wfiu.org - Indiana University Bloomington

Transcription

wfiu.org - Indiana University Bloomington
February
2008
W IU
wfiu.org
A Prairie Home Companion comes to town!
Also this month:
• Black History Month Programs
• Doctors Without Borders
• Long Distance Love
• Artist of the Month:
James Campbell
. . . and more!
Live broadcast Saturday,
February 16, 6 p.m.
Directions in Sound (USPS314900) is published each month
by the Indiana University Radio
and Television Services, 1229
East 7th Street, Bloomington, IN
47405-5501
telephone: 812-855-6114 or
e-mail: wfiu@indiana.edu
web site: wfiu.org
Periodical postage paid at
Bloomington, IN
POSTMASTER
Send address changes to:
WFIU Membership Department
Radio & TV Center
Indiana University
1229 East 7th Street
Bloomington, IN 47405-5501
WFIU is licensed to the Trustees
of Indiana University, and
operated by Indiana University
Radio and Television Services.
Perry Metz—Executive Director, Radio and Television Services
Christina Kuzmych—Station Manager/Program Director
Sharon Beikman—Broadcast Systems Manager, Traffic
Joe Bourne—Producer/Jazz Director
Cary Boyce—Operations Director
Brian Cox—Corporate Development
Don Glass—Volunteer Producer/
A Moment of Science®
Milton Hamburger—Art Director
Brad Howard—Director of Engineering and Operations
David Brent Johnson—Producer/
Systems Coordinator
LuAnn Johnson—Web Content Developer/Program Liaison
Questions or Comments?
Programming, Policies, or this Guide: If you have any questions about something you heard on the radio, station policies or this programming guide, call
Christina Kuzmych, Station Manager/Program Director, at (812) 855-1357, or
email her at wfiu@indiana.edu.
Listener Response: If you wish only to leave a comment, please feel free
to call our Listener Response Line any time of the day at (812) 856-5352.
You can also email us at wfiu@indiana.edu. If you wish to send a letter, the
address is WFIU, Radio/TV Center, 1229 East 7th Street, Indiana University,
Bloomington, IN 47405-5501.
Membership: WFIU appreciates and depends on our members. The membership staff is on hand Monday through Friday between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. to
answer questions. Want to begin or renew your membership? Changing
addresses? Haven’t received the thank-you gift you requested? Questions about
the MemberCard? Want to send a complimentary copy of Directions in Sound
to a friend? Call (812) 855-6114 or toll free at (800) 662-3311.
Underwriting: For information on how your business can underwrite
particular programs on WFIU, call (800) 662-3311.
Volunteers: Information about volunteer opportunities is available at
(812) 855-1357, or by sending an email to wfiu@indiana.edu.
Page 2 / Directions in Sound / February 2008
A Prairie Home Companion
comes to Indiana
Listen to a live,
national broadcast
of A Prairie Home
Companion when
Garrison Keillor
and company
perform the
radio show on
the stage of the
IU Auditorium
Garrison and cast shown performing live on stage
in Bloomington.
WFIU will air the program on Saturday, February 16th at 6 p.m.
“The last time Garrison Keillor and the entire cast came to
Bloomington for a live broadcast was back in 1992,” says Station
Manager Christina Kuzmych. “Much has changed in the world
since then, but in Lake Wobegon, things change at a slower pace,
if at all.
“In any event,” Kuzmych adds, “it was worth waiting for
them to visit us again. WFIU is proud to bring this popular and
family friendly live broadcast to Bloomington. It’s a formidable
undertaking, but our expert WFIU staff is up to the challenge.”
This year’s engagement came about when Keillor was in
Bloomington last year to appear in a solo performance at the IU
Auditorium. He asked Auditorium Director Doug Booher when
the last time A Prairie Home Companion had done a show there.
Upon hearing that it had been fifteen years, Keillor declared that
it was indeed time to return.
“Needless to say, we didn’t argue,” says Booher. “We took
his eagerness to return as a compliment to both the Auditorium
and the great work of WFIU. This upcoming broadcast of the
show will prove to be another great collaboration between two
community gems, WFIU and the IU Auditorium.”
As the guide went to press, premium seating tickets were
still available for the live broadcast on February 16. Premium
seats are located in the first sixteen center orchestra rows. Ticket
holders are entitled to attend a post-show VIP reception that
immediately follows the broadcast in the foyer of the auditorium,
featuring hors d’oeuvres, a cash bar, and live music. Premium
seating tickets are $180 each. To reserve your tickets, call 8556114 or 800-662-3311 during regular business hours.
(Attendees to the live broadcast need to arrive at the auditorium
by 5:45 p.m.)
A Prairie Home Companion is now in its thirty-second year
of production. Broadcast live Saturday evenings from the historic
Fitzgerald Theater in Saint Paul, Minnesota, it features comedy
sketches, music, and Garrison Keillor’s signature monologue,
“The News from Lake Wobegon”—stories of the fictitious little
town “that time forgot and the decades could not improve.”
Keillor also writes and hosts The Writer’s Almanac, heard
on WFIU weeknights at 7:01 p.m.. He has written more than
a dozen books, including Lake Wobegon Days, The Book of
Guys, and his most recent, Pontoon. Keillor was born in Anoka,
Minnesota, in 1942 and was graduated from the University of
Minnesota. He lives in St. Paul with his wife and daughter and
has two grandsons. He is a member of the American Academy of
Arts and Letters and the Episcopal Church.
Credit: Dana Nye
February 2008
Vol. 56, No­­­­­­. 2
Nancy Krueger—Major Gifts and Grants Officer
Yaël Ksander—Producer/Announcer
Patrick McAleer—Corporate Development
Virginia Metzger—Chief Financial Officer
Angela Mariani—Host/Producer, Harmonia
Michael Paskash—Studio Engineer and Technical Producer
Adam Ragusea—Assistant News Director
Adam Schwartz—Editor,
Directions In Sound, News and Promotions Assistant
Adam Schweigert—Music Director and Integrated Media Coordinator
John Shelton—Assistant Chief Engineer of Radio
Michael Toler—Webmaster
George Walker—Producer/On-Air Broadcast Director
Scott Witzke—Marketing Director
Marianne Woodruff—Corporate Development
Eva Zogorski—Membership Director
Announcers: Ann Corrigan, Adam
Ragusea, David Wood
Broadcast Assistants: Phyllis Chen,
Jared Disbro
Harmonia Scriptwriter:
Bernard Gordillo
Ether Game: Mollie Ables, Jeremy
Allen, Dan Bishop, Donna Cohen,
Cliff Gagliardo, Dan Lelchuck, Laura
Stokes, Sherri Winks
Volunteer Producer/Hosts: Moya Andrews, Mary Catherine Carmichael, Owen Johnson, Jenny
Kander, Patrick O’Meara, Shana Ritter,
Steve Sanders, Michael Wilkerson, Bob
Zaltsberg
Membership Staff: Laura Grannan,
Joan Padawan
Movie Reviewer: Peter Noble-Kuchera
News Assistants: Joice Biazoto, Colin
Bishop, Catherine Hageman, Rishika
Murthy, Annika Pampel, Daniel
Robison
Production Specialist: Paul Messing
Interns: Colleen Carroll, Sylvia
Techavalitpongse, G. Pablo
Vanwoerkom
Bloomington 103.7 fm • Columbus 100.7 fm • French Lick/West Baden 101.7 fm
La Jolla Music
Society Summer Fest
Sundays at 4 p.m.
The “Festival by the Sea” continues with
its eclectic blend of established chamber
repertoire, overlooked works by renowned
composers, and commissioned new music.
This month we
broadcast episodes
five through eight
of this thirteenpart series. Your
host is well-known
La Jolla resident
and classical musical lover, legendary sportscaster,
IU alumnus, and
former WFIU
Host Dick Enberg
student announcer
Dick Enberg.
The February 10th program includes
Sylvia’s Dilemma, a five-minute spokensung piece by soprano Sylvia McNair,
that describes how her shift from opera to
popular song begin to make itself known.
“In 1999, I was engaged by the
Metropolitan Opera to sing the role
of Cleopatra in Handel’s opera Julius
Caesar,” McNair explains. “One day
we were rehearsing my first aria in Act
Two, where the magnificent Cleopatra is
seducing the great Julius Caesar, and while
singing ‘V’adoro pupille,’ I found myself
really wanting to sing “Embrace me, my
sweet embraceable you.”
“I thought maybe this was just a onetime occurrence, but then it happened
again during La Traviata. While singing Violetta’s toast to freedom, “Sempre
Libera,” what popped into my head was
“Don’t Fence Me In!”
February 3 – Haydn: She Never Told
Her Love; Kate Lindsey, mezzo-soprano;
Anthony Newman, piano. Ravel: Sonata
for Violin and Piano; Cho-Liang Lin,
violin; Anne-Marie McDermott, piano.
Elgar: Piano Quintet in A Minor, Op. 84;
Shai Wosner, piano; David Chan and Yoon
Kwon, violins; Paul Neubauer, viola; Gary
Hoffman, cello.
February 10 – Bartok: Contrasts for Clarinet, Violin and Piano, Sz. 111; Burt Hara,
clarinet; Cho-Liang Lin, violin; Anne-Marie McDermott, piano. Mendelssohn: Trio
No. 1 in D Minor for Violin, Cello and
Piano, Op. 49; Chee-Yun, violin; Alisa
Weilerstein, cello; Cecile Licad, piano.
McNair: Sylvia’s Dilemma; Sylvia McNair,
soprano; Ted Taylor, piano.
February 17 – Dvorák: Slavonic Dance
No. 10 in E Minor for Piano Four-Hands;
Cecile Licad and Joseph Kalichstein, piano. Dvorák: Terzetto in C Major for Two
Violins and Viola; Chee-Yun and Adam
Bamett-Hart, violins; Pierre Lapointe,
viola.
Chausson: Chanson d’Ophélie (Hamlet), No. 3 from Chansons de Shakespeare
(trans. Bouchor), Op. 28; Kate Lindsey,
mezzo-soprano; Anthony Newman, piano.
Beethoven: Trio No 4 in D Major for Piano and Strings, Op. 70, No. 1 (“Ghost”);
Orion Weiss, piano; David Chan, violin;
Gary Hoffman, cello.
February 24 – Walton: Sonata in B-Flat
Major for Violin and Piano; Cho-Liang
Lin, violin; André-Michel Schub, piano.
Schumann: Quintet in E-Flat Major for
Piano and Strings, Op. 44; Joseph Kalichstein, piano; Shanghai Quartet: Weigang
Li, Yi-Wen Jiang, violins; Honggang Li,
viola; Nicholas Tzavaras, cello.
Odetta
Jackson and Amos
Brown, Editor
Emeritus of Ebony
magazine Lerone
Bennett Jr., folk singer
Odetta, JapaneseAmerican activist Yuri
Kochiyama, and a
host of others.
Harry Belafonte
Tavis Smiley
Economic Club
of Indiana Speakers
Series: Michael
McRobbie
Sunday, February 3, 9 p.m.
Memories of the
Movement
Sunday, February 3, 8 p.m.
WFIU’s celebration of Black History
Month kicks off with this compelling
documentary about a turbulent time in
our nation’s history.
The years of the civil rights movement
are counted among the most volatile yet
vibrant times in American history. The
people and events that shaped this period
range from charismatic preachers and
actors to students and domestic workers. To celebrate the courage, conviction,
and commitment of the everyday people
who made extraordinary contributions
to American social progress, The Tavis
Smiley Show presents Memories of the
Movement.
