May 2011 – Radio Guide

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May 2011

W IU wfiu.org

Jazz saxophonist

Grace Kelly

Also this month: • Simon & Garfunkel: Bridge Over Troubled Water • Intelligence Squared: Scrap the two-party system? • Radiolab: Falling • Artist of the Month: Elisabeth Wright . . . and more!

— on —

Marian McPartland’s Piano Jazz Friday, May 27, 8 p.m.


May 2011 Vol. 59, No­­­­­­. 5

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 John Bailey—Director of Marketing and Communications Katie Becker—Corporate Development Joe Bourne—Producer/Jazz Director Cary Boyce—Operations Director Annie Corrigan—Multi Media Producer/Announcer 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 Alex Roy—WFIU/WTIU News Producer 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 David Wood—Music Director Marianne Woodruff—Corporate Development Eva Zogorski—Membership Director

Jazz Saxophone Phenom Grace Kelly on Piano Jazz

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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: You can 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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Eighteen-year-old wunderkind Grace Kelly —a saxophonist, singer, songwriter, composer, and arranger who’s lighting up the jazz music world—is the guest on the Friday, May 27th edition of Marian McPartland’s Piano Jazz. Kelly has performed over 500 concerts worldwide as the leader of her own quintet. She has recorded or performed with many Phil Woods and Grace Kelly notable musicians including Dave Brubeck, Wynton Marsalis, the Boston Pops, and others. She has appeared in concert throughout the world and at such notable venues as Carnegie Hall, the Newport Jazz Festival, and the Lionel Hampton Jazz Festival. Kelly has recorded six CDs, her latest being Mood Changes, the fifth release on her PAZZ label. The album mixes six standards with four Kelly originals and features her working quintet (Jason Palmer, trumpet; Doug Johnson, piano; John Lockwood, basses; Jordan Perlson or Terri Lyne Carrington, drums), with guest appearances by guitarist Adam Rogers and trombonist Hal Crook. Trumpeter Wynton Marsalis was so impressed with Kelly’s three-night stand as guest of the Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra that he invited her to join the ensemble at the Kennedy Center’s Eisenhower Theater in Washington, D.C. for a Martin Luther King, Jr. Day/Inauguration Eve concert. Harry Connick, Jr. heard Kelly in a master class on a December afternoon and brought her on stage to sit in with his band that night. The Boston Music Awards declared her the city’s Outstanding Jazz Act, and the 2009 DownBeat Critics Poll added to her growing list of accolades by naming her one of the “Alto Saxophone Rising Stars,” the youngest ever to be so named. Kelly’s 2005 two-CD set Times Too found her expanding her musical palette while interpreting such classics as “Isfahan” and “`Round Midnight” with the gravitas of a veteran. The title track of her 2006 disc, Every Road I Walked, garnered the first of her ASCAP Foundation awards and an invitation to perform with the Boston Pops. Her mother’s strong classical music background led Kelly to begin piano lessons at age six, and she began studying saxophone at age 10. She currently studies or has studied with George Garzone, Lee Konitz, Allan Chase and others. She also plays piano, soprano and tenor saxophone, flute, and some drums. Kelly is currently is a junior at Boston’s Berklee College of Music, which she began attending on full scholarship at age 16. Kelly has garnered accolades from artists she revered growing up, sitting in with the likes of the late Frank Morgan and Phil Woods. “I gave her my hat, that’s how good she sounded,” Woods said.“She’s the first alto player to get one.”

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The Santa Fe Chamber Music Festival

bass; Kathleen McIntosh, harpsichord Franck: Piano Quintet in F Minor, M. 7 (1878-79) Cho-Liang Lin, violin; Jennifer Frautschi, violin; Teng Li, viola; Peter Stumpf, cello; Jeremy Denk, piano

Simon & Garfunkel: Bridge Over Troubled Water Sunday, May 1, 8 p.m.

Sundays at 9 p.m. Sunday, May 15 The thirteen-week Santa Fe Chamber Music Festival series continues this month with these five episodes. Renowned for its innovative spirit, inspirational performances, and commitment to artistic excellence, the festival is among the oldest in the nation and considered among the world’s preeminent musical gatherings. These broadcasts present performances primarily from the Santa Fe Chamber Music Festival’s 2010 season, recorded by Grammy-winning engineer Matthew Snyder. Kerry Frumkin hosts the series with commentary from Santa Fe Chamber Music Festival artistic director Marc Neikrug and remarks from many of the players. Sunday, May 1 Mieczyslaw Weinberg: Sonata for Clarinet & Piano, Op. 28 (1945) David Shifrin, clarinet; Anne-Marie McDermott, piano Schumann: Piano Quartet in E-Flat Major, Op. 47 (1842) Opus One: Ida Kavafian, violin; Steven Tenenbom, viola; Peter Wiley, cello; AnneMarie McDermott, piano

Joseph Joachim: Hebrew Melodies (On Poems of Byron) for Viola and Piano, Op. 9 (1855) Nokuthula Ngwenyama, viola; Marc Neikrug, piano W.A. Mozart: Clarinet Quintet in A Major, K. 581 (1789) David Shifrin, clarinet; Orion String Quartet: Todd Phillips, violin; Daniel Phillips, violin; Steven Tenenbom, viola; Timothy Eddy, cello Sunday, May 22 Moritz Moszkowski: Suite in G Minor Op. 71, for Two Violins and Piano (ca. 1900-1910) Giora Schmidt, violin; Bella Hristova, violin; Victor Santiago Asuncion, piano Reynaldo Hahn: Piano Quintet in F-Sharp Minor (1921) Cho-Liang Lin, violin; Jennifer Gilbert, violin; Hsin-Yin Huang, viola; Peter Stumpf, cello; Jeremy Denk, piano

Victor Santiago Asuncion

Sunday, May 29

Anne-Marie McDermott

Sunday, May 8 J.S. Bach: Brandenburg Concerto No. 3 in G Major, BWV 1048 (1721) Helen Nightengale, violin; Bella Hristova, violin; Giora Schmidt, violin; Lily Francis, viola; Michael Tree, viola; L. P. How, viola; Eric Kim, cello; Gary Hoffman, cello; Lynn Harrell, cello; Marji Danilow,

In 1969, Simon and Garfunkel recorded what would be their fifth and final studio album as a duo. Widely considered to be their masterpiece, the duo reportedly spent more than 800 hours over a two-year span recording Bridge Over Troubled Water.

Greensburg 98.9 fm • Kokomo 106.1 fm • Terre Haute 95.1 fm

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Haydn: String Trio in G Major, Op. 53, No. 1, H. XVI: 40 (1784) Jennifer Frautschi, violin; Nokuthula Ngwenyama, viola; Ralph Kirshbaum, cello Brahms: Piano Quartet No. 3 in C Minor, Op. 60 (1855-75) William Preucil, violin; Nokuthula Ngwenyama, viola; Ralph Kirshbaum, cello; Jon Kimura Parker, piano

Released in January 1970, the album reached No. 1 on Billboard Music Charts pop albums list. It won a Grammy Award for Album of the Year, as well as for Best Engineered Recording, while its title track won the Grammy Award for Record of the Year and Song of the Year. It has since sold over 25 million copies worldwide. In this special you’ll hear about the creation of Bridge Over Troubled Water from Paul Simon and Art Garfunkel, co-producer and engineer Roy Halee, and music journalist Bud Scoppa. The prevailing vibe at the tail end of the sixties was anything but peaceful or loving. Not with the unending carnage of Vietnam, the Manson family metastasizing hippie idealism into unimaginable brutality, or the violence of Altamont, which, combined with the breakup of the Beatles, jeopardized that last vestige of sixties idealism—the notion of music as a sacred sanctuary. Less than a month into 1970, America got a song that offered much needed message of hope with eloquent simplicity and grace: “Bridge Over Troubled Water.” Opening the album, the song gradually ascended from whispery intimacy to breathtaking grandeur on the wings of Garfunkel’s finest vocal. That slow-build aural architecture was but one of the record’s myriad pleasures, not the least of which was the epic

May 2011 / Directions in Sound / Page 3


with it. But as with the Beatles before them, what for so many years had been a natural and unforced shared experience for the principals had become a strained, self-conscious one. Like the decade that had borne them into prominence, Simon & Garfunkel had run out of time. For those of us who lived through those times, though, hearing their songs never fails to bring back certain moments in our own lives, and with startling vividness. They moved on, and so did the rest of us. Simon & Garfunkel: Bridge Over Troubled Water is hosted by Rita Houston.

Sunday, May 8, 8 p.m.

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Sunday, May 15, 8 p.m. There are so many ways to fall—in love, asleep, and flat on your face. In an episode full of falling music, Radiolab plunges into a black hole, takes a trip over Niagara Falls in a barrel, and debunks some myths about falling cats. We begin with two stories about heartstopping falls. David Eagleman gets to the bottom of what goes on in our brains during those life or death moments when time seems to slow way down, and Lulu Miller brings us the story of Sarita and Simon, who fell in—and then out—of love.

