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June DIS 7 - WFIU - Indiana University

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Also this month:<br />

• Kids’ Art Contest Winners<br />

• Keyboard Conversations<br />

• Confronting Terrorism<br />

• Artist of the Month:<br />

Paul Biss<br />

• The Hospice Experiment<br />

• Humankind<br />

. . . and more!


<strong>June</strong> 2004<br />

Vol. 52, No. 6<br />

Directions in Sound (USPS-<br />

314900) is published each month<br />

by the <strong>Indiana</strong> <strong>University</strong> Radio<br />

and Television Services, Suite 321,<br />

Fountain Square Mall,<br />

Bloomington, <strong>Indiana</strong>, 47404<br />

telephone: 812-855-6114 or<br />

e-mail: wfiu@indiana.edu<br />

web site: wfiu.indiana.edu<br />

Periodical postage paid at<br />

Bloomington, IN<br />

<strong>WFIU</strong> is licensed to the Trustees of<br />

<strong>Indiana</strong> <strong>University</strong>, and operated<br />

by <strong>Indiana</strong> <strong>University</strong> Radio and<br />

Television Services.<br />

Perry Metz—Executive Director,<br />

Radio and Television Services<br />

Christina Kuzmych—Station<br />

Manager/Program Director<br />

Sharon Beikman—Broadcast<br />

Systems Manager, Traffic<br />

Chad Bouchard—Assistant News<br />

Director<br />

Joe Bourne—Producer/Jazz<br />

Director<br />

Don Glass—Producer/Special<br />

Projects Director<br />

Milton Hamburger—Art Director<br />

Brad Howard—Chief Engineer<br />

LuAnn Johnson—Radio Services<br />

Coordinator<br />

Yaël Ksander—Producer/<br />

Announcer<br />

Robert Lumpkin—Music Director/<br />

Programming Operations<br />

Coordinator<br />

Questions or Comments?<br />

Virginia Metzger—Chief Financial<br />

Officer<br />

Will Murphy—News Director<br />

Michael Paskash—Studio Engineer<br />

Adam Schwartz—Editor,<br />

Directions In Sound, News &<br />

Promotions Assistant<br />

John Shelton—Radio Studio<br />

Supervisor<br />

Michael Toler—Webmaster<br />

George Walker—Producer/On-Air<br />

Broadcast Director<br />

Kelly Walker—Underwriting<br />

Director<br />

Judith Witt—Development<br />

Director, Major & Planned<br />

Giving; Production Support<br />

Mark Zalewski—Promotions &<br />

Marketing Director<br />

Eva Zogorski—Membership<br />

Director<br />

Announcers: Kory Bickel, Ann<br />

Corrigan, Dianne Iauco, David<br />

Brent Johnson, Robert Samels,<br />

Henry Schilb<br />

Broadcast Assistants: Rebecca<br />

Batterman, Emily Blacklin, Eve<br />

Corrigan<br />

Volunteer Producer/Hosts: Moya<br />

Andrews, Richard Bishop, Mary<br />

Catherine Carmichael, Shanna<br />

Ritter, Steve Sanders, Bob<br />

Zaltsberg<br />

Membership & Underwriting<br />

Staff: Tom Dukeman, Laura<br />

Grannan, Karen Luerssen, Joan<br />

Padawan, Bennett Roberts<br />

Music Assistants: Adam McCord,<br />

Debra Paul, Thomas Pease, Adam<br />

Schweigert<br />

News Assistants: Jennifer Nicole<br />

Beemsterboer, Cheryl Owsley<br />

Jackson, Maryellen May, Sherhara<br />

Williams<br />

Production Assistants:<br />

Paul Messing, Jason Stahl<br />

Programming, Policies, or this Guide. If you have any questions about<br />

something you heard on the radio, station policies or this programming<br />

guide, call Christina Kuzmych, Station Manager/Program Director, at<br />

(812) 855-1357, or email her at wfiu@indiana.edu.<br />

Listener Response. If you wish only to leave a comment, please feel free<br />

to call our Listener Response Line any time of the day at (812) 856-5352.<br />

You can also email us at wfiu@indiana.edu. If you wish to send a letter,<br />

the address is <strong>WFIU</strong>, Radio/TV Center, 1229 East 7 th Street, <strong>Indiana</strong><br />

<strong>University</strong>, Bloomington, IN 47405-5501.<br />

Membership. <strong>WFIU</strong> appreciates and depends on our members. The<br />

membership staff is on hand Monday through Friday between 8 a.m.<br />

and 5 p.m. to answer questions. Want to begin or renew your membership?<br />

Changing addresses? Haven’t received the thank-you gift you<br />

requested? Questions about the MemberCard? Want to send a<br />

complimentary copy of Directions in Sound to a friend? Call (812) 855-<br />

6114 or toll free at (800) 662-3311.<br />

Underwriting: For information on how your business can underwrite<br />

particular programs on <strong>WFIU</strong>, call (800) 662-3311.<br />

Volunteers: Information about volunteer opportunities is available at<br />

(812) 855-1357, or by sending an email to wfiu@indiana.edu.<br />

2004 Kids’ Art Winners<br />

This year’s edition of the annual <strong>WFIU</strong> Kids’ Art contest drew<br />

unprecedented numbers of entries from all over south-central<br />

<strong>Indiana</strong>. Children in grades one through six were invited to enter<br />

artwork on the theme “Space Exploration,” with visuals of alien<br />

creatures, distant<br />

planets and outof-this-world<br />

travels often<br />

depicted.<br />

This year’s<br />

winner is Gary<br />

Blevins of<br />

Martinsville. Gary<br />

is in fifth grade at<br />

Brooklyn Elementary<br />

School. His<br />

illustration of an<br />

astronaut on the<br />

Gary Blevins presented first place award by judges<br />

surface of Mars<br />

Yaël Ksander and Milton Hamburger<br />

was uniquely<br />

drawn, with interesting use of color and shadows. The judges<br />

also selected two runners-up. Maemie Blankenship of Central<br />

Elementary School and Alex Golay of Centerton Elementary<br />

School also received awards. Maemie’s distinctive use of various<br />

artistic tools impressed the judges, and Alex’s bold colors set his<br />

work apart from the rest.<br />

The winners received generous gift certificates from<br />

Pygmalion’s Art Supply in Bloomington, and met with <strong>WFIU</strong><br />

staff members. The winning entries, along with numerous<br />

honorable mentions, will be on display throughout the summer<br />

as part of <strong>WFIU</strong>’s Traveling Art Show. Stay tuned to find out<br />

when it will travel to your area!<br />

Special thanks to this year’s judging panel:<br />

Milton Hamburger – IU Radio &Television Art Director,<br />

M.F.A. Graphic Design<br />

Yaël Ksander – Producer/Announcer, M.F.A. Painting<br />

Malcolm Mobutu Smith – Assistant Professor, Studio Art<br />

(Ceramics) – <strong>Indiana</strong> <strong>University</strong>, M.F.A.<br />

Winner: Gary Blevins<br />

Runner-up: Maemie Blankenship<br />

Runner-up: Alex Golay<br />

Honorable Mentions:<br />

Emma Binkowski<br />

Faith Bridges<br />

Holly Bunner<br />

Heather Carada<br />

Travis Cordin<br />

Mersadi’s Curtsinger<br />

Jacob Draughn<br />

Samantha Ellison<br />

McKenzi Gatlin<br />

On the cover: Drawing by Gary Blevins<br />

Andrew Goodrum<br />

Evan Heeb<br />

Annie Hollinden<br />

Josh Hunt<br />

Courtnee Johnson<br />

Abby Karcher<br />

Kyana Kemp<br />

Robert Livingston<br />

Emily Man<br />

Jenny So Young<br />

Park<br />

Brooke Perez<br />

Cory Pless<br />

Jeff Ratliff<br />

Megan Reynolds<br />

Dillon Taylor<br />

Zachery Terrell<br />

Page 2 / Directions in Sound / <strong>June</strong> 2004


Keyboard<br />

Conversations with<br />

Jeffrey Siegel<br />

Sundays, 4:00 p.m.<br />

Each Keyboard Conversations program is<br />

a concert-plus—a concert where each<br />

work is performed in its entirety… and<br />

the plus is pianist Jeffrey Siegal’s informal<br />

commentaries before performing each<br />

composition, as he illustrates with a few<br />

pertinent musical examples from the<br />

keyboard.<br />

Siegal may pose the questions, “How<br />

was the music of Robert Schumann<br />

affected by his love life? In Beethoven’s<br />

immortal Für Elise, who was “Elise,” and<br />

why did Beethoven write this “love<br />

poem” for her? How was Brahms able to<br />

compose a monumental work based on<br />

only one very short melody?<br />

After his commentary, listeners hear<br />

the music with a fresh perspective for the<br />

performance that follows. For newcomers<br />

to classical concerts, the programs<br />

provide an informal, accessible and<br />

entertaining introduction to the vast<br />

repertoire of the piano and to classical<br />

music in general. Seasoned music lovers<br />

are enlightened by Siegal’s erudition and<br />

rewarded with increased understanding<br />

and enjoyment of their favorite works.<br />

Each concert concludes with a brisk<br />

question and answer session.<br />

Conductor Leonard Slatkin commented<br />

that Siegal’s presentation and<br />

performance “add immeasurably to the<br />

listener’s understanding of how and why<br />

a piece of music exists. I can’t think of<br />

anyone who does this kind of programming<br />

better.”<br />

Chicago native Jeffrey Siegel has been<br />

a soloist with the world’s great orchestras.<br />

For more than thirty-two years<br />

across eighteen cities, broadcasts of<br />

Keyboard Conversations have, in Siegal’s<br />

words, “made friends for classical<br />

music.” Join us for a series of classical<br />

music concerts unlike any you have ever<br />

heard.<br />

<strong>June</strong> 6—Beethoven<br />

<strong>June</strong> 13—The Russians:<br />

Rachmaninoff, Medtner, Scriabin<br />

<strong>June</strong> 20—Chopin, Grieg, Liszt<br />

<strong>June</strong> 27—W.A. Mozart<br />

Confronting Terrorism: Democracy’s<br />

Response to the Terrorist Threat<br />

Three specials from the Voices of Public Intellectuals series<br />

Now in its fifth year, the Voices of Public Intellectuals lecture series brings innovative,<br />

thought-provoking issues affecting civic life to a public forum. This year’s series<br />

explores the effect of terrorism on democracy. These live lectures were held at the<br />

Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study at Harvard <strong>University</strong> in Cambridge, Massachusetts.<br />

