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DIRECTIONS January<br />
OUND<br />
2004<br />
in<br />
wfiu.indiana.edu<br />
A Tribute to<br />
Marilyn Horne<br />
<strong>Sunday</strong>, January 18, 9:00 p.m.<br />
Also this month:<br />
• <strong>WFIU</strong> Prose/Poetry<br />
Contest<br />
• Martin Luther King<br />
Tribute<br />
• Artist of the Month:<br />
Ray Cramer<br />
• Heart to Heart: Caring<br />
for the Dying<br />
• Profiles features<br />
William Schultz<br />
• ...and more!<br />
Marilyn Horne (l) and Lella Cuberli in Rossini’s “Semiramide”
January 2003<br />
Vol. 52, No. 1<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 />
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—Director of<br />
Production Support<br />
Mark Zalewski—Promotions &<br />
Marketing Director; Editor,<br />
Directions In Sound<br />
Eva Zogorski—Membership<br />
Director<br />
Announcers: Kory Bickel, Dianne<br />
Iauco, David Brent Johnson,<br />
Robert Samels, Steve York<br />
Broadcast Assistants: Rebecca<br />
Batterman, Eve Corrigan, Adam<br />
Schwartz<br />
Volunteer Producer/Hosts:<br />
Richard Bishop, Mary Catherine<br />
Carmichael, Bob Zaltsberg<br />
Membership & Underwriting<br />
Staff: Julie Cooper, Tom<br />
Dukeman, Laura Grannan, Karen<br />
Luerssen, Joan Padawan, Bennett<br />
Roberts<br />
Music Assistants: Debra Paul,<br />
Thomas Pease, Adam Schweigert<br />
News Assistants: Jennifer Nicole<br />
Beemsterboer, Cheryl Owsley<br />
Jackson, Maryellen May, Adam<br />
Schwartz, Sherhara Williams<br />
Production Assistants:<br />
Paul Messing, Jason Stahl<br />
103.7 fm Bloomington<br />
100.7 fm Columbus<br />
106.1 fm Kokomo<br />
95.1 fm Terre Haute<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 />
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Volunteers: Information about volunteer opportunities is available at<br />
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New Year’s Day from<br />
Vienna 2004<br />
Thursday, January 1, 7:00 p.m.<br />
Start the New Year with the world’s most popular<br />
classical music concert, broadcast to more than one billion<br />
listeners worldwide! Direct from the fabled Musikverien in<br />
Vienna, Riccardo Muti conducts the 2004 edition of the<br />
Vienna Philharmonic’s annual concert of waltzes, polkas<br />
and marches. Korva Coleman returns to host the gala<br />
event for NPR.<br />
In addition to the famous Blue Danube Waltz, this year<br />
the Vienna Philharmonic delves into the inexhaustible<br />
supply of novelties from the great Waltz era of Vienna—<br />
typified by the Strauss family—including several items<br />
being performed for the first time for a New Year’s Day<br />
concert. 2004 also marks the bicentennial of Johann<br />
Strauss Senior’s birth (1804-1849), and the concert<br />
features six works by the father of the Strauss family as<br />
A Tribute to Marilyn Horne<br />
<strong>Sunday</strong>, January 18, 9:00 p.m.<br />
In celebration of her 70th birthday on<br />
January 16, <strong>WFIU</strong> presents A Tribute<br />
to Marilyn Horne, hosted by WFMT’s<br />
Kerry Frumkin. Ms. Horne reminisces<br />
about the great moments in her career,<br />
and how that career evolved from her<br />
formative years in Pennsylvania and<br />
California; her years singing in church,<br />
in films, and in the Roger Wagner<br />
Chorale, to her debuts at the great<br />
opera houses of Europe and the United<br />
States. She also speaks about her<br />
teachers and colleagues, especially<br />
Marilyn Horne<br />
Dame Joan Sutherland, Richard<br />
Bonynge and Henry Lewis.<br />
Told in the first person, this is the story of Marilyn Horne’s<br />
remarkable musical life, which includes an abundance of music,<br />
as well as excerpts from her remarkable recordings in the Bel<br />
Canto repertoire and on the recital stage. Marilyn Horne has<br />
been called by Opera News “probably the greatest singer in the<br />
world.” She is without a doubt one of the greatest mezzosopranos<br />
in opera history and is probably the greatest Rossini<br />
interpreter ever.<br />
Born in 1934 in Bradford, Pennsylvania, Marilyn Berneice<br />
Horne made her operatic debut at the age of 20, and has<br />
performed in the world’s great opera houses throughout her<br />
career. Today, she works as the Vocal Program Director at the<br />
Music Academy of the West in Santa Barbara, and has also set<br />
up The Marilyn Horne Foundation, which helps to support<br />
young singers.<br />
Page 2 Directions in Sound
Heart-to-Heart:<br />
Caring for the<br />
Dying<br />
Everyone dies. Not everyone dies well.<br />
Good care can make the difference.<br />
That is the premise of Heart-to-Heart:<br />
Caring for the Dying, three absorbing<br />
hour-long documentaries designed to<br />
prompt thoughtful public conversation<br />
