1-0.

England players David Platt (left) and Gary Lineker celebrate after the quarter final game in which they beat Cameroon.
Italia 90, Vinceroo-ooo?: England players David Platt (left) and Gary Lineker celebrate after the quarter final game in which they beat Cameroon. Photograph: Mirrorpix/Getty Images

Current proof of the ongoing classical connections that bind football fans together is the team- and nation-crossing phenomenon of the White Stripes’ Seven Nation Army, which is sung everywhere from club matches to international fixtures from Bruges to Boston. (Club Brugge KV was where it all started in 2003) And, as every fool knows, Jack White borrowed his riff from the first movement of Bruckner’s Fifth Symphony – alas a story too good to be true. White came up with the riff at a sound check in Melbourne, consciously or unconsciously drawing on Bruckner’s symphony.

Yet the musical connection is real. So even if the BBC and ITV have ditched any classical references in their title sequences for this current World Cup, they can’t take Bruckner out of the terraces.


This week Tom has been listening to: {oh!}Orkiestra’s new recording of Mozart’s 29th Symphony and Janiewicz’s Fifth Violin Concerto. It’s the freedom that Martyna Pastuszka and her players dare with all of this repertoire, and the Mozart in particular, that’s wonderful: here’s a symphony that sounds like a collective improvisation from the musicians – and the fortepianist in particular. There’s no other recording of the symphony like it. Listen on Spotify