The Nature of the Terrorist Threat<br />

Sunday, <strong>June</strong> 6, 8:00 p.m.<br />

Louise Richardson<br />

opens the Voices of<br />

Public Intellectuals<br />

lecture series by<br />

placing terrorism in<br />

context, suggesting<br />

how the term<br />

should be understood<br />

and examining<br />

terrorist motives<br />

and tactics. Using<br />

lessons learned by<br />

Louise Richardson<br />

other democracies,<br />

Richardson argues that terrorism can be<br />

defeated without compromising democratic<br />

principles. Richardson has written<br />

extensively on British foreign and defense<br />

policy, security institutions and international<br />

terrorism. She is the coeditor of the<br />

SUNY Press series on terrorism and is<br />

currently working on studies of decision<br />

making inside terrorist movements and of<br />

the patterns of terrorist violence.<br />

Why the U.S. is Targeted by Terrorism<br />

Sunday, <strong>June</strong> 13, 8:00 p.m.<br />

The United States<br />

has been a terrorist<br />

target since the late<br />

1960s; in this<br />

lecture, Martha<br />

Crenshaw discusses<br />

why. She examines<br />

the strategies of<br />

groups that have<br />

employed terrorism<br />

against Americans<br />

and their interests,<br />

as well as the<br />

specific, local roots<br />

of their grievances.<br />

Martha Crenshaw<br />

Crenshaw has written extensively on<br />

the issue of political terrorism and is the<br />

editor of Terrorism in Context, a volume<br />

of case studies of terrorist campaigns<br />

from the nineteenth century to the<br />

present. In addition to her academic<br />

appointments at Wesleyan <strong>University</strong>,<br />

Crenshaw serves on the executive board<br />

of Women in International Security and<br />

on the Council for the American Political<br />

Science Association. She is also a member<br />

of the Brookings Institute Task Force on<br />

US Policy Towards the Islamic World.<br />

Civil Liberties and the War on Terrorism<br />

Sunday, <strong>June</strong> 20, 8:00 p.m.<br />

Mary Jo White<br />

served as the first<br />

and only female<br />

U.S. attorney for<br />

the Southern<br />

District of New<br />

York—widely<br />

recognized as the<br />

premier U.S.<br />

attorney’s office in<br />

the country—from<br />

1993 until 2002.<br />

Mary Jo White<br />

Under White’s<br />

leadership the office investigated and<br />

prosecuted numerous international<br />

terrorism cases, including prosecutions<br />

for the 1993 bombing of the World Trade<br />

Center; the indictment of Osama bin<br />

Laden and the leadership of the al Qaeda<br />

terrorist organization for the 1998 U.S.<br />

embassy bombings in Nairobi, Kenya and<br />

Tanzania; and the investigation of the<br />

September 11 terrorist attacks.<br />

<strong>June</strong> 2004 / Directions in Sound / Page 3


American Radio<br />

Works: The Hospice<br />

Experiment<br />

Sunday, <strong>June</strong> 27, 8:00 p.m.<br />

In the 1960s a protest movement took<br />

place that did not involve marches,<br />

demonstrations or student sit-ins. Its<br />

leaders were middle-aged women who set<br />

out to change the treatment of the<br />

terminally ill. They wanted to call off the<br />

fruitless battles for cures and focus<br />

instead on pain control and the quality of<br />

a dying person’s last days.<br />

Their movement was a striking<br />

success—today three in ten dying<br />

Americans get hospice care. But until<br />

now, the story of the hospice movement<br />

has gone untold.<br />

The Hospice Experiment tells the<br />

stories of the hospice pioneers and<br />

follows a hospice patient through her last<br />

weeks of life. Listeners meet the<br />

movement’s founder, a formidable<br />

Englishwoman named Cicely Saunders,<br />

and a nurse named Florence Wald who<br />

created America’s first hospice program.<br />

The program also shows how Swiss-born<br />

psychiatrist Elisabeth Kübler-Ross<br />

became the leading spokesperson for<br />

hospice through her landmark book, “On<br />

Death and Dying.”<br />

Hospice patient Kitty Shenay<br />

talks to correspondent John<br />

Biewen during the last months of<br />

her life.<br />

Photo by Tom Rankin/American<br />

RadioWorks<br />

Humankind<br />

Stories of remarkable people<br />

whose dedication helps to<br />

humanize our society.<br />

The Pressure to Consume<br />

Sunday, <strong>June</strong> 6, 9:00 p.m.<br />

In this first installment we hear the voices<br />

of a variety of Americans who feel<br />

overwhelmed by the pressure to consume,<br />

and who are seeking ways to simplify and<br />

un-clutter their lives by turning to<br />

relationships that are less materialistic<br />

and more genuine. We then examine two<br />

traditions that practice the discipline of<br />

fasting as a way of intentionally experiencing<br />

what it means to go hungry.<br />

Cancer Support Groups<br />

Sunday, <strong>June</strong> 13, 9:00 p.m.<br />

Cancer patients in Los Angeles join a<br />

support group where they can identify<br />

with others who have the disease and can<br />

freely express taboo topics like the fear of<br />

death. Also, a counselor of cancer<br />

patients explains how to interrupt the<br />

psychological cycle of worrying and<br />

despair so common among those who<br />

receive a potentially life-threatening<br />

diagnosis.<br />

Art by contest runners-up (above) Alex Golay, age 7, and<br />

(left) Maemie Grace Blankenship, age 6<br />

Getting Rid of Nuclear Weapons<br />

Sunday, <strong>June</strong> 20, 9:00 p.m.<br />

At a time when the U.S. government<br />

advocates lowering the threshold for use<br />

of nuclear weapons, Global Security<br />

Institute President Jonathan Granoff<br />

pleads for an end to all nuclear stockpiles.<br />

In the second half of this program,<br />

Reverend Steve Shick, a Unitarian pastor<br />

in Haverhill, Massachusetts, wrestles with<br />

the appropriate role to be played by a<br />

religious congregation in social activism<br />

and social service.<br />

The Importance of “Downtime”<br />

Sunday, <strong>June</strong> 27, 9:00 p.m.<br />

Members of a Philadelphia organization<br />

promote more “downtime” so that people<br />

can nurture relationships and catch their<br />

breath in the midst of relentless stress<br />

caused by modern schedules and accelerated<br />

by modern technology. And John<br />

Heider, Kansas-based author of the bestselling<br />

“The Tao of Leadership,” discusses<br />

how a work of ancient Chinese<br />

wisdom inspires him to lead a “meaningful,<br />

conscious” life.<br />

Page 4 / Directions in Sound / <strong>June</strong> 2004


Mark Zalewski invites kids from Tulip Tree’s Head<br />

Start program to feel the grooves on an LP.<br />

Head Start-Tulip<br />

Tree Tour<br />

On a blustery March morning, a group of<br />

four- and five-year-olds from the Head<br />

Start program at Tulip Tree Apartments<br />

in Bloomington were given a tour of the<br />

<strong>WFIU</strong> studios.<br />

Promotions and Marketing Director<br />

Mark Zalewski led the tour and answered<br />

the children’s questions. While showing<br />

them <strong>WFIU</strong>’s music library, he displayed<br />

something few of the kids had seen<br />

before—a vinyl record.<br />

The group also visited George Walker<br />

inside the broadcast studio during a break<br />

in his morning music show, where George<br />

gave them a chance to be on the air.<br />

First he made sure the kids could give the<br />

station’s ID. He asked them say “<strong>WFIU</strong><br />

Bloomington” in unison. They passed the<br />

audition.<br />

“I mentioned on the air that usually I<br />

announce alone, but that today I had help<br />

from a Head Start group,” George said.<br />

“They were so darned neat that I wanted<br />

to do something special for them, and I<br />

didn’t think telling them how I got into<br />

radio or how many CD players I had<br />

would be as memorable.”<br />

Christmas in<br />

Mozart’s Music<br />

Cities<br />

November 26 – December 3, 2004<br />

<strong>WFIU</strong> is offering listeners a unique travel<br />

adventure: a guided tour of the cities<br />

associated with the life of Mozart, at the<br />

time of year when they are at their most<br />

beautiful.<br />

Travel with <strong>WFIU</strong> to Europe on an<br />

eight-day journey featuring the Christmas<br />

markets of Salzburg, Linz, Vienna and<br />

Prague. You’ll enjoy stunning vistas and<br />

Alpine splendor, leisure time to shop the<br />

traditional Christmas markets, plus<br />

classical music and culinary delights.<br />

You’ll see historic palaces and cathedrals,<br />

like the marvelous Schoenbrunn Palace<br />

and St. Stephan’s Cathedral, and tour the<br />

world-famous city of Salzburg with its<br />

sights made famous by Rodgers and<br />

Hammerstein in The Sound of Music.<br />

Roam the banks of the Danube to Linz<br />

for a comprehensive tour of this imperial<br />

city, highlighted by a visit to the<br />

Mozarthaus, where Mozart composed his<br />

“Linz” Symphony. Tour the Jewish<br />

Quarter with its Old World synagogues,<br />

museums and cemetery.<br />

The tour concludes in the “Golden<br />

City” of Prague in the Czech Republic,<br />

which offers visitors<br />

a mix of Gothic,<br />

Renaissance and<br />

Baroque architecture.<br />

A sightseeing<br />

tour of this fairy<br />

tale city includes the<br />

beautiful Hradcany<br />

Castle and St. Vitus<br />

Cathedral. A<br />

leisurely tour of the<br />

Old Town showcases<br />

the unique<br />

astronomical clock<br />

and the 14th<br />

Century, statuelined<br />

Charles<br />

Bridge. Celebrate<br />

the end of a<br />

spectacular trip<br />

with a special<br />

farewell dinner.<br />

Itinerary at a Glance<br />

Day 1 Overnight Flight<br />

Day 2-3 Renaissance Hotel,<br />

Salzburg<br />

Day 4-5 Hotel De France,<br />

Vienna<br />

Day 6-7 Renaissance or<br />

Marriott Hotel, Prague<br />

Rates<br />

Single $1,999 per Person<br />

Twin $1,799 per person<br />

Triple $1,769 per person<br />

Includes round trip air from<br />

<strong>Indiana</strong>polis, hotel transfers<br />

and departure tax. Also<br />

includes 10 meals (six breakfasts<br />

and four dinners).<br />

<strong>WFIU</strong> is coordinating this trip through<br />

Collette Vacations. A representative will<br />

be at the <strong>WFIU</strong> studios on <strong>June</strong> 2 at 6:00<br />

p.m. to give a presentation, answer<br />

questions and take reservations. To sign<br />

up for this presentation or to request<br />

more information, call (812) 855-1357.<br />

<strong>June</strong> 2004 / Directions in Sound / Page 5


Musical Highlights<br />

for <strong>June</strong><br />

By Robert Lumpkin, Music Director<br />

Artist of the Month<br />

<strong>WFIU</strong>’s Artist of<br />

the Month for<br />

<strong>June</strong> is conductor<br />

and violinist Paul<br />

Biss. Paul Biss is<br />

active in orchestral<br />

and chamber<br />

music. He’s a<br />

former member of<br />

the Berkshire<br />

Quartet and has<br />

participated in<br />

major festivals<br />

Paul Biss<br />

including Ravinia,<br />

Marlboro, La Jolla, Lockenhaus and<br />

Casals. Paul Biss is also an accomplished<br />

pedagogue with master classes in Europe,<br />

Israel and North America. On <strong>WFIU</strong> this<br />

month, he’ll be conducting the IU<br />

Chamber Orchestra on Wednesday, <strong>June</strong><br />

9 at 10:12 p.m. in a performance of<br />

Apollo by Igor Stravinsky. On Thursday<br />

the 17th at 7:07 p.m., join us for<br />

Beethoven’s Leonore Overture No. 3,<br />

Op. 72a. Paul Biss leads the IU Philharmonic<br />

Orchestra in that performance.<br />

He’s joined by violist Atar Arad on<br />

Sunday, <strong>June</strong> 27th at 11:08 p.m. for a<br />

performance of the Viola Concerto by<br />

Don Freund. And on Wednesday, <strong>June</strong> 30<br />

at 10:12 p.m., you can hear him again<br />

leading the IU <strong>University</strong> Orchestra in<br />

Ives’ Symphony No. 2.<br />

New Releases<br />

Vocal, orchestral and chamber music are<br />

all featured in this month’s selected new<br />

releases. Mezzo-soprano Lorraine Hunt<br />

Lieberson has caused somewhat of a stir<br />

in the press with her new recording on<br />

Nonesuch of two solo cantatas by J. S.<br />

Bach.<br />

On Monday, <strong>June</strong> 7, we’ll hear the<br />

Cantata BWV 199: “Mein Herze<br />

schwimmt im Blut” from that new<br />

release. Ms. Lieberson is joined by the<br />

Orchestra of Emmanuel Music conducted<br />

by Craig Smith.<br />

On Wednesday the 9th at 10:12 p.m.,<br />

tune in for a historic recording reissued<br />

by Decca of Manuel De Falla’s Three<br />

Cornered Hat. We’ll hear the Orchestra<br />

of the Suisse-Romande conducted by the<br />

legendary Ernest Ansermet. Trio Amadé,<br />

made up of violinist Felicia Moye, cellist<br />

Emilio Colón and pianist Heather<br />

Coltman, join us with a recent release<br />

from Klavier of Aaron Copland’s trio,<br />

Vitebsk that airs Wednesday, <strong>June</strong> 16 at<br />

7:07 p.m.<br />

Also Hilary Hahn, who seems to have<br />

a new disc every few months, can be<br />

heard Wednesday the 23rd at 10:12 in<br />

Shostakovich’s Violin Concerto No. 1 in<br />

a, Op. 77. Marek Janowski leads the<br />

Oslo Philharmonic Orchestra in this new<br />

Sony recording.<br />

A Moment of<br />

Science Fan visits<br />

Don Glass<br />

On April 2, 2004, 11-year-old Taylor<br />

Nelson dropped by <strong>WFIU</strong> from Chicago<br />

to meet A Moment of Science producer<br />

Don Glass and ask him to sign one of her<br />

favorite books—“How Can You Tell if a<br />

Spider Is Dead? And More Moments of<br />

Science.”<br />

Taylor’s family was visiting <strong>Indiana</strong> to<br />

watch her sister play in a volleyball<br />

tournament, and she made a special trip<br />

to Bloomington. Don was away from the<br />

station at the time, but he signed Taylor’s<br />

book and mailed it back to her.<br />

Cindy Nelson and her granddaughter Taylor<br />

Don Glass autographs his book<br />

Page 6 / Directions in Sound / <strong>June</strong> 2004


Broadcasts from the<br />

IU School of Music<br />

ROCHBERG—Sonata for Viola and<br />

Piano; Atar Arad, vla.; Jeannette<br />

Koekkoek, p.<br />

Airs: 6/1 at 10:00 a.m.<br />

Jeannette Koekkoek<br />

ARGENTO—Sonnet No. LXIV (in<br />

memoriam 9/11/01); Jan Harrington/IU<br />

Univ. Singers<br />

Airs: 6/7 at 7:00 p.m., 6/8 at 10:00 a.m.,<br />

6/11 at 3:00 p.m.<br />

WILLIAMS—Concerto for Tuba and<br />

Orchestra; Bryan Heath, b. tb.; Imre<br />

Pallò/IU Concert Orch.<br />

Airs: 6/14 at 7:00 p.m., 6.15 at 10:00<br />

a.m.<br />

BRAHMS—Serenade No. 1 in D, Op. 11;<br />

Imre Pallò/IU Concert Orch.<br />

Airs: 6/16 at 10:00 p.m.<br />

LANG, D.—Little Eye; Joakim Munkner,<br />

vlc.; David Dzubay/IU New Music Ens.<br />

Airs: 6/20 at 11:00 p.m.<br />

BARBER—Vanessa: Intermezzo; Pratt,<br />

Stephen/IU Wind Ens.<br />

Airs: 6/21/ at 7:00 p.m., 6/22 at 10:00<br />

a.m., 6/25 at 3:00 p.m.<br />

HARLAP—Bat Yiftach [Jephthah’s<br />

Daugher]; Reyna Carguill, s.; Chris<br />

Carducci, bar.; John Manganaro, hn.; Jan<br />

Harrington/IU <strong>University</strong> Singers<br />

Airs: 6/28 at 7:00 p.m., 6/29 at 10:00<br />

a.m.<br />

Profiles<br />

<strong>June</strong> 6 – David Quammen and Russell Mittermeier<br />

David Quammen is a science and nature writer. In<br />

addition to his columns in Outside magazine, essays,<br />

nonfiction and fiction, Quammen has also published in<br />

National Geographic, Harper’s and The New York Times<br />

Book Review. He spent eight years traveling the globe for<br />

his book, “Song of the Dodo: Island Biogeography in an<br />

Age of Extinctions,” which describes the history of<br />

evolutionary theory, biodiversity and population dynamics.<br />

A primatologist, herpetologist and biological anthropologist,<br />

Russell Mittermeier brings a multidisciplinary<br />

perspective to conservation. He has conducted fieldwork<br />

in more than twenty tropical countries, with special<br />

emphasis on Brazil, the Guianas and Madagascar. His<br />

research focuses on identifying the world’s megadiversity<br />

countries, biodiversity hotspots, and major tropical<br />

wilderness areas—topics that are also the themes of his<br />