about end-of-life care. How can we help<br />
people live well in the face of death How<br />
can we make the process of dying a<br />
meaningful experience, free from excessive<br />
fear and pain Program host and<br />
producer Claire Schoen examines these<br />
and other questions, and explores some of<br />
the answers facing the nation as our<br />
population ages and many confront the<br />
passing of parents and loved ones.<br />
Beyond Pain<br />
<strong>Sunday</strong>, January 4, 8:00 p.m.<br />
Richard Buike’s cancer has wrapped itself<br />
around nerve cells, which can cause<br />
incredible pain. However, unlike many<br />
Americans who die today in needless<br />
agony, his pain is controlled with high<br />
doses of opioid drugs. Beyond Pain<br />
focuses on how fear of addiction and the<br />
War on Drugs undermine pain management<br />
at the end of life.<br />
Respecting Diversity<br />
<strong>Sunday</strong>, January 18, 8:00 p.m.<br />
Regina Dyer, an African American<br />
woman, is dying of breast cancer. She<br />
feels that stereotypes about black people<br />
color the treatment she gets from doctors<br />
and hospitals. Respecting Diversity looks<br />
at the influence of culture, race and<br />
religion on dying—how the assumptions<br />
behind good end-of-life care do not<br />
necessarily match the needs of people<br />
who are not white and middle-class.<br />
Regina<br />
Producer/host, Claire Schoen<br />
Heart-to-Heart shares the personal<br />
stories and remarkable moments of<br />
people facing death and those who are<br />
helping them along the journey. It looks<br />
at the care given by doctors, hospitals,<br />
clergy, family and friends to people at the<br />
end of life. The program examines the<br />
barriers to good care that arise from<br />
cultural misunderstanding, to fear over<br />
the use of morphine, to the lack of<br />
funding to pay for good programs. Each<br />
program provides ideas, examples and<br />
inspiration for those who are searching<br />
for a good path on the journey to death.<br />
Heart-to-Heart is compelling, soundrich<br />
radio that brings wisdom, compassion<br />
and common sense to a vitally<br />
important dialogue. While the stories are<br />
personal, the themes are universal—we all<br />
struggle to come to terms with the death<br />
of friends, family members and ultimately<br />
ourselves.<br />
Richard Buike & wife<br />
Children Sometimes Die<br />
<strong>Sunday</strong>, January 11, 8:00 p.m.<br />
Brittney is thirteen. Cystic fibrosis<br />
threatens to take her life before she has a<br />
chance to grow up. Wise beyond her<br />
years, she faces her fear of death and her<br />
frustrations with being so sick. Her mom<br />
is helping her make some hard decisions<br />
about getting a lung transplant. Children<br />
Sometimes Die is about the youngest<br />
among us who die and the support they<br />
and their families need during this<br />
unbelievably difficult experience.<br />
Brittney<br />
About the Host<br />
Claire Schoen, producer/director and host<br />
of Heart-to-Heart, has been creating<br />
award-winning documentaries in radio,<br />
film and video for more than 25 years.<br />
Her works address a wide range of<br />
subjects, including environmental<br />
education, physical disability, communications<br />
technology, genetic engineering,<br />
nuclear proliferation and Jewish culture.<br />
Schoen’s previous producer/director<br />
credits include:<br />
• Mad River, an hour-long PBS<br />
documentary film about logging the<br />
Pacific northwest Redwoods.<br />
• Voices in Exile, four-part radio series<br />
about undocumented Salvadoran<br />
refugees, winner of the NFCB Golden<br />
Reel.<br />
• Is Our Fate in Our Genes, an hourlong<br />
radio documentary on genetic<br />
engineering that was part of the series<br />
The DNA Files, winner of both the<br />
Peabody and duPont-Columbia<br />
Awards.<br />
Directions in Sound Page 3
A Century in Sound:<br />
The Minnesota<br />
Orchestra Turns 100<br />
<strong>Sunday</strong>, January 4, 9:00 p.m.<br />
November 2003 marks the centennial of<br />
the internationally acclaimed Minnesota<br />
Orchestra. Music Director Osmo Vänskä<br />
looks forward to his tenure as the orchestra<br />
begins its second century, and A Century<br />
in Sound invites listeners to join the<br />
celebration of the landmark anniversary.<br />
Page 4 Directions in Sound<br />
Minnesota Orchestra—2003<br />
Host Brian Newhouse presents<br />
archival recordings of the orchestra’s<br />
great performances along with insights<br />
from the symphony’s luminary music<br />
directors—Eugene Ormandy, Dimitri<br />
Mitropoulos, Antal Dorati, Neville<br />
Marriner, Edo de Waart and others—who<br />
reflect on the ups and downs of making<br />
music in Minnesota.<br />
