Discoveries at DISNEY HALL - Indiana University Bloomington

Transcription

Discoveries at DISNEY HALL - Indiana University Bloomington
January
2007
Discoveries at
Also this month:
Disney Hall
• Hearing America
Sundays at 9 p.m.
• Afghanistan: Fighting for Peace
• Artist of the Month: Mark Kaplan
• WFIU Visits Ukraine
. . . and more!
Joshua Bell
January 2007
Vol. 55, No­­­­­­. 1
Directions in Sound (USPS314900) is published each month
by the Indiana University Radio
and Television Services, 1229
East 7th Street, Bloomington, IN
47405-5501
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Joe Bourne—Producer/Jazz Director
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Announcers: Ann Corrigan, Adam
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Ether Game Volunteers: Mollie
Ables, Dan Bishop, Damian
Isminger, Laura Stokes, Sherri Winks
Volunteer Producer/Hosts: Moya Andrews, Mary Catherine Carmichael, Jenny Kander, Patrick
O’Meara, Shana Ritter, Steve
Sanders, Michael Wilkerson, Bob
Zaltsberg
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Page / Directions in Sound / January 2007
Discoveries at Disney Hall
Sundays at 9 p.m.
Discoveries at Disney Hall is an eclectic mix of concert specials
recorded live at Disney Hall in Los Angeles. From singer-songwriters to classical, world music, and Broadway stars, they are a
celebration of the variety of our thriving musical culture. In addition to the dynamic live performances, these programs feature the
artists introducing their music from the stage and brief interviews
with them throughout the hour. Over this month and the next,
WFIU will broadcast eight installments of this series. Hosted by
Renée Montagne.
John Williams
Dianne Reeves The World of
Robert Schumann
Sundays at 4 p.m.
This thirteen-part series continues with
episodes 8 through 11.
January 7
“The Songs: A Symposium of Singers”
The flowering of the art song tradition
in Germany in the songs of Schubert and
Schumann. Commentary and analyses
of the Dichterliebe and Frauenliebe-undLeben cycles by performers Elly Ameling,
Joerg Demus, Dalton Baldwin, Samuel
Sanders, Jan De Gaetani, and Gilbert
Kalish; and historians Eric Sams and
Rufus Hallmark. Special commentary by
Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau.
January 21
“Schumann and Heine: The Romantic
Irony”
The poems of Heinrich Heine and the
music of Robert Schumann were joined
together in many of Schumann’s finest
songs, including two of the greatest song
cycles in music history, the Liederkreis,
Opus 24 and Dichterliebe, Opus 48.
The texts and the music bespeak what
has been described as “The Romantic
Irony”—the typically Romantic perception
of the disparity between private dreams
and ideals and worldly reality. Song
historians Rufus Hallmark and David
Ferris and Heine biographer Roger F.
Cook join distinguished art song-opera
singer Thomas Hampson in a detailed
examination of these songs and their texts.
Mônica Salmaso
“Music from My Fair Lady”
January 7
Composer, conductor, and arranger John Williams gives a jazz
twist to Lerner and Loewe’s classic Broadway score for My Fair
Lady. Featuring singers Dianne Reeves and Brian Stokes Mitchell,
the Steve Houghton Quintet, and a big band. “The Rain in
Spain” has never swung so much!
“Joshua Bell”
January 14
Grammy Award-winning violinist Joshua Bell gives an intimate
and passionate recital of Romantic and Twentieth Century music
with pianist and former NPR artist-in-residence Jeremy Denk.
Highlights include the Beethoven fifth violin sonata, Bartók’s
Rhapsody No. 1 for Violin and Piano, and Prokofiev’s Five
Melodies.
“Mônica Salmaso”
January 21
Brazilian Mônica Salmaso has surfaced as one of the best young
vocal stylists of today. At Disney Hall she gives a dazzling performance of sensual, rhythmically-inflected Brazilian popular songs,
including a Beatles favorite and an “Ave Maria” with a Brazilian
twist!
Two new documentaries from the acclaimed documentary unit of American
Public Media.
Hearing America: A Century of Music on
the Radio
Sunday, January 7, 8 p.m.
According to popular history, one hundred
years ago this Christmas Eve, shipboard
technicians listening for Morse code messages on their newly installed wireless telegraphs heard something incredible: music.
Men on ships from the North Atlantic to
the Gulf of Mexico made up the audience
of the first successful radio transmission
of music and voice. Since that first experimental broadcast, music has been the
dominant sound on radio. This program
explores the history of music on the radio
and how it became both the economic
engine of a major American industry and
an engine for cultural and political change
in American life.
Thomas Hampson
Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau
Joerg Demus
January 14
“The Chamber Music: A Symposium of
Players”
From “Hausmusik” to modern recording
practices. Commentary and analyses of the
Violin Sonatas, the three String Quartets,
the three Trios, the Piano Quintet, and
the Piano Quartet by pianist Emanuel Ax,
Paul Katz of the Cleveland String Quartet,
members of the Juilliard String Quartet,
members of the Tokyo String Quartet,
violinists Peter Zazovsky and Christine
Edinger, oboist Heinz Holliger, cellist
Lynn Harrell, and horn player Hermann
Baumann.
“Bach’s Brandenburg Concertos”
January 28
The Los Angeles Baroque Orchestra performs what may be J.S.
Bach’s most beloved and oft-performed music. These six lively
works for chamber orchestra show a lighter side to his imperishable genius.
Lynn Harrell
Bloomington 103.7 fm • Columbus 100.7 fm • Kokomo 106.1 fm • Terre Haute 95.1 fm
American RadioWorks
Heinz Holliger
January 28
“The Haunted Forest: Romanticism and
Nature”
The Romanticists responded to new travel
destinations in the early 19th century and
produced in their music, poems, novels,
and paintings, their sense of the glories
and the mysteries of nature. Three works
by Schumann are selected for commentary and analysis: the Waldscenen (Forest
Scenes) for piano; the song cycle Liederkreis, Opus 39, to texts by the German poet Joseph von Eichendorff; and a
choral work, Manfred, set to Lord Byron’s
dramatic poem.
Guest commentators include song
historians Rufus
Hallmark, Eric
Sams, and David
Ferris, and musicians Elly Ameling and Dalton
Baldwin.
Elly Ameling
Imperial Washington
Sunday, January 21, 8 p.m.
The 110th Congress begins this month, and
in many ways, it will be a very different
Congress than the one that preceded it.
After years in the wilderness, Democrats
will hold the balance of power in the
House and the Senate. Yet no matter the
party, when the new members of Congress
reach Washington, the red carpet rolls out.
But the longer legislators stay and the
more powerful they become, the more
gold-plated perks come their way: a pension plan to beat all pension plans; free
parking spots at Washington’s National
and Dulles airports; free travel; low-cost
childcare. Imperial Washington provides
a peek under the Capitol Dome, revealing
an insular world of privilege that isolates
lawmakers from the people they serve.
January 2007 / Directions in Sound / Page Profiles
Sundays at 7 p.m.
The Changing
World
January 7 – Michele Norris
All Things Considered co-host Michelle Norris has had nearly two
decades of experience as a broadcast journalist. Before coming to
NPR, she was a correspondent for ABC News, where she was a
contributing correspondent for the Closer Look segments on World
News Tonight. Norris has reported extensively on education, inner city issues, the nation’s drug problem, and poverty. She was a
reporter for the Chicago Tribune and Los Angeles Times, and her
Washington Post series on a six-year-old who lived in a crack house
was reprinted in the book “Ourselves Among Others.” She spoke
with WFIU News Director Will Murphy.
A collaboration between the BBC World
Service and Public Radio International,
The Changing World draws on the unique
talents and strengths of the BBC’s extensive network of seasoned correspondents
and journalists. The ongoing series examine issues critical to understanding our
evolving world, taking the time to explore
multiple aspects of a single global issue.
They are hosted by journalist and news
anchor Lisa Mullins.
January 14 – Chris Swanson
Chris Swanson is one of the founders of the Bloomington-based independent recording companies Secretly Canadian and Jagjaguwar,
artist-friendly labels known for coupling a fertile artistic environment with ambitious business plans. Swanson works on developing
over thirty musical artists, some of which have gone on to international acclaim, such as Antony & the Johnsons, Black Mountain,
and Okkervil River. Additionally, he co-runs SC Distribution, which
exclusively distributes 18 record labels globally, and Bellwether
Manufacturing, a media replication company, which works with
more than 200 record labels. David Brent Johnson conducted the
interview. (repeat)
Afghanistan: Fighting for Peace
January 21 – Jaime Laredo and Sharon Robinson
Violinist, conductor, and IU Jacobs School of Music professor Jaime
Laredo has performed worldwide for more than four decades as
a soloist, conductor, recitalist, and chamber musician. He plays
regularly with many of the nation’s major orchestras and in festivals
both here and abroad, and has played on nearly 100 recordings. He
is director of the Vermont Symphony Orchestra, artistic director
of the Brandenburg Ensemble, and artistic director of New York’s
“Chamber Music at the Y” series.
Cellist Sharon Robinson is an associate professor of cello at
IU, and, with husband Jamie Laredo, co-founded the celebrated
Kalichstein-Laredo-Robinson Trio. She has made guest appearances
with many leading orchestras and festivals in the United States and
Europe and has recorded numerous chamber and concerto works.
Her many television appearances include “The Tonight Show,” “The
Kennedy Center Honors,” and a profile on “Sunday Morning.”
Peter Jacobi conducted the interview.
January 28 – Bill Bryson
Writer Bill Bryson tells uncommon stories in his bestselling books.
From the Appalachian Trail’s interior in “A Walk in the Woods” to
primordial nothingness in “A Short History of Nearly Everything,”
his writings ponder a wide range of subjects and are peppered with
wry observations and keen insights. Bryson is also the author of
“In a Sunburned Country,” “Neither Here Nor There,” and “I’m a
Stranger Here Myself: Notes on Returning to America After Twenty
Years Away.” Bryson is a longtime resident of England, the subject
of his book “Notes from a Small Island,” and is Chancellor of
Durham University. In conversation with Roy Eisenhardt for City
Arts & Lectures.
Page / Directions in Sound / January 2007
Sunday, January 14, 8 p.m.
In the German city of Bonn in December
2001, Afghan leaders and representatives
of the larger world community shook
hands on a new deal, a promise by the
world that Afghanistan would not be
abandoned again. The BBC’s Lyse Doucet
considers whether that promise is being
kept or whether the international community and Afghans themselves have let the
people of this beleaguered country down.
Lyse Doucet
This program first examines the Bonn
Agreement, crafted in the euphoric aftermath of the Taliban’s fall. Doucet asks
whether Bonn launched a process that
kept key warlords in power and failed to
address the abuses and poverty that led to
the rise of the Taliban in the first place. Or
was Bonn the best possible solution for a
nation emerging from a quarter century of
war?
Looking to the future, do Afghans still
have the backing and the will to build the
independent, peaceful nation envisioned at
Bonn? That ideal may be inconsistent with
its dual status as the world’s biggest producer of opium poppies and third poorest
nation. Is the international community
Bloomington 103.7 fm • Columbus 100.7 fm • Kokomo 106.1 fm • Terre Haute 95.1 fm
Broadcasts from the
IU Jacobs School of
Music
pulling together to move this country
forward or do competing interests and
programs further confound the nation’s
slow progress?
Baghdad Billions
BARTÓK—Divertimento; Uriel Segal/IU
Ch. Orch.
Airs: 1/1 at 7 p.m., 1/2 at 10 a.m., 1/5 at
3 p.m.
Sunday, January 28, 8 p.m.
Iraq has become a vast financial black
hole. Since the war began in 2003,
America has spent around $30 billion—
and at least $20 billion of Iraq’s money—
in rebuilding the country. Where has it
all gone? Mark Gregory has followed
the money trail from Iraq to Washington
via a kebab shop in Jordan. He discovers
that there have been allegations of fraud,
mismanagement, and corruption on such
a gigantic scale that much of the money is
now untraceable.
Jazz on the WFIU
Web site
by David Brent Johnson, host of Night
Lights and Afterglow
Hoping to hear a late-night jazz program
that you couldn’t stay up for? Wondering what live jazz events are going on in
the WFIU listening area? In the past year
WFIU has greatly expanded the jazz offerings on our Web site wfiu.org. All of our
programs now have their own Web pages,
and some of them include archived editions of previous broadcasts that you can
enjoy any time, day or evening.
At Joe Bourne’s site, www.justyouandme.indiana.edu, you can read about Joe’s
radio past, peruse the Web sites of Indiana
artists whom Joe has featured on Just You
and Me, listen to an extensive two-part
interview with Indiana University jazz
master David Baker, and follow links to
organizational Web sites such as Jazz From
Bloomington and the IU Jacobs School of
Music’s Prelude page, with information
about local and regional performances.
These performances are also often included in WFIU’s events calendar, found at
www.publicbroadcasting.net/wfiu/events.
eventsmain.
