d irections - Indiana University Bloomington

Transcription

d irections - Indiana University Bloomington
DIRECTIONS
OUND
in
July
2006
Also this month:
• Ragtime to the Max
• Artists of the Month: Jeannette Koekkoek and Mark Kaplan
• Johnny Cash:
The Legend
• Humankind
. . . and more!
“Helping Others in Need” drawing by: Jonah Dahncke, age 11
July 2006
Vol. 54, No­­­­­­. 7
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: [email protected]
web site: wfiu.indiana.edu
Periodical postage paid at
Bloomington, IN
POSTMASTER
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WFIU Membership Department
Radio & TV Center
Indiana University
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Bloomington, IN 47405-5501
WFIU is licensed to the Trustees of
Indiana University, and operated
by Indiana University Radio and
Television Services.
Perry Metz—Executive Director, Radio and Television Services
Christina Kuzmych—Station Manager/Program Director
Sharon Beikman—Broadcast Systems Manager, Traffic
Joe Bourne—Producer/Jazz Director
Cary Boyce—Operations Director
Brian Cox—Underwriting Associate
Don Glass—Volunteer Producer/
A Moment of Science®
Milton Hamburger—Art Director
Brad Howard—Director of Engineering and Operations
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Systems Coordinator
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Directions In Sound, News & Promotions Assistant
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Judith Witt—Development Director, Major & Planned Giving; Production Support
Scott Witzke—Marketing Director
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Underwriting Sales Manager
Eva Zogorski—Membership Director
Announcers: Ann Corrigan, Adam
Ragusea, Jake Sentgeorge, David
Wood
Broadcast Assistant: Phyllis Chen
Harmonia Scriptwriters:
Keith Collins, Catherine Hawkes, Wolodymyr Smishkewych
Volunteer Producer/Hosts: Moya Andrews, Mary Catherine Carmichael, Jenny Kander, Patrick
O’Meara, Shana Ritter, Steve
Sanders, Sarah Stevens, Michael
Wilkerson, Bob Zaltsberg
Membership & Underwriting Staff:
Laura Grannan, Joan Padawan
Movie Reviewer: Peter Noble-Kuchera
Music Assistants: Randy Goldberg,
Adam McCord, Mona
Seghatoleslami
News Assistants: Lauren Algee,
Koran Addo, Clare Deady, Catherine
Hageman
Production Assistant: Paul Messing
Volunteer Office Assistant:
Clare Deady
The 2006 WFIU Kids’ Art
Contest Awards
The winner of the 2006 WFIU Kids’ Art Contest is eleven yearold Jonah Dahncke. The judges thought that his art best visualized the theme of “Helping Others in Need.” Jonah is a fifth
grader at Unionville Elementary School. His hobbies include amateur model aviation, and he would like to be an aircraft designer
when he grows up.
Jonah received a prize of $50, which was donated by United
Way of Monroe County. Half of the prize is for Jonah while the
other half is to be given to the charity of Jonah’s choice. Jonah
plans on using his portion to save for a model airplane. His
charity of choice was the Monroe County Humane Association.
When asked why he chose that particular charity, he said, “that’s
where we got our dog, Lucky, a half chow, half schipperke mix.”
WFIU solicited entries from children in grades 1–5 throughout
the listening area, encouraging them to submit pieces of original
artwork that represent pictorially what it means to help others.
The primary goal of WFIU’s annual art contest is to encourage
and enliven the creative impulse in the young people of our listening area.
Honorable mentions went to:
• Bailey Flich, Age 9, Unionville Elementary
• Lily Hollinden, Age 9, Binford Elementary
• Lizzy Jenson, Age 7, Nashville Elementary
• Eva Marsh, Age 9, Binford Elementary
This year’s judges were Malcolm Smith, Assistant Professor of
Studio Art at Indiana University; Milton Hamburger, Radio and
TV Services Art Director; and Yaël Ksander, artist and WFIU
announcer.
All of the contest entries will be on display at the “WFIU’s
Kids’ Art Show,” at the Monroe County Public Library from July
10–16.
Scott Witzke, WFIU Marketing Director, and Jennifer Hottell,
Communications Director of Monroe County United Way,
present Jonah his prize.
Humankind
Sundays at 8 p.m.
“Checks and Balances”
Sunday, July 2
This program takes place in Philadelphia,
birthplace of America, where our Constitutional system of checks and balances
was established by the founders as a way
to protect the rights of competing interests
in a dynamic democracy. Our exploration
of democratic ideals includes comments of
veteran White House correspondent Helen
Thomas, who has covered every president
since Kennedy, as well as historian and
author Kevin Phillips.
Sunday, July 9
Two young activists in the movement
of children with incarcerated parents
tell what it is like to grow up when
the only access to a parent is by going
through the scary gates of a correctional
institution. We examine the unintended
consequences—emotional, financial,
domestic, and educational—on innocent
children who are left behind when their
parents are incarcerated.
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 [email protected].
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 [email protected]. If you wish to send a letter, the address is
WFIU, Radio/TV Center, 1229 East 7th Street, Indiana University, Bloomington, IN 47405-5501.
“Bill Siemering/Katie Davis”
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.
Sunday, July 16
Underwriting: For information on how your business can underwrite particular programs on WFIU, call (800) 662-3311.
Page / Directions in Sound / July 2006
Jonah Dahncke with his
winning entry.
“Children Left Behind”
Questions or Comments?
Volunteers: Information about volunteer opportunities is available at
(812) 855-1357, or by sending an email to [email protected].
2006 WFIU Kids’ Art Contest
honorable mention entries: (top row l to r) Bailey Flich, Lily Hollinden
(bottom row l to r) Lizzy Jenson, and Eva Marsh
Bloomington 103.7 fm • Columbus 100.7 fm • Kokomo 106.1 fm • Terre Haute 95.1 fm
The first half-hour of this program focuses
on developing nations with little access to
media, where radio broadcasting is a
powerful force for bringing communities
together and promoting a sense of
Johnny Cash:
The Legend
Sundays at 9 p.m.
democracy through greater participation.
The second half focuses on journalist,
conflict mediator, and “emergency social
worker” Katie Davis, who is on a onewoman quest to save children in an inner
city section of Washington, D.C. from
gangs, weapons, alcohol, and drugs.
“Inner Calm/Bill Mosher”
Sunday, July 23
First we travel to Harvard’s Mind/Body
Medical Institute, which has pioneered
research on the Relaxation Response,
an ancient meditative technique that has
helped millions of patients learn ways
of reducing the harmful effects of stress.
Then we profile a television filmmaker
who travels the world in search of heroic
organizations. He shares audio excerpts
of his journey and describes how he’s been
touched by encounters with people who
perform extraordinary acts of service.
“David Allen”
Sunday, July 30
The relentless assault of modern
communication, from cell phones to
e-mail, has left many people feeling
overwhelmed and in need of ways to clear
both their desks and their minds. David
Allen, best-selling author of “Getting
Things Done,” recounts his remarkable
personal journey from early-in-life chaos
and crisis to his current role as a bestselling author in high demand and as an
advisor to organizations needing focus.
No other artist has touched the world of
music like Johnny Cash. Beginning his
career as an outlaw to the Nashville establishment, Cash has come to define country
music over the last forty years. At first, his
unique mix of hillbilly music with gospel
and blues made him a perfect fit at Sam
Phillips’ Sun records, where he recorded
such classics as “Folsom Prison Blues”
and “I Walk The Line.” From there,
Cash signed with Columbia records and
embarked on one of the most remarkable
musical careers of the twentieth century.
Cash is the only person to be inducted
into the Country Music Hall of Fame,
the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, and
the Songwriter’s Hall of Fame. His very
name is synonymous with fighting for the
downtrodden, and the image of the Man
In Black is as deeply American as the stars
and stripes themselves. Cash spent more
than thirty years reinventing himself,
breaking all of the rules of traditional
country music only to emerge as a mythic
hero and archetype of the genre.
Johnny Cash: The Legend is presented
in four parts. “Ring of Fire”: Johnny
Cash and the American Dream; “How
Great Thou Art”: Cash’s spiritual quest;
“The Man in Black”: Cash’s politics and
influence; “The World Needs a Melody”:
Johnny Cash the storyteller.
Interview subjects include Roseanne
Cash, John Carter Cash, Earl Scruggs,
Cowboy Jack Clement, Larry Gatlin,
Marty Stuart, Rolling Stone critic Anthony
DeCurtis, and Cash biographer Patrick
Carr. Also featured are archival recordings
of Johnny and June Carter Cash interviews.
Singer-songwriter Rodney Crowell is
the host.
July 2006 / Directions in Sound / Page Progressions: 100
Ragtime to the Max
Years of Jazz Guitar Sundays at 4 p.m.
Sunday, July 30, 9 p.m.
As a cornerstone
of jazz evolution,
the guitar has a
fascinating history,
with its labyrinthine
web of influences
in the hands of the
myriad artists who
shaped its destiny.
Progressions: 100
Years of Jazz Guitar
draws on dozens
of recording artists and record labels to
represent the guitar’s odyssey over the
decades. It is both a scholarly collection
and one that will satisfy the appetites of
guitar fanatics and music lovers across the
entire spectrum.
Hosted by the legendary Les Paul, the
program traces the history of jazz guitar
from 1906 to the present. You’ll hear
music and commentary by John Scofield,
George Benson, Jim Hall, and journalist
Bill Milkowski. Classic, influential tracks
by Django Reinhart, Wes Montgomery,
John McLaughlin, and many more are also
featured.
Broadcasts from the
IU Jacobs School of
Music
IVES—Variations on “America”; Paul
Biss/IU University Orch.
Airs: 7/3 at 7 p.m., 7/4 at 10 a.m., 7/7 at
3 p.m.
BARTÓK—Sonatina, Sz. 55; Atar Arad,
vla.; Jeannette Koekkoek, p.
Airs: 7/10 at 7 p.m., 7/11 at 10 a.m., 7/14
at 3 p.m.
GRANTHAM—Kentucky Harmony;
Stephen Pratt/IU Wind Ens.
Airs: 7/17 at 7 p.m., 7/18 at 10 a.m., 7/21
at 3 p.m.
BURNETTE—Cinder Hill; Brian Horne,
t.; Gary Arvin, p.
Airs: 7/24 at 7 p.m., 7/25 at 10 a.m., 7/28
at 3 p.m.
Page / Directions in Sound / July 2006
Join us for a lively thirteen-week excursion
into America’s first popular music—
ragtime.
Ragtime was America’s music of the
theater and vaudeville, bands and orchestras, ballroom dances and pop tunes.
Syncopation was its musical trademark
and the source of its popularity.
Ragtime to the Max employs a broad
definition of “ragtime,” applying it both
to the now well-recognized piano works
of composers such as Scott Joplin, Jelly
Roll Morton, and Eubie Blake, as well
as to all popular music of the period that
broke away from the European legacy of
waltz and ballad forms.
Host Max Morath
is a performer who
occupies a unique space
as an entertainer and
spokesman for American life and music. A
pianist, humorist, historian, and raconteur, his
first one-man theatrical,
“Turn of the Century,”
spearheaded the ragtime
revival of the 1970s,
playing Off-Broadway
for a full season. On
tour he has performed
more than 3,000 engagements at theaters,
colleges and community
concerts as a solo artist,
with his quintet, and
with various orchestras.
Sunday, July 2
“Ragtime to the Max”
In this first episode, Max Morath covers
ragtime music during the period of its
great popularity, ca. 1900–1920. Ragtime
was more than a small niche for the piano;
it became the label defining all of America’s first popular music. Recorded artists
include Dick Hyman, Virginia Eskin, and
Butch Thompson.
Sunday, July 9
“Troublesome Ivories”
This program is devoted exclusively to
piano ragtime. Most of the rags are of the
type composed by such icons as James P.
Johnson, Jelly Roll Morton, and Eubie
Blake. Their stunning virtuoso pieces
edged toward jazz styles to come. Morath
also takes us briefly to a nickelodeon,
where ragtime was part of the musical
score for silent movies.
Pianists include the Canadians Mimi
Blais, John Arpin, and Eubie Blake himself.
Artists of the Month: Featured Classical
Jeannette Koekkoek New Releases
and Mark Kaplan
Selected by Adam P. Schweigert
by Adam P. Schweigert
The IU Jacobs School of Music continues
its annual Summer Music Festival in July,
and WFIU celebrates by featuring recordings by pianist Jeannette Koekkoek and
violinist Mark Kaplan, two of the faculty
members for this year’s festival.
Sunday, July 16
“Yes, We Have No Pianos”
This program celebrates ragtime as performed everywhere except at the piano.
We hear ragtime for saxophone, xylophone, string quartet, banjo and guitar,
along with plenty of rousing rags by bands
and orchestras. The piano and orchestra of
Dick Hyman is featured, plus organist Lee
Erwin, the Amherst Saxophone Quartet,
and others.
Sunday, July 23
“Ragtime Gold From Tin Pan Alley”
Part of the ragtime story lies in the fact
that its emergence from folk sources
coincided with the commercialization of
popular music. Ragtime appeared just as
the publishing world took on the name
Tin Pan Alley. Using a wide range of music
from the period, Morath takes us through
the years when ragtime, beginning as a
pariah, finally gained popularity. Artists
include André Previn and Itzhak Perlman
in a charming duet, the Canadian Brass,
vocals by Morath and mezzo-soprano
Joan Morris with William Bolcom on
piano.
Sunday, July 30
“What Time Is Ragtime?”
Ragtime from the musician’s point-ofview: Where did it come from? What
were its roots? Why were its rhythms and
syncopations considered so shocking?
Morath examines ragtime’s use of duple
time, which set it apart from the threefour waltzes so popular at the time. Music
is furnished by pianists and singers, plus
orchestras directed by Gunther Schuller,
Turk Murphy and others.