Rita Houston

Intelligence Squared The Republican and Democratic parties are entrenched in calcified partisanship, where politics is played as a zero-sum game. The rise of the Tea Party, liberal backlash, and the exodus of moderate voices from Congress all point toward the public’s growing discontent. Has our twoparty system failed us? On this installment of Intelligence Squared, panelists debate: “The two-party system is making America ungovernable.” For the motion: David Brooks, op-ed columnist for the New York Times, former contributing editor at Newsweek and the Atlantic Monthly, and commentator on The Newshour with Jim Lehrer. He is the author of Bobos In Paradise and On Paradise Drive: How We Live Now (And Always Have) in the Future Tense. Arianna Huffington, co-founder and editor-in-chief of The Huffington Post, a nationally syndicated columnist, and author of thirteen books. In 2006, she was named to the Time 100, Time magazine’s list of the world’s 100 most influential people.

Radiolab: Falling

Jeffrey Beall/flickr

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survivor’s narrative, “The Boxer,” a top 10 hit in 1969 and another of Simon’s most memorable songs. While several songs, most notably “Cecilia,” had nothing more pressing on their minds than getting to the hook, their old-school exuberance conspired to restore our faded memories of a long-ago moment when anything seemed possible—just what the doctor ordered for a generation whose golden dream had withered into its worst nightmare. One could certainly make a case that, with “So Long, Frank Lloyd Wright,” Simon was bidding adieu to his friend and partner, a onetime architecture major, or to the union itself, as, over a dusky bossa nova groove, Garfunkel sighed, “All of the nights we’d harmonize till dawn/So long/ So long.” Ironically, during the making of this landmark work, which was embraced as a covenant of renewal, the team of Paul Simon and Art Garfunkel was itself in the process of coming apart. Their diverging ambitions certainly had something to do

David Brooks

Zev Chafets

Against the motion: Zev Chafets, contributor to the New York Times Magazine, founding editor of the Jerusalem Report and the author of twelve books. He spent 30 years living in Israel with their multi-party system as an active participant in the Egyptian-Israeli peace process. P. J. O’Rourke, political satirist, research fellow at the Cato Institute, and the author of thirteen books. Time and the Wall Street Journal called him “the funniest writer in America.” He has written for such diverse publications as the Weekly Standard, the Atlantic Monthly, and Rolling Stone. John Donvan, correspondent for ABC News Nightline, moderates.

We follow with three stories that upend our pre-conceived notions about falling. David Quammen ponders the terminal velocity of a plummeting cat, teaches cohost Jad Abumrad a new word, and helps clear up some fallacies of feline physics. Brian Greene explains why he can’t answer the most basic question you can ask a physicist: “Why do we fall?” Garrett Soden and Joan Murray introduce us to the 20th century’s greatest “gravity hero,” who, despite being the first person to survive a trip over Niagara Falls in a barrel, ultimately landed in a poorhouse. We conclude with two stories of falling in everyday life, and one fantastical leap. Professor Frederick Coolidge argues that our tree-dwelling ancestors are to blame for a hiccup in our sleeping patterns. David Eagleman explains walking as the act of calibrating our steps to turn falls into forward motion, and astrophysicist Neil deGrasse Tyson takes us on a oneway trip into a black hole.

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Economic Club of Indiana: Gary Becker

The Water-Energy Crunch— A Powerful Puzzle

Sunday, May 22, 8 p.m.

Sunday, May 29, 8 p.m.

Gary Becker, a pioneering economist and Nobel Prize winner, was born the son of Canadian and European immigrants in a small coal mining town in Pennsylvania. Neither of his parents had an Gary Becker education beyond the eighth grade. Becker began aggressively studying math at the age of 16 and earned a bachelor’s degree in economics from Princeton in just three years. He went on to study under Milton Friedman, who encouraged his use of economic theory to promote social change. He holds appointments at the University of Chicago in the Department of Economics and Sociology and the Graduate School of Business. Becker was one of the first economists to branch into what were traditionally considered topics belonging to sociology— including racial discrimination, crime, family organization, and drug addiction. His central premise is that rational economic choices, based on self-interest, govern most aspects of human behavior— not just the purchasing and investment decisions traditionally thought to influence economic behavior. In studies such as A Treatise on the Family, Becker analyzed the household as a sort of factory, producing goods and services such as meals, shelter, and child care. From 1985 to 2004 he served as a columnist for Business Week. He is a founding partner of The Greatest Good, a business and philanthropy consulting company. Always on the leading edge, Becker has been blogging since 2004. In addition to his Nobel Prize, Becker received the National Medal of Science in 2000 and the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2007. His luncheon talk to the Economic Club of Indiana is titled, “The Slow Recovery and Long Run Challenges to the American Economy.”

The world runs on water. Without it, we’d have practically no energy. Without energy—for cars, planes, laptops, smartphones, heating, cooling, and lighting—life as we know it would cease. Plug your iPhone into the wall, and about half a liter of water must flow through kilometers of pipes, pumps, and the heat exchangers of a power plant. That’s a lot of money and machinery to get a six-watt-hour charge for a flashy little phone. In the United States alone, on just one average day, more than 500 billion liters of freshwater travel through the country’s power plants—more than twice what flows through the Nile. According to one estimate, a single Google search takes about half a milliliter of water. Just a few drops, really. But the 300 million searches we do a day take 150,000 liters. That’s a thousand bathtubs of water to power the data centers that handle the world’s idle curiosity. In this co-production from IEEE Spectrum magazine and the National Science Foundation, we look at the coming clash between water and energy, learning how engineers, communities, and countries are working on innovative solutions to balance our needs for water and energy. Lisa Raffensperger reports a team at Yale that has developed a creative new low-energy method of desalination that could produce fresh water at half the price of existing methods, and use just one-tenth as much electricity. Current desalination provides make drinkable water from the sea for millions of people a day, but methods are hugely energy intensive. In Ames, Iowa, engineers are studying how growing biofuel crops might change the weather. Much of the current federal requirement for more biofuel production will be met by dedicated energy crops like switchgrass. By 2022, an area equivalent to the state of Missouri will be planted with the stuff, from almost nothing now. Switchgrass will require more water than the plants currently on that land—but, what’s less well known is that it might also change precipitation patterns in other regions of the country.

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California desperately needs two things right now: water and renewable energy. It’s looking to Imperial Valley for both. But unless the state makes the right decisions about how to get these resources, it could end up destroying the Imperial Valley. For researchers at Penn State University, it’s the ultimate trash to treasure story: Someday cleaning our sewage could also generate electricity. The technology behind such a vision is the microbial fuel cell, which harvests electrons from microbes as they feed on waste and shuttles them through a circuit, potentially powering hundreds of homes in the future off the effluent of one wastewater treatment plant. Electricity generation is a thirsty process, requiring even more water than does agriculture. At the same time, providing clean water requires energy. Balancing our demands for both energy and water is a delicate business. If we add sustainability and air quality to the mix, the predicament becomes even more complex. Researchers are creating tools to help decision makers find a way through this dilemma. Their work is already improving air quality in Austin, Texas, and now they’re analyzing water-saving technologies to determine which will deliver the optimal effect. On Australian farms, various efforts to save water are causing electricity costs to skyrocket. Griffith, New South Wales, population 25,000, doesn’t seem like the center of anything, but this small Australian farming town is now undergoing firsthand the water-energy nexus and the painful tradeoffs that come with it. Dependent on imported oil for both its energy and water, the island of Malta has little control over its economic lifeblood. It has hired IBM to help it gain control of its water and electricity grids. A smart grid will monitor both water and electricity to clarify the connections between the two. The Water-Energy Crunch: A Powerful Puzzle is part of the Engineers of the New Millennium series. May 2011 / Directions in Sound / Page 5


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 at wfiu.org under the Podcasts link. May 1-7 Vivaldi: Sacred Music (7CDs) (Newton 8802045) Various Artists Vittorio Negri, director

holiday special the last couple of years on WFIU. On “That Eternal Day,” they ensemble focuses on the tradition of American sacred song from William Billings to Bobby McFerrin including a couple of new arrangements by one of their own, Timothy Takach. May 22–28 The Business of Angels: English Recorder Music from the Stuart Era (Pipistrelle Music PIP1110) Alison Melville, recorders Lucas Harris, archlute and baroque guitar Nadina Mackie Jackson, baroque bassoon Borys Medicky, harpsichord Joëlle Morton, bass viol

Much of Vivaldi’s sacred music was written for a state-funded foundlings’ home for girls where he was music director. His writing concentrated almost entirely on instrumental music, especially concertos, when the choirmaster Francesco Gasparini went on leave and failed to return. Vivaldi was asked to help out, and the results can be heard on these seven CDs. This set is a must-have for those who love Vivaldi’s music and wish to explore beyond the famous concertos.

The years surrounding the turn of the 18th century marked one of the recorder’s golden ages in England, when the “common flute” appeared in many performance contexts and a wealth of music for it was composed, published, and played by professionals and amateurs alike. This CD offers a snapshot of that era, featuring works from instruction manuals and transcriptions of works for other instruments.