Page / Directions in Sound / December 2006
Our Saturday evening program Night
Lights (www.nightlights.indiana.edu) has
all of the shows that have aired since the
program’s debut in the summer of 2004,
available to be listened to at your convenience. (Playlists are posted as well.) If
you’re looking for jazz news or jazz discussion, you can follow links to a variety
of resources on the Internet, including new
release information and sites such as author Doug Ramsey’s jazz blog. The Night
Lights site also includes our own jazz news
column and “The Book Nook,” a list of
recommended books for reading about
jazz.
The Friday evening jazz lineup now
has a site for each program as well.
Visit Marian McPartland’s Piano Jazz site
(www.npr.org/programs/pianojazz/) for
playlists and information about previous
and upcoming guests. The Big Bands site
(www.thebigbands.indiana.edu) features
a year’s worth of archived programs,
links to numerous big band sites on the
Internet, and two previous WFIU jazz
documentaries: Duke Ellington’s Jump for
Joy and Bix Beiderbecke: Never the Same
Way Twice. We now also have a Web site
for Afterglow, our two-hour program of
jazz and American popular song: www.
afterglow.indiana.edu. There you can hear
recent shows and view playlists, see what’s
coming up in the next month, and visit
our Afterglow legacy page, which includes
reflections from Afterglow creator Dick
Bishop and his colleagues, as well as an
archived audio edition of Dick’s farewell
Afterglow broadcast. Whenever, wherever,
and however you listen, we’re committed to bringing you more jazz music and
information than ever before.
DVORÁK—Rondo in g, Op. 94; Tsuyoshi
Tsutsumi, vlc.; Mstislav Rostropovich/IU
Phil. Orch.
Airs: 1/8 at 7 p.m., 1/9 at 10 a.m., 1/12 at
3 p.m.
FREUND—Outsider; Stephen Pratt/IU
Wind Ens.
Airs: 1/15 at 7 p.m., 1/16 at 10 a.m., 1/19
at 3 p.m.
BACH—Orchestral Suite No. 3 in D,
BWV 1068; Jan Harrington/IU Ch. Orch.
Airs: 1/18 at 9 a.m.
SCHMELZER—SONATAE UNARUM
FIDIUM: Sonata IV; Duo Geminiani
Airs: 1/18 at 7 p.m.
GINASTERA—Suite de danzas criollas,
Op. 15; Nariaki Sugiura, p.
Airs: 1/22 at 7 p.m., 1/23 at 10 a.m., 1/26
at 3 p.m.
FAURÉ—PELLEAS ET MELISANDE,
OP. 80: Suite; Robert Porco/IU University
Orch.
Airs: 1/23 at 9 p.m.
LIEBERSON—Free and Easy Wanderer;
David Dzubay/IU New Music Ens.
Airs: 1/29 at 3 p.m.
MOZART—Piano Concerto No. 23 in A,
K. 488; Alex Peh, p.; Uriel Segal/IU Ch.
Orch.
Airs: 1/29 at 7 p.m., 1/30 at 10 a.m., 2/2
at 3 p.m.
BRAHMS—Violin Sonata No. 1 in G, Op.
78; Federico Agostini, vln.; Reiko Neriki,
p.
Airs: 1/31 at 10 a.m.
January 2007 / Directions in Sound / Page The Radio Reader
with Dick Estell
“A Sense of the World”
by Jason Roberts
Begins: Wednesday, January 3
Number of episodes: approx. twenty-six
He was known
simply as the Blind
Traveler—a solitary, sightless adventurer who, astonishingly, fought
the slave trade in
Africa, survived
a frozen captivity
in Siberia, hunted
rogue elephants in
Roberts
Ceylon, and helped
chart the Australian outback.
James Holman became one of the
greatest wonders of the world he so sagaciously explored, triumphing not only over
blindness but crippling pain, poverty, and
the interference of well-meaning authorities—his greatest feat, a circumnavigation
of the globe, had to be launched in secret.
Once a celebrity, a best-selling author,
and an inspiration to Charles Darwin and
Sir Richard Francis Burton, the charismatic, witty Holman outlived his fame, dying
in an obscurity that has endured—until
now. “A Sense of the World” is a moving
rediscovery of one of history’s most epic
lives.
Featured Classical
Recordings
Artist of the Month:
Mark Kaplan
Selected by Adam P Schweigert
by Adam P Schweigert
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.
This month WFIU
is pleased to feature
the recordings of
violinist and IU
faculty member
Mark Kaplan.
Kaplan has
performed in all the
principal cities of
Europe and played
Mark Kaplan
with nearly every
major orchestra in the United States.
Along the way he has collaborated with
many of the world’s foremost conductors.
Before the joining the faculty at IU, he
taught at UCLA and he has appeared
regularly at major summer festivals.
A dedicated chamber musician, he recently
formed a new trio, Sequenza, with cellist
Colin Carr and pianist Yael Weiss. With a
repertoire that stretches from the baroque
to the present day, Kaplan has recorded
extensively.
In January, we feature Kaplan’s
recordings throughout the month:
January 1st – 6th
Haydn: Complete Symphonies, vol. 6
(Hänssler Classics CD 98.236)
Thomas Fey/Heidelberg Sym.
This disc features Symphonies 49, 52,
and 58, some of the sturmiest of Haydn’s
“Sturm und Drang” symphonies. The Heidelberg Symphony performs brilliantly and
the Fey’s interpretations are fresh in the
latest disc of a critically acclaimed Haydn
Symphony cycle by the group.
January 8 – 13
Britten and Bliss (Cedille Records CDR
90000 093)
th
th
Alex Klein, ob.; Vermeer Qt.
Oboist Alex Klein lends his sensitive
playing to works for oboe and strings by
English composers Benjamin Britten and
Arthur Bliss. The Vermeer Quartet pairs
these works with the Third String Quartet
of Britten in a memorable souvenir of their
final season together.
January 15th – 20th
Beethoven: Cello Sonatas, Vol. I (Delos DE
3368)
January 22nd – 27th
William Byrd: Consort Songs (Harmonia
Mundi HMU 907383)
Emma Kirkby, s.; Fretwork
Known primarily for his church music,
William Byrd (c.1540-1623) was also a
pioneer in the form of consort songs for
voice and string accompaniment. Enjoy
spirited performances of these unjustly
neglected songs on this disc by early music
vocalist Emma Kirkby and ensemble
Fretwork.
January 29nd – February 3rd
Honegger, Martinu, Bach, Pintscher,
Ravel: Duos for Violin and Cello (ECM
New Series 1912)
Frank Peter Zimmermann, vln,; Heinrich
Schiff, vlc.
This CD, a Grammy Award nominee for
producer Manfred Eichner, violinist Frank
Peter Zimmermann, and cellist Heinrich
Schiff, provides a fascinating survey of the
repertoire for this combination of instruments including well-known works by
Bach and Ravel as well as works further
off the beaten path by Honneger, Martinu,
and Mathias Pintscher.
Zuill Bailey, vlc.; Simone Dinnerstein, p.
In this, the first half of a new cycle of
Beethoven Cello Sonatas, the duo of cellist
Zuill Bailey and pianist Simone Dinnerstein finds a youthful energy in the early
Op. 5 sonatas and
their interpretation
of the Op. 69 is filled
with interesting twists
and turns in a disc that
will leave you wanting more—thankfully
the second half of the
cycle is due out later
this year.
Page / Directions in Sound / January 2007
Bloomington 103.7 fm • Columbus 100.7 fm • Kokomo 106.1 fm • Terre Haute 95.1 fm
Tuesday, 1/2, 9 a.m.
VIOTTI—Violin Concerto No. 22 in a; w/
David Golub and the Padova Ch. Orch.
Saturday, 1/6, 12:09 p.m.
STRAVINSKY—Violin Concerto in D; w/
Lawrence Foster and the Budapest Fest.
Orch.
Wednesday, 1/10, 10 a.m.
WIENIAWSKI—Violin Concerto No. 2 in
d, Op. 22; w/ Mitch Miller and the London Sym. Orch.
Wednesday, 1/17, 10 a.m.
BERG—Violin Concerto “To the Memory
of an Angel”; w/ Lawrence Foster and the
Budapest Fest. Orch.
Tuesday, 1/23, 3 p.m.
SARASATE—Zortzico D’Iparaguirre, Op.
39; w/ Bruno Canino, p.
Sunday, 1/28, 11:25 a.m.
SARASATE—Navarra (Spanish Dance),
Op. 33; w/ Bruno Canino, p.
Wednesday, 1/31, 9 a.m.
DOHNÁNYI—Violin Concerto No. 2 in
c, Op. 43; w/ Lawrence Foster and the
Sym. Orch. of Barcelona
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
Middle Way House Art Auction
Saturday, January 13
5 – 9 p.m.
Neal Marshall Black Culture Center
The Middle Way House Annual auction
supports programs and services for women
and their children recovering from the
trauma of family violence. It features both
a silent and live auction. Cost is $10 at
the door and includes hors d’oeuvres by
Food Works, a cash bar, and live music.
Proceeds go towards Middle Way programs including crisis intervention, housing, support services, legal advocacy, child
care and programming, and community
outreach. Information: Bobbie Summers at
812-333-7404 ext. 223.
Martin Luther King Birthday Celebration
Monday, January 15
“A Day On, Not a Day Off” is The City
of Bloomington’s Martin Luther King Day
volunteer initiative. The City invites
volunteers to help local non-profit
organizations that have created service
projects that will strengthen the community. Participating organizations and
volunteers will be honored at the King
Holiday Celebration at the BuskirkChumley Theater at 7:30 p.m., preceded
by a reception at First United Methodist
Church at 6 p.m. Information at www.
bloomington.in.us or by calling 812-3493471.
Week of Chocolate
www.weekofchocolate.com
812-332-9615
Week of Chocolate is a celebration filled
with luscious desserts, great company,
and collaboration between businesses
and community organizations. This is an
annual fundraising event for Options for
Better Living, a non-profit organization
that helps people with disabilities bring
about self-directed and fulfilled lives.
The Art of Chocolate
Sunday, January 28, 5 – 8 p.m.
IU Art Museum
The Art of Chocolate features decadent
chocolate desserts from head chefs at area
restaurants, hors d’oeuvres and wine tasting, a silent auction featuring food, art and
cultural packages, and entertainment by
local musicians.
Tenth Annual Chocolate Fest
Saturday, February 3, 5 – 8 p.m.
Bloomington Convention Center
This event features a 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, children’s entertainment,
and all the chocolate you can eat.
Thursday, 1/25, 7 p.m.
VIOTTI—Violin Concerto No. 4 in D; w/
David Golub and the Padova Ch. Orch.
January 2007 / Directions in Sound / Page Sarah Stevens
missed at station
A Hoosier in
Ukraine
The WFIU staff joined the Bloomington
community in mourning the passing of
Profiles host Sarah Stevens.
Stevens conducted six interviews for
WFIU’s Sunday evening interview program, and was herself interviewed for that
program.
“She did the
interviews with
her characteristic high
energy,” notes
Adam Schwartz,
who produced
Stevens’ Profiles
programs. He
invited her to be
an interviewer
because of her
extensive knowlSarah Stevens
edge of music
and engaging manner.
“Sarah spent a lot of time researching
her guests and preparing for the interviews, and was very engaging and personable on the air. Her warmth for people
and passion for ideas really came through.
She added something wonderful to the station.”
Most recently Stevens had recently
interviewed Julia Copeland, the president
of the Musical Arts Youth Orchestra, for
an upcoming segment on WFIU’s arts
program Artworks.
Christina Kuzmych, WFIU’s station
manager, calls Stevens “a truly innovative thinker who touched many lives from
children to adults.”
“She was a teacher, performer, composer, and writer,” Kuzmych adds. “Her
loss is both a personal and professional
one. WFIU was all the stronger because
of Sarah’s involvement with our programs
and testimonials. We will miss her optimism, good cheer, creativity, and most of
all, her lovely laugh and smile.”
Sarah Stevens’ Profiles interview and
the interviews she conducted are in the
WFIU archive on our Web page. Visit
wfiu.org and open the dropdown menu
Local Programs, then click on Profiles. The
interviews are with Mary Goetze, Alan
Kostelecky, Deniese Smith, Janis Stockhouse, Jill Taylor, and Mimi Zweig.
by Scott Witzke, WFIU Marketing
Director
Page / Directions in Sound / January 2007
WFIU continued its American-Ukrainian
exchange program with an eight-day trip
to Ukraine by WFIU Operations Director Cary Boyce and Marketing Director
Scott Witzke. The exchange, sponsored by
the International Research and Exchange
Board, an agency funded by the U.S.
Department of State, was set up to trade
information between America and the
young democracy about radio operations
and journalism. Radio Mix, a commercial
FM station in Dnipropetrovsk that plays
contemporary popular music, participated
with WFIU in the program. Below, Scott
offers random observations and experiences of the trip.
Dnipropetrovsk is an industrial city of
1.6 million people. It’s dirty. For comparison, when the Ukrainian delegation was
in Bloomington in July, we took them to
Chicago and, driving through the industrial portion around Gary, they told us it
“looks like home.” The Soviet regime was
not kind to the environment and the city is
still paying the price.