Bloomington 103.7 fm • Columbus 100.7 fm • Kokomo 106.1 fm • Terre Haute 95.1 fm
Jeannette Koekkoek
Mark Kaplan
Dutch pianist Jeannette Koekkoek is a
renowned soloist, chamber musician, and
educator based in Arezzo, Italy. Following
studies at the Amsterdam Conservatory,
she studied at IU with Menahem Pressler,
and returns this summer to teach at the
IU Summer String Academy and perform
several chamber music concerts with other
faculty and guest artists.
On Wednesday, July 5th at 7:07 p.m.,
we’ll hear Koekkoek with the Sagee Piano
Trio in a performance of Haydn’s Piano
Trio in C, Hob. XV: 27, and the following
week, on Monday, July 10th, also at 7:07
p.m., she joins violist Atar Arad for the
Sonatina of Béla Bartók.
Also performing this month is violinist
Mark Kaplan. Mr. Kaplan, another highly
renowned soloist, chamber musician, and
educator, joined the IU’s string department
last year. He performs two concerts this
month, first with faculty colleagues on July
9th and then with the Sequenza Trio, an
ensemble he formed with his wife pianist
and fellow IU faculty member Yael Weiss
and cellist Adrian Brendel on July 13th.
We’ll hear two recordings featuring Mr.
Kaplan this month. First, on Saturday, July
8th at 11:33 p.m., the Concerto No. 4 in D
of Giovanni Battista Viotti. Kaplan joins
the Padova Chamber Orchestra under the
direction of David Golub for that recording, and then on Wednesday, July 12th, he
joins the London Symphony Orchestra
under the direction of Mitch Miller for
the Violin Concerto No. 2 in d, Op. 22 of
Henryk Wieniawski.
Charles Koechlin: Vocal Works with Orchestra (Hänssler Classics CD 93.159)
Juliane Banse, s.; Heinz Holliger, cond.;
SWR Vocal Ens. and Radio Sym. Orch. of
Stuttgart
• Deux Poèmes d’André Chénier, Op. 23:
Sunday, July 2nd at 11:25 a.m.
• Études antiques, Op. 46: Saturday, July
8th at 11:33 a.m.
• Deux Poèmes symphoniques, Op. 43:
Thursday, July 13th at 7:07 p.m.
• Quatre Poèmes d’Edmond Haraucourt,
Op. 7; Chant funèbre a la mémoire
des jeunes femmes défuntes, Op. 37:
Tuesday, July 25th at 10:12 p.m.
It may seem odd that Charles Koechlin—a
student of Fauré, classmate of Ravel, and
teacher of Poulenc—has yet to attain the
attention devoted to these other composers. Koechlin possessed a remarkable lyric
gift and was a master of orchestration and
of writing for the voice. On this two-disc
set, soprano Juliane Banse and conductor
Heinz Holliger have assembled a thoughtful program of his works for voice and
orchestra.
Johann Sebastian Bach: The Sonatas and
Partitas for Violin Solo (ECM New Series
1926/27)
Gidon Kremer, vln.
• Sonata No. 1 in g, BWV 1001: Monday,
July 17th at 7:07 p.m.
• Partita No. 1 in b, BWV 1002:
Wednesday, June 5th at 10:12 p.m.
• Sonata No. 2 in a, BWV 1003:
Saturday, July 29th at 11:33 a.m.
• Partita No. 2 in d, BWV 1004:
Wednesday, July 12th at 10:12 p.m.
• Sonata No. 3 in C, BWV 1005:
Thursday, July 27th at 7:07 p.m.
• Partita No. 3 in E, BWV 1006:
Saturday, July 15th at 11:33 p.m.
Latvian violinist Gidon Kremer
has a remarkable ability to jump
effortlessly between styles and
time periods, championing new
works and putting his personal
stamp on works of the past.
Kremer’s recent recordings of
Bach’s monumental works for
violin solo are fresh, interesting, and uniquely his own.
Mozart: Piano Concertos K. 449 and K.
467 (Classical Soundings CD1001)
Steven Lubin, fp. and cond./The Mozartean Players Classical Orch.
• Concerto No. 21 in C, K. 467.: Monday,
July 10th at 7:07 p.m.
• Concerto No. 14 in E-flat, K. 449:
Saturday, July 22nd at 11:33 a.m.
These two recordings made by fortepianist
Steven Lubin in the mid 80s are just now
seeing the light of day. The period instrument performances display a sparkling
clarity in Mr. Lubin’s solo lines, and the
ensemble playing is refined and sensitive.
This CD is the debut release of independent record label Classical Soundings.
Sound in Motion: Eugene Izotov, Oboe
(Boston Records BR1068CD)
Eugene Izotov, ob.; Christopher Brown
and Elizaveta Kopelman, p.
• Pasculli: Concerto on Motives from
Donizetti’s “La Favorita”: Saturday,
July 1st at 11:33 a.m.
• Kalliwoda: Morceau de Salon, Op. 228:
Thursday, July 6th at 7:07 p.m.
• Bozza: Fantasie Pastorale, Op. 37:
Wednesday, July 19th at 7:07 p.m.
• Silvestrini: Etudes for Oboe: Selections:
Sunday, July 30th at 11:25 a.m.
Mr. Izotov performs these opera fantasy
pieces like someone who makes his living
in the opera pit (he is the principal oboist
of the Metropolitan Opera Orchestra). He
plays with a delightful tone and charming
sense of phrasing and rubato, giving the
impression that he cherishes every note—
no small task considering the virtuosity
required of several of these works.
July 2006 / Directions in Sound / Page July Jazz Notes
Community
Events
By David Brent Johnson
It’s going to be a jazzy July on WFIU, with two jazz-oriented Sunday specials this month—Progressions: 100 Years of Jazz Guitar,
and the debut of the series Ragtime to the Max (for details see
page 4).
During the week, meanwhile, jazz is a standard attraction
at WFIU, led by the redoubtable Joe Bourne’s Just You and
Me, weekday afternoons from 3:30 to 5. Joe also hosts The Big
Bands every Friday evening from 9 to 10, giving you a chance
to party like it’s 1939. Before The Big Bands it’s Piano Jazz, and
this month host Marion McPartland entertains a broad range of
guests, including movie star, director, and jazz lover Clint Eastwood; pop composer Elvis Costello (who’s made a number of forays into jazz in recent years—and just coincidentally happens to
be hitched to jazz chanteuse Diana Krall); R & B songstress Alicia
Keys; and a man who’s made his mark in the canon of post-1950
American popular song—Burt Bacharach.
If you crave more American popular song and jazz, stick
around after The Big Bands for Afterglow, with programs this
month focusing on saxophonist Dave Pell’s interpretations of
music by Irving Berlin, Rodgers and Hart, and Johnny Burke and
Jimmy Van Heusen; the early jazz recordings of French singer
Serge Gainsbourg (just in time for Bastille Day); a new release
from pianist Frank Kimbrough; and new reissues of 1950s smallgroup and vocal jazz recordings by drummer Buddy Rich. These
programs are also archived after broadcast at www.afterglow.
indiana.edu.
On Saturdays late evening listeners can catch Night Lights
at 11:05 and hear programs that explore jazz and jazz artists in
the post-World War II era. Shows this month include “Nat King
Cole’s St. Louis Blues,” with music and dialogue from the only
movie to feature Cole as a leading man (playing blues composer
W.C. Handy); “Jazz Advance,” a look at the early recordings of
avant-garde pianist Cecil Taylor; “Do It Again,” in which artists
such as Gerry Mulligan, Helen Merrill, Curtis Fuller, and June
Christy revisit past albums; “Vibin’,” an exploration of the 1960s
straight ahead jazz recordings of vibraphonist Roy Ayers, who
would go on to commercial crossover success in the 1970s; and
“Porgy & Bess: the 1950s Jazz Revival,” with music from Miles
Davis, the Modern Jazz Quartet, Ella Fitzgerald and Louis Armstrong, and more obscure renderings such as that of the Bill Potts
Big Band. These programs are also archived on WFIU’s website,
at www.nightlights.indiana.edu.
Finally, we invite everyone to attend the free Jazz in July
concerts on the terrace of the IU Art Museum, beginning
every Friday evening this month at 6:30. The performers
include Rachel and Sara Caswell, the
Indianapolis Guitar Summit, Craig and
the Crawdads, and Kwyjibo. Seating
will be provided and refreshments will
be available for purchase. Cool jazz on
a warm summer night—we hope to see
you there!
Page / Directions in Sound / July 2006
WFIU is the media sponsor for
the following events. For more
information on these and other
activities on the calendar, visit
wfiu.indiana.edu
Jazz in July
This year the series will be
hosted by WFIU’s Joe Bourne
and David Brent Johnson.
Concerts take place on the IU
Art Museum’s outdoor sculpture terrace at 6:30 p.m.
• Sara and Rachel Caswell
July 7
Brown County Playhouse
“Arms and the Man”
July 6-9, 12-16, 19-23, 26-30
www.theatre.indiana.edu
812-855-1103
812-988-2123
Picnic with the Pops
Saturday, July 1
Ivy Tech Bloomington
Red Cross Book Drive
Sara & Rachel Caswell
• The Indianapolis Guitar Summit
July 14
• Craig and the Crawdads
July 21
• Kwyjibo
July 28
Pre-concert gallery talk at
5:30 by Nan Brewer, curator
of works on paper, on James
McGarrell and the Art of
Jazz.
Profiles
Festival Orchestra
Saturday, July 8
Border’s Books and Music
Eastland Plaza, Bloomington
WFIU assists the Red Cross in
collecting books for the group’s
annual book sale in October.
Drop off your books, DVDs,
VHS tapes, and music.
Summer Chamber Music Series
Part of the IU Summer Music
Festival 2006. Complete schedule available at www.music.
indiana.edu. All performances
in Auer Hall.
• Chih-Yi Chen and Jeannette
Koekkoek
July 6, 8 p.m.
• Chamber Music Recital
July 9, 4 p.m.
• William Harvey and Jeannette Koekkoek
July 10, 8 p.m.
• Sequenza Trio
July 13, 8 p.m.
Kwyjibo
Bloomington 103.7 fm • Columbus 100.7 fm • Kokomo 106.1 fm • Terre Haute 95.1 fm
These concerts feature outstanding students and distinguished faculty members of
the IU Jacobs School of Music
on three Thursday evenings
at 8 p.m. at the Musical Arts
Center:
• Concert II
Michael Stern, Conductor
July 20
• Concert III
Leonard Slatkin, Conductor
August 3
• Additional Free Concert:
Symphony Orchestra
Cliff Colnot, Conductor
July 11, 8 p.m.
Sundays at 7 p.m.
July 2 – Richard Perez
As producing artistic director of the Bloomington Playwright’s
Project, Richard Perez has overseen the production of more than
twenty new full-length plays, including fourteen world premieres.
He has developed the Ensemble of Artists, a group of writers,
directors, and actors who participate in the running of the
company and in the development of new works. Perez has taught
acting and improvisation at Tony Randall’s National Actor’s
Theatre in New York City, Arizona State University, and Theatre
Sports New York. He wrote and performed in a one-man show,
Secret Things, staged at the BPP and in New York. He spoke
with Shana Ritter.
July 9 – Deniese Smith
Since beginning her teaching career at University High School
nearly four decades ago, Deniese Smith has nurtured generations
of students and art teachers. While she has served Bloomington
High School North in numerous leadership roles over the years,
arguably her most important role has been that of department
chair for the Fine Arts Department, where she has vigorously defended financial support for the arts. This year she was awarded
the Arts in Education Award from the Bloomington Area Arts
Council. She spoke with Sarah Stevens. (repeat)
IU Opera Theater Presents
The Mikado
By Gilbert and Sullivan
July 28, 29 and August 4, 5
8 p.m., Musical Arts Center
Symphonic Band Outdoor
Concerts
MAC Lawn on Jordan Avenue,
7 p.m. Rain location: Recital
Hall.
• Stephen W. Pratt, conductor
July 12
• David C. Woodley,
conductor
July 19
• Stephen W. Pratt, conductor
July 26
Shawnee Theatre’s 47th Season
Bloomfield
812-384-3559
www.shawneetheatre.org
• “I Only Have Fangs For
You” by Craig Sodaro
June 29–July 2, July 6­–9
• “Here Lies Jeremy Troy” by
Jack Sharkey
July 13–16
• “If it’s Monday, This Must
Be Murder” by Pat Cook
July 20–23
• “Our Town” by Thornton
Wilder
July 27–30
Billy Collins
July 16 – Billy Collins and Kay Ryan hosted by Garrison Keillor
Popular with both critics and the public, former Poet Laureate
of the United States Billy Collins is a unique literary figure. His
last three collections, “Nine Horses,” “Sailing Alone Around the
Room,” and “Picnic, Lightning,” broke records for poetry sales
and earned him comparisons to Robert Frost.
Kay Ryan’s minimalist poems—many are less than twenty
lines of fewer than six syllables—expose entire worlds of rich,
allegorical meaning. Her most recent collection is “The Niagara
River.” Produced by KQED in San Francisco.
July 23 – Janis Stockhouse
The entire nation watched the work of Janis Stockhouse when
the Bloomington High School North marching band played at
the 1999 Rose Bowl Parade and the 2003 Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade. Stockhouse has directed the program for two
decades and also held leadership positions in many professional
organizations. She co-authored the book, “Jazzwomen: Conversations with Twenty-one Musicians,” and was awarded the
Indiana Music Teacher of the Year Award and the BAAC Arts in
Education Award. Sarah Stevens is the host.
July 30 – Alexander Kerr
By the time Alexander Kerr became the youngest member of the
string faculty at the IU Jacobs School of Music, he had amassed
a considerable orchestral and solo career. He has served as concertmaster of the Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra, and appeared
as a soloist with orchestras throughout Europe and the United
States. As a chamber musician, he has collaborated with such notables as IU alumni Joshua Bell and Edgar Meyer. Most recently
he mounted a chamber music tour of Europe with violinist Sarah
Chang and members of the Berlin Philharmonic. He spoke with
Peter Jacobi.
