September 2010
The Eroica Trio on Center Stage from Wolf Trap Sunday, September 19th, 9 p.m.
Also this month:
Photo: Nina Choi
• Engineers of the New Millennium • Snap Judgment: “The Man in the White Hat” • Humankind: Mia Farrow • Artist of the Month: Leonard Slatkin . . . and more!
September 2010 Vol. 58, No. 9
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 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 Stan Jastrzebski—News Director David Brent Johnson—Producer/ Systems Coordinator LuAnn Johnson—Program Services Manager Nancy Krueger—Gifts and Grants Officer
Yaël Ksander—Producer/ Announcer Angela Mariani—Host/Producer, Harmonia Michael Paskash—Studio Engineer and Technical Producer Mia Partlow—Executive Assistant Adam Schwartz—Editor, Directions In Sound; Producer Donna Stroup—Chief Financial Officer John Shelton—Assistant Chief Engineer of Radio George Walker—Producer/On-Air Broadcast Director Sara Wittmeyer—WFIU/WTIU Bureau Chief Scott Witzke—Marketing Director David Wood—Music Director Marianne Woodruff—Corporate Development Eva Zogorski—Membership Director
Center Stage from Wolf Trap Sundays at 9 p.m. Center Stage from Wolf Trap showcases live performances from some of today’s finest chamber musicians from Wolf Trap National Park for the Performing Arts in Vienna, Virginia. The programs include unscripted and spontaneous conversation with hosts Rich Kleinfeldt and Bill McGlaughlin. The programs are recorded live in the Barns at Wolf Trap, an acoustically superb facility considered by some as one of the best places to hear music in the Washington, D.C. area. A popular segment of Center Stage from Wolf Trap is Off the Beaten Track which presents music written in our own time. This month features a performance of Edouard Lalo’s Piano Trio No. 1 in C minor, Op. 7 by the Eroica Trio, one of the world’s most sought-after ensembles.
• Announcers: Ann Corrigan, LuAnn Johnson, Joseph “Bill” Kloppenburg • Broadcast Assistants: Michael Kapinus, Rachel Lyon, Josephine McRobbie • Ether Game: Mollie Ables, Dan Bishop, Steven Eddy, Delanie Marks, Consuelo Lopez-Morillas, Sherri Winks • Harmonia Scriptwriter: Bernard Gordillo • Integrated Media Interns: Ariel Ivas, Liz Leslie, Andrew Olanoff • Managing Editor Muslim Voices: Megan Meyer • Membership Staff: Laura Grannan, Joan Padawan • Multiplatform Reporter: Dan Goldblatt • Music Library Assistant: Anna Pranger • News Assistants: Regan McCarthy, Ben Skirvin • Reporter/Blogger: Sarah Chowdhury • Videographer/Editor: Aut Phanthavong • Visual Journalism Intern: Andrew Olanoff • Volunteer Producer/Hosts: Moya Andrews, Mary Catherine Carmichael, Christopher Citro, Peter Jacobi, Owen Johnson, Patrick O’Meara, Shana Ritter, Bob Zaltsberg • Web Developer: G. Pablo Vanwoerkom • Web Assistant: Margaret Aprison • Web Producer: Eoban Binder • Associate Web Producers: Molly Plunkett, Ann Sauder, Emily Shelton
Sunday, September 5
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.
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J. S. Bach: French Suite No. 3 Emmanuel Ceysson Charles Ives: String Quartet No. 1 “A Revival Service” Miró String Quartet Dana Wilson: Deep Remembering Gail Williams, horn; Mary Ann Covert, piano George Gershwin: “Let’s Call the Whole Thing Off,” “Liza,” “Someone to Watch over Me,” “They All Laughed” Patricia Risley, mezzosoprano; Keith Phares, baritone; Kim Pensinger Witman, piano
Sunday, September 12 Arnold Schoenberg: Phantasy for Violin and Piano, Op. 47 Lara St. John, violin; Martin Kennedy, piano Elliot Carter: Matribute Ursula Oppens, piano Ludwig van Beethoven: Sonata No. 29 in B-flat Major, Op. 106, “Hammerklavier” Jeremy Denk, piano Sunday, September 19 Edouard Lalo: Piano Trio No. 1 in C minor, Op. 7 Eroica Trio John Adams: Book of Alleged Dances: “Toot Nipple,” “DogJam” Kronos Quartet Susan Kander: Five Movements for My Father Keith Phares, baritone; Sally McLain, violin; Joshua Kowalsky, cello; David Jones, clarinet; Kim Pensinger Witman, piano Sunday, September 26 Béla Bartók: Sonata for Violin and Piano No. 2 in C Major, Sz. 76, BB 85 Lara St. John, violin; Martin Kennedy, piano György Ligeti: String Quartet No. 1, “Métamorphoses nocturnes” Pacifica Quartet David Diamond: Woodwind Quintet, Andante Grazioso Chicago Chamber Musicians Felix Mendelssohn: String Quartet in D, Op. 44, No. 1, Andante espressivo ma con moto Miró String Quartet
Lara St. John
Bloomington 103.7 fm • Columbus 100.7 fm • French Lick/West Baden 101.7 fm
Sunday, September 5, 4 p.m.
Arieta Gonelevu in the South Pacific
After the September 11th attacks destroyed the twin towers of the World Trade Center, rescue professionals from many parts of the country raced to New York City to help search for victims. Among them was Robin Murphy, a robotics expert whose efforts after 9/11 marked the birth of a new and still rapidly evolving field—rescue robotics. David Schneider visited Murphy in her lab to learn more about her and the potentially life-saving techniques she’s pioneering.
Keya Banerjee
Credit Jeremy Sutton-Hibbert
Kunio Koike is an electrical engineer who designs high-end timekeeping mechanisms for Seiko watches. Jean Kumagai visited him in Japan to learn about his work.
Credit: Matthew Mahon
Credit: Michael Rubinstein
This program profiles engineers around the world with challenging and exciting jobs that harness the imagination. We meet a robotics engineer, a video games designer, a Bollywood special effects expert, a toys engineer, and others with a passion for their work. We travel to four continents and hear stories of people who always knew what they wanted to be, and others with roundabout paths into fields they came to love. Keya Banerjee is a Bollywood special effects designer. She grew up amid India’s vibrant Bollywood industry, where her father was an international movie star. But her first love was a much smaller screen. “When I was 12,” she says, “I saw my first computer and said ‘Oh my God this is what I want to do,’ and from the age of 12 to 22 I begged my parents for a computer.” Banerjee finally got her computer, and ended up studying graphic design at Harvard and UCLA before returning to India to work in the film industry. Now she’s a successful visual effects supervisor.
Following up on her childhood fascination with hydroelectric production, Arieta Gonelevu has found her dream job close to home, in Suva, the capital of Fiji. She leads an engineering team that exploits green technologies to bring power to some of the South Pacific’s most remote islands. Laurie Howell has her story.
Credit: Sandra Upson
Engineers of the New Millennium: Dream Jobs
Kunio Koike
Robin Murphy shows off her robots at a train wreck staged for rescue drills.
When Kenyon Kluge’s childhood dreams were to become an astronaut. “Then I wanted to become a pilot and then hopefully, a shuttle pilot.” But when he got older, Kluge loved designing electronic chips and devices, and he loved racing motorcycles. He never expected to find a job where he could combine his passions, but he did. We visit Kluge at the Zero Motorcycles facility near Santa Cruz, California. Engineers of the New Millennium: Dream Jobs was co-produced by IEEE Spectrum Magazine and the National Science Foundation.