May 8–14 Beethoven: The 11 Overtures

May 29–June 4 Homage to Astor Piazzolla

(PentaTone Classics PTC 5186 148) Gewandhaus Orchestra, Leipzig Kurt Masur, conductor

(Opening Day ODR 7396) Ensemble Vivant

Beethoven’s eleven overtures were written almost side by side with his symphonies. The first, The Creatures of Prometheus, came along almost simultaneously with the Symphony No. 1. The last, The Consecration of the House, was written during the same period as the ninth and final symphony. These orchestras paved the way for the concert overture and subsequently the symphonic poem, and all are recorded here by Leipzig’s masterful Gewandhaus Orchestra under the direction of Kurt Masur. May 15–21 That Eternal Day (Cantus Recordings CTS-1210) Cantus The Minnesota-based men’s vocal ensemble Cantus is riding a wave of success. You may have caught them on one of their national tours or heard their Page 6 / Directions in Sound / May 2011

Astor Piazzolla (1921–1992) was an Argentine tango composer and bandoneón player who revolutionized the traditional tango with a style called nuevo tango, incorporating elements from jazz and classical music. The trio Ensemble Vivant is aided by Julien Labro, a musician steeped in the music of Piazzolla, in delivering a fiery and sensual performance of the Argentine composer’s music.

Artist of the Month WFIU’s artist of the month for May is Elisabeth Wright, professor of harpsichord and fortepiano at Indiana Univesity’s Jacobs Elisabeth Wright School of Music. At the age of five Wright spent hours sitting at the piano, studying the music of Brahms, Chopin, and above all, Bach. She discovered the harpsichord while studying at Sarah Lawrence College in New York, and after graduating she continued her studies in harpsichord with Gustav Leonhardt at the Sweelinck Conservatory in Amsterdam. Upon her return to the U.S. she began her career as a performer and teacher. At IU she teaches basso continuo improvisation and performance practices of music of the late Renaissance, Baroque, and early Classical periods, and has given many master classes at conservatories around the world. She has toured in the U.S., Latin America, Canada, Europe and Australia, and performed at major early music festivals including Mostly Mozart, Tanglewood, and Festival Cervantino. Ms. Wright currently performs with the early music ensemble Musica Ficta, a group specializing in Renaissance and Baroque music from Spain and Latin America. She is a member of Duo Geminiani with fellow IU professor and violinist Stanley Ritchie, Ye Olde Friends, and Les Sonatistes. Her recordings have appeared on labels such as Classic Masters, Focus, Centaur, Arts Music, Musical Heritage, Milan-Jade, and Pro Musica Antiqua. She has served on juries of international harpsichord competitions, and has written reviews for Early Keyboard Journal. Wright is a founding member of the Seattle Early Music Guild and Bloomington Early Music Associates. She served as a board member of Early Music America and a panelist for the National Endowment for the Arts. WFIU will feature music performed by Elisabeth Wright throughout the month of May. Courtesy of Indiana University

Featured Classical Recordings

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Featured Contemporary Composer WFIU’s composer for the month of May is Paul Chihara. Paul Seiko Chihara was born in Seattle, Washington in 1938 and received his doctorate from Cornell Paul Chihara University in 1965 as a student of Robert Palmer. He also studied with Nadia Boulanger in Paris, Ernst Pepping in Berlin, and with Gunther Schuller at Tanglewood. Chihara is professor of theory and composition and chair of the Visual Media Program (film music) at UCLA. He joined the faculty in 1966 and subsequently founded and directed the Twice Ensemble and conducted the Collegium Musicum. He has taught at the California Institute of Technology and the California Institute of the Arts, and was composer-in-residence for the Marlboro Music Festival in Vermont. Chihara’s music reflects interest in a variety of musical styles, and often shows influence from Asian music and culture through his shifts in color and limited movements in pitch. He has also been known to borrow from chant and traditional folk songs in his music. His compositions have won numerous awards and have been played by notable ensembles around the world. He has received commissions from the Boston Symphony, London Symphony, Los Angeles Philharmonic, the Cleveland Orchestra, and the Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center, the National Endowment for the Arts, among others. While composer-in-residence for The San Francisco Ballet, he wrote critically-praised scores for the ballets The Tempest and Shin-ju. His symphonic, chamber and solo works are programmed internationally. His numerous honors include The Lili Boulanger Memorial Award. Active in the ballet world, Mr. Chihara was composer-in-residence for thirteen

years at the San Francisco Ballet. While there, he wrote many works, including Shin-ju (based on the plays by the Japanese dramatist Chikamatsu), as well as the first full-length American ballet, The Tempest. He was the first composer-in-residence of the Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra, and more recently, he served as composer-inresidence with the Mancini Institute. In addition to his many concert works, Mr. Chihara also served as music supervisor at Buena Vista Pictures and composed scores for some one hundred motion pictures and television series. He has worked with such directors as Sidney Lumet, Louis Malle, and Arthur Penn. His movies include Prince of the City, The Morning After, and Crossing Delancey, and series for television China Beach, Noble House, and 100 Centre Street. He’s worked on Broadway as well, as composer for the musical version of James Clavell’s Shogun, and as musical consultant/arranger for Duke Ellington’s Sophisticated Ladies. Chihara’s works have been widely recorded. His compositions appear on many labels including BMG Records, Reference Recordings, and Vox Candide. He was named Composer of the Year for 2008 by the Classical Recording Foundation in New York. WFIU will feature music written by Paul Chihara throughout May.

Jazz Notes Last year an amazing trove of big-band era radio broadcasts turned up—some 1,000 discs of live performances of leading jazz bands recorded in the late 1930s. The “Savory Collection,” named after the engineer who recorded the broadcasts, includes new and often crystal clear musical snapshots of jazz greats such as Coleman Hawkins, Billie Holiday, and Lester Young, performing in the prime of their careers. Loren Schoenberg, the executive director of the National Jazz Museum in Harlem who helped secure the collection for preservation, recently visited WFIU and was a guest on Joe Bourne’s Just You and Me. While Schoenberg was here, he chatted with Night Lights host David Brent Johnson and played numerous selections from the Savory Collection that have been unheard since their original broadcast.

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“Listening to the Savory Collection With Loren Schoenberg” airs on Night Lights Saturday, May 7 at 11 p.m. On May 28, Night Lights honors the Memorial Day holiday with “Reminiscing in Tempo: Grief and Remembrance in Jazz and Popular Song,” focusing on compositions by Duke Ellington, Oliver Nelson, and others—commemorating both national figures and loved ones with music. Our Friday evening program Afterglow also pays tribute to Memorial Day with a program about Glenn Miller’s Army Air Force band, featuring rarely heard radio broadcasts and an Glenn Miller interview with Nat Peck—a trombonist who joined Miller’s wartime orchestra in 1943 at the age of 19 and went overseas with Miller the following year. The AAF, as it came to be known, started out as a 40-piece orchestra and eventually encompassed a big band unit, an easy-listening strings ensemble, a modern-jazz small group, a vocal group, and a pianist/singer duo as well. “Sustain the Wings: Major Glenn Miller Goes to War” airs Friday, May 27 at 10 p.m. Other Afterglow highlights this month include a CD feature on Frank Sinatra and Antonio Carlos Jobim’s late-1960s collaboration, a combined birthday tribute program to songwriters Hal David and Bob Dylan, and a new-releases show spotlighting Everybody Wants to Be a Cat, a recent anthology of songs from Disney films interpreted by jazz and popular song artists. Sudoku Solution

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Courtesy of Firelight Media

Courtesy of Indiana University

Sundays at 7 p.m. May 1 – Claude Cookman Claude Cookman enjoyed a career of more than 18 years, primarily as a photography editor, at the Associated Press in New York, The Louisville Times, and The Miami Herald. As associate professor at IU’s School of Journalism, he teaches the history of photography, visual communications, informational graphics, and computer graphic design; and his research focuses on French magazine photojournalists. He is co-author of American Photojournalism: Motivations and Meanings, among other books. Yaël Ksander hosts. May 8 – Stanley Nelson Stanley Nelson has more than two decades experience as a producer, director, and writer of documentaries. His films include a number of PBS productions, including Freedom Riders for the American Experience series, Shattering the Silences, about the growing presence of and challenges to minority faculty in higher education; Methadone: Curse or Cure, about the methadone maintenance program for the treatment of heroin addiction; and Two Dollars and a Dream: The Story of Madame C.J. Walker, on the life and times of the black businesswoman who became the nation’s first self-made woman millionaire. Shana Ritter hosts. May 15 – Gay Talese Gay Talese was a reporter for the New York Times from 1956 to 1965, and since then he has written for The New Yorker, Harper’s, and other national publications. He is considered one of the founders of an inventive form of nonfiction writing called the “New Journalism.” Talese has written eleven books. His earlier bestsellers deal with the history and influence of the New York Times, the inside story of a Mafia family, and the changing moral values of America after World War II. Owen Johnson hosts. (repeat) May 22 – Leonard Slatkin Leonard Slatkin is the Arthur R. Metz Foundation Conductor at IU’s Jacobs School of Music and the Distinguished Artist in Residence at the American University. Slatkin has enjoyed a long career conducting some of the most prestigious orchestras in the world. During the seventeen years with the St. Louis Symphony Orchestra, he increased the reputation of the orchestra with a vast output of high-quality recordings. His list of recordings includes the standard symphonies ranging from Haydn to Elgar, while his artistry as a conductor appears most in his performance of 20th century composers. Annie Corrigan hosts. (repeat) May 29 – Sage Steele Sage Steele is a co-host of ESPN’s SportsCenter. She graduated from Indiana University Bloomington in 1995 with a bachelor’s degree in sports communications and began her television career at WSBT-TV in South Bend, Indiana, as a producer and reporter, and was the beat reporter for the Indianapolis Colts. In Tampa, she was a reporter, anchor, and host for WFTS-TV, and she covered the NCAA Men’s Final Four and Super Bowl XXXV. Steele was the anchor for the debut of Comcast SportsNet, serving the Washington DC/Baltimore region, anchored the flagship show SportsNite for six years, and was a beat reporter for the Baltimore Ravens, hosting a magazine show for five seasons. Annie Corrigan hosts. Page 8 / Directions in Sound / May 2011