In the United States we have a lot of
space, and so we expect a buffer zone
between ourselves and others. When
traveling in Ukraine, however, it is good
to give up any idea of maintaining your
“personal space.” Take waiting on line,
for example. Lines are merely suggestions.
The line to go through immigration wasn’t
so much a line as a funnel. Lines open and
close at any time and when they close, get
out of the way or you’ll be run over by the
stampede!
A similar attitude governs the roads.
What looks like two distinct lanes turns
into five in the blink of an eye. Passing occurs on all sides, and I expected someone
to drive over, above, or underneath us to
get around. Fortunately, our driver was
able to maneuver his van with the precision of a surgeon, and by the end of the
stay I was relaxed. Pedestrians: Cross the
street at your own risk. Even when you
have the right of way, you don’t.
At first I was mystified by the sight of
so many fancy cars. In a country where the
average monthly income is the equivalent
of 200 dollars, I wondered how so many
people could afford them. The answer is
that there is no middle class. Those that
have prospered in the post-communist
society have thrived, most others have not.
One time when we didn’t have a car and
needed to hire a cab, we made a surprising
discovery. If no cabs are around, any car
willing to carry a passenger or two will
do—just negotiate the price. A young fellow in an Opel picked us up and took us
to our destination for about ten hryvnia—
the equivalent of two dollars.
A Difficult and Modular Soup
Not being familiar with Cyrillic, we found
it difficult to read the signs. Since this was
Cary’s second trip he had advanced to preKindergarten level. This was my first trip
and my command of the language can best
be described as “babbling.”
We went to a McDonalds in Kyiv (also
known as Kiev) and it took about fifteen
minutes to decipher the menu. They didn’t
have the convenient pictures that we have,
allowing you to order a “Number 3.” Yet
the meals were pronounced exactly the
same, even though they were spelled in
Cyrillic with its backward “N” and other
crazy-looking (to us) letters.
At one of the Ukrainian restaurants,
we were able to get an English version of
the menu and we ordered a soup called
solyanka. The menu described this as a
“difficult and modular” soup. I think what
they were getting at was that it had a complex flavor with a variety of meats. I liked
it: sour but tasty.
for a number of times and then they add
a twist. A gentleman wielding a bunch of
oak leaves proceeds to gives you a rubdown, followed by the cold pool chaser. In
between rounds one sits in an adjourning
room, watching TV and drinking water.
Our final option was a rub down from a
large hairy Russian man. Both Cary and I
passed.
You Call That Pizza?
Pizza is a staple in a college town like
Bloomington. Growing up on the east
coast I grew to love New York style,
however being in the Midwest, I also love
Chicago style. Now I can say that I’ve
had Ukrainian style pizza. Chicken is the
most popular topping. It was served with
a white sauce, sliced tomatoes, and onions,
and—get ready—corn and green beans.
But it tasted a lot better than it sounds.
Here in the states you would have your
pizza with a soft drink. Their delivery
person showed up with three boxes of
tomato juice. (Tomatoes and cucumbers
are popular vegetables.)
MemberCard
For a complete listing of more
than 300 membership benefits visit
membercard.com or call toll-free
1-888-727-4411.
Special attractions honoring the
WFIU MemberCard this month
include:
Eiteljorg Museum of American
Indians and Western Art
500 W. Washington St., Indianapolis
317-636-9378
www.eiteljorg.org
Valid for 2-for-1 admission
throughout the month. WonderLab
308 W. 4th St., Bloomington
812-337-1337
www.wonderlab.org
Valid for 2-for-1 admission
throughout the month. Closed
Mondays.
Restaurant Updates—
No longer valid:
Golden Corral in Bedford
Woodsferry Café in Bedford
Peterson’s Restaurant in Bloomington
Hickory Junction in Terre Haute
Oak Leaf Rubdown
The monastery at Kyiv, Pecherska Lavra
Our Ukrainian hosts took us to a shooting range, where Cary and I wanted to
shoot Kalashnikov machine guns. They
were a little nervous having us do that,
however, being that we were Americans.
So they found another site, this one run
by a former Soviet Special Services Officer,
where we shot rifles, pistol and skeet.
Neither Cary nor I had shot before and it’s
not likely we will again, but it was a good
experience.
Another excursion of note was our trip
to a Russian Bath. It was quite an experience. It involves naked men wrapped in
togas, sitting in a 60 degree Celsius (140
degrees Fahrenheit) sauna for long periods. When you can’t stand it any more,
you jump into a cold pool. This goes on
Kyiv—Where the Roofs are Lined with Gold
Bloomington 103.7 fm • Columbus 100.7 fm • Kokomo 106.1 fm • Terre Haute 95.1 fm
Our guide told us that there were three
methods that the Soviets had for dealing
with churches. They were made into atheistic museums where religious icons were
replaced with political ones; they were
co-opted for other uses, such as offices or
theaters; or they were simply demolished
and replaced by more utilitarian buildings.
Many important churches, fortunately,
have been reconstructed. But much of
the artwork that once filled these may be
lost forever, carried away by the Nazis or
destroyed by the Soviets.
For Americans like us, walking through
Kyiv is like walking through a major
European city: One is overwhelmed with
the art, the history, and the sheer age of
the civilization. In a country with a long
history of occupations, genocides, and
political upheavals, Ukrainians remain optimistic, undaunted, and patriotic in their
quest for life and liberty. They say, “Our
country has problems. We seek to make it
better.”
We concluded our trip with admiration for the Ukrainian people. They don’t
always have the latest technology nor
the fanciest office buildings. What they
do have is drive and a will to succeed. In
some small way, I trust our exchange trip
will bolster their efforts.
After being in an industrialized city like
Dnipropetrovsk, Kyiv seemed clean.
During a walking tour of the city, we saw
just about everything—beautiful office
buildings, parks, palaces, and monuments.
The most impressive things were all of the
churches—Russian Orthodox with the
onion shaped roofs glimmering in golden
leaf. As classical musicians, Cary and I
also enjoyed seeing the actual Great Gate
of Kyiv and Bald Mountain—the former
being the subject of the painting that was
musically depicted by Mussorgsky in
Pictures at an Exhibition, and the latter
referenced by the composer in Night on
Bald Mountain.
(left to right) Iurii Strashnyi (Radio Mix broadcast
manager) Scott Witzke (WFIU marketing director)
Ismayil Khayredinov (translator) Cary Boyce (WFIU
operations director and production manager)
New:
Papa John’s Pizza
2520 Eastbrook Pl., Columbus
812-376-9999
Papa John’s Pizza
1821 N. Lincoln, Greensburg
812-662-6331
To receive an updated brochure or
to replace a lost brochure, call the
Membership Department at 800-6623311 or 855-6114.
Visit www.membercard.com for a
complete list of benefits
(left to right) Discussing Web site—Sacha Melnikova,
Scott Witzke, Vasylyna Zagoskina, Olena Kotova
January 2007 / Directions in Sound / Page Weekday
Saturday
12:01 AM NPR NEWS
12:06 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC OVERNIGHT
5:00 AM BBC WORLD SERVICE
6:00 AM MORNING EDITION
NPR’S award-winning news program with local and state news at 6:06, 7:06, and 8:06
8:50 AM MARKETPLACE
A daily rundown of financial news from Public Radio International followed by Indiana Business News.
9:04 AM SPEAK YOUR MIND
(On selected days.)
9:00 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH
GEORGE WALKER
Featuring new releases and recordings from the WFIU library. (See daily listings for program highlights.)
9:03 AM MOVIE REVIEW (Friday)
10:01 AM BBC NEWS
10:06 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH
GEORGE WALKER (con’t.)
MOVIE REVIEW (Tuesday)
10:58 AM A MOMENT OF SCIENCE
11:01 AM NPR NEWS
11:05 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH
GEORGE WALKER (con’t.)
11:06 AM MOVIE REVIEW (Friday)
11:26 AM A MOMENT OF INDIANA
HISTORY (Mondays)
11:27 AM RADIO READER
11:55 AM STARDATE
11:56 AM SPEAK YOUR MIND
(On selected days.)
12:01 PM NPR & LOCAL NEWS
12:06 PM FRESH AIR
(ASK THE MAYOR airs Wednesday: NOON EDITION airs Friday.)
1:00 PM PERFORMANCE TODAY
2:01 PM NPR NEWS
2:00 PM PERFORMANCE TODAY
3:01 PM NPR NEWS
3:08 PM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH
GEORGE WALKER (con’t.)
3:10 PM MOVIE REVIEW (Tuesday) 3:25 PM COMPOSERS DATEBOOK
(Monday to Wednesday)
3:25 PM FOCUS ON FLOWERS
(Thursday and Friday)
3:30 PM JUST YOU AND ME
WITH JOE BOURNE
4:55 PM A MOMENT OF SCIENCE
5:00 PM ALL THINGS CONSIDERED
News coverage and commentary from National Public Radio with local and state news at 5:04 and 5:33.
6:30 PM MARKETPLACE
(Followed by Indiana Business News)
7:00 PM A CONGRESSIONAL MOMENT
(Fridays)
7:01 PM THE WRITER’S ALMANAC
7:06 PM EVENING CLASSICAL MUSIC
(FRESH AIR on Fridays.) 7:58 PM A MOMENT OF INDIANA
HISTORY (Wednesdays)
8:02 PM A MOMENT OF INDIANA
HISTORY (Fridays)
9:00 PM THE BIG BANDS (Fridays)
10:01 PM BBC NEWS
10:08 PM STARDATE
10:09 PM AFTERGLOW (Fridays)
See program grid on back cover and daily
listings for details of weeknight programming.
12:00 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC OVERNIGHT
7:01 AM NPR & LOCAL NEWS
7:07 AM FOCUS ON FLOWERS
7:47 AM SATURDAY FEATURE/RADIO PUBLIC
8:00 AM WEEKEND EDITION
10:00 AM CAR TALK
11:00 AM SAYS YOU!
11:30 AM STARDATE
(Start time may be affected by opera start
time.)
11:33 PM CLASSICAL MUSIC
(Start time may be affected by opera start
time.)
1:30 PM METROPOLITAN OPERA
(Start times may vary.)
5:00 PM ALL THINGS CONSIDERED
(Start time may be delayed by opera.)
6:00 PM GARRISON KEILLOR’S
A PRAIRIE HOME COMPANION
8:00 PM HOMETOWN
WITH TOM ROZNOWSKI
8:05 PM THE FOLK SAMPLER
9:05 PM THE THISTLE AND SHAMROCK
10:09 PM AFROPOP WORLDWIDE
10:07 PM STARDATE
11:09 PM NIGHT LIGHTS
12:10 AM JAZZ WITH BOB PARLOCHA
Page 10 / Directions in Sound / January 2007
Sunday
1:00 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC OVERNIGHT
7:01 AM NPR & LOCAL NEWS
7:07 AM FOCUS ON FLOWERS
7:55 AM A CONGRESSIONAL MOMENT
8:00 AM WEEKEND EDITION
10:00 AM THIS AMERICAN LIFE
11:00 AM LIVING ON EARTH
11:23 AM EARTHNOTE
11:25 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC
11:46 AM THE POETS WEAVE
11:52 AM STARDATE
11:55 AM LOCAL NEWS
12:00 PM SAINT PAUL SUNDAY
1:00 PM SCHICKELE MIX
2:00 PM BROADWAY REVISITED
3:00 PM WEEKEND RADIO
3:57 PM EARTHNOTE
5:01 PM ALL THINGS CONSIDERED
6:01 PM NPR NEWS
6:04 PM A CONGRESSIONAL MOMENT
6:06 PM SOUND MEDICINE
7:00 PM PROFILES
8:00 PM SPECIALS (See detailed listings.)
10:01 PM NPR NEWS
10:05 PM STARDATE
10:08 PM MUSIC FROM THE HEARTS OF
SPACE
11:08 PM CLASSICAL MUSIC
OVERNIGHT
Key to abbreviations.
b., bass; bar., baritone; bssn., bassoon; c., contralto; 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; 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., violoncello; vln., violin. Upper case letters
indicate major keys; lower case letters indicate
minor keys.
1 Monday
9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH
GEORGE WALKER
9am HAYDN—Symphony No. 52 in c, Hob.
I:52; Thomas Fey/Heidelberg Sym. Orch.
10am BACH—Orchestral Suite No. 1 in C,
BWV 1066; Café Zimmerman
11am PADEREWSKI—Overture; Antoni
Wit/Polish Natl. Radio Sym. Orch.
3pm LANDI—Sinfonia; Christina Pluhar/
L’Arpeggiata
7:07 PM EVENING CLASSICAL MUSIC
PICKER—Old and Lost Rivers; Christoph
Eschenbach/The Houston Sym.
HAYDN—Symphony No. 58 in F, Hob.
I:58; Thomas Fey/Heidelberg Sym. Orch.
BARTOK—Divertimento; Uriel Segal/IU Ch.
Orch.