July 2006 / Directions in Sound / Page Robert Samels
Memorial Fund
Below is a partial list of the WFIU staff
members and listeners who have made
donations to the Robert Samels Memorial
Fund. To date we have received more
than eight thousand dollars in donations.
We invite you to join us by making a
voluntary contribution. No amount is too
small. Information on how to contribute
to the Fund is on our Web site:
wfiu.indiana.edu. Together we can
preserve his memory and teach those who,
like Robert, come to WFIU to learn the art
and craft of public radio.
Fred and Sereta Andrews
Peggy Bachman
Olimpia F. Barbera
Sharon Beikman
David Belbutoski
Liz Bevers
Mike and Sue Blazier
Jean Boone
Laura Bornholdt
Cary Boyce
John and Nancy Bruce
Marilyn Burnside
James and Carol Campbell
Becky Cape
Marvin Carmony
Beverley G. Carson
Carla Carson
Ledford C. Carter
Robert L. Carter
Ruth H. Chesmore
Nelda Christ
Sandra and Fred Churchill
Andrea and Amanda Ciccarelli
Joseph R. Clark
John H. Coats
Edmond Cooper
Annie Corrigan
Lucille Cummings
Barbara F. Dunn
Andrew R. Durkin
David and Marilyn Ebbinghouse
Luba Edlina-Dubinsky
David Eisenman
Ruellen Fessenbecker
Jana Fisher
Don Freund
Gallagher Properties, Inc.
Glenn and Julie Gass
Laura Ginger
Marge Gravit
Jordana and Miriam Greenberg
Milton Hamburger
Page / Directions in Sound / July 2006
David Heise and Elsa Lewis-Heise
Jamie Helsen
“Bud” on Ether Game
E.J. Hewitt and R.H. Small
Margaret Hinshaw
Marian Hoffa
Jan Holloway
Stella Hooker-Haase
Ann T. Hunckler
Ross S. Jennings
David Brent Johnson
Jacob Kander
Patricia Kingsbury
Christina Kuzmych
Michael and Jaydene Laros
David and Sharon Larson
Steve and Chris Letsinger
Rosemary and Paul Lloyd
Judith Lovejoy
Ian MacDonald
Darby McCarty
Adam and Emily McCord
Sandra McCoy and Betty Haven
Michael McCraw
John McDowell
Bruce and Connie McLaren
Ron and Cindy McMillin
Nancy and Perry Metz
Louis and Norma Miller
Marsha Minton
Michael Molenda
Michael and Audrey Morgan
Robert O’Hearn
Marc Oliphant
Ann and Brian O’Neill
David and Rita Pavolka
Arvids Plesovs
Cynthia Port
Patricia Powell
Maryrose Pratter
Chris Price
Dan Quilter and Kathleen Sideli
Mary Jane Reilly
Vickie Renfrow
Joe and Sandy Ridenour
Todd and Christan Royer
Matt and Jean Ruhlen
Mike and Phyllis Ryan
Tony, Sue, Ann and Kay Sauder
Chad, Ann Marie and A.J. Schultheis
Adam Schwartz
Herbert, Nancy and Catherine Seltz
Judith Serebnick
Charles and Jeanne Shaw
Debora Shaw and Charles Davis
John Shelton
George and Mary Ann Smerk
Malcolm Smith and LuAnn Johnson
Dorothy Soudakoff
George and Annemarie Springer
Wendell and Shirley St. John
Janis Starcs
Janos and Rae Starker
Rose Marie Stiffler
Judith Stoffel
Cathy Stone
Kirsten Folting Streib
Cheryl and Vernon Sweeney
Carol Tomasic
University of Akron-Wayne College Faculty and Staff
Mazelle Van Buskirk
Lane Vargas
George Walker and Carolyn Lipson-Walker
Gloria Walsh
Werner and Barbara Watt Jorck
Don and Kay Weaver
Allen and Nancy White
Virginia Wightman
Richard D. Willey
Anne Wilson
Barbara F. Wilson
Annette Windhorn and Steve York
Henry Winton
Patricia Wise
Judy and Lee Witt
Scott and Jennifer Witzke
David and Micaela Wood
Todd and Hiromi Yampol
Paul and Charlotte Zietlow
Public Matters
on the Web
This year Congress is considering
a proposal to cut over 200 million
dollars in federal support for public
broadcasting.
National Public Radio, in association with PBS, has created Tell
Them Public Matters, a Web site
that makes it possible for listeners
to share their thoughts on public
broadcasting in the face of proposed budget cuts. To learn about
how public broadcasting is funded
or to send a message to Congress,
visit tellthempublicmatters.org
or visit the WFIU Web site: wfiu.
indiana.edu.
Bloomington 103.7 fm • Columbus 100.7 fm • Kokomo 106.1 fm • Terre Haute 95.1 fm
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:
Indiana University
Summer Music Festival
IU Opera Theatre
Musical Arts Center
Bloomington
812-855-7433
www.music.indiana.edu
Valid for two-for-one admission to
the July 28 opening performance
of The Mikado by Gilbert and
Sullivan. Subject to availability.
Conner Prairie
13400 Allisonville Road
Fishers
317-776-6000
www.connerprairie.org
Valid for two-for-one general
admission throughout the month of
July, including the Glorious Fourth
celebration. Excludes Symphony
on the Prairie, Adventure Camp,
and non-general admission events.
Subject to availability.
Offer expired:
Waldon Inn’s Different Drummer
2 West Seminary Street
Greencastle
765-653-2761
Weekday
Saturday
12:01 AM NPR NEWS
12:06 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC OVERNIGHT
5:00 AM BBC WORLD SERVICE
6:00 AM MORNING EDITION
NPR’S award-winning news program with
local and state news at 6:06, 7:06, and 8:06
8:50 AM MARKETPLACE
A daily rundown of financial news from Public Radio International followed by
Indiana Business News.
9:04 AM SPEAK YOUR MIND
(On selected days.)
9:00 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH
GEORGE WALKER
Featuring new releases and recordings from the WFIU library. (See daily listings for
program highlights.)
9:03 AM MOVIE REVIEW (Friday)
10:01 AM BBC NEWS
10:06 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH
GEORGE WALKER (con’t.)
MOVIE REVIEW (Tuesday)
10:58 AM A MOMENT OF SCIENCE
11:01 AM NPR NEWS
11:05 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH
GEORGE WALKER (con’t.)
11:06 AM MOVIE REVIEW (Friday)
11:26 AM A MOMENT OF INDIANA
HISTORY (Mondays)
11:27 AM RADIO READER
11:55 AM STARDATE
11:56 AM SPEAK YOUR MIND
(On selected days.)
12:01 PM NPR & LOCAL NEWS
12:06 PM FRESH AIR
(ASK THE MAYOR airs Wednesday: NOON EDITION airs Friday.)
1:00 PM PERFORMANCE TODAY
2:01 PM NPR NEWS
2:00 PM PERFORMANCE TODAY
3:01 PM NPR AND LOCAL NEWS
3:08 PM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH
GEORGE WALKER (con’t.)
3:10 PM MOVIE REVIEW (Tuesday) 3:25 PM COMPOSERS DATEBOOK
(Monday to Wednesday)
3:25 PM FOCUS ON FLOWERS
(Thursday and Friday)
3:30 PM JUST YOU AND ME
WITH JOE BOURNE
4:55 PM A MOMENT OF SCIENCE
5:00 PM ALL THINGS CONSIDERED
News coverage and commentary from
National Public Radio with local and state
news at 5:04 and 5:33.
6:30 PM MARKETPLACE
(Followed by Indiana Business News)
7:00 PM A CONGRESSIONAL MOMENT
(Fridays)
7:01 PM THE WRITER’S ALMANAC
7:06 PM EVENING CLASSICAL MUSIC
(FRESH AIR on Fridays.) 7:58 PM A MOMENT OF INDIANA
HISTORY (Wednesdays)
8:02 PM A MOMENT OF INDIANA
HISTORY (Fridays)
9:00 PM THE BIG BANDS (Fridays)
10:01 PM BBC & LOCAL NEWS
10:08 PM STARDATE
10:09 PM AFTERGLOW (Fridays)
See program grid on back cover and daily
listings for details of weeknight programming.
12:00 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC OVERNIGHT
7:01 AM NPR & LOCAL NEWS
7:07 AM FOCUS ON FLOWERS
7:47 AM SATURDAY FEATURE/RADIO PUBLIC
8:00 AM WEEKEND EDITION
10:00 AM CAR TALK
11:00 AM SAYS YOU!
11:30 AM STARDATE
(Start time may be affected by opera start
time.)
11:33 PM CLASSICAL MUSIC
(Start time may be affected by opera start
time.)
1:30 PM OPERA STAGE
(Start times may vary.)
5:00 PM ALL THINGS CONSIDERED
(Start time may be delayed by opera.)
6:00 PM GARRISON KEILLOR’S
A PRAIRIE HOME COMPANION
8:00 PM HOMETOWN
WITH TOM ROZNOWSKI
8:05 PM THE FOLK SAMPLER
9:05 PM THE THISTLE AND SHAMROCK
10:09 PM AFROPOP WORLDWIDE
10:05 PM NEWS
10:07 PM STARDATE
11:09 PM NIGHT LIGHTS
12:10 AM PORTRAITS IN BLUE
Sunday
1:00 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC OVERNIGHT
7:01 AM NPR & LOCAL NEWS
7:07 AM FOCUS ON FLOWERS
7:55 AM A CONGRESSIONAL MOMENT
8:00 AM WEEKEND EDITION
10:00 AM THIS AMERICAN LIFE
11:00 AM LIVING ON EARTH
11:23 AM EARTHNOTE
11:25 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC
11:46 AM THE POETS WEAVE
11:52 AM STARDATE
11:55 AM LOCAL NEWS
12:00 PM SAINT PAUL SUNDAY
1:00 PM SCHICKELE MIX
2:00 PM BROADWAY REVISITED
3:00 PM WEEKEND RADIO
3:57 PM EARTHNOTE
4:00 PM RAGTIME TO THE MAX
5:01 PM ALL THINGS CONSIDERED
6:01 PM NPR NEWS
6:06 PM SOUND MEDICINE
6:14 PM A CONGRESSIONAL MOMENT
7:00 PM PROFILES
8:00 PM SPECIALS (See detailed listings.)
10:01 PM NPR & LOCAL NEWS
10:05 PM STARDATE
10:08 PM MUSIC FROM THE HEARTS OF
SPACE
11:08 PM CLASSICAL MUSIC
OVERNIGHT
July 2006 / Directions in Sound / Page Key to abbreviations.
b., bass; bar., baritone; bssn., bassoon; c., contralto; cl., clarinet; cond., conductor; cont., continuo; ct., countertenor; db., double bass; ch.,
chamber; E.hn., English horn; ens., ensemble;
fl., flute; gt., guitar; hn., horn; hp., harp; hpsd.,
harpsichord; intro., introduction; instr., instrument; kbd., keyboard; ms., mezzo-soprano;
ob., oboe; orch., orchestra; org., organ; Phil.,
Philharmonic; p., piano; perc., percussion; qt.,
quartet; rec., recorder; sax., saxophone; s.,
soprano; str., string; sym., symphony; t., tenor;
tb., trombone; timp., timpani; tpt., trumpet;
trans., transcribed; var., variations; vla., viola;
vlc., violoncello; vln., violin. Upper case letters
indicate major keys; lower case letters indicate
minor keys.
1 Saturday
10:00 AM CAR TALK
With hosts Tom and Ray Magliozzi
11:00 AM SAYS YOU!
With host Richard Sher
11:33 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC
BACH—Sonata in e, BWV 1023; Hélène
Schmitt, vln.; Alain Gervreau, vlc.; Jan
Willem Jansen, hpsd.
BEETHOVEN: 33 VARIATIONS ON A
WALTZ BY A. DIABELLI, OP. 120: Var.
29-33; Edmund Battersby, p.
MOZART—Concerto in D for Violin and
Piano, K. Anh. 56; Daniel Hope, vln.;
Sebastian Knauer, p.; Roger Norrington/
Camerata Salzburg
BARTÓK—Violin Concerto No. 1, Sz. 36,
Op. post.; Christian Ostertag, vln.; Hans
Zender/SWR Sym. Orch. Baden-Baden &
Freiburg
ZELENKA—Sonata No. 3 in B-flat, for
Violin, Oboe, Bassoon, and Continuo;
Chiara Banchini, vln.; Paul Dombrecht, ob.;
Danny Bond, bsn.; Richte van der Meer, vlc.;
Robert Kohnen, hpsd.
PASCULLI—Concerto on motives from
Donizetti’s “La Favorita”; Eugene Izotov,
ob.; Christopher Brown, p.
1:30 PM OPERA STAGE
VIVALDI—Orlando furioso
Alan Curtis/Teatro Carlo Felice Chorus and
Orch.; Ann Hallenberg (Orlando); Elena
Belfiore (Alcina); Laura Aikin (Angelica);
Annarita Gemmabella (Bradamante); Max
Emanuel Cencic (Medoro); Vito Priante
(Astolfo); Franco Fagioli (Ruggiero)
6:00 PM A PRAIRIE HOME COMPANION
With host Garrison Keillor
8:00 PM HOMETOWN
WITH TOM ROZNOWSKI
“The Conscious Mile”
8:05 PM THE FOLK SAMPLER
“As Old As You Feel”
And other lies.
Page 10 / Directions in Sound / July 2006
9:05 PM THE THISTLE AND SHAMROCK
“Young Tradition”
The finals concert of the BBC Radio
Scotland Young Traditional Musician 2006
took place earlier this year at the thirteenth
Celtic Connections festival. Meet the
winner and enjoy music from the successful
recording artists who launched their careers
after winning the title in previous years.