The program’s music is largely drawn<br />
from the new 12-volume CD set, Minnesota<br />
Orchestra at 100. This includes the<br />
orchestra’s very first recording made in<br />
1924 (a two-minute Maori dance) as well<br />
as a selection from the orchestra’s most<br />
recent radio broadcast, a striking performance<br />
of Grieg’s Peer Gynt.<br />
Other program highlights include:<br />
• Ormandy on his conducting technique.<br />
• Mitropoulos’ moving farewell speech<br />
in 1949, recorded live.<br />
• Dorati’s first radio address in Minnesota.<br />
• Marriner on the player’s strike which<br />
cast a shadow over his tenure.<br />
• Edo de Waart on the hard work of<br />
rebuilding the Minnesota Orchestra.<br />
A Century in Sound: The Minnesota<br />
Orchestra Turns 100—join the celebration<br />
on <strong>WFIU</strong>!<br />
Dreams Within A<br />
Dream<br />
<strong>Sunday</strong>, January 11, 8:00 p.m.<br />
Dreams of love, loss, terror, death,<br />
revelation—such visions are not uncommon.<br />
They are aspects of the human<br />
condition, themes illuminated for us by<br />
writers, poets and mystics throughout the<br />
ages.<br />
In May of<br />
2003, <strong>WFIU</strong> was<br />
the media sponsor<br />
for a very special<br />
project: Dreams<br />
Within A Dream,<br />
a new oratorio for<br />
soprano solo,<br />
chorus and<br />
orchestra by<br />
composer Cary<br />
Boyce. It premiered<br />
in downtown<br />
Bloomington<br />
at the<br />
Cary Boyce<br />
Buskirk-Chumley Theater, with the<br />
Bloomington Chamber Singers and<br />
soprano Susan Swaney, conducted by<br />
Gerald Sousa. The oratorio is a musical<br />
dreamscape, beginning with preparations<br />
for sleep that lead through a series of<br />
journeys deep into the veiled regions of<br />
the night until, ultimately, dawn emerges.<br />
Boyce selected texts by poets Edgar<br />
Allan Poe, John Keats, Linda McKay<br />
Feldmann, W.B. Yeats, William Frances<br />
Bourdillon, Louise Bogan, St. John of the<br />
Cross and Pedro Calderon de la Barca,<br />
weaving a “dream” narrative that draws<br />
from many places and times. Music critic<br />
Peter Jacobi wrote of the work’s premiere,<br />
“Dreams produces a dream of a result,”<br />
calling it “an honest, inspired and deftly<br />
crafted work, one of scope… of musical<br />
elements fitting poetic content, of artistic<br />
worth.”<br />
Due to the considerable resources<br />
involved—musical, financial and human—<br />
such projects are usually the purview of<br />
major metropolitan centers. However,<br />
Bloomington, <strong>Indiana</strong> is a special place.<br />
Despite its modest size, Bloomington is a<br />
well-respected and major center of music<br />
making in the United States. Great things<br />
are possible here, and this commissioned<br />
project came to life with a gifted amateur<br />
community chorus led by an outstanding<br />
conductor, along with the help of a<br />
generous and supportive community.<br />
This special Dreams Within A Dream<br />
broadcast, hosted by <strong>WFIU</strong>’s Robert<br />
Lumpkin, features Boyce’s new and<br />
extraordinary music along with interviews<br />
with the composer, the conductor<br />
and the soloist. They discuss the process<br />
of commissioning, creating and premiering<br />
a new work on such a large scale.<br />
The Dreams Within A Dream oratorio,<br />
along with Vaughan Williams’ The Lark<br />
Ascending featuring the great violin<br />
virtuoso Corey Cerovsek, is available on<br />
the latest Bloomington Chamber Singers<br />
CD produced by Aguavá New Music<br />
Studio. It can be found at<br />
www.aguava.com and at local record<br />
stores. Join us <strong>Sunday</strong>, January 11 at 8:00<br />
p.m. for this very special broadcast of<br />
Dreams within a Dream.<br />
Broadcasts from the<br />
IU School of Music<br />
MUCZYNSKI—Concerto for Alto<br />
Saxophone and Chamber Orchestra;<br />
Adam McCord, a. sax.; David Effron/IU<br />
<strong>University</strong> Orch.<br />
Airs: 1/5 at 7:00 p.m., 1/6 at 10:00 a.m.<br />
XENAKIS—Thallein; David Dzubay/IU<br />
New Music Ens.<br />
Airs: 1/11 at 11:00 p.m.<br />
BEETHOVEN—Leonore Overture No. 3,<br />
Op. 72a; Paul Biss/IU Phil. Orch.<br />
Airs: 1/12 at 7:00 p.m., 1/13 at 10:00<br />
a.m., 1/16 at 3:00 p.m.<br />
RIMSKY-KORSAKOV— Scheherazade,<br />
Op. 35, I: The Sea and Sinbad’s Ship;<br />
David Effron/IU <strong>University</strong> Orch.<br />
Airs: 1/19 at 7:00 p.m.. 1/20 at 10:00<br />
a.m., 1/23 at 3:00 p.m.<br />
TCHAIKOVSKY—Serenade in C for<br />
Strings, Op. 48; Ilya Kaler/IU Ch. Orch.<br />
Airs: 1/21/ at 10:00 p.m.<br />
RIMSKY-KORSAKOV—Scheherazade,<br />
Op. 35, II: The Tale of the Kalander<br />
Prince; David Effron/IU <strong>University</strong> Orch.<br />
Airs: 1/26 at 7:00 p.m., 1/27 at 10:00<br />
a.m., 1/30 at 3:00 p.m.