latest books, “Megadiversity” and “Hotspots.” Listen to<br />

these two experts in conversation with John McCosker for<br />

City Arts and Lectures, courtesy of KQED in San Francisco.<br />

<strong>June</strong> 13 – Matt Ridley<br />

Matt Ridley brings a unique perspective to science writing.<br />

In his national bestseller “Genome: An Autobiography of<br />

Species in 23 Chapters,” Ridley explains how mapping out<br />

human DNA could change everything from medicine and<br />

politics to what it means to be human. His latest book,<br />

“Nature via Nurture,” argues that genes predetermine the<br />

broad structure of the brain and absorb formative experiences,<br />

react to social cues and even run memory. He spoke<br />

with Roy Eisenhardt of City Arts and Lectures, courtesy of<br />

KQED in San Francisco.<br />

<strong>June</strong> 20 – Ruth Engs<br />

Ruth Engs, professor of Applied Health Sciences at IU, is<br />

an authority on addictive behaviors. Her research focuses<br />

on American health reform movements, patterns of alcohol<br />

use among women and students, and controversies in the<br />

addiction field. Dr. Engs is the author of six books<br />

including “Clean Living Movements: American Cycles of<br />

Health Reform,” “The Progressive Era’s Health Reform<br />

Movement: A Historical Dictionary” and “Alcohol And<br />

Other Drugs: Self Responsibility.” She spoke with <strong>WFIU</strong>’s<br />

Adam Schwartz in an hour-long conversation.<br />

<strong>June</strong> 27 – Sallyann Murphey<br />

Sallyann Murphey produced the current events program<br />

The World At One for the BBC and later established the<br />

American news operation for Good Morning Britain, the<br />

sister program to Good Morning America. She has also<br />

worked as an investigative journalist for a number of<br />

publications including the London Observer, the Daily<br />

Mail and Utne Reader. In her first of four books, “Bean<br />

Blossom Dreams: A City Family’s Search for a Simple<br />

Country Life,” Murphey wrote about her experiences<br />

moving to <strong>Indiana</strong>. She teaches history, government and<br />

media studies at Harmony High School in Bloomington.<br />

Join us for this interview, hosted by Shana Ritter.<br />

<strong>June</strong> 2004 / Directions in Sound / Page 7


<strong>June</strong> Community<br />

Events<br />

Visit the <strong>WFIU</strong> web site for links to these<br />

and other events: wfiu.indiana.edu.<br />

Travel to Mozart’s Musical Cities –<br />

Information Session<br />

Wednesday, <strong>June</strong> 2, 6:00 p.m.<br />

<strong>WFIU</strong> Studios, 1229 E. 7 th Street,<br />

Bloomington<br />

Join <strong>WFIU</strong> for a guided tour of Mozart’s<br />

Musical Cities from November 26<br />

through December 3, 2004. <strong>WFIU</strong> and<br />

Collette Vacations are offering an eightday<br />

tour of the Christmas Markets of<br />

Salzburg, Linz, Vienna and Prague.<br />

A representative from Collette<br />

Vacations will be at the <strong>WFIU</strong> studios on<br />

Wednesday, <strong>June</strong> 2 at 6:00 p.m. to give a<br />

presentation, answer questions and take<br />

reservations. To sign-up for this session<br />

or to request a brochure, call <strong>WFIU</strong> at<br />

812-855-1357. Detailed trip information<br />

can be found on the <strong>WFIU</strong> web site:<br />

wfiu.indiana.edu.<br />

<strong>Indiana</strong> State <strong>University</strong> – SummerStage<br />

2004<br />

“The Foreigner”<br />

written by Larry Shue, directed by Kristin<br />

Kundert-Gibbs<br />

<strong>June</strong> 18, 19, 23 – 7:30 p.m.<br />

<strong>June</strong> 20 – 4:00 p.m.<br />

Larry Shue, author of the SummerStage<br />

1996 comedy hit “The Nerd,” brings us<br />

another side-splitting comedy. This one<br />

takes place in a fishing lodge in rural<br />

Georgia, often visited by “Froggy”<br />

LeSeuer, a British demolition expert who<br />

runs training sessions at a nearby army<br />

base. On this visit “Froggy” takes along<br />

Charlie, a pathologically shy young man<br />

who is overcome with fear at the thought<br />

of making conversation with strangers.<br />

To help his friend, “Froggy” tells all<br />

assembled that Charlie is from an exotic<br />

foreign country and speaks no English.<br />

This fuels the non-stop hilarity of the play<br />

as Charlie overhears sinister plots and<br />

intimate details of the lives of the resident<br />

minister, his pretty fiancée and the local<br />

KKK—all the while pretending to<br />

understand none of it.<br />

Page 8 / Directions in Sound / <strong>June</strong> 2004<br />

Arts Fair on the Square<br />

Saturday, <strong>June</strong> 19, 10:00 a.m. – 6:00 p.m.<br />

Monroe County Courthouse Square,<br />

Bloomington<br />

The Arts Fair on the Square is a one-day<br />

fair organized by the Bloomington Area<br />

Arts Council. The fair is held amid the<br />

landscaped beauty of the Monroe County<br />

courthouse in downtown Bloomington.<br />

This annual event is run in conjunction<br />

with the Taste of Bloomington, which<br />

offers visitors a broad sampling of the<br />

variety of dining experiences available in<br />

the Bloomington area. The Arts Fair is in<br />

its 24 th year of connecting artists with the<br />

art-buying public and promoting the<br />

awareness of the visual arts in a festive<br />

and entertaining atmosphere.<br />

<strong>Indiana</strong> State <strong>University</strong> – SummerStage<br />

2004<br />

“The Glass Menagerie”<br />

written by Tennessee Williams, directed<br />

by Julie Dixon<br />

<strong>June</strong> 25, 26, 30 – 7:30 p.m.<br />

<strong>June</strong> 27 – 4:00 p.m.<br />

One of Tennessee Williams’ most<br />

powerful and oft-performed pieces, “The<br />

Glass Menagerie” is a poetic, sunlightand-memory<br />

drenched classic. The<br />

struggle between beauty wrung from pain<br />

and survival at great cost twines through<br />

the bittersweet drama of a family’s<br />

gradual disintegration, all set in St. Louis<br />

during the depression era. This poetic,<br />

delicate and fragile portrayal of a faded<br />

Southern belle, her dreamer son, and her<br />

painfully withdrawn daughter makes an<br />

indelible impression on everyone who sees<br />

it.<br />

Brown County Studio & Garden Tour<br />

Saturday, <strong>June</strong> 26, 9:00 a.m. – 6:00 p.m.<br />

Sunday, <strong>June</strong> 27, 10:00 a.m. – 5:00 p.m.<br />

The Brown County Studio and Garden<br />

Tour is a free, self-guided educational<br />

event designed to showcase the arts and<br />

crafts of “The Art Colony of the Midwest.”<br />

A select group of artisans, who<br />

continue this cultural heritage, will open<br />

their studios and gardens to the public for<br />

this one special weekend. Demonstrations<br />

will delight young and old, while collectors<br />

will relish the selections of new<br />

artwork available especially for this<br />

occasion.<br />

Society of<br />

Professional<br />

Journalists Honor<br />

<strong>WFIU</strong> News<br />

Members of the <strong>WFIU</strong> and WTIU news<br />

departments attended the 25 th Annual<br />

<strong>Indiana</strong> Society of Professional Journalists<br />

Awards ceremony in <strong>Indiana</strong>polis this<br />

April. Radio stations and publications<br />

from all over <strong>Indiana</strong> were represented,<br />

including the <strong>Indiana</strong>polis Star, the South<br />

Bend Tribune, the <strong>Indiana</strong>polis Monthly<br />

and the Herald-Times.<br />

The delegation from <strong>WFIU</strong> brought<br />

home four awards.<br />

<strong>WFIU</strong> News Director Will Murphy<br />

received a second place award in the<br />

“Best Radio Feature” category for his<br />

piece featuring Bloomington’s Von Lee<br />

theater. Adam Schwartz won a first place<br />

award in the “Social Justice Reporting”<br />

category for his report on Pages to<br />

Prisoners and a second place award for<br />

“Best Coverage of Children’s Issues” for<br />

his piece on transient students at Fairview<br />

Elementary. Simone Gubar won a first<br />

place award in the “Best Radio Feature—<br />

Student Division” for her Veteran’s Day<br />

feature of M.E. Lawlis.<br />

Behind the scenes, <strong>WFIU</strong>’s audio<br />

production assistant Jason Stahl was<br />

indispensable, providing the expert audio<br />

editing skills that contributed to the<br />

department’s successes.<br />

The judges described Adam’s Pages to<br />

Prisoners piece as “great reporting” and<br />

commented that it showed “excellent<br />

research of sound; well used to provide<br />

different points of view.”<br />

Simone’s piece on Professor Lawlis’<br />

wartime experience prompted the judges<br />

to write, “‘Veteran’s Day’ is the clear<br />

winner. Excellent use of sound clips<br />

captures Lawlis’ experience and reflections<br />

on being a POW. Strong writing,<br />

narrative and production resulted in a<br />

compelling and memorable radio feature.”<br />

To date this year, the <strong>WFIU</strong> News<br />

Department has entered four state,<br />

regional and national competitions. It has<br />

received recognition in three of them,<br />

earning a total of seven awards so far,<br />

including two regional Edward R.<br />

Murrow awards for Chad Bouchard and<br />

an award from Network <strong>Indiana</strong> for<br />

Chelsea Wald’s feature on Bloomington’s<br />

WonderLab.


Musical information<br />

is Thomas Pease’s<br />

passion<br />

When a <strong>WFIU</strong> announcer enlightens you<br />

with insightful information about a piece<br />

of classical music, there is a good chance<br />

that music assistant Thomas Pease was at<br />

work. Pease maintains <strong>WFIU</strong>’s music<br />

database, which contains some 40,000<br />

entries.<br />

Cataloging<br />

the<br />

CD in the<br />

correct<br />

category is<br />

more<br />

complicated<br />

than<br />

one would Music Assistant Thomas Pease in the<br />

<strong>WFIU</strong> music library<br />

think.<br />

“Often on CDs, music pieces are put<br />

down in the vaguest sense, like “adagio”<br />

or “aria by Handel,”Pease says. “But a<br />

piece isn’t just named ‘aria’; that might<br />

not even be the name of the movement.<br />

That might be something that they just<br />

call it.”<br />

To classify a piece, Pease needs to ask:<br />

Where did that piece come from? When<br />

was it written? What were the circumstances<br />

under which the composer wrote<br />

it? To make things even harder, there are<br />

different composers with the same names.<br />

Not to mention the occasional inaccuracies<br />

that Pease finds lurking in the<br />

database.<br />

Pease must also catalog the twenty-five<br />

to forty new CDs that come to the station<br />

each month. His favorite part of the job is<br />

cataloging what he calls “a really tough<br />

CD”—one that requires a lot of background<br />

information to look up from<br />

various sources, including the Internet<br />

and other databases.<br />

Pease’s passion for musical information<br />

stems from his desire to help connect<br />

people to great works of art and from his<br />

belief in music education. “Everyone<br />

should have the arts as a part of their<br />

lives.” Pease started out planning to be a<br />

music teacher, but as an undergraduate he<br />

took a course in musicology that excited<br />

his interest, pointing him in a new<br />

direction.<br />

“I loved doing the research for the<br />

papers we had to do, and being in the<br />

library, and finding all this neat stuff out<br />

about the music.” Prior to coming to<br />

Bloomington, Pease spent three years as<br />

music librarian at public station WETA in<br />

Washington, D.C. He also was an intern<br />

for the National Symphony Orchestra.<br />

To stay informed about the field, Pease<br />

attends the annual conference of the<br />

Music Librarian Association. He is now<br />

working towards his masters of library<br />

science degree with a specialization in<br />

music librarianship at IU’s School of<br />

Information and Library Science.<br />

Defying the image of librarians being<br />

quiet people, Pease prefers a lively work<br />

environment. “I like an atmosphere where<br />

there are interesting conversations and a<br />

lot of life going on,” he says with a smile.<br />

“That’s why I like to hang around radio<br />

stations.”<br />

The Radio Reader<br />

with Dick Estell<br />

“No Greater Glory”<br />

by Dan Kurzman<br />

Began: May 27<br />

During the night<br />

of February 5,<br />

1943, the SS<br />

Dorchester was<br />

pushing through<br />

the chill seas off<br />

the coast of<br />

Greenland when<br />

a torpedo<br />

shattered her<br />

starboard side.<br />

Some of the 904<br />

Dan Kurzman<br />

men aboard<br />

managed to fight their way onto lifeboats.<br />

Many did not have life jackets and<br />

panicked as the ship gradually sank, and<br />

would have drowned if not for the four<br />

chaplains aboard—the Rev. George L.<br />

Fox (Methodist), the Rev. Clark V. Poling<br />

(Dutch Reformed), Father John P.<br />

Washington (Roman Catholic), and<br />

Rabbi Alexander Goode (Jewish). These<br />

four men courageously distributed life<br />

jackets and, in the end, gave up their<br />

own.<br />

Author Dan Kurzman has penetrated<br />

the lives of these four extraordinary men,<br />

showing the influences and spiritual<br />

forces that led to their ultimate sacrifice.<br />

“No Greater Glory” is a riveting story of<br />

four men of the cloth who came from<br />

different backgrounds but found common<br />

ground in serving God and country.<br />

MemberCard<br />

Special attractions honoring the <strong>WFIU</strong><br />

MemberCard include the following<br />

benefits of the month. To see a<br />

complete listing of the more than 280<br />

membership benefits, including many<br />

businesses new to the MemberCard in<br />

the greater <strong>Indiana</strong>polis area, visit<br />

www.membercard.com.<br />

Benefits of the Month:<br />

Cave Country Canoes<br />

360 East State Road 64<br />

Marengo 812-365-2705<br />

www.cavecountrycanoes.com<br />

Valid anytime in <strong>June</strong> for two-for-one<br />

canoe trip tickets.<br />

Subject to availability.<br />

Theater on the Square<br />

627 Massachusetts Avenue<br />

<strong>Indiana</strong>polis 317-637-8085<br />

www.tots.org<br />

Valid anytime for two-for-one general<br />

admission to Sordid Lives by Del<br />

Shores through <strong>June</strong> 19th; reservations<br />

required, subject to availability.<br />

New Listings:<br />

Chi Chi’s Mexican Restaurant<br />

2550 East 3rd Street<br />

Bloomington 812-333-1781<br />

Valid anytime.<br />

Chi Chi’s Mexican Restaurant<br />

3830 South US Hwy 4<br />

Terre Haute 812-234-2248<br />

Valid anytime.<br />

Zamberletti’s Restaurant<br />

1429 South 25th Street<br />

Terre Haute 812-232-1243<br />

Valid anytime.<br />

No changes in Bed & Breakfast<br />

listings or Outlet Stores.<br />

To find out how you can become a<br />

member of <strong>WFIU</strong> and receive a<br />

MemberCard, go to the <strong>WFIU</strong> web<br />

site wfiu.indiana.edu, or call (812)<br />

855-6114 or 800-662-3311.<br />

<strong>June</strong> 2004 / Directions in Sound / Page 9


Weekday<br />

12:01 AM NPR NEWS<br />

12:06 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC OVERNIGHT<br />

5:00 AM BBC WORLD SERVICE<br />

6:00 AM MORNING EDITION<br />

Join host Bob Edwards for NPR’s<br />

award-winning news program, with local<br />

and state news at 6:06, 7:06, and 8:06.<br />

8:50 AM MARKETPLACE<br />

A daily rundown of financial news from<br />

Public Radio International. Followed by<br />

<strong>Indiana</strong> Business News.<br />

9:04 AM SPEAK YOUR MIND<br />

(On selected days.)<br />

9:00 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH<br />

GEORGE WALKER<br />

Featuring new releases and recordings from<br />

the <strong>WFIU</strong> library. (See daily listings for<br />

program highlights.)<br />

10:01 AM BBC NEWS<br />

10:06 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH<br />

GEORGE WALKER (con’t.)<br />

10:58 AM A MOMENT OF SCIENCE<br />

A timely moment of entertainment and<br />

enlightenment produced by <strong>WFIU</strong> and the<br />

scientific community at <strong>Indiana</strong> <strong>University</strong>.<br />

