Hello my fellow Morsonians. I have in this post compiled a list of the classical music played in all the Morse episodes. Which episodes used a particular piece of music has also been included.
Click on the music title to open a new window with a music video from Youtube of the selected music.
Posts with all the music from Lewis and Endeavour series will be coming soon. There will also be a fourth post which will include all the music that has turned up in more than one series or episode.
At the end of the post I have included a downloadable PDF and excel sheet which includes a list of all the information. This will allow you to put the list on your phone or tablet or print it out.
If you find any broken links please let me know.
DEAD OF JERICHO
Start of Episode & 00h12m01s & 00h20m22s –
My Soul there is a Country by Hubert Parry & Henry Vaughan.
00h00m23s.
Gloria in Excelsis Deo by Antonio Vivaldi.
00h09m46s.
Prelude in E-Minor (op.28 no. 4) by Frédéric Chopin.
00h18m40s.
Concerto No. 14 in E-flat major, K. 449 by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart.
00h25m18s.
Le Nozze di Figaro K492 act 2, Porgi Amor (The Marriage of Figaro)’ by Mozart.
00h45m35s.
I am unable to identify the next piece. It is being played in Ned’s room when Morse visits him and is assumed to be Ned’s uncle by Ned’s roommate. I think it is possibly one of the American minimalist modern composers Philip Glass or Steve Reich.
01h00m28s.
Don Giovanni, K.527, Act 1: Ah, Chi Mi Dice Mai by Mozart.
01h03m29s.
Quartet No. 12 in B flat major, K. 172 by Mozart.
01h14m09s.
Fantasie Impromptu Opus 66 in C sharp minor by Frédéric Chopin.
01h16m44s.
Concerto grosso Op.3 No.1 by George Frideric Handel.
01h23m33s.
The piece Morse plays while tinkering on Anne’s piano is the opening of the ‘Prelude to Wagner’s _Tristan und Isolde.
The Silent World of Nicholas Quinn.
00h04m57s.
Der Freischutz (the Marksman) by Carl Maria von Weberand & Friedrich Kind.
00h11m29s.
Symphony in D minor by Cesar Franck.
00h49m20s.
Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg by Richard Wagner.
01h22m25s.
Largo from Concerto No. 2 in B-flat major HWV 313 by George Frideric Handel.
Service of All the Dead
00h00m33s.
Prelude and Fugue in A Minor, BWV 543 by Johann Sebastian Bach.
00h03m53s.
Overture Euryanthe: Allegro marcato, con molto fuoco by Carl Maria von Weber.
I’m afraid there is no Youtube video of the Weber piece and the two that I found were unavailable in my country.
00h21m54s.
00h24m20s.
Missa Brevis – Agnus Dei by Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina.
00h45m55s.
Toccata, Adagio and Fugue in C, BMV 564 by Johann Sebastian Bach.
01h01m10s.
The Wolvercote Tongue.
00h28m20s.
Flow, my Tears by John Dowland & an unknown librettist.
01h06m05s.
Les Troyens, (“The Trojans”) H133, Act III, Allegro Moderato by Hector Berlioz.
Last Seen Wearing.
00h00m01s.
Violin Concerto No. 1 in B flat, K. 207 by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart.
The above video contains the complete piece. The section of music used in the episode starts at 8 minutes and 47 seconds in the above video.
00h33m58s.
Ride of the Valkyries by Richard Wagner
The Settling of the Sun.
00h00m01s.
The Dream of Gerontius, Op38, Pt II:I by Edward Elgar.
The above piece of music is scattered throughout the episode.
00h06m48s.
‘St John Passion‘ by Johann Sebastian Bach.
00h52m59s.
Opus 10, Piano Etude No’ 5 by Frédéric Chopin.
00h53m38s.
Enigma Variations by Edward Elgar.
01h14m16s.
String Quartet No. 15 by Ludwig van Beethoven.
01h34m34s.
De Jules Lemaitre by Jehan Ariste Alain.
01h40m20s.
The last piece of music in this episode is played while Morse first talks to the young girl, Alex in Jane’s flat and continues as he drives her to the hospital to see Jane. It is another section of the first piece of music above, ‘The Dream of Gerontius, Op38, Pt II:I‘.
Last Bus to Woodstock.
00h13m42s.
00h27m22s.
Piano Sonata in C (K545) by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart.
Ghost in the Machine.
00h05m05s.