The People’s Voice<br />
Profiles<br />
January 4 – Donald Phinney Gregg<br />
Donald P. Gregg is an expert on Asian<br />
policy affairs. From 1989 to 1993 he<br />
served as Ambassador to Korea. He also<br />
served under Vice President George H. W.<br />
Bush as a national security advisor. He<br />
worked for the CIA, and was awarded its<br />
highest decoration, the Distinguished<br />
Intelligence Medal. Donald Gregg was a<br />
guest lecturer on the IU Bloomington<br />
campus, and dropped in for a conversation<br />
with <strong>WFIU</strong> News director, Will<br />
Murphy.<br />
January 11 – William F. Schulz<br />
Dr. Schulz serves as Executive Director of<br />
Amnesty International USA. An ordained<br />
Unitarian Universalist minister, he<br />
assumed the position in March of 1994.<br />
A quote from The New York Review of<br />
Books sums up his contributions:<br />
“William Schulz… has done more than<br />
anyone in the American human rights<br />
movement to make human rights issues<br />
known in the United States.” You can<br />
meet this extraordinary humanitarian in<br />
an interview hosted by <strong>WFIU</strong> News<br />
director, Will Murphy.<br />
January 18 – Third House<br />
Join us for a live discussion of issues<br />
before the current legislature. A simulcast<br />
of the program can be seen on WTIU<br />
public television.<br />
January 25 – Violette Verdy<br />
Violette Verdy was the Principal<br />
Dancer with the New York City Ballet<br />
for 20 years, and an internationally<br />
known ballerina with major companies<br />
in America and Europe. She also<br />
served as Artistic Director of the Paris<br />
Opera Ballet, and taught for companies<br />
and schools throughout the<br />
world, including the New York City<br />
Ballet, The Royal Ballet, The Paris<br />
Opera Ballet and the Australian Ballet<br />
Company. Peter Jacobi hosts this<br />
hour-long interview. (repeat)<br />
Lift Every Voice and Sing: A<br />
Musical Tribute to Dr. Martin<br />
Luther King, Jr.<br />
<strong>Sunday</strong>, January 25, 8:00 p.m.<br />
The memory and timeless<br />
messages of Dr. Martin Luther<br />
King, Jr. are celebrated on<br />
<strong>WFIU</strong> through music and song<br />
in a holiday program of choral<br />
music. Lift Every Voice and<br />
Sing: A Musical Tribute to Dr.<br />
Martin Luther King, Jr.<br />
includes performances by an<br />
array of choruses, recorded live<br />
at the Kennedy Center for the<br />
Performing Arts. This holiday<br />
special is hosted by Martin Goldsmith, formerly of NPR’s<br />
Performance Today and Deutsche Welle Radio’s Concert Hour.<br />
With the focus on African-American musical traditions, this<br />
program features a variety of traditional spirituals, contemporary<br />
gospel music, choral anthems and newly commissioned<br />
works for the holiday. The centerpieces of the program are the<br />
Howard <strong>University</strong> Gospel Choir, Paul Gatling, conductor, and<br />
the Choral Arts Society of Washington, Norman Scribner, music<br />
director. Also appearing in the program are the Duke Ellington<br />
Concert Choir and the Shiloh Baptist Church Gospel Choir. The<br />
program features such well-known spirituals as Amazing Grace,<br />
Rock-a-My-soul, He’s Got the Whole World in His Hands and<br />
Deep River. Gospel works performed include Born to Die and<br />
Glory to His Name. Also performed are the stirring anthem Lift<br />
Every Voice and Sing, and commissioned works such as<br />
Adolphus Hailstork’s Stages. The program ends with a performance<br />
of Precious Lord, Take My Hand, Dr. King’s favorite<br />
spiritual.<br />
Commentary by Paul Gatling and Norman Scribner details<br />
the origin and inspiring joys of this collaborative, ongoing<br />
tribute which was begun by Scribner and is now in its sixteenth<br />
year. Scribner and Gatling discuss the central role music played<br />
in the civil rights movement which, under Dr. King’s leadership,<br />
created fundamental changes in the fabric of American society.<br />
The Howard <strong>University</strong> Choir is recognized as one of the most<br />
outstanding choirs in the United States. The choir has become<br />
the definitive interpreter of African-American spirituals and<br />
work songs, as well as choral works by composers of African<br />
descent.<br />
For the past 36 years, The Choral Arts Society of Washington,<br />
D.C., under the leadership of founder and music director<br />
Norman Scribner, has secured its reputation as one of the major<br />