11:01 AM NPR NEWS<br />

11:05 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH<br />

GEORGE WALKER (con’t.)<br />

11:27 AM RADIO READER<br />

Join host Dick Estell for a half hour of your<br />

favorite bestsellers. (Begins at 11:15 during<br />

Fund Drive week.)<br />

11:55 AM STARDATE<br />

11:56 AM SPEAK YOUR MIND<br />

(On selected days.)<br />

12:01 PM NPR & LOCAL NEWS<br />

12:06 PM FRESH AIR<br />

(ASK THE MAYOR airs every Wednesday;<br />

NOON EDITION airs every Friday.)<br />

1:00 PM PERFORMANCE TODAY<br />

NPR’s award-winning classical magazine<br />

with host Fred Child.<br />

2:01 PM NPR NEWS<br />

2:00 PM ADVENTURES IN GOOD MUSIC<br />

Classical music from a different perspective<br />

on this award-winning series.<br />

3:01 PM NPR AND LOCAL NEWS<br />

3:08 PM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH<br />

GEORGE WALKER (con’t.)<br />

3:25 PM WEATHER NOTEBOOK (except<br />

Fridays)<br />

3:25 PM FOCUS ON FLOWERS (Fridays)<br />

3:30 PM JUST YOU AND ME<br />

WITH JOE BOURNE<br />

4:55 PM A MOMENT OF SCIENCE<br />

5:00 PM ALL THINGS CONSIDERED<br />

News coverage and commentary from<br />

National Public Radio, with local and state<br />

news at 5:04 and 5:33.<br />

6:30 PM MARKETPLACE<br />

(Followed by <strong>Indiana</strong> Business News)<br />

7:01 PM THE WRITER’S ALMANAC<br />

7:06 PM EVENING CLASSICAL MUSIC<br />

(FRESH AIR on Fridays.)<br />

See program grid on back cover, and daily<br />

listings, for details of weeknight programming.<br />

9:00 PM THE BIG BANDS (Fridays)<br />

10:01 PM BBC & LOCAL NEWS<br />

10:08 PM STARDATE<br />

10:09 PM AFTERGLOW (Fridays)<br />

Page 10 / Directions in Sound / <strong>June</strong> 2004<br />

Saturday<br />

12:00 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC OVERNIGHT<br />

7:01 AM NPR & LOCAL NEWS<br />

7:07 AM FOCUS ON FLOWERS<br />

7:47 AM SATURDAY FEATURE/RADIO<br />

PUBLIC<br />

8:00 AM WEEKEND EDITION<br />

10:00 AM CAR TALK<br />

11:00 AM SAYS YOU!<br />

11:30 AM TALKING HISTORY<br />

(Start time may be affected by opera start<br />

time.)<br />

12:01 PM NPR & LOCAL NEWS<br />

(Start time may be affected by opera start<br />

time.)<br />

12:06 PM STARDATE<br />

(Start time may be affected by opera start<br />

time.)<br />

12:08 PM CLASSICAL MUSIC<br />

(Start time may be affected by opera start<br />

time.)<br />

12:30 PM EUROPEAN OPERA SERIES<br />

(Start times may vary.)<br />

4:00 PM ALL THINGS CONSIDERED<br />

(Start time may be delayed by opera.)<br />

5:00 PM GARRISON KEILLOR’S<br />

A PRAIRIE HOME COMPANION<br />

7:00 PM HOMETOWN<br />

WITH TOM ROZNOWSKI<br />

7:05 PM THE FOLK SAMPLER<br />

8:05 PM THE THISTLE AND SHAMROCK<br />

9:09 PM AFROPOP WORLDWIDE<br />

10:05 PM NEWS<br />

10:07 PM STARDATE<br />

10:09 PM PORTRAITS IN BLUE<br />

10:59 PM WORLDWIDE JAZZ<br />

Sunday<br />

12:00 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC OVERNIGHT<br />

7:01 AM NPR & LOCAL NEWS<br />

8:00 AM WEEKEND EDITION<br />

10:00 AM THIS AMERICAN LIFE<br />

11:00 AM LIVING ON EARTH<br />

11:23 AM EARTHNOTE<br />

11:25 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC<br />

11:46 AM THE POETS WEAVE<br />

11:52 AM STARDATE<br />

11:55 AM LOCAL NEWS<br />

12:00 PM SAINT PAUL SUNDAY<br />

1:00 PM SCHICKELE MIX<br />

2:00 PM BROADWAY REVISITED<br />

3:00 PM WEEKEND RADIO<br />

3:57 PM EARTHNOTE<br />

4:00 PM THE SAVVY TRAVELER<br />

5:01 PM ALL THINGS CONSIDERED<br />

6:01 PM NPR NEWS<br />

6:06 PM SOUND MEDICINE<br />

7:00 PM PROFILES<br />

8:00 PM SPECIALS (See detailed listings.)<br />

10:01 PM NPR & LOCAL NEWS<br />

10:05 PM STARDATE<br />

10:08 PM MUSIC FROM THE HEARTS OF<br />

SPACE<br />

11:08 PM LATE NIGHT MUSIC<br />

Key to abbreviations.<br />

b., bass; bar., baritone; bssn., bassoon; c.,<br />

contralto; cl., clarinet; cond., conductor; cont.,<br />

continuo; ct., countertenor; db., double bass;<br />

ch., chamber; E.hn., English horn; ens.,<br />

ensemble; fl., flute; gt., guitar; hn., horn; hp.,<br />

harp; hpsd., harpsichord; intro., introduction;<br />

instr., instrument; kbd., keyboard; ms., mezzosoprano;<br />

ob., oboe; orch., orchestra; org.,<br />

organ; Phil., Philharmonic; p., piano; perc.,<br />

percussion; qt., quartet; rec., recorder; sax.,<br />

saxophone; s., soprano; str., string; sym.,<br />

symphony; t., tenor; tb., trombone; timp.,<br />

timpani; tpt., trumpet; trans., transcribed; var.,<br />

variations; vla., viola; vlc., violoncello; vln.,<br />

violin. Upper case letters indicate major keys;<br />

lower case letters indicate minor keys.<br />

1 Tuesday<br />

9:05 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH<br />

GEORGE WALKER<br />

9am MARCELLO, B.—QUANDO PENSO<br />

AGL’AFFANNI, SF 276: Sinfonia; Ottavio<br />

Dantone/Accademia Bizantina<br />

10am ROCHBERG—Sonata for Viola and<br />

Piano; Atar Arad, vla.; Jeannette<br />

Koekkoek, p.<br />

11am BLISS—Concerto for Two Pianos<br />

and Orchestra, F. 110; Peter Donohoe, p.;<br />

Martin Roscoe, p.; David Lloyd-Jones/<br />

Royal Scottish Natl. Orch.<br />

3pm RAMSIER—Zoo of Dreams III<br />

“Sahara Rainforest”; Christopher Pegis,<br />

vlc.; John Miller, db.<br />

7:05 PM FROM THE TOP<br />

From Texas Tech <strong>University</strong> in Lubbock,<br />

you’ll hear Villa-Lobos played by an<br />

outstanding 10-year-old guitarist and<br />

Handel sung by a talented tenor. You’ll<br />

also meet a sibling duo whose favorite<br />

activity is driving each other bonkers.<br />

8:05 PM ETHER GAME<br />

“The Classic Screw-up!”<br />

Human error gets exposed on this edition<br />

of Ether Game.<br />

10:09 PM THE VOCAL SCENE WITH<br />

GEORGE JELLINEK<br />

“An Hour of Choice Offenbach”<br />

11:08 PM LATE NIGHT MUSIC<br />

SCHUMANN—MANFRED, OP. 115:<br />

Overture; Leonard Bernstein/Vienna Phil.<br />

SHOSTAKOVICH—Twenty-Four Preludes,<br />

Op. 34; Grigory Kalinovsky, vln.; Tatiana<br />

Goncharova, p.