10:07 PM AFROPOP WORLDWIDE
With Host Georges Collinet
11:00 PM NIGHT LIGHTS
“Nat King Cole’s St. Louis Blues”
Music from the 1958 biopic movie about
blues composer W.C. Handy, played by Nat
King Cole.
2 Sunday
12:09 AM PORTRAITS IN BLUE
“Blues Music Award Winners 2006”
All Eras and Styles
10:00 AM THIS AMERICAN LIFE
With host Ira Glass
11:00 AM LIVING ON EARTH
With host Steve Curwood
11:25 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC
CHOPIN—Impromptu in A-flat, Op. 29;
Yundi Li, p.
FAURÉ—Fantaisie for Flute and Piano, Op.
79; Christina Jennings, fl.; Lura JohnsonLee, p.
KOECHLIN—TWO POEMS OF ANDRÉ
CHENIER, OP. 23: La jeune Tarentine;
Juliane Banse, s.; Heinz Holliger/SWR Radio
Sym. Orch. Stuttgart
11:47 AM THE POETS WEAVE
With host Jenny Kander
12:00 PM SAINT PAUL SUNDAY
Jacques Ogg, hpsd.; Wilbert Hazelzet, fl.
TELEMANN—TAFELMUSIK, PART I:
Solo in b
BACH—Flute Sonata in b, BWV 1030
BACH, C.P.E.—Duetto in D, Wq. 83
1:00 PM SCHICKELE MIX
“Transitory Pleasures”
2:00 PM BROADWAY REVISITED
“American History 101”
Three shows about America’s past: “1776,”
“Assassins,” and “Sing for Your Supper.”
3:00 PM WEEKEND RADIO
A program for Canada Day (July 1st) and
Independence Day. We hear the Royal
Canadian Air Farce’s “Great Canadian
Moments,” “Born on the First of July,”
and “Immigration Inspector” and The
Kaminski International Kazoo Quartet’s
“Oh, Canada.” Also on hand are “Stars
and Stripes Forever” by the Guckenheimer
Sauerkraut Band and “Ballad for
Americans” with Odetta.
4:00 PM RAGTIME TO THE MAX
6:00 PM SOUND MEDICINE
Interviews from the IU School of Medicine.
Barbara Lewis West is host.
7:00 PM PROFILES
Richard Perez
8:00 PM HUMANKIND
“Checks and Balances”
This program takes place in Philadelphia,
birthplace of America. Our exploration of
democratic ideals includes comments of
veteran White House correspondent Helen
Thomas as well as historian and author
Kevin Phillips.
9:00 PM PROGRESSIONS: 100 YEARS OF
JAZZ GUITAR
Hosted by the legendary Les Paul, this
program traces the history of jazz guitar
from 1906 to the present. You’ll hear
music and commentary by John Scofield,
George Benson, Jim Hall and journalist
Bill Milkowski. Classic, influential tracks
by Django Reinhart, Wes Montgomery,
John McLaughlin, and many more are also
featured.
Wes Montgomery
10:05 PM MUSIC FROM THE HEARTS OF
SPACE
With host Stephen Hill
3 Monday
9:05 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH
GEORGE WALKER
9am MOZART—Piano Concerto No. 16
in D, K. 451; Sebastian Knauer, p.; Roger
Norrington/Camerata Salzburg
10am SZYMANOWSKI—Violin Concerto
No. 1, Op. 35; Jennifer Koh, vln.; Carlos
Kalmar/Grant Park Orch.
11am STEFFANI—Amante felice [The
Happy Lover]; Marco Beasley, voice; Guido
Morini/Accordone
3pm STRAVINSKY—Monumentum pro
Gesualdo di Venosa; Dennis Russell Davies/
Stuttgart Ch. Orch.
7:07 PM EVENING CLASSICAL MUSIC
IVES—Variations on “America”; Paul Biss/
IU University Orch.
BACH—Sonata in c, BWV 1024; Hélène
Schmitt, vln.; Alain Gervreau, vlc.; Jan
Willem Jansen, hpsd.
HOVHANESS—Nocturne, Op. 20, No. 1;
Susanne McDonald, hp.
BEETHOVEN—Symphony No. 1 in C, Op.
21; Fritz Reiner/Chicago Sym. Orch.
8:00 PM DEUTSCHE WELLE FESTIVAL
CONCERTS
ARD International Music Competition
Bavarian Radio Sym. Orch.
Yakov Kreizberg, cond.; Soloists TBA
Program TBA
Bloomington 103.7 fm • Columbus 100.7 fm • Kokomo 106.1 fm • Terre Haute 95.1 fm
10:12 PM LATE NIGHT MUSIC
MONTEVERDI—”Non m’è grave ’l
morire” [Dying does not grieve me]; Rinaldo
Alessandrini/Concerto Italiano
VAUGHAN WILLIAMS—Five Variants
of “Dives and Lazarus”; Neville Marriner/
Acad. of St. Martin-in-the-Fields
10:30 PM PIPEDREAMS
With host Michael Barone.
4 Tuesday
9:05 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH
GEORGE WALKER
9am WARD, S.—America the Beautiful;
John Williams/Boston Pops Orch. w/
Tanglewood Fest. Chorus
10am IVES—Variations on “America”; Paul
Biss/IU University Orch.
11am BUCK—Festival Overture on the
American National Air, The Star Spangled
Banner; Kenneth Klein/London Sym. Orch.
3pm CANFIELD—Fanfare on “America”;
Robert Stoll/Bloomington Pops Orch.
7:05 PM FROM THE TOP
This week From the Top brings you an
exciting program from the New England
Conservatory’s Jordan Hall, featuring
award-winning group The Alisier Trio.
8:05 PM ETHER GAME
“Revolution”
Ether Game commemorates Independence
Day.
10:12 PM TUESDAY EVENING VOCAL
MUSIC
In honor of Independence Day, we’ll hear
selections from a recent release entitled
“Song of America” by baritone Thomas
Hampson.
11:00 PM TUESDAY NIGHT
CONTEMPORARY MUSIC
“We Are Variations”
Recent recordings of Steve Reich’s You Are
Variations and Esa-Pekka Salonen’s L.A.
Variations.
5 Wednesday
9:05 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH
GEORGE WALKER
9am VAR. RENAISSANCE—Three Pieces
for Broken Consort; Baltimore Consort
10am BEETHOVEN—String Quartet No.
16 in F, Op. 135; Emerson Qt.
11am ANONYMOUS REN.—Two
Elizabethan Dances; Baltimore Consort
7:07 PM EVENING CLASSICAL MUSIC
RACHMANINOFF—FOURTEEN SONGS,
OP. 34: No. 14 “Vocalise”; Eugene Izotov,
ob.; Elizaveta Kopelman, p.
HAYDN—Piano Trio in C, Hob. XV:27;
The Sagee Trio
BACH—Cantata BWV 169, “Gott soll
allein mein Herze haben”; Marianne Beate
Kielland, a.; Cologne Bach Choir; Helmut
Müller-Brühl/Cologne Ch. Orch.
8:00 PM SEATTLE SYMPHONY
Gerard Schwarz, cond.; Lynn Harrell, vlc.
MAHONEY—Sparkle (World Premiere)
STRAUSS, R.—Don Quixote, Op. 35
BRAHMS—Symphony No. 4 in e, Op. 98
10:12 PM LATE NIGHT MUSIC
BEETHOVEN—Piano Sonata No. 22 in F,
Op. 54; Andreas Haefliger, p.
HAYDN—THE SEASONS, Hob. XXI:3:
Der Frühling [Spring]; Gewandhaus Ch.
Choir; Sibylla Rubens, s.; Andreas Karasiak,
t.; Stephan MacLeod, b.; Morten SchuldtJensen/Leipzig Ch. Orch.
BACH—Partita No. 1 in b, BWV 1002;
Gidon Kremer, vln.
CACCINI—Amarilli [Amaryllis]; Marco
Beasley, voice; Guido Morini/Accordone
STRAVINSKY—Apollon Musagète; Dennis
Russell Davies/Stuttgart Ch. Orch.
6 Thursday
9:05 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH
GEORGE WALKER
9am SIBELIUS—Overture in f; Jukka-Pekka
Saraste/Finnish Brass Ens.
10am BARTÓK—Four Orchestral Pieces,
Op. 12; Michael Gielen/SWR Sym. Orch.
Baden-Baden & Freiburg
11am HAYDN—Symphony No. 1 in D,
Hob. I:1; Adrian Shepherd/Cantilena
3pm ALBENIZ, I.—SUITE IBERIA: Triana;
Fritz Reiner/Chicago Sym. Orch.
7:07 PM EVENING CLASSICAL MUSIC
POPPER—Vito; Janos Starker, vlc.; Shigeo
Neriki, p.
KALLIWODA—Morceau de Salon, Op.
228; Eugene Izotov, ob.; Christopher Brown,
p.
LECLAIR—Violin Sonata in c, Op. 5, No.
6 “Le Tombeau”; Patrick Cohën-Akenine,
vln.; François Poly, vlc.; Beatrice Martin,
hpsd.
OFFENBACH—Gaîté Parisienne (arr.
Manuel Rosenthal); Leonard Bernstein/New
York Phil.
8:00 PM SANTE FE CHAMBER MUSIC
Vivianne Hagner and Pinchas Zukerman,
vln.; Lynn Harrell, vlc.
DOHNANYI—Serenade for Violin, Viola,
and Cello, Op. 10
Emanuel Ax, p.; Emerson Str. Qt.
SCHUMANN—Piano Quintet in E-flat, Op.
44
9:00 PM HARMONIA
“The Harmonia Wedding Planner”
Your friendly Harmonia wedding
consultants have some musical suggestions
to lend your ceremony an early music flair.
10:09 PM INDIANAPOLIS SYMPHONY
ORCHESTRA
Lars Vogt, p.; Yakov Kreizberg, cond.
MOZART—Piano Concerto No.24 in c,
K.491
Gil Shaham, vln.; Claus Peter Flor, cond.
BRAHMS—Violin Concerto in D, Op. 77
7 Friday
9:05 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH
GEORGE WALKER
9am BRITTEN—PETER GRIMES: Four
Sea Interludes, Op. 33a; Leonard Bernstein/
Boston Sym. Orch.
10am ARRIAGA—String Quartet No. 1 in
d; Voces Str. Qt.
11am OFFENBACH—LA BELLE HÉLÈNE:
Overture; Joseph Silverstein/Utah Sym.
3pm HAYDN—Symphony No. 1 in D, Hob.
I:1; Adrian Shepherd/Cantilena
8:00 PM MARIAN McPARTLAND’S
PIANO JAZZ
Arturo Sandoval
9:00 PM THE BIG BANDS
With host Joe Bourne
10:09 PM AFTERGLOW
“Frank Kimbrough’s Play”
New trio music from pianist Frank
Kimbrough, featuring veteran drummer Paul
Motian.
8 Saturday
10:00 AM CAR TALK
With hosts Tom and Ray Magliozzi
11:00 AM SAYS YOU!
With host Richard Sher
11:33 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC
HANDEL—Organ Concerto in G minor/
major, Op. 4, No. 1; Matthew Halls, org.;
Monica Huggett/Sonnerie
ENESCO—Nocturne in D-flat; Luiza Borac,
p.
MAHLER—Five Rückert Songs;
Janet Baker, ms.; John Barbirolli/New
Philharmonia Orch.
LECLAIR—Violin Sonata in B-flat, Op.
5, No. 4; Patrick Cohën-Akenine, vln.;
François Poly, vlc.; Beatrice Martin, hpsd.
HAYDN—Symphony No. 92 in G, Hob.
I:92 “Oxford”; René Jacobs/Baroque Orch.
of Freiburg
1:30 PM OPERA STAGE
OFFENBACH—La Vie parisienne
Nicolas Chalvin/Chamber Orch. and
Chorus of Lausanne; Francis Dudziak (Le
Baron Gondremarck); Martial Defontaine
(Gardefeu); Jean-Louis Meunier (Bobinet);
Humberto Ayerbe-Piño (Le Brésilien);
Frédéric Longbois (Prosper/Alphonse);
Michel Tellechea (Frick); Florent Blaser
(Urbain/Alfred); Olivier Prodestà (Joseph/
Trébuchet); Alexandre Feser (L’Employé);
Patricia Samuel (Gabrielle); Karine Lavorel
(Métella); Maryline Fallot (La Baronne
Gondremarck); Sophie Graf (Pauline);
Ola Waridel (Madame Quimper-Karadec);
Catherine Torriani (Clara); Nathalie
Constantin (Léonie); Lauranne Jacquier
(Louise)
6:00 PM A PRAIRIE HOME COMPANION
With host Garrison Keillor
July 2006 / Directions in Sound / Page 11
9 Sunday
12:09 AM PORTRAITS IN BLUE
“Paul Williams – Vol. 4”
Nineteen-fifties Jump Blues.
10:00 AM THIS AMERICAN LIFE
With host Ira Glass
11:00 AM LIVING ON EARTH
With host Steve Curwood
11:25 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC
TELEMANN—Quartet in G; Ton
Koopman/Amsterdam Baroque Soloists
NIN—Cuatro Comentarios [Four
Commentaries]; Maya Beiser, vlc.; Anthony
de Mare, p.
11:47 AM THE POETS WEAVE
With host Jenny Kander
12:00 PM SAINT PAUL SUNDAY
The FOG Trio
SCHUBERT—PIANO TRIO NO. 2 IN EFLAT, OP. 100, D. 929: Allegro
DVORÁK—PIANO TRIO IN F, OP. 65:
Poco Adagio; Finale
HAYDN—PIANO TRIO IN C, HOB. XV:
27: Finale
1:00 PM SCHICKELE MIX
“Dominant Characteristics”
2:00 PM BROADWAY REVISITED
“Kismet”
Our summer tour begins in Baghdad as we
sample the Borodin musical “Kismet” as
performed by Robert Merrill and Regina
Resnick.