symphonic choruses in the United States. Comprised of over 180<br />
professional-caliber volunteer singers, the Chorus is regularly<br />
called upon to help inaugurate presidents, honor world leaders<br />
and celebrate national holidays. It also performs with the<br />
National Symphony Orchestra under its music director, Leonard<br />
Slatkin.<br />
Directions in Sound Page 5
Musical Highlights<br />
for January<br />
by Robert Lumpkin, Music Director<br />
Artist of the Month<br />
<strong>WFIU</strong>’s Artist of<br />
the Month for<br />
January, 2004 is<br />
conductor and<br />
educator, Ray E.<br />
Cramer. Ray<br />
Cramer conducts<br />
the Wind Ensemble<br />
and<br />
Chamber Winds at<br />
<strong>Indiana</strong> <strong>University</strong><br />
and teaches<br />
graduate conducting,<br />
band history and wind literature<br />
Ray E. Cramer<br />
classes. He is President of the Midwest<br />
Clinic, an international band and<br />
orchestra convention and is in demand<br />
internationally as guest conductor,<br />
clinician and adjudicator. Although<br />
primarily active as a wind ensemble<br />
conductor, we will hear Ray E. Cramer<br />
first as an orchestral conductor. He leads<br />
the IU <strong>University</strong> Orchestra on Wednesday,<br />
January 7 at 7:06 p.m. in a performance<br />
of the “Overture” to Rienzi by<br />
Richard Wagner.<br />
Cramer takes the podium with the IU<br />
Wind Ensemble on Thursday, January 15<br />
at the same time in William Schuman’s<br />
New England Triptych. Join us on<br />
Wednesday, January 21 at 7:06 p.m. for<br />
Hammersmith, Op. 52 by Gustav Holst,<br />
once again featuring the IU Wind<br />
ensemble. Soprano Kate van Eck joins<br />
Ray E. Cramer and the IU Wind Ensemble<br />
on Saturday, January 31 at 12:09<br />
p.m. for five Songs from the Chants<br />
d’Auvergne by Joseph Canteloube.<br />
New Releases<br />
Our featured new releases for this month<br />
include a new item from Vanguard<br />
Classics called “The Fauré Album”<br />
featuring violinist Gil Shaham and pianist<br />
Akira Eguchi. On Thursday, January 8 at<br />
7:06 p.m., we will hear the Violin Sonata<br />
No. 1 in A, Op. 13 by Gabriel Fauré from<br />
that new release. Join us on Wednesday,<br />
January 14 at 10:12 p.m. for Dvorak’s<br />
Serenade in E, Op. 22 played by the<br />
Rotterdam Chamber Orchestra led by<br />
Conrad van Alphen on a new Telarc<br />
release. On the following Wednesday at<br />
the same time, we will hear Stravinsky’s<br />
Suite Italienne from a recent cpo release<br />
featuring violinist Dora Bratchkova and<br />
pianist Aldo Orvieto. Finally, a new<br />
recording of Bruckner’s unfinished last<br />
symphony, the Symphony No. 9 in d,<br />
comes your way on January 28 at 10:12<br />
p.m. from RCA Red Seal, with Nikolaus<br />
Harnoncourt conducting the Vienna<br />
Philharmonic.<br />
January Community<br />
Events<br />
Visit the <strong>WFIU</strong> web site for links to these<br />
and other events! wfiu.indiana.edu<br />
BAAC Performance Series<br />
The Madwoman of Chaillot<br />
By Jean Giraudoux<br />
Co-produced with Bloomington High<br />
Schools North & South and Catharine<br />
Rademacher<br />
Directed by Francesca Sobrer<br />
January 16-17, 23-24; 8:00 p.m.<br />
January 18 & 25; 2:00 p.m.<br />
Waldron Auditorium<br />
Following their Waldron collaboration in<br />
2002, Bloomington High Schools North<br />
and South reunite to present The Madwoman<br />
of Chaillot. In this comic and<br />
poetic fable, greedy prospectors seek to<br />
tear up the streets of Paris in search of oil<br />
and wealth. The Madwoman holds a<br />
unique tea party where she confronts all<br />
“despoilers of the earth” in an attempt to<br />
bring justice, joy and love back into the<br />
world.<br />
Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Birthday<br />
Celebration<br />
Monday, January 19, 7:30 p.m.<br />
Buskirk-Chumley Theater<br />
The City of Bloomington’s annual “A<br />
Day On! Not A Day Off” evening<br />
program will feature music by David<br />
Baker, Sarah Stevens and the <strong>Indiana</strong><br />
<strong>University</strong> African American Choral<br />
Ensemble, as well as a keynote presentation<br />
by Dr. Michael Gordon. In addition,<br />
the Student Web Page Contest and King<br />
Legacy Award winners will be announced.<br />
The event is free and open to<br />
the public.<br />
Dr. Michael Gordon<br />
Page 6 Directions in Sound
Camerata Orchestra “Icons”<br />
<strong>Sunday</strong>, January 25, 3:00 p.m.<br />
Carmichael Hall, Bloomington H.S. South<br />