Broadcasts from the IU Jacobs School of Music Airs at 7 p.m. Mondays, 10 a.m. Tuesdays, and 3 p.m. Fridays May 2-6 BARTÓK—Improvisations on Hungarian Peasant Songs; Peter Pertis, piano

Peter Pertis

May 9-13 GIBBONS—Hosanna to the Son of David; Paul Elliott/Pro Arte Singers May 16-20 WOLF—Italian Serenade; Uriel Segel/IU Chamber Orchestra May 23-27 WECKMANN—Toccata in d; Elisabeth Wright, harpsichord May 30-Jun 3 GRAINGER—Lincolnshire Posy; Frederick Fennell/IU Symphonic Band

Courtesy of Indiana University

Profiles

Frederick Fennell

Bloomington 103.7 fm • Columbus 100.7 fm • French Lick/West Baden 101.7 fm


The Radio Reader

Gifts of Life Insurance:

The Last Boy by Jane Leavy Airs: May 19 to June 27 (approx. 28 episodes)

Photo: Sid Taba

with Dick Estell Weekdays at 11:30 a.m.

Sports writer Jane Leavy, author of the New York Times bestseller Sandy Koufax: A Lefty’s Legacy, returns with a biography of an American original— Jane Leavy number 7, Mickey Mantle. Drawing on more than five hundred interviews with friends and family, teammates and opponents, she delivers the definitive account of Mantle’s life, mining the mythology of “The Mick” for the true story of a luminous and illustrious talent with an achingly damaged soul. The Last Boy is a baseball tapestry that weaves together episodes from the author’s weekend with Mantle in Atlantic City, where she interviewed her hero in 1983 after he was banned from baseball, with reminiscences from friends and family of the boy from Commerce, Oklahoma, who would lead the Yankees to seven world championships, be voted the American League’s Most Valuable Player three times, win the Triple Crown in 1956, and duel teammate Roger Maris for Babe Ruth’s home run crown in the summer of 1961. Subtitled Mickey Mantle and the End of America’s Childhood, the book transcends the hyperbole of hero worship to reveal the man behind the coast-to-coast smile, who grappled with a wrenching childhood, crippling injuries, and a genetic predisposition to drunkenness. Leavy chronicles her search to find out more about the person he was to explain his mystifying hold on a generation of baseball fans, who were seduced by that lopsided, gap-toothed grin. It is an uncommon biography, a portrait of an icon, and an investigation of memory itself. How long was the Tape Measure Home Run? Did Mantle swing the same way right-handed and left-handed? What really happened to his knee in the 1951 World Series? What became of the red-haired, freckle-faced boy known back home as Mickey Charles? Jane Leavy is also author of the comic novel Squeeze Play, which Entertainment Weekly called “the best novel ever written about baseball.”

Washington Update As Directions of Sound went to press, Congress was expected to approve a continuing resolution to fund the federal government for the remainder of this fiscal year. This bill would preserve the funding for public broadcasting that a House bill passed in March would have zeroed out. Also, the continuing resolution restores the Corporation for Public Broadcasting’s two-year advance appropriations, an arrangement that for years has allowed stations to plan special projects beyond the current year. The CPB would get an across-the-board cut of two-tenths percent for the coming fiscal year (FY2012), but would see no further decrease for FY2013. We are cautiously optimistic about this news, and additionally pleased that, unlike the House bill passed in March that would have forbidden stations to spend federal funding on programming, this bill contains no such restrictions. Listeners like you have helped preserve funding for public broadcasting simply by speaking up. You may continue to do so at 170MillionAmericans.org.

Greensburg 98.9 fm • Kokomo 106.1 fm • Terre Haute 95.1 fm

—Getting Started—

If you own a life insurance policy with accumulated cash value, you’re essentially sitting on a pile of money. When the original purpose for the protection no longer applies—such as to educate children now grown or to provide financial security for a spouse now deceased— your life insurance can be redirected to help support a worthwhile cause, such as WFIU. One way to do it is simply to name WFIU as the primary beneficiary of your policy or have us receive a percentage of the benefits. Naming WFIU as a beneficiary costs you nothing, and is a meaningful way to make certain your assets ultimately serve the programs and the people most important to you. If your goals change in the future, beneficiary designations can of course be changed. Another way is to assign WFIU ownership of a life insurance policy and also name us as the beneficiary. When you do that, the following good things happen: • You receive an income tax charitable deduction. • You realize tax savings from use of the deduction. These savings can be invested for future income. • You may reduce your estate taxes. This could happen because you have removed the life insurance policy from your estate. As always, it is best to consult your attorney or tax advisor to help you decide on the best approach if you are considering a substantial gift of life insurance to a charity. WFIU’s Gifts and Grants Officer Nancy Krueger would love to help you get started. Contact her at 812-855-2935 or nkrueger@ indiana.edu with any questions about life insurance giving opportunities at WFIU.

May 2011 / Directions in Sound / Page 9


Monday

Tuesday

Wednesday

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

The Last Boy begins May 19

Ask the Mayor

Fresh Air 1 PM 2

Fresh Air

Noon Edition

Fresh Air 2:01 & 3:01 pm : NPR News

Performance Today

3 4

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

Artworks

Classical Music

BP Chicago Symphony Orchestra

Ether Game

Live! At the Concertgebouw

(Quiz show)

Keeping Score 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 / May 2011

Bloomington 103.7 fm • Columbus 100.7 fm • French Lick/West Baden 101.7 fm


Saturday

News Programs

Sunday Saturday

Classical Music

5 AM 6 7 8 9 10

This American Life Wait Wait . . . Don’t Tell Me! Says You! Classical Music Metropolitan Opera

5-7 Ariadne auf Naxos 5-14 Die Walküre

Lyric Opera of Chicago 5-21 Macbeth 5-28 Carmen

Living on Earth

11 Noon

Saint Paul Sunday With Heart and Voice The Score Travel with Rick Steves

1 PM 2

Classical Music

Other Programs A Moment of Science Weekdays at 10:58 am and 4:55 pm Community Minute Weekdays at 8:50 am, 11:51 am and 3:25 pm Saturdays and Sundays at 5:58 am and 11:58 am Composers Datebook Mondays through Wednesdays at 3:25 pm

Focus on Flowers Thursdays and Fridays at 3:25 pm Saturdays and Sundays at 7:07 am and Sundays 11:06 am Hometown with Tom Roznowski Saturdays at 8:00 pm Isla Earth Sundays at 11:23 am and 3:57 pm

8

Journey with Nature Wednesdays at 9:03 am

9 10

Moment of Indiana History Mondays at 11:26 am Wednesdays at 7:58 pm Fridays at 8:02 pm The Poets Weave Sundays at 11:46 am

11

Speak Your Mind Weekdays at 9:04 am and 11:56 am (as available)

Mid.

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

1 AM 2

Shanna Ritter

John Bailey

7

Night Lights Jazz with Bob Parlocha

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

5

Folk Sampler

Afropop Worldwide

Stan Jastrzebsk i

Earth Eats Saturdays at 12:38 pm

Profiles

Music from the Hearts of Space

Marketplace Morning Report Weekdays at 8:50 am

4

6

The Thistle & Shamrock

Local and State News Weekdays at 6:06 am, 7:06 am, 8:06 am, 12:01 pm, 5:04 pm, 5:33 pm

Congressional Moments Fridays at 7:00 pm Sundays at 7:55 am and 6:04 pm

All Things Considered

Specials

Indiana Business News Weekdays at 8:50 am (immediately following Marketplace)

3

The State We’re In

Sound Medicine

BBC News Weekdays at 10:01 am and 10:01 pm

Sara Wittmeyer

The Writer’s Almanac Weekdays at 7:01 pm

Owen Johnson

Greensburg 98.9 fm • Kokomo 106.1 fm • Terre Haute 95.1 fm

May 2011 / Directions in Sound / Page 11


Sweet & Savory Café & Bakery (#911) Carmel Valid anytime two-for-one menu item The Ruby Pear Tea Parlor (#168) Noblesville Valid anytime two-for-one luncheon tea

MemberCard For a complete listing of more than 300 Indiana membership benefits or for an updated brochure, call us at 800-662-3311. Benefits of the month: kidscommons (#390) 309 Washington Street Columbus 812-378-3046 kidscommons.org Valid for two-for-one admission during the month. Visit our Web site for special museum programs and activities.

Turtle Run Winery (#260) Corydon Blue Heron Vineyards Winery (#262) Cannelton Madison Vineyards Estate Winery (#265) Madison

Brown County Winery (#267) Nashville Valid anytime for a complimentary wine tasting for two and 20 percent discount on regularly priced nonalcohol merchandise Buck Creek Winery (#263) Indianapolis Valid anytime for a complimentary wine tasting for two and 10 percent discount off wine purchase

Benefit Updates: Adelino’s Old World Kitchen (#53) Lafayette Valid anytime

French Lick Winery (#264) West Baden Springs Valid anytime for a complimentary wine tasting and 10 percent discount off non-wine merchandise

The Hamilton Restaurant (#910) Noblesville Valid for two-for-one sandwich or salad at lunch or two-for-one entrée at dinner

AmazingClubs.com Unlimited free shipping and 10 percent off and an additional 10 percent off when you choose any 12 month gift. FlyingNoodle.com Unlimited free shipping and 10 percent off and an additional 10 percent off when you choose any 12 month gift.