Greensburg 98.9 fm • Kokomo 106.1 fm • Terre Haute 95.1 fm
The Changing World Sundays at 8 p.m. “The Crescent and the Cross, Part 2” Sunday, September 5 The BBC’s Owen Bennett Jones continues his exploration of key turning points in the history of Islam and Christianity. Malta was the site of one such turning point. In the mid-16th century, Malta was controlled by a group of devout militant Christians, now known as the Knights of Malta. These Knights ran afoul of the Ottoman Emperor, Suleiman the Magnificent. Bennett Jones takes us back to the legendary siege of Malta. He then concludes this series with a look at the siege of Khartoum, telling how the son of a Sudanese boat builder and self-proclaimed messianic redeemer successfully took on the might of the British Empire. “Young Voices” Sunday, September 12 Although quite young, Thembi Ngubane was courageously open about living with AIDS in a South African township at a time when most people in South Africa kept quiet about it. In this moving and personal audio diary, Thembi recorded her experience of the pain of having to break the news to her parents, of visits to the doctor, of her great love for her boyfriend Melikhaya and her daughter Onwabo, and of her thoughts of not being around any more. The village of Alert Bay is perched on a tiny island off Canada’s Pacific coast. It’s the only settlement on Cormorant Island, an island that is fewer than two-and-a-half miles long. Recently, teenagers were given recording equipment and asked to capture their lives and their community. This documentary weaves together their earnest stories about youth, boredom, their love of home, and their longing to leave it. “China: Shaking the World, Part1” Sunday, September 19 Napoleon said, “China is a sleeping giant. When she awakes, she will shake the world.” China endured decades of September 2010 / Directions in Sound / Page 3
occupation, division, and international isolation since that 19th century warning. When it finally opened to the rest of the world, foreign money and expertise flooded in. Now, little more than a generation later, China is poised to overtake Japan to become the world’s second-largest economy. Its unprecedented growth in exports has left it holding more foreign currency than any other nation— financial power that China is beginning to use to challenge the American dollar’s long-standing dominance as the medium of international trade.
Snap Judgment: America Abroad: “The Man in the “Young and White Hat” Restless: Youth Identity in the Arab Sunday, September 19, 4 p.m. Snap Judgment’s raw, intimate, and World” Sunday, September 12, 4 p.m. The Arab world has the largest youth bulge on the planet, with one-third of the region’s inhabitants between 15 and 24. The region’s youth population is facing a bleak economic future, and they live in a seething cauldron of tribal, national, religious, social, and political forces that simultaneously pull them east and west. In this program, we travel to several Arab countries to examine how Islam, globalization, and a turbulent region are shaping how teens and twenty-somethings look at themselves, and the world.
Looking for new ideas: Professor Guosong Liu of Tsinghua University
“China: Shaking the World, Part 2” Sunday, September 26
Credit: Neal Razzell
China’s economic resurgence lifted hundreds of millions from poverty and helped the Communist Party maintain its authority and control. But potential dangers lie ahead. Internally, there’s a housing and construction bubble that could burst, spreading problems far beyond China’s borders. Externally, there are threats of trade sanctions from recession-hit America, where many accuse China of manipulating its currency to gain unfair advantage. We examine the political, economic, and cultural mechanisms of China’s growing global influence. Michael Robinson assesses the prospects and problems of a shift of power from West to East.
The Chinese government is knocking down this couple’s home to make way for an industrial park. They will receive compensation and a modern apartment.
Page 4 / Directions in Sound / September 2010
Arab youngsters
We begin as Sean Carberry visits Jordan to explore how young people are navigating between global, religious, and tribal forces as they form their identities. His guests include Muin Khoury, research analyst with the Royal Hashemite Court in Jordan; and Naseem Tarawnah, a founder and editor of 7iber.com, a youth-oriented and Jordanian-based independent media outlet. Next, Carberry reports from Cairo on the conflicting pressures facing Egyptian women as they struggle to reconcile traditional codes of conduct with western norms when it comes to dating and relationships. His guests include Ghada Abdel Aal, blogger and author of the best-selling I Want to Get Married!; and Marwa Rakha, dating writer and blogger. We then travel to Michigan with Jordana Gustafson who reports on the struggles facing young Arab-Americans as they negotiate their identities in the United States. She speaks with Suha Ahmed, a graduate student at Wayne State University in Detroit who works at the ArabAmerican National Museum in Dearborn.
musical brand of storytelling dares you to see a sliver of the world through another’s eyes. Deejay-driven musical delivery, paired with lush sound design, drops you into the heart of the action. The fast-paced (sometimes dark, sometimes playful) narrative highlights stories burning hot on the lips of people from across the globe. It’s a sweet rhythmic blend of drama, humor, music, and personality all hosted by the winner of the Public Radio Talent Quest, Glynn Washington. This episode of Snap Judgment features stories of people who rely on the kindness of strangers to get them out of whatever mess they happen to be in. Segments include: “Milagro in El Paso”: Frenchman Pascal loves America. He loves the scenery, the people, and most of all, his girlfriend. He loves it so much that he overstays his visa—and in El Paso, everything goes to heck. Lucky for him, cowboys still live in Texas. “Story Corps Stabbing”: At the end of a dark hallway is a door. Behind that door is a madman. It’s the job of two caring women to try to save him, and each other. “Fertilizer Bomb”: A ten-ton bomb on wheels threatens the citizens of North Carolina. “Jeff meets Arthur C. Clarke”: The most famous science fiction author in the world reaches down and changes the destiny of a 14-year-old aspiring writer. “Lake Michigan”: Brett was 13, omnipotent and having the time of his life swimming in Lake Michigan—going out deeper and deeper. But Mother Nature doesn’t care for hubris. “Not a Cat Lady”: You might take it upon yourself to save the day, but sometimes the hero in one story is also the villain in someone else’s. “Bad White Hat”: Sometimes the man who comes to the rescue is not the man to be trusted. Snap Judgment—storytelling with a beat.
Bloomington 103.7 fm • Columbus 100.7 fm • French Lick/West Baden 101.7 fm
Humankind: “Mia Farrow” Sunday, September 26, 4 p.m. “I wear around my neck this amulet, which was given to me by a woman named Halima . . . She held my two hands and said, ‘Tell people what is happening here. Tell them we will all be slaughtered. Tell them we need help.’ And I promised Halima that I would do my best to do that.” —Mia Farrow, actress and human rights activist Fame and success—both artistic and critical—came to actress Mia Farrow at an early age. Following her young life in 1940’s Hollywood as the daughter of screenwriter-director John Farrow and the actress Maureen O’Sullivan, she gained national attention in television and starred in more than forty movies, including Rosemary’s Baby and Hannah and Her Sisters. As successful as her professional life was, her personal life was marked with many struggles—leading her to become a high-profile advocate for children’s rights, working to raise funds and awareness for children in conflict-affected regions, predominantly Africa. Since her appointment as a UNICEF Good Will Ambassador in 2000, Farrow has campaigned for the rights of children affected by violence. In 2008, she testified at a Senate Mia Farrow cradling a starving child in Chad subcommittee hearing about her ninth trip to what she called “a triangle of human suffering”: Darfur, eastern Chad and the Central African Republic. In this edition of Humankind, Farrow tells her story, from her childhood bout with polio to her crusade for the suffering people of Sudan.
Artist of the Month Featured WFIU’s Artist of the Month for September Contemporary is conductor Leonard Slatkin. Leonard Slatkin is the Arthur R. Metz Composer
Foundation Conductor at IU’s Jacobs School of Music and the Distinguished Artist in Residence at the American University. He has enjoyed a long career conducting some of the most prestigious orchestras in the world. He began his training at Indiana University and Los Angeles City College before getting his degree from the Julliard School. He conducted his debut concert in 1966 with the New York Youth Symphony, and he became the assistant conductor for the Saint Louis Symphony Orchestra under the guidance of his former teacher Walter Susskind. Slatkin stayed in St. Louis for the next seventeen years and helped to increase the reputation of the orchestra with a vast output of high-quality recordings. Leonard Slatkin While building the SLSO, Slatkin also accepted guest engagements with leading orchestras in Europe and the United States including the Chicago Lyric Opera, Vienna Staatsoper, Paris Opera, and the Metropolitan. His list of recordings include the standard symphonies ranging from Haydn to Elgar, while his artistry as a conductor appears the most in his performance of twentieth-century composers such as Adams, Barber, Castelnuovo-Tedesco, Corigliano (whose A Dylan Thomas Trilogy he premiered), Ives, Schuman, and Piston. He has received acclaim for his recordings of Gounod’s Romeo et Juliette, the complete Vaughan Williams symphonies, and a series of works by Bernstein. His recording of William Bolcom’s Songs of Innocence and of Experience earned him a Grammy Award. He premiered his own composition, The Raven (based on the poem by Edgar Allen Poe), with the SLSO. WFIU will feature music conducted by Leonard Slatkin throughout the month of September.
