Prince Charles, Camilla Parker Bowles
Prince Charles conducted an orchestra for Camilla Parker Bowles. Pictured: Prince Charles, Camilla talk during the burial ceremony of an unknown World War One soldier, the last of the 250 found in a mass grave from the 1916 Battle of Fromelles, on July 19, 2010 in Fromelles, northern France. Getty Images/Denis Charlet/AFP

Prince Charles exerted a romantic effort for Camilla Parker Bowles during her 60th birthday.

During an interview on Radio 3’s “Private Passions,” the heir to the throne revealed that he tried his hand at conducting an orchestra in order to replicate music for his beloved wife. He said that he tried conducting music at the suggestion of the Philharmonia, which he is a patron of.

Lead violinist and conductor Christopher Warren-Green persuaded Prince Charles, and he accepted the challenge as a special surprise for Camilla. When asked if the musicians made it to the end of the piece at the same time, Prince Charles hilarious said that they barely made it.

“Well roughly, yes. The orchestra was terribly polite,” he said.

During his interview, Prince Charles also paid tribute to his grandmother, Queen Mother, who introduced him to the ballet at Covent Garden, as well as the concerts at the Kings Lynn festival when he was just a young boy.

Prince Charles called Queen Mother wonderful because she understood that young boys at that age wouldn’t want to do anything too long.

And when he was still studying at Gordonstoun, Prince Charles learned how to play the trumpet with the help of his marvelous music teachers who escaped the Holocaust in Germany.

After learning how to play the trumpet, Prince Charles learned how to play the cello while studying at Trinity College.

“I wasn’t good at it but it was great fun. The magic of playing in the orchestra, even if you’re not very good, is very special,” he said.

In related news, Prince Charles also made headlines this week after the real reason why his marriage to Princess Diana fell apart was revealed. Tina Brown, the author of “The Diana Chronicles,” said that at the end of the 80s, the royal couple’s marriage could no longer be fixed.

While in Klosters, Switzerland in March 1988, Princess Diana blamed Prince Charles for his recklessness in choosing a dangerous activity with Major Hugh Lindsay. The latter was killed when an avalanche struck and buried him.

Prince Charles wasn’t also pleased with Princess Diana’s determination to accompany Lindsay’s body back home to his pregnant wife.