2 Wednesday<br />

9:05 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH<br />

GEORGE WALKER<br />

9am BEETHOVEN—Fantasia in c for<br />

Piano, Chorus, and Orchestra, Op. 80;<br />

Hélène Grimaud, p.; Swedish Radio Choir;<br />

Esa-Pekka Salonen/Swedish Radio Sym.<br />

Orch.<br />

Hélène Grimaud<br />

10am SHOSTAKOVICH—Chamber<br />

Symphony, Op. 110a; Constantine<br />

Orbelian/Moscow Ch. Orch.<br />

11am BERNSTEIN—Trio for Violin, Cello,<br />

and Piano; Trio Amadé<br />

7:06 PM EVENING CLASSICAL MUSIC<br />

FIALA, J.—Duet No. 6 in C; Mela<br />

Tenenbaum, vln.; Yosef Feigelson, vlc.<br />

COPLAND—APPALACHIAN SPRING:<br />

Suite; Aaron Copland/Boston Sym.<br />

GRANADOS—Cuentos de la juventud<br />

(Stories of Youth); Alicia De Larrocha, p.<br />

8:00 PM SAINT PAUL CHAMBER<br />

ORCHESTRA<br />

Joseph Silverstein, cond.; Sarah Chang, vln.<br />

MOZART—Symphony No. 33 in B-flat, K.<br />

319<br />

MENDELSSOHN—String Octet in E-flat,<br />

Op. 20<br />

DVORAK—Violin Concerto in a, Op. 53<br />

10:12 PM LATE NIGHT MUSIC<br />

VIVALDI—GLORIA IN D, RV 589:<br />

Laudamus Te; Yo-Yo Ma, Baroque vlc.;<br />

Jonathan Manson, Baroque vlc.; Ton<br />

Koopman/Amsterdam Baroque Orch.<br />

BORODIN—Symphony No. 1 in E-flat;<br />

Bramwell Tovey/Vancouver Sym.<br />

BRAHMS—Piano Quartet No. 3 in c, Op.<br />

60; Adkins Str. Ens.<br />

ELGAR—Cello Concerto in e, Op. 85;<br />

Janos Starker, vlc.; Leonard Slatkin/<br />

Philharmonia Orch.<br />

CHOPIN—Waltz in A-flat, Op. 34, No. 1;<br />

György Sebok, p.<br />

3 Thursday<br />

9:05 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH<br />

GEORGE WALKER<br />

9am COWELL—Hymn and Fuguing Tune<br />

No. 3, HC 660; Jorge Mester/Louisville<br />

Orch.<br />

10am GRANADOS—Escenas románticas<br />

(Romantic scenes); Alicia De Larrocha, p.<br />

11am BORODIN—PRINCE IGOR:<br />

Overture; Bramwell Tovey/Vancouver Sym.<br />

3pm MACHAUT—Plange, regni respublica,<br />

M. 22 (Weep, commonwealth of the<br />

kingdom);Hilliard Ens.<br />

7:06 PM EVENING CLASSICAL MUSIC<br />

FALLA—LA VIDA BREVE: Interlude and<br />

Dance; Ernest Ansermet/L’Orch. de la<br />

Suisse Romande<br />

MARTIN—Piano Trio on Popular Irish<br />

Folk Tunes; Borodin Trio<br />

RESPIGHI—BELKIS, QUEEN OF SHEBA:<br />

Suite; Geoffrey Simon/Philharmonia Orch.<br />

8:00 PM SPOLETO CHAMBER MUSIC<br />

Wendy Chen, p.<br />

BACH (Arr. Busoni)—PARTITA NO. 2 IN<br />

d, BWV 1004: Ciaccona<br />

Courtenay Budd, s.; Charles Wadsworth, p.<br />

ROREM—Five Songs<br />

Chee-Yun, vln.; Wendy Chen, p.<br />

FRANCK— Violin Sonata in A<br />

9:00 PM HARMONIA<br />

Harmonia presents Domenico vs.<br />

Allessandro Scarlatti this week. We’ll hear<br />

performances by Seattle Baroque and Byron<br />

Schenkman.<br />

10:09 PM INDIANAPOLIS SYMPHONY<br />

ORCHESTRA<br />

Naoto Otomo, cond.; André Watts, p.<br />

RACHMANINOFF—Piano Concerto No.2<br />

in c, Op.18<br />

MUSSORGSKY—Pictures at an Exhibition<br />

4 Friday<br />

9:05 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH<br />

GEORGE WALKER<br />

9am MENDELSSOHN—Violin Concerto in<br />

e, Op. 64; Hilary Hahn, vln.; Hugo Wolf/<br />

Oslo Phil.<br />

10am BIGGS—Symphony No. 2; Paul<br />

Freeman/Czech Natl. Sym.<br />

11am RESPIGHI—Adagio con variazioni;<br />

Mischa Maisky, vlc.; Semyon Bychkov/<br />

Orch. de Paris<br />

3pm FALLA—LA VIDA BREVE: Interlude<br />

and Dance; Ernest Ansermet/L’Orch. de la<br />

Suisse Romande<br />

8:00 PM MARIAN McPARTLAND’S<br />

PIANO JAZZ<br />

Patricia Barber<br />

9:00 PM THE BIG BANDS<br />

With host Joe Bourne<br />

10:09 PM AFTERGLOW<br />

With host Dick Bishop<br />

5 Saturday<br />

10:00 AM CAR TALK<br />

With hosts Tom and Ray Magliozzi<br />

11:00 AM SAYS YOU!<br />

With host Richard Sher<br />

11:30 AM TALKING HISTORY<br />

Fred Nielsen and Barbara Freese discuss<br />

coal, and—in the commentary—John<br />

Pinheiro exhorts us to look a little further<br />

than the Vietnam War for an historical<br />

analogy to Iraq.<br />

12:09 PM CLASSICAL MUSIC<br />

BRUCKNER—Ave Maria; Dennis Shrock/<br />

Santa Fe Desert Chorale<br />

SCHUBERT—Violin Sonata in g, Op. 137,<br />

No. 3, D. 408; Arturo Delmoni, vln.;<br />

Edward Auer, p.<br />

Edward Auer<br />

12:30 PM EUROPEAN OPERA SERIES<br />

RESPIGHI—Marie Victoire (World<br />

Premiere)<br />

Teatro dell’ Opera, Rome; Gianluigi<br />

Gelmeti, cond.; Nelly Miricioiu (Marie<br />

Victoire); Alberto Cupido (Clorivière);<br />

Giorgio Surian (Cloteau); Alberto Gazale<br />

(Maurice); Anna Rita Taliento (Lison<br />

Fleuriot)<br />

5:00 PM GARRISON KEILLOR’S<br />

A PRAIRIE HOME COMPANION<br />

A live performance at Meadowbrook<br />

Musical Arts Center in Gilford, New<br />

Hampshire<br />

7:00 PM HOMETOWN<br />

WITH TOM ROZNOWSKI<br />

“Pretending I Never Saw You”<br />

7:05 PM THE FOLK SAMPLER<br />

“A Full Moon”<br />

8:05 PM THE THISTLE AND<br />

SHAMROCK<br />

“Smithsonian Folklife Festival, Pt. 2”<br />

We are proud to be offering these exclusive<br />

highlights from a live performance by<br />

singer, songwriter, and guitarist Karine<br />

Polwart at the 2003 Folklife Festival.<br />

9:05 PM AFROPOP WORLDWIDE<br />

With Host Georges Collinet<br />

10:07 PM PORTRAITS IN BLUE<br />

“Catching Up with Keb’ Mo’ 1990s &<br />

2000s Blues”<br />

11:07 PM WORLDWIDE JAZZ<br />

The Big Band Metropole Orchestra Meets<br />

John Clayton<br />

<strong>June</strong> 2004 / Directions in Sound / Page 11


6 Sunday<br />

10:00 AM THIS AMERICAN LIFE<br />

With host Ira Glass<br />

11:00 AM LIVING ON EARTH<br />

With host Steve Curwood<br />

11:25 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC<br />

BACH—PASTORALE IN F, BWV 590:<br />

Pastorale; Larry Zalkind, tb.; David<br />

Chamberlin, org.<br />

FALLA—Siete Canciones Populares<br />

Españolas; Emilio Colón, vlc.; Sung Hoon<br />

Mo, p.<br />

11:47 AM THE POETS WEAVE<br />

With host Jenny Kander<br />

12:00 PM SAINT PAUL SUNDAY<br />

Milan Turkovics, bssn.; David Shifrin, p.<br />

Repertoire to be announced<br />

1:00 PM SCHICKELE MIX<br />

“The Ties that Bind”<br />

2:00 PM BROADWAY REVISITED<br />

“Tony Awards Preview”<br />

3:00 PM WEEKEND RADIO<br />

Join us for Hal Holbrook in “Mark Twain<br />

Tonight!” including the selections<br />

“Congress”, “A Helluva Heaven” and<br />

“How to be Seventy.”<br />

4:00 PM KEYBOARD CONVERSATIONS<br />

Pianist Jeffrey Siegel presents the first of<br />

four concerts of keyboard music, speaking<br />

briefly and informally before performing<br />

each work. This Sunday, we’ll hear music<br />

of Beethoven.<br />

6:00 PM SOUND MEDICINE<br />

Host Barbara Lewis interviews physicians<br />

from the <strong>Indiana</strong> <strong>University</strong> School of<br />

Medicine on this program from WFYI<br />

Public Radio.<br />

7:00 PM PROFILES<br />

David Quammen and Russell Mittermeier<br />

8:00 PM CONFRONTING TERRORISM<br />

“The Nature of the Terrorist Threat”<br />

Louise Richardson opens the “Voices of<br />

Public Intellectuals” lecture series by<br />

placing terrorism in context, suggesting<br />

how the term should be understood and<br />

examining terrorist motives and tactics.<br />

9:00 PM HUMANKIND<br />

“Pressure to Consume”<br />

We hear the voices of a variety of Americans<br />

who feel overwhelmed by the cultural<br />

pressure to consume, and who are seeking<br />

ways to simplify and unclutter their lives.<br />

10:05 PM MUSIC FROM THE HEARTS OF<br />

SPACE<br />

With host Stephen Hill<br />

11:08 PM LATE NIGHT MUSIC<br />

YOUNG, C.R.—Tempered Steel; Eugene<br />

Corporon/North Texas Wind Sym.<br />

BIGGS—Symphony No. 1; Paul Freeman/<br />

Czech Natl. Sym.<br />

REICH—New York Counterpoint; Roland<br />

Diry, cl.<br />

Page 12 / Directions in Sound / <strong>June</strong> 2004<br />

7 Monday<br />

9:05 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH<br />

GEORGE WALKER<br />

9am CORELLI—Violin Sonata in F, Op. 5,<br />

No. 10; Larry Zalkind, tb.; Ricklen Nobis,<br />

hpsd.; Pegsoon Whang, vlc.<br />

10am BEETHOVEN—Symphony No. 4 in<br />

B-flat, Op. 60; Frans Brüggen/Orch. of the<br />

18th Century<br />

11am MACHAUT—De soupirant cuer, M2<br />

(With sighing, suffering heart); Hilliard<br />

Ens.<br />

3pm BURGMÜLLER—Duo for Clarinet<br />

and Piano in E-flat, Op. 15; James<br />

Campbell, cl.; Stéphan Sylvestre, p.<br />

7:06 PM EVENING CLASSICAL MUSIC<br />

ARGENTO—Sonnet No. LXIV (in<br />

memoriam 9/11/01); Jan Harrington/IU<br />

Univ. Singers<br />

MOZART—Divertimento in E-flat, K. 289;<br />

Danzi Wind Qnt.<br />

BACH—Cantata BWV 199: “Mein Herze<br />

schwimmt im Blut”; Lorraine Hunt<br />

Lieberson, ms.; Betty Hauck, vla.; Craig<br />

Smith/Orch. of Emmanuel Music<br />

8:00 PM LIVE! AT THE<br />

CONCERTGEBOUW<br />

Royal Concertgebouw Orch.; Michel<br />

Tabachnik, cond.<br />

FLOTHUIS—Symphonic Music, Op. 59<br />

RUZICKA—Nachtstück für Orchester<br />

SCHOENBERG—Verklärte Nacht<br />

[Transfigured Night], Op. 4<br />

10:09 PM PIPEDREAMS<br />

“On the Bridal Trail”<br />

Whether for posh ceremony or rustic<br />

celebration, the pipe organ provides music<br />

for every sort of wedding.<br />

8 Tuesday<br />

9:05 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH<br />

GEORGE WALKER<br />

9am MACHAUT—De bon espoir—Puis<br />

que la douce rousee; Hilliard Ens.<br />

10am ARGENTO—Sonnet No. LXIV (in<br />

memoriam 9/11/01); Jan Harrington/IU<br />

Univ. Singers<br />

11am HAYDN—”London” Trio No. 3 in<br />

G, Hob. IV:3; Hanoverian Ens.<br />

3pm TELEMANN—Concerto Polonois;<br />

Christopher Hogwood/Acad. of Ancient<br />

Music<br />

7:05 PM FROM THE TOP<br />

This episode of From the Top comes from<br />

the Biennial Convention of MENC, The<br />

National Association of Music Educators,<br />

in Minneapolis, Minnesota.<br />

8:05 PM ETHER GAME<br />

“Oh, my head!”<br />

From headaches to beheadings, all headrelated<br />

issues receive a complimentary<br />

aspirin on this week’s edition of Ether<br />

Game.<br />

10:09 PM THE VOCAL SCENE WITH<br />

GEORGE JELLINEK<br />

“Nine Ways to Sing an Aria”<br />

11:08 PM LATE NIGHT MUSIC<br />

MENDELSSOHN—Three Pieces for<br />

Clarinet, Horn, and Piano; James<br />

Campbell, cl.; James Sommerville, hn.;<br />

Stéphan Sylvestre, p.<br />

BERNSTEIN—Concerto for Orchestra<br />

(“Jubilee Games”); Nathan Gunn, bar.;<br />

James Judd/New Zealand Sym. Orch.<br />

SCHUMANN—Blumenstück, Op. 19;<br />

Sviatislav Richter, p.<br />

Sviatislav Richter<br />

9 Wednesday<br />

9:05 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH<br />

GEORGE WALKER<br />

9am VIVALDI—Concerto in g for Two<br />

Cellos, RV 531; Yo-Yo Ma, Baroque vlc.;<br />

Jonathan Manson, Baroque vlc.; Ton<br />

Koopman/Amsterdam Baroque Orch.<br />

10am PASQUINI, B.—Sinfonia a quattro;<br />

Ottavio Dantone/Accademia Bizantina<br />

11am FIALA, J.—Duet No. 6 in C; Mela<br />

Tenenbaum, vlc.; Yosef Feigelson, vlc.<br />

7:06 PM EVENING CLASSICAL MUSIC<br />

VICTORIA—Ave Maria; Dennis Shrock/<br />

Santa Fe Desert Chorale<br />

RACHMANINOV—Symphonic Dances,<br />

Op. 45; David Zinman/Baltimore Sym.<br />

BRIDGE—Phantasy Piano Quartet in f-<br />

sharp; Edward Newman, p.; Adkins Str.<br />

Ens.<br />

8:00 PM SAINT PAUL CHAMBER<br />

ORCHESTRA<br />

Joseph Swensen, cond.; Stephen<br />

Kovacevich, p.<br />

SIBELIUS—Rakastava [The Beloved], Op.<br />

14<br />

BEETHOVEN—Piano Concerto No. 1 in<br />

C, Op. 15<br />

HAYDN—Symphony No. 103 in E-flat,<br />

Hob. I:103 “Drumroll”<br />

10:12 PM LATE NIGHT MUSIC<br />

ANONYMOUS—Sonata a 5 clarini;<br />

Friedemann Immer Trumpet Consort<br />

STRAVINSKY—Apollo; Paul Biss/IU Ch.<br />

Orch.<br />

BACH—Suite No. 4 in E-flat for Solo<br />

Cello, BWV 1010; Daniil Shafran, vlc.