The final scene of Tosca by Giacomo Puccini.
00h14m18.
The next piece is again from Tosca and is heard while Morse and Lewis are driving to Hanbury House. And no it’s not from Cats.😉
The singer is as mentioned in the episode, Maria Callas but I’m not sure which section of the opera it is from. I think it is the same as above but i’m afraid my knowledge of opera is very limited.
00h53m49.
Quartet No. 14 in G Major for Strings. K.387:III. Andante cantabile by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart.
The Last Enemy.
00h44m03s.
String Quintet in C Major by Franz Schubert.
Deceived by Flight.
00h00m00s
Emperor’ Quartet by Joseph Haydn.
00h03m27s.
Second movement of his Concerto for Cello in A minor by Camille Saint-Saëns.
I couldn’t find a video of just the second movement so I have used the video below which has all three movements.
01h21m30s.
Third String Quartet by Robert Schumann.
Secret of Bay 5B.
00h13m01s.
Parsifal. Specifically the Prelude to Parsifal by Richard Wagner.
The Infernal Serpent.
00h00m00s.
Piano Sonata No. 25, middle section by Ludwig van Beethoven.
00h11m15s.
Piano Sonata in A, K.331:1 Andante Grazioso by Mozart.
00h13m47s.
Miserere mei, Deus by Gregorio Alligri.
00h47m00s.
Prelude and Fugue in C Minor BWV 546. BWV by Johann Sebastian Bach.
00h57m40s.
La Poupée (The doll) N°3 from Jeux d’enfants op.22 by Georges Bizet.
01h12m50s.
Sonata No. 11 in A Major for Piano, K331:1 Tema Andante Grazioso by Mozart.
01h36m48s.
Justorum Animae by Orlande Di Lassus.
The Sins of the Fathers.
00h55m13s
La Traviata, Follie, follie/Sempre libera by Giuseppe Verdi.
The music is first played when Morse talks to the Lisa Harrow character Thelma Radford. That is at 55 minutes and 13 seconds. It is then played again in Morse’s office and at his home.
01h01m58s.
String Quartet No.10 in E flat major, op.125 No.1 by Franz Schubert.
Driven to Distraction.
00h24m30s.
Six Suites for Violin and Cello. Suite No. 3 by Johann Sebastian Bach.
01h17m32s.
Masonic Mysteries.
It is no surprise that all the classical music is excerpts from the Mozart opera The Magic Flute. (The Magic Flute (German: Die Zauberflöte), K. 620)
What I will attempt to do is identify the excerpts as to where they happen in the opera and which characters are singing. I have also tried to get all the musical excerpts used in the episode and make them into short videos for each piece.
I am a fan of the opera but do not put myself forward as an expert. So, on that note I apologize in advance for any errors.
00h00m00s.
The Magic Flute opening music.
00h15m40s.
After three ladies, attendants of the Queen of the Night, appear and kill the serpent that was tormenting Tomino, he having fainted, he awakes to find Papageno who takes credit for having killed the serpent.
00h21m21s. Morse and Lewis are leaving McNutt’s house and walking toward his, now defaced, car. A section of the opening is replayed here.
00h21m57s.
Morse and Lewis are driving back from McNutt’s house and are trying to make sense of that night’s events.
The music is played while the council of priests of Isis and Osiris, headed by Sarastro, enter.
He invokes the gods Isis and Osiris, asking them to protect Tamino and Pamina (Aria and chorus: “O Isis und Osiris“).
00h27m27s.
The scene starts with Morse staring at the defaced car and then moves into his house where he sits on the settee contemplating all that has happened.
The next piece is from Act 1, scene 1 and is part of the scene after Prince Tamino has just been presented by the Three Ladies with an image of the princess Pamina, and falls instantly in love with her. “Dies Bildnis ist bezaubernd schön” (This image is enchantingly lovely)
00h48m46s.
Morse is in a cell and Lewis and Bottomley arrive at his house to find angry neighbours beating at Morse’s door as their is music blasting from his house.
We are now at act 2, scene 3. The Queen of the Night appears handing Pamina a dagger, ordering her to kill Sarastro with it and threatening to disown her if she does not. “Der Hölle Rache kocht in meinem Herzen” (“Hell’s vengeance boils in my heart”)
01h05m11s.
Morse is released from his cell and returns home. As he lies sleeping on the settee a fire starts.