8:00 PM NEW YEAR’S DAY FROM
VIENNA
NPR and WGBH, Boston take you direct
to the Golden Hall of the Musikverein
in Vienna for the most popular classical
music concert in the world: the Vienna
Philharmonic New Year’s Day concert.
10:00 PM PIPEDREAMS
“Music for an Epiphany”
Whether because of a guiding star, or a
brilliant flash of inspiration, our composers
make that special moment of clarity more
vivid.
2 Tuesday
9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH
GEORGE WALKER
9am VIOTTI—Violin Concerto No. 22 in a;
Mark Kaplan, vln.; David Golub/Padova Ch.
Orch.
10am BARTÓK—Divertimento; Uriel Segal/
IU Ch. Orch.
11am GOTTSCHALK—Deuxième Banjo
[Second Banjo], Op. 82; Lambert Orkis, p.
3pm MOZART—Piano Sonata in C, K. 545;
Angela Jia Kim, p.
Bloomington 103.7 fm • Columbus 100.7 fm • Kokomo 106.1 fm • Terre Haute 95.1 fm
7:07 PM ARTWORKS
WFIU’s weekly look at the local arts and
culture scene.
8:05 PM ETHER GAME
“New Beginnings”
Ether Game celebrates the New Year with all
sorts of new beginnings.
3 Wednesday
9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH
GEORGE WALKER
9am CAPLET—ALBUM LEAVES:
Selections; Leone Buyse, fl.; Martin Amlin, p.
10am GRAINGER—The Warriors; Geoffrey
Simon/Melbourne Sym.
11am HAYDN—Symphony No. 58 in F,
Hob. I:58; Thomas Fey/Heidelberg Sym.
Orch.
7:07 PM EVENING CLASSICAL MUSIC
BACH—MASS IN b, BWV 232: Laudamus
te; Angelika Kirchschlager, ms.; Andrea
Marcon/Venice Baroque Orch.
BRAHMS—Three Intermezzos, Op. 117;
Hélène Grimaud, p.
BRUCKNER—Te Deum; Maria Stader,
s.; Sieglinde Wagner, a.; Ernst Haefliger,
t.; Peter Lagger, b.; Choir of the German
Opera, Berlin; Eugen Jochum/Berlin Phil.
FAURÉ—Andante for Violin & Piano, Op.
75; Gil Shaham, vln.; Akira Eguchi, p.
8:00 PM MILWAUKEE SYMPHONY
ORCHESTRA
Andreas Delfs, cond.
STRAUSS—Don Juan, Op. 20
SIERRA—Sinfonia No. 3 “La Salsa” (World
Premiere)
MUSSORGSKY—Pictures at an Exhibition
10:08 PM LATE NIGHT MUSIC
HAYDN—Symphony No. 52 in c, Hob.
I:52; Thomas Fey/Heidelberg Sym. Orch.
SMIT—Quintet; Eleonore Pameijer, fl.;
Jacobien Rozemond, vln.; Edith van
Moergastel, vla.; Doris Hochscheid, vlc.;
Erika Waardenburg, hp.
BACH—MASS IN b, BWV 232: Kyrie and
Gloria; Sylvia McNair and Delores Ziegler,
s.; Marietta Simpson, ms.; John Aler, t.;
William Stone, bar.; Thomas Paul, b.; Robert
Shaw/Atlanta Sym. Orch. and Chorus
7:07 PM EVENING CLASSICAL MUSIC
BELLINI—I PURITANI: Sinfonia; Tullio
Serafin/Orch. del Teatro alla Scala di Milano
GINASTERA—Danzas argentinas, Op. 2;
Gabriela Montero, p.
DVORÁK—Romance in f, Op. 11;
Kyung-Wha Chung, vln.; Riccardo Muti/
Philadelphia Orch.
BACH—Sonata No. 3 in C, BWV 1005;
Nigel North, lute
8:00 PM CHAMBER MUSIC SOCIETY OF
LINCOLN CENTER
Harumi Rhodes, vln.; Richard O’Neill, vla.;
Clancy Newman, vlc.
SCHOENBERG—String Trio, Op. 45
SCHOENBERG—String Quartet No. 2, Op.
10
9:00 PM HARMONIA
“Outdoor Oddities”
Bagpipes, hurdy-gurdy, birdcalls and other
oddities graced the ears of 18th century
listeners, even sometimes accompanied by
orchestra. On this edition of Harmonia,
we’ll explore the refined sounds of outdoor
music in the listening parlor.
10:09 PM INDIANAPOLIS SYMPHONY
ORCHESTRA
Program TBA
5 Friday
9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH
GEORGE WALKER
9am CASTELLO—Sonata decima quarta
(14) (“due soprani e doi tromboni”); Jean
Tubéry/La Fenice
10am HAYDN—Symphony No. 49 in f,
Hob. I:49 “La Passione”; Thomas Fey/
Heidelberg Sym. Orch.
11am BELLINI—I PURITANI: O rendetemi
la speme...Qui la voce sua suave...Vien,
diletto; Joan Sutherland, s.; Francesco
Molinari-Pradelli/Orch. of the Royal Opera
House, Covent Garden
3pm BARTÓK—Divertimento; Uriel Segal/
IU Ch. Orch.
6 Saturday
10:00 AM CAR TALK
With hosts Tom and Ray Magliozzi
11:00 AM SAYS YOU!
With host Richard Sher
11:30 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC
BACH—CANTATA BWV 156: Sinfonia;
Stefanie Haegele, ob.; Andrea Marcon/
Venice Baroque Orch.
HAYDN—Symphony No. 49 in f, Hob. I:49
“La Passione”; Thomas Fey/Heidelberg Sym.
Orch.
12:09 PM CLASSICAL MUSIC
FIELD—Nocturne No. 7 in C; Miceál
O’Rourke, p.
STRAVINSKY—Violin Concerto in D; Mark
Kaplan, vln.; Lawrence Foster/Budapest
Fest. Orch.
MARAIS—Suite No. 1 in D, for three violas
da gamba; Wieland Kuikken, vla. da gamba;
Les Voix Humaines
MOZART—Trio in B-flat, K. 502; Sharon
Roffman, vln.; Julie Alberts, vlc.; Angela Jia
Kim, p.
1:30 PM METROPOLITAN OPERA
BELLINI—I Puritani
Patrick Summers, cond.; Anna Netrebko
(Elvira); Eric Cutler (Arturo); Franco
Vassallo (Riccardo); John Relyea (Giorgio)
4 Thursday
9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH
GEORGE WALKER
9am MOZART—Violin Concerto No. 1
in B-flat, K. 207; Julia Fischer, vln.; Yakov
Kreizberg/Netherlands Ch. Orch.
10am LUTOSLAWSKI—Dance Preludes;
Janet Hilton, cl.; Matthias Bamert/Scottish
Natl. Orch.
11am BEETHOVEN—Piano Sonata No. 19
in g, Op. 49, No. 1; Andras Schiff, p.
3pm SCHNITTKE—Moz-Art à la Haydn;
Todd Phillips and Daniel Phillips, vln.
10:09 PM AFTERGLOW
“Sinatra on V-Disc”
World War II recordings that Frank Sinatra
made for men and women in the military.
Uriel Segal
8:00 PM MARIAN McPARTLAND’S
PIANO JAZZ
The Ashby Brothers Quartet
9:00 PM THE BIG BANDS
With host Joe Bourne
Anna Netrebko
6:00 PM A PRAIRIE HOME COMPANION
With host Garrison Keillor
8:00 PM HOMETOWN
WITH TOM ROZNOWSKI
“The Chosen Path”
8:05 PM THE FOLK SAMPLER
“Review of 2006: Part II”
More of the great music from 2006
9:05 PM THE THISTLE AND SHAMROCK
“The Captain’s Collection”
Captain Simon Fraser left a legacy of music
that has endured for more than 200 years.
Hear tunes from his remarkable book along
with other music of the era from fiddler
Jonny Hardie, piper Rory Campbell, and
Gaelic singer Alyth McCormack.
January 2007 / Directions in Sound / Page 11
10:07 PM AFROPOP WORLDWIDE
With host Georges Collinet
11:00 PM NIGHT LIGHTS
“Resolution: Jazz From Rehab”
Jazz albums with themes of addiction
recovery from guitarist Joe Pass and pianist
Elmo Hope, as well as music from
James Moody and Charlie Parker.
7 Sunday
10:00 AM THIS AMERICAN LIFE
With host Ira Glass
11:00 AM LIVING ON EARTH
With host Steve Curwood
11:25 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC
MARAIS—PIÈCES DE VIOLE (BOOK II):
Tombeau pour Monsieur de Lully; Wieland
Kuikken, vla. da gamba; Les Voix Humaines
TCHAIKOVSKY—Sérénade Mélancolique,
Op. 26; Leila Josefowicz, vln.; Charles
Dutoit/Sym. Orch. of Montreal
12:00 PM SAINT PAUL SUNDAY
Stephen Isserlis, vlc.; Ana Maria Vera, p.
MENDELSSON—Variations Concertantes,
Op. 17
SUK—Ballade in d, Op. 3, No. 1
SUK—Serenade in A, Op. 3, No. 2
MARTINU—Cello Sonata No. 3
1:00 PM SCHICKELE MIX
With host Peter Schickele
2:00 PM BROADWAY REVISITED
“Follies”
This year is the hundredth anniversary of
the first Ziegfeld Follies, which began the
Glorification of the American Girl in 1907.
We’ll celebrate the centennial with Stephen
Sondheim’s tribute.
3:00 PM WEEKEND RADIO
As is traditional, the first two weeks of the
year are all-request programs.
4:00 PM THE WORLD OF
ROBERT SCHUMANN
“The Songs: A Symposium Of Singers”
The flowering of the art song tradition
in Germany in the songs of Schubert and
Schumann.
6:00 PM SOUND MEDICINE
Host Barbara Lewis West interviews
physicians from the Indiana University
School of Medicine on this program from
WFYI Public Radio.
7:00 PM PROFILES
Michele Norris
8:00 PM AMERICAN RADIOWORKS
“Hearing America”
This new documentary explores the history
of music on the radio and how it became
the economic engine of a major American
industry and a force for cultural and
political change in American life.
9:00 PM DISCOVERIES AT DISNEY HALL
“Music from My Fair Lady”
Composer, conductor, and arranger John
Williams gives a jazz twist to Lerner and
Loewe’s classic Broadway score for My
Fair Lady. Featuring singers Dianne Reeves
and Brian Stokes Mitchell and the Steve
Houghton Quintet.
Page 12 / Directions in Sound / January 2007
10:05 PM MUSIC FROM THE HEARTS OF
SPACE
With host Stephen Hill
8 Monday
9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH
GEORGE WALKER
9am BLISS—Oboe Quintet; Alex Klein, ob.;
Vermeer Qt.
10am RESPIGHI—Ballatta delle Gnomidi
[The Ballad of the Gnomes]; Geoffrey
Simon/Philharmonia Orch.
11am FALLA—Cortejo de gnomos
[Courtship of the Gnomes]; Uta Weyand, p.
3pm LISZT—ZWEI KONZERTETUDEN,
S. 145: No. 2 “Gnomenreigen”; Jorge Bolet,
p.
7:07 PM EVENING CLASSICAL MUSIC
DVORAK—Rondo in g, Op. 94; Tsuyoshi
Tsutsumi, vlc.; Mstislav Rostropovich/IU
Phil. Orch.
STRAUSS, R.—ZWEI GESÄNGE, OP. 34:
No. 1, “Der Abend”; Marcus Creed/SWR
Stuttgart Vocal Ens.
HAYDN—Symphony No. 22 in E-flat, Hob.
I:22 “The Philosopher”; Wim ten Have/
Amsterdam Bach Soloists
BRITTEN—Phantasy Quartet, Op. 2;
Vermeer Qt.
8:00 PM DEUTSCHE WELLE FESTIVAL
CONCERTS
Telemann Festival in Magdeburg
Hermann Max, cond.; Veronika Winter
and Jenny Haecker, s.; Lena Susanne Norin,
a.; Jan Kobow, t.; Ekkehard Abele, b.;
Rheinische Kantorei; Das kleine Konzert
TELEMANN—Six Cantatas
10:00 PM PIPEDREAMS
“Dutch Treats”
The Netherlands, beyond its eye-catching
windmills and colorful tulips, is home to an
incredible treasure of historic and modern
pipe organs.
9 Tuesday
9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH
GEORGE WALKER
9am BACH—Orchestral Suite No. 2 in b,
BWV 1067; Severino Gazzelloni, fl.; I Musici
10am DVORÁK—Rondo in g, Op.
94; Tsuyoshi Tsutsumi, vlc.; Mstislav
Rostropovich/IU Phil. Orch.
11am CASTELLO—Sonata decima terza
(13) (“due soprani e doi tromboni”); Jean
Tubéry/La Fenice
3pm VARIOUS SPANISH—Marizapalos;
Chatham Baroque
7:07 PM ARTWORKS
WFIU’s weekly look at the local arts and
culture scene.