Lanthier Winery (#266) Madison

Indianapolis Civic Theatre (#137) 3200 Cold Spring Road Indianapolis 317-923-4597 civictheatre.org Valid for two-for-one admission to The Musical Comedy Murders of 1940, May 6–21. Show times are Thursday at 7 p.m., Friday to Saturday at 8 and Sunday at 2. Subject to availability.

The Fickle Peach (#908) Muncie Valid anytime for two-for-one bratwurst with chips

Online Shopping Updates: LoriFayeBockShop.com Unlimited 50 percent off all art greeting card gift portfolios by popular animal artist Lori Faye Bock of Abiquiú, New Mexico.

Butler Winery “In-Town” Tasting Room (#259) Butler Winery & Vineyards (#258) Bloomington

Winzerwald Winery (#261) Bristow Valid for 20 percent discount on regularly priced non-alcohol merchandise The Quarterdeck Restaurant at the Fourwinds Resort (#328) Bloomington Offer Expired

Musical Word Search by Myles Mellor

There are 17 musically related names and words hidden in this Word Search puzzle. They may be across, backwards, up and down or diagonal in any direction. How many can you find? R P D K U F C U X A Z S J P F

J A N D Q W O V H U H E P C U

G P C O I D M T A O T G R U G

L N A H A U B C S U Q L O C U

G B B U M M O T D D B I G A E

Q B K L J A A E J G R S R I C

W Y C I C K N J X M W S E X A

B S E Z O M R I O L J A S K E

E Z J V A N I T N R C N S W A

K B I W M O C N L O S D I C C

X C A A L T I O O R V O O C B

H F K R R E C H O R D S N Z R

V L G S D I V G R V Y D U E T

O A F O I H A R M O N Y Y Z O

A T A R U M P R O K O F I E V

Peaceful Greens (#20) Lafayette Valid anytime, value to $8

Page 12 / Directions in Sound / May 2011

Bloomington 103.7 fm • Columbus 100.7 fm • French Lick/West Baden 101.7 fm


Community Events Event details are subject to change. Get updates and learn more about these and other goings-on at wfiu.org/events. Curtains Up: Great Broadway Moments Sunday, May 1, 4 p.m. First United Church, Bloomington The Quarryland Men’s Chorus presents an evening of Broadway, with haunting melodies from Les Miserables, Miss Saigon, and Into the Woods; lighthearted numbers from West Side Story and The Fantasticks, and a few surprises as well. A Year with Frog and Toad Friday, May 13 to Sunday, May 29, times vary Waldron Auditorium This Tony-nominated Best Musical follows the year-long adventures of two amphibious friends, a worrywart toad and a perky frog, with their assorted colorful hopping, crawling, and flying companions. The Cardinal Stage Company presents this visually entertaining physical comedy best suited for children 5 and up.

Key to abbreviations. The Dallas Brass Friday, May 20, 7:30 p.m. Kokomo High School South Auditorium A unique blend of traditional brass instruments with a full complement of drums and percussion. The Dallas Brass brings a versatile repertoire including classical masterworks, Dixieland, swing, Broadway, Hollywood, and patriotic music. Dancing with the Celebrities Saturday, May 21, 8 p.m. Buskirk-Chumley Theater Area notables intensively train for this event, patterned after the popular TV show Dancing with the Stars. Ticket sales from their onstage competition benefit the charities of the local celebrities’ choice. Paradise Kitchen Sunday, May 22, 5:30 p.m. Upstairs at Zaharako’s Columbus A celebration of Chef Daniel Orr’s newest cookbook, with select recipes from the book, a local wine and beer tasting, and music by Tom Roznowski and The Living Daylights. A collaboration of Porch Light Indiana with IU Press, Bloomingfoods, and the new Columbus Cooperative Grocery and Market. Step into Fitness Kickoff Event

TEDxBloomington: The Wisdom of Play Saturday, May 14, 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Buskirk-Chumley Theater TEDxBloomington is an independently organized community and conference in the spirit of TED.com’s “Ideas Worth Spreading.” The inaugural conference features local and national speakers addressing the theme “The Wisdom of Play.”

Wednesday, May 25, 11:30 p.m. to 1:30 p.m. IU Auditorium foyer and Showalter Fountain Plaza IU Campus Recreational Sports is holding a formal kickoff event for its free, selfguided summer walking program, Step into Fitness. Registrants will get a free pedometer and step tracker, along with structure, support, education, and motivation from Rec Sports and the IU Health Center.

Greensburg 98.9 fm • Kokomo 106.1 fm • Terre Haute 95.1 fm

a., alto; b., bass; bar., baritone; bssn., bassoon; cl., clarinet; cond., conductor; cont., continuo; ct., countertenor; db., double bass; ch., chamber; E.hn., English horn; ens., ensemble; fl., flute; gt., guitar; hn., horn; hp., harp; hpsd., harpsichord; intro., introduction; instr., instrument; kbd., keyboard; lt., lute; ms., mezzo-soprano; ob., oboe; orch., orchestra; org., organ; Phil., Philharmonic; p., piano; perc., percussion; qt., quartet; rec., recorder; sax., saxophone; s., soprano; str., string; sym., symphony; t., tenor; tb., trombone; timp., timpani; tpt., trumpet; trans., transcribed; var., variations; vla., viola; vlc., vdg., viola da gamba; violoncello; vln., violin. Upper case letters indicate major keys; lower case letters indicate minor keys.

Note: Daily listings are as complete as we can make them at press time, and we strive to provide full program information whenever possible. However, some programs do not provide us with information about their content. We include the titles of those programs as a convenience to our readers. For a complete list of WFIU’s schedule, see the program grid on pages 10 and 11.

1 Sunday 12:00 PM SAINT PAUL SUNDAY Stephen Prutsman, piano RAVEL—Miroirs (Mirrors) BACH—English Suite VI in d minor, B.W.V. 811 PRUTSMAN—Tannery Pond PRUTSMAN—Dog WAGNER—Isolde’s Liebestod 1:00 PM WITH HEART AND VOICE The second Sunday of Easter is also known as the Octave of Easter. We continue our celebration of the Resurrection with music of joy and praise. 2:00 PM THE SCORE WITH EDMUND STONE Weddings This week music for tying the knot. We’ll hear wedding music from films including Four Weddings and a Funeral, The Godfather, and others. 7:00 PM PROFILES Claude Cookman 8:00 PM SIMON & GARFUNKEL: BRIDGE OVER TROUBLED WATER In 1969, Simon and Garfunkel recorded what would be their final studio album. Widely considered to be their masterpiece, the duo spent more than 800 hours recording Bridge Over Troubled Water. In this special you’ll hear about the creation of the album from Paul Simon and Art Garfunkel, co-producer and engineer Roy Halee, and music journalist Bud Scoppa. 9:00 PM THE SANTA FE CHAMBER MUSIC FESTIVAL May 2011 / Directions in Sound / Page 13


2 Monday

5 Thursday

7 Saturday

9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH GEORGE WALKER Vivaldi, Bennett, and Nelson 8:00 PM CHICAGO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA Conductor Juanjo Mena and violinist Renaud Capuçon make their CSO debuts. RAVEL—Concerto for the Left Hand (JeanYves Thibaudet, piano; Charles Dutoit, conductor) RAVEL—Valses Nobles et Sentimentales KORNGOLD—Violin Concerto in D Major, Op. 35 (Renaud Capuçon, violin) TCHAIKOVSKY—Symphony No. 6 in B Minor, Op. 74, Pathétique 10:00 PM PIPEDREAMS Dupré on Dupré Revisiting the art of one of the foremost organist-composers of the 20th century, on the occasion of his 125th birthday anniversary

9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH GEORGE WALKER Grieg, Martinu, and Chance 8:00 PM KEEPING SCORE: 13 DAYS WHEN MUSIC CHANGED April 7, 1805: The First Public Performance of Beethoven’s Eroica Beethoven’s Symphony No. 3 changed our idea of what music could express. Instead of classical form and rarified beauty, this symphony lays out the full range of human feelings, from joy and love to hopelessness and pathos. 9:00 PM HARMONIA Flowers for Mother’s Day In honor of motherhood, Harmonia looks at flower themes in music, with a special focus on the rose—a symbol of love and beauty. Plus, we’ll hear a featured release of Christopher Simpson’s The Monthes.

1:00 PM METROPOLITAN OPERA STRAUSS—Ariadne auf Naxos Fabio Luisi conducts the performance. Starring Violeta Urmana, Kathleen Kim, Joyce DiDonato, Robert Dean Smith, and Thomas Allen.

3 Tuesday 9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH GEORGE WALKER Kodaly, Bartók, and Chopin 8:00 PM ETHER GAME Scramble! It’s Finals Week and we’re cramming as much classical as possible on this edition of Ether Game. 10:06 PM SOUNDS CHORAL The Vespers of Sergei Rachmaninoff We’ll hear a magnificent performance of this masterwork by the Estonian Philharmonic Chamber Choir.