Greensburg 98.9 fm • Kokomo 106.1 fm • Terre Haute 95.1 fm
Louis Andriessen
WFIU’s featured composer for September is Louis Andriessen. Born in 1939 in Holland, Andriessen’s earliest teachers included his father, uncle, and brother, all of whom had prominent musical careers. He studied further with Luciano Berio after receiving first prize for his compositions. He began teaching at the Royal Conservatory in 1973, and gave guest lectures at schools such as Yale, the University at Buffalo (SUNY), and Princeton. He later joined the faculty of the Royal Conservatory playing an important role in developing the talent of the next generation of Dutch composers. Early works by Andriessen show experimentation with various contemporary trends: post war serialism (Series, 1958), pastiche (Anachronie I, 1966-67), and tape (Il Duce, 1973). His reaction to what he perceived as the conservatism of much of the Dutch contemporary music scene quickly moved him to form a radically alternative musical aesthetic of his own. Since the early 1970s he has refused to write for conventional symphony orchestras and has instead written for his own idiosyncratic instrumental combinations. Andriessen’s mature music combines the influences of jazz, American minimalism, Igor Stravinsky, and Claude Vivier. His harmonic writing abandons the consonant modality of much minimalism, preferring post-war European dissonance, often combined into large blocks of sound. WFIU will feature music composed by Louis Andriessen throughout the month of September. September 2010 / Directions in Sound / Page 5
Featured Classical Recordings Selections from each week’s featured recording can be heard throughout WFIU’s local classical music programming. A weekly podcast of our featured classical recordings is available through our Web site, wfiu.org, under the “podcasts” link. September 5th-11th Schumann: Complete Works for Violin and Orchestra (Hänssler Classic CD 93.258) Lena Neaudauer, violin German Radio Philharmonic Pablo González, conductor Violinist Lena Neudauer performed her first concert with orchestra at age ten. La Prensa calls her “. . . a genius: clear, penetrating sound flows spontaneously and gracefully from her bow, and while seeming utterly effortless, her playing still exudes an exceptional perfection . . . .” September 12th-18th Boismortier: Concertos for Five Flutes (Dorian DSL-90803) Stephen Schutz, flutes French composer Joseph Bodin de Boismortier wrote instrumental music, cantatas, opera ballets, and vocal music. He considerably extended the repertory of his favorite instrument, the transverse flute. Stephen Schultz performs these works for five flutes alone in a seamless example of multi-track editing. September 19th-25th Brahms: Complete Works for Solo Piano, Vol. 4 (Oehms Classics OC 743) Andreas Boyde, piano Andreas Boyde knows about the perils of recording Brahms: cheap showmanship, an excess of sentimentality, and falsely understood “heaviness” that too often kill the musical substance of Brahms’ music. Boyde’s interpretations reveal the structures of the composer’s works, enabling the soul of Brahms’ musical world to resound naturally.
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September 26th-October 2nd Revelation (Analekta AN 2 9974) Valérie Milot, harp The young Québec harpist Valérie Milot plays the harp with a style that challenges the clichés one associates with the instrument. The winner of numerous competitions, she was the first harpist in nearly 100 years to receive the Prix d’Europe, in 2008. On Revelation she takes the listener on a tour of the harp repertoire of the late nineteeth and twentieth centuries with works by Ginastera, Ravel, Godefroid, and others.
The Radio Reader with Dick Estell Elliot Allagash by Simon Rich Airs: September 8 to 27 Simon Rich, the youngestever writer for Saturday Night Live, dazzled readers with his absurdist sense of humor in his hilarious collections Ant Farm and Free-Range Chickens. Now Simon Rich comes Rich’s rollicking debut novel which explores the strangest, most twisted, and comically fraught terrain of them all: high school. Seymour Herson is the least popular student at Glendale, a private school in Manhattan. He’s painfully shy, physically inept, and his new nickname, “chunk style,” is in danger of entering common usage. But Seymour’s solitary existence comes to a swift end when he meets the new transfer student: Elliot Allagash, evil heir of America’s largest fortune. Elliot’s rampant delinquency has already gotten him expelled from dozens of prep schools around the country. But despite his best efforts, he can’t get himself thrown out of Glendale; his father has simply donated too much money. Bitter and bored, Elliot decides to amuse himself by taking up a challenging and expensive new hobby: transforming Seymour into the most popular student in the school. An unlikely friendship develops between the two loners as Elliot introduces Seymour to new concepts, such as power, sabotage, and vengeance. With Elliot as his diabolical strategist and investor, Seymour scores a spot on the basketball team, becomes class president, and ruthlessly destroys his enemies. Using sabotage, fraud, and a shocking amount of money, Elliot transforms Seymour into the most beloved boy in school. But what began as an amusing experiment ends in a way that neither of them could have expected.
Bloomington 103.7 fm • Columbus 100.7 fm • French Lick/West Baden 101.7 fm
Profiles Sunday at 7 p.m. September 5 – Canyon Sam Canyon Sam is a San Francisco-based writer and performance artist. Her creative nonfiction and articles have appeared in Shambhala Sun, Seattle Review, Turning Wheel, San Jose Mercury News and numerous anthologies. She also wrote on Tibetan issues for Agence France Presse. Following a year-long sojourn in her ancestral China and Tibet, she worked as an activist for Tibetan independence and human rights, and addressed a Congressional sub-committee hearing after Tiananmen Square. Her solo theater pieces explore contemporary issues through the lens of Buddhist practice, and she hosted and co-produced a cable television show on Tibet. Shana Ritter hosts.
Photo: Star Black
Photo: Andew Scalini
September 12 – Steve Reich From his early taped speech pieces It’s Gonna Rain and Come Out to his digital video opera Three Tales, Steve Reich’s style of minimalist music has embraced aspects of Western classical music, and the structures, harmonies, and rhythms of non-Western and American vernacular music, particularly jazz. His techniques include using tape loops to create phasing patterns in his early compositions, and the use of simple, audible processes to explore musical concepts. Reich’s compositions, marked by their use of repetitive figures, slow harmonic rhythm and canons, have significantly influenced contemporary music. Cary Boyce hosts. September 19 – Pharez Whitted Jazz trumpeter, composer, and educator Pharez Whitted has performed with such notables as Wynton and Branford Marsalis, John Mellencamp, The Temptations, The O’Jays, Lou Rawls, and Ramsey Lewis. An Indianapolis native, he received his musical education at DePauw University and the IU Jacobs School of Music and is director of jazz studies at Chicago State University. Whitted wrote, produced, and arranged on his two compact discs for Motown, Pharez Whitted and Mysterious Cargo, and co-produced the album People Make the World Go ’Round. David Brent Johnson hosts. September 26 – Eileen Myles Eileen Myles has written thousands of poems since she gave her first reading at New York City’s CBGB in 1974. She’s since read to audiences at colleges, performance spaces, and bookstores across America and around the world. Her books include the poetry collections include Sorry, Tree, Skies, on my way, the novels Chelsea Girls, Cool for You, and a collection of essays, The Importance of Being Iceland. She wrote the libretto for the opera Hell. She’s a professor emeritus of writing and literature at UC San Diego. Shana Ritter hosts.
Greensburg 98.9 fm • Kokomo 106.1 fm • Terre Haute 95.1 fm
Broadcasts from the IU Jacobs School of Music Airs at 7 p.m. Mondays, 10 a.m. Tuesdays, and 3 p.m. Fridays September 5th-11th IVES—Variations on “America”; IU Symphonic Wind Ensemble September 12th-18th WAGNER—DIE WALKÜRE: Farewell and Magic Fire Music; Roy Samuelson, baritone; IU Symphony September 19th-25th JANÁCEK—Allegretto; IU Brass Choir September 26th-October 2nd CORELLI—Concerto Grosso in g; IU Chamber Orchestra
Art Hilgart,1936-2010 Art Hilgart, host and producer of Broadway Revisited, the weekly series that showcases music of the American theater, died on August 3rd. He was 74. He lived in Kalamazoo, Michigan with his wife of 53 years, Carolyn. Hilgart once wrote that he began Broadway Revisited, “to share the pleasure I had over the decades from the superior popular songs that constitute one of our significant national art forms . . . and “to honor the past and Art Hilgart present creators of the form and help keep their contributions alive.” His interest in the musical theater began at age four when his parents took him to see The Student Prince. He involved himself with theater ever since, serving on boards associated with theater programs at Kalamazoo College and Western Michigan University, and as president of the award-winning Kalamazoo Civic Players. He also had a strong interest in jazz. He taught courses in jazz history and musical theater history at Kalamazoo College and Western Michigan University, wrote CD liner notes, and regularly reviewed jazz for The Journal of the International Association of Jazz Record Collectors. Hilgart studied music, but, he admitted, “I can’t play well enough to amuse anyone but myself.”
September 2010 / Directions in Sound / Page 7
Baby, We Were Meant for Each Other
Credit: Will O’Leary
Scott Simon’s new book is a warm and funny tale of adoption.