8:05 PM ETHER GAME
“We Three Kings”
Ether Game brings musical gifts for a variety
of kings (and queens).
10 Wednesday
9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH
GEORGE WALKER
9am BEETHOVEN—Piano Sonata No. 9 in
E, Op. 14, No. 1; Andras Schiff, p.
10am WIENIAWSKI—Violin Concerto No.
2 in d, Op. 22; Mark Kaplan, vln.; Mitch
Miller/London Sym. Orch.
11am BRITTEN—Phantasy Quartet, Op. 2;
Vermeer Qt.
7:07 PM EVENING CLASSICAL MUSIC
DVORAK—RUSALKA: Polonaise; Eiji Oue/
Minnesota Orch.
LAWES—Consort Sett a 5 in A; Phantasm
BRAHMS—Concerto in a for Violin and
Cello, Op. 102; William Preucil, vln.; Janos
Starker, vlc.; Mstislav Rostropovich/IU Phil.
Orch.
8:00 PM MILWAUKEE SYMPHONY
ORCHESTRA
Andreas Delfs, cond.; Emanuel Ax, p.
MOZART—Piano Concerto No. 9 in E-Flat,
K. 271, “Jeunehomme”
MAHLER—Symphony No. 9
10:08 PM LATE NIGHT MUSIC
RAVEL—Le tombeau de Couperin; Pierre
Boulez/Cleveland Orch.
BRITTEN—String Quartet No. 3, Op. 94;
Vermeer Qt.
BACH: MASS IN b, BWV 232: Credo,
Sanctus, Benedictus, Agnus Dei; Sylvia
McNair and Delores Ziegler, s.;
Marietta Simpson, ms.; John Aler, t.;
William Stone, bar.; Thomas Paul, b.; Robert
Shaw/Atlanta Sym. Orch. and Chorus
11 Thursday
9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH
GEORGE WALKER
9am PADEREWSKI—Piano Concerto in
a, Op. 17; Janina Fialkowska, p.; Antoni
Wit/Polish Natl. Radio Sym. Orch.
10am BACH—Partita No. 3 in E, BWV
1006; Nigel North, lute
11am LIGETI—MUSICA RICERCATA:
Nos. I, 3, 7; Sergei Babayan, p.
3pm GRAINGER—Irish Tune from County
Derry; Geoffrey Simon/Melbourne Sym.
7:07 PM EVENING CLASSICAL MUSIC
NIN-CULMELL—Tonadas, Volume IV;
Edmund Battersby, p.
BACH—CANTATA BWV 42: “Wo zwei
und drei versammelt sind”; Angelika
Kirchschlager, ms.; Andrea Marcon/Venice
Baroque Orch.
GRAINGER—The Warriors; Geoffrey
Simon/Melbourne Sym.
HANDEL—Music for the Royal Fireworks,
HWV 351; Frederick Fennell/Cleveland
Sym. Winds
Bloomington 103.7 fm • Columbus 100.7 fm • Kokomo 106.1 fm • Terre Haute 95.1 fm
8:00 PM CHAMBER MUSIC SOCIETY OF
LINCOLN CENTER
Jonathan Biss, p.; Boromeo String Qt.
SCHUMANN—Piano Quintet in E-Flat,
Op. 44
Alexander Fiterstein, cl.; Clancy Newman,
vlc.; Benjamin Hochman, p.
BRAHMS—Clarinet Trio in a, Op. 114
Jonathan Biss
9:00 PM HARMONIA
“Da Vinci a la Mode”
The score of the recent “Da Vinci Code”
movie doesn’t sound much like anything
Leonardo might have heard during his
lifetime, so we’ll listen to music that might
actually have reached his ears in 15th
century Italy. Plus we’ll hear selections from
a recent release of music by female Baroque
composer Antonia Bembo.
10:09 PM INDIANAPOLIS SYMPHONY
ORCHESTRA
Program TBA
12 Friday
9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH
GEORGE WALKER
9am ROUSSEL—Serenade; Ossian Ellis, hp.;
Melos Ens.
10am BRITTEN—String Quartet No. 3, Op.
94; Vermeer Qt.
11am DUN, T.—Ghost Opera; Tan Dun,
pipa; Kronos Qt.
3pm DVORÁK—Rondo in g, Op.
94; Tsuyoshi Tsutsumi, vlc.; Mstislav
Rostropovich/IU Phil. Orch.
8:00 PM MARIAN McPARTLAND’S
PIANO JAZZ
Keith Jarrett
9:00 PM THE BIG BANDS
With host Joe Bourne
10:09 PM AFTERGLOW
“Bill Evans 1961-62”
Recordings the pianist made with Mark
Murphy, Dave Pike, Herbie Mann, and
others in the wake of his bassist Scott La
Faro’s death.
13 Saturday
10:00 AM CAR TALK
With hosts Tom and Ray Magliozzi
11:00 AM SAYS YOU!
With host Richard Sher
11:30 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC
TELEMANN—Symphony in D, TWV Anh.
50:1; Reinhard Goebel/Musica Antiqua Köln
BLISS—Oboe Quintet; Alex Klein, ob.;
Vermeer Qt.
12:09 PM CLASSICAL MUSIC
KREISLER—Praeludium and Allegro;
Joshua Bell, vln.; Paul Coker, p.
BEETHOVEN—Piano Sonata No. 11 in
B-flat, Op. 22; Andras Schiff, p.
MOZART—Violin Concerto No. 2 in D,
K. 211; Julia Fischer, vln.; Yakov Kreizberg/
Netherlands Ch. Orch.
TCHAIKOVSKY, B.—Cello Sonata;
Johannes Moser, vlc.; Paul Rivinius, p.
1:30 PM METROPOLITAN OPERA
DUN—The First Emperor (World Premiere)
Tan Dun, cond.; Elizabeth Futral (Princess
Yueyang); Michelle DeYoung (Shaman);
Susanne Mentzer (Mother of Yueyang);
Plácido Domingo (Emperor Qin); Paul
Groves (Gao Jianli); Haijing Fu (Chief
Minister); Hao Jiang Tian (General Wang);
Wu Hsing-Kuo (Yin-Yang Master)
6:00 PM A PRAIRIE HOME COMPANION
With host Garrison Keillor
8:00 PM HOMETOWN
WITH TOM ROZNOWSKI
“Bill Smith”
8:05 PM THE FOLK SAMPLER
“What’s New”
The periodic look at new music
9:05 PM THE THISTLE AND SHAMROCK
“The Master and the Maker”
Chris Norman, one of today’s leading
players of traditional and baroque flute,
tells us about the role of his instrument in
the music of Scotland and Canada. We also
meet his travel companion, flute maker Rod
Cameron.
10:07 PMAFROPOP WORLDWIDE
With host Georges Collinet
11:00 PMNIGHT LIGHTS
“The Best Tenor You Never Heard: J.R.
Monterose”
Late-1950s and early-1960s recordings by
hardbop tenor saxophonist J.R. Monterose,
including records he made with Charles
Mingus and Kenny Dorham.
14 Sunday
10:00 AM THIS AMERICAN LIFE
With host Ira Glass
11:00 AM LIVING ON EARTH
With host Steve Curwood
11:25 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC
KOMITAS—Nine Songs on German Poems;
Hasmik Papian, s.; Vardan Mamikonian, p.
12:00 PM SAINT PAUL SUNDAY
The Saint Paul Chamber Orchestra
Ruggero Allifranchini, vln.
SCHUBERT—Rondo in A for Violin and
Strings, D. 438
Dale Baltroup, vln.
PIAZZOLLA—CUATRO ESTACIONES
PORTEÑAS: Invierno Porteno;
Steven Copes, vln.
PIAZZOLLA—CUATRO ESTACIONES
PORTEÑAS: Oto o Porteno
HAYDN—Symphony No. 15 in D, Hob.
I:15
1:00 PM SCHICKELE MIX
With host Peter Schickele
2:00 PM BROADWAY REVISITED
“The Lives and Works of Adolph Green and
Betty Comden”
Betty Comden died last month, and we’ll
remember her and the late Adolph Green
with some of the hundreds of songs they
wrote for Broadway and Hollywood.
3:00 PM WEEKEND RADIO
The second of our two weeks of all-request
programs.
4:00 PM THE WORLD OF
ROBERT SCHUMANN
“The Chamber Music: A Symposium Of
Players”
From “Hausmusik” to modern recording
practices. Commentary and analyses of the
Violin Sonatas, the three String
Quartets, the three Trios, the Piano Quintet
and the Piano Quartet.
6:00 PM SOUND MEDICINE
Host Barbara Lewis West interviews
physicians from the Indiana University
School of Medicine on this program from
WFYI Public Radio.
7:00 PM PROFILES
Chris Swanson (repeat)
8:00 PM THE CHANGING WORLD
“Afghanistan: Fighting for Peace”
In the German city of Bonn in December
2001, Afghan leaders and representatives of
the larger world community shook hands
on a new deal, a promise by the world that
Afghanistan would not be abandoned again.
The BBC’s Lyse Doucet considers whether
that promise is being kept or whether the
international community and Afghans
themselves have let the people of this
beleaguered country down.
9:00 PM DISCOVERIES AT DISNEY HALL
“Joshua Bell”
Grammy Award-winning violinist and IU
alumnus Joshua Bell gives an intimate and
passionate recital of Romantic and twentieth
century music with pianist Jeremy Denk.
Highlights include the Beethoven Fifth
Violin Sonata, Bartók’s Rhapsody No. 1
for Violin and Piano, and Prokofiev’s Five
Melodies.
10:05 PM MUSIC FROM THE HEARTS OF
SPACE
With host Stephen Hill
January 2007 / Directions in Sound / Page 13
15 Monday
9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH
GEORGE WALKER
9am BAKER, D.—Through this Vale of
Tears; Vivian Taylor/Mem. of Videmus
10am BEETHOVEN—Cello Sonata No. 1
in F, Op. 5, No. 1; Zuill Bailey, vlc.; Simone
Dinnerstein, p.
11am CLEMENTI—Piano Sonata in B-flat,
Op. 24, No. 2; Albert Wong, p.
3pm BUONAMENTE: Sonata a tre sopra il
Ball del grand ducca; Jean Tubéry/La Fenice
7:07 PM EVENING CLASSICAL MUSIC
PURCELL—THE ECHOING AIR: Music
of Henry Purcell, Part 2; Sylvia McNair, s.;
Christopher Hogwood/Acad. of Ancient
Music
BEETHOVEN—Cello Sonata No. 2 in g,
Op. 5, No. 2; Zuill Bailey, vlc.; Simone
Dinnerstein, p.
FREUND—Outsider; Stephen Pratt/IU Wind
Ens.
8:00 PM DEUTSCHE WELLE FESTIVAL
CONCERTS
Dresden Music Festival
Jörg Breiding, cond.; Michael Jäckel,
b.; Hanover Boy Choir; L’Arco Baroque
Ensemble
GABRIELI, G.—Jubilate
Deo omnis terra; Canzona No. 1 in g;
Canzona No. 2 in c
MONTEVERDI—Motet: Laudate
Dominum secundo; Motet: Lauda Sion
SCHÜTZ—Jubilate Deo omnis terra, SWV
262; Der Engel sprach zu den Hirten, SWV
395; German Magnificat, SWV 426; Es ging
ein Sämann aus, SWV 408
ROSENMÜLLER—Sonata No. 10 in D
Major
SCARLATTI, A.—Motet: Salve Regina
VIVALDI—Concerto in g for Strings and
Continuo
HAMMERSCHMIDT—Motet, Meine Seele
erhebet den Herren Sacred Concerto, Verleih
uns Friede Also hat Gott die Welt geliebet
RHEINBERGER—Bleibe bei uns, denn es
will Abend warden
10:00 PM PIPEDREAMS
“A Syracuse Organ Book”
Will Headlee, David Enos, and Katharine
Pardee play four historic instruments in this
New York university town as we explore
a collection of cordial contemporary
compositions.
16 Tuesday
9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH
GEORGE WALKER
9am RESPIGHI—Trittico botticelliano
[Botticelli Triptych]; Geoffrey Simon/
Philharmonia Orch.
10am FREUND—Outsider; Stephen Pratt/IU
Wind Ens.
Page 14 / Directions in Sound / January 2007
11am LOCATELLI—Concerto in F, Op. 4,
No. 12; Reinhard Goebel/Musica Antiqua
Köln
3pm GOTTSCHALK—Souvenir de la
Havane, Op. 39; Lambert Orkis, p.
7:07 PM ARTWORKS
WFIU’s weekly look at the local arts and
culture scene.
8:05 PM ETHER GAME
“Equal Rights”
In honor of Martin Luther King, Jr., Ether
Game focuses on equality—both social and
musical.
17 Wednesday
9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH
GEORGE WALKER
9am BEETHOVEN—Cello Sonata No. 2 in
g, Op. 5, No. 2; Zuill Bailey, vlc.; Simone
Dinnerstein, p.