6 Friday 9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH GEORGE WALKER Stravinsky, Barber, and Gebauer 8:00 PM MARIAN McPARTLAND’S PIANO JAZZ Karrin Allyson Vocalist and pianist Karrin Allyson is one of the most in-demand performers on today’s jazz scene. She sings in English, French, Portuguese, Italian, and Spanish, as well as interpreting tunes in scat and vocalese. On this 1998 studio session, Allyson performs Marian McPartland’s “There Will Be Other Times” and the Arlen/Koehler number “I’ve Got The World On A String.”

4 Wednesday 9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH GEORGE WALKER Jenkins, Berlioz, and Beethoven 8:00 PM LIVE! AT THE CONCERTGEBOUW Iván Fischer/Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra Maria João Pires, piano MOZART—Overture to Die Zauberflöte MOZART—Piano Concerto No. 23 KV 488 MOZART—Adagio and Fuga KV 546 MOZART—Symphony No. 41 in C Major, Jupiter 10:06 PM THE RECORD SHELF In the first of two programs, Igor Stravinsky leads premiere recordings of his music, including the first recording (from 1950) of the ballet Apollo.

Page 14 / Directions in Sound / May 2011

Violeta Urmana

Kathleen Kim

8:00 PM HOMETOWN WITH TOM ROZNOWSKI Those People 8:05 PM THE FOLK SAMPLER Songs for Mother’s Day 8:05 PM THE THISTLE AND SHAMROCK For Our Mothers Hear how the gift of music appreciates through the generations. We celebrate musical legacies with Gaelic singer Flora MacNeil, whose daughter Maggie MacInnes has inherited her mother’s song passion; Maddie Prior and her daughter Rose; and Mary and Frances Black with their mother. 11:00 PM NIGHT LIGHTS Listening to the Savory Collection with Loren Schoenberg Jazz musician, scholar, and National Jazz Museum executive director Loren Schoenberg stops by Night Lights with some never-before-heard recordings from the Savory collection—the remarkable, recentlydiscovered cache of late 1930s-early 1940s radio broadcasts featuring Lester Young, Roy Eldridge, and many other greats of the swing era.

8 Sunday

Karrin Allyson

10:09 PM AFTERGLOW Sinatra and Jobim When the chairman of the board met the bossa—highlighting the late 1960s pairing of Frank Sinatra and Antonio Carlos Jobim.

12:00 PM SAINT PAUL SUNDAY BARTON PINE—violin; Matthew Hagle, piano BACH—Sonata No. 1 in G Minor PISENDEL—Sonata in a minor WESTHOFF—Suite No. 2 in A Major BEETHOVEN—Sonata No. 8 in G Major Op. 30, No. 3 THOMAS—Rush RAVEL—Sonata No. 1 in G Major MACKENZIE—Pibroch Suite

Bloomington 103.7 fm • Columbus 100.7 fm • French Lick/West Baden 101.7 fm


2:00 PM THE SCORE WITH EDMUND STONE Mother’s Day This week music from movies about mothers and motherhood. We’ll hear excerpts from Now Voyager, The Joy Luck Club and others. 7:00 PM PROFILES Stanley Nelson 8:00 PM INTELLIGENCE SQUARED Panelists debate the motion “The two-party system is making America ungovernable.” 9:00 PM THE SANTA FE CHAMBER MUSIC FESTIVAL

9 Monday 9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH GEORGE WALKER Beethoven, Bach, and Dvorák 8:00 PM CHICAGO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA A concert from January, conducted by Leonard Slatkin BARTÓK—Four Pieces for Orchestra (Pierre Boulez, conductor) STRAVINSKY—Symphony in 3 Movements ELGAR—In the South (Alassio), Op. 50 BARTÓK—Concerto for Orchestra 10:00 PM PIPEDREAMS Langlais on Langlais A celebration of the French composer and organist Jean Langlais (1902-1991), with performances by himself and his wife, Marie-Louise Langlais, on the occasion of the 20th anniversary of his death.

10 Tuesday 9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH GEORGE WALKER Bax, Gibbons, and Rachmaninov 8:00 PM ETHER GAME A Little Romance Love is in the air on this week’s Ether Game. 10:06 PM SOUNDS CHORAL Happy Birthday, Brahms We’ll serenade the master’s memory this year with performances of his small choral-orchestral pieces, including his Alto Rhapsody.

11 Wednesday 9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH GEORGE WALKER Prokofiev, Joplin, and Vivaldi 8:00 PM LIVE! AT THE CONCERTGEBOUW Fabien Gabel/Rotterdam Philharmonic Orchestra Antoine Tamestit, viola BERLIOZ—Harold en Italie, Op. 116 FRANCK—Symphony in D Minor

10:06 PM THE RECORD SHELF In the second of two programs, Igor Stravinsky leads the Dumbarton Oaks Concerto and Jeu de cartes in their recording premieres.

12 Thursday 9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH GEORGE WALKER Turnier, Bax, and Piazzolla 8:00 PM KEEPING SCORE: 13 DAYS WHEN MUSIC CHANGED August 13, 1876: The Launch of the First “Ring” cycle at Bayreuth A program about the danger and appeal of Wagner’s full-immersion mythology and why the composer was so important, even to those who hated him. 9:00 PM HARMONIA New Music/Early Music: The New Brandenburgs, pt. 2 A continuation of the Orpheus Chamber Orchestra’s commissions of new works inspired by the Brandenburg concertos of J.S. Bach, American lutenist Ronn McFarlane joins us to talk about recent recordings of his own compositions, and the Dunedin Consort & Players are featured in a release of Bach’s B minor Mass.

8:00 PM HOMETOWN WITH TOM ROZNOWSKI Prayer Shawl 8:05 PM THE FOLK SAMPLER Batter Up: the great American pastime 8:05 PM THE THISTLE AND SHAMROCK William Jackson Catch up with the multi-instrumentalist and composer en route from North Carolina to Ireland via Scotland, as he reflects upon his large-scale work, Duan Albanach, and introduces us to his collaborations with Irish harper Gráinne. 11:00 PM NIGHT LIGHTS Rollins ’57: Sonny Rollins Takes the Lead Music from an early peak period of tenor saxophonist Sonny Rollins

15 Sunday 12:00 PM SAINT PAUL SUNDAY Trio Mediaeval HARKAVYY—Kyrie (2002) POWER—Gloria from Missa “Alma redemptoris mater” BRYARS—Ave regina gloriosa (2003) SMITH—Ave Maria (2000)

13 Friday 9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH GEORGE WALKER Still, Sibelius, and Wagner 8:00 PM MARIAN McPARTLAND’S PIANO JAZZ Dianne Reeves One of the preeminent jazz singers of our time, Dianne Reeves continues the legacies of Billie Holiday, Ella Fitzgerald, and Sarah Vaughn, and has won three consecutive Grammys for Best Jazz Vocal Performance. On this Piano Jazz, host McPartland accompanies Reeves on “Softly As In A Morning Sunrise” and “Million Dollar Secret.” 10:09 PM AFTERGLOW What’s New: May 2011 Our periodic roundup of new and recent releases, featuring music from the Disney tribute “Everybody Wants to Be a Cat” and a tribute to the music of Ray Charles

14 Saturday 12:00 PM METROPOLITAN OPERA WAGNER—Die Walküre James Levine conducts. Starring Deborah Voigt, Eva-Maria Westbroek, Stephanie Blythe, Jonas Kaufmann, Bryn Terfel, and Hans-Peter König.

Greensburg 98.9 fm • Kokomo 106.1 fm • Terre Haute 95.1 fm

Trio Mediaeval

1:00 PM WITH HEART AND VOICE Throughout the centuries prayer has been set to music. Today Peter DuBois explores some of these wonderful settings. 2:00 PM THE SCORE WITH EDMUND STONE Nino Rota A look at the film music of Nino Rota. We’ll hear excerpts from scores to The Godfather trilogy, Zefferelli’s Romeo and Juliet, and movies by Federico Fellini. 7:00 PM PROFILES Gay Talese 8:00 PM RADIOLAB “Falling” There are so many ways to fall—in love, asleep, and flat on your face. In an episode full of falling music, Radiolab plunges into a black hole, takes a trip over Niagara Falls in a barrel, and debunks some myths about falling cats. 9:00 PM THE SANTA FE CHAMBER MUSIC FESTIVAL

May 2011 / Directions in Sound / Page 15


16 Monday

19 Thursday

21 Saturday

9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH GEORGE WALKER Zelenka, Elger, and Mercy 8:00 PM CHICAGO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA Conductor Emeritus Pierre Boulez leads a program featuring mezzo-soprano Susan Graham and pianist Daniel Barenboim. BERIO—Quatre Dédicaces BERLIOZ—Les nuits d’été (Susan Graham, mezzo-soprano) STRAVINSKY—Petrushka BARTÓK—Piano Concerto No. 1 (Daniel Barenboim, piano) 10:00 PM PIPEDREAMS Dutch Treats Delightful representatives of the Netherlands organ experience, with instruments and repertoire from five centuries

9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH GEORGE WALKER McFerrin, Handel, and Carulli 8:00 PM KEEPING SCORE: 13 DAYS WHEN MUSIC CHANGED May 6, 1889: The Opening Day of the Exposition Universelle in Paris The Exposition Universelle was where Debussy first heard gamelan music, and “world” music became a part of Western European classical language. Composers before and after Debussy frequently turned to vernacular sources for inspiration, whether Brahms, Mahler, and Bartók incorporating folk melodies, Copland and Gershwin using the rhythms of Latin dance, or Steve Reich quoting West African drumming. 9:00 PM HARMONIA Witchcraft and Madness in Restoration England Harmonia has a look at witches and insanity in songs and scenes from late 17th century English stage works, violinist Ingrid Matthews and harpsichordist Byron Schenkman perform live in recital from Seattle, and Esterházy Machine explores Haydn’s trios for the baryton.