3:00 PM WEEKEND RADIO
“Bridge on the River Wye” with Peter
Sellers, Spike Milligan, Jonathan Miller,
Peter Cook et al. Also, songs by Alien
Folklife, Marginal Considerations with Jan
C. Snow and This Week in the Media.
4:00 PM RAGTIME TO THE MAX
6:00 PM SOUND MEDICINE
Interviews from the IU School of Medicine.
Barbara Lewis West is host.
7:00 PM PROFILES
Deniese Smith (repeat)
8:00 PM HUMANKIND
“Children Left Behind”
Two young activists in the movement of
children with incarcerated parents tell what
it is like to grow up when the only access to
a parent is by going through the scary gates
of a correctional institution.
9:00 PM JOHNNY CASH: THE LEGEND
“Ring of Fire”
Johnny Cash the American Dream
10:05 PM MUSIC FROM THE HEARTS OF
SPACE
With host Stephen Hill
10 Monday
9:05 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH
GEORGE WALKER
9am BEETHOVEN—String Quartet No. 12
in E-flat, Op. 127; Hagen Qt.
10am SCHUMANN—Three Romances, Op.
94; Christina Jennings, fl.; Lura JohnsonLee, p.
11am DURUFLE—Prélude et fugue sur le
nom d’Alain, Op. 7; Scott Dettra, org.
3pm LECLAIR—Ouverture in A, Op.
13, No. 3; Patrick Cohën-Akenine, vln.;
François Poly, vlc.; Beatrice Martin, hpsd.
7:07 PM EVENING CLASSICAL MUSIC
BARTOK—Sonatina, Sz. 55; Atar Arad,
vla.; Jeannette Koekkoek, p.
LECLAIR—Violin Sonata in a, Op. 5, No.
7; Patrick Cohën-Akenine, vln.; François
Poly, vlc.; Beatrice Martin, hpsd.
BERNSTEIN—MASS: Meditation No.
1; Mstislav Rostropovich, vlc.; Leonard
Bernstein/Israel Phil.
MOZART—Piano Concerto No. 21 in C,
K. 467; Steven Lubin, fp. and cond./The
Mozartean Players
8:00 PM DEUTSCHE WELLE FESTIVAL
CONCERTS
Beethoven Festival in Bonn
Orchestre National de France
Kurt Masur, cond.
FRANCK—Symphony in d
DEBUSSY—Prélude à l-après-midi d’un
faune [Prelude to the Afternoon of a Faun]
DEBUSSY—La mer
RAVEL—Boléro
Page 12 / Directions in Sound / July 2006
photo: Christian Steiner
8:00 PM HOMETOWN
WITH TOM ROZNOWSKI
“Backseat Passengers”
8:05 PM THE FOLK SAMPLER
“What’s New”
The periodic look at new music.
9:05 PM THE THISTLE AND SHAMROCK
“Summer Light”
The bright and airy sound of contemporary
music from Celtic roots complements the
long summer days and the warm light of
summer nights. Take your radio outside
and tune into some fine music from Sharon
Shannon, Bill Whelan, Kim Robertson, and
Kirsty MacColl.
10:07 PM AFROPOP WORLDWIDE
With host Georges Collinet
11:00 PM NIGHT LIGHTS
“Vibin’: Roy Ayers in the 1960s”
Jazz recordings from vibraphonist Roy
Ayers, whose later R & B music influenced
contemporary rappers and hiphop musicians.
Kurt Masur
10:12 PM LATE NIGHT MUSIC
DEBUSSY—D’un cahier d’esquisses; JeanYves Thibaudet, p.
BERTALI—Chiacona a violino solo; John
Holloway, vln.
10:30 PM PIPEDREAMS
With host Michael Barone.
11 Tuesday
9:05 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH
GEORGE WALKER
9am HANDEL—Organ Concerto in F, Op.
4, No. 4, HWV 292; Matthew Halls, org.;
Monica Huggett/Sonnerie
10am BARTÓK—Sonatina, Sz. 55; Atar
Arad, vla.; Jeannette Koekkoek, p.
11am LE JEUNE—Tristiia obsedit me
[Sadness besieged me]; Olivier Schneebeli/
Les Pages & Les Chantres
3pm HAYDN—Symphony No. 2 in C, Hob.
I:2; Adrian Shepherd/Cantilena
7:05 PM FROM THE TOP
From the Top heads south to the Alys
Stephens Center at the University of
Alabama in Birmingham for a special
show featuring a behind-the-scenes look at
Christopher O’Riley coaching a chamber
music session with two young performers.
8:05 PM ETHER GAME
“In Left Field”
Ether Game pays tribute to some creative
left-handers.
10:12 PM TUESDAY EVENING VOCAL
MUSIC
BRITTEN—Seven Sonnets of Michelangelo,
Op. 22; Peter Pears, t.; Benjamin Britten, p.
BRITTEN—Nocturne for tenor, seven
obligato instruments, and strings, Op. 60;
Ian Bostridge, t.; Simon Rattle/Berlin Phil.
11:00 PM TUESDAY NIGHT CONTEMPO
RARY MUSIC
“New Releases”
Recent releases of music by John Cage,
Lou Harrison, John Corigliano, and Lera
Auerbach.
12 Wednesday
9:05 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH
GEORGE WALKER
9am SPOHR—String Quartet No. 27 in d,
Op. 84, No. 1; New Budapest Qt.
10am RESPIGHI—Fontane di Roma
[Fountains of Rome]; Herbert von Karajan/
Berlin Phil.
11am SIBELIUS—Petite Suite, for Brass
Septet; Jukka-Pekka Saraste/Finnish Brass
Ens.
7:07 PM EVENING CLASSICAL MUSIC
MONTEVERDI—SELVA MORALE E
SPIRITUALE: Laudate Dominum I; Marco
Beasley, voice; Guido Morini/Accordone
WIENIAWSKI—Violin Concerto No. 2 in d,
Op. 22; Mark Kaplan, vln.; Mitch Miller/
London Sym. Orch.
Bloomington 103.7 fm • Columbus 100.7 fm • Kokomo 106.1 fm • Terre Haute 95.1 fm
ENESCO—Scherzo; Luiza Borac, p.
PURCELL—Welcome to all the pleasures;
Ruth Holton and Nicola Jenkin, s.; Michael
Chance, a.; Paul Tindall, t.; George Mosley,
b.; John Eliot Gardiner/English Baroque
Soloists w/Monteverdi Choir
8:00 PM SEATTLE SYMPHONY
Gerard Schwarz, cond.; Chris Olka, tba.
KODÁLY—Dances of Galanta
JONES—Tuba Concerto (World Premiere)
TCHAIKOVSKY—Symphony No. 6 in b,
Op. 74 “Pathétique”
10:12 PM LATE NIGHT MUSIC
SAUGUET—La nuit [The Night]; Daniel
Swift/CBC Vancouver Orch.
HAYDN—THE SEASONS, Hob. XXI:3:
Der Sommer [Summer]; Gewandhaus Ch.
Choir; Sibylla Rubens, s.; Andreas Karasiak,
t.; Stephan MacLeod, b.; Morten SchuldtJensen/Leipzig Ch. Orch.
BACH—Partita No. 2 in d, BWV 1004;
Gidon Kremer, vln.
MARTIN, F.—Mass; Karen P. Thomas/
Seattle Pro Musica
13 Thursday
9:05 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH
GEORGE WALKER
9am BACH—Sonata in A, BWV Anh. II,
153; Hélène Schmitt, vln.; Alain Gervreau,
vlc.; Jan Willem Jansen, hpsd.
10am MOZART—Violin Sonata in G, K.
379; Daniel Hope, vln.; Sebastian Knauer, p.
11am STRAVINSKY—Concerto in D;
Dennis Russell Davies/Stuttgart Ch. Orch.
3pm NIN—Suite Espagnole; Maya Beiser,
vlc.; Anthony de Mare, p.
7:07 PM EVENING CLASSICAL MUSIC
PROKOFIEV—WAR AND PEACE:
Natasha’s Arioso (“Kakoye prava ani
imeyut”); Olga Guryakova, s.; Constantine
Orbelian/Moscow Ch. Orch.
HANDEL—Organ Concerto in F, Op.
4, No. 5; Matthew Halls, org.; Monica
Huggett/Sonnerie
KOECHLIN—Vers la Plage lointaine
(Nocturne), Op. 43, No. 2; Heinz Holliger/
SWR Radio Sym. Orch. Stuttgart
BARTÓK—Four Orchestral Pieces, Op. 12;
Michael Gielen/SWR Sym. Orch. BadenBaden & Freiburg
MONTEVERDI—”Si dolce è ‘l tormento”
[So sweet is the torment]; Marco Beasley,
voice; Guido Morini/Accordone
8:00 PM SANTE FE CHAMBER MUSIC
Susan Narucki, s.; Joseph Kalichstein, p.
ADÈS—Life Story
Orion Str. Qt.; Johannes Str. Qt.
ENESCU—Octet
9:00 PM HARMONIA
“Outdoor Oddities”
Bagpipes, hurdy-gurdy, birdcalls and other
oddities graced the ears of 18th century
listeners . . . even sometimes accompanied
by orchestra! On this edition of Harmonia,
we’ll explore the refined sounds of outdoor
music in the listening parlor.
10:09 PM INDIANAPOLIS SYMPHONY
ORCHESTRA
Mario Venzago, cond.
COPLAND—Fanfare for the Common Man
Andrew Litton, p. and cond.
GERSHWIN—Rhapsody in Blue
Mario Venzago, cond.
BERNSTEIN—Divertimento for Orchestra
GERSHWIN—An American in Paris
14 Friday
9:05 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH
GEORGE WALKER
9am DE LISLE/BERLIOZ—La Marseillaise;
Placido Domingo, t.; Daniel Barenboim/
Chicago Sym. Orch. & Chorus
10am LECLAIR—Violin Concerto in g, Op.
10, No. 6; Patrick Cohën-Akenine, vln.;
François Poly, vlc.; Beatrice
Martin, hpsd.; Patrick Cohën-Akenine/
Orchestre des Folies Françoises
11am PROKOFIEV—WAR AND PEACE:
Natasha’s Arioso (“Kakoye prava ani
imeyut”); Olga Guryakova, s.; Constantine
Orbelian/Moscow Ch. Orch.
3pm BARTÓK—Sonatina, Sz. 55; Atar
Arad, vla.; Jeannette Koekkoek, p.
8:00 PM MARIAN McPARTLAND’S
PIANO JAZZ
Clint Eastwood
9:00 PM THE BIG BANDS
With host Joe Bourne
10:09 PM AFTERGLOW
“Serge Gainsbourg”
Early jazz recordings from the French
vocalist, in honor of Bastille Day.
15 Saturday
10:00 AM CAR TALK
With hosts Tom and Ray Magliozzi
11:00 AM SAYS YOU!
With host Richard Sher
11:33 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC
LECLAIR—Ouverture in A, Op. 13, No. 3;
Patrick Cohën-Akenine, vln.; François Poly,
vlc.; Beatrice Martin, hpsd.
FAURÉ—Violin Sonata No. 1 in A, Op. 13;
Christina Jennings, fl.; Lura Johnson-Lee, p.
BACH—Partita No. 3 in E, BWV 1006;
Gidon Kremer, vln.
BRITTEN—Les Illuminations, Op. 18; Ian
Bostridge, t.; Sir Simon Rattle/Berlin Phil.
HANDEL—Keyboard Suite in F, HWV 427;
Garrick Ohlsson, p.
Davies/Stuttgart Ch. Orch.
WHITACRE—Leonardo Dreams of his
Flying Machine; Mark Griffiths/Coro
1:30 PM OPERA STAGE
PROKOFIEV—War and Peace
Alexander Vedernikov/Bolshoi Theater
Chorus and Orch.; Andrei Grigoriev (Prince
Andrei Bolkonsky); Elena Novak (Princess
Mariya Bolkonsky); Leonid Zimnenko
(Old Prince Nikolai Bolkonsky); Yekaterina
Shcherbachenko (Countess Natasha
Rostova); Alexander Naumenko (Count Ilya
Andreyevich Rostov); Margarita Mamsirova
(Sonya); Roman Muravitsky (Count Pierre
Bezuknov); Oksana Kornievskaya (Countess
Hélène Bezukhov); Vsevolod Grivnov
(Prince Anatol Kuragin); Yuri Baranov
(Lieutenant Dolokhov); Tatiana Yerastova
(Mariya Akhrossimova); Irina Rubtsova
(Madame Perónskaya); Paata Burchuladze
(Field Marshal Kutuzov); Boris Statsenko
(Napoleon Bonaparte)
6:00 PM A PRAIRIE HOME COMPANION
With host Garrison Keillor
8:00 PM HOMETOWN
WITH TOM ROZNOWSKI
“The Indiana Wolverines”
8:05 PM THE FOLK SAMPLER
“Lady’s Choice”
What the lady wants to say.
9:05 PM THE THISTLE AND SHAMROCK
“Eileen Ivers”
The sensational Irish American fiddler shows
us new worlds of Celtic music with her band
Immigrant Soul.
10:07 PM AFROPOP WORLDWIDE
With host Georges Collinet
11:00 PM NIGHT LIGHTS
“Do It Again: Jazz Remakes”
Albums and their later revisitations from
Duke Ellington, Gil Evans and Helen
Merrill, Gerry Mulligan, June Christy, Curtis
Fuller, and others.
16 Sunday
12:09 AM PORTRAITS IN BLUE
“Howlin’ Wolf – From the Beginning”
Nineteen-fifties Chicago Blues.
10:00 AM THIS AMERICAN LIFE
With host Ira Glass
11:00 AM LIVING ON EARTH
With host Steve Curwood
11:25 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC
RACHMANINOFF—SIX SONGS, OP.