Tamino declares that he is ready to be tested. Pamina enters and declares her intention to undergo the remaining trials with him. She hands him the magic flute to help them through the trials. Wir wandelten durch Feuergluten, (We wandered through the fire’s glow)
01h25m30s.
We are now in the house of Hugo DeVries and he and Morse talk of what has happened. Hugo turns on a cassette recording of The Magic Flute.
Papageno and Pamina are searching for Tamino when they are recaptured by Monostatos and his slaves. Papageno plays his magic bells, and Monostatos and his slaves begin to dance, and exit the stage, still dancing, mesmerised by the beauty of the music. Schnelle Füße, racher Mut (Swift feet and ready courage)
Our final piece is when Morse is sitting in his car outside where the opera is being played. Lewis and his wife went along at the behest of Morse. The scene sees Lewis and his wife coming out early (though they almost stayed to the end as the music that can be heard playing is almost at the end of the opera).
The traitorous Monostatos appears with the Queen of the Night and her three ladies. They plot to destroy the temple (“Nur stille, stille“) and the Queen confirms that she has promised her daughter Pamina to Monostatos.
Second Time Around.
00h35m25s.
Senza Mamma, from Giacomo Puccini’s (1858 – 1924) opera Suor Angelica.
01h00m02s.
As above.
01h05m35s
As above.
01h25m26s
As above.
Fat Chance
00h00m00s
Laudate Dominum’ from Vesperae Solemnes de Confessore by Mozart.
00h04m37s
String Quartet No. 7 in F Major by Ludwig van Beethoven.
00h18m01s
Laudate Dominum is heard again during the scene when Dinah Newberry is sitting in her room crying, eating ice cream and Irene is banging on her door.
00h25m36s
We return to Dinah Newberry’s room as Morse visits to talk to her. As before Laudate Dominum is playing.
00h51m52s
Laudate Dominum plays again as we see Morse at home and he phones Emma to ask about Dinah Newberry.
01h12m19s
Venetian Gondola Song (Opus 19, No. 6 in G Minor) by Felix Mendelssohn.
01h28m00s
‘Well Tempered Clavier’ Book Two Prelude and Fugue in F sharp by Johann Sebastian Bach.
Who Killed Harry Field?
00h52m30s
Concerto for Piano and Orchestra No.15 in B flat major K.450.Allegro by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart.
01h03m30s
As above,
01h05m22s
St Matthew Passion by Johann Sebastian Bach
Greeks Bearing Gifts
00h52m42s
Introduction and Allegro for Strings by Edward Elgar
01h16m11s
String Quartet No. 13 in B Flat major by Ludwig van Beethoven
Promised Land
Hab’ mir’s gelobt from Der Rosenkavalier by Richard Strauss
Dead on Time
The main piece of music in this episode is String Quintet in C major. The movement at the beginning of the episode is the second movement by Franz Schubert.
The above piece is played a few more times through the episode.
00h22m40s
Schubert Quintet in C, D596 fourth movement by Franz Schubert
Happy Families
00h37m50s
Soave ‘Sia Il Vento‘ from Cosi Fan Tutte by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
00h54m27s
Death of the Self.
00h09m00s
Concerto for Two Mandolini in G Minor by Antonio Vivaldi.
The Concerto for Two Mandolini replays several times through the episode: at 13 minutes and 25 seconds when Morse, Lewis and the Italian policeman are walking through the strade and piazza. The piece occurs again when Morse, Lewis and Claudio Battisti first arrive at Clark’s abode at the 16 minute and 10 seconds mark.
00h24m45s
Caro Nome from Rigoletto by Giuseppe Verdi.
00h56m25s
Aria Signore, Ascolta! from the opera Turandot by Giacomo Puccini.
This piece is heard again at the end of the episode when Nicole Burgess performs in front of an audience.
Absolute Conviction
00h33m35s
Death and the Maiden Quartet for Strings by Franz Schubert
00h36m54s
String Quartet in C Minor, D 703 – Allegro assai by Franz Schubert
00h38m14s
Death and the Maiden Quartet for Strings by Franz Schubert
00h46m32s
Rachmaninoff’s Piano Concerto No. 2 in C Minor, Op. 18: Allegro scherzando. (The section used starts about halfway through the piece mentioned).