Luis Biava, guest conductor (Resident<br />
Conductor Philadelphia Orchestra)<br />
Jeremy Denk, piano soloist (former IU<br />
faculty & concert artist)<br />
Overture to Colas Breugnon<br />
Kabelevsky<br />
Piano Concerto No. 2<br />
Prokofiev<br />
Symphonic Dances<br />
Rachmaninoff<br />
Serge Prokofiev<br />
Luis Biava<br />
BAAC Performance Series<br />
Espen Jensen<br />
Sergei Rachmaninoff<br />
Co-produced with Bloomington Classical<br />
Guitar Society<br />
Saturday, January 31, 8:00 p.m.<br />
Waldron Auditorium<br />
Bloomington artist Espen Jensen will<br />
transport you to Spain and South<br />
America in a moving performance of<br />
Spanish guitar music. From folk song to<br />
tango, experience a panorama of captivating<br />
and rarely heard classical guitar<br />
music.<br />
Local Actors Bring Fund Drive Spots to<br />
Life<br />
<strong>WFIU</strong>’s news and promotions<br />
assistant Adam Schwartz was<br />
having no success finding a<br />
five-year-old actor for one of<br />
his 2003 comedic fund drive<br />
spots. Then one evening in the<br />
lobby of the YMCA, he<br />
overheard two boys talking<br />
animatedly and asked if they<br />
knew any young actors. Tenyear-old<br />
Nick Heinzen<br />
chirped, “I’m an actor” and<br />
Schwartz auditioned the boy<br />
right there. Adam selected<br />
five-year-old Nick to perform<br />
opposite veteran radio actor<br />
Richard Fish and Nick Heinzen<br />
Richard Fish. Heinzen and<br />
Fish were just two of fourteen local actors who donated their voice talents for the twodozen<br />
spots, which were broadcast during the 2003 <strong>WFIU</strong> Fund Drive.<br />
Veteran actors Diane Kondrat and Mark McIntyre appeared in a series of spots<br />
playing a husband and wife who debate the finer points of pledging support. “Working<br />
with Mark was a<br />
pleasure,” says<br />
Kondrat. “The<br />
fact that the comic<br />
spots may have<br />
allowed <strong>WFIU</strong>’s<br />
fund drive to run<br />
more successfully<br />
was a bonus.”<br />
The real-life<br />
husband and wife<br />
team of Allison<br />
Batty and<br />
Jonathan Molitor<br />
performed in three<br />
spots. The two are<br />
students in IU’s<br />
Masters program<br />
in theater and<br />
Diane Kondrat and Mark McIntyre<br />
drama, and it was<br />
their first experience<br />
in radio acting. Molitor played a character based on Bertie Wooster of the P.G.<br />
Wodehouse stories opposite Rich Fish playing a Jeeves-like valet. This role posed an<br />
extra difficulty in that it required a British accent. Luckily during the week of recording,<br />
Molitor was also appearing in the Brown County production of the British drama<br />
Angel Street, so his English accent was in top form, resulting in a hilarious portrayal of<br />
an upper-class fop.<br />
With the success of this year’s fund drive, <strong>WFIU</strong> is looking into distributing these<br />
and additional spots for other public radio stations to utilize. Will Bloomington’s best<br />
actors soon be heard on airwaves across the country Stay tuned!<br />
<strong>WFIU</strong> thanks all the actors and musicians who graciously volunteered their talents<br />
for Fund Drive: Chris Carducci, Lauren Robert, Dylan Marks, Kaira Hogle, Daniel<br />
Petrie, Mark Robinson and Jason Stahl.<br />
Directions in Sound Page 7
<strong>WFIU</strong> Cosponsors<br />
Arts<br />
Week with<br />
Contest &<br />
Features<br />
In celebration of IU’s Arts Week<br />
(February 8 – March 1), <strong>WFIU</strong> will<br />
hold a prose and poetry contest,<br />
and air special features highlighting<br />
the importance of the arts in<br />
America.<br />
The first ever <strong>WFIU</strong> Arts Week<br />
Prose & Poetry Contest is open to<br />
everyone in the <strong>WFIU</strong> listening<br />
area, and will feature two separate<br />
awards for the best poetry and<br />
short fiction piece or essay. The<br />
adjudicators include faculty<br />
members of IU’s Creative Writing<br />
Program. Details and specific<br />
guidelines can be found on the<br />
<strong>WFIU</strong> web site: wfiu.indiana.edu.<br />
<strong>WFIU</strong> will also present twentyfive<br />
short features highlighting<br />
various people and events in the<br />
arts, most of which are associated<br />
with the month of February. The<br />
features will touch upon events<br />
that had a significant influence on<br />
the arts, such as the invention of<br />
sound recording and talking<br />
motion pictures—even the American<br />
debut of The Beatles. There<br />