Introduced and narrated by Tavis
Smiley, this powerful special features the
poignant, humorous, unheard, or little
known stories and anecdotes from living
civil rights figures such as actors Harry
Belafonte and Ruby Dee, preachers Jesse
Greensburg 98.9 fm • Kokomo 106.1 fm • Terre Haute 95.1 fm
In this luncheon
talk delivered
in December
of last year, IU
President Michael
McRobbie spoke
to the Economic
Club of Indiana
at the Indiana
Convention
Michael McRobbie
Center in
Indianapolis. A technology expert and
accomplished professor, McRobbie held
the position of interim provost and
vice president of academic affairs prior
to becoming president. He has led an
extensive transformation in information
technology during his time at IU. His
vision led to the university’s management
of the Internet2 Abilene network and
the acquisition of one of the world’s
twenty most powerful supercomputers.
McRobbie was selected to Computerworld
magazine’s 2004 list of “Premier 100 IT
Leaders.” A native of Australia, he earned
a bachelor’s degree from the University
of Queensland and a doctorate from
Australia National University.
February 2008 / Directions in Sound / Page 3
Swingtime
Sunday, February 10, 9 p.m.
During the 1930s
and 1940s, many
black schools in
the U.S. maintained
traveling swing
bands to keep their
doors open during
the Depression.
Narrator Tonea
Stewart profiles
Tonea Stewart
three of the era’s
most famous bands in this showcase of the
Bama State Collegians, the Prairie View
Co-eds, and the International Sweethearts
of Rhythm.
Stewart weaves the era’s music
around interviews with surviving band
members, scholarly commentary, and
archival sound from now-deceased band
members, including the great Erskine
Hawkins. The traveling ensembles
influenced mainstream music on a grand
scale. Harlem’s top jazz orchestras pulled
talent from these bands, whose members
made enduring contributions to American
culture. Hawkins’ “Tuxedo Junction,” for
example, became the anthem for American
GIs in World War II.
The songs in this program go beyond
the iconic—“In the Mood,” “Take the A
Train,” “Henderson Stomp”—to include
lesser known gems like “Vi Vigor,”
composed for International Sweethearts
of Rhythm saxophonist Vi Burnside. Band
members describe what it was like for
them as teens, many from poor homes, to
travel the country as stars of swing.
Making History in
Massachusetts
Doctors Without
Borders
Sunday, February 17, 8 p.m.
Sunday, February 17, 9 p.m.
Massachusetts Governor Deval Patrick
made the journey from the south
side of Chicago to the State House of
Massachusetts. He is only the second
elected black governor in U.S. history.
Around the world, where governments
don’t function, humanitarian organizations
feed the hungry and heal the sick. The
1999 Nobel Peace Prize-winning Médecins
Sans Frontières, or Doctors Without
Borders, is one such group. Their medical
staff serves victims of war and poverty,
working under dangerous conditions. It
would be easy to romanticize their work,
but the reality contradicts that view.
In this Inside Out documentary,
correspondent Michael Goldfarb takes
us into the Niger River delta, as a team
from Doctors Without Borders returns
to the region where the organization was
founded thirty years ago.
Deval Patrick
From WBUR in Boston, this program
profiles Governor Patrick and the election
campaign that brought him into office
in January of last year. It recounts how
the Chicago native escaped poverty
and hardship by coming to school in
Massachusetts, and how he followed that
up with Harvard law school and work in
the Clinton administration. Bob Oakes
and Fred Thys report on what finally
led Patrick from private law practice to
political campaigning.
The program includes the comments of
Andrew Young and Douglas Wilder and a
discussion in the final segment on the new
politics of race across the nation, and how
the election of Deval Patrick fits into that
new reality.
Andrew Young
With Goldfarb we travel by boat
through mangrove swamps and dense
forest observing the team of physicians as
they treat malaria victims and inoculate
children against the disease. Traveling
farther into Nigeria we attend a ceremony
in which traditional healing practices
such as animal sacrifice provide a vivid
contrast to the Western science that
Doctors Without Borders offers. Finally
we listen to the doctors and nurses as they
unwind and take stock of the personal and
professional implications of their work.
Douglas Wilder
International Sweethearts of Rhythm
Page 4 / Directions in Sound / February 2008
Bloomington 103.7 fm • Columbus 100.7 fm • French Lick/West Baden 101.7 fm
From Cold War
to Cold Peace
Profiles
Sunday, February 24, 8 p.m.
February 3 – Wayne Manns
When the Soviet Union collapsed in
the early 1990s, there was a chance for
cooperation where there had once been
conflict. For a while it seemed friendship
might replace the bitter legacy of the Cold
War. But eighteen
years after the fall
of the Berlin Wall,
relations between
Washington and
Moscow are once
again icy.
Ray Suarez looks
at how President
Putin has retained
Vladimir Putin
his popularity
despite cracking down on political
freedom in Russia. He also explores
Russia’s position on the independence of
Kosovo and what it says about Russia’s
foreign policy.
Andrea Koppel narrates an archival
audio tour of the history of US-Russian
relations since the fall of the Soviet
Union. She speaks with James Goldgeier,
professor of political science at The
George Washington University.
Garrick Utley looks back at the Clinton
administration’s efforts to expand NATO
while maintaining friendly relations
with Russia. He is joined by Warren
Christopher, former Secretary of State;
Anthony Lake, former National Security
Advisor; Strobe Talbott, former Deputy
Secretary of State, and others.
Figurative painter Wayne Manns uses a Brazilian-influenced
palette of bold colors to depict jazz musicians and the
black experience. He has had numerous group and solo
shows throughout the U.S., Europe, and South America;
and his work is represented in numerous private and public
collections, including IU’s Neal-Marshall Black Culture Center.
As a curator, he has overseen exhibits at the Kinsey Institute
and the Mathers Museum; and in San Francisco he worked
with at-risk youth to create a mural of Rosa Parks that won a
Best New Mural Award of 1997. Shana Ritter is the host.
Sundays at 7 p.m.
February 10 – George List
George List is a major figure in the field of ethnomusicology.
The professor emeritus of folklore and ethnomusicology
has been, in his ninety-six years, an archivist, researcher,
translator, magazine editor, composer, conductor, flutist, and
choreographer. He was director of Indiana University’s Archive
of Traditional Music for more than two decades, during which
time he built the Archives into a nationally-known resource.
Dr. List lost his sight at age 66 yet has continued a prolific
output of journal articles and reviews. His books include
Music and Poetry in a Colombian Village: A Tri-Cultural
Heritage. He spoke with George Walker. (repeat)
February 17 – Malcolm Abrams
Malcolm Abrams is founder, publisher, and editor of
Bloomington’s culture and lifestyle magazine, Bloom. His
work has appeared in many magazines and newspapers
including Ladies’ Home Journal, Playboy, and The Toronto
Globe & Mail, and has been syndicated by both the New York
Times and the Los Angeles Times syndicates. He has worked
for Rupert Murdoch as vice president/editorial director of
Murdoch Business Magazines, where he was responsible for
twenty publications. Abrams is the co-author of Future Stuff,
and its sequel, More Future Stuff, both published by Viking
Penguin. Moya Andrews hosts. (repeat)
February 24 – Jim Naremore
Warren Christopher Anthony Lake
Film scholar James Naremore is Emeritus Chancellors’
Professor of Communication and Culture and English at
Indiana University. He has taught film courses at IU and other
schools for more than thirty years, and co-founded the IU
Film Studies Program. He has lectured widely in the U.S. and
Europe on subjects such as film genre, acting, adaptation,
and modernism. His books include The World Without a
Self: Virginia Woolf and the Novel, Acting in the Cinema,
Filmguide to Psycho, The Films of Vincente Minnelli, The
Magic World of Orson Welles, More Than Night: Film Noir in
Its Contexts, and his latest, On Kubrick. He spoke with Peter
Noble-Kuchera.
Strobe Talbott
Greensburg 98.9 fm • Kokomo 106.1 fm • Terre Haute 95.1 fm
February 2008 / Directions in Sound / Page 5
Artist of the Month Contemporary
Music Highlights
WFIU’s Artist
Wednesday, February 6
10:08 p.m. RAVEL—Pièce en forme de
habanera
th
Saturday, February 9th
12:09 p.m. GLINKA—Trio pathètique in d
Sunday, February 10th
11:25 a.m. GRAINGER—Scotch
Strathspey and Reel
Wednesday, February 13th
7:09 p.m. COPLAND—Concerto for
Clarinet, Strings, Harp and Piano
Thursday, February 14th
7:09 p.m. BRAHMS—Clarinet Trio in a,
Op. 114
Sunday, February 17th
7:06 a.m. BOTTESINI—Grand Duo for
Double Bass and Clarinet
Tuesday, February 19th
10:07 a.m. KIBBE—Shtetl Tanzen
Saturday, February 23rd
12:09 p.m. BRAHMS—Quintet in b, Op.
115
Page 6 / Directions in Sound / February 2008
Ned Rorem is WFIU’s featured
contemporary composer for February.
Rorem was born in Richmond,
Indiana and attended music school at
Northwestern University and the Curtis
Institute
of Music.
He studied
composition
under Bernard
Wagenaar
at Juilliard,
taking his B.A.
in 1946 and his
M.A. degree
(along with
the George
Gershwin
Ned Rorem
Memorial
Prize in composition) in 1948. Rorem has
received the Fulbright and the Guggenheim
and has been commissioned by everyone
from the Ford Foundation to the Chicago
Symphony.
Time Magazine has called him “the
world’s best composer of art songs,” yet
his musical and literary ventures extend far
beyond this specialized field. Rorem has
composed three symphonies, four piano
concertos, and an array of other orchestral
works; music for numerous combinations
of chamber forces, six operas, choral
works of every description, ballets and
other music for the theater, and hundreds
of songs and cycles. He is the author of
fourteen books, including five volumes
of diaries and collections of lectures and
criticism.
WFIU will showcase the works of Ned
Rorem throughout the month of February.
Credit: Claudia Kroenberg
of the Month
for February is
internationally
renowned
clarinetist James
Campbell.
Called by the
Toronto Star
“Canada’s preeminent clarinetist
and wind soloist,”
James Campbell
Campbell has
performed in most of the world’s major
concert halls and with more than fifty
orchestras. He has made more than
40 recordings encompassing most of
the standard clarinet repertoire. Since
1989, Campbell has called Bloomington,
Indiana home during the academic year as
Professor of Music at the Jacobs School of
Music.
WFIU highlights performances of
James Campbell throughout the month of
February and with an Artworks interview
on February 12th at 7:06 p.m.
Wednesday, February 13th
7:09 p.m. Seven Poems of Paul Goodman;
Rosalind Rees, s.; Ned Rorem, p.
Sunday, February 17th
7:06 a.m. Pastorale for Organ; Ronald
Prowse, org.
Wednesday, February 20th
11:07 a.m. Dances; Contrasts Qt.
Saturday, February 23rd
12:09 p.m. Trio; Huntington Trio
Thursday, February 28th
7:09 p.m. Spring Music; Constrasts Qt.
Other selected new music highlights:
Wednesday, February 6th
10:08 a.m. RUTTER—Mass of the
Children; Cambridge Singers; Cantate
Youth Choir, John Rutter/City of London
Sinfonia
Monday, February 11th
9:03 a.m. NELSON—Savannah River
Holiday; Keith Lockhart/Boston Pops
Wednesday, February 13th
7:09 p.m. ORREGO-SALAS—Tres
Madrigales, Op. 62; Carmen Téllez/IU
Contemporary Vocal Ens.
Monday, February 18th
9:03 a.m. EWAZEN—Down a River of
Time (Concerto for Oboe and Strings);
Linda Strommen, ob.; International Sejong
Soloists
Saturday, February 2nd
11:30 a.m. Pilgrims; José Serebrier/Royal
Liverpool Phil.