00h48m26s
Mi tradi quell’alma ingrata aria from Don Giovanni by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
01h11m40s
Chorale: Erkenne mich, mein Huter (St Matthew Passion) by Johann Sebastian Bach
01h39m40s
Chorale: Erkenne mich, mein Huter (St Matthew Passion) by Johann Sebastian Bach
Cherubim and Seraphim
00h09m24s
“Che farò senza Euridice” from ‘Orfeo ed Euridice’ by Christoph Willibald Gluck
00h25m49s
“Che farò senza Euridice” from ‘Orfeo ed Euridice’ by Christoph Willibald Gluck
Deadly Slumber
00h14m33s
00h51m07s
Piano Concerto No.23 In A Major, K 488 Adagio by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
01h10m16s
Piano Concerto No.23 In A Major, K 488 Adagio by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
The Day of the Devil
00h13m11s
String Sextet No. 1 In B Flat Major Op. 18 by Johannes Brahms
00h21m50s
Busoni Chorale Prelude BWV 639 Ich ruf zu dir,Herr by Johann Sebastian Bach
00h40m04s
From the opera Manon – Massenet – Adieu notre petite table by Jules Massenet
00h46m25s
Toccata and Fugue in D Minor by Johann Sebastian Bach
00h53m34s
Sextet No. 1 in B-flat major – 2. Andante ma moderato by Johannes Brahms
Twilight of the Gods
00h00m00s
Götterdämmerung, Act III, Scene 3 Finale (The Immolation Scene) by Richard Wagner
00h03m55s & 00h04m30s
As above.
00h13m52s
Twilight of the Gods – Chapter 13 Third scene The hall of the Gibichungen by Richard Wagner
00h14m56s
Military Polonaise Opus 40 No. 1 in A Major by Frédéric Chopin
01h39m50s
Twilight of the Gods – Chapter 13 Third scene The hall of the Gibichungen by Richard Wagner
The Way Through the Woods
00h00m10s
String Quartet in g minor by Claude Debussy. This is played throughout the episode. I only have access to the complete work.
00h20m00s
As above
The Daughters of Cain
00h00m00s,
La Traviata – Prelude to Act 1 by Giuseppe Verdi
01h39m44s
String quartet in g minor, Op.74, No.3 by Joseph Haydn
Death Is Now My Neighbour
00h15m14s
The Marriage of Figaro ‘non so piu’ by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
01h11m58s
The Wench Is Dead
00h48m37s
Clarinet Concerto in A major K 622 by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
00h51m18s
As above
00h57m58s
Unidentified.
01h10m03
Piano trio No. 7 in B flat major WoO 39 Allegretto by Ludwig van Beethoven
01h32m22s
Haydn string quartet op.64 no 5 by Joseph Haydn
The Remorseful Day
00h12m17s
Peer Gynt Suite No.1 by Edvard Grieg
01h02m28s
Parsifal Overture by Richard Wagner
01h06m05s
The Day Thou Gavest Lord Is Ended by unknown.
01h15m38s
String Quintet in C Major, 2nd movement by Franz Schubert
01h18m35s
Gabriel Fauré’s Requiem Op. 48.
01h21m30s
Requiem. Libera Me Gabriel Faure
01h27m45s
Requiem : ‘In Paradisum’ by Gabriel Fauré
01h37m30s
Click this link to download excel sheet; Morse Music
Click this link to open as PDF; Morse Music update
Wow, Christopher! This is a gift. I love how music is woven organically through all of Morse. It serves as a function in character and plot development and not just to texture the environment. Thank you for this hard work; oh, the hours you must have spent!
Wow! This is beautiful! A gift, indeed! Thank you, Chris!
Wonderful, Chris. Many thanks for putting this together and sharing it with us.
Sir! You are doing God’s work here. Thank you!
Excellent work, Chris, thank you.
You’re welcome Richey, glad you liked it.
THANK YOU! DANKE! GREAT WORK!
Hi there – love your work here, very useful!! Just on the matter of The Infernal Serpent: I’m a choral singer, and as far as I know the Miserere is by William Byrd, not Allegri, and the piece in the chapel at the end is Byrd’s Justorum Animae. Hope this is correct…
Thanks again!!
Thanks Peter, I will update the list.
Hello my name is Neil Malley. Thank you for your marvellous work. Just a couple of corrections on the above comment. The Miserere is by Grigorio Allegri, not William Byrd and the choral piece in the Infernal Serpent is called Justorum Animae but it is the version by Orlande Di Lassus not the Byrd version
Hi Neil, welcome to my website. Sorry Neil but I don’t fully understand the first part of your comment. In my post I have written that the Miserere mei, Deus is by Gregorio Alligri. Thank you for the information regarding the choral piece.