will be glimpses into the lives of<br />
such noted authors as James Joyce<br />
and Arthur Miller, the dancer<br />
Vaslav Nijinsky, musicians Bruno<br />
Walter and Andrés Segovia,<br />
composers George Friedrich<br />
Handel and Alban Berg, the<br />
musical productions The Ballad of<br />
Baby Doe and Miss Saigon and the<br />
drama Proof. These features will<br />
air on <strong>WFIU</strong> from January19 to<br />
February 20.<br />
More information about Arts<br />
Week is available online at:<br />
www.indiana.edu/~artsweek.<br />
The Radio Reader<br />
with Dick Estell<br />
“The Turtle Warrior”<br />
by Mary Relindes Ellis<br />
Begins: December 31<br />
Mary Relindes Ellis<br />
By 1967, the Lucas farm had fallen into<br />
disrepair, thanks to the hard-drinking of<br />
John Lucas, who brutalizes his wife and<br />
two sons, James and Bill. The elder<br />
brother, James, escapes by enlisting in the<br />
Marines and fighting in Vietnam, a<br />
conflict he does not survive. Young Bill is<br />
left to protect his mother with only his<br />
own will and the spirit of his dead<br />
brother to guide him. The warrior of the<br />
title, Bill fashions a shield from a giant<br />
turtle shell he believes will keep him from<br />
harm. And, as he faces manhood, he<br />
longs to create a family very different<br />
from his father’s.<br />
Author Mary Relindes Ellis takes us<br />
from the heartland of America to the<br />
battlefields of World War II and Vietnam,<br />
weaving a haunting tale of an unforgettable<br />
world where the physical and<br />
spiritual, the past and the present merge.<br />
Farewell to Ether<br />
Game Helper<br />
If you are a<br />
frequent player of<br />
Ether Game, then<br />
you have probably<br />
spoken with Mary<br />
Thomason-Smith.<br />
For the past seven<br />
months, Mary has<br />
been one of the four<br />
Ether Game<br />
coordinators you<br />
speak to when you Mary Thomason-Smith<br />
call in your<br />
answers. Mary and the other coordinators<br />
delve into their personal knowledge of<br />
music to help listeners figure out the<br />
answers. In Mary’s case, her knowledge<br />
comes from studying piano since age five,<br />
completing a Masters in piano performance<br />
and teaching music theory here at<br />
IU.<br />
If the answer to an Ether Game<br />
question is “Beethoven,” Mary might tell<br />
the caller, “This composer was deaf in his<br />
old age,” or “this composer is especially<br />
known for his symphonies.”<br />
But isn’t giving hints, uh, cheating<br />
Mary doesn’t think so.<br />
“We want each player to come away<br />
feeling more positive about classical music<br />
than when they began they game. Sure it’s<br />
a competition, but we’d like for them to<br />
learn and feel good about playing.”<br />
Besides, says Mary, the majority of callers<br />
need hints. Only a “token few” callers get<br />
the correct answer on the first guess.<br />
Mary is currently working towards a<br />
doctorate in organ performance at IU, and<br />
gives private piano lessons to elementary<br />
school-age children. She is also the<br />
organist and choral director at the<br />
Arlington Methodist Church in<br />
Bloomington, a job she enjoys especially<br />
for the teaching aspects.<br />
“So much of choral direction is<br />
teaching people,” she says.<br />
Mary and her husband Timothy Smith,<br />
a tenor with whom she gives recitals, grew<br />
up in Florida, and Mary looks forward to<br />
returning there and teaching music at a<br />
small college. She is leaving <strong>WFIU</strong> and<br />
Ether Game to focus on her studies.<br />
Mary hopes listeners who play Ether<br />
Game to always call in with their answers—even<br />
if they’re not sure that their<br />
answers are correct. “We’d rather they call<br />
and play and have a good time than feel<br />
intimidated,” she says.<br />
Page 8 Directions in Sound
MemberCard<br />
Benefits<br />
Special attractions honoring the <strong>WFIU</strong><br />
MemberCard this month include:<br />
Benefits of the Month:<br />
Ryder Film Series<br />
Bloomington<br />
812-339-2002<br />
www.theryder.com<br />
2-for-1 admission to “Capturing The<br />
Friedmans” opening Jan 16.<br />
WonderLab<br />
308 W 4th St<br />
Bloomington<br />
812-337-1337<br />
www.wonderlab.org<br />
2-for-1 general admission throughout the<br />
month.<br />
<strong>Indiana</strong>polis Chamber Orchestra<br />
4600 Sunset Ave<br />
<strong>Indiana</strong>polis, IN<br />
317-940-9607<br />
www.icomusic.org<br />