1:00 PM LYRIC OPERA OF CHICAGO VERDI—Macbeth Starring Thomas Hampson, Nadja Michael, Leonardo Capalbo, and Stefan Kocán. Renato Palumbo conducts the performance.

17 Tuesday 9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH GEORGE WALKER Strauss II, Wolf, and Haydn 8:00 PM ETHER GAME Saints Alive Halos abound in the stories of saints. 10:06 PM SOUNDS CHORAL A Song in Season

18 Wednesday 9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH GEORGE WALKER Brooks, Billings, and Vivaldi 1:00 PM WITH HEART AND VOICE In celebration of Mother’s Day we’ll hear music that honors Mary, the mother of Jesus. Join Peter DuBois for a program of hymns, antiphons and Magnificats. 8:00 PM LIVE! AT THE CONCERTGEBOUW Mariss Jansons/Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra Magdalena Kozena, mezzo-soprano SIBELIUS—Symphony No. 1, Op. 39 DUPARC—L’invitation au voyage DUPARC—Extase DUPARC—Le manoir de Rosemonde DUPARC—Chanson triste DUPARC—Phydilé RAVEL—Daphnis et Chloé, Suite No. 2 10:06 PM THE RECORD SHELF The Best of The Record Shelf: a rebroadcast of the first part of a conversation with pianist Leon Fleisher.

Page 16 / Directions in Sound / May 2011

Ingrid Matthews

20 Friday 9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH GEORGE WALKER Quantz, Castellanos, and Verdi 8:00 PM MARIAN McPARTLAND’S PIANO JAZZ Remembering James Moody Saxophonist James Moody’s career took off with his 1949 improvisation, “Moody’s Mood For Love.” He kept busy for the next six decades, right up until his death at age 85 last year. On this 1997 session with McPartland and bassist Todd Coolman, Moody performs “Body and Soul” and sings and plays “Moody’s Mood For Love.” 10:09 PM AFTERGLOW David and Dylan Birthday tributes to the music of songwriters Hal David and Bob Dylan

Renato Palumbo

8:00 PM HOMETOWN WITH TOM ROZNOWSKI ’Cause I Recognize Him 8:05 PM THE THISTLE AND SHAMROCK What in The World? Twenty-first century contemporary Celtic music may take in Balkan tunes, African percussion, Latin rhythms, and have a gritty urban edge. Are the musicians who draw upon such diverse influences simply creating World Music soup with a dash of Celtic spice? Or are they the innovators of a cutting edge Celtic sound that enhances the global music vibe? See what you think. 8:05 PM THE FOLK SAMPLER Variety, the spice of life 11:00 PM NIGHT LIGHTS East Meets West: Ahmed Abdul-Malik and World Jazz Ahmed Abdul-Malik was Thelonious Monk’s bassist in the late 1950s, but he was also a pioneer of a world/jazz fusion. We’ll hear several such records he made as a leader.

22 Sunday 12:00 PM SAINT PAUL SUNDAY Enso String Quartet HAYDN—String Quartet in D Major, Opus 20, No. 4 BEETHOVEN—String Quartet in D Major, Opus 18, No. 3 SCHUMANN—Quartet in A major, Opus 41, No. 3 1:00 PM WITH HEART AND VOICE For the Fifth Sunday of Easter we hear music of resurrection and renewal, along with themes of new life and creation

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2:00 PM “THE SCORE” WITH EDMUND STONE Ron Goodwin This week, the life and music of British film composer Ron Goodwin. We’ll hear some of his work for such movies as The Battle of Britain, Of Human Bondage, and Where Eagles Dare.

7:00 PM PROFILES Leonard Slatkin 8:00 PM THE ECONOMIC CLUB OF INDIANA Pioneering economist and Nobel Prize winner Gary Becker speaks to the Economic Club of Indiana on “The Slow Recovery and Long Run Challenges to the American Economy.” 9:00 PM THE SANTA FE CHAMBER MUSIC FESTIVAL

23 Monday 9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH GEORGE WALKER Handel, Zelenka, and Piazzolla 8:00 PM CHICAGO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA Mitsuko Uchida is both pianist and conductor in two concertos by Mozart. MOZART—Piano Concerto No. 11 in F Major, K. 413 MOZART—Divertimento in B-Flat Major, K. 137 MOZART—Piano Concerto No. 21 in C Major, K. 467 FRANCK—Symphony in D Minor (Philippe Jordan, conductor) 10:00 PM PIPEDREAMS Kimmel Center Concert Collective Selections from recital programs recorded on the Fred J. Cooper Memorial Organ (by Dobson) in Philadelphia’s Verizon Hall

24 Tuesday 9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH GEORGE WALKER Nicolia, Weckmann, and Purcell 8:00 PM ETHER GAME Spring Has Sprung Our bouquet of classical favorites is in full bloom on this Ether Game.

10:06 PM SOUNDS CHORAL When Less is More: Minimalism in Choral Music We’ll hear Harmonium by John Adams and We Are by Steve Reich, among other pieces.

25 Wednesday 9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH GEORGE WALKER Bach, Corelli, and Vivaldi 8:00 PM LIVE! AT THE CONCERTGEBOUW Roman Kofman/Netherlands Chamber Philharmonic Women of the Netherlands Radio Choir, Grete Pederse, conductor DVORÁK—The Golden Spinning Wheel SCHUMANN—Acht Frauenchöre BARTOK—Falun (Three Village Scenes) KODALY—Symphony in C 10:06 PM THE RECORD SHELF The Best of The Record Shelf: the conclusion of a two-part conversation with pianist Leon Fleisher.

26 Thursday 9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH GEORGE WALKER Paisible, Elgar, and Beethoven 8:00 PM KEEPING SCORE: 13 DAYS WHEN MUSIC CHANGED January 5, 1909: The Premiere of Elektra Elektra is Richard Strauss’s farthest out work and perhaps the only piece from the days of early modernism that retains its ability to shock today. 9:00 PM HARMONIA Vivaldi’s Angels with Ensemble Caprice Harmonia looks at the new and the classic. Ensemble Caprice offers a new take on the choral music of Vivaldi, the New London Consort explores the Renaissance dances from Tylman Susato’s Dansereye, and violin inventions of Francesco Bonporti are performed by Chiara Banchini.

27 Friday 9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH GEORGE WALKER Milhaud, Stamitz, and Waxman 8:00 PM MARIAN McPARTLAND’S PIANO JAZZ Grace Kelly Grace Kelly began making waves in the Boston area with her alto sax playing before hitting her teen years. Since then, she’s played with a host of jazz legends. She also ranked high on both the recent JazzTimes Readers’ Poll and DownBeat Critics’ Poll. On this session she plays “‘Round Midnight,” and displays her vocal skill on “East of the Sun.”

Greensburg 98.9 fm • Kokomo 106.1 fm • Terre Haute 95.1 fm

10:09 PM AFTERGLOW Sustain the Wings: Glenn Miller Goes to War with the Army Air Force Band In 1942 Glenn Miller broke up his popular big band and joined the military, where he formed a new and even bigger orchestra that included strings, small jazz combos, and vocal groups, drawing on some of the most talented musicians who were serving in World War II. Historian Michael McGerr and jazz educator Brent Wallarab are special guests for this Memorial Day week program.

28 Saturday 1:00 PM LYRIC OPERA OF CHICAGO BIZET—Carmen Starring Nadia Krasteva, Brandon Jovanovich, Nicole Cabell, Kyle Ketelson, Craig Irvin, Jennifer Jakob, and Emily Fons. Alain Altinoglu conducts the performance. 8:00 PM HOMETOWN WITH TOM ROZNOWSKI Return Address 8:05 PM THE FOLK SAMPLER Memorial Day: We will not forget. 8:05 PM THE THISTLE AND SHAMROCK Musical Breizh Intoxicating melodies from Brittany fill the air this week, with the ensembles Kornog and Skolvan, vocalist Annie Ebrel, and the father of contemporary Celtic music in Brittany, Alan Stivell. 11:00 PM NIGHT LIGHTS Reminiscing in Tempo: Remembrance in Jazz and Popular Song A Memorial Day tribute featuring music evoking or inspired by the memory of friends, loved ones, and musical colleagues.