…justorum animae- Orlando lassus.
Terrific! Your efforts are an opus itself. Many, many thanks.
Peter Cuthbertson
Thank you Peter and welcome to my website.
The hymn “The Day Thou Gavest, Lord, is Ended”, played in the church, around 1h6m into the episode: words, John Ellerton (1826-93); music, “St. Clement” by Clement Cotterill Scholefield (1839-1904). HTH
Ep. The Remorseful Day.
That lovely hymn is also used in the film “Yanks,” for the funeral of the mother of one of the main characters.
Just found you and this marvelous list! My husband was trying to remember a piece of music that was in one of the Morse episodes, but he didn’t know which one it was in. As I type this, he’s going through your list! Thank you for taking the time and effort to compile this list!
Hello Savannah and welcome to my website. I hope your husband finds the piece of music he is looking for. I will warn you that if you are in America some of the music is different from the British episodes due to copyright.
Thank You
Thank you so much! I’ve been hunting for the piece of music which turns out to be Schubert’s Quintet in C Major, 2nd Movement. Thanks to you, I can identify it. It’s a piece that moves me to tears.
Glad to be of help Penelope.
The Wolvercote Tongue
Les Troyens, (“The Trojans”) H133, Act III, Allegro Moderato by Hector Berlioz.
Amazingly wonderful enterprise — thank you so much!
The Wolvercote Tongue
Les Troyens, (“The Trojans”) H133, Act III, Allegro Moderato by Hector Berlioz.
I am hoping that it will be played at my funeral memorial! Many thanks to you Chris for your epic effort. Lesley
You state above that you were not able to find a youtube for this music, and so I found this and posted it. Sorry I posted it twice.
Ah, thank you Marge.
The piece at 00h 14m 18 in Ghost in the Machine is the very end of Tosca’s aria “Vissi d’arte” in the second act, minutes before she stabs Scarpia, the Chief of Police. So glad to be able to contribute to your great work!
Thank you Mimi, I’ve updated the excel sheet.
My goodness! You will be a very busy fellow. Best wishes on you new project. I was wondering if you were going to be providing a similar music list for Lewis and Endeavour. But I suppose not that you have school ahead of you.
Hi Corlyss. You can find the Endeavour music list here, https://morseandlewisandendeavour.com/2019/03/11/update-new-music-list-for-all-episodes-of-endeavour-with-pdf-excel-sheet-new-modern-music-list/ I’m working on the Lewis music list.
Hi Chris,
Last night I watched “The Wench is Dead” and the music at 00h57m58s bugged me for the rest of the night. Today I listened to all of my Schubert piano pieces until I found it again – the second movement (Andantino) of Piano Sonata No. 20 in A major, D.959. 🙂
What? All of them?
Thank you so much for this wondrous music gift. I also, with my siblings, have looked after my mom for the past six years. She passed away a month ago and I found myself rewatching all Morse episodes but immensely enjoying music. In looking for a resource to guide me in identifying selections I came across your work. Thank you, thank you. I look forward to your book and gladly buying myself and others copies.
Hello Nancy. I’m sorry to read about your mother passing. I hope you are finding a way to cope. Thank you Nancy for your kind words in regard to my music list. I’m glad you enjoyed it and hopefully you will enjoy the Lewis book when I get it finished.
This is brilliant! Thank you so much for this superb effort. I loved Morse in my teenage years and it introduced me to so much good music. I came here for the tune at the beginning of Daughters of Cain. Mesmerising! Thank you again xxx
You’re welcome Deborah I’m glad you enjoyed it.
Thank you so much for compiling the pdf and excel spreadsheet.
Regards
Raymond Williams
You’re welcome Raymond.
Here’s your Berlioz Allegro Moderato from Act III: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FHNPuKcQa9k
And here’s the Euryanthe allegto marcato…https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k2gAHv4Xl9Q
Amazing and than you so very much!!!
Thank you sir! My wife and I recently discovered this wonderful series and the music is so much of its charm. I often grab the phone and use an app to identify the pieces and now I can use this to create some playlists.
Where are all the people who care to know more about opera because of this wonderful show? I sometimes search to find title of a piece, but until I found this blog, thought only someone like me was weird enough to bother. Thank you for your work.