Wednesday, February 6th
10:08 p.m. Nine Episodes for Four
Players; Contrasts Qt.
Thursday, February 7th
7:06 p.m. Sky Music; Yolanda
Kondanassis, hp.
Saturday, February 9th
7:09 a.m. Organbook III; Ronald Prowse,
org.
International Sejong Soloists
Tuesday, February 19th
10:07 a.m. KIBBE—Shtetl Tanzen; Trio
Indiana
Thursday, February 21st
7:09 p.m. YANAGIDA—A Poetic Grace;
Noriko Sanagi, koto; Kazuhiko Komatsu/
Sapporo Sym. Orch.
Bloomington 103.7 fm • Columbus 100.7 fm • French Lick/West Baden 101.7 fm
Featured Classical
Recordings
Selections from each week’s featured
recording can be heard at 9 a.m. and 7
p.m. Monday; 11 a.m. Tuesday; 10 a.m.
and 10 p.m. Wednesday; 3 p.m. Thursday;
and 11:30 a.m. Saturday.
February 4th–9th
Dr. Bull’s Jewel
February 18th–23rd
Dim Sum
(Telarc Cd-80690)
Ying Quartet.
This recent Telarc release brings some of
the best new music by Chinese-American
composers played by four remarkable
siblings. Familiar names like Tan Dun and
Bright Sheng share the bill with Vivian
Fung, Lei Liang, and others.
(Lyrichord LEMS-8060)
Kathryn Cook, harpsichord and virginal
For the early keyboard lover, Kathryn
Cook presents a charming collection of
keyboard music by John Bull (1563-1628)
on this Lyrichord release.
February 25th–March 1st
Orfeo Fantasia
(ATMA SACD2 2337)
Charles Daniels, tenor
Montréal Baroque
February 11th–16th
La Ciudad Celeste (The Heavenly City)
(IU Music lamc CD2007-01 OB)
Contemporary Vocal Ensemble, Indiana
University Singers, and Chamber
Orchestra
Carmen Helena Téllez and Jan
Harrington, conductors
The tale of Orpheus, the god of music,
has inspired musicians and composers in
every generation. Such music from the
Baroque and Renaissance is presented on
this recording conceived by gambist Susie
Napper. Charles Daniels lends his tenor to
the superb musicianship of the Montréal
Baroque.
The Indiana University Jacobs School of
Music’s Latin American Music Center
coordinated this release of choral works
by Juan Orrego-Salas. Compositions to
note are the title track La ciudad celeste,
Op. 105 and Tres madrigales, Op. 62.
Greensburg 98.9 fm • Kokomo 106.1 fm • Terre Haute 95.1 fm
Jazz Notes
Throughout February WFIU will
commemorate African-American artists
and themes as part of the daily mix
on Joe Bourne’s Just You and Me, and
on our Saturday evening jazz program
Night Lights as well, saluting Black
History Month with shows such as “Suite
History” (featuring extended musical
depictions of African-American history
by Duke Ellington, Oliver Nelson, and
John Carter), “The Langston Hughes
Songbook,” and “Say It Loud: BlackPride Soul Jazz.” Another program pays
a 75th birthday tribute to hardbop tenor
saxophonist John Handy, focusing on his
early recordings with Charles Mingus and
his rarely heard Roulette and Columbia
albums from the 1960s. All of these
programs, as always, will be archived
after broadcast for online listening at
nightlights.indiana.edu.
While you’re on the Night Lights Web
site, you can also check out a previous
WFIU documentary, Jump for Joy:
Duke Ellington’s Celebratory Musical,
which features the music and stories of
Ellington’s early civil rights revue, staged
in Hollywood in 1941. Finally, on Sunday,
Feb. 10 at 9 p.m., tune in for Swingtime,
a program about the traveling black
college swing bands of the 1930s and
40s, featuring music of bands such as the
International Sweethearts of Rhythm and
interviews with surviving musicians about
life on the road as black teenagers in the
Depression and World War II era.
This month on Afterglow (heard every
Friday night at 10:05) we’ll mark another
75th birthday of a tenor saxophonist—
David “Fathead” Newman, who rose
to renown as a member of Ray Charles’
orchestra, and who has recorded a series
of critically acclaimed albums for the
HighNote label in recent years. Other
Afterglow shows highlight the recent Keith
Jarrett Trio release My Foolish Heart, the
vocal duo of Jackie Cain and Roy Kral,
and recordings from the 1940s and 50s
movies of Frank Sinatra. These programs,
too, can be heard online, at afterglow.
indiana.edu.
Earlier on Friday evenings at 8, you can
catch Marian McPartland’s Piano Jazz.
Featured artists for February include the
late black jazz pioneer Max Roach, singer
Tony DeSare, and pianist Steve Kuhn.
Piano Jazz can be found online as part
of NPR’s comprehensive new multimedia
music site, www.npr.org/music/.
February 2008 / Directions in Sound / Page 7
The Radio Reader
with Dick Estell
Playing For Pizza by John Grisham
Airs February 11 through March 4
John Grisham’s latest
novel is “a light-hearted
story of football, food,
and love” (The Richmond Times-Dispatch).
Rick Dockery
was the third-string
quarterback for the
Cleveland Browns. In
John Grisham
a championship game
against Denver, to the surprise and dismay
of virtually everyone, Rick actually got
into the game. With a 17-point lead and
just minutes to go, Rick provided what
was arguably the worst single performance
in the history of the NFL. Overnight, he
became a national laughingstock, was
immediately cut by the Browns, and
shunned by all other teams.
But all Rick knows is football, and he
insists that his agent, Arnie, find a team
that needs him. Against enormous odds
Arnie finally locates just such a team and
informs Rick that, miraculously, he can in
fact now be a starting quarterback—for
the mighty Panthers of Parma, Italy.
Italians do play American football
(after a fashion) and the Parma Panthers
desperately want a former NFL player at
their helm. So Rick reluctantly agrees to
play for the Panthers, at least until a better
offer comes along, and heads to Italy. He
knows nothing about Parma, has never
been to Europe, and doesn’t understand a
word of Italian.
To say that Italy—the land of opera,
fine wines, extremely small cars, romance,
and Football Americano—holds a few
surprises for Rick Dockery would be something of an understatement.
Broadcasts from the
IU Jacobs School of
Music
FAURÉ—Nocturne No. 6 in D-flat, Op.
63; Michel Block, p.
Airs: 2/4 at 7 p.m., 2/5 at 10 a.m., 2/8 at
3 p.m.
MONTEVERDI—Two Madrigals; A.
Baron Breland/IU University Singers
Airs: 2/11 at 7 p.m., 2/12 at 10 a.m., 2/15
at 3 p.m.
VIVALDI—Flute Concerto in F, Op. 10,
No. 1, RV 433 “La tempesta di mare”
(The Sea Storm); Jennifer Streeter, rec.
Stanley Ritchie/IU Baroque Orch.
Airs: 2/18 at 7 p.m., 2/19 at 10 a.m., 2/22
at 3 p.m.
HAYDN—Symphony No. 49 in f, Hob.
I:49 “La Passione”; José Serebrier/IU
Cham. Orch.
Airs: 2/25 at 7 p.m., 2/26 at 10 a.m., 2/29
at 3 p.m.
Community Events
WFIU is the media sponsor for the
following events. For more information on
these and other activities on the calendar,
visit wfiu.indiana.edu
Monroe County History Center
Friday, February 1
Fountain Square Ballroom
6 p.m.
Festivities include a dinner, silent auction,
and a presentation by Gayle Cook,
“Preserving Indiana’s Domes.”
Options
Eleventh Annual Chocolate Fest
Saturday, February 2
Bloomington Convention Center
5 – 8 p.m.
Includes Chocolate Creations Contest
for chefs of all ages, chocolate and food
samples from local, regional, and national
vendors, beer and wine tasting areas, live
music, and children’s entertainment.
Page 8 / Directions in Sound / February 2008
Kokomo Community Concerts
Fiesta Folklorico
Friday, February 8
Kokomo High School Auditorium
7:30 p.m.
Developed by San Antonio’s acclaimed
band Los Caporales, this colorful program
celebrates the artistic heritage of Latin
America, Spain and Portugal.
Bloomington Symphony Orchestra
A Hot Night in Old Vienna
Saturday, February 9
Alumni Hall, IMU
6 – 11 p.m.
Gourmet buffet dinner, desserts and coffee;
cash bar; and dancing to romantic waltzes,
swing, Latin, and popular standards
played by the Bloomington Symphony
Orchestra.
Bloomington Playwrights Project
Symphony for Three
February 14 – March 1
www.newplays.org
A play about love, genius and madness by
local playwright Mike Smith. Robert, a
composer, is married to Clara, a novelist.
They befriend Johannes, a graduate
student who becomes a folksinger and
then rock star. The tragic triangle is set
against a 1960s backdrop of The Beatles,
Vietnam, and the hope of a better world.
Camerata Orchestra
Technicolors
Sunday, February 17
Bloomington High School South
3:30 p.m.
Guest conductor Steven Smith leads the
Camerata Orchestra with horn soloist Jeff
Nelsen in works of Montecino, Richard
Strauss’ Horn Concerto, and Ravel’s
Daphnis and Chloe Suites.
Hoosier Hills Food Bank
Fourteenth Annual Soup Bowl Benefit
Sunday, February 17
Monroe County Convention Center
5 p.m.
Twenty dollars buys a handmade bowl of
your choice filled with scrumptious soup
that you can eat while listening to live
music.
Bloomington 103.7 fm • Columbus 100.7 fm • French Lick/West Baden 101.7 fm
ArtsWeek 2008
Politics and the Arts
February 20 – March 1
www.artsweek.indiana.edu
The Power of
Humor
The City of Bloomington and the IU
Campus will share the stage for eleven
nights of performances, exhibitions,
workshops, and other events that are
creative, diverse, and inspiring.
Cardinal Stage Company
O Lovely Glowworm
February 22 through March 1
Buskirk-Chumley Theater
5 p.m.
The narrator of Glen Berger’s comedy is a
formerly dead Irish goat who finds himself
alive again and seeks to find out how he
wound up that way. Smart, literate, and
funny, this story of love and heroism is the
perfect Bloomington show.
Big Brothers Big Sisters of South Central
Indiana
Edward Jones Bowl for Kids’ Sake
February 23 through March 1
Suburban Lanes in Bloomington
bigsindiana.org
Bowl for Kids’ Sake is Big Brothers
Big Sisters of South Central Indiana’s
largest annual fundraising campaign. It
culminates in community-wide bowling
events for area residents and businesses—
parties held to thank the members of the
community for coming through for the
kids. Take part in a fun activity while
helping local kids in need.
Tom and Ray Magliozzi
“If I could live my life over,
”
I would have laughed more.
Erma Bombeck
You can leave a rich legacy of quality radio for
generations to come. There are numerous
tax-advantaged ways of making a gift beyond
your annual membership support.
Contact:
Nancy Krueger
(812) 855-2935 | nkrueger@indiana.edu
wfiu.org/majorgiving
Greensburg 98.9 fm • Kokomo 106.1 fm • Terre Haute 95.1 fm
February 2008 / Directions in Sound / Page 9
Monday
Wednesday
Tuesday
Thursday
Friday
5 AM
6
7
State and Local news :06 after the hour
8:50 am : Marketplace Morning Report
8
9
10
10:01 am : BBC News
Classical Music with George Walker
10:58 am : A Moment of Science
11:01 am : NPR News
11
Noon
Radio Reader
Playing for Pizza begins February 11
Ask the Mayor
Fresh Air
1 PM
2
3
4
Fresh Air
Noon Edition
Fresh Air
2:01 & 3:01 pm : NPR News
Performance Today
Classical Music
Classical Music
Just You and Me with Joe Bourne
4:55 pm : A Moment of Science
5
5:04 & 5:33 pm : State and Local News
6
7
8
9
Marketplace
Classical Music
Pittsburgh
Symphony
Orchestra
Artworks
Classical Music
Ether Game
Live! At the
Concertgebouw
(Quiz show)
Spoleto Chamber
Music Festival
Harmonia
(Early music)
10
11
Fresh Air
Indianapolis
Symphony
Orchestra
Pipedreams
(Organ music)
Piano Jazz
The Big Bands
Afterglow
Mid.