Scott Simon
In his new book, Scott Simon, host of Weekend Edition Saturday, tells the story of how he and his wife Caroline found true love with two tiny strangers from the other side of the world. It contains memorable moments, such as when the Simons first look at pictures of their daughters, and when the small girls are placed in their arms. Woven into the tale are the stories of other adoptive families. Some are famous and some are not, but each family’s saga captures facets of the miracle of adoption. The book doesn’t gloss over the rough spots. There are anxieties and tears along with hugs and smiles and the joy of making a family. This is a book that families who have adopted—or are considering adoption—will want to read for inspiration. But everyone can enjoy this story because, as Scott Simon writes, adoption can also help us understand what really makes families, and how and why we fall in love. Excerpt from Baby, We Were Meant for Each Other: My wife and I, not having had children in the traditional, Abraham-and-Sarah-begat manner, have learned to make jokes about the way we’ve had our family. (“Pregnant! Why would you do that? Those clothes! And you can’t drink for months!”) Jokes are sometimes the only sensible answer to some of the astoundingly impertinent questions people can ask, right in your children’s faces. “How much did they cost? Are they healthy? You know, you
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hear stories. So why did you go overseas? Not enough kids here?” But we cannot imagine anything more remarkable and marvelous than having a stranger put into your arms who becomes, in minutes, your flesh, your blood: your life. There are times when the adoption process is exhausting and painful and makes you want to scream. But, I am told, so does childbirth. w Raindrops rattled the roof of our small bus, seeped through the windows, and pitted the windshield with great wet gobs. “A sad day,” sighed Julie from Utah, while the cityscape of Nanchang, China, slabs of brown and gray with wet laundry flapping, rolled by our windows. Five sets of strangers were together on the bus, about to share one of the most intimate moments of our lives. We had Cheerios, wipes, and diapers in our hands. “A happy day,” Julie added, “but also sad,” and then we just listened to the ping of raindrops. A month before, this moment couldn’t have happened fast enough. Now it was here; and we weren’t ready. w A few weeks before, we had received a few photos in an envelope: a small girl with rosebud lips, quizzical eyebrows, and astonished eyes. She was about six months old at the time of the picture. A dossier prepared by Chinese adoption officials told us that she was smart, active, funny, hungry, energetic, and impatient (all of which remain a good description to this day). The officials had given her a name: Feng Jia-Mei. A little girl named Excellent-Beautiful. From the Feng township. We made copies of the photos, slipped them into our wallets, sent them around to friends and families, and doled them out like business cards, often to total strangers. “Jia-Mei Simon” was imprinted along the bottom, like the name under a photo in a class yearbook. Feng Jia-Mei, Jia-Mei. Excellent, Beautiful, Jia-Mei Simon. w Our small bus pulled up before a great gray file cabinet of a building in central Nanchang. So: this is where we are going to become parents. You walk into the building as a couple, and leave a few minutes later as a family. You walk in recollecting long romantic dinners, nights at the theater, and carefree vacations. You leave worrying about where to get diapers, milk, and Cheerios.
Caroline Richard and Elise
Grinning bureaucrats received us and showed us to a staircase. They took us down a flight and into a room. We saw smiling middle-aged women in white smocks holding babies, cooing, singing, and hefting them in their arms. We shucked raindrops from our shoes and coats. We checked cameras and cell phones. We looked at the women in the smocks and then realized—they held our children in their arms. We saw Elise. She was five months older than in the picture we had, but still recognizably the little girl in the thumbnail portrait. Pouty little mouth, tiny, endearing little downy baby duck’s head, fuzzy patch of hair, and amazed eyebrows, crying, steaming, red-faced, and bundled into a small, puffy pink coat. We blinked back tears and cleared our throats. “Feng Jia-Mei?” we asked softly. The woman in the white smock looked down at a tag—as if checking the size—and smiled. “Ah, yes. Feng Jia-Mei!” She put her into my wife’s arms. I tried to point a video camera, snap pictures, roll audio, and hug them, all at the same time. Our little girl’s tears fell like soft, fat, furious little jewels down her face. As Caroline lifted her slightly from her lap to hold her, Elise soaked her own tufted little legs with a hot surge of pee. And then, as we laughed, cried, and hugged her even more fiercely, Feng Jia-Mei opened her small robin’s mouth and burped up a geyser of phlegm, fear, and breakfast. Baby, baby, our baby. Excerpted from Baby, We Were Meant for Each Other by Scott Simon Copyright © 2010 by Scott Simon. Excerpted by permission of Random House, a division of Random House, Inc. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Bloomington 103.7 fm • Columbus 100.7 fm • French Lick/West Baden 101.7 fm
Top 7 things you can do to leave a legacy We Americans are generous—some 70 percent of us give to charity each year. When it comes to estate planning, however, less than six percent of us include non-profits in our plans. But just imagine the difference we’d make in our communities if more people donated to their favorite nonprofits! If you want to make a difference, consider charitable organizations in your estate planning—and remember that WFIU qualifies as a charitable nonprofit organization through the Indiana University Foundation. Below are seven easy things to consider when you plan or revise your estate. 1. Prepare a will. A will gives you control over your belongings. Without one, others may decide what happens to your possessions. 2. Leave a specific dollar amount or a percentage of the assets in your will to the non-profits that you value. 3. Consider using appreciated assets to fund current charitable gifts and planned gifts. These include, but aren’t limited to: stocks, bonds, certificates of deposit, real estate, vehicles, art and jewelry. Such gifts may even provide tax savings. 4. Name one or more non-profits as the beneficiary of your pension plan, IRA, or retirement plan. Doing so can avoid estate and income taxes (up to 70%) that might otherwise be due on the remainder of the funds you didn’t spend during your lifetime. 5. Name your favorite non-profits as the owner and/or beneficiary of a new or existing life insurance policy. 6. Call your favorite non-profits about special funds or programs you’d like to support. 7. Support a fund in memory of a loved one, such as naming a room after a deceased relative.
Dining updates:
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: Terre Haute Children’s Museum (#400) 523 Wabash Avenue Terre Haute 812-235-5548 terrehautechildrensmuseum.com Valid for two-for-one admission during the month.
Players Pub (#215) 424 South Walnut Street Bloomington 812-334-2080 theplayerspub.com Your MemberCard now valid any time. Uptown Café (#228) 102 East Kirkwood Avenue Bloomington 812-339-0900 Valid any time for dine-in only; value to $15. Offer expires 12/31/10. Waffle House Family Restaurant (#251) 530 North College Avenue Bloomington 812-336-1955 Now valid any time. Lodging updates: Country Elegance Bed & Breakfast SR 54 and Jct 45 Bloomfield Closed – offer expired Arts and attractions update:
Fastimes Indoor Karting (#29) 3455 North Harper Road Indianapolis 317-566-0066 ftik.com Valid for a two-for-one race. Subject to availability.
Little Theatre of Bedford (#244) 1704 Brian Lane Way Bedford 812-279-3009 ltb.org Valid any time for two-for-one admission. Online shopping update: Hayneedle Unlimited 11% discount on most purchases through membercard.com. Enter discount code MEMBERCARD when ordering.
For more information, contact Nancy Krueger at WTIU at 812-855-2934 or nkrueger@indiana.edu. or call the IU Foundation’s Gift Planning Department at 812-855-8311.
Greensburg 98.9 fm • Kokomo 106.1 fm • Terre Haute 95.1 fm
September 2010 / 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
Elliot Allagash begins September 8
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 BP Chicago Symphony Orchestra
Artworks Classical Music
Classical Music
Ether Game
Live! At the Concertgebouw
(Quiz show)
Chicago Chamber Musicians Harmonia (Early music)
10 11
Fresh Air
Pipedreams
Sounds Choral
The Record Shelf
(Organ music)
Classical Music
Piano Jazz The Big Bands Afterglow Beale Street Caravan
Mid.
Classical Music Overnight 1 AM 2 Schedule subject to change. See complete listing for details Page 10 / Directions in Sound / September 2010
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 8 9 10
This American Life Wait Wait . . . Don’t Tell Me! Says You! Classical Music San Francisco Opera 9-4
The Abduction from the Seraglio 9-11 Il Trittico 9-18 Il Trovatore 9-25 Tannhäuser
Living on Earth Classical Music
11 Noon
Saint Paul Sunday 1 PM
The Score Broadway Revisited
2 3
Weekend Radio Specials
4 5
All Things Considered 6
Sound Medicine
7
Profiles
The Thistle & Shamrock Afropop Worldwide
Music from the Hearts of Space
Saturday Feature/Radio Public Saturdays at 7:47 am (approx.)