4: No. 4 “Ne poi krasavitsa” [Let me not
hear you sing]; Eugene Izotov, ob.; Elizaveta
Kopelman, p.
RACHMANINOFF—ETUDESTABLEAUX, OP. 39: No. 5 in e-flat
“Appassionato”; Mikhail Pletnev, p.
SHOSTAKOVICH—Jazz Suite No. 1;
Vadim Gluzman, vln.; Angela Yoffe, p.
11:47 AM THE POETS WEAVE
With host Jenny Kander
12:00 PM SAINT PAUL SUNDAY
Gil Shaham, vln.; Akira Eguchi, p.
FAURÉ—Berceuse, Op. 16
FAURÉ—Violin Sonata No. 1 in A, Op. 13
FAURÉ—Romance in B-flat, Op. 28
FAURÉ—PELLÉAS ET MELISANDE, OP.
80: Fileuse
FAURÉ—Morceau de lecture
FAURÉ—Clair de lune, Op. 46, No. 2
1:00 PM SCHICKELE MIX
“Things Fall Apart”
July 2006 / Directions in Sound / Page 13
2:00 PM BROADWAY REVISITED
“The Boys from Syracuse” and “On Your
Toes”
The first of these Rodgers and Hart shows is
set in ancient Greece; the second is about the
Russian ballet.
3:00 PM WEEKEND RADIO
Some Alec Templeton classics including
“And the Angels Sing,” “Man with a New
Radio,” and “Bruenhilde’s Battle Cry as
It Might Have be sung by an American
Crooner.” Also National Lampoon Radio
Hour’s “Classics of Contemporary Drama,”
“The Immigrants,” and “House Rules.”
4:00 PM RAGTIME TO THE MAX
6:00 PM SOUND MEDICINE
Interviews from the IU School of Medicine.
Barbara Lewis West is host.
7:00 PM PROFILES
Billy Collins and Kay Ryan
8:00 PM HUMANKIND
“Bill Siemering/Katie Davis”
The first half-hour of this program focuses
on developing nations with little access
to media, where radio broadcasting is a
powerful force for bringing communities
together and promoting a sense of
democracy through greater participation.
The second half focuses on Katie Davis, who
is on a one-woman quest to save children in
an inner city section of Washington, D.C.
from gangs, alcohol, and drugs.
9:00 PM JOHNNY CASH: THE LEGEND
“How Great Thou Art”
Johnny Cash’s spiritual quest
10:05 PM MUSIC FROM THE HEARTS OF
SPACE
With host Stephen Hill
17 Monday
9:05 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH
GEORGE WALKER
9am KETELBEY—Bells Across the
Meadows; Eric Rogers/Royal Phil. Orch.
10am SCHUBERT—Fantasy in C, D. 760
“Wandererfantasie”; Boris Berezovsky, p.;
Kurt Masur/New York Phil.
11am HONEGGER—Fugue et Choral; Scott
Dettra, org.
3pm CACCINI—Tu ch’hai le penne, amore
[Oh love, you who have wings]; Marco
Beasley, voice; Guido Morini/Accordone
7:07 PM EVENING CLASSICAL MUSIC
STEFFANI—Amante felice [The Happy
Lover]; Marco Beasley, voice; Guido Morini/
Accordone
ENESCO—Prelude and Fugue in C; Luiza
Borac, p.
GRANTHAM—Kentucky Harmony;
Stephen Pratt/IU Wind Ens.
BACH—Sonata No. 1 in g for Solo Violin,
BWV 1001; Gidon Kremer, vln.
SCHUBERT—Adagio in E, D. 612; Luba
Edlina, p.
Page 14 / Directions in Sound / July 2006
8:00 PM DEUTSCHE WELLE FESTIVAL
CONCERTS
Beethoven Festival in Bonn
Berlin Radio Sym. Orch.
Marek Janowski, cond.; Julia Fischer, vln.;
Alban Gerhardt, vlc.; Markus Groh, p.
BEETHOVEN—Triple Concerto in C, Op.
56
BERLIOZ—Symphonie fantastique, Op. 14
Bernd Glemser, p.
BEETHOVEN—Piano Sonata No. 13 in
E-flat, Op. 27, No. 1
10:12 PM LATE NIGHT MUSIC
MOZART—Fantasia in d, K. 397; Lars
Vogt, p.
SIBELIUS—LEMMINKAINEN SUITE,
OP. 22: The Swan of Tuonela; Patrick
McFarland, E.hn.; Yoel Levi/Atlanta Sym.
10:30 PM PIPEDREAMS
With host Michael Barone.
18 Tuesday
9:05 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH
GEORGE WALKER
9am ARRIAGA—String Quartet No. 2 in A;
Voces Str. Qt.
10am GRANTHAM—Kentucky Harmony;
Stephen Pratt/IU Wind Ens.
11am FAURÉ: Fantaisie for Flute and
Piano, Op. 79; Christina Jennings, fl.; Lura
Johnson-Lee, p.
3pm ENESCO—Scherzo; Luiza Borac, p.
7:05 PM FROM THE TOP
This week’s show features a cello/violin
duo of brothers performing a piece written
by the 15-year-old cellist, and introduces
From the Top’s first two Cooke Young Artist
winners, who receive $10,000 scholarships
to further their musical educations.
8:05 PM ETHER GAME
“Fairy Tales”
Other worldly stories inspire some fantastic
music on Ether Game.
10:12 PM TUESDAY EVENING VOCAL
MUSIC
MAHLER—Lieder eines fahrenden Gesellen
[Songs of a Wayfarer]; Janet Baker, s.; John
Barbirolli/Hallé Orch.
MAHLER—Kindertotenlieder [Songs on
the Death of Children]; Janet Baker, s.; John
Barbirolli/Hallé Orch.
11:00 PM TUESDAY NIGHT
CONTEMPORARY MUSIC
“Peter Schat: Part I”
Radio Netherlands recently released a 12disc retrospective dedicated to the works of
Dutch composer Peter Schat. We’ll spend
two weeks listening to various works from
this collection.
19 Wednesday
9:05 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH
GEORGE WALKER
9am MARTIN—Violin Concerto No. 2,
H. 293; Jennifer Koh, vln.; Carlos Kalmar/
Grant Park Orch.
10am WAGNER—DAS LIEBESVERBOT
(The Ban on Love): Overture; Alexander
Rahbari/Malaga Phil. Orch.
11am NIN—Chant d’Espange; Maya Beiser,
vlc.; Anthony de Mare, p.
7:07 PM EVENING CLASSICAL MUSIC
BACH—Sonata in A, BWV Anh. II, 153;
Hélène Schmitt, vln.; Alain Gervreau, vlc.;
Jan Willem Jansen, hpsd.
BARTÓK—Two Portraits, Op. 5; Jennifer
Koh, vln.; Carlos Kalmar/Grant Park Orch.
BOZZA—Fantasie Pastorale, Op. 37;
Eugene Izotov, ob.; Christopher Brown, p.
VIVALDI—Concerto in F for Violin, Two
Oboes, Two Horns, and Bassoon, RV 569;
Fabio Biondi/Europa Galante
8:00 PM SEATTLE SYMPHONY
Gerard Schwarz, cond.; John Lill, p.
DVOsÁK—Slavonic Dances, Op. 46, Nos.
1, 2, 8
DVORÁK—Slavonic Dances, Op. 72, No.
10
BARTÓK—Music for Strings, Percussion
and Celesta
BEETHOVEN—Piano Concerto No. 5 in
E-flat, Op. 73 “Emperor”
10:12 PM LATE NIGHT MUSIC
CACCINI—Udite amanti [Listen, Lovers];
Marco Beasley, voice; Guido Morini/
Accordone
ENESCO—Piano Sonata No. 3 in D, Op.
24, No. 3; Luiza Borac, p.
BEETHOVEN—String Quartet No. 15 in a,
Op. 132 “Heiliger Dankgesang”; Hagen Qt.
HAYDN—THE SEASONS, Hob. XXI:3:
Der Herbst [Autumn]; Gewandhaus
Chamber Choir; Sibylla Rubens, s.;
Andreas Karasiak, t.; Stephen MacLeod, b.;
Morten Schuldt-Jensen/Leipzig Chamber
Orch.
20 Thursday
9:05 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH
GEORGE WALKER
9am HAYDN—Organ Concerto, Hob.
XVIII:1; Christopher Hogwood, ch. org. and
cond./Acad. of Ancient Music
10am ALBENIZ, I.—SUITE IBERIA: Book
III; Jesús López-Cobos/Cincinnati Sym.
Orch.
11am BACH—Cantata BWV 53, “Schlage
doch gewünschte Stunde”; Marianne Beate
Kielland, a.; Helmut Müller-Brühl/Cologne
Ch. Orch.
3pm SIBELIUS—Allegro, for Brass Septet;
Jukka-Pekka Saraste/Finnish Brass Ens.
Bloomington 103.7 fm • Columbus 100.7 fm • Kokomo 106.1 fm • Terre Haute 95.1 fm
7:07 PM EVENING CLASSICAL MUSIC
VERDI—LA FORZA DEL DESTINO:
Overture; Daniel Barenboim/West-Eastern
Divan Orch.
MOZART—Violin Sonata in G, K. 379;
Daniel Hope, vln.; Sebastian Knauer, p.
BACH—Orchestral Suite No. 1 in C, BWV
1066; Martin Pearlman/Boston Baroque
Orch.
8:00 PM SANTE FE CHAMBER MUSIC
Ana Marie Martinez, s.; Marc Neikrug, p.
FALLA—SIETE CANCIONES POPULARES
ESPANOLAS: Three Selections
Ivan Chan, vln.; Kirsten Johnson, vla.; Eric
Kim, vlc.; Jeremy Denk, p.
BRAHMS—Piano Quartet No. 2 in A, Op.
26
Jeremy Denk
9:00 PM HARMONIA
“Da Vinci à la Mode”
While the soundtrack to the recent movie
“The Da Vinci Code” is atmospheric, it
doesn’t sound like anything Leonardo da
Vinci might have heard during his lifetime.
This week we’ll listen to music that might
actually have reached the ears of the master
in 15th-century Italy. Plus, we’ll hear
selections from a recent release of music by
female Baroque composer Antonia Bembo.
10:09 PM INDIANAPOLIS SYMPHONY
ORCHESTRA
Mario Venzago, cond.
MAHLER—Symphony No.7
21 Friday
9:05 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH
GEORGE WALKER
9am SCHUBERT—ROSAMUNDE, D.
797: Entr’acte No. 3 and Musique de Ballet
No. 2; Eduard van Beinum/Concertgebouw
Orch.
10am TELEMANN—Concerto in D for 2
Oboes and High Trumpet; Robert and Sara
Lambert Bloom, ob.; Robert Nagel, tpt.;
Muriel Wilkinson, hpsd.; Jay Humeston, vlc.
11am VERDI—LA FORZA DEL DESTINO:
“Pace, pace mio Dio”; Leontyne Price, s.;
David Garvey, p.
3pm GRANTHAM—Kentucky Harmony;
Stephen Pratt/IU Wind Ens.
8:00 PM MARIAN McPARTLAND’S
PIANO JAZZ
Elvis Costello
9:00 PM THE BIG BANDS
With host Joe Bourne
10:09 PM AFTERGLOW
“Dave Pell Plays . . .”
Nineteen-fifties songbook albums from the
saxophonist’s octet, featuring the music of
Rodgers and Hart, Burke and Van Heusen,
and Irving Berlin.
22 Saturday
10:00 AM CAR TALK
With hosts Tom and Ray Magliozzi
11:00 AM SAYS YOU!
With host Richard Sher
11:33 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC
VAUGHAN WILLIAMS—The Lover’s
Ghost; Mark Griffiths/Coro
MOZART—Piano Concerto No. 14 in Eflat, K. 449; Steven Lubin, fp. and cond./The
Mozartean Players
BACH—Suite in A, BWV 1025; Hélène
Schmitt, vln.; Alain Gervreau, vlc.; Jan
Willem Jansen, hpsd.
DVORÁK—Piano Quintet in A, Op. 81, B
155; Rudolf Firkusný, p.; Ridge Str. Qt.
STRAVINSKY—Danses concertantes;
Dennis Russell Davies/Stuttgart Ch. Orch.
1:30 PM OPERA STAGE
VERDI—La Forza del Destino
Robert Bass/Collegiate Chorale and Orch.
of St. Luke’s; Maria Guleghina (Leonora);
Salvatore Licitra (Don Alvaro); Marianne
Cornetti (Preziosilla); Mark Rucker (Don
Carlo); Padre Gaurdiano (Simon Estes); Paul
Plishka (Fra Melitone)
6:00 PM A PRAIRIE HOME COMPANION
With host Garrison Keillor
8:00 PM HOMETOWN
WITH TOM ROZNOWSKI
“Shaving Brush”
8:05 PM THE FOLK SAMPLER
“Out In the Country”
Down home and quiet.
9:05 PM THE THISTLE AND SHAMROCK
“Dreamtime”
Some styles of instrumental and vocal music
invoke a dreamy frame of mind, while
traditional dance tunes are intended to
do just the opposite. Daydream your way
through an hour of music from Ireland,
Scotland, and Australia, home of the
hypnotic didgeridoo.
10:07 PM AFROPOP WORLDWIDE
With host Georges Collinet
11:00 PM NIGHT LIGHTS
“Porgy & Bess: the 1950s Jazz Revival”
Jazz interpretations of George Gershwin’s
folk opera from Miles Davis, the Modern
Jazz Quartet, Ella Fitzgerald and Louis
Armstrong, and others.
23 Sunday
12:09 AM PORTRAITS IN BLUE
“Reissues 2006”
All styles/All eras.
10:00 AM THIS AMERICAN LIFE
With host Ira Glass
11:00 AM LIVING ON EARTH
With host Steve Curwood
11:25 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC
ENESCO—Pièce sur le nom de “Fauré”;
Luiza Borac, p.