Classical Music Overnight
1 AM
2
Schedule subject to change. See complete listing for details
Page 10 / Directions in Sound / February 2008
Bloomington 103.7 fm • Columbus 100.7 fm • French Lick/West Baden 101.7 fm
Saturday
News Programs
Sunday
Saturday
Classical Music
BBC News
Weekdays at 10:01 am and 10:01 pm
5 AM
6
7
Local and State News
Weekdays at 6:06 am, 7:06 am, 8:06 am,
12:01 pm, 5:04 pm, 5:33 pm
8
Marketplace Morning Report
Weekdays at 8:50 am
9
NPR News
Weekdays at 12:01 am, 11:01 am, 12:01 pm, 2:01 pm, 3:01 pm
Saturdays at 7:01 am
Sundays at 7:01 am, 6:01 pm, 10:01 pm
10
This American Life
Says You!
Living on Earth
Classical Music
Classical Music
Metropolitan Opera
2-2
2-9
2-16
2-23
Die Walküre
L’Assedio Di Corinto
Manon Lescaut
Carmen
11
Noon
Saint Paul Sunday
Cleveland Int’l
Piano Competition
Broadway Revisited
Congressional Moments
Fridays at 7:00 pm
Sundays at 7:55 am and 6:04 pm
Journey with Nature
Wednesdays at 9:03 am
5
Focus on Flowers
Thursdays and Fridays at 3:25 pm
Saturdays and Sundays at 7:07 am
7
Profiles
8
Folk Sampler
The Thistle
& Shamrock
Afropop Worldwide
Music from the
Hearts of Space
9
10
11
Night Lights
Mid.
Jazz with
Bob Parlocha
Classical Music
Nancy Krueger
Hometown with Tom Roznowski
Saturdays at 8:00 pm
A Moment of Indiana History
Mondays at 11:26 am
Wednesdays at 7:58 pm
Fridays at 8:02 pm
Movie Reviews
with Peter Noble-Kuchera
Tuesdays at 10:06 am and 3:10 pm
Fridays at 9:03 am and 11:06 am
The Poets Weave
Sundays at 11:46 am
Don Glass
Speak Your Mind
Weekdays at 9:04 am and 11:56 am
(as available)
1 AM
Star Date
Weekdays at 11:55 am and 7:06 pm
Saturdays at 11:30 am and 10:07 pm
Sundays at 11:52 am and 10:05 pm
2
The Writer’s Almanac
Weekdays at 7:01 pm
Greensburg 98.9 fm • Kokomo 106.1 fm • Terre Haute 95.1 fm
Moya Andrews
Isla Earth
Sundays at 11:23 am and 3:57 pm
4
6
Specials
A Moment of Science
Weekdays at 10:58 am and 4:55 pm
2
All Things Considered
Sound Medicine
Other Programs
Composers Datebook
Mondays through Wednesdays at 3:25 pm
3
Adam Ragusea
Radio Public/Saturday Feature
Saturdays at 7:47 am (approx.)
1 PM
Weekend Radio
Specials
Indiana Business News
Weekdays at 8:50 am
(immediately following Marketplace)
David Wood
February 2008 / Directions in Sound / Page 11
MemberCard
For a complete listing of more than 300
membership benefits visit membercard.com
or call toll-free 1-888-727-4411.
Benefits of the month:
Columbus Architecture Tour (#388)
Visitors’ Center
Fifth and Franklin
Columbus
812-378-2622
www.columbus.in.us
Valid for two-for-one admission for the
two-hour tour. Reservations required,
subject to availability.
Carmel Symphony Orchestra (#164)
11 First Ave NE, Carmel
317-844-9717
www.carmelsymphony.org
Two-for-one admission to February or
March performances. Family Fun: Greatest
Hits for Kids on February 10 at 3 p.m. or
Bernstein & Webber: Broadway Hits on
March 15 at 7:30 p.m. Both performances
at Westfield High School. Subject to availability.
Lodging:
All Nations B&B (#161)
2164 N. Capitol Ave., Indianapolis
317-923-2622
www.allnationsbnb.us
Valid Sunday to Thursday for two-for-one
overnight accommodations. Reservations
required, room selection based on availability at check-in.
Renata’s Bed & Breakfast (#147)
2201 S. Lynhurst Dr., Indianapolis
317-486-4577
www.renatasbandb.com
Valid Sunday to Thursday for two-forone overnight accommodations, holidays
excluded. Subject to availability, call for
reservations.
Page 12 / Directions in Sound / February 2008
Salt Box Lodge Vacation Rental (#96)
10323 Weisbach Road, Shoals
812-247-2306
www.indianasaltboxlodge.com
Valid for two-for-one overnight accommodations. Reservations required; subject to
availability.
Restaurants:
Bucceto’s Pizza and Pasta Restaurants
115 South State Road 45, Bloomington
(#209)
812-331-1234
350 South Liberty Drive, Bloomington
(#309)
812-323-0123
Valid anytime for individual entrée; excludes medium and large pizzas.
Merchants:
Amazing Clubs (#997)
www.amazingclubs.com
Unlimited ten percent discount on any
12-month gift club membership through
Amazing Clubs, which offers a mouthwatering selection of monthly gift clubs
for every occasion and budget. From the
membercard.com site click the link to
amazingclubs.com to view products and
place order. Enter promotion code MBCARDTEN and have MemberCard ready
for verification.
Key to abbreviations.
a., alto; b., bass; bar., baritone; bssn., bassoon;
cl., clarinet; cond., conductor; cont., continuo; ct., countertenor; db., double bass; ch.,
chamber; E.hn., English horn; ens., ensemble;
fl., flute; gt., guitar; hn., horn; hp., harp; hpsd.,
harpsichord; intro., introduction; instr., instrument; kbd., keyboard; lt., lute; ms., mezzo-soprano; ob., oboe; orch., orchestra; org., organ;
Phil., Philharmonic; p., piano; perc., percussion;
qt., quartet; rec., recorder; sax., saxophone; s.,
soprano; str., string; sym., symphony; t., tenor;
tb., trombone; timp., timpani; tpt., trumpet;
trans., transcribed; var., variations; vla., viola;
vlc., vdg., viola da gamba; violoncello; vln.,
violin. Upper case letters indicate major keys;
lower case letters indicate minor keys.
Note: Daily listings feature only those
programs for which we have detailed
content information. For a complete list of
WFIU’s schedule, see the program grid on
pages 10 and 11.
1 February
9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH
GEORGE WALKER
9am POULENC—Oboe Sonata; Linda
Strommen, ob.; Émile Naoumoff, p.
10am SCHUBERT—String Trio Movement
in B-flat, D. 471; Kodály Qt.
11am WAGNER—DIE WALKÜRE: “Du
bist der Lenz”; Kirtsen Flagstad, s.; Hans
Knappertsbusch/Vienna Phil.
3pm STRAVINSKY—Three Church Slavonic
Settings; Paul Hillier/Pro Arte Singers
8:00 PM MARIAN McPARTLAND’S
PIANO JAZZ
“Tony DeSare”
Tony DeSare has recently earned a reputation as one of New York’s hottest young
singer/pianists. Whether performing classic
standards or sophisticated original compositions, DeSare delivers a cool vocal tone with
swinging piano accompaniment. He sings
and plays his deliciously romantic original
“How I Will Say I Love You,” and McPartland backs him on “Memories of You.”
Tony DeSare
10:09 PM AFTERGLOW
“Sinatra in Hollywood.” Nineteen forties
and 50s cinematic song from Frank Sinatra.
2 Saturday
7:06 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC
MOZART, L.—Symphony in C “The Toy
Symphony”; Wolfgang Martin/State Opera
Orch. of Berlin
11:30 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC
CANTELOUBE—CHANTS
D’AUVERGNE: “Obal, din lo Coumbèlo”
[Down yonder in the valley]; Véronique
Gens, s.; Serge Baudo/Orch. National de
Lille-Région Nord/Pas-de Calais
12:09 PM CLASSICAL MUSIC
RACHMANINOFF—Variations on a
Theme by Corelli, Op. 42; Vladimir
Ashkenazy, p.
12:30 PM METROPOLITAN OPERA
DIE WALKÜRE (Wagner)
Loren Maazel; Lisa Gasteen (Brünnhilde),
Deborah Voigt (Sieglinde), Michelle
DeYoung (Fricka), Clifton Forbis
(Siegmund), James Morris (Wotan), Mikhail
Petrenko (Hunding)
Bloomington 103.7 fm • Columbus 100.7 fm • French Lick/West Baden 101.7 fm
8:00 PM HOMETOWN
WITH TOM ROZNOWSKI
“The World on a String”
8:05 PM THE FOLK SAMPLER
“Make a Wish”
It could come true.
9:05 PM THE THISTLE AND SHAMROCK
Muir of Gormack
The area of wilderness known as the Muir
of Gormack was first mentioned in 1776
by scholars who labeled it a “Caledonian
Camp,” noting its prehistoric remains of hut
circles, cairns and decorated stones. Scottish
singer-songwriter Dougie MacLean imagines
the setting in “Muir of Gormack: A Pictish
Story.”
11:00 PM NIGHT LIGHTS
“Handy With the Horn: John Handy at
75.”
Tenor saxophonist John Handy gained
prominence with Charles Mingus’ late 1950s
group and went on to record as a leader for
both the Roulette and Columbia labels in
the 1960s. We’ll celebrate his 75th birthday
with music from those albums and his
appearances with Mingus.
3 Sunday
7:06 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC
TELEMANN—Concerto in D for 2
Violins, Viola, and Continuo, TWV 43:D4;
Musicians of the Old Post Road
11:25 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC
ALBENIZ, I.—Mallorca, Op. 202; David
Russell, gt.
12:00 PM SAINT PAUL SUNDAY
Zehetmair String Trio
Franz Schubert: String Trio in Bb Major, D.
471
Gideon Klein (1919-1945): String Trio
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart: Divertimento in
Eb Major, K. 563
—Adagio
—Andante
Eugène August Ysaÿe: Ballade (Solo Violin
Sonata No. 3, Op. 27)
2:00 PM BROADWAY REVISITED
“Victor Herbert’s Greatest Hits”
operetta. This week we’ll hear songs from
several of his fifty-four Broadway shows.
3:00 PM WEEKEND RADIO
Peter Cook, Rowan Atkinson, John Cleese
on bees; Albert Brooks makes some Kooky
Krazy Kalls. 7:00 PM PROFILES
Wayne Manns
8:00 PM MEMORIES OF A MOVEMENT
From The Tavis Smiley Show, a
remembrance of the civil rights movement
shared by people who lived it.
9:00 PM ECONOMIC CLUB OF INDIANA
IU President Michael McRobbie speaks
to the Economic Club of Indiana in this
luncheon talk delivered in December 2007.
(approx. 45 mins.)
4 Monday
9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH
GEORGE WALKER
9am BULL—Galliard to the Quadran Pavan;
Kathryn Cok, hpsd.
10am HOTTETERRE—DEUXIEME
LIVRE...POUR LA FLUTE, Op. 5: Suite
in e for rec. & cont.; Frans Brüggen, rec.;
Wieland Kuijken,vdg.; Gustav Leonhardt,
hpsd.