Other Programs A Moment of Science Weekdays at 10:58 am and 4:55 pm Community Minute Weekdays at 9:00 am, 11:01 am and 3:25pm Saturdays and Sundays at 5:58 am and 11:58 am
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Nancy Krueger
Composers Datebook Mondays through Wednesdays at 3:25 pm Congressional Moments Fridays at 7:00 pm Sundays at 7:55 am and 6:04 pm Earth Eats Saturdays at 12:38 pm Focus on Flowers Thursdays and Fridays at 3:25 pm Saturdays and Sundays at 7:07 am
Perry Metz
Hometown with Tom Roznowski Saturdays at 8:00 pm Isla Earth Sundays at 11:23 am and 3:57 pm
Moment of Indiana History Mondays at 11:26 am Wednesdays at 7:58 pm Fridays at 8:02 pm
10
Don Glass
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
9
Mid.
Jazz with Bob Parlocha
Marketplace Morning Report Weekdays at 8:50 am
Journey with Nature Wednesdays at 9:03 am
Night Lights Classical Music
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
Folk Sampler Specials
Indiana Business News Weekdays at 8:50 am (immediately following Marketplace)
The Poets Weave Sundays at 11:46 am
Liz Leslie
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 12:06 pm and 10:07 pm Sundays at 11:52 am and 10:05 pm
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The Writer’s Almanac Weekdays at 7:01 pm
David Wood
Greensburg 98.9 fm • Kokomo 106.1 fm • Terre Haute 95.1 fm
September 2010 / Directions in Sound / Page 11
Community Events WFIU is the media sponsor for the following events. For more information on these and other activities on the calendar, visit wfiu.org Fourth Street Festival of the Arts and Crafts Saturday, September 4, 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Sunday, September 5, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Fourth and Grant Streets, Bloomington sites.google.com/site/4thstreetfestival/ For more than thirty years, the Fourth Street Festival of the Arts and Crafts has created an atmosphere of appreciation for artists and their work along the tree-shaded streets adjacent to Indiana University. The annual Labor Day weekend show hosts over 100 artisans from across the country who offer their work to the public. Music, dance, and other entertainment are provided on the Grant street stage during the two-day festival. Stop by the WFIU/WTIU booth to say hello and pick up your free reusable grocery bag.
Community Kitchen of Monroe County Fourth Annual Bloomington’s Chefs’ Challenge Sunday, September 5th Buskirk-Chumley Theater Doors at 6 p.m. Event at 7 p.m. monroecommunitykitchen.com Based on television’s popular Iron Chef, this culinary event will feature three local chefs who will have an hour to prepare a winning dish from a pantry of ingredients. A mystery ingredient will be revealed just before the competition begins. A CATS film crews will show close-ups of the fastpaced action on the theater’s big screen. Emcees will update the audience as the competition heats up and the celebrity judges will pick the top dish. Judging is based on the use of time, use of product, Page 12 / Directions in Sound / September 2010
including secret ingredient, presentation and taste. Two chefs will be chosen through to compete against last year’s winner, Dave Tallent of Restaurant Tallent. Tickets are $25, available at the BCT box office, the Community Kitchen, and all Bloomingfoods locations. There are a few “Bistro” seats available for $100, which include an up close view of the competition and a sampling of each dish prepared by the chefs. A cash bar and hors d’oeuvres from many local restaurants will be available.
Blues at the Crossroads draws artists from around the world and an audience from around the country. This year’s festival features headliners such as Lukas Nelson and Promise of the Real, W. T. Feaster, Cadillac Sky, the Guy Forsyth Band, and such favorites as Governor Davis and the Blues Ambassadors, and the Clayton Miller Band.
WonderLab Science Night Out: Sail the High Seas Friday, September 10 Bloomington Convention Center Doors open at 6 p.m. wonderlab.org 812-337-1337 ext. 14
Cadillac Sky
Porchlight Indiana Hoosier Hops and Harvest Sunday, September 12 Noon – 6 p.m. The Story Inn porchlightindiana.org
This gala benefit features treasure-laden silent and live auctions, bars open to those with pieces of eight, a hearty pirate feast with wine, and swashbuckling surprises. Guests must be 21 years or older to come aboard. Honorary Chairpersons are Felisha Legette-Jack, head coach, Indiana University Women’s Basketball, and David Jack. The benefit provides essential support from the community to help sustain WonderLab’s educational services for local schools and families. As a private nonprofit organization, WonderLab does not receive an annual appropriation of tax dollars. Tickets are $95 per person ($55 is tax-deductible) or $760 per table of eight ($440 is tax-deductible).
The first Hoosier Hops & Harvest Festival takes place on the grounds of the historic Story Inn. Local chefs Dan Orr, Dan Borders, and the Story Inn’s Erick and Jenny Virt will prepare an array of dishes using locally-produced ingredients. Jason Wilber and his band, and Tom Roznowski and the Living Daylights will perform. Rita Kohn, author of True Brew: A Guide to Craft Beer in Indiana and Douglas Wissing, author of Indiana: One Pint At a Time, local growers, and other guest artists will make appearances. Admission is $20 with a special fee of $10 for designated drivers. Tickets at Bloomingfoods and online from storyinn. com and porchlightindiana.com. Each adult attendee receives a commemorative glass plus four tokens good for four-ounce sample purchases from brewers. No outside food or beverages allowed on the Red Barn grounds.
Blues at the Crossroads Friday, Sept. 10 (gates open at 6 p.m.) Saturday, Sept. 11 (gates open at 11a.m.) Downtown Terre Haute Wabash Ave. and 7th Street bluesatthecrossroads.com Jason Wilber
Bloomington 103.7 fm • Columbus 100.7 fm • French Lick/West Baden 101.7 fm
Key to abbreviations. Saturday, September 18th Columbus North High School, 7:30 p.m.
Courtesy of Indiana University
Courtesy of Indiana University
The Concerto after Glière for Alto Saxophone and Orchestra by David Canfield is a colorful tour de force dedicated to master saxophonist Eugene Rousseau, professor of Music at the IU music school for many years. This melodic work will be performed by Rousseau’s protégé, virtuoso saxophonist Kenneth Tse. Also on the program are Brahms’ lush masterpiece Symphony No. 1 in C Minor, and Café Neon: Fantasy on Greek Songs and Dances by Greek-American composer Steven Karidoyanes, a work that is in turn hauntingly beautiful, infectious, and seductive.
Eugene Rousseau
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.
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Columbus Indiana Philharmonic Sax In The City
There’s also a 1940s-style live radio show, The Wizard of Oz re-created in seven minutes, and a salute to Motown’s Temptations. Season tickets are $40, single tickets $20. Full-time students admitted free, but must have a ticket. Ticket locations: Comprehensive Planning, Kokomo; Big Ben Coffee, Forest Park, Kokomo; The Windmill Grill; Herbst Pharmacy, Kokomo or Greentown.
Face the Music by Myles Mellor
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.
There are fifteen musically-related names and terms hidden in this word search puzzle. They may be across, down, backwards, or diagonal. How many can you find?
1 Wednesday
Kenneth Tse
Join us before the concert at 6:40 p.m. for Musically Speaking, a spirited and informative conversation led by Music Director David Bowden. Guests Eugene Rousseau, Kenneth Tse, and David Canfield will share their ideas and anecdotes. Open to all ticket holders.
9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH GEORGE WALKER Brahms, Chabrier, and Rachmaninoff 7:09 PM EVENING CLASSICAL MUSIC Benda, Handel, and Palestrina 8:00 PM LIVE! AT THE CONCERTGEBOUW Andris Nelsons/Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra Rafal Blechaz, piano DEBUSSY—Prélude à l’après-midi d’un faune SAINT-SAËNS—Piano Concerto No. 2 TCHAIKOVSKY—Symphony No. 6, Pathétique
Kokomo Community Concerts The Great American Songbook Wednesday, September 22 7:30 p.m. Kokomo High School Auditorium South Campus kokomocommunityconcerts.org 765-210-0686
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Classics from Rodgers and Hammerstein, Harold Arlen, and the Gershwins are revamped into dazzling production numbers performed by a cast of eight performers and a jazz trio. The tunes range from “Over the Rainbow” and “Route 66” to “Bridge Over Troubled Waters,” as well as songs from hit makers such as Michael Bublé, Ray Charles, and Billy Joel—a musical moment for every family member.