TAILLEFERRE: Homage à Rameau;
Clinton-Narboni Duo/Shepherd School Perc.
Ens.
STRAVINSKY—Monumentum pro
Gesualdo di Venosa; Dennis Russell Davies/
Stuttgart Ch. Orch.
11:47 AM THE POETS WEAVE
With host Jenny Kander
12:00 PM SAINT PAUL SUNDAY
Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center
MOZART—STRING QUINTET IN EFLAT, K 614: Allegro di molto; Allegro
BERMEL—SOUL GARDEN FOR VIOLA
AND STRING QUARTET: excerpt
DVORÁK—STRING SEXTET IN A, OP.
48: Dumka. Poco allegretto; Furiant. Presto;
Finale. Tema con variazioni
1:00 PM SCHICKELE MIX
“Background Information”
2:00 PM BROADWAY REVISITED
“The Threepenny Opera”
The Brecht-Weill Berlin show, set in
Victorian England.
3:00 PM WEEKEND RADIO
The baseball season is in full swing, and
we present two favorite items – “The
Cleveland Indians Travel Co-ordinator” and
“Shakespearian Baseball Game.”
A “Night and Day” compilation including
versions by Peter Sellers, Allan Sherman,
Carver Blanchard, Will Holt and Thomas
Hampson.
4:00 PM RAGTIME TO THE MAX
6:00 PM SOUND MEDICINE
Interviews from the IU School of Medicine.
Barbara Lewis West is host.
7:00 PM PROFILES
Janis Stockhouse
8:00 PM HUMANKIND
“Inner Calm/Bill Mosher”
First we travel to Harvard’s Mind/Body
Medical Institute, which has pioneered
research on the Relaxation Response, an
ancient meditative technique that has helped
millions of patients learn ways of reducing
the harmful effects of stress. Then we profile
a television filmmaker who travels the world
in search of heroic organizations.
9:00 PM JOHNNY CASH: THE LEGEND
“The Man in Black”
Johnny Cash’s politics and influence
10:05 PM MUSIC FROM THE HEARTS OF
SPACE
With host Stephen Hill
July 2006 / Directions in Sound / Page 15
24 Monday
9:05 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH
GEORGE WALKER
9am BRITTEN—The Young Person’s Guide
to the Orchestra, Op. 34; André Previn/
Royal Phil. Orch.
10am SPOHR—String Quartet No. 28 in
A-flat, Op. 84, No. 2; New Budapest Qt.
11am VIERNE—Berceuse, Op. 31, No. 19;
Scott Dettra, org.
3pm YSAŸE—Sonata in E for Violin Solo,
Op. 27, No. 6; Maxim Vengerov, vln.
7:07 PM EVENING CLASSICAL MUSIC
BURNETTE—Cinder Hill; Brian Horne, t.;
Gary Arvin, p.
VIVALDI—Violin Concerto in D, RV 208
“Il grosso Mogul”; Stanley Ritchie, vln.;
Joshua Rifkin/The Bach Ens.
ENESCO—Piano Sonata No. 1 in f-sharp,
Op. 24, No. 1; Luiza Borac, p.
8:00 PM DEUTSCHE WELLE FESTIVAL
CONCERTS
Beethoven Festival in Bonn
German Ch. Phil., Bremen
Paavo Järvi , cond.
BEETHOVEN—Coriolan Overture, Op. 62
BEETHOVEN—Symphony No. 5 in c, Op.
67
ROUSSEL— Symphony No. 3 in g, Op. 42
Andreas Staier, fp.
BEETHOVEN—Piano Sonata No. 5 in c,
Op. 10, No. 1
BEETHOVEN—Piano Sonata No. 6 in F,
Op. 10, No. 2
10:12 PM LATE NIGHT MUSIC
PICKER—Old and Lost Rivers; Christoph
Eschenbach, p.
SANDSTROM, J.—Två Körpoem [Two
Poems for Choir]; Eric Ericson/Accentus Ch.
Choir
10:30 PM PIPEDREAMS
With host Michael Barone.
25 Tuesday
9:05 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH
GEORGE WALKER
9am DVORÁK—Piano Quintet in A, Op.
81, B 155; Rudolf Firkusný, p.; Ridge Str. Qt.
10am BURNETTE—Cinder Hill; Brian
Horne, t.; Gary Arvin, p.
11am COWELL—Hymn and Fuguing Tune
No. 3, HC 660; Jorge Mester/Louisville
Orch.
3pm LE JEUNE—Muze Honorons [Muse,
let us honor]; Olivier Schneebeli/Les Pages
& Les Chantres
7:05 PM FROM THE TOP
Host Christopher O’Riley catches up with
some of From The Top’s favorite musicians
to see what they have been doing since their
appearance on the program.
8:05 PM ETHER GAME
“On top of the world”
Ether Game takes a look at the world from
the top of the town.
Page 16 / Directions in Sound / July 2006
10:12 PM TUESDAY EVENING VOCAL
MUSIC
KOECHLIN—Four Poems of Edmond
Haraucourt, Op. 7; Juliane Banse, s.; Heinz
Holliger/SWR Radio Sym. Orch. Stuttgart
KOECHLIN—Chant funèbre à la mémoire
des jeunes femmes défuntes, Op. 37; SWR
Stuttgart Vocal Ens.; Heinz Holliger/SWR
Radio Sym. Orch. Stuttgart
FAURÉ—Chanson de Mélisande; Juliane
Banse, s.; Heinz Holliger/SWR Radio Sym.
Orch. Stuttgart
11:00 PM TUESDAY NIGHT
CONTEMPORARY MUSIC
“Peter Schat: Part II”
Radio Netherlands recently released a 12disc retrospective dedicated to the works
of Dutch composer Peter Schat. Here’s the
second of two programs devoted to various
works from this collection.
26 Wednesday
9:05 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH
GEORGE WALKER
9am HANDEL—Keyboard Suite in F, HWV
427; Garrick Ohlsson, p.
10am HAYDN—Horn Concerto No. 1
in D, Hob. VIId3; Timothy Brown, hn.;
Christopher Hogwood/Acad. of Ancient
Music
11am CHARPENTIER, M.-A.—Te Deum,
H. 147; Hervé Niquet/Le Concert Spirituel
7:07 PM EVENING CLASSICAL MUSIC
POULENC—Sept chansons; Harry
Christophers/The Sixteen
SHOSTAKOVICH—Violin Sonata, Op.
134; Vadim Gluzman, vln.; Angela Yoffe, p.
8:00 PM SEATTLE SYMPHONY
Gerard Schwarz, cond.
HAYDN—Symphony No. 96 in D, Hob.
I:96 “The Miracle”
BEETHOVEN—Symphony No. 5 in c, Op.
67
STRAUSS, R.—Also sprach Zarathustra,
Op. 30
10:12 PM LATE NIGHT MUSIC
LE JEUNE—Louë tous ce Dieu qui est dous
[Give thanks unto the Lord, for his is kind];
Olivier Schneebeli/Les Pages & Les Chantres
BRITTEN: Serenade for Tenor, Horn and
Strings, Op. 31; Ian Bostridge, t.; Radek
Baborák, hn.; Simon Rattle/Berlin Phil.
HANDEL—Organ Concerto in B-flat, Op.
4, No. 6; Matthew Halls, org.; Monica
Huggett/Sonnerie
HAYDN—THE SEASONS, Hob. XXI:3:
Der Winter [Winter]; Gewandhaus Chamber
Choir; Sibylla Rubens, s.; Andreas
Karasiak, t.; Stephan MacLeod, b.; Morten
Schuldt-Jensen/Leipzig Ch. Orch.
MARTIN—Violin Concerto No. 2, H. 293;
Jennifer Koh, vln.; Carlos Kalmar/Grant
Park Orch.
27 Thursday
9:05 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH
GEORGE WALKER
9am HAYDN—Symphony No. 3 in G, Hob.
I:3; Adrian Shepherd/Cantilena
10am BARTÓK—Music for Strings,
Percussion and Celesta; Hans Zender/SWR
Sym. Orch. Baden-Baden & Freiburg
11am BEETHOVEN—Piano Sonata No. 22
in F, Op. 54; Andreas Haefliger, p.
3pm RAUTAVAARA—A Requiem in Our
Time; Jukka-Pekka Saraste/Finnish Brass
Ens.
7:07 PM EVENING CLASSICAL MUSIC
MOZART—IDOMENEO, K. 366:
Overture; Colin Davis/Staatskapelle Dresden
BACH—Sonata No. 3 in C, BWV 1005;
Gidon Kremer, vln.
WOLF—Eichendorff Lieder; Madrigalia
Chamber Singers; Karen P.Thomas/Seattle
Pro Musica
HANDEL—Organ Concerto in B-flat, Op.
4, No. 2; Matthew Halls, org.; Monica
Huggett/Sonnerie
8:00 PM SANTE FE CHAMBER MUSIC
Elizabeth Mann and Tara Helen O’Connor,
fl.; Marc Neikrug, p.
DOPPLER—Andante and Rondo, Op. 25
Todd Levy, cl.; Marc Neikrug, p.
SCHUMANN—Phantasiestücke, Op. 73
Jon Kimura Parker, p.; Pinchas Zukerman,
vln.; Lynn Harrell, vlc.
SHOSTAKOVICH—Piano Trio No. 2 in e,
Op. 67
9:00 PM HARMONIA
“Jefferson the Musician”
Founding Father, Virginia gentleman and
bonafide polymath, Thomas Jefferson was
a man of numerous talents. Near the top of
the list he might be described as a musician
of distinction. This week, Harmonia will
explore the repertoire found in Jefferson’s
music catalogue of 1783.
10:09 PM INDIANAPOLIS SYMPHONY
ORCHESTRA
Hugo Wolff, cond.
HAYDN—Symphony No.89 in F, Hob. I:89
Lang Lang, p.; Mario Venzago, cond.
MOZART—Piano Concerto No.17 in G,
K.453
28 Friday
9:05 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH
GEORGE WALKER
9am SULLIVAN—THE MIKADO:
Overture; Neville Marriner/Acad. of St.
Martin-in-the-Fields
10am STRAVINSKY—Danses concertantes;
Dennis Russell Davies/Stuttgart Ch. Orch.
11am MOZART—IDOMENEO, K. 366:
Overture; Nikolaus Harnoncourt/MozartOrchester des Opernhauses Zürich
3pm BURNETTE—Cinder Hill; Brian
Horne, t.; Gary Arvin, p.
Bloomington 103.7 fm • Columbus 100.7 fm • Kokomo 106.1 fm • Terre Haute 95.1 fm
8:00 PM MARIAN McPARTLAND’S
PIANO JAZZ
Alicia Keys
Alicia Keys
9:00 PM THE BIG BANDS
With host Joe Bourne
10:09 PM AFTERGLOW
“A Pair of Buddies”
Vocal and small-group music from drummer
Buddy Rich.
29 Saturday
10:00 AM CAR TALK
With hosts Tom and Ray Magliozzi
11:00 AM SAYS YOU!
With host Richard Sher
11:33 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC
NIN—Suite Espagnole; Maya Beiser, vlc.;
Anthony de Mare, p.
BACH—Sonata No. 2 in a for Solo Violin,
BWV 1003; Gidon Kremer, vln.
BEETHOVEN—String Quartet No. 12 in
E-flat, Op. 127; Hagen Qt.
CHOPIN—Three Mazurkas; Émile
Naoumoff, p.
HANDEL—Organ Concerto in F, Op. 4,
No. 4, HWV 292; Matthew Halls, org.;
Monica Huggett/Sonnerie
SZYMANOWSKI—Violin Concerto No. 1,
Op. 35; Jennifer Koh, vln.; Carlos Kalmar/
Grant Park Orch.
1:30 PM OPERA STAGE
MOZART—Idomeneo
Seiji Ozawa; Arnold Schoenberg Chorus
and Vienna State Opera Orch.; Neil Shicoff
(Idomeneo); Angelika Kirchschlager
(Idamante); Genia Kühmeier (Ilia); Barbara
Frittoli (Elettra); Peter Jelosits (Arbace);
Marian Talaba (High Priest); Walter Fink
(Voice of the Oracle)
6:00 PM A PRAIRIE HOME COMPANION
With host Garrison Keillor
8:00 PM HOMETOWN
WITH TOM ROZNOWSKI
“Fresh From The Mill”
8:05 PM THE FOLK SAMPLER
“Old Friends” How sweet!
9:05 PM THE THISTLE AND SHAMROCK
“Perthshire Amber Preview”
A look ahead to the Second Annual Dougie
MacLean Perthshire Amber Weekend with
an hour of exclusive highlights from last
year’s event.
10:07 PM AFROPOP WORLDWIDE
With host Georges Collinet
11:00 PM NIGHT LIGHTS
“Jazz Advance: Early Cecil Taylor”
The late-1950s recordings of avant-garde
pianist Cecil Taylor.
30 Sunday
12:09 AM PORTRAITS IN BLUE
With “Paul Williams”
Nineteen-fifties Jump Blues
10:00 AM THIS AMERICAN LIFE
With host Ira Glass
11:00 AM LIVING ON EARTH
With host Steve Curwood
11:25 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC
SILVESTRINI, G.—ETUDES FOR OBOE:
Selections; Eugene Izotov, ob.
MOZART—Symphony No. 23 in D, K.