11am MOZART—Miserere, K. 85; Herbert
Tachezi, org.; Nikolaus Harnoncourt/Arnold
Schoenberg Chorus
3pm ROUSSEL—Rapsodie Flamande
[Flemish Rhapsody]; Pierre Stoll/Rhenish
State Phil.
7:09 PM EVENING CLASSICAL MUSIC
SAINT-SAËNS—Le rouet d’Omphale, Op.
31; Charles Dutoit/Philharmonia Orch.
8:00 PM PITTSBURGH SYMPHONY
ORCHESTRA
Gilbert and Sullivan Fantasia
MOZART Flute Concerto No. 2
MANCINI Favorites
Bramwell Tovey, cond.; James Galway, fl.
10:00 PM PIPEDREAMS
In the Spotlight
Pipedreams has circled the globe to bring
you this collection of concert performances
featuring the pipe organ in solo, in
ensemble, with piano, and with choir.
5 Tuesday
9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH
GEORGE WALKER
9am BACH, J.C.—SIX SYMPHONIES, OP.
6: No. 6 in g; Thomas Dunn/IU Ch. Orch.
10am CAMBINI—Woodwind Quintet in F,
No. 3; Aulos Ww. Qnt.
11am BULL—Bull’s Goodnight; Kathryn
Cok, hpsd.
3pm SCHUBERT—Three Lieder without
Words; Mischa Maisky, vlc.; Daria Hovora, p.
7:07 PM ARTWORKS
This week, Grammy nominees and brothers
David and Peter Turnley. Plus reviews by
Peter Noble-Kuchera and George Walker.
8:00 PM ETHER GAME
“Divine Connection”
Up in the clouds munching on ambrosia.
6 Wednesday
9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH
GEORGE WALKER
9am RESPIGHI—Metamorphoseon modi
XII; Timothy Lees, vln.; Marna Street, vla.;
Eric Kim, vlc.; Gillian Benet Stella, hp.;
Randolph Bowman, fl.; Richard Johnson,
ob.; Richard Hawley, cl.; William Winstead,
bsn.; Thomas Sherwood, hn.; Duane Dugger,
hn.; Jesús López-Cobos/Cincinnati Sym.
Orch.
Greensburg 98.9 fm • Kokomo 106.1 fm • Terre Haute 95.1 fm
10am BULL—Walsingham; Kathyrn Cok,
hpsd.
11am DITTERSDORF—SINFORNIA ON
OVID’S “METAMORPHOSES”: Adagio
non molto in F major; Lajos Lencsés, ob.;
Franz Liszt Ch. Orch.
7:09 PM EVENING CLASSICAL MUSIC
BERLIOZ—LES FRANCS JUGES, Op. 3:
Overture; Roger Norrington/SWR Radio
Symphony Orchestra Stuttgart
8:00 PM LIVE! AT THE
CONCERTGEBOUW
Herbert Blomstedt/Royal Concertgebouw
Orch; Yefim Bronfman, p.
BEETHOVEN—Piano Concerto No. 1 in C
Major, Op. 15
BRAHMS—Symphony No. 4 in E Minor,
Op. 98
Brahms
10:08 PM LATE NIGHT MUSIC
RUTTER—Mass of the Children;
Cambridge Singers; Cantate Youth Choir;
Joanne Lunn, s.; Roderick Williams, bar.;
John Rutter/City of London Sinfonia
7 Thursday
9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH
GEORGE WALKER
9am CAMBINI—Symphonie Concertante
No. 3 in G, for Two Flutes and Orchestra;
Anne Utagawa, fl.; Dominique Hunziker, fl.;
Paul Kuentz/Paul Kuentz Ch. Orch
10am GABRIELI, G.—CANZONI E
SONATE: Canzon No. 18 à 14; Philip
Pickett/London Brass
11am ROSSINI—ERMIONE: Overture;
Neville Marriner/Academy of St. Martin-inthe-Fields
3pm BULL—Chromatic Galliard; Kathyrn
Cok, hpsd.
7:09 PM EVENING CLASSICAL MUSIC
ROSSINI—LE SIÈGE DE CORINTHE
[THE SIEGE OF CORINTH]: Overture;
Riccardo Chailly/Natl. Phil. Orch.
8:00 PM SPOLETO CHAMBER MUSIC
HANDEL, arr. HALVORSEN—Passacaglia;
Chee-Yun, vln.; Alisa Weilerstein, vlc.
BUNCH—Drift (new work for clarinet,
viola and piano); Todd Palmer, cl.; Kenji
Bunch, vla.; Jeremy Denk, p.
MOZART—Quartet in C Major K.465
(“Dissonant”) St. Lawrence String Quartet
9:00 PM HARMONIA
Mary Springfels
Our Great Musicians Series continues this
week with gambist Mary Springfels, an
American original. We’ll hear her talk about
music and recent events. A new release of
French harpsichord music with Arthur Haas
will also be featured.
February 2008 / Directions in Sound / Page 13
8 Friday
9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH
GEORGE WALKER
9am PROKOFIEV—Violin Concerto No.
2 in g, Op. 63; Joshua Bell, vln.; Charles
Dutoit/Montreal Sym.
10am CLARKE, R.—Piano Trio; Newstead
Trio
11am ROSSINI—LE SIÈGE DE
CORINTHE [THE SIEGE OF CORINTH]:
“Giusto ciel! In tal periglio”; Montserrat
Caballé, s.; Carlo Felice Cillario/RCA
Italiana Opera Orch. and Chorus
3pm DEMESSIEUX—Te Deum for Organ;
Christopher Young, org.
8:00 PM MARIAN McPARTLAND’S
PIANO JAZZ
“Hiromi Uehara”
Hiromi Uehara is a brilliant young pianist
from Japan by way of the Berklee College
of Music. Her exciting mixture of musical
genres and high energy playing is made even
more thrilling by her amazing technique
and complex ideas. She demonstrates her
original approach with her own composition
“The Tom and Jerry Show,” a frenetic tune
inspired by the famous cartoon.
10:09 PM AFTERGLOW
“Keith Jarrett Trio: My Foolish Heart.”
Music from the latest release from the
pianist’s standards trio.
9 Saturday
7:06 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC
ROREM—Organbook III; Ronald Prowse,
org.
11:30 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC
HOLST—Greeting; Jon Ceander Mitchell/
Philharmonia Bulgarica
12:09 PM CLASSICAL MUSIC
MORAWETZ—Duo for Violin and Piano;
Cleveland Duo
1:30 PM METROPOLITAN OPERA
L’ASSEDIO DI CORINTO (Rossini) Archive
broadcast from April 15, 1975
Thomas Schippers: Beverly Sills (Pamira).
Shirley Verrett (Neocle), Betsy Norden
(Iseme), Harry Theyard (Cleomene),
Maometto (Justine Diaz).
8:00 PM HOMETOWN
WITH TOM ROZNOWSKI
“Shopping List”
8:05 PM THE FOLK SAMPLER
“Love Songs”
For your Valentine.
9:05 PM THE THISTLE AND SHAMROCK
On the Road
Itinerant work ways are celebrated this week
in traditional songs, while contemporary
musicians offer us their take of the traveling
musician’s lifestyle. Featured are The Easy
Club, Malinky, Ossian, and Dolores Keane.
Page 14 / Directions in Sound / February 2008
11:00 PM NIGHT LIGHTS
“Suite History.”
Duke Ellington, Oliver Nelson, and John
Carter composed extended works that
offered musical and historical depictions of
the African-American experience. We’ll hear
music from all three and talk with historian
Michael McGerr.
10 Sunday
7:06 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC
COPLAND—Duo for Flute and Piano;
Marianne Gedigian, fl.; Eugene Rowley, p.
11:25 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC
KOPYLOV—Scherzo in A, Op. 10; Antonio
de Almeida/Moscow Sym. Orch.
12:00 PM SAINT PAUL SUNDAY
Helen Callus, viola; Phillip Bush, piano
Traditional Scottish (arr. Rebecca Clarke):
I’ll Bid My Heart Be Still
Rebecca Clarke: Morpheus
Sergei Prokofiev (arr. Vadim Borrisowsky):
from Six Pieces from the Ballet Romeo and
Juliet
—I. Introduction
—III. Young Juliet
—IV. Dance of the Nights
—V. Balcony Scene
—VI. Mercucio
Pamela Harrison: Viola Sonata (1946)
—III. Andante affetuoso
2:00 PM BROADWAY REVISITED
“My Funny Valentine”
For Valentine’s Day weekend, an assortment
of theatrical love songs, some of them
tender, but with some comic Valentines, too.
3:00 PM WEEKEND RADIO
Peter Sellers and Sophia Loren try to
keep their love alive with “Shadows
on the Grass,” “I Fell in Love with an
Englishman,” and “To Keep My Love
Alive.” Ann Mortifee and the Weavers
present love songs, and Bridget Emerson
reads “Ah Pick Yew a Pretty Flawr.”
7:00 PM PROFILES
George List (repeat)
8:00 PM LONG DISTANCE LOVE
From Radio Netherlands, two tales of
transatlantic romance.
9:00 PM SWINGTIME
During the 1930s and 1940s, many black
schools in the U.S. fielded traveling swing
bands to keep their doors open during the
Depression. This program showcases the
Bama State Collegians, the Prairie View
Co-eds, and the International Sweethearts of
Rhythm.
10am SHOSTAKOVICH—THE
COUNTERPLAN, OP. 33: Excerpts;
Alexander Kerr, vln.; Riccardo Chailly/Royal
Concertgebouw Orch.
11am LISZT—Prelude and Fugue on the
name BACH; Marie-Claire Alain, org.
3pm MUSSORGSKY—
KHOVANSHCHINA: Dance of the Persian
Slaves; Claudio Abbado/Berlin Phil.
7:09 PM EVENING CLASSICAL MUSIC
VAN VLIJMEN—Quintetto per archi;
Nobuko Imai, vla.; Schoenberg Qt.
8:00 PM PITTSBURGH SYMPHONY
ORCHESTRA
SALONEN Foreign Bodies
HAYDN Cello Concerto in C Major
SIBELIUS Symphony No. 2
Michael Christie, cond.; Lynn Harrell, vlc.
Lynn Harrell
10:00 PM PIPEDREAMS
The Spirit of Youth
These talented musicians—all in their
twenties—demonstrate again that the future
of the pipe organ is in good hands.
12 Tuesday
9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH
GEORGE WALKER
9am STRAUSS, JOH. JR.—Kaiser-Walzer
[Emperor Waltz], Op. 437; Imre Pallò/IU
Fest. Orch.
10am VAUGHAN WILLIAMS—“Henry
the Fifth” Overture; James Stobart/London
Collegiate Brass
11am ORREGO-SALAS—Romance
a lo divino, Op. 7; Carmen Téllez/IU
Contemporary Vocal Ens.
3pm POULENC—Oboe Sonata; Linda
Strommen, ob.; Émile Naoumoff, p.
7:07 PM ARTWORKS
This week, clarinetist James Campbell and
the Windfall Dancers. Plus reviews by Peter
Noble-Kuchera and George Walker.
8:00 PM ETHER GAME
“Book of Love”
Ether Game gets all mushy.
11 Monday
13 Wednesday
9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH
GEORGE WALKER
9am NELSON—Savannah River Holiday;
Keith Lockhart/Boston Pops
9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH
GEORGE WALKER
9am BACH, W.F.E.—Symphony in G;
Ursula Bundies, vln.; Hermann Max/Das
Kleine Konzert
Bloomington 103.7 fm • Columbus 100.7 fm • French Lick/West Baden 101.7 fm
10am ORREGO-SALAS—Tres madrigales,
Op. 62; Carmen Téllez/IU Contemporary
Vocal Ens.