FALLA—El sombrero de tres picos [The<br />

Three Cornered Hat]; Teresa Berganza, s.;<br />

Ernest Ansermet/L’Orch. de la Suisse<br />

Romande<br />

SCHUMANN—Variations on the Name<br />

Abegg, Op. 1; Ian Hobson, p.<br />

10 Thursday<br />

9:05 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH<br />

GEORGE WALKER<br />

9am GRANADOS—Cuentos de la juventud<br />

(Stories of Youth); Alicia De Larrocha, p.<br />

10am BRAHMS—Piano Quartet No. 3 in<br />

c, Op. 60; Adkins Str. Ens.<br />

11am RAMSIER—Three Lyric Pieces; John<br />

Miller, db.; Paul Ramsier, p.<br />

3pm HANDEL—KEYBOARD SUITE IN E,<br />

HWV 430: Air & Variations “The<br />

Harmonious Blacksmith”; Larry Zalkind,<br />

tb.; Ricklen Nobis, hpsd.; Pegsoon Whang,<br />

vlc.<br />

7:06 PM EVENING CLASSICAL MUSIC<br />

VERDI—IL TROVATORE: “Di quella<br />

pira”; Luciano Pavarotti, t.; Richard<br />

Bonynge/Natl. Phil. Orch./London Opera<br />

Chor.<br />

MOZART—Trio in E, K. 542; Borodin Trio<br />

FALLA—El Amor Brujo [Love, The<br />

Magician]; Marina de Gabarain, ms.;<br />

Ernest Ansermet/L’Orch. de la Suisse<br />

Romande<br />

8:00 PM SPOLETO CHAMBER MUSIC<br />

Todd Palmer, cl.<br />

STRAVINSKY—Three Pieces for Clarinet<br />

Todd Palmer, cl.; St. Lawrence Str. Qt.<br />

BRAHMS—Quintet in b, Op. 115<br />

Courtenay Budd, s.; Elina Vahala, vln.;<br />

Charles Wadsworth, p.<br />

RACHMANINOFF—Songs<br />

9:00 PM HARMONIA<br />

A program on medieval bowed strings -<br />

vielle, rebec, crwth, and more - and a<br />

conversation with Jann Cosart, who plays<br />

bowed strings in the medieval music<br />

ensemble Altramar.<br />

10:09 PM INDIANAPOLIS SYMPHONY<br />

ORCHESTRA<br />

Yakov Kreizberg, cond.<br />

DVORAK—Carnival Overture, Op.92<br />

BRAHMS—Symphony No.2 in D, Op.73<br />

11 Friday<br />

9:05 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH<br />

GEORGE WALKER<br />

9am BORODIN—Symphony No. 3 in a;<br />

Bramwell Tovey/Vancouver Sym.<br />

10am BACH—Suite No. 5 in c for Solo<br />

Cello, BWV 1011; Daniil Shafran, vlc.<br />

11am VERDI—IL TROVATORE:<br />

Selections; Erich Kunzel/Cincinnati Pops<br />

3pm ARGENTO—Sonnet No. LXIV (in<br />

memoriam 9/11/01); Jan Harrington/IU<br />

Univ. Singers<br />

8:00 PM MARIAN McPARTLAND’S<br />

PIANO JAZZ<br />

Jim Hall<br />

9:00 PM THE BIG BANDS<br />

With host Joe Bourne<br />

10:09 PM AFTERGLOW<br />

With host Dick Bishop<br />

12 Saturday<br />

10:00 AM CAR TALK<br />

With hosts Tom and Ray Magliozzi<br />

11:00 AM SAYS YOU!<br />

With host Richard Sher<br />

11:30 AM TALKING HISTORY<br />

Fred Nielsen talks with Peter Stearns,<br />

author of “Anxious Parents: A History of<br />

Modern Childrearing in America.”<br />

Historian James Banner comments on the<br />

problems of writing a constitution.<br />

12:09 PM CLASSICAL MUSIC<br />

SCHUBERT—Die Nacht, D. 983c; Dennis<br />

Shrock/Santa Fe Desert Chorale<br />

SCHICKELE—Dances for Three; Trio<br />

<strong>Indiana</strong><br />

Trio <strong>Indiana</strong><br />

12:30 PM EUROPEAN OPERA SERIES<br />

VERDI—Il Trovatore<br />

Bastille Opera, Paris; Maurizio Benini,<br />

cond.; Sondra Radvanovsky (Leonora);<br />

Dolora Zajick (Azucena); Roberto Alagna<br />

(Manrico); Orlin Anastassov (Ferrando);<br />

Martine Mahe (Ines); Jean-Luc Maurette<br />

(Ruiz); Stefano Antonucci (Count di Luna)<br />

5:00 PM GARRISON KEILLOR’S<br />

A PRAIRIE HOME COMPANION<br />

Join us for a show from The Great<br />

Auditorium in Ocean Grove, New Jersey.<br />

7:00 PM HOMETOWN<br />

WITH TOM ROZNOWSKI<br />

“Beneficence”<br />

7:05 PM THE FOLK SAMPLER<br />

“It’s Too Late Now”<br />

8:05 PM THE THISTLE AND<br />

SHAMROCK<br />

“Birdsong”<br />

Common bird life from garden and<br />

woodland has often fuelled the imagination<br />

of songwriters. We’ll flit through some this<br />

week, including selections from Laurie<br />

Lewis, whose album Birdsong has been<br />

released as a benefit for the Audubon<br />

Canyon Ranch.<br />

9:05 PM AFROPOP WORLDWIDE<br />

With Host Georges Collinet<br />

10:07 PM PORTRAITS IN BLUE<br />

“Lightnin’ Hopkins, Vol.5 1950s Texas<br />

Blues”<br />

11:07 PM WORLDWIDE JAZZ<br />

The Izaline Calister Band<br />

13 Sunday<br />

10:00 AM THIS AMERICAN LIFE<br />

With host Ira Glass<br />

11:00 AM LIVING ON EARTH<br />

With host Steve Curwood<br />

11:25 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC<br />

LISZT—Sonetto del Petrarco No. 104;<br />

Mikhail Rudy, p.<br />

BURGMÜLLER—Duo for Clarinet and<br />

Piano in E-flat, Op. 15; James Campbell,<br />

cl.; Stéphan Sylvestre, p.<br />

11:47 AM THE POETS WEAVE<br />

With host Jenny Kander<br />

12:00 PM SAINT PAUL SUNDAY<br />

Ensemble Concertante<br />

BRAHMS—SEXTET NO. 1 IN B FLAT,<br />

OP. 18: I. Allegro ma non troppo<br />

TCHAIKOVSKY—SOUVENIR DE<br />

FLORENCE, OP. 70: I. Allegro con spirito,<br />

II. Adagio cantabile e con moto<br />

Moderato<br />

BRAHMS—SEXTET NO. 1 IN B FLAT,<br />

OP. 18: III. Scherzo<br />

1:00 PM SCHICKELE MIX<br />

“That Weird & Intoxicating Effect”<br />

2:00 PM BROADWAY REVISITED<br />

“Broadway Marriage Manual”<br />

3:00 PM WEEKEND RADIO<br />

Humor by two personalities who shaped<br />

television comedy, Steve Allen and Ernie<br />

Kovacs, including “The Question Man”<br />

and “Mr. Question Man”, “Eye Witless<br />

News”, and “Tom Swift.”<br />

4:00 PM KEYBOARD CONVERSATIONS<br />

Pianist Jeffrey Siegel presents the second of<br />

four concerts of keyboard music, speaking<br />

briefly and informally before performing<br />

each work. This Sunday, we’ll hear music<br />

of Rachmaninov, Medtner and Scriabin.<br />

6:00 PM SOUND MEDICINE<br />

Host Barbara Lewis interviews physicians<br />

from the <strong>Indiana</strong> <strong>University</strong> School of<br />

Medicine on this program from WFYI<br />

Public Radio.<br />

7:00 PM PROFILES<br />

Matt Ridley<br />

8:00 PM CONFRONTING TERRORISM<br />

“Why the U.S. is Targeted by Terrorism”<br />

The United States has been a terrorist target<br />

since the late 1960s; in this lecture, Martha<br />

Crenshaw will discuss why.<br />

9:00 PM HUMANKIND<br />

“Cancer Support Groups”<br />

Cancer patients in Los Angeles join a<br />

support group where they can identify with<br />

others facing this profound challenge.<br />

10:05 PM MUSIC FROM THE HEARTS OF<br />

SPACE<br />

With host Stephen Hill<br />

<strong>June</strong> 2004 / Directions in Sound / Page 13


11:08 PM LATE NIGHT MUSIC<br />

DIRIE—Siete de oro; Paulina Zamora, p.<br />

COWELL—Symphony No. 11 “Seven<br />

Rituals of Music,”; Robert S. Whitney/<br />

Louisville Orch.<br />

SCHWARTZ, E.—Timepiece 1794 for<br />

Chamber Orchestra; Toshiyuki Shimada/<br />

Moravian Phil. Orch.<br />

14 Monday<br />

9:05 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH<br />

GEORGE WALKER<br />

9am SCHUMANN—Three Romances, Op.<br />

94; James Campbell, cl.; James<br />

Sommerville, hn.; Stéphan Sylvestre, p.<br />

10am TCHAIKOVSKY—Variations on a<br />

Rococo Theme, Op. 33; Laszlo Varga, vlc.;<br />

Siegfried Köhler/Stuttgart Phil.<br />

11am MOZART—Rondo in D, K. 382;<br />

András Schiff, p.; Sándor Végh/Camerata<br />

Academica des Mozarteums Salzburg<br />

3pm NARDINI—Duet No. 6 in B-flat;<br />

Mela Tenenbaum, vln.; Yosef Feigelson,<br />

vlc.<br />

7:06 PM EVENING CLASSICAL MUSIC<br />

MENDELSSOHN—Rondo Capriccioso in<br />

E, Op. 14; Mikhail Pletnev, p.<br />

WILLIAMS—Concerto for Tuba and<br />

Orchestra; Bryan Heath, b. tb.; Imre Pallò/<br />

IU Concert Orch.<br />

PIAZZOLLA—Cuatro Estaciones Porteas<br />

[The Four Seasons]; Trio Amadé<br />

8:00 PM LIVE! AT THE<br />

CONCERTGEBOUW<br />

Osiris Trio<br />

NOVAK—Piano Trio in d, Op. 27 “quasi<br />

una ballata”<br />

MARTINU—Piano Trio No. 1, “cinq<br />

pieces bréves”<br />

SMETANA—Piano Trio in g, Op. 15<br />

10:09 PM PIPEDREAMS<br />

“Dupré, Symphonic and Seraphic”<br />

Powerful and poetic pages from one of<br />

France’s great masters of this century.<br />

15 Tuesday<br />

9:05 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH<br />

GEORGE WALKER<br />

9am IBERT—Suite Symphonique “Paris”;<br />

Richard A. Clark/Manhattan Ch. Orch.<br />

10am WILLIAMS—Concerto for Tuba and<br />

Orchestra; Heath,; Imre Pallò/IU Concert<br />

Orch.<br />

11am SUPPE—POET AND PEASANT:<br />

Overture; Paul Paray/Detroit Sym.<br />

3pm COLON—”N” (Tango for Violin,<br />

Cello, and Piano); Trio Amadé<br />

7:05 PM FROM THE TOP<br />

We return to Interlochen, recognized<br />

around the world as a leader in arts<br />

education. This show features musicians<br />

from across the globe who all study at the<br />

Interlochen Arts Academy.<br />

8:05 PM ETHER GAME<br />

“Patriotism”<br />

Using Flag Day as a departure point, Ether<br />

Game looks at patriotism from a musical<br />

perspective.<br />

10:09 PM THE VOCAL SCENE WITH<br />

GEORGE JELLINEK<br />

“A Visit with Susan Graham”<br />

11:08 PM LATE NIGHT MUSIC<br />

BORODIN—STRING QUARTET NO. 2<br />

IN D: “Notturno”; Bramwell Tovey/<br />

Vancouver Sym.<br />

BLISS—Piano Sonata, F. 145; Peter<br />

Donohoe, p.<br />

RESPIGHI—Ancient Airs and Dances, Suite<br />

No. 3; Orpheus Ch. Orch.<br />

16 Wednesday<br />

9:05 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH<br />

GEORGE WALKER<br />

9am BRIDGE—Phantasy Piano Quartet in<br />

f-sharp; Edward Newman, p.; Adkins Str.<br />

Ens.<br />

10am VIVALDI—Cello Concerto in B-Flat,<br />

RV 423; Yo-Yo Ma, Baroque vlc.; Ton<br />

Koopman/Amsterdam Baroque Orch.<br />

11am GRANADOS˜Bocetos (Sketches);<br />

Alicia De Larrocha, p.<br />

7:06 PM EVENING CLASSICAL MUSIC<br />

BORODIN—PRINCE IGOR: Overture;<br />

Bramwell Tovey/Vancouver Sym.<br />

MOZART—Concerto No. 10 in E-flat for<br />

Two Pianos, K. 365; Christoph<br />

Eschenbach, p.; Justus Frantz, p.; Christoph<br />

Eschenbach/North German Radio Sym.<br />

Orch.<br />

COPLAND—Vitebsk (Study on a Jewish<br />

Theme); Trio Amadé<br />

8:00 PM SAINT PAUL CHAMBER<br />

ORCHESTRA<br />

Andreas Delfs, cond.; Esther Heideman, s.;<br />

Laura Aikin, s.; Stanford Olsen, t.;<br />

Theodore Green, t.; Alan Ewing, b.; John<br />

de Lancie, nar.; Minnesota Chorale<br />

MOZART—The Abduction from the<br />

Seraglio, K. 384<br />

10:12 PM LATE NIGHT MUSIC<br />

HOFFMAN, S.—Psalm 121 “I Will Lift<br />

Mine Eyes to the Mountains”; Randi Von<br />

Ellefson/Rockefeller Chapel Choir, Univ. of<br />

Chicago<br />

BRAHMS—Serenade No. 1 in D, Op. 11;<br />

Imre Pallò/IU Concert Orch.<br />

SHOSTAKOVICH—Violin Sonata, Op.<br />

134; Grigory Kalinovsky, vln.; Tatiana<br />

Goncharova, p.<br />

STRAUSS, R.—Till Eulenspiegel’s Merry<br />

Pranks, Op. 28; Leonard Slatkin/Bavarian<br />

Radio Sym. Orch.<br />

17 Thursday<br />

9:05 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH<br />

GEORGE WALKER<br />

9am HAYDN—”London” Trio No. 1 in C,<br />

Hob. IV:1; Hanoverian Ens.<br />

10am SHOSTAKOVICH—Violin Concerto<br />

No. 1 in a, Op. 77; Hilary Hahn, vln.;<br />

Marek Janowski/Oslo Phil.<br />

11am CORELLI—Sonata in g; Ottavio<br />

Dantone/Accademia Bizantina<br />

3pm AUBER—MASANIELLO: Overture;<br />

Paul Paray/Detroit Sym.<br />

7:06 PM EVENING CLASSICAL MUSIC<br />

BEETHOVEN—Leonore Overture No. 3,<br />

Op. 72a; Paul Biss/IU Phil. Orch.<br />

WOLF—SPANISCHES LIEDERBUCH<br />

[SPANISH SONGBOOK]: Six Secular<br />

Songs; Anne-Sophie von Otter, ms.; Olaf<br />

Bär, bar.; Geoffrey Parsons, p.<br />

STRAVINSKY—Song of the Nightingale;<br />

Gerard Schwarz/Seattle Sym.<br />

8:00 PM SPOLETO CHAMBER MUSIC<br />

St. Lawrence Str. Qt.<br />

MOZART—String Quartet in C, K. 157<br />

Elina Vahala, vln.; Anne Marie<br />

McDermott, p.<br />

PROKOFIEV—Violin Sonata No. 1 in f,<br />

Op. 80<br />

Todd Palmer, cl.; Wendy Chen, p.<br />

MILHAUD—Scaramouche, Op. 165c<br />

9:00 PM HARMONIA<br />

An all Bach program, including recent<br />

releases of music by Johann Sebastian Bach.<br />

10:09 PM INDIANAPOLIS SYMPHONY<br />

ORCHESTRA<br />

James Judd, cond.; John O’Conor, p.<br />

MOZART—Piano Concerto No.25 in C,<br />

K.503<br />

MOZART—Symphony No.38 in D, K.504<br />

“Prague”<br />

18 Friday<br />

9:05 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH<br />

GEORGE WALKER<br />

9am BEETHOVEN—Piano Sonata No. 17<br />

in d, Op. 31, No. 2 “Tempest”; Hélène<br />

Grimaud, p.<br />

10am REINECKE—Trio in B-Flat for<br />

Clarinet, Horn & Piano, Op. 274; James<br />

Campbell, cl.; James Sommerville, hn.;<br />

Rena Sharon, p.<br />

11am WOLF—Harfenspieler-Lieder<br />

[Harper’s Songs]; Matthias Goerne, bar.;<br />

Riccardo Chailly/Royal Concertgebouw<br />

Orch.<br />

3pm IBERT—Capriccio; Richard A. Clark/<br />

Manhattan Ch. Orch.<br />

8:00 PM MARIAN McPARTLAND’S<br />

PIANO JAZZ<br />

Jeremy Kahn<br />

9:00 PM THE BIG BANDS<br />

With host Joe Bourne<br />

10:09 PM AFTERGLOW<br />

With host Dick Bishop<br />

Page 14 / Directions in Sound / <strong>June</strong> 2004


19 Saturday<br />

10:00 AM CAR TALK<br />

With hosts Tom and Ray Magliozzi<br />

11:00 AM SAYS YOU!<br />

With host Richard Sher<br />

11:30 AM TALKING HISTORY<br />

Joe Dorinson compares the struggles of<br />

Paul Robeson and Jackie Robinson against<br />

segregation in the United States.<br />

12:09 PMCLASSICAL MUSIC<br />

STANFORD—Beati quorum via; Dennis<br />

Shrock/Santa Fe Desert Chorale<br />

BACH—Concerto in A for Harpsichord,<br />

BWV 1055; Byron Schenkman, hpsd.;<br />

Byron Schenkman/Seattle Baroque<br />

12:30 PM EUROPEAN OPERA SERIES<br />

WOLF—Der Corregidor<br />

Semper Opera, Dresden; Hartmut<br />

Haenchen/Dresden Phil. & Youth Chorus;<br />

Christian Elsner (Der Corregidor); Michelle<br />

Breedt (Frasquita); Harald Stamm (Juan<br />

Lopez); Andreas Schmidt (Tio Lukas);<br />

Marcel Reijans (Pedro); Friedemann<br />

Röhling (Tonuelo)<br />

5:00 PM GARRISON KEILLOR’S<br />

A PRAIRIE HOMECOMPANION<br />

This evening, a show recorded live the<br />

night before at the Greek Theatre in Los<br />

Angeles, with The Hopeful Gospel Quartet<br />

A Prairie Home Companion cast (l to r) Fred<br />

Newman, Tim Russell, Sue Scott, Garrison Keillor<br />

(photo by: Dana Nye)<br />

7:00 PM HOMETOWN<br />

WITH TOM ROZNOWSKI<br />

“Ballot Count”<br />

7:05 PM THE FOLK SAMPLER<br />

“Here Comes Summer”<br />