29 Sunday 12:00 PM SAINT PAUL SUNDAY The Seattle Chamber Players & Friends NARBUTAITE—Winter Serenade TULVE—Island TUUR—Architectonics VII MAGI—A Tre VASKS—Plainscapes 1:00 PM WITH HEART AND VOICE Music for Remembrance Memorial Day commemorates American soldiers who died while in the military service, and is also an occasion for remembering all those who have gone before. 2:00 PM THE SCORE WITH EDMUND STONE Memorial Day This week we honor those who have served our military in over two centuries of conflict. Music from movies on America’s War of Independence, the U.S. Civil War, World Wars I and II, Vietnam, and the Gulf War. 7:00 PM PROFILES Sage Steele May 2011 / Directions in Sound / Page 17


8:00 PM THE WATERENERGY CRUNCH In this co-production from IEEE Spectrum magazine and the National Science Foundation, we look at the coming clash between water and energy—learning how engineers, communities, and countries are working on innovative solutions to balance our needs for water and energy. 9:00 PM THE SANTA FE CHAMBER MUSIC FESTIVAL

30 Monday 9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH GEORGE WALKER Piazzolla, Haydn, and Tollett 8:00 PM CHICAGO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA A program conducted by Leonard Slatkin HINDEMITH—Overture to Neues vom Tage HINDEMITH—Trauermusik BERLIOZ—Harold in Italy (Pinchas Zukerman, viola) SHOSTAKOVICH—Symphony No. 5 in D Minor, Op. 47 10:00 PM PIPEDREAMS Off the Shelf A spring survey of some recent CD releases from American producers in the USA, Canada, and Mexico.

31 Tuesday 9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH GEORGE WALKER Handel, Grainger, and Tollett 8:00 PM ETHER GAME That’s All Folks Classical composers turn to the people’s music for inspiration on this edition of Ether Game. 10:06 PM SOUNDS CHORAL Canticle of the Sun This famous text by St. Francis of Assisi inspired many composers. We’ll hear selections from Amy Beach’s Canticle of the Sun, written in 1924.

Amy Beach

Page 18 / Directions in Sound / May 2011

W IU This month on WTIU television.

Freedom Riders: American Experience

wfiu.org PROGRAMMING AND OPERATING SUPPORT Indiana University

Monday, May 16 at 9pm and Sunday, May 22 at 1pm In 1961, segregation seemed to have an overwhelming grip on American society. Many states violently enforced the policy, while the federal government, under the Kennedy administration, remained indifferent, preoccupied with matters abroad. That is, until an integrated band of college students— many of whom were the first in their families to attend a university—decided to risk everything and buy a ticket on a Greyhound bus bound for the Deep South. They called themselves the Freedom Riders, and they managed to bring the president and the entire American public face to face with the challenge of correcting civilrights inequities that plagued the nation. The self-proclaimed “Freedom Riders” came from all strata of American society—black and white, young and old, male and female, northern and southern. They embarked on the rides knowing the danger, but firmly committed to the ideals of non-violent protest, aware that their actions could provoke a savage response, but willing to put their lives on the line for the cause of justice. From award-winning filmmaker Stanley Nelson (Wounded Knee, Jonestown: The Life and Death of Peoples Temple, The Murder of Emmett Till), Freedom Riders is the first feature-length film about this courageous band of civil-rights activists. Gaining impressive access to influential figures on both sides of the issue, Nelson chronicles a chapter of American history that stands as an astonishing testament to the accomplishment of youth and what can result from the incredible combination of personal conviction and the courage to organize against all odds. Says director Nelson, “The lesson of the Freedom Rides is that great change can come from a few small steps taken by courageous people. And that sometimes to do any great thing, it’s important that we step out alone.”

CORPORATE MEMBERSHip Bloomington Chiropractic Center Bloomington Iron & Metal, Inc. Bloomington Veterinary Hospital Brown Hill Nursery of Columbus Dr. Phillip Crooke Obstetrics & Gynecology Delta Tau Delta Fraternity— Indiana University Duke Energy G. C. Magnum & Son Construction Dr. David Howell & Dr. Timothy Pliske, DDS of Bedford & Bloomington Joie De Vivre | Medical KP Pharmaceutical Technology Laborers Union #204-Terre Haute Pynco, Inc.—Bedford Smithville Strategic Development PROGRAM UNDERWRITERS 4th Street Festival of the Arts and Crafts A Summit of Awesome Art Girls Allen Funeral Home Anderson Medical Products Andrews, Harrell, Mann, Carmin, and Parker P.C. Aqua PRO Argentum Jewelry Arts Illiana Arts Week Baugh Enterprises Commercial Printing & Bulk Mail Services Bell Trace Bicycle Garage Bloom Magazine Bloomingfoods Market & Deli Bloomington Convention & Visitors Bureau Bloomington Symphony Orchestra Brown County Art Guild, Inc. The Buskirk-Chumley Theater By Hand Gallery Café Django Camerata Orchestra

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Cardinal Stage Company Centerstone Children’s Village Clay City Pharmacy Columbus Area Arts Council Columbus Container Inc. Columbus Indiana Philharmonic Columbus Optical The Community Foundation of Jackson County Commercial Service of Bloomington Crawlspace Doctor Crossroads Repertory Theatre Curry Auto Center Dell Brothers Dermatology Center of Southern Indiana DePauw University Designscape Horticultural Services, Inc The District-MCSWMD Eco Logic, LLC Effingham Performance Center The Electrical Workers of the IBEW Local 725 and the National Electrical Contractors Association Experience Technology Farm Bloomington Finch’s Brasserie First United Church First United Methodist Church Friends of Art Bookstore Friends of the Library-Monroe County The Funeral Chapel Garden Villa Gilbert Construction Global Gifts Good Earth Compost & Mulch Goode Integrative Health Care Goods for Cooks Golden Living Center Grant Street Inn Greene & Schultz, Trial Lawyers, P.C. The Herald-Times Hills O’Brown Realty Hills O’Brown Property Management Christopher J. Holly, Attorney at Law Hoosier Environmental Council Hoosiers for Higher Education Dr. Howard & Associates Eye Care In A Yarn Basket Indiana Daily Student Indiana History Museum

Indiana State Museum Indiana State University Indiana University Health Indianapolis Chamber Orchestra Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra Indianapolis-Marion County Public Library Foundation The Irish Lion Restaurant and Pub ISU Hulman Center IU Art Museum IU Auditorium IU Bloomington Continuing Studies IU Campus Bus Services IU College of Arts & Sciences IU Credit Union IU Credit Union—Investment Services IU Department of Theatre & Drama IU Campus Recreational Sports IU Division of Residential Programs & Services IU Friends of Art Bookshop IU Jacobs School of Music IU Medical Sciences Program IU Press IU School of Fine Arts IU University Information Technology Services IUB Early Childhood Educational Services Ivy Tech Community College J. L. Waters & Company Joie De Vivre | Medical Kappa Alpha Theta Antique Show Laughing Planet Café L. B. Stant and Associates Lake Monroe Village Lotus Pilates Mallor | Grodner Attorneys Mann Plumbing Inc. Meadowood Retirement Center Meadowood Health Pavilion Midwest Counseling Center-Linda Alis Monroe County History Center Musical Arts Youth Orchestra Nicki Williamson Counseling Oliver Winery Periodontics & Dental Implant Center of Southern Indiana Pictura Gallery ProBleu Pygmalion’s Art Supply Quality Surfaces Relish Rentbloomington.net Restore/Habitat for Humanity Ron Plecher-Remax

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Rose Hulman Performing Arts Series Scholars Inn Bakehouse Serendipity Martini Bar and Restaurant Shawnee Summer Theatre Smithville Showers Inn Bed & Breakfast Sole Sensations Soma Coffee House and Juice Bar Saint Mary of the Woods College

Storage Express Terry’s Banquets & Catering The Venue Fine Arts & Gifts Traditions Catering Trojan Horse Restaurant Twisted Limb Paperworks Vance Music Center Village Deli WonderLab 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 Allen Funeral Home (Ask the Mayor-Bloomington) Bicycle Garage (Afterglow) Bloomingfoods Market & Deli (Earth Eats) The Bloomington Brewing Company (Just You and Me) Café Django (Just You and Me) The District-MCSWMD (Ask the Mayor-Bloomington) Goods for Cooks (Earth Eats) The Funeral Chapel (Classical Music with George Walker) Mark Adams, Financial Advisor (Classical Music with George Walker) Indiana Humanities Council (Moment of Indiana History) Lennie’s (Just You and Me) The Nature Conservancy (Journey with Nature) Pizza X (Just You and Me) Periodontics & Dental Implant Center of Southern Indiana (Classical Music with George Walker) Smithville (Profiles) (Noon Edition) Sole Sensations (Classical Music with

George Walker) The Trojan Horse (Just You and Me) Vance Mucic Center (Classical Music with George Walker) Wandering Turtle (Artworks) Nationally Syndicated Program Support American Society of Plant Biologists (A Moment of Science) Christel DeHaan Family Foundation (Harmonia) Brabson Foundation (A Moment of Science) Laughing Planet (Night Lights) Landlocked Music (Night Lights) E. Nakamichi Foundation (Harmonia—The Traditions Series) The Oakley Foundation, Terre Haute (Hometown) Office of the IU Provost, Bloomington (A Moment of Science) Pynco, Inc., Bedford (A Moment of Science) (Harmonia) Raymond Foundation (A Moment of Science) Soma Coffee House and Juice Bar (Night Lights)

May 2011 / Directions in Sound / Page 19


W IU wfiu.org

May 2011

Periodicals Postage

Indiana University 1229 East 7th Street Bloomington, IN 47405-5501

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TIME DATED MATERIAL

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