11am BEN-HAIM—Three Songs Without
Words for Flute and Harp; Suzanne
Shulman, fl.; Erica Goodman, hp.
7:09 PM EVENING CLASSICAL MUSIC
CHOPIN—Scherzo in b-flat, Op. 31; Josef
Hofmann, p.
8:00 PM LIVE! AT THE
CONCERTGEBOUW
Jaap van Zwenden/Netherlands Radio Phil.
Orch.; Anne Schwanewilms, s.
KETTING—Symphony No. 4
R. STRAUSS—Vier letzte Lieder
SCHUBERT—Symphony No. 9 in C Major,
D. 944, The Great
10:08 PM LATE NIGHT MUSIC
BARTOK—Bluebeard’s Castle, Op. 11;
Cornelia Kallisch, ms.; Péter Fried, bar.;
Peter Eötvös/SWR Radio Sym. Orch. Stuttgart
10am SCHUMANN—F.A.E. SONATA:
Finale; Franco Gulli, vln.; Enrica Cavallo, p.
11am PUCCINI—MANON LESCAUT:
“In quelle trine morbide”; Kiri Te Kanawa,
s.; Kent Nagano/Orchestra of the National
Opera of Lyon
3pm CROFT—Sarabande and Ground;
Elzbieta Szmyt, hp.
8:00 PM MARIAN McPARTLAND’S
PIANO JAZZ
“Steve Kuhn”
In his youth, pianist Steve Kuhn played
with Coleman Hawkins, Stan Getz, and
John Coltrane. He joins McPartland for
“Walkin’” and “Too Late Now.”
10:09 PM AFTERGLOW
“Jackie and Roy.” Recordings by the vocal
duo Jackie Cain and Roy Kral.
14 Thursday
7:06 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC
HAYDN—Scherzando No. 4 in G, Hob.
II:36; Emmanuel Pahud, fl.; Haydn Ens. of
Berlin
11:30 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC
STRAVINSKY—Symphonies of Wind
Instruments; En Shao/New Zealand Sym.
Orch.
12:09 PM CLASSICAL MUSIC
DE FALLA—EL AMOR BRUJO [LOVE,
THE MAGICIAN]: Orchestral Suite;
Leopold Stokowski/Royal
Concertgebouw Orch
1:00 PM METROPOLITAN OPERA
MANON LESCAUT (Puccini)
James Levine; Karita Mattila (Manon
Lescaut), Marcello Giordani (des Grieux),
Dwayne Croft (Lescaut)
9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH
GEORGE WALKER
9am PLAYFORD—THE ENGLISH
DANCING MASTER: Six Group Dances;
Sally Logemann/New York Renaissance
Band
10am BERLIOZ—LES FRANCS JUGES,
Op. 3: Overture; David Zinman/Baltimore
Sym. Orch.
11am ABEL—Symphony No. 4 in F, Op. 7;
Adrian Shepherd/Cantilena
3pm ORREGO-SALAS—Villancico, Op. 6;
Carmen Téllez/IU Contemporary Vocal Ens.
7:09 PM EVENING CLASSICAL MUSIC
ROZSA—Andante for Strings, Op. 22a;
James Sedares/New Zealand Sym. Orch.
8:00 PM SPOLETO CHAMBER MUSIC
BACH—Brandenburg Concerto No. 6
in Bb Major, BWV 1051; Masumi Per
Rostad, vla.; Lesley Robertson, vla.; Alisa
Weilerstein, vlc.; Chris Costanza, vlc.; Claire
Bryant, vlc.; Jessica Grabbe, db.; Charles
Wadsworth, p.
MOZART—Clarinet Quintet in A Major,
K.581; Todd Palmer, cl.; St. Lawrence String
Quartet
9:00 PM HARMONIA
A Harmonia Valentine
Love is in the air as we celebrate Valentine’s
Day with a new recording Beautiful Baroque
with Ensemble L’Aura, a production of WFIU.
15 Friday
9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH
GEORGE WALKER
9am FOSTER—Dancing on the River
(Medley); Jay Ungar, vln.; Matt Glaser, vln.;
Evan Stover,vln. and db.; Molly Mason,
p. and gt.; Tony Trischka, banjo; Peter
Ecklund, cor.; Dave Bargeron, tb.; Arnie
Kinsella, perc.
16 Saturday
Karita Mattila
Dwayne Croft
8:00 PM HOMETOWN
WITH TOM ROZNOWSKI
“Preferred Choice”
8:05 PM THE FOLK SAMPLER
“Coming Down with the Blues”
9:05 PM THE THISTLE AND SHAMROCK
Song Beat
Hebridean tweed workers’ songs, rowing
songs, hiking songs, mouth music lighten the
work and keep the singer going. Performers:
Christy Moore, Catherine-Ann MacPhee,
Ossian, and others.
11:00 PM NIGHT LIGHTS
“Say It Loud: Black Pride Soul Jazz.”
As the black pride movement gained
Greensburg 98.9 fm • Kokomo 106.1 fm • Terre Haute 95.1 fm
momentum in the late 1960s and early
1970s, an increasing number of jazz artists
began to incorporate the message into
their music. We’ll hear records by Lou
Donaldson, Gil Scott-Heron, Freddie Roach,
Jackie McLean, and others.
17 Sunday
7:06 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC
VIVALDI—Bassoon Concerto in G, RV 494;
Tamás Benkócs, bsn.; Béla Drahos/Nicolaus
Esterházy Sinfonia
11:25 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC
JOPLIN—Peacherine Rag; Trio Bell’Arte
12:00 PM SAINT PAUL SUNDAY
Brentano String Quartet
Don Carlo Gesualdo (arr. Bruce Adolphe):
Madrigals Book VI
Deh, come invan sospiro
Belta, pi che t’assenti
Resta di darmi noia
Gia piansi nel dolore
Moro, lasso
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart: String Quartet
in A major, No. 18, K. 464
—I. Allegro
—II. Menuetto - Trio
—III. Andante
—IV. Allegro non troppo
2:00 PM BROADWAY REVISITED
“Pacific Overtures”
Back in 1853, President Fillmore sent
Commodore Perry to Japan, opening the
feudal country to foreign trade and visitors
for the first time in 250 years. The story
is told in Pacific Overtures, the Stephen
Sondheim Broadway show.
3:00 PM WEEKEND RADIO
Bits by Henry Morgan including “The
First Time You Fall in Love,” “Infant
Psychologist,” “The Discover of Time,”
and the French version of “Little Red
Riding Hood.” Also Shelly Berman’s classic
“Spermatozoa plus the Roe make the Little
Fishes grow.”
7:00 PM PROFILES
Malcolm Abrams (repeat)
8:00 PM MAKING HISTORY IN
MASSACHUESETTS
Massachusetts Governor Deval Patrick is
only the second elected black governor in
U.S. history. This program profiles Patrick
and the election campaign that brought him
into office.
9:00 PM INSIDE OUT
“Doctors without Borders”
18 Monday
9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH
GEORGE WALKER
9am EWAZEN—Down a River of Time
(Concerto for Oboe and Strings); Linda
Strommen, ob.; International Sejong Soloists
February 2008 / Directions in Sound / Page 15
10am LISZT—Piano Concerto No. 3 in
E-flat, Op. Posthumous; Janina Fialkowska,
p.; Hans Graf/Calgary Phil. Orch. 11am SOLER—CONCIERTOS DE DOS
ORGANOS OBLIGADOS: No. 2 in a; Mary
Murrell Faulkner, org.;
Quentin Faulkner, org.
7:09 PM EVENING CLASSICAL MUSIC
SZYMANOWSKI—Three Paganini
Caprices, Op. 40; Vincent P. Skowronski,
vln.; Donald Isaak, p.
8:00 PM PITTSBURGH SYMPHONY
ORCHESTRA
TCHAIKOVSKY Polonaise from Eugene
Onegin
TCHAIKOVSKY Violin Concerto in D
TCHAIKOVSKY Manfred Symphony
Valery Gergiev, cond.; Mikhail Simonyan,
vln.
10:00 PM PIPEDREAMS
The English Concerto
History accords the “invention” of the
organ concerto to Handel, whose example
inspired many more composers in his
adopted homeland.
19 Tuesday
9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH
GEORGE WALKER
9am RIMSKY-KORSAKOV—Sviatoslav
Richter, p.; Kirill Kondrashin/Moscow
Youth Orch.
10am KIBBE—Shtetl Tanzen; Campbell,;
Eban,; Klug,; Trio Indiana
11am BRAHMS—F.A.E. SONATA:
Scherzo in c; Federico Agostini, vln.; Yasuo
Watanabe, p.
3pm AVISON—Sonata in c, Op. 5, No.
2 for Harpsichord, 2 Violins and Cello;
London Baroque
7:07 PM ARTWORKS
Highlights from Arts Week 2008 and
reviews from Peter Noble-Kuchera and
George Walker.
8:00 PM ETHER GAME
“The Red Carpet”
Ether Game takes a trip to the movies just in
time for the Oscars.
20 Wednesday
9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH
GEORGE WALKER
9am SCHUMANN—Phantasiestücke, Op.
73; David Shifrin, cl.; Carol Rosenberger, p.
10am RAMEAU—PIÈCES DE CLAVECIN
EN CONCERTS: Troisième concert:
Selections; Elaine Comparone/The Queen’s
Ch. Band
11am ROREM—Dances; Contrasts Qt.
7:09 PM EVENING CLASSICAL MUSIC
MACDOWELL—Six Idylls after Goethe,
Op. 28; James Barbagallo, p.
Page 16 / Directions in Sound / February 2008
8:00 PM LIVE! AT THE
CONCERTGEBOUW
Philippe Herreweghe/Royal Concertgebouw
Orch.; Hanneke de Wit, s.; Tania Kross, ms.;
Werner Güra, t.; David Wilson-Johnson,
bar.; Netherlands Radio Choir
KUHLAU—William Shakespeare Overture
BERLIOZ—Tristia, Op. 18
BRUCKNER—Mass No. 3 in F Minor
10:08 PM LATE NIGHT MUSIC
CHARPENTIER, M.-A.—La Descente
d’Orphée aux Enfers, H. 488; William
Christie/Les Arts Florissants
21 Thursday
9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH
GEORGE WALKER
9am FREDERICK THE GREAT—Flute
Sonata in G; Michala Petri, rec.; Hanne
Petri, hpsd.
10am STRAVINSKY—Octet for Winds;
Leonard Bernstein/Boston Sym. Orch.
11am FASCH—Trio in D for Flute, Violin,
and Continuo; Camerata Köln
3pm JANÁCEK—Incidental Music to
SCHLUCK UND JAU; Libor Pesek/Slovak
Phil
7:09 PM EVENING CLASSICAL MUSIC
YANAGIDA—A Poetic Grace; Noriko
Sanagi, 20-string koto; Kazuhiko Komatsu/
Sapporo Sym. Orch.
8:00 PM SPOLETO CHAMBER MUSIC
BACH—Toccata and Fugue in D Minor,
BWV 565; Catrin Finch, hp.
MOZART—Violin Sonata in G Major K.
379; Corey Cerovsek, vln.; Jeremy Denk, p.
ARANSKY—Piano Trio in D Minor, Opus
32; Corey Cerovsek, vln.; Alisa Weilerstein,
vlc.; Jeremy Denk, p.
9:00 PM HARMONIA
New Music, Period Instruments, and Recent
Recordings
New works for period instruments will
be featured this week as we explore the
vast world of New Music. The musician
composer will be highlighted as we look at
compositions inspired by the Renaissance
and baroque. We’ll also listen to a new
release by the Basel Baroque Orchestra.