181; Nikolaus Harnoncourt/Concentus
musicus of Vienna
11:47 AM THE POETS WEAVE
With host Jenny Kander
12:00 PM SAINT PAUL SUNDAY
Chanticleer
DUFAY—Gloria ad modum tubae (Trumpet
Gloria)
PURCELL—Remember not, Lord our offences
WEELKES—Gloria in excelsis Deo
ALONZO (attr.)—La Tricotea
HAWLEY—TRE RIME DI TASSO (2000):
Fuggi, fuggi, dolor; Labbra vermiglie e belle
HOPKINS—Past Life Melodies
TRAD.—Danny Boy
FOSTER—Camptown Races
ELLINGTON— Creole Love Song
TRAD.—My Soul is Witness
1:00 PM SCHICKELE MIX
“Boom Chick and Beyond”
2:00 PM BROADWAY REVISITED
“A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to
the Forum”
Zero Mostel in Stephen Sondheim’s take on
ancient Rome.
3:00 PM WEEKEND RADIO
Some neutral and some anti-smoking bits
including “Twelve Days of Warning,”
Lawrence Welk’s “Smoke, Smoke, Smoke,”
and “Cigareets, Whusky, and Wild, Wild
Women.” Myron Cohen tells about “Flies”
and Allen Sherman sings about “Strange
Things in My Soup.”
4:00 PM RAGTIME TO THE MAX
6:00 PM SOUND MEDICINE
Interviews from the IU School of Medicine.
Barbara Lewis West is host.
7:00 PM PROFILES
Alexander Kerr
8:00 PM HUMANKIND
“David Allen”
The relentless assault of modern
communication has left many people feeling
overwhelmed and in need of ways to clear
their desks and their minds. David Allen,
author of “Getting Things Done,” recounts
his remarkable personal journey from
early-in-life chaos and crisis to his current
role as a best-selling author in demand as an
advisor to organizations needing focus.
9:00 PM JOHNNY CASH: THE LEGEND
“The World Needs a Melody”
Johnny Cash the storyteller
10:05 PM MUSIC FROM THE HEARTS OF
SPACE
With host Stephen Hill
31 Monday
9:05 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH
GEORGE WALKER
9am GERMAN—HENRY VIII: Three
Dances; Adrian Leaper/Czecho-Slovak
Radio Sym., Bratislava
10am MOZART—Concerto in D for Violin
and Piano, K. Anh. 56; Daniel Hope, vln.;
Sebastian Knauer, p.; Roger Norrington/
Camerata Salzburg
Sebastian Knauer
11am MONTEVERDI—SELVA MORALE
E SPIRITUALE: Laudate Dominum I; Marco
Beasley, voice; Guido Morini/Accordone
3pm PIAZZOLLA—La Mufa; Maya Beiser,
vlc.; Anthony de Mare, p.
7:07 PM EVENING CLASSICAL MUSIC
BEETHOVEN—33 VARIATIONS ON A
WALTZ BY A. DIABELLI, OP. 120: Var.
22-28; Edmund Battersby, p.
LECLAIR—Violin Concerto in g, Op.
10, No. 6; Patrick Cohën-Akenine, vln.;
François Poly, vlc.; Beatrice Martin, hpsd.
Patrick Cohën-Akenine/Orchestre des Folies
Françoises
GRIFFES—Poem for Flute and Orchestra;
Christina Jennings, fl.; Lura Johnson-Lee, p.
BACH—Cantata BWV 54, “Widerstehe
doch der Sünde”; Marianne Beate Kielland,
a.; Helmut Müller-Brühl/Cologne Ch. Orch.
8:00 PM DEUTSCHE WELLE FESTIVAL
CONCERTS
Beethoven Festival in Bonn
Beethoven Orch., Bonn
Roman Kofman, cond.; Jean-Yves Thibaudet,
p.
SAINT-SAËNS—Piano Concerto No. 5 in F,
Op. 103
SILVESTROV—Symphony No. 6
Louis Lortie, p.
BEETHOVEN—Piano Sonata No. 28 in A,
Op. 101
10:12 PM LATE NIGHT MUSIC
ALBINONI—Concerto in B-flat for Oboe,
Strings and Continuo, Op. 7, No. 3; John
Anderson, ob.; Simon Wright/Philharmonia
Orch.
BARTÓK—Romanian Folk-Dances, Sz. 56;
Daniel Hope, vln.; Sebastian Knauer, p.
10:30 PM PIPEDREAMS
With host Michael Barone.
July 2006 / Directions in Sound / Page 17
WFIU Future Fund
WTIU television in July
Great Performances—
Garrison Keillor’s Independence
Day Special: A Prairie Home
Companion at Tanglewood
Sunday, July 2 at 9pm
The little town that time forgot is front
and center this July 4 weekend when its
best-known citizen and booster hosts
“Garrison Keillor’s Independence Day
Special: A Prairie Home Companion
at Tanglewood.” The telecast finds the
good people of Lake Wobegon joined
by Private Eye Guy Noir, the cowboys
Dusty and Lefty, and special guest star
Meryl Streep. Also on hand are the
Hopeful Gospel Quartet, the Wailin’
Jennys and, of course, Guy’s All-Star
Shoe Band.
“We’re celebrating this great
country, with great American stories
and great American songs,” Keillor
says, noting that the program marks
Garrison Keillor
the townfolks’ first appearance on the
acclaimed Great Performances series.
“They’re strong, they’re good-looking, they’re above average and they
are excited. And I get to give my annual Lake Wobegon Fourth of July
speech.”
One of America’s most beloved humorists, Garrison Keillor started
work at Minnesota Public Radio in 1969 on a 6-to-9 a.m. show called
A Prairie Home Companion, named after the Prairie Home cemetery in
Moorhead, Minnesota. From this he developed the idea of adding musical
guests and commercials for imaginary products, and in 1974 he hosted the
first live broadcast of the program as it is known today. More than four
million listeners now tune in each week to hear the program over National
Public Radio’s 580-station network, the BBC, Armed Forces Radio Network and other international outlets.
This summer Keillor co-stars with Meryl Streep, Kevin Kline, Lindsay
Lohan and Lily Tomlin in Robert Altman’s film version of A Prairie Home
Companion. He also wrote the screenplay.
A familiar voice and face on PBS (last seen with Roy Blount Jr. in 2002’s
The Main Stream), Keillor is the author of 14 books, including the New
York Times best-sellers Love Me, Lake Wobegon Summer 1956, Wobegon
Boy and Lake Wobegon Days.
Garrison Keillor, who lives in St. Paul, Minnesota, is a member of the
Academy of American Arts & Letters and thinks the Berkshire Mountains,
the Massachusetts home of Tanglewood, broadcast site of the telecast,
“one of the beautiful places in our country.”
Page 18 / Directions in Sound / July 2006
Radio broadcasting is undergoing rapid
change. One of WFIU’s missions is to keep
up with change, ensuring the best possible
service to both our current listeners and
listeners of the future.
This future takes us beyond today’s
broadcasting, into a world where anyone,
anywhere will be able to access our programs at any time. These changes require
a major investment in technology that go
well beyond the resources we generate
through our annual membership program
that supports our daily operation.
To financially support these new initiatives, we created the WFIU Future Fund.
Thoughtful gifts to the Fund have come
in many forms—from direct cash gifts of
support, to stock, retirement, insurance
policies, and estate plans. The Future
Fund Charter Donors are listed below,
with WFIU’s gratitude.
We welcome your participation in helping WFIU stay in the broadcasting forefront. Listeners may support the WFIU
Future Fund, or any number of giving and
naming opportunities beginning at $1,000
that permit individuals and businesses to
become involved beyond an annual membership or underwriting gift.
To learn how you can become involved, contact Judy Witt, WFIU/WTIU
Major and Planned Gifts Officer, at jwitt@
indiana.edu or 812-855-2935.
We would like to express our gratitude
to the 2004–2005 Future Fund Charter
Donors:
Becky Cape
Fred and Sandra Churchill
Anna Marie and Matthew Dalle-Ave
Kenneth Gros Louis
Harold and Dorothy Hammel
Diane M. Hawes
Ross Jennings
Stephen and Diane Keucher
Christina Kuzmych
Bob and Allison Lendman
Jeanette Calkins Marchant
Celeste and Mike McGregor
Perry and Nancy Metz
William Murphy
John and Susan Nash
James and Barbara Randall
Frederick Risinger
Marie-Louise and David Smith
Maurice and Linda Smith
Ron and Sally Stephenson
Rex and Nancy Stockton
Mary and Joseph Walker
Lee and Judy Witt
Eva Zogorski
Bloomington 103.7 fm • Columbus 100.7 fm • Kokomo 106.1 fm • Terre Haute 95.1 fm
W IU
wfiu.indiana.edu
PROGRAMMING AND
OPERATING SUPPORT
Indiana University
CORPORATE SILVER
Bloomington Iron and Metal, Inc.
Delta Tau Delta Fraternity—
Indiana University
PYNCO, Inc.—Bedford
CORPORATE BENEFACTORS
Brown Hill Nursery of Columbus
CINERGY, Inc.—
Bloomington Region
Clay City Pharmacy—Clay City
Dr. David Southwick, Hand and Microvascular Surgeon of
Terre Haute
KP Pharmaceutical Technology
Kronodynamics, LLC,
Drs. Michael Kane and
Polly Lybrook
Pinnacle Properties
Tipton Lakes Athletic Club—
Columbus
World Arts, Inc.—Spencer
CORPORATE SPONSORS
Bloomington Podiatry Center and
Bloomington Optometry—
Dr. Michael Hoffman and
Dr. Miccah Hoffman
Bloomington Veterinary Hospital
Brown County Hotels and
Restaurants
• Nashville House,
• Brown County Inn,
• The Ordinary and
• The Seasons
Dermatology Center of Indiana —Drs. Byrne, McTigue and Reeck
Designscape Horticultural
Services, Inc.
Drs. David J. Howell and
Timothy A. Pliske, DDS of Bloomington and Bedford
HobNob Corner Restaurant —Nashville
ISU/May Insurance Agency
Strategic Development Group, Inc.
Unity Physicians Group
CORPORATE MEMBERS
Beacon X-Ray Testing, Inc.—
Terre Haute
Dr. Phillip Crooke—
Obstetrics and Gynecology
JB’s Salvage, Inc.—Scrap Metal Recycler
Kappa Kappa Kappa Inc.
G. C. Mangum Construction—
Nashville
Smart and Johnson Title Company —Columbus
World Wide Automotive
PROGRAM UNDERWRITERS
Akento Technology Sourcing Inc.
Andrews, Harrell, Mann, Carmin, and Parker P.C.
Baugh Enterprises Commercial Printing & Bulk Mail Services
Beacon X-ray Testing, Inc.
Bicycle Garage
BKD
Bloomingfoods
Bloomington Area Birth Services
Bloomington Dental Group
Bloomington Hospital
Bloomington Pet Pals
Bloomington Shuttle Service
Bloomington Symphony Orchestra
Brian Lappin Real Estate
South Dunn Street Project
Brown County Winery
Bunger and Robertson, Attorneys at Law
By Hand Gallery
Canine Companions
Caveat Emptor Books
Clay City Pharmacy
Columbus Area Arts Council
Columbus Container Inc.
Columbus Optical
Commercial Service of Bloomington
Crawlspace Doctor
Day & Carter Mortuary, Bedford
Dell Brothers
DePauw University
Elements
Falafels
First United Methodist Church
The Foot & Ankle Center
Fossil Rain
Four Seasons Retirement
Game Preserve
General Hotels
Gilbert Construction
Goods for Cooks
Greene Acres Farm of Aden, Inc.
Greene & Schultz, Trial Lawyers, P.C.
Hamilton Facial Plastic Surgery
Hair International
The Herald-Times
Heritage Fund of Bartholomew County
Hills O’Brown Realty
Hills O’Brown Property Management
Indianapolis Arts Center
Indianapolis Children’s Museum
Indianapolis Museum of Art
Indianapolis Opera
The Irish Lion Restaurant and Pub
ISU/The May Agency
IU Art Museum
IU Auditorium
IU Bloomington Continuing Studies
IU Bookstore
IU Credit Union
IU Department of Theatre & Drama
IU Division of Recreational Sports
IU Division of Residential Programs & Services
IU University Information Technology Services
IU Jacobs School of Music
IU Kelley School of Business
IU Kokomo Theater & Drama
IU Medical Sciences Program
IU Press
IU Printing Services
IU School of Continuing Studies
IU Writer’s Conference
J. L. Waters & Company
Kern Financial Group
The Kinsey Institute
Kirby-Risk Supply Co.
Laughing Planet Café
L. B. Stant and Associates
Mallor, Clendening, Grodner & Bohrer, Attorneys at Law
Meadowood Retirement Community
Medicaid Solutions
Midwest Counseling Center
N. R. Hiller Design
Oliver Winery
Owen County Community Foundation, Inc.
Plumb, Inc.
Prima Gallery
ProsLink
Pygmalion’s Art Supplies
Relish
Ron Plecher—REMAX
Dr. Byron Rutledge, DDS
Shawnee Summer Theatre
Smithville Telephone Company
Soma Coffee House and Juice Bar
Square Home Improvement
St. Mark’s United Methodist Church
Stonebridge Health Campus
Stone Cabin Design
Taylor & Webb,
American Portfolios, Inc.
Terry’s Banquets and Catering
Trojan Horse Restaurant
Twisted Limb Paperworks
Vance Music Center
World Wide Automotive Service
Yarns Unlimited
These community minded
businesses support locally
produced programs on
WFIU.
We thank them for their
partnership and encourage
you to thank and support
them.
Local Program
Production Support
Brian Lappin Real Estate
(Ask the Mayor)
(Ether Game)
(Noon Edition)
(Hometown)
Closets Too!
(Noon Edition)
The Gallery
(Afterglow)
Lennie’s
(Just You and Me)
The Bloomington
Brewing Pub
(Just You and Me)
Pizza Express
(Just You and Me)
Nationally Syndicated
Program Support
Nakamichi Foundation—
American Early Music Series
(Harmonia)
The Oakley Foundation, Terre Haute
(Hometown)
Office of the IU Provost, Bloomington
(A Moment of Science)
PYNCO, Inc., Bedford
(Harmonia)
July 2006 / Directions in Sound / Page 19