Inside an Orchestra Conductor’s Mind: Overcoming Perfectionism, Performance Anxiety & Making Music
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About this listen
What makes someone musical, talent, training, or timing?
In this episode, Raffaello Morales (conductor, pianist, and founder of Fidelio Café & Live Music Restaurant Farringdon) joins me for a conversation that reshaped how I think about musicality, performance, and the pressure baked into the classical music world.
We talk about the nature vs nurture debate (especially through the lens of childhood and parenting), why the “right teacher at the right time” can change a life, and why Raffaello believes music isn’t about perfection, it’s about connection.We also go into a side of the industry most people don’t see: oversupply, shrinking audiences, intense competition, and the anxiety that follows musicians everywhere.
Finally, we explore how Raffaello brought music into food through Fidelio, creating a space where music belongs back in everyday life, not locked behind elitism, silence, and strict rules.
Timestamps
0:00 – Intro: nature vs nurture + what musicality really is
2:34 – Childhood dreams, identity, and why music can’t be “everything”
8:30 – Parenting, exposure, and whether a child can develop an ear
10:19 – The “right teacher at the right time” and how paths shift
20:15 – First instrument, early training, and stage anxiety
24:20 – “Music isn’t about perfection”, what matters more
33:18 – Why conducting can feel easier than playing
37:55 – What happens if the conductor isn’t there?
42:01 – Music as wellbeing vs music as a profession full of anxiety
54:39 – Fidelio: combining music + food to bring art back to normal life
What We Cover
Nature vs nurture in musicality (and what shapes it early on)
Why teacher timing and guidance can change everything
Music as connection, not perfection
What a conductor actually does (tempo + expressive meaning)
The anxiety behind classical music as a career
Oversupply of musicians + shrinking audiences (and how that creates pressure)
Why the industry is becoming “either huge or invisible”
How Fidelio blends music, food, and real-life atmosphere
Leadership lessons: vision, people, and knowing when to speak (or stay quiet)
Key Takeaways
Musicality is rarely “just talent”, it’s exposure + guidance + timing.
Perfection is not the point; connection is.
A conductor is the human layer between notes and meaning: tempo + expression.
The anxiety many musicians carry isn’t personal, it’s structural.
Music becomes more powerful when it’s reconnected to everyday life and community.
Building something meaningful requires people, trust, and restraint, not just opinion.
Resources
Fidelio Café (London): https://fidelio.cafe/
Raffaello’s Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/raffomorales/?hl=en
Fidelio Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/wearefidelio/
Raffaello’s LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/raffaello-morales-85b455213/
Order Raffaello’s Book: The Earth of the Skies
Connect With Me🌍 Website: https://charlenegisele.com📸 Instagram: https://instagram.com/charlenegisele💼 LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/charlène-gisèle-bourliout/✉️ Subscribe to my Life Less Burnt Out Newsletter
If this episode resonated, share it with someone who loves music, but has forgotten it’s meant to feel human.