22 Friday
9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH
GEORGE WALKER
9am MOZART—LE NOZZE DI FIGARO,
K. 492: Duets; Rob Turner, fl.; Kevin
Bushee, vln.
10am SCHUMANN—Symphony in g;
Neville Marriner/Sym. Orch. of Stuttgart
Radio
11am LAGOYA—“Danses espagnoles sur
des motifs de l’opéra ‘Carmen’ de Bizet
[‘Carmen’ Dances] de Bizet”; Alexandre
Lagoya, gt.; Kenneth Sillito/Academy of St.
Martin-in-the-Fields
3pm SHEARING—Three Miniatures; James
Campbell, cl.; The Gene DiNovi Trio
8:00 PM MARIAN McPARTLAND’S
PIANO JAZZ
“Max Roach”
Drummer Max Roach was a co-creator
of what became known as bebop. In this
program from 1998, Roach relates memories
of performing with Charlie Parker, Monk
and Dizzy Gillespie. He joins bassist Ray
Drummond and McPartland in performing
“Joy Spring” and “Now’s The Time.”
10:09 PM AFTERGLOW
“Happy Birthday, Fathead.” A 75th
birthday tribute to tenor saxophonist David
“Fathead” Newman.
23 Saturday
7:06 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC
LECLAIR—Violin Sonata in a, Op. 9, No.
5; Mela Tenenbaum, vla.; Richard Kapp, p.
11:30 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC
PERSICHETTI—Serenade for Band, Op. 85;
Craig Paré/DePauw University Band
12:09 PM CLASSICAL MUSIC
TCHAIKOVSKY—Festival Overture on the
Danish National Anthem, Op. 15; Geoffrey
Simon/London Sym.
1:30 PM METROPOLITAN OPERA
CARMEN (Bizet)
Emmanuel Villaume; Krassimira Stoyanova
(Micaëla), Olga Borodina (Carmen),
Marcelo Álvarez (Don José), Lucio Gallo
(Escamillo)
8:00 PM HOMETOWN
WITH TOM ROZNOWSKI
“Penny for Your Steps”
8:05 PM THE FOLK SAMPLER
“Two By Two”
Great duets.
9:05 PM THE THISTLE AND SHAMROCK
“Easy Does It”
Celtic music is not all high-energy reels and
jigs. Kick back with some soothing voices
from Maire Brennan, Dougie MacLean,
Karen Matheson, and some free-spirited
instrumentals from Davy Spillane, William
Jackson, and Michael McGoldrick.
11:00 PM NIGHT LIGHTS
“The Langston Hughes Songbook”
Interpretations of Hughes’ songs by Nina
Simone, June Christy, and others, as well
as recordings that Hughes himself made,
including his collaboration with bassist
Charles Mingus. African-American novelist
John McCluskey offers commentary on the
influence of jazz and blues on Hughes’ work.
24 Sunday
7:06 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC
BUXTEHUDE—Nimm von uns, Herr, du
treuer Gott, BuxWV 207;
Hans Davidsson, org.
Bloomington 103.7 fm • Columbus 100.7 fm • French Lick/West Baden 101.7 fm
11:25 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC
BARBER—God’s Grandeur; Douglas
Lawrence/Choir of Ormond College, Univ.
of Melbourne
12:00 PM SAINT PAUL SUNDAY
Zuill Bailey, cello; Awadagin Pratt, piano
Claude-Achille Debussy: Sonata
—I. Prologue
Ludwig van Beethoven: Sonata No. 3 in A
major
—III. Adagio cantabile / Allegro vivace
Johannes Brahms: Sonata No. 1 for Cello
and Piano in e minor, Op. 38
—I. Allegro non troppo
—II. Allegretto quasi Menuetto
—III. Allegro
2:00 PM BROADWAY REVISITED
“Mary and Ethel”
Selections from the hit shows of Broadway’s
biggest stars for more than three decades—
Mary Martin and Ethel Merman.
3:00 PM WEEKEND RADIO
Way-past bedtime stories by Monty Python’
Flying Circus and Saturday Night Live,
nursery rhymes with Cyril Richard, Celeste
Holm and Boris Karloff. Robert Conrad
reads his own story, “The Frabus Loves
Raspberry Ripple Ice Cream.” Also, Lily
Tomlin as Edith Ann.
7:00 PM PROFILES
James Naremore
8:00 PM AMERICA ABROAD
From Cold War to Cold Peace
9:00 PM THE LAST LETTER HOME
A poignant retelling in radio drama and
interview of the World War II fighter group
known as the Tuskegee Airmen.
25 Monday
9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH
GEORGE WALKER
9am ANONYMOUS—Harpsichord
transcription of Dowland’s “Lachrimae”
pavanne; Skip Sempé, hpsd.
10am SMETANA—MA VLAST: Blaník;
Paavo Berglund/Staatskapelle Dresden
11am VANHAL—Sinfonia in a; JukkaPekka Saraste/Umea Sinfonietta
3pm ABEL—Symphony No. 2 in B-flat, Op.
7; Adrian Shepherd /Cantilena
7:09 PM EVENING CLASSICAL MUSIC
HAYDN—Symphony No. 49 in f, Hob. I:49
“La Passione”; José Serebrier/IU Ch. Orch.
8:00 PM PITTSBURGH SYMPHONY
ORCHESTRA
ALBENIZ Suite Española (orch. de Burgos)
RODRIGO Concierto de Aranjuez
PALOMO Nocturnos de Andalucia
de FALLA The Three-Cornered Hat
Rafael Fruhbeck de Burgos, cond.; Pepe
Romero, gt.
8:00 PM ETHER GAME
“Little Green Men”
We abduct a few musical selections for this
otherworldy game.
10:00 PM PIPEDREAMS
A Musical Menagerie
Birds and bees, squirrels and wolves bring
a smile as we listen to the sounds of this
fanciful bestiary.
26 Tuesday
9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH
GEORGE WALKER
9am MUSSORGSKY—A Night on Bald
Mountain; Valery Gergiev/Vienna Phil.
10am STRAUSS, JOH. JR.—Künstlerleben
[Artists’ Life], Op. 316; Ondrej Lenárd/
Slovak Phil. Orch.
11am HUME—POETICALL MUSICKE:
My hope is revived; Montreal Baroque
3pm SAINT- SAËNS—Morceau de Concert
in f, Op. 94; Zdenek Tylsar, hn.; Vàclav
Neumann/Czech Phil.
7:07 PM ARTWORKS
Composer James MacMillan and
“Masterworks from the IU Art Museum.”
Plus reviews by Peter Noble-Kuchera and
George Walker.
7:09 PM EVENING CLASSICAL MUSIC
MASSENET—THAÏS: Méditation; Herbert
von Karajan/Berlin Phil.
27 Wednesday
9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH
GEORGE WALKER
9am CHABRIER—Larghetto; David Jolley,
hn.; Samuel Sanders, p.
10am MONTEVERDI—Prologue Ritornello
from “l’Orfeo”; Montreal Baroque
11am GODOWSKY—Two Studies on
Chopin Études; Marc-André Hamelin, p.
8:00 PM LIVE! AT THE
CONCERTGEBOUW
Edo de Waart/Netherlands Radio Phil.
Orch.; Ralph van Raat, p.
SCHAT—Arch Music for St. Louis
KEURIS—To Brooklyn Bridge
DVORAK—Symphony No. 9, Op. 95, From
the New World
ADAMS—A Short Ride in a Fast Machine
10:08 PM LATE NIGHT MUSIC
ORFF—Carmina Burana; F.A.C.E. Treble
Choir; Beverly Hoch, s.; Stanford Olsen,
t.; Mark Oswald, bar.; Charles Dutoit/
Montreal Sym. Orch. & Chorus
28 Thursday
9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH
GEORGE WALKER
9am EWAZEN—Down a River of Time
(Concerto for Oboe and Strings); Linda
Strommen, ob.; International Sejong Soloists
10am PÄRT—Symphony No. 2; Neeme
Järvi/Bamburg Sym.
11am SCRIABIN—Piano Sonata No. 4 in
F-sharp, Op. 30; Karen Shaw, p.
Greensburg 98.9 fm • Kokomo 106.1 fm • Terre Haute 95.1 fm
3pm DOWLAND—Lasso vita mia, mia fa
morire [Alas, my dear, you are killing me];
Charles Daniels, t.; Montreal Baroque
7:09 PM EVENING CLASSICAL MUSIC
SCHUBERT—Introduction and Variations
on Trockne Blumen, D. 802; Jean Ferrandis,
fl.; Émile Naoumoff, p.
8:00 PM SPOLETO CHAMBER MUSIC
GAUBERT—Nocturne and Allegro
Scherzando; Tara Helen O’Connor, fl.;
Charles Wadsworth, p.
Charles Wadsworth
MOZART—Kegelstatt Trio for clarinet,
viola and piano, K. 498; Todd Palmer, cl.;
Masumi Per Rostad, vln.; Jeremy Denk, p.
DOHNANYI—Serenade for String Trio in
C Major, Opus. 10; Cory Cerovsek, vln.;
Masumi Per Rostad, vla.; Alisa Weilerstein,
vlc.
9:00 PM HARMONIA
A Medieval Melting Pot
For seven centuries, medieval Spain had a
unique intersection of cultures. Christian,
Jewish, and Islamic traditions coexisted in
an environment that nurtured developments
in music of its regions. We’ll listen to music
inspired by the Sephardim, Ziriyâb, and
Alfonso X, and to a new release by Alonso
Lobo.
29 Friday
9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH
GEORGE WALKER
9am BAX—Overture to a Picaresque
Comedy; Lloyd-Jones, David/Royal Scottish
National Orchestra
10am SCHUBERT—Five Minuets with Six
Trios, D. 89; Kodály Qt.
11am COLERIDGE-TAYLOR—Othello
Suite, Op. 79; Leaper, Adrian/RTE Concert
Orch., Dublin
3pm RACHMANINOV—The Rock, Op. 7;
Mikhail Pletnev/Russian Natl. Orch.
8:00 PM MARIAN McPARTLAND’S
PIANO JAZZ
“Tammy Hall”
Pianist, organist, composer, and arranger
Tammy Hall is one of the most in-demand
musicians in the San Francisco Bay Area. She
performs several of her own compositions,
including “Sermon in Blue” and “Hymn to
Lacy B.”
10:09 PM AFTERGLOW
“Stardust Melodies.”
The stories behind twelve classic American
popular songs (and the songs themselves).
February 2008 / Directions in Sound / Page 17
This month on WTIU television.
Black History Month
WTIU will offer a number of significant programs to celebrate
Black History Month in February. Below are some of the
highlights.
American Experience: Eyes on the Prize II
Sundays at 2 & 3pm
Eyes on the Prize II documents the journey of black Americans
seeking justice, power, and identity, from the mid-1960s to the
mid-1980s and shows the profound effect this movement had on
all Americans.
Slavery and the Making of America
Sundays at 11pm
This groundbreaking series chronicles the institution of American
slavery from its origins in 1619 when English settlers in Virginia
purchased 20 Africans from Dutch traders, through the arrival
of the first 11 slaves in the northern colonies, the American
Revolution, the Civil War, the adoption of the 13th Amendment
and Reconstruction.
Charles Moore: I Fight with My Camera
Sunday, February 3 at 4:30pm
Charles Moore is the legendary Montgomery photojournalist
whose coverage of the Civil Rights era produced some of the
most famous shots in the world
African American Lives 2
Wednesdays, February 6-13 at 9pm
Harvard scholar Henry Louis Gates Jr. guides an all-new
group—poet Maya Angelou, author Bliss Broyard, actor Don
Cheadle, actor Morgan Freeman, theologian Peter Gomes, college
administrator Kathleen Henderson, publisher Linda Johnson
Rice, radio host Tom Joyner, athlete Jackie Joyner-Kersee,
comedian Chris Rock and rock ’n’ roll legend Tina Turner—on a
journey to discover their ancestry.