8:05 PM THE THISTLE AND<br />

SHAMROCK<br />

“The Borders”<br />

Music from the borders of Scotland and<br />

England are featured this week, with<br />

musicians based in the region.<br />

9:05 PM AFROPOP WORLDWIDE<br />

With Host Georges Collinet<br />

10:07 PM PORTRAITS IN BLUE<br />

“Hank Ballard & the Midnighters, Vol.3<br />

1960s Vocal Group”<br />

11:07 PM WORLDWIDE JAZZ<br />

Nueva Manteca<br />

20 Sunday<br />

10:00 AM THIS AMERICAN LIFE<br />

With host Ira Glass<br />

11:00 AM LIVING ON EARTH<br />

With host Steve Curwood<br />

11:25 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC<br />

VIVALDI—GIUSTINO, RV 717: “La<br />

Gloria Del Mio Sangue”;Yo-Yo Ma,<br />

Baroque vlc.; Alfredo Bernardini, Baroque<br />

ob.; Michel Henry, Baroque ob.; Ton<br />

Koopman/Amsterdam Baroque Orch.<br />

COPLAND—Music for Movies; Leonard<br />

Slatkin/Saint Louis Sym.<br />

11:47 AM THE POETS WEAVE<br />

With host Jenny Kander<br />

12:00 PM SAINT PAUL SUNDAY<br />

The FOG Trio<br />

SCHUBERT—PIANO TRIO IN E-FLAT<br />

MAJOR, OPUS 100, D. 929: I. Allegro<br />

1:00 PM SCHICKELE MIX<br />

“The Count Is 3 & 2”<br />

2:00 PM BROADWAY REVISITED<br />

“A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to<br />

the Forum”<br />

3:00 PM WEEKEND RADIO<br />

We visit A Thurber Carnival with “The<br />

Night the Bed Fell,” “File and Forget,” and<br />

“Casuals of the Keys” as well as some of<br />

the “Word Dances.”<br />

4:00 PM KEYBOARD CONVERSATIONS<br />

Pianist Jeffrey Siegel presents the third of<br />

four keyboard music concerts, speaking<br />

briefly and informally before performing<br />

each work. This Sunday, we’ll hear music<br />

of Chopin, Grieg and Liszt.<br />

6:00 PM SOUND MEDICINE<br />

Host Barbara Lewis interviews physicians<br />

from the <strong>Indiana</strong> <strong>University</strong> School of<br />

Medicine on this program from WFYI<br />

Public Radio.<br />

7:00 PM PROFILES<br />

Ruth Engs<br />

8:00 PM CONFRONTING TERRORISM<br />

“Civil Liberties and the War on Terrorism”<br />

We hear from Mary Jo White who<br />

investigated and prosecuted numerous<br />

international terrorism cases, including<br />

those for the 1993 bombing of the World<br />

Trade Center.<br />

9:00 PM HUMANKIND<br />

“Getting Rid of Nuclear Weapons”<br />

At a time when the U.S. government<br />

advocates lowering the threshold for<br />

deployment of nuclear weapons, Global<br />

Security Institute President Jonathan<br />

Granoff pleads for an end to the use of<br />

these armaments.<br />

10:05 PM MUSIC FROM THE HEARTS OF<br />

SPACE<br />

With host Stephen Hill<br />

11:08 PM LATE NIGHT MUSIC<br />

LANG, D.—Little Eye; Joakim Munkner,<br />

vln.; David Dzubay/IU New Music Ens.<br />

HIGDON—City Scape; Jennifer Higdon/<br />

Atlanta Sym. Orch.<br />

BOYCE, C.—Noche Oscura; Carmen<br />

Helena Téllez/Aguavá New Music Ens.<br />

21 Monday<br />

9:05 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH<br />

GEORGE WALKER<br />

9am FIORILLO, F.—Duet in C, Op. 31,<br />

No. 1; Mela Tenenbaum, vln.; Yosef<br />

Feigelson, vlc.<br />

10am MOZART—Piano Concerto No. 6 in<br />

B-flat, K. 238; Schiff,; Sándor Végh/<br />

Camerata Academica des Mozarteums<br />

Salzburg<br />

11am HUBAY—SCENES FROM THE<br />

CZARDA, OP. 32: No. 4, “Hejre Kati”;<br />

Ferenc Balogh, vln.; Mátyás Antal/<br />

Hungarian State Orch.<br />

3pm BACH, J.C.—Quartet in G (T. 308/4),<br />

Op. 9, No. 3; Hanoverian Ens.<br />

7:06 PM EVENING CLASSICAL MUSIC<br />

BARBER—VANESSA: Intermezzo; Pratt,<br />

Stephen/IU Wind Ens.<br />

BEETHOVEN—Fantasia in c for Piano,<br />

Chorus, and Orchestra, Op. 80; Hélène<br />

Grimaud, p.; Swedish Radio Choir; Esa-<br />

Pekka Salonen/Swedish Radio Sym. Orch.<br />

STRAUSS, R.—Tod und Verklärung [Death<br />

and Transfiguration], Op. 24; Jesús López-<br />

Cobos/Cincinnati Sym. Orch.<br />

8:00 PM LIVE! AT THE<br />

CONCERTGEBOUW<br />

Rotterdam Phil. Orch.; Valery Gergiev,<br />

cond.<br />

MAHLER—Symphony No. 7<br />

10:09 PM PIPEDREAMS<br />

“It’s a Disney World”<br />

Organ arrangements of famous classical<br />

works and original compositions used in<br />

Fantasia and other Walt Disney films.<br />

22 Tuesday<br />

9:05 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH<br />

GEORGE WALKER<br />

9am LALO—Cello Concerto in d; Laszlo<br />

Varga, vlc.; Siegfried Köhler/Stuttgart Phil.<br />

10am BARBER—VANESSA: Intermezzo;<br />

Stephen Pratt/IU Wind Ens.<br />

11am MENDELSSOHN—Three Pieces for<br />

Clarinet, Horn, and Piano; James<br />

Campbell, cl.; James Sommerville, hn.;<br />

Stéphan Sylvestre, p.<br />

3pm PEGIS—Passages; John Miller, db.;<br />

Jonathan Spivey, p.<br />

7:05 PM FROM THE TOP<br />

Special guest Nadja Salerno-Sonnenberg<br />

joins host Christopher O’Riley and his<br />

young musical guests for a program<br />

recorded at Jordan Hall in Boston.<br />

8:05 PM ETHER GAME<br />

“Welcome Summer Solstice!”<br />

The longest day in the year deserves a<br />

musical salute.<br />

10:09 PM THE VOCAL SCENE WITH<br />

GEORGE JELLINEK<br />

“By the Light of the Silvery Moon”<br />

<strong>June</strong> 2004 / Directions in Sound / Page 15


11:08 PM LATE NIGHT MUSIC<br />

VIVALDI—Cello Concerto in c, RV 401;<br />

Yo-Yo Ma, Baroque vlc.; Ton Koopman/<br />

Amsterdam Baroque Orch.<br />

POULENC—Gloria; Sylvia McNair, s.;<br />

Robert Shaw/Atlanta Sym. Orch. and<br />

Chorus<br />

CORIGLIANO—Fantasia on an Ostinato;<br />

Hélène Grimaud, p.<br />

23 Wednesday<br />

9:05 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH<br />

GEORGE WALKER<br />

9am ABEL—Trio in G, Op. 16, No. 4;<br />

Hanoverian Ens.<br />

10am IBERT—Suite Èlisabéthaine; Richard<br />

A. Clark/Manhattan Ch. Orch.<br />

11am VIVALDI—Concerto in d for Viola<br />

d’amore and Lute, RV 540; Yo-Yo Ma,<br />

Baroque vlc.; Ton Koopman, org.; Ton<br />

Koopman/Amsterdam Baroque Orch.<br />

7:06 PM EVENING CLASSICAL MUSIC<br />

COLON—”N” (Tango for Violin, Cello,<br />

and Piano); Trio Amadé<br />

TCHAIKOVSKY— Romeo and Juliet,<br />

Fantasy Overture; Claudio Abbado/Berlin<br />

Phil.<br />

BEETHOVEN—Piano Sonata No. 17 in d,<br />

Op. 31, No. 2 “Tempest”; Hélène<br />

Grimaud, p.<br />

8:00 PM SAINT PAUL CHAMBER<br />

ORCHESTRA<br />

Steven Copes, cond. & vln.; Pieter<br />

Wispelwey, cond. & vlc.; Julia Bogorad-<br />

Kogan, fl.; Alicia McQuerrey, fl.<br />

MOZART—Serenade No. 3 in D, K. 185<br />

HAYDN—Cello Concerto in D<br />

BACH—Suite No. 3 in C for Solo Cello,<br />

BWV 1009<br />

BACH—Brandenburg Concerto No. 4 in G,<br />

BWV 1049<br />

10:12 PM LATE NIGHT MUSIC<br />

SCARLATTI, D.—Sonata in E, K. 380<br />

“Cortège”; Beverly Simms, p.<br />

SHOSTAKOVICH—Violin Concerto No. 1<br />

in a, Op. 77; Hilary Hahn, vln.; Marek<br />

Janowski/Oslo Phil.<br />

REINECKE—Trio in B-Flat for Clarinet,<br />

Horn & Piano, Op. 274; James Campbell,<br />

cl.; James Sommerville, hn.; Rena Sharon, p.<br />

BERNSTEIN—Symphony No. 1<br />

“Jeremiah”; Helen Medlyn, ms.; James<br />

Judd/New Zealand Sym. Orch.<br />

JOSQUIN—Salve regina; Taverner Choir;<br />

Andrew Parrott/Taverner Consort<br />

24 Thursday<br />

9:05 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH<br />

GEORGE WALKER<br />

9am BACH—Suite No. 2 in d for Solo<br />

Cello, BWV 1008; Daniil Shafran, vlc.<br />

10am BORODIN—Symphony No. 1 in E-<br />

flat; Bramwell Tovey/Vancouver Sym.<br />

Page 16 / Directions in Sound / <strong>June</strong> 2004<br />

11am VIVALDI—Cello Sonata No. 6 in B-<br />

flat, RV 46; Larry Zalkind, tb.; Ricklen<br />

Nobis, hpsd.; Pegsoon Whang, vlc.<br />

3pm BENCINI—Introduction for Strings<br />

and Continuo; Ottavio Dantone/Accademia<br />

Bizantina<br />

7:06 PM EVENING CLASSICAL MUSIC<br />

BIZET—THE PEARL FISHERS: “Au fond<br />

du temple saint”; Jussi Bjoerling, t.; Robert<br />

Merrill, bar.; Renato Cellini/RCA Victor<br />

Sym. Orch.<br />

SCHUBERT—String Quartet in E-flat, Op.<br />

125, No. 1, D. 87; Fine Arts Qt.<br />

SHOSTAKOVICH—Chamber Symphony,<br />

Op. 110a; Constantine Orbelian/Moscow<br />

Ch. Orch.<br />

8:00 PM SPOLETO CHAMBER MUSIC<br />

Elina Vahala, vln.; Wendy Chen, p.<br />

SIBELIUS—Sonatine in E, Op. 80<br />

Courtenay Budd, s.; Todd Palmer, cl.; St.<br />

Lawrence Str. Qt.<br />

GOLIJOV—Tenebrae<br />

Elina Vahala, vln; Daniel Phillips, vla.;<br />

Alisa Weilerstein, vlc.; Anne Marie<br />

McDermott, p.<br />

SCHUMANN—Piano Quartet in E-flat,<br />

Op. 47<br />

9:00 PM HARMONIA<br />

This week on Harmonia we celebrate the<br />

lute with songs, lute solos and recent<br />

recordings of lute music.<br />

10:09 PM INDIANAPOLIS SYMPHONY<br />

ORCHESTRA<br />

Mark Wigglesworth, cond.<br />

SHOSTAKOVICH—Symphony No.10 in e,<br />

Op. 93<br />

25 Friday<br />

9:05 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH<br />

GEORGE WALKER<br />

9am STAMITZ, C.—Duet No. 6 in D;<br />

Mela Tenenbaum, vln.; Yosef Feigelson, vlc.<br />

10am SCHUMANN—Piano Quartet in E-<br />

flat, Op. 47; André Previn, p.; Young Uck<br />

Kim, vln.; Heiichiro Ohyama, vla.; Gary<br />

Hoffman, vlc.<br />

11am BIZET—THE PEARL FISHERS: “Au<br />

fond du temple saint”; Roberto Alagna, t.;<br />

Bryn Terfel, bar.; James Levine/Metropolitan<br />

Opera Orch.<br />

3pm BARBER—VANESSA: Intermezzo;<br />

Stephen Pratt/IU Wind Ens.<br />

8:00 PM MARIAN McPARTLAND’S<br />

PIANO JAZZ<br />

Jane Monheit<br />

9:00 PM THE BIG BANDS<br />

With host Joe Bourne<br />

10:09 PM AFTERGLOW<br />

With host Dick Bishop<br />

26 Saturday<br />

10:00 AM CAR TALK<br />

With hosts Tom and Ray Magliozzi<br />

11:00 AM SAYS YOU!<br />

With host Richard Sher<br />

11:30 AM TALKING HISTORY<br />

Fred Nielsen talks with Eric Foner, author<br />

of “Who Owns History? Rethinking the<br />

Past in a Changing World.” Kathleen<br />

McDonough gives us insight into the<br />

construction of historical documentary.<br />

12:09 PM CLASSICAL MUSIC<br />

CHESNOKOV—Spaseniye sodelal<br />

(Salvation is Created); Dennis Shrock/Santa<br />

Fe Desert Chorale<br />

BLOCH—Baal Shem; Joshua Bell, vln.;<br />

David Zinman/Baltimore Sym. Orch.<br />

12:30 PM NPR WORLD OF OPERA<br />

BIZET—The Pearl Fishers<br />

Eve Queler/Opera Orchestra of New York<br />

(Carnegie Hall); Darina Takova (Leila);<br />

Daniil Shtoda (Nadir); Luiz-Ottavio Faria<br />

(Nourabad); Jean-Luc Chaignaud (Zurga)<br />

5:00 PM GARRISON KEILLOR’S<br />

A PRAIRIE HOME COMPANION<br />

We’re at Marymoor Park in Redmond,<br />

Washington with The Hopeful Gospel<br />

Quartet and Kelly Joe Phelps.<br />

7:00 PM HOMETOWN<br />

WITH TOM ROZNOWSKI<br />

“Gratitude in your Attitude”<br />

7:05 PM THE FOLK SAMPLER<br />

“Father’s Day”<br />

8:05 PM THE THISTLE AND<br />

SHAMROCK<br />

“The Master and the Maker”<br />

Chris Norman is one of today’s leading<br />

players of traditional and baroque flute. As<br />

our guest this week, he talks about the role<br />

of his instrument in the traditional music of<br />

Scotland and Canada.<br />

9:05 PM AFROPOP WORLDWIDE<br />

With Host Georges Collinet<br />

10:07 PM PORTRAITS IN BLUE<br />

“Freddie King, Vol.1 1960s Chicago Blues”<br />

11:07 PM WORLDWIDE JAZZ<br />

Dutch Jazz in Japan<br />

27 Sunday<br />

10:00 AM THIS AMERICAN LIFE<br />

With host Ira Glass<br />

11:00 AM LIVING ON EARTH<br />

With host Steve Curwood<br />

11:25 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC<br />

RUTTER—Wings of the Morning;<br />

Cambridge Singers; John Rutter/City of<br />

London Sinfonia<br />

SCHUMANN—Three Romances, Op. 94;<br />

James Campbell, cl.; James Sommerville,<br />

hn.; Stéphan Sylvestre, p.<br />

11:47 AM THE POETS WEAVE<br />

With host Jenny Kander


12:00 PM SAINT PAUL SUNDAY<br />

Program to be announced<br />

1:00 PM SCHICKELE MIX<br />

“Quintessential Music”<br />

2:00 PM BROADWAY REVISITED<br />

“Anyone Can Whistle”<br />

3:00 PM WEEKEND RADIO<br />

Our bi-monthly Goon Show is “The Case<br />

of the Missing CD Plates.” Also, Gamble<br />

Rogers entertains us with stories and songs.<br />

4:00 PM KEYBOARD CONVERSATIONS<br />

Pianist Jeffrey Siegel presents the fourth<br />

and final concert in this series on keyboard<br />

music, speaking briefly and informally<br />

before performing each work. This Sunday,<br />

we’ll hear music of Mozart.<br />

6:00 PM SOUND MEDICINE<br />

Host Barbara Lewis interviews physicians<br />

from the <strong>Indiana</strong> <strong>University</strong> School of<br />

Medicine on this program from WFYI<br />

Public Radio.<br />

7:00 PM PROFILES<br />

Sallyann Murphey<br />

8:00 PM AMERICAN RADIOWORKS<br />

“The Hospice Experiment”<br />

Hospice founders set out to change the<br />

treatment of the terminally ill, to call off<br />

fruitless battles for cures and instead focus<br />

on pain control and the quality of patients’<br />

last days. Their movement is a striking<br />

success, and their stories, which have gone<br />

largely untold, are presented here.<br />

9:00 PM HUMANKIND<br />

“The Importance of ‘Downtime’”<br />

The relentless stress of modern schedules is<br />

questioned by members of a Philadelphia<br />

group that advocates more downtime, so<br />

that people can nurture relationships and<br />

improve the quality of their lives.<br />

10:05 PM MUSIC FROM THE HEARTS OF<br />

SPACE<br />

With host Stephen Hill<br />

11:08 PM LATE NIGHT MUSIC<br />

SCHWARTZ, E.—Voyager for Orchestra;<br />

Toshiyuki Shimada/Moravian Phil. Orch.<br />

FREUND—Viola Concerto; Atar Arad,<br />

vla.; Paul Biss/IU Ch. Orch.<br />

KNOX—Clouds are not Spheres; Christina<br />

Smith, fl.; Dorothy Lewis, vlc.; Cary Lewis,<br />

p.<br />

28 Monday<br />

9:05 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH<br />

GEORGE WALKER<br />

9am SCHUMANN—Piano Quartet in c;<br />

André Previn, p.; Young Uck Kim, vlc.;<br />

Heiichiro Ohyama, vla.; Gary Hoffman, vlc.<br />

10am SAINT-SAENS—Cello Concerto No.<br />

2 in d, Op. 119; Laszlo Varga, vlc.;<br />

Siegfried Landau/Westphalian Sym.<br />

11am LISZT—Hungarian Rhapsody No. 1<br />

in f (orch.); Mátyás Antal/Hungarian State<br />

Orch.<br />

3pm VIVALDI—”IL PASTOR FIDO”, OP.<br />

13: Sonata for Violin and Cello; Mela<br />

Tenenbaum, vln.; Yosef Feigelson,<br />

7:06 PM EVENING CLASSICAL MUSIC<br />