10am BERG—Violin Concerto “To the
Memory of an Angel”; Mark Kaplan, vln.;
Lawrence Foster/Budapest Fest. Orch.
11am LACROIX—Four Pieces; Leone
Buyse, fl.; Martin Amlin, p.
7:07 PM EVENING CLASSICAL MUSIC
BACH—CANTATA BWV 74: “Nicths kann
mich erretten”; Angelika Kirchschlager, ms.;
Andrea Marcon/Venice Baroque Orch.
RAVEL—Gaspard de la nuit; Martha
Argerich, p.
Martha Argerich
WAGNER—WESENDONK-LIEDER: “Im
treibhaus” [In a glass house]; Marcus Creed/
SWR Stuttgart Vocal Ens.
HAYDN—String Quartet in E-flat, Op. 1,
No. 5, Hob. II:6; Kodaly Qt.
8:00 PM MILWAUKEE SYMPHONY
ORCHESTRA
Emily Wacker, narr.; Awet Andemicael,
s.; John Osborn, t.; Robert Orth, bar.;
Milwaukee Sym. Chorus; Milwaukee
Children’s Choir; Andrew Massey, cond.
STRAVINSKY—Song of the Nightingale
Andreas Delfs, cond.
ORFF—Carmina Burana
10:08 PM LATE NIGHT MUSIC
FASCH—Quartet in B-flat for Recorder,
Oboe, Violin, and Continuo; Camerata Köln
BEETHOVEN—Cello Sonata No. 3
in A, Op. 69; Zuill Bailey, vlc.; Simone
Dinnerstein, p.
BARTOK—Violin Concerto No. 2; Mark
Kaplan, vln.; Lawrence Foster/Sym. Orch. of
Barcelona
MARAIS—Suite No. 2 in G, for three violas
da gamba; Wieland Kuikken, vla. da gamba;
Les Voix Humaines
18 Thursday
9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH
GEORGE WALKER
9am BACH—Orchestral Suite No. 3 in D,
BWV 1068; Jan Harrington/IU Ch. Orch.
10am PADEREWSKI—Fantasie Polonaise,
Op. 19; Janina Fialkowska, p.; Antoni Wit/
Polish Natl. Radio Sym. Orch.
11am SCHUBERT—Gebet [Prayer], D. 815;
J. Eliot Gardiner/Monteverdi Choir
3pm BEETHOVEN—Piano Sonata No. 20
in G, Op. 49, No. 2; Andras Schiff, p.
7:07 PM EVENING CLASSICAL MUSIC
SCHMELZER—SONATAE UNARUM
FIDIUM: Sonata IV; Duo Geminiani
DONIZETTI—LUCIA DI
LAMMERMOOR: “Il dolce suono...Ardon
gl’incensi” (Mad scene); Anna Netrebko
(Lucia); Andrea Concetti (Raimondo);
Nicola Ulivieri (Enrico); Coro Sinfonico di
Milano Giuseppe Verdi; Claudio Abbado/
Mahler Ch. Orch.
WOOLLETT, H.—Flute Sonata in b-flat;
Leone Buyse, fl.; Martin Amlin, p.
8:00 PM CHAMBER MUSIC SOCIETY OF
LINCOLN CENTER
Wu Han, p.; Cho-Liang Lin, vln.; David
Finckel, vlc.
SMETANA—Piano Trio in g, Op. 15
Pacifica Qt.
J ANÁCEK—String Quartet No. 2 “Intimate
Letters”
9:00 PM HARMONIA
“Plays Well With Others”
Under the Sun King in 17th century France,
the Italian Lully rose to have a near
monopoly on official court music, as winds
and strings played together in a new style.
Tonight, we’ll hear how this came about.
10:09 PM INDIANAPOLIS SYMPHONY
ORCHESTRA
Program TBA
19 Friday
9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH
GEORGE WALKER
9am GRAINGER—Danish Folk Music
Suite; Geoffrey Simon/Melbourne Sym.
10am BEETHOVEN: Cello Sonata No.
3 in A, Op. 69; Zuill Bailey, vlc.; Simone
Dinnerstein, p.
11am DONIZETTI—LUCIA DI
LAMMERMOOR: “Tombe degl’avi miei...
Fra poco a me ricovero”; Roberto Alagna,
t.; Richard Armstrong/London Phil.
3pm FREUND—Outsider; Stephen Pratt/IU
Wind Ens.
Bloomington 103.7 fm • Columbus 100.7 fm • Kokomo 106.1 fm • Terre Haute 95.1 fm
8:00 PM MARIAN McPARTLAND’S
PIANO JAZZ
Eddie Gomez
9:00 PM THE BIG BANDS
With host Joe Bourne
10:09 PM AFTERGLOW
“Jazz Vocal Reissues I”
Classic jazz-vocal albums from Irene Kral,
Sue Raney, and Chris Connor.
20 Saturday
10:00 AM CAR TALK
With hosts Tom and Ray Magliozzi
11:00 AM SAYS YOU!
With host Richard Sher
11:30 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC
LANDI—Amarilli, deh! vieni [Amaryills,
oh come!]; Stephan Van Dyck, t.; Christina
Pluhar/L’Arpeggiata
BEETHOVEN—Cello Sonata No. 1 in F,
Op. 5, No. 1; Zuill Bailey, vlc.; Simone
Dinnerstein, p.
12:09 PM CLASSICAL MUSIC
HONEGGER—Pacific 231: Movement
symphonique No. 1; Leonard Bernstein/New
York Phil.
LAWES—Consort Sett a 5 in c; Phantasm
STRAUSS, R.—ZWEI GESÄNGE, OP.
34: No. 2, “Hymne”; Marcus Creed/SWR
Stuttgart Vocal Ens.
SZYMANOWSKI—Violin Sonata in d, Op.
9; Vincent Skowronski, vln.; Donald Isaak,
p.
BEETHOVEN—Fantasia in c for Piano,
Chorus, and Orchestra, Op. 80; Vladimir
Ashkenazy, p.; The Cleveland Orch.Chorus;
Vladimir Ashkenazy/Cleveland Orch.
1:30 PM METROPOLITAN OPERA
DONIZETTI—Lucia di Lamermoore
(broadcast Dec. 8, 1956)
Fausto Cleva, cond.; Maria Callas
(Lucia); Guiseppe Campora (Edgardo);
Enzo Sordello (Enrico); Nicola Moscona
(Raimondo); James McCracken (Normanno)
6:00 PM A PRAIRIE HOME COMPANION
With host Garrison Keillor
8:00 PM HOMETOWN
WITH TOM ROZNOWSKI
“A Face in the Crowd”
8:05 PM THE FOLK SAMPLER
“That’s Silly”
Songs that should tickle your funny bone
9:05 PM THE THISTLE AND SHAMROCK
“New Year, New Voices”
Unforgettable new voices show why Celtic
singers and songs have such international
appeal.
10:07 PM AFROPOP WORLDWIDE
With host Georges Collinet
11:00 PM NIGHT LIGHTS
“A Few Words About Jazz: John Gennari’s
Blowin’ Hot and Cool”
An interview with jazz writer John Gennari,
plus historical music that became a
flashpoint for jazz criticism.
21 Sunday
10:00 AM THIS AMERICAN LIFE
With host Ira Glass
11:00 AM LIVING ON EARTH
With host Steve Curwood
11:25 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC
SANDSTROM, J.—Två Körpoem [Two
Poems for Choir]; Eric Ericson/Accentus Ch.
Choir
CAPLET—ALBUM LEAVES: Selections;
Leone Buyse, fl.; Martin Amlin, p.
12:00 PM SAINT PAUL SUNDAY
Anonymous 4
Darol Anger, vln.; Scott Nygaard, gt. and
mandolin
Program TBA
1:00 PM SCHICKELE MIX
With host Peter Schickele
2:00 PM BROADWAY REVISITED
“Oklahoma!”
This year Oklahoma celebrates the
centennial of its statehood. We recognize the
event with the legendary Broadway show of
that bears the state’s name.
3:00 PM WEEKEND RADIO
We observe Robert Burn’s birthday with
appropriate music and some Scottish
humor including Anna Russell’s “How to
Enjoy Your Bagpipe” and P.D.Q. Bach’s
Pervertimento for Bagpipes, Bicycle
and Balloons. Jan C. Snow returns with
Marginal Considerations.
4:00 PM THE WORLD OF ROBERT
SCHUMANN
“Schumann and Heine: The Romantic
Irony”
The poems of Heinrich Heine and the music
of Robert Schumann were joined together
in many of Schumann’s finest songs. The
texts and the music bespeak what has
been described as “The Romantic Irony,”
the Romantic perception of the disparity
between private dreams and ideals and
worldly reality.
6:00 PM SOUND MEDICINE
Host Barbara Lewis West interviews
physicians from the Indiana University
School of Medicine on this program from
WFYI Public Radio.
7:00 PM PROFILES
Jaime Laredo and Sharon Robinson
8:00 PM AMERICAN RADIOWORKS
“Imperial Washington”
The 110th Congress takes power this month,
and in many ways, it will be a very different
Congress than the one that preceded it.
No matter what the party, however, when
the new members of Congress reach
Washington, the red carpet rolls out. This
new documentary reveals an insular world
of privilege that isolates lawmakers from the
people they serve.
9:00 PM DISCOVERIES AT DISNEY HALL
“Mônica Salmaso, Brazilian vocal stylist”
Born in Sao Paulo in 1971, Mônica
Salmaso has surfaced as one of the best
young voices in Brazil. At Disney Hall, she
gives a dazzling performance of sensual,
rhythmically-inflected Brazilian popular
songs, including a Beatles favorite and an
“Ave Maria” with a Brazilian twist.
10:05 PM MUSIC FROM THE HEARTS OF
SPACE
With host Stephen Hill
22 Monday
9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH
GEORGE WALKER
9am BYRD—Fantasia a 6 No. 3; Fretwork
10am MOZART—Violin Concerto No. 5
in A, K. 219, “Turkish”; Julia Fischer, vln.;
Yakov Kreizberg/Netherlands Ch. Orch.
Julia Fischer
11am GRAINGER—Irish Tune from
County Derry; Geoffrey Simon/Melbourne
Sym.
3pm BRAHMS—TWO RHAPSODIES, OP.
79: No. 1 in b; Wilhelm Backhaus, p.
7:07 PM EVENING CLASSICAL MUSIC
BYRD—O You that hear this voice; Emma
Kirkby, s.; Fretwork
GINASTERA—Suite de danzas criollas, Op.
15; Nariaki Sugiura, p.
HANDEL—Concerto Grosso in d, Op. 6,
No. 10, HWV 328; Christopher Hogwood/
Handel & Haydn Society
WEINBERG: Cello Sonata No. 2, Op. 63;
Johannes Moser, vlc.; Paul Rivinius, p.
8:00 PM DEUTSCHE WELLE FESTIVAL
CONCERTS
Bach Festival in Leipzig
Douglas Boyd, cond.; Malcolm Bilson, p.;
Chamber Orchestra of Europe
MOZART—Piano Concerto No. 20 in d, K.
466
MOZART—Symphony No. 41 in C, K. 551
“Jupiter”
BACH—Keyboard Concerto in d, BWV
1052
10:00 PM PIPEDREAMS
“Rootin’ for the Youngsters”
From seventh grade to graduate school,
aged 12 to 21, talented players in Denver,
Interlochen, and Michigan point the way
towards the pipe organ’s future.
January 2007 / Directions in Sound / Page 15
23 Tuesday
25 Thursday
9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH
GEORGE WALKER
9am FAURE—PELLEAS ET MELISANDE,
OP. 80: Suite; Robert Porco/IU University
Orch.
10am GINASTERA—Suite de danzas
criollas, Op. 15; Nariaki Sugiura, p.
11am GAUBERT—Romance; Leone Buyse,
fl.; Martin Amlin, p.
3pm SARASATE—Zortzico D’Iparaguirre,
Op. 39; Mark Kaplan, vln.; Bruno Canino, p.
7:07 PM ARTWORKS
WFIU’s weekly look at the local arts and
culture scene.
8:05 PM ETHER GAME
“Aquarians”
It is the dawning of the Age of Aquarius
on Ether Game this week. Here are some
composers who fall under that sign.
9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH
GEORGE WALKER
9am BEETHOVEN—Piano Sonata No. 10
in G, Op. 14, No. 2; Andras Schiff, p.
10am BACH—Orchestral Suite No. 4 in
D, BWV 1069; Sigiswald Kuijken/La Petite
Bande
11am RESPIGHI—Adagio con variazioni;
Alexander Baillie, vlc.; Geoffrey Simon/
Philharmonia Orch.
3pm POULENC—Laudes de Saint Antoine
de Padoue; Harry Christophers/The Sixteen
7:07 PM EVENING CLASSICAL MUSIC
PUCCINI—MADAMA BUTTERFLY:
Intermezzo from Act 2, Part 2; Herbert
von Karajan/Orch. del Teatro alla Scala di
Milano
VIOTTI—Violin Concerto No. 4 in D; Mark
Kaplan, vln.; David Golub/Padova Ch.