Sudoku Solution Solution to
Greensburg 98.9 fm • Kokomo 106.1 fm • Terre Haute 95.1 fm
Rafal Blechaz
11:09 PM LATE NIGHT CONTEMPORARY MUSIC Koechlin and Andriessen
2 Thursday 9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH GEORGE WALKER Morkov, Britten, and Bernstein September 2010 / Directions in Sound / Page 13
Credit: Randy Beach
7:09 PM EVENING CLASSICAL MUSIC Grainger, Elgar, and Purcell 8:00 PM CHICAGO CHAMBER MUSICIANS STRAVINSKY—Three Pieces for String Quartet BARTÓK—Contrasts for Violin, Piano and Clarinet BEETHOVEN—Trio in D Major, Op. 70, No. 1, Ghost 9:00 PM HARMONIA The Frottola and Renaissance Love Harmonia explores themes of love found in the popular Renaissance song known as the frottola, Robert Green joins us to talk about the French Baroque hurdy-gurdy, and Nicholas McGegan directs in the world-premiere recording of a Mendelssohn arrangement of Handel’s Acis and Galatea.
Nicholas McGegan
3 Friday 9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH GEORGE WALKER Carisimi, Byrd, and Mozart 8:00 PM MARIAN McPARTLAND’S PIANO JAZZ Vijay Iyer with Guest Host Arturo O’Farrill The multifaceted Vijay Iyer’s résumé includes pianist, composer, bandleader, writer and doctorial candidate in physics. Last year his Vijay Iyer Trio won a treasure trove of accolades for the album Historicity. In this session, Iyer performs Geri Allen’s “I’m All Smiles,” and duets with guest host Arturo O’Farrill on the bluesy Iyer original “Abundance.” 10:09 PM AFTERGLOW Stardust Melodies Part Two
4 Saturday 7:10 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC Lawes, Obrecht, and Mozart 1:00 PM SAN FRANCISCO OPERA MOZART—The Abduction from the Seraglio Starring Mary Dunleavy, Anna Christy, Matthew Polenzani, Andrew Bidlack, Peter Rose, and Charles Shaw Robinson. Cornelius Meister conducts. 8:00 PM HOMETOWN WITH TOM ROZNOWSKI Time For One Cup Page 14 / Directions in Sound / September 2010
8:05 PM THE FOLK SAMPLER Catch That Train: Remembering the old time trains 9:05 PM THE THISTLE AND SHAMROCK Dáithí Sproule Meet one of the gentle architects of today’s Irish music sound. Fiona and an intimate audience gathered at the Swannanoa Gathering during its Traditional Song Week to enjoy musical insights, conversation, and song with Dáithí Sproule, as he talked about working with Skara Brae, Liz Carroll Trian and Altan.
Dáithí Sproule
11:00 PM NIGHT LIGHTS Work Songs in Jazz Jazz historian Ted Gioia joins us for this Labor Day week special about the influence of work songs on jazz.
5 Sunday 7:06 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC Purcell, Ockeghem, and Gottschalk 12:00 PM SAINT PAUL SUNDAY Pearls “Baroque” comes from the Portugese word originally used to describe pearls prized for their misshapen and often fantastic forms. These rarities helped inspire a style of architecture that took extravagant license with inherited traditions and eventually also came to refer to musical forces that did the same. This week, the masterful performers of REBEL plunge into Baroque repertoire with all the zest their name implies. They trace its development from early origins in Mozart and Bach through and beyond Georg Philipp Telemann’s thrilling stylistic juxtapositions. We’ll also hear lesser known pearls of Francesco Mancini and Johann Joachim Quantz. 4:00 PM ENGINEERS OF THE NEW MILLENNIUM: DREAM JOBS This program profiles engineers around the world with challenging and exciting jobs that harness the imagination. 7:00 PM PROFILES Canyon Sam 8:00 PM THE CHANGING WORLD “The Crescent and the Cross, Part 2” 9:00 PM CENTER STAGE FROM WOLF TRAP
6 Monday 9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH GEORGE WALKER Victoria, Debussy, and Mudara 7:09 PM EVENING CLASSICAL MUSIC Giordani, Ives, and Vivaldi 8:00 PM CHICAGO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA Storytelling and dance music infuse this program conducted by Esa-Pekka Salonen and Charles Dutoit. FALLA—Three Dances from El amor brujo BATES—Music from Underground Spaces RAVEL—Mother Goose RAVEL—La Valse RIMSKY-KORSAKOV—Scheherazade (Charles Dutoit, conductor) 10:00 PM PIPEDREAMS Going On Record A late-summer review of an international selection of recently issued compact discs devoted to the King of Instruments
7 Tuesday 9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH GEORGE WALKER Bernstein, Ives, and Lizotte 7:09 PM EVENING CLASSICAL MUSIC Muffat and Tallis 8:00 PM ETHER GAME “Loves Me, Loves Me Not” Ether Game weighs its romantic alternatives. 10:00 PM SOUNDS CHORAL The College Choir Returns We’ll take the next two programs to discuss the making of a choral CD with Joe Miller, Chairman of Choral Studies at Westminster Choir College.
Joe Miller
8 Wednesday 9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH GEORGE WALKER Prokofiev, Schumann, and Fiala 7:09 PM EVENING CLASSICAL MUSIC Telemann, Weekles, Giuliani 8:00 PM LIVE! AT THE CONCERTGEBOUW Vasily Petrenko/Netherlands Radio Philharmonic Orchestra
Bloomington 103.7 fm • Columbus 100.7 fm • French Lick/West Baden 101.7 fm
Yvette Bonner, soprano; Leonidas Kavakos, violin; Irina Tschistjakova, alto; Netherlands Radio Choir FRANSSENS—Grace BEETHOVEN—Violin Concerto in D Major, Op. 61 PROKOFIEV—Cantata, Alexander Nevski, Op. 78 11:09 PM LATE NIGHT CONTEMPORARY MUSIC Godowsky, Andriessen, and Pärt
9 Thursday 9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH GEORGE WALKER Heinichen, Gossec, and Fauré 7:09 PM EVENING CLASSICAL MUSIC Rorem, Ravel, and Heinichen 8:00 PM CHICAGO CHAMBER MUSICIANS TCHAIKOVSKY—Excerpt from Sextet for Strings in D Major, Op. 70, Souvenir de Florence TCHAIKOVSKY—Trio in A Minor for Piano, Violin and Cello, Op. 50 9:00 PM HARMONIA New Music/Early Music: The New Brandenburgs, pt. 1 Harmonia explores the Orpheus Chamber Orchestra’s commissions inspired by the Brandenburg Concertos of J.S. Bach, a look at prominent countertenors from the 1990s, and Rolf Lislevand performs music of the Italian Renaissance in the featured recording “Diminutito.”
10 Friday 9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH GEORGE WALKER Bach, Puccini, and Schumann 8:00 PM MARIAN McPARTLAND’S PIANO JAZZ Jean Bach Jean Bach was nominated for an Academy Award for her film A Great Day in Harlem, which documented the gathering of 57 jazz greats on a Harlem front stoop for an Esquire magazine shoot in 1959. Marian McPartland was there, standing right next to friend Mary Lou Williams. Bach remembers the legacy of this iconic image, including those who have appeared on Piano Jazz: Mary Lou Williams, Dizzy Gillespie, Benny Golson, Hank Jones, Roy Eldridge, Milt Hinton, and Gerry Mulligan. 10:09 PM AFTERGLOW Swing It, Lady, Swing: Billie Holiday with the Big Bands Music that singer Billie Holiday recorded with Artie Shaw, Count Basie, Duke Ellington and others in a big-band format
11 Saturday 7:10 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC Handel and Dunstable 1:00 PM SAN FRANCISCO OPERA PUCCINI—Il Trittico IL TABBARO stars Patricia Racette, Brandon Jovanovich, Paolo Gavanelli, Catherine Cook, Andrea Silvestrelli, Matthew O’Neill, Tamara Warpinsky, David Lomeli, and Thomas Glenn.