RAVEL—Introduction et allegro; Nicanor<br />

Zabaleta, hp.; Christian Lardé, fl.; Guy<br />

Deplus, cl.; Monique Frasca-Colombier,<br />

vln.; Marguerite Vidal, vln.; Anka<br />

Moraver, vla.; Hamisa Dor, vlc.<br />

MENDELSSOHN—Violin Concerto in e,<br />

Op. 64; Hilary Hahn, vln.; Hugo Wolf/<br />

Oslo Phil.<br />

HARLAP—Bat Yiftach [Jephthah’s<br />

Daugher]; Reyna Carguill, s; Chris<br />

Carducci, bar.; John Manganaro, hn.; Jan<br />

Harrington/IU Univ. Singers<br />

8:00 PM LIVE! AT THE<br />

CONCERTGEBOUW<br />

Royal Concertgebouw Orch.; Mariss<br />

Jansons, cond.<br />

BARTOK—Concerto for Orchestra<br />

DVORAK—Symphony No. 9 in e, Op. 95,<br />

“From the New World”<br />

10:09 PM PIPEDREAMS<br />

“American Holiday”<br />

Through folk tunes and patriotic airs, the<br />

pipe organ celebrates our national spirit<br />

with its own special kind of sound.<br />

29 Tuesday<br />

9:05 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH<br />

GEORGE WALKER<br />

9am MOZART—Piano Concerto No. 5 in<br />

D, K. 175; András Schiff, p.; Sándor Végh/<br />

Camerata Academica des Mozarteums<br />

Salzburg<br />

10am HARLAP—Bat Yiftach [Jephthah’s<br />

Daugher]; Reyna Carguill, s.; Chris<br />

Carducci, bar.; John Manganaro, hn.; Jan<br />

Harrington/IU Univ. Singers<br />

11am HOLST—THE PLANETS, OP. 32:<br />

Jupiter, the Bringer of Jollity; Seiji Ozawa/<br />

Boston Sym.<br />

3pm BORODIN—STRING QUARTET<br />

NO. 2 IN D: “Notturno”; Bramwell Tovey/<br />

Vancouver Sym.<br />

7:05 PM FROM THE TOP<br />

Special guest Peter Schickele is universally<br />

recognized as one of the most versatile<br />

artists in the world of music. Each of the<br />

young musicians featured tonight performs<br />

one of his pieces.<br />

8:05 PM ETHER GAME<br />

“Kings”<br />

It’s ol’ Henry’s birthday; that’s the Henry<br />

of the multiple wives syndrome. In his<br />

honor, Ether Game will pay tribute to<br />

Kings.<br />

10:09 PM THE VOCAL SCENE WITH<br />

GEORGE JELLINEK<br />

“Carlos Bergonzi – Live”<br />

11:08 PM LATE NIGHT MUSIC<br />

BACH, J.C.—Trio in C; Hanoverian Ens.<br />

MOZART—Violin Concerto No. 3 in G,<br />

K. 216; Joshua Bell, vln.; Peter Maag/<br />

English Ch. Orch.<br />

GRANADOS—Bocetos (Sketches), H. 16;<br />

Alicia De Larrocha, p.<br />

30 Wednesday<br />

9:05 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH<br />

GEORGE WALKER<br />

9am ABEL—Trio in G, Op. 16, No. 4;<br />

Hanoverian Ens.<br />

10am COUPERIN, F.—Pièces en Concert;<br />

Larry Zalkind, tb.; Ralph Matson, vln.;<br />

Jeanne Bradford, vln.; Roberta Zalkind,<br />

vla.; Pegsoon Whang, vlc.<br />

11am SAINT-SAENS—PARYSATIS: Airs<br />

de Ballet; Geoffrey Simon/London Phil.<br />

Geoffrey Simon<br />

7:06 PM EVENING CLASSICAL MUSIC<br />

CORELLI—Violin Sonata in F, Op. 5, No.<br />

10; Larry Zalkind, tb.; Ricklen Nobis,<br />

hpsd.; Pegsoon Whang, vlc.<br />

BORODIN—Symphony No. 3 in a;<br />

Bramwell Tovey/Vancouver Sym.<br />

MOZART—Clarinet Trio in E-flat, K. 498;<br />

Atar Arad, vla.; Eli Eban, cl.; Evelyne<br />

Brancart, p.<br />

8:00 PM SAINT PAUL CHAMBER<br />

ORCHESTRA<br />

Stefan Sanderling, cond.; Yefim Bronfman, p.<br />

SCHICKELE—Symphony No. 2 “The<br />

Sweet Season” (world premiere)<br />

FAURÉ—Masques et Bergamasques, Op.<br />

112<br />

SCHUBERT—Italian Overture in D, D.<br />

590<br />

SAINT-SAËNS—Piano Concerto No. 2 in<br />

g, Op. 22<br />

10:12 PM LATE NIGHT MUSIC<br />

TARREGA—Recuerdos de la Alhambra;<br />

Pepe Romero, gt.<br />

IVES—Symphony No. 2; Paul Biss/IU Univ.<br />

Orch.<br />

BERNSTEIN—Trio for Violin, Cello, and<br />

Piano; Trio Amadé<br />

BLISS—Piano Concerto in B-flat, F. 108;<br />

Peter Donohoe, p.; David Lloyd-Jones/<br />

Royal Scottish Natl. Orch.<br />

VANDINI—Cello Sonata in B-flat; Susan<br />

Moses, vlc.; Jeannette Koekkoek, hpsd.;<br />

David Cole, continuo vlc.<br />

<strong>June</strong> 2004 / Directions in Sound / Page 17


Tchaikovsky special on<br />

television<br />

How is a performance of a great piece of music<br />

created? The renowned San Francisco Symphony,<br />

under the leadership of Michael Tilson Thomas, addresses that issue in an engrossing<br />

and provocative documentary, Keeping Score: MTT on Music: The Making of a<br />

Performance, Tchaikovsky’s 4th Symphony, airing on WTIU Wednesday, <strong>June</strong> 16 at<br />

9:30pm on Great Performances.<br />

Taking viewers behind the scenes and revealing<br />

what goes into playing this great music, Thomas<br />

explains, “We look forward to energizing not just<br />

committed classical music lovers. We also look<br />

forward to convincing a new generation that music is<br />

part of their human heritage and essential to<br />

everyone.”<br />

As expected, the conductor’s limitless ardor for<br />

his subject fills every frame of the one-hour telecast.<br />

Whether discussing Tchaikovsky while behind the<br />

wheel of a snappy silver Volvo, demonstrating<br />

passages at the piano in his study in Pacific Heights<br />

or running over concepts with concertmaster<br />

Alexander Barantschik prior to rehearsals, Thomas is<br />

ever the genial host.<br />

Along the way, he explores the symphony’s four<br />

Michael Tilson Thomas<br />

movements, provides commentary on the powerful<br />

and vibrant emotions embodied in the music and<br />

introduces many of the personable members of the orchestra.<br />

Timpanist David Herbert, for example, is shown working on his kettle drums.<br />

Always pursuing the ideal sound, he is determined to bring out the drama and<br />

emotion that Tchaikovsky’s 4th requires. Down in the locker room, he prepares<br />

natural skins imported from Ireland. These produce a rich sound that modern plastic<br />

just can’t match.<br />

Perhaps most exotic to viewers will be William Bennett, principal oboe, meticulously<br />

slicing the slivers of cane whose vibrations create the distinctive voice of the<br />

instrument.<br />

“Reeds are the bane of our existence,” he laughs, “making reeds and acquiring all<br />

the weird medieval tools that go along with that production. We spend so much time<br />

at our desks, scraping and trying to get the right sound at the right pitch, we hardly<br />

have time to practice.”<br />

Cathy Payne, piccolo, has her concerns, too. Addressing a Family Concert<br />

audience, she explains that her solo in the third movement is the most technically<br />

challenging she has with the orchestra. “For 125 years, piccolo players all over the<br />

world, generations of us, have had trouble with this.” Although only 21 notes long,<br />

Payne notes, there is just one catch: those notes have to be played in three seconds.<br />

The program climaxes with highlights of a gala performance of the symphony at<br />

the orchestra’s home base, Davies Symphony Hall. (A companion film of the<br />

complete performance, Tchaikovsky Symphony No. 4 in Performance: The San<br />

Francisco Symphony and Michael Tilson Thomas, follows on Great Performances.<br />

Amidst post-concert dressing-room congratulations from orchestra members and<br />

friends, an ebullient Thomas is still afloat in the majesty of Tchaikovsky’s emotional<br />

sweep. “Working with a great orchestra like this,” he says, “there’s absolutely no<br />

limit.” And, he adds, “It can be as the piece has never been done before.”<br />

PROGRAMMING AND<br />

OPERATING SUPPORT<br />

<strong>Indiana</strong> <strong>University</strong><br />

CORPORATE SILVER<br />

CINERGY<br />

Delta Tau Delta<br />

Friends of the Unitarian<br />

Universalist Church,<br />

Bloomington<br />

PYNCO, Inc.–Bedford<br />

CORPORATE BENEFACTORS<br />

Bloomington Iron and Metal<br />

Innovative Medical Care–<br />

Dr. Michael Kane<br />

KP Pharmaceutical Technology,<br />

Inc.<br />

Dr. Matthew Parmenter at<br />

The Foot and Ankle Center<br />

Dr. David Southwick, Hand and<br />

Microvascular Surgeon–Terre<br />

Haute<br />

Tipton Lakes Athletic Club–<br />

Columbus<br />

Wininger Stolberg Homes<br />

CORPORATE SPONSORS<br />

Brown Hill Nursery–Columbus<br />

Drs. David J. Howell &<br />

Timothy A. Pliske, DDS–<br />

Bloomington & Bedford<br />

Well Being Psychological Services<br />

in Bloomington–Paul Shriver<br />

CORPORATE MEMBERS<br />

Bloomington Veterinary Hospital<br />

Brown County Hotels and<br />

Restaurants: • Brown County Inn<br />

• Nashville House • The<br />

Ordinary • The Seasons<br />

Dr. Phillip Crooke, Obstetrics<br />

and Gynecology<br />

Dermatology Center of <strong>Indiana</strong>–<br />

Drs. Bryne, McTigue and Reeck<br />

Glusenkamp Designscape<br />

Horticultural Service<br />

G. C. Mangum Construction–<br />

Nashville<br />

May Insurance Agency<br />

Neuter Scooter<br />

Oliver Winery<br />

Smart and Johnson Title<br />

Company–Columbus<br />

Strategic Development Group,<br />

Inc.<br />

World Wide Automotive Service<br />

Page 18 / Directions in Sound / <strong>June</strong> 2004


PROGRAM UNDERWRITERS<br />

4th Street Festival of Arts and<br />

Crafts<br />

A.G. Edwards & Sons, Inc.—<br />

Bloomington<br />

A.G. Edwards & Sons, Inc.—<br />

Columbus<br />

Andrews, Harrell, Mann,<br />

Carmin, and Parker P.C.<br />

Appletree Cleaning Co.<br />

Argentum Jewelry<br />

Baugh Enterprises Commercial<br />

Printing & Bulk Mail Services<br />

Bellevue Gallery<br />

Bicycle Garage<br />

BloomingFoods<br />

Bloomington Area Arts Council<br />

Bloomington Area Birth<br />

Services<br />

Bloomington Cardiology<br />

Bloomington Hospital &<br />

Healthcare System<br />

Bloomington Parks &<br />

Recreation<br />

Bloomington Shuttle Service<br />

Bloomington Symphony<br />

Orchestra<br />

Joan H. Bowden, LCSW<br />

Bunger and Robertson,<br />

Attorneys at Law<br />

By Hand Gallery<br />

Caveat Emptor Books<br />

Center for Behavioral Health<br />

The Cinemat<br />

City of Bloomington<br />

City of Bloomington Parks &<br />

Recreation<br />

Classic Pyx<br />

Columbus Area Arts Council<br />

Columbus Container Inc.<br />

Columbus Optical<br />

Columbus Philharmonic<br />

Orchestra<br />

Commercial Service of<br />

Bloomington<br />

Day & Carter Mortuary,<br />

Bedford<br />

Delta Tau Delta, Bloomington<br />

Chapter<br />

Direkt Approach<br />

EcoLogic<br />

Evans Violins<br />

First Christian Church,<br />

Disciples of Christ<br />

First Presbyterian Church of<br />

Columbus<br />

Fossil Rain<br />

Four Seasons Retirement<br />

Gallery North on the Square<br />

Greentree at Westwood<br />

The Framing Guild<br />

Goods for Cooks<br />

Grant St.<br />

Hamilton Center<br />

The Herald-Times<br />

Hills O’Brown Realty<br />

Hills O’Brown Property<br />

Management<br />

Hirons & Company<br />

HoosierNet<br />

Hoosier Energy<br />

IMA—Internal Medicine<br />

Associates<br />

<strong>Indiana</strong> Department of<br />

Commerce—Tourism<br />

Division<br />

<strong>Indiana</strong> Repertory Theatre—<br />

<strong>Indiana</strong>polis<br />

<strong>Indiana</strong> Space Grant<br />

Consortium<br />

<strong>Indiana</strong> State Fair<br />

<strong>Indiana</strong> State Museum<br />

<strong>Indiana</strong> State Park Inns<br />

<strong>Indiana</strong>polis Museum of Art—<br />

Columbus Gallery<br />

<strong>Indiana</strong>polis Opera<br />

<strong>Indiana</strong>polis Symphony<br />

Orchestra<br />

The Irish Lion Restaurant<br />

and Pub<br />

IU Art Museum<br />

IU Bloomington Division of<br />

Continuing Studies<br />

IU Credit Union<br />

IU Department of Theatre and<br />

Drama<br />

IU Division of Recreational<br />

Sports<br />

IU East Asian Studies Center<br />

IU Home Pages<br />

IU Honors Program in Foreign<br />

Languages<br />

IU Liberal Arts & Management<br />

Program<br />

IU Medical Sciences Program<br />

IU School of Music<br />

The Kinsey Institute<br />

Kirby-Risk Supply Co.<br />

LaSalle Bank<br />

L. B. Stant and Associates<br />

Mallor, Clendening, Grodner &<br />

Bohrer, Attorneys at Law<br />

Mays Greenhouse<br />

Meadowood Retirement<br />

Community<br />

Medicaid Solutions<br />

Michael’s Uptown Cafe<br />

Midwest Counseling Center<br />

Monroe Bank<br />

Monroe County Solid Waste<br />

Management<br />

N.R. Hiller Design<br />

Old National<br />

Organization of American<br />

Historians<br />

Pak Mail<br />

Providence Center<br />

Restaurant Tallent<br />

Roadworthy Guitar & Amp<br />

Royal Toyota Volvo<br />

Dr. Byron Rutledge<br />

Ryder Magazine<br />

Salaam<br />

The Scholar’s Inn Bakehouse<br />

Sheer Elegance Drapery Designs<br />

Smith’s Sport ‘n’ Shoe<br />

Smithville Telephone Company<br />

Sprint PCS<br />

Stafford Counseling &<br />

Consulting<br />

J.R. Stallsmith & Co.<br />

St. Mark’s United Methodist<br />

Church<br />

Stephens Olds Honda Hyundai<br />

Stirling Productions<br />

Stone Cabin Design<br />

Sycamore Land Trust<br />

Talbot Studio<br />

TIAA-CREF<br />

Trojan Horse Restaurant<br />

Twisted Limb Paperworks<br />

<strong>University</strong> Information<br />

Technology Services<br />

Vance Music Center<br />

Wandering Turtle Art Gallery<br />

& Gifts<br />

World Wide Automotive Service<br />

Yarns Unlimited<br />

Elizabeth A.York MS, LCSW<br />

These community minded<br />

businesses support locally<br />

produced programs on<br />

<strong>WFIU</strong>.<br />

We thank them for their<br />

partnership and encourage<br />

you to thank and support<br />

them.<br />

LOCAL PROGRAM<br />

PRODUCTION SUPPORT<br />

Avers Electric<br />

(Ether Game)<br />

Closets Too!<br />

(Noon Edition)<br />

The Gallery<br />

(Afterglow)<br />

Pygmalion’s Art Supplies<br />

(Ether Game)<br />

Romy Remodeling<br />

(Big Bands)<br />

The Toy Chest of Nashville<br />

(Ether Game)<br />

NATIONALLY<br />

SYNDICATED PROGRAM<br />

SUPPORT<br />

Nakamichi Foundation -<br />

American Early Music<br />

Series<br />

(Harmonia)<br />

The Oakley Foundation,<br />

Terre Haute<br />

(Hometown)<br />

Office of the IU Chancellor,<br />

Bloomington<br />

(A Moment of Science)<br />

Office of the IU Vice<br />

President for Research<br />

(A Moment of Science)<br />

PYNCO, Inc., Bedford<br />

(Harmonia)<br />

<strong>June</strong> 2004 / Directions in Sound / Page 19

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