Orch.
BACH—ST. MATTHEW PASSION, BWV
244: “Erbarme dich”; Angelika Kirschlager,
ms.; Andrea Marcon/Venice Baroque Orch.
POULENC—Concerto in d for Two Pianos
and Orchestra; Lyubov Bruk and Mark
Taimanov, p.; Arnold Katz/Leningrad Phil.
8:00 PM CHAMBER MUSIC SOCIETY OF
LINCOLN CENTER
Alexander Fiterstein, cl.; Richard O’Neill,
vla.; Benjamin Hochman, p.
KURTÁG—Hommage à R. Sch., Op. 15d
Borromeo Qt.
SCHOENBERG—String Quartet No. 1 in d,
Op. 7
9:00 PM HARMONIA
“Harpers Bizarre”
Harp music from England, Wales, Scotland,
and Ireland was known throughout Europe
for its beauty and technical brilliance.
Tonight we sample harps with gut strings
and harps with metal strings and hear how
each contributed to the flowering of these
unique instruments.
10:09 PM INDIANAPOLIS SYMPHONY
ORCHESTRA
Program TBA
24 Wednesday
9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH
GEORGE WALKER
9am MOZART—Trio in B-flat, K. 502;
Sharon Roffman, vln.; Julie Alberts, vlc.;
Angela Jia Kim, p.
10am BRAHMS—Symphony No. 3 in F,
Op. 90; Michael Gielen/SWR Sym. Orch.
Baden-Baden & Freiburg
11am BYRD—The noble famous Queen;
Emma Kirkby, s.; Fretwork
7:07 PM EVENING CLASSICAL MUSIC
BACH—CANTATA BWV 83: “Erfreute Zeit
im neuen Bunde”; Angelika Kirchschlager,
ms.; Andrea Marcon/Venice Baroque Orch.
MOZART—Violin Concerto No. 1 in B-flat,
K. 207; Julia Fischer, vln.; Yakov Kreizberg/
Netherlands Ch. Orch.
BIZET—L’ARLÉSIENNE: Suite No. 2;
Myung-Whun Chung/Orch. de l’Opera
Bastille
8:00 PM MILWAUKEE SYMPHONY
ORCHESTRA
Andreas Delfs, cond.; Frank Almond, vln.
WAGENAAR—Cyrano de Bergerac, Op. 23
WIENAWSKI—Violin Concerto No. 2 in d,
Op. 22
DVORÁK—Symphony No. 6 in D, Op. 60
10:08 PM LATE NIGHT MUSIC
BYRD—My mistress had a little dog; Emma
Kirkby, s.; Fretwork
MOZART—Sinfonia Concertante in Eflat, K. 364; Daniel Majeske, vln.; Robert
Vernon, vla.; Christoph von Dohnanyi/
Cleveland Orch.
HARBISON—String Quartet No. 4; Orion
Str. Qt.
BRAHMS—Symphony No. 4 in e, Op. 98;
Michael Gielen/SWR Sym. Orch. BadenBaden & Freiburg
MONTEVERDI—MADRIGALI
GUERRIERI: “Altri canti d’Amor” [Let
others sing of Love]; Jean Tubéry/La Fenice
Page 16 / Directions in Sound / January 2007
9:00 PM THE BIG BANDS
With host Joe Bourne
10:09 PM AFTERGLOW
“Jazz Vocal Reissues II”
Classic jazz-vocal albums from June Christy,
Dinah Shore, and Dakota Staton.
27 Saturday
10:00 AM CAR TALK
With hosts Tom and Ray Magliozzi
11:00 AM SAYS YOU!
With host Richard Sher
11:30 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC
KHACHATURIAN—Prelude in a for
Guitar; Michalis Kontaxakis, gt.
BYRD—Content is rich; Emma Kirkby, s.;
Fretwork
GRANADOS, E.—GOYESCAS: Book II;
Edmund Battersby, p.
12:09 PM CLASSICAL MUSIC
BEETHOVEN—FIDELIO, OP. 72:
Overture; Andre Previn/Royal Phil. Orch.
ARENSKY—Quartet No. 2 in a, for Violin,
Viola, and 2 Cellos; Alexander Kerr, vln.;
Kirsten Johnson, vla.; Timothy Eddy and
Eric Kim, vlc.
BACH—Sonata No. 2 in a, BWV 1003;
Nigel North, lute
COPLAND: Duo for Flute and Piano;
Jeanne Baxstresser, fl.; Israela Margalit, p.
1:30 PM METROPOLITAN OPERA
PUCCINI—Madama Butterfly (broadcast
Sept. 25, 2006)
James Levine, cond.; Cristina GallardoDomâs (Cio-Cio-San); Marcello Giordani
(Pinkerton); Maria Zifchak (Suzuki);
Dwayne Croft (Sharpless); Greg Fedderly
(Goro); James Courtney (Bonze)
6:00 PM A PRAIRIE HOME COMPANION
With host Garrison Keillor
8:00 PM HOMETOWN
WITH TOM ROZNOWSKI
“It’s a Girl”
8:05 PM THE FOLK SAMPLER
“It’s Cold Out There”
Ten degrees and getting colder
26 Friday
9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH
GEORGE WALKER
9am NERI, M.—Sonata a otto “due violini,
violetta, tre flauti e tiorba”; Jean Tubéry/La
Fenice
10am BYRD—O Lord, bow down thine
heavn’ly eyes; Emma Kirkby, s.; Fretwork
11am PUCCINI—MADAMA BUTTERFLY:
“Un bel di” [One fine day]; Teresa Kubiak,
s.; enryk Czyz/Lodz Phil. Orch.
3pm GINASTERA—Suite de danzas criollas,
Op. 15; Nariaki Sugiura, p.
8:00 PM MARIAN McPARTLAND’S
PIANO JAZZ
Diana Krall
9:05 PM THE THISTLE AND SHAMROCK
“Continental Celtic”
Follow hypnotic dance rhythms to Brittany
and Galicia, explore a panorama of songs in
Breton, French and Spanish, and savour the
essence of continental Celtic music.
10:07 PM AFROPOP WORLDWIDE
With host Georges Collinet
11:00 PM NIGHT LIGHTS
“Tony Williams: 1980s Blue Note Recordings”
Music from a new collection of drummer
Tony Williams’ acoustic jazz albums.
Bloomington 103.7 fm • Columbus 100.7 fm • Kokomo 106.1 fm • Terre Haute 95.1 fm
28 Sunday
10:00 AM THIS AMERICAN LIFE
With host Ira Glass
11:00 AM LIVING ON EARTH
With host Steve Curwood
11:25 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC
MUDARRA—Fantasia; Julian Bream, lute
SARASATE—Navarra (Spanish Dance), Op.
33; Mark Kaplan, vln.; Bruno Canino, p.
BACH—CANTATA BWV 82: “Schlummert
ein, ihr matten Augen”; Angelika
Kirchschlager, ms.; Andrea Marcon/Venice
Baroque Orch.
12:00 PM SAINT PAUL SUNDAY
Endellion String Quartet
HAYDN—String Quartet in C major, Op.
20, No. 2, Hob. III:32
BEETHOVEN—STRING QUARTET NO.
13 IN B-FLAT, OP. 130: Presto; Andante
con moto, ma non troppo
SCHUBERT—STRING QUARTET IN D,
D. 810 “DEATH AND THE MAIDEN”:
Allegro
1:00 PM SCHICKELE MIX
With host Peter Schickele
2:00 PM BROADWAY REVISITED
“Susannah McCorkle and Mel Tormé and
Broadway”
Great singers, great songs.
3:00 PM WEEKEND RADIO
A revisit to some favorites including
Bob Newhart’s “Retirement Party,” “An
Assortment of Yarns” with Myron Cohen,
and “Deteriorata” by the National Lampoon
Radio Hour. Also “The Italian Lesson” by
Ruth Draper and a Message from Richard
Howland Bolton.
4:00 PM THE WORLD OF ROBERT
SCHUMANN
“The Haunted Forest: Romanticism And
Nature”
The Romanticists responded to new travel
opportunities in the early 19th century and
produced in their music, poems, novels,
and paintings, their sense of the glories and
the mysteries of nature. Three works by
Schumann are selected for commentary and
analysis.
6:00 PM SOUND MEDICINE
Host Barbara Lewis West interviews
physicians from the Indiana University
School of Medicine on this program from
WFYI Public Radio.
7:00 PM PROFILES
Bill Bryson
8:00 PM THE CHANGING WORLD
“Baghdad Billions”
Since the Iraq war began in 2003, America
has spent around $30 billion and Iraq, at
least $20 billion, to rebuild the country.
Where has it gone? Mark Gregory follows
the money trail.
9:00 PM DISCOVERIES AT DISNEY HALL
“Bach’s Brandenburg Concertos”
The Los Angeles Baroque Orchestra
performs J.S. Bach’s Brandenburg Concertos.
10:05 PM MUSIC FROM THE HEARTS OF
SPACE
With host Stephen Hill
29 Monday
9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH
GEORGE WALKER
9am MARTINU—Duet for Violin and Cello;
Frank Peter Zimmerman, vln.; Heinrich
Schiff, vlc.
10am RESPIGHI—Suite in G for Strings
and Organ; Leslie Pearson, org.; Geoffrey
Simon/Philharmonia Orch.
11am GOTTSCHALK—Union (Paraphrase
de Concert); Lambert Orkis, p.
3pm LIEBERSON—Free and Easy
Wanderer; David Dzubay/IU New Music
Ens.
7:07 PM EVENING CLASSICAL MUSIC
GERSHWIN—THREE PRELUDES: Prelude
No. 1; Nadja Salerno-Sonnenberg, vln.;
Sandra Rivers, p.
MOZART—Piano Concerto No. 23 in A, K.
488; Alex Peh, p.; Uriel Segal/IU Ch. Orch.
RAVEL—Sonata for Violin and Cello; Frank
Peter Zimmerman, vln.; Heinrich Schiff, vlc.
8:00 PM DEUTSCHE WELLE FESTIVAL
CONCERTS
Kent Nagano’s Farewell Concert in Berlin
Kent Nagano, cond.; Anne Schwanewilms,
s., Marie-Nicole Lemieux, a.; Klaus Florian
Vogt, t.; Günther Groissböck, b.; Berlin
Radio Chorus; Deutsches SymphonieOrchester, Berlin
BEETHOVEN—Mass in D, Op. 123 “Missa
Solemnis”
10:00 PM PIPEDREAMS
“Decade of Delight”
A sampler of six new American-built
instruments that were inaugurated during
the past ten years.
30 Tuesday
9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH
GEORGE WALKER
9am MOZART—Violin Concerto No.
2 in D, K. 211; Julia Fischer, vln.; Yakov
Kreizberg/Netherlands Ch. Orch.
10am MOZART—Piano Concerto No. 23
in A, K. 488; Alex Peh, p.; Uriel Segal/IU
Ch. Orch.
11am PONCE—Theme variations‚ and
Finale; Eliot Fisk, gt.
3pm MONTEVERDI—MADRIGALI
GUERRIERI: “Altri canti d’Amor” [Let
others sing of Love]; Jean Tubéry/La Fenice
7:07 PM ARTWORKS
WFIU’s weekly look at the local arts and
culture scene.
8:05 PM ETHER GAME
“The Big Game”
While football fans gear up for the big game,
Ether Game plays musical games of all
types.
31 Wednesday
9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH
GEORGE WALKER
9am DOHNANYI—Violin Concerto No. 2
in c, Op. 43; Mark Kaplan, vln.; Lawrence
Foster/Sym. Orch. of Barcelona
10am BRAHMS—Violin Sonata No. 1 in
G, Op. 78; Federico Agostini, vln.; Reiko
Neriki, p.
Reiko Neriki
11am BACH—THE ART OF THE FUGUE,
BWV 1080: Contrapunctus No. 5; Frank
Peter Zimmerman, vln.; Heinrich Schiff, vlc.
3pm GRAINGER—Hill-Song No. 2;
Geoffrey Simon/Melbourne Sym.
7:07 PM EVENING CLASSICAL MUSIC
VIVALDI—Lute Concerto in D, RV 93; Paul
O’Dette, lute; Peter Holman/The Parley of
Instruments
BEETHOVEN—Piano Sonata No. 9 in E,
Op. 14, No. 1; Andras Schiff, p.
IVES—String Quartet No. 1 “From the
Salvation Army”; Blair Str. Qt.
8:00 PM JERUSALEM SYMPHONY
ORCHESTRA
“New Year’s Day from Vienna”
Host Korva Coleman takes you to the
Golden Hall of the Musikverein in Vienna
for the most popular classical music concert
in the world—the Vienna Philharmonic New
Year’s Day concert.
8:00 PM MILWAUKEE SYMPHONY
ORCHESTRA
Nicolas McGegan, cond.; Samantha George,
vln.; Tanya Ell, vlc.
HANDEL—Concerto Grosso in G, Op. 6,
No. 1, HWV 319
MOZART—Symphony No. 1 in E-Flat, K.