Hi Jean, you are very welcome. There are a lot of ‘weird’ people who are very interested in the opera in the show.
This is fantastic. What a treat. Thank you so much.
I am 51 years old now and I noticed some years back I was losing the passion for popular music (not hitparade of course, don’t be daft) I once had. There had always been some interest in classical music for sure. But opera… never even considered it.
Until about 4 years ago, re-watching the Morse series, and I found myself wanting to know more and more what pieces were played. And then came the episode Masonic Mysteries. A day later I was searching YT for several versions of it. A month later the opera happened to be performed in the city I live.
Nowadays I hardly listen to anything but classical and opera. Morse for the win!
Thank you again.
Hi Lutek and welcome to my website. I’m so glad you enjoyed my list of music.
Many thanks for compiling this wonderful list and sharing it – I’ve long enjoyed the Morse, Lewis and Endeavour series both in their original airings and now in reruns, and always wanted to know more about the music. Thanks to you I can listen to pieces that intrigued me on the shows, in their entirety. What a gift.
You are very welcome Johanne.
Re: Les Troyens, (“The Trojans”) H133, Act III, Allegro Moderato by Hector Berlioz.
morseandlewisandendeavour.com writes : I’m afraid I couldn’t find a YouTube recording of the piece.
There is now a YT link available : https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JVuj-b0zXVE
Thank you Sonja. I have updated the post.
Thank you for this amazing volume of information. I binged on all of Morse a few weeks ago and wish I had had your work in front of me. Such an incredible amount of work!
Thank you, thank you, thank you for this information.
As someone who is a lifelong Morse addict, but also listening increasingly to classical work [quartets are in general my preference], this site is invaluable. Currently listening to the lovely Debussy. Thank you so much!
Welcome to my website, Phil. I’m glad you are enjoying it.
Amazing! So much work and so great to have. Morse has introduced me to so much music! <3
Welcome to my my website Traci.
Thank-you so much! This is going to save me do much time!
Fantastic!
Thank you for hard working.
Greetings from Germany,
BR
Dirk
Was directed to your absolutely brilliant web-site by someone on f/b after a query about “Cherubim and Seraphim” – when Morse has a headset on and says they are playing Hallelujah Chorus (Haendel – Messiah) I was expecting to hear that later on when the young guy was mixing music, but all I could identify was Miserere (Allegri) – I don’t know whether you have an explanation to this one? Other than that – your website has inspired me to go back and listen to some works that I have left behind long time ago – Verdi’s Gloria always sends me back to a time when I did 2nd bass part and I still sing it every time it is featured on radio..
hello,
if you put subtitles on, you will have the name of the pieces that are played !
thank you for all the work tou’ve done on Morse
greetings from a fan from France !
Thank you Roselyne.
Hi Chris, thank you for compiling this wonderfully comprehensive list.
With regards to the unidentified piece of music in Series 1, Episode 1, “Dead of Jericho”, at 00h45m35s, I believe you are correct that it is composed by Steve Reich, I am fairly sure that it is an excerpt from his composition, Music for 18 Musicians.
Thank you!!
You’re welcome Mark.
Thank you for these. This link is broken: Prelude in E-Minor (op.28 no. 4) by Frédéric Chopin.
There are a few replacements to choose from. One is here: youtube.com/watch?v=qNDHb4fbOuE
I really like how you’ve made an all-in-one list. Now that I’m rewatching Morse, after some years away, I’ve started compiling an all-in-one table showing:
– the dominant literary reference (Tosca, etc.)
– the main institution (usually a fictitious college), and the real-life venue(s) used for filming
– the woman receiving Morse’s attention
– the names of the deceased (the death rate, in the first twelve episodes anyway, is exactly three so far)
Hi Mark. I have already created a post about the death rate, who was killed and what weapon was used. Ive also did one for Lewis and Endeavour. https://morseandlewisandendeavour.com/2015/08/01/im-the-three-file-man/
Thank you Chris
You have added to my pleasure while watching Morse. My husband and I are re-watching Lewis and waiting for the last series of Endeavor.
Nancy (from Portland, OR US)
Hello Nancy. Thank you for your lovely comment. I hope you are enjoying rewatching the Lewis series.
Thank you Mr Sullivan, many regards from an Inspector Morse fan in Belgium…
You’re welcome, Hans.