Independent Lens: Banished
Tuesday, February 19 at 10pm
This is the story of three counties that forcefully banished African
American families from their towns 100 years ago—and the
descendents who return to learn a shocking history.
Lessons from the Lunch Counter
Thursday, February 21 at 1pm
In 1960, Friendship College students in Rock Hill, SC demanded
service at McCory’s on Main Street. The “Friendship Nine” from
Rock Hill were arrested and gained national attention from civil
rights activists when they chose jail instead of bail.
Better Hour: The Legacy of William Wilberforce
Thusday, February 28 at 10pm
This program dramatizes the life of social reformer William
Wilberforce, a leader in the British abolitionist movement of the
early 19th century.
Page 18 / Directions in Sound / February 2008
Leaving a Legacy
by Nancy Krueger,
Major Gifts and Grants Officer
Leaving a legacy that is aligned with your values is easy—mention
public radio in your will. A bequest to WFIU helps ensure your
property is distributed according to your needs and wishes.
A charitable bequest may be in the form of cash, securities,
real estate, or other property. It is generally not subject to estate
or inheritance taxes and it significantly reduces the tax burden of
your estate.
You can make a gift through your will for a specific dollar
amount, a percentage of your total estate, or as a residual portion
of your estate after payment of expenses and all other specific
bequests have been made. Gifts come in many sizes—even one
or two percent of the remainder of your estate could make a big
difference to your public radio station.
Bequests can also be made to benefit a specific program area
of WFIU’s broadcasting day, such as news from the BBC, local
news, or, say, A Moment of Science or Harmonia.
Help ensure the continuation of WFIU’s on-air services to
communities in south-central Indiana for many years to come by
giving back to the station that has contributed so much to the
quality of your life.
To discuss making a bequest or for assistance in drafting bequest language, contact Nancy Krueger at (812) 855-2935.
More information on ways to make a gift can also be found at
www.wfiu.org/majorgiving.
To remember WFIU in your will, provide your attorney with the following
statement:
“I give, devise, and bequeath [the sum of/a percentage of/or the residue of my
estate] to the Indiana University Foundation, a nonprofit Indiana corporation with
principal offices in Bloomington, Indiana, for the benefit and unrestricted support
of WFIU, Indiana University, Bloomington campus.”
LIMESTONE LEGACY SOCIETY*
In recognition of those who have remembered Radio-TV with a
bequest or planned gift.
Ross Allen estate
John V. Beck estate
Becky Cape
Jerry Hasch
Helen McMahon estate
Perry and Nancy Metz
Walter Niekamp
C. Donald Peet estate
James and Alexandra Ackerman
Pamela and Jefrey Davidson
*WFIU has several different funds and a new giving society called
Voices for Tomorrow. We will feature a different fund or donor
level in each guide.
Bloomington 103.7 fm • Columbus 100.7 fm • French Lick/West Baden 101.7 fm
W IU
wfiu.org
PROGRAMMING AND
OPERATING SUPPORT
Indiana University
CORPORATE MEMBERSHip
Bloomington Iron & Metal, Inc.
Bloomington Veterinary Hospital
Brown Hill Nursery
Dr. Phillip Crooke Obstetrics & Gynecology
Delta Tau Delta Fraternity—
Indiana University
Duke Energy
Dr. David Howell &
Dr. Timothy Pliske, DDS
of Bedford & Bloomington
Hoosier Energy
Howard’s Bookstore
ISU/The May Agency
JB’s Salvage, Inc.
KP Pharmaceutical Technology
Mirwee Film, Inc.
Optiks
Pinnacle Properties
PYNCO, Inc.—Bedford
Smart & Johnson Title
Company—Columbus
Smithville One
Strategic Development
World Arts, Inc.—Spencer
PROGRAM UNDERWRITERS
4th Street Festival of the Arts
and Crafts
All American Storage/Pak Mail
Alternative Health Center
Ambrosia Catering
Andrews, Harrell, Mann, Carmin, and Parker P.C.
Art in the Heartland
Baugh Enterprises Commercial Printing & Bulk Mail Services
Black Film Center/Archive
Bell Trace
Bicycle Garage
Bloom Magazine
Bloomingfoods Market & Deli
Bloomington Area Arts Council
Bloomington Area Birth Services
Bloomington Hospital
Bloomington Meadows Hospital
Bloomington Shuttle Service
Bloomington Worldwide Friendship
Brian Lappin Real Estate
South Dunn Street Project
Brown County Art Guild, Inc.
Bunger and Robertson, Attorneys at Law
By Hand Gallery
Canine Companions
Caveat Emptor Books
Clay City Pharmacy
Columbus Area Arts Council
Columbus Container Inc.
Columbus Indiana Philharmonic
Columbus Optical
Community Foundation of Bloomington & Monroe County
Community Foundation of Morgan County, Inc.
The Community Foundation of Jackson County
Crawlspace Doctor
Curry Buick Cadillac Pontiac GMC, Inc.
Dell Brothers
Designscape Horticultural Services, Inc
Duke Energy
Dunn Memorial Hospital
First United Methodist Church
The Foot & Ankle Center
Four Seasons Retirement
Friends of the Library-Monroe County
Gary Benassi Builders
Gilbert Construction
Goods for Cooks
Grant Street Inn
Greene Acres Farm of Aden, Inc.
Greene & Schultz, Trial Lawyers, P.C.
The Heartland Center
The Herald-Times
Heritage Fund of Bartholomew County
Hills O’Brown Realty
Hills O’Brown Property
Management
Home Instead Senior Care
Hoosier Energy
Dr. Howard & Associates
Eye Care
IBEW Local 725 and Plus 5 Electrical Contractors
IDS
Indiana Arts Commission
Indiana State Department of Natural Resources
Indiana State Park Inns
Indiana Memorial Union-Hotel & Conference Center
Indiana Memorial Union-Dining & Catering Services
Indianapolis Opera
Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra
Inner Resources Counseling
The Irish Lion Restaurant and Pub
ISU/The May Agency
IU Art Museum
IU Auditorium
IU Bloomington Continuing Studies
IU Campus Bus Services
IU Credit Union
IU Credit Union—Investment Services
IU Department of Theatre & Drama
IU Division of Recreational Sports
IU Division of Residential Programs & Services
Greensburg 98.9 fm • Kokomo 106.1 fm • Terre Haute 95.1 fm
IU Foundation
IU Friends of Art Bookshop
IU Honors Program in Foreign Languages
IU Information Technology
Training & Education
IU Jacobs School of Music
IU Kelley School of Business
IU Medical Sciences Program
IU Poynter Center for the Study of Ethics & American Institutions
IU Press
IU School of Health, Physical Education & Recreation
IU School of Journalism
IU School of Optometry
IU University Information Technology Services
IU William T. Patten Lecture Series
J. L. Waters & Company
The Kinsey Institute
Kirby-Risk Supply Co.
Laughing Planet Café
Dr. David E. Lawler, DDS
L. B. Stant and Associates
Mallor, Clendening, Grodner & Bohrer, Attorneys at Law
Mary M’s Flowers & Plants
Meadowood Health Pavilion
Meadowood Retirement Community
Medicaid Solutions
Midwest Counseling Center
Mountain Made Music
The Nature Conservancy of Indiana
North Christian Church
Oliver Winery
Owen County Community Foundation, Inc.
Planned Parenthood of Indianapolis
Plum Creek Cabinets
Prima Gallery
ProsLink
Relish
Rentbloomington.net
Dr. Byron Rutledge, DDS
St. Charles Catholic School
Scholar’s Inn Bakehouse
Shawnee Summer Theatre
Smithville Telephone Company
Soma Coffee House and Juice Bar
Square Home Improvement
Stillframes
Stone Cabin Design
Taylor & Webb,
American Portfolios, Inc.
Terry’s Banquets and Catering
The Toy Chest
Trojan Horse Restaurant
Twisted Limb Paperworks
Unity Physician Group
Vance Music Center
Walnut House Flowers & Gifts
World Wide Automotive Service
WonderLab
Yarns Unlimited
These community minded
businesses support locally
produced programs on
WFIU.
We thank them for their
partnership and encourage
you to thank and support
them.
Local Program
Production Support
American Society of Plant Biologists
(A Moment of Science)
Bicycle Garage
(Afterglow)
Brian Lappin Real Estate
(Ask the Mayor)
(Ether Game)
(Noon Edition)
(Hometown)
Closets Too!
(Noon Edition)
Aver’s Electric
(Ether Game)
Laughing Planet
(Night Lights)
Lennie’s
(Just You and Me)
The Bloomington
Brewing Pub
(Just You and Me)
Pizza Express
(Just You and Me)
Soma Coffee House and Juice Bar
(Night Lights)
Nationally Syndicated
Program Support
Nakamichi Foundation—
American Early Music Series
(Harmonia)
The Oakley Foundation, Terre Haute
(Hometown)
Office of the IU Provost, Bloomington
(A Moment of Science)
PYNCO, Inc., Bedford
(Harmonia)
February 2008 / Directions in Sound / Page 19
May I have the
envelope, please?
Long Distance Love
While the Oscars are
being handed out in
Hollywood, WFIU
will broadcast a
sort of “Alternative
Academy Awards
of 2007,” as movie
review Peter NobleKuchera interviews
Professor Emeritus
of Communication
Peter Noble-Kuchera
and Culture James
Naremore on Profiles. They will analyze
recent movie trends and discuss their
favorites of last year—including some
lesser-known films that you may
have missed.
“Two thousand seven
was a year of lackluster
blockbusters,” says NobleKuchera, “but dazzling
independent features, almost
too many to take into account.
It was a year in which an
animated rat was upstaged
by an animated Iranian
girl. And the long-overdue
writers’ strike paralyzed
the industry, threatening
even that most stalwart of institutions, the
80th annual Academy Awards show.”
For more information on James
Naremore, see Profiles listings on page 5.
From Radio Netherlands comes Long Distance Love, two tales of transatlantic romance
to warm up your Valentines Day.
In the first half hour: “From Brooklyn to Banja Luka,” the story of a New Yorker
and a Serb who overcame their passionate irritation at each other’s cultural and personal
peccadilloes to build a life and a family together.
The second half hour, “Mucho Corazon,” tells the tale of two star-crossed lovers
from Holland and Cuba who struggle to find a way to be together while their
governments work to keep them apart.
W IU
wfiu.org
Indiana University
1229 East 7th Street
Bloomington, IN 47405-5501
29-200-91
Printed on Domtar EarthChoice© paper.
Sunday, February 10, 8 p.m.
The Last Letter Home
Sunday, February 25, 9 p.m.
This radio drama tells the story of the 332nd
fighter group, also known as the Tuskegee
Airmen, who overcame segregation and
prejudice to become one of the most highly
respected fighter groups of World War II.
The group never lost a plane it was
protecting to air fire, only to assaults from
the ground. They proved conclusively that
blacks could fly and maintain sophisticated
combat aircraft, overcoming doubt by many
in the military. The Tuskegee Airmen’s
achievements, together with the men and
women who supported them, paved the way
for full integration of the U.S. military.
The program includes an interview with
retired Lt. Col. John Mosley, a member
of the Tuskegee Airmen, as well as period
music by composer Joe Bonner.
Tuskegee Airmen attending a briefing in Ramitelli,
Italy—March, 1945.
Periodicals Postage
PAID
Bloomington, Indiana
TIME DATED
MATERIAL