16
BACH, J.C.—Sinfonia concertante in A
CLEMENTI—Symphony No. 3 in G,
“Great National Symphony,” Wo. 34
HAYDN—Symphony No. 104 in D, Hob.
I:104 “London”
10:08 PM LATE NIGHT MUSIC
ROSETTI, A.—Sinfonia in E-flat, Op. 5;
Concerto Köln
SHOSTAKOVICH—Cello Sonata in d, Op.
40; Johannes Moser, vlc.; Paul Rivinius, p.
PINTSCHER—Study I for “Treatise on
the Veil”; Frank Peter Zimmerman, vln.;
Heinrich Schiff, vlc.
SCHUBERT—Schwanengesang, D. 957;
Thomas Quasthoff, bar.; Justus Zeyen, p.
January 2007 / Directions in Sound / Page 17
WFIU Future Fund
Radio broadcasting is undergoing rapid
change. One of WFIU’s missions is to keep
up with change, ensuring the best possible
service to both our current listeners and
listeners of the future.
This future takes us beyond today’s
broadcasting, into a world where anyone,
anywhere will be able to access our programs at any time. These changes require
a major investment in technology that go
well beyond the resources we generate
through our annual membership program
that supports our daily operation.
To financially support these new initiatives, we created the WFIU Future Fund.
Thoughtful gifts to the Fund have come
in many forms—from direct cash gifts of
support, to stock, retirement, insurance
policies, and estate plans. The Future Fund
Charter Donors are listed below, with
WFIU’s gratitude.
We welcome your participation in
helping WFIU stay in the broadcasting
forefront. Listeners may support the WFIU
Future Fund, or any number of giving and
naming opportunities beginning at $1,000
that permit individuals and businesses to
become involved beyond an annual membership or underwriting gift.
To learn how you can become involved,
contact Judy Witt, WFIU/WTIU Major
and Planned Gifts Officer, at jwitt@
indiana.edu or 812-855-2935.
We would like to express our gratitude
to the Future Fund Charter Donors:
Becky Cape
Fred and Sandra Churchill
Anna Marie and Matthew Dalle-Ave
Kenneth Gros Louis
Harold and Dorothy Hammel
Diane M. Hawes
Ross Jennings
Stephen and Diane Keucher
Christina Kuzmych
Bob and Allison Lendman
Jeanette Calkins Marchant
Celeste and Mike McGregor
Perry and Nancy Metz
William Murphy
John and Susan Nash
James and Barbara Randall
Frederick Risinger
Marie-Louise and David Smith
Maurice and Linda Smith
Ron and Sally Stephenson
Rex and Nancy Stockton
Mary and Joseph Walker
Lee and Judy Witt
Eva Zogorski
Page 18 / Directions in Sound / January 2007
This month on WTIU television.
American Masters: Annie Leibovitz
Wednesday, January 3 at 9pm
Annie Leibovitz has produced some of the most iconic images of the last 30
years and is, arguably, America’s most influential woman photographer. She
has shot the rich and famous, the profound and powerful, the exceptional and
notorious. Her camera has documented the horrors of war—most recently
in Sarajevo and Rwanda. Masterful at exposing her photographic subjects,
Leibovitz’s own life has been private and protected. In this film, she made the
decision to bare her artistic process, her personal journey and her delicate
balancing of fame and family to the camera—a camera that is being vigilantly
pointed by a filmmaker who is her younger sister.
Masterpiece Theatre: Jane Eyre
Sundays, January 21 & 28 at 9pm
A governess goes to work for a moody employer, captures his heart, then a
dark secret intrudes. The love story that launched a thousand gothic imitations comes to Masterpiece Theatre in a two-part adaptation of Charlotte
Brontë’s 1847 classic, “Jane Eyre.” Newcomer Ruth Wilson stars in the title
role as the spirited but plain young woman who escapes a sadistic orphanage
to find improbable true love. In addition to its intense romanticism, “Jane
Eyre” features a satisfying assortment of wicked relatives, spooky mayhem,
extrasensory messages and astonishing coincidences—enough to have kept
readers thoroughly entertained for 160 years.
Great Performances at the Met:
The Magic Flute
Wednesday, January 24 at 9pm
Celebrated director Julie Taymor,
who brought The Lion King
to Broadway, casts her spell
on Mozart’s The Magic Flute.
Dancing bears, flying birds, even
a giant serpent are all brought
vividly to life through Taymor’s
ingenious use of puppetry. This
abridged version of Mozart’s
opera is sung in English by
an attractive young cast that
Erika Miklósa is the evil Queen of the Night
includes Isabel Bayrakdarian
(Pamina), Cornelia Gotz (Queen of the Night), Matthew Polenzani (Tamino),
Nathan Gunn (Papageno) and Morris Robinson (Sarastro), conducted by
beloved maestro James Levine.
Bloomington 103.7 fm • Columbus 100.7 fm • Kokomo 106.1 fm • Terre Haute 95.1 fm
W IU
wfiu.indiana.edu
PROGRAMMING AND
OPERATING SUPPORT
Indiana University
CORPORATE MEMBERSHip
Best Buy-Bloomington
Bloomington Chiropractic Center
Bloomington Hospital
Bloomington Iron & Metal, Inc.
Bloomington Podiatry Center & Bloomington Optometry—
Dr. Michael Hoffman &
Dr. Miccah Hoffman
Bloomington Veterinary Hospital
Brown Hill Nursery
CS Property Management
Dr. Phillip Crooke Obstetrics & Gynecology
Delta Tau Delta Fraternity—
Indiana University
Dermatology Center of Southern Indiana
Duke Energy
Dr. David Howell &
Dr. Timothy Pliske, DDS
of Bedford & Bloomington
The Hope Foundation
ISU/The May Agency
Indiana University Bookstore
JB’s Salvage, Inc.
KP Pharmaceutical Technology
Pain Management Center
Pinnacle Properties
PYNCO, Inc.—Bedford
Smart & Johnson Title
Company—Columbus
Smithville One
Strategic Development
Tipton Lakes Athletic Club—
Columbus
World Arts, Inc.—Spencer
PROGRAM UNDERWRITERS
4th Street Festival of the Arts
and Crafts
Andrews, Harrell, Mann, Carmin, and Parker P.C.
Argentum Jewelry
Aqua Pro Pool & Spa
Bahá’í Faith
Baugh Enterprises Commercial Printing & Bulk Mail Services
Beacon X-ray Testing, Inc.
Bicycle Garage
BKD
Bloomingfoods
Bloomington Area Birth Services
Bloomington Hospital
Bloomington Pet Pals
Bloomington Shuttle Service
Bloomington Worldwide Friendship
Brian Lappin Real Estate
South Dunn Street Project
Brown County Winery
Bunger and Robertson, Attorneys at Law
By Hand Gallery
Canine Companions
Caveat Emptor Books
Children’s Village
Clay City Pharmacy
Columbus Container Inc.
Columbus Museum of Art & Design
Columbus Optical
Commercial Service of
Bloomington
Compass Events
Crawlspace Doctor
Dell Brothers
DePauw University
Elements
Falafels
First United Methodist Church
The Foot & Ankle Center
Fossil Rain
Four Seasons Retirement
General Hotels
Gilbert Construction
Goods for Cooks
Greene Acres Farm of Aden, Inc.
Greene & Schultz, Trial Lawyers, P.C.
Hamilton Facial Plastic Surgery
Hair International
The Herald-Times
Heritage Fund of Bartholomew County
Hills O’Brown Realty
Hills O’Brown Property
Management
Home Instead Senior Care
Dr. Howard & Associates
Indiana State Attorney General
Indiana State Secretary of State Office
Indianapolis Arts Center
Indianapolis Children’s Museum
Indianapolis Museum of Art
Indianapolis Opera
Inner Resources Counseling
The Irish Lion Restaurant and Pub
ISU/The May Agency
IU Art Museum
IU Auditorium
IU Bloomington Continuing Studies
IU Bookstore
IU Credit Union
IU Department of Theatre & Drama
IU Division of Recreational Sports
IU Division of Residential Programs & Services
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—
Bloomington
IU Kelley School of Business—
Indianapolis
IU Kokomo Theater & Drama
IU Medical Sciences Program
IU Poynter Center for the Study of Ethics & American Institutions
IU Press
IU Printing Services
IU School of Continuing Studies
IU School of Health, Physical Education & Recreation
IU School of Optometry
IU University Information Technology Services
J. L. Waters & Company
The Kinsey Institute
Kirby-Risk Supply Co.
Laughing Planet Café
L. B. Stant and Associates
Mallor, Clendening, Grodner & Bohrer, Attorneys at Law
Mary M’s Flowers & Plants
Meadowood Retirement Community
Medicaid Solutions
Midwest Counseling Center
Monroe Hospital
N. R. Hiller Design
The Nature Conservancy of Indiana
North Christian Church—
Columbus
O’Malia’s Food Market
Oliver Winery
Owen County Community Foundation, Inc.
Planned Parenthood
Plumb, Inc.
Plus 5 Homeowners Guarantee
Prima Gallery
ProsLink
Pygmalion’s Art Supplies
Relish
Rentbloomington.net
Ron Plecher—REMAX
Dr. Byron Rutledge, DDS
Shawnee Summer Theatre
Smith Neubecker & Associates, Inc.
Smithville Telephone Company
Soma Coffee House and Juice Bar
Square Home Improvement
St. Mark’s United Methodist Church
Taylor & Webb,
American Portfolios, Inc.
Terry’s Banquets and Catering
Tina’s Cuisine & Catering
Trojan Horse Restaurant
Twisted Limb Paperworks
Unity Physician Group
The UPS Store—South Walnut, Bloomington
Vance Music Center
Walnut House Flowers & Gifts
World Wide Automotive Service
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
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)
January 2007 / Directions in Sound / Page 19
January 2007
Sunday
5 AM
6
11
Noon
1 PM
2
3
4
5
6
7
10
11
Friday
5 AM
6
7
CLASSICAL
MUSIC
NPR’S MORNING EDITION
8
WEEKEND EDITION
with Scott Simon
CLASSICAL MUSIC with George Walker
THIS
AMERICAN LIFE
LIVING ON EARTH
CLASSICAL MUSIC
SAINT PAUL
SUNDAY
SCHICKELE
MIX
BROADWAY
REVISITED
WEEKEND RADIO
with Robert Conrad
WORLD OF
ROBERT SCHUMANN
ALL THINGS
CONSIDERED
SOUND
MEDICINE
9
10
CAR TALK
11
SAYS YOU!
RADIO READER with Dick Estell
FRESH AIR with Terry Gross
PERFORMANCE TODAY
CLASSICAL MUSIC with George Walker
JUST YOU AND ME with Joe Bourne
NPR’S ALL THINGS CONSIDERED
PROFILES
CLASSICAL MUSIC
ARTWORKS
SPECIALS
see detailed listings
DEUTSCHE
FESTIVAL
CONCERTS
ETHER
GAME
MUSIC FROM THE
HEARTS OF SPACE
Saturday
OVERNIGHT
PIPEDREAMS
Mid.
Noon
CLASSICAL
MUSIC
NOON EDITION
Live Call-in
1 PM
2
METROPOLITAN OPERA
1-6
1-13
1-20
1-27
I Puritana
The First Emperor
Lucia di Lamermoor
Madama Butterfly
3
4
5
ALL THINGS
CONSIDERED
6
Garrison
MARKETPLACE
Keillor’s
A PRAIRIE HOME
FRESH AIR
EVENING CLASSICAL MUSIC
COMPANION
with Terry Gross
FOLK
Marian McPartland’s
SPOLETO
SAMPLER
PIANO JAZZ
CHAMBER MUSIC
MILWAUKEE
SYMPHONY
THE BIG BANDS
THE THISTLE &
CHAMBER MUSIC
Joe Bourne
SHAMROCK
LINCOLN CENTER
AFROPOP
INDIANAPOLIS
AFTERGLOW
WORLDWIDE
SYMPHONY ORCH.
LATE NIGHT
David Brent
NIGHT
MUSIC
Johnson
LIGHTS
CLASSICAL MUSIC OVERNIGHT
1 AM
2
Thursday
WEEKEND EDITION
with Liane Hansen
8
9
Wednesday
BBC WORLD SERVICE
CLASSICAL
MUSIC
8
10
Tuesday
OVERNIGHT
7
9
Monday
7
8
9
10
11
Mid.
JAZZ WITH
BOB PARLOCHA
1 AM
Check Saturday, Sunday, Weekday and detailed listings concerning air times for A MOMENT OF SCIENCE©, ASK THE MAYOR, STAR DATE, SPEAK YOUR MIND!,
THE POETS WEAVE, EARTHNOTE, HOMETOWN, NPR NEWS, BBC NEWS, INDIANA BUSINESS NEWS, COMPOSERS DATEBOOK, THE WRITER’S ALMANAC, RADIO
PUBLIC, SATURDAY FEATURE, FOCUS ON FLOWERS, A MOMENT OF INDIANA HISTORY, and A CONGRESSIONAL MOMENT
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