Thomas Adès’s Traced Overhead, a work of otherworldly beauty that she commissioned herself. In different ways, each of the works demands technical virtuosity and emotional agility—powers Ms. Cooper possesses in abundance. Perhaps above all she reveals the music from the inside out, taking us with her as she goes, and leaving no treasure concealed. 4:00 PM AMERICA ABROAD “Young and Restless: Youth Identity in the Arab World” 7:00 PM PROFILES Steve Reich 8:00 PM THE CHANGING WORLD “Young Voices” 9:00 PM CENTER STAGE FROM WOLF TRAP
13 Monday Patricia Racette
Brandon Jovanovich
SUOR ANGELICA stars Patricia Racette, Ewa Podles, Rebekah Camm, Catherine Cook, Daveda Karanas, Meredith Arwady, Leah Crocetto, Heidi Melton, Virginia Pluth, Daniela Mack, Mary Finch, Tamara Wapinsky, Dvora Djoraev, Claire Kelm, Rachelle Perry, and Sally Mouzon. GIANNI SCHICCHI stars Paolo Gavanelli, Patricia Racette, David Lomeli, Rebekah Camm, Catherine Cook, Meredith Arwady, Thomas Glenn, Austin Kness, Jake Gardner, Andrea Silvestrelli, Levi Hernandez, Bojan Knezevic, Kyle Reidy, Kenneth Kellogg, and Valery Portnov. Patrick Summers will conduct the performance. 8:00 PM HOMETOWN WITH TOM ROZNOWSKI Getting My Way 8:05 PM THE FOLK SAMPLER Producer’s Choice: Let me play you a song 9:05 PM THE THISTLE AND SHAMROCK What’s New? Fiona opens some recent deliveries in the Thistle mailbox and plays them on the radio for the first time. 11:00 PM NIGHT LIGHTS Jazz From Monterey Historic performances from the famous jazz festival by Miles Davis, Thelonious Monk, Shirley Horn and others
12 Sunday 7:06 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC Cavalieri, Elgar, and Morley 12:00 PM SAINT PAUL SUNDAY Traced Overhead Fresh from a triumphant recital at Carnegie Hall, pianist Imogen Cooper returns to Saint Paul Sunday this week for music of Haydn, Schumann, and the final movement of
Greensburg 98.9 fm • Kokomo 106.1 fm • Terre Haute 95.1 fm
9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH GEORGE WALKER Boismortier, Brahms, and Soler 7:09 PM EVENING CLASSICAL MUSIC Wagner and Biber 8:00 PM CHICAGO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA Mexican conductor Carlos Miguel Prieto makes his subscription debut with the CSO. REVUELTAS—Suite from Redes YANOV-YANOVSKY—Cello Concerto [world premiere; CSO commission] (Yo-Yo Ma, cello) SHOSTAKOVICH—Symphony No. 6 in B Minor, Op. 54 WILLIAMS—Memoirs of a Geisha for Cello and Orchestra (Yo-Yo Ma, cello)
Carlos Miguel Prieto
10:00 PM PIPEDREAMS Lively Moments A bi-coastal selection of excerpts from concerts in California, North Carolina, and Minnesota.
14 Tuesday 9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH GEORGE WALKER Dukas, Wagner, and Diamond 7:09 PM EVENING CLASSICAL MUSIC Benjamin Britten September 2010 / Directions in Sound / Page 15
8:00 PM ETHER GAME “Don’t Quit Your Day Job” Ether Game looks at composers who took other jobs to make ends meet. 10:00 PM SOUNDS CHORAL The College Choir Returns, Part II We continue our talk with Joe Miller from Westminster Choir College, and hear about the College’s efforts to reach out to the broader choral community.
15 Wednesday 9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH GEORGE WALKER Ives, Boismortier, and McTee 7:09 PM EVENING CLASSICAL MUSIC Bach, Josquin, and Mozart 8:00 PM LIVE! AT THE CONCERTGEBOUW Mariss Jansons/Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra WAGNER—Overture to Tannhäuser WAGNER—Movements from Götterdämmerung SHOSTAKOVICH—Symphony No. 10 in E Minor, Op. 93 11:09 PM LATE NIGHT CONTEMPORARY MUSIC Britten, Andriessen, and Ward
of the roots of jazz. As a full-time educator, Stiles has been presenting the music of Mary Lou Williams for the past decade. She also knows how to swing on a Monk tune or two. On this session with guest host Jon Weber, Stiles performs her tunes “Spherical” and “Hurly-Burly,” and a duet on “Jitterbug Waltz.” 10:09 PM AFTERGLOW Doris Day and André Previn’s Duet Afterglow’s monthly CD feature spotlights singer Day and pianist Previn’s 1961 studio meeting. We’ll also hear music from Frank Sinatra, Melody Gardot, Stan Getz, Tony DeSare and more.
18 Saturday 7:10 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC Vivaldi, Weelkes, and Machaut 1:00 PM SAN FRANCISCO OPERA VERDI— Il Trovatore Starring Marco Berti, Sondra Radvanovsky, Stephanie Blythe, Dmitri Hvorostovsky, Burak Bilgili, Renee Tatum, Andrew Bidlack, Dale Tracy, and Bojan Knezevic. Nicola Luisotti conducts the performance.
20 Monday
17 Friday 9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH GEORGE WALKER Bach, Schumann, and Verdi 8:00 PM MARIAN McPARTLAND’S PIANO JAZZ Joan Stiles with guest host Jon Weber Pianist Joan Stiles is known for her brilliant playing informed by a deep understanding Page 16 / Directions in Sound / September 2010
Photo: Pavel Antonov
16 Thursday 9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH GEORGE WALKER Bach, Puccini, and Debussy 7:09 PM EVENING CLASSICAL MUSIC Strauss, Busnois, and Haydn 8:00 PM CHICAGO CHAMBER MUSICIANS BEETHOVEN—String Quartet in D Major, Op. 18, No. 3 NIELSEN—Quintet for Winds, Op. 43 9:00 PM HARMONIA The Mexican Baroque A special Harmonia devoted to the baroque music of Mexico. Works by Gaspar Fernandes and Juan Gutiérrez de Padilla, a look at the Jesús Sánchez Garza Collection of Spanish colonial manuscripts, and Lee Santana leading Ensemble Continuo in an unusual take on the guitar music of Santiago de Murcia.
adventurers of eighth blackbird delight in every chance they get. This week eighth blackbird brings us two works that take us a few steps further. Frederic Rzewski’s Les Moutons de Panurge uses hopscotchlike addition and repetition to spark ever changing patterns of sound and line: each performance of it generates an entirely new composition. And in his Fantasy Études, Fred Lerdahl elaborates simple themes into variations of increasing color and richness, showing us in the process how eighth blackbird’s assorted textures can interact in countless different ways. The blackbirds animate both with characteristic brilliance and verve, as they do the two works that complete their program, Derek Bermel’s Tied Shifts and Ashley Fure’s Inescapable. 4:00 PM SNAP JUDGMENT “The Man in the White Hat” Stories of people who rely on the kindness of strangers to get them out of whatever mess they happen to be in. 7:00 PM PROFILES Pharez Whitted 8:00 PM THE CHANGING WORLD “China: Shaking the World, Part 1” 9:00 PM CENTER STAGE FROM WOLF TRAP
Sondra Radvanovsky
8:00 PM HOMETOWN WITH TOM ROZNOWSKI Dribble Glass 8:05 PM THE FOLK SAMPLER Going Places: An imaginary trip 9:05 PM THE THISTLE AND SHAMROCK Pulse of the City Our music often evokes wild landscapes and open spaces, but this week we listen to music from some of our well-loved and wellworn cities. 11:00 PM NIGHT LIGHTS Space Age Jazz Music from Booker Ervin, George Russell, Duke Ellington, Sun Ra and others
19 Sunday 7:06 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC Victoria, Chopin, and Dowland 12:00 PM SAINT PAUL SUNDAY Infinities Contained Great music always inspires new directions and interpretations—a freedom the six
9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH GEORGE WALKER Brahms, Pleyel, and Schumann 7:09 PM EVENING CLASSICAL MUSIC Handel, Janácek, and Couperin 8:00 PM CHICAGO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA The CSO presents the U.S. premiere of a work by Detlev Glanert followed by a performance of Mahler’s Symphony No. 5. Semyon Bychkov conducts. VIVALDI—Piccolo Concerto in C (Jennifer Gunn, piccolo; Harry Bicket, conductor) GLANERT—Theatrum bestiarum, Songs and Dances for Large Orchestra (US Premiere) MAHLER—Symphony No. 5 (Semyon Bychkov, conductor)
Detlev Glanert
10:00 PM PIPEDREAMS A Dozen Will Do Modest instruments can achieve maximal satisfaction, as shown by these organs which possess no more than twelve stops each.
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21 Tuesday
24 Friday
9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH GEORGE WALKER Tartini, Janácek, and Hebden 7:09 PM EVENING CLASSICAL MUSIC Vivaldi and Cornish 8:00 PM ETHER GAME “Gussying Up” Ether Game gets all neat and pretty. 10:00 PM SOUNDS CHORAL The Children’s Choir Returns We look at upcoming seasons of ensembles such as the Young People’s Chorus of New York City.
9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH GEORGE WALKER Rossini, Debussy, and Wagner 8:00 PM MARIAN McPARTLAND’S PIANO JAZZ Marian Selects: Helen Merrill Vocalist Helen Merrill got her start singing with the Earl Hines Band and recorded an acclaimed album with Clifford Brown, Oscar Pettiford and Milt Hinton. She worked with other greats and lived in Italy and Japan before returning to the U.S. in the 1970s. In this 1995 session, Merrill joins host Marian McPartland for duets on “Home on the Range” and “Don’t Explain.” 10:09 PM AFTERGLOW What’s New Our monthly rundown of recent releases and reissues
22 Wednesday 9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH GEORGE WALKER Ravel, Brahms, and Barber 7:09 PM EVENING CLASSICAL MUSIC Benda, Salas y Castro, and Dufay 8:00 PM LIVE! AT THE CONCERTGEBOUW Jaap van Zweden/Netherlands Radio Chamber Philharmonic Enrico Pace, piano TCHAIKOVSKY—Suite No. 4 in G Major, Op. 61 RACHMANINOV—Rhapsody on a Theme by Paganini, Op. 43 RAVEL—Ma mère l’oye 11:09 PM LATE NIGHT CONTEMPORARY MUSIC Weber, Andriessen, and Knussen
23 Thursday 9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH GEORGE WALKER Boismortier, Haydn, and Brahms 7:09 PM EVENING CLASSICAL MUSIC Boccherini, Telemann, and Susato 8:00 PM CHICAGO CHAMBER MUSICIANS SCHEIDT—Centone Canzon Gallican ADOLPHE—Excerpts from Tyrannosaurus Sue BRAHMS—Trio in E-Flat Major, Op. 40 WAGNER—Siegfried Idyll 9:00 PM HARMONIA Handel’s Harp Harmonia explores George Frideric Handel’s harp music with baroque harp virtuoso Maxine Eilander. The Toronto Consort performs works for Queen Elizabeth I and the Spanish ensemble More Hispano improvises on music from the Spanish and Italian Renaissance.
25 Saturday 7:10 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC Telemann, Henry VIII, and Mozart 1:00 PM SAN FRANCISCO OPERA WAGNER—Tannhäuser Starring Peter Seiffert, Maria Schnitzer, Petra Lang, James Rutherford, Eric Halfvarson, Gregory Reinhart, and Stefan Margita. Donald Runnicles conducts. 8:00 PM HOMETOWN WITH TOM ROZNOWSKI Intended Consequences 8:05 PM THE FOLK SAMPLER All kinds of blues, from happy to sad 9:05 PM THE THISTLE AND SHAMROCK Hands Across the Water This week’s music is all-American, revealing the quality and range of music with Celtic roots that thrives in communities across the United States. 11:00 PM NIGHT LIGHTS Brothers Music from brother teams in jazz such as Thad, Elvin, and Hank Jones, Cannonball and Nat Adderley, and Wes, Buddy and Monk Montgomery.
26 Sunday 7:06 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC Handel, Purcell, and Rachmaninoff 12:00 PM SAINT PAUL SUNDAY Revelations On the heels of its 40th anniversary, the Guarneri String Quartet returns to Saint Paul Sunday with music by Mozart, Dvorák and Ravel—works that reveal the heart and soul of this revered ensemble as movingly today as they did when it first performed them. Each composer’s distinct voice shines, but refracted through a sound and mastery
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wholly the Guarneri’s own. After more than four decades, both remain undimmed. 4:00 PM IN FOCUS “Crime/Law Enforcement/Public Safety” 4:30 PM HUMANKIND “Mia Farrow” An interview with actress Mia Farrow, who, since her appointment as a UNICEF Good Will Ambassador in 2000, has campaigned tirelessly for the rights of children affected by violence. 7:00 PM PROFILES Eileen Myles 8:00 PM THE CHANGING WORLD “China: Shaking the World, Part 2” 9:00 PM CENTER STAGE FROM WOLF TRAP
27 Monday 9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH GEORGE WALKER Godefroid, Hanson, and Gibbons 7:09 PM EVENING CLASSICAL MUSIC Galles, Corelli, and Henry VIII 8:00 PM CHICAGO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA In his first concerts as music director designate in January 2009, Riccardo Muti conducts the CSO in Verdi’s Requiem; and Sir Mark Elder conducts a sacred work from the CSO’s spring Dvorák Festival. VERDI—Messa da Requiem (Barbara Frittoli, soprano; Olga Borodina, mezzosoprano; Mario Zeffiri, tenor; Ildar Abdrazakov, bass; Chicago Symphony Chorus, Duain Wolfe, director; Riccardo Muti, conductor) DVORÁK—Te Deum (Patricia Racette, soprano; Philip Cutlip, baritone, Chicago Symphony Chorus, Duain Wolfe, director; Sir Mark Elder, conductor) 10:00 PM PIPEDREAMS From Colleges, Castles and Cathedrals The splendid sounds of organs in the United Kingdom resonate with pleasurable grandeur.
28 Tuesday 9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH GEORGE WALKER Copland, Corelli, and Haydn 7:09 PM EVENING CLASSICAL MUSIC Heinichen and Palestrina 8:00 PM ETHER GAME “Faster than a Speeding Bullet” Ether Game jumps skyscrapers in a single bound, with music about superhuman feats. 10:00 PM SOUNDS CHORAL The Professional Choir Returns We hear the brilliant work of the Phoenix Chorale and Conspirare, and we’ll speak with Joshua Habermann from the Santa Fe Desert Chorale.
September 2010 / Directions in Sound / Page 17
29 Wednesday
Iván Fischer
11:09 PM LATE NIGHT CONTEMPORARY MUSIC Godowsky, Andriessen, and Hoiby
30 Thursday 9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH GEORGE WALKER Mozart, Schumann, and Boismortier 7:09 PM EVENING CLASSICAL MUSIC Mozart, Bach, and Gluck 9:00 PM HARMONIA Cançonièr and The Black Dragon Harmonia explores medieval music from the time of Vlad Dracula with the ensemble Cançonièr, Imagem da Melancolia performs works from the Portuguese Renaissance, and harpsichordist Robert Hill plays Bach’s viola da gamba sonatas on the lautenwerk with gambist Ekkehard Weber. 10:00 PM INDIANAPOLIS ONTHE-AIR SCHUBERT—Symphony No. 8 (Unfinished) HINDEMITH—Mathis der Maler Raymond Leppard, conductor
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The Tenth Inning
PROGRAMMING AND OPERATING SUPPORT Indiana University
Tuesday & Wednesday, September 28 & 29 at 8pm
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Photo: Budapest Festival Orchestra
9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH GEORGE WALKER Borodin, Hindemith, and Handel 7:09 PM EVENING CLASSICAL MUSIC Biber, Taverner, and Hummel 8:00 PM LIVE! AT THE CONCERTGEBOUW Iván Fischer/Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra BARTÓK—Music for Strings, Percussion and Celesta TCHAIKOVSKY—Symphony No. 4, Op. 36
Jeff Blauser of the Atlanta Braves slides into home plate as the Philadelphia Phillies Darren Daulton applies a tag in a 1993 playoff game.
Thousands of bats, three home run records and one “curse” have been broken since Ken Burns last explored the history of America’s national pastime with his landmark 1994 PBS series Baseball. The Tenth Inning tells the tumultuous story of America’s national pastime from the early 1990s to the present day, introducing an unforgettable array of players, teams and fans, celebrating the game’s resilience and enduring appeal, and showcasing both extraordinary accomplishments—and devastating losses and disappointments. The film highlights dramatic developments that transformed the game: the crippling 1994 strike that left many fans disillusioned with their heroes; the increasing dominance of Latino and Asian players who turned baseball into a truly international game; baseball’s skyrocketing profits, thanks to new stadiums, interleague play, and the wild card; the rise of a new Yankee Dynasty; the Red Sox’ historic World Series victory; the astonishing feats of Mark McGwire, Sammy Sosa and Barry Bonds; and the revelations about performance-enhancing drugs. Combining extraordinary highlights, stunning still photographs, popular music of the period, and insightful commentary by players, managers, experts and fans, The Tenth Inning interweaves the story of the national pastime with the story of America. In an age of globalization, deregulation and speculation, the film demonstrates that baseball has continued to be a mirror of the country—at its best and at its worst. The film will air 16 years after the original Emmy Award-winning, nine-part documentary series Baseball debuted in 1994 during the players’ strike. The original series was seen by more than 43 million viewers, making it the most-watched program in PBS history.
Page 18 / Directions in Sound / September 2010
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