2-for-1 on tickets purchased during<br />
January for the March 21, 2004 performance<br />
of “American Pianists Association<br />
Fellows.”<br />
New Benefits:<br />
15% off any purchases. Some restrictions<br />
do apply. Call or check the website for<br />
details.<br />
Mikasa Outlet Store: 812-522-8641<br />
Reebok Outlet Store: 812-523-2299<br />
Seymour, IN<br />
Reebok Outlet Store: 812-526-0833<br />
Samsonite Outlet Store<br />
Edinburgh, IN<br />
Restaurant Changes:<br />
O’ Charley’s<br />
360 N. Jacob Dr.<br />
Bloomington<br />
Offer expired—no longer valid.<br />
More information at:<br />
www.membercard.com. To find out how<br />
you can become a member of <strong>WFIU</strong> and<br />
receive a MemberCard, go to the <strong>WFIU</strong><br />
web site: wfiu.indiana.edu, or call (812)<br />
855-6114 or (800) 662-3311.<br />
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 the third<br />
Wednesday of every month; NOON<br />
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<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 />
Saturday<br />
12:00 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC OVERNIGHT<br />
7:01 AM NPR & LOCAL NEWS<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 />
1:30 PM NPR WORLD OF OPERA<br />
(Start times may vary.)<br />
5:00 PM ALL THINGS CONSIDERED<br />
(Start time may be delayed by opera.)<br />
6:00 PM GARRISON KEILLOR’S<br />
A PRAIRIE HOME COMPANION<br />
8:00 PM HOMETOWN<br />
WITH TOM ROZNOWSKI<br />
8:05 PM THE FOLK SAMPLER<br />
9:05 PM THE THISTLE AND SHAMROCK<br />
10:05 PM NEWS<br />
10:07 PM STARDATE<br />
10:09 PM AFROPOP WORLDWIDE<br />
11:09 PM PORTRAITS IN BLUE<br />
11:59 PM WORLDWIDE JAZZ<br />
<strong>Sunday</strong><br />
12:00 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC OVER-<br />
NIGHT<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 />
Directions in Sound Page 9
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 Thursday<br />
9:05 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH<br />
GEORGE WALKER<br />
9am SMETANA—MA VLAST: Vysehrad;<br />
Nikolaus Harnoncourt/Vienna Phil.<br />
10am FAURE—Piano Trio in d, Op. 120;<br />
Gil Shaham, vln.; Akira Eguchi, p.; Brinton<br />
Smith, vlc.<br />
11am MOZART—Divertimento in D, K.<br />
136; Pinchas Zukerman/Natl. Arts Centre<br />
Orch. of Canada<br />
3pm YSAYE—Sonata No. 3 for Violin<br />
Solo, Op. 27; Maxim Vengerov, vln.<br />
7:00 PM NEW YEAR’S DAY FROM VIENNA<br />
Start the New Year with the world’s most<br />
popular classical music concert, broadcast<br />
to more than one billion listeners worldwide!<br />
Direct from the fabled Musikverein<br />
in Vienna, Riccardo Muti conducts the<br />
2004 edition of the Vienna Philharmonic’s<br />
annual concert of waltzes, polkas and<br />
marches. Korva Coleman will be back to<br />
host the gala event for NPR.<br />
Korva Coleman<br />
9:00 PM HARMONIA<br />
“Harmonia Solstice Celebration, with Shira<br />
Kammen”<br />
Shira Kammen is one of the best-known<br />
players of medieval bowed string instruments.<br />
She also sings, plays harp and other<br />
instruments, and composes in various folk<br />
and traditional styles as well as early music.<br />
Throw a Yule Log on the fire, turn on the<br />
radio and join us!<br />
Page 10 Directions in Sound<br />
10:09 PM INDIANAPOLIS SYMPHONY<br />
ORCHESTRA<br />
Emmanuel Villaume, cond.<br />
MOZART—Symphony No.29 in A, K. 201<br />
Mario Venzago, cond.; Joshua Bell, vln.<br />
TCHAIKOVSKY—Violin Concerto in D,<br />
Op.35<br />
2 Friday<br />
9:05 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH<br />
GEORGE WALKER<br />
9am PROKOFIEV—ROMEO AND<br />
JULIET: Suite No. 3, Op. 101; Paavo Järvi/<br />
Cincinnati Sym. Orch.<br />
10am BOCCHERINI—Cello Concerto in<br />
B-flat, G. 482; Jian Wang, vlc.; Camerata<br />
Salzburg<br />
11am WOLFL—Piano Sonata in C, Op. 33,<br />
no. 1; Jon Nakamatsu, p.<br />
8:00 PM MARIAN McPARTLAND’S PIANO<br />
JAZZ<br />
Bill Mays<br />
9:00 PM THE BIG BANDS<br />
With host Joe Bourne<br />
10:09 PM AFTERGLOW<br />
With host Dick Bishop<br />
3 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 />
This program focuses on Frederick<br />
Douglass, with Harvard <strong>University</strong><br />
Professor James Stauffer. Douglas Wead<br />
reflects on the lives of children of past<br />
White House occupants.<br />
12:09 PM CLASSICAL MUSIC<br />
CHAMINADE—Two Mélodies; Anne<br />
Sophie von Otter, ms.; Bengt Forsberg, p.<br />
Anne Sophie von Otter<br />
PREVIN—Violin Concerto “Anne-Sophie”;<br />
Anne-Sophie Mutter, vln.; André Previn/<br />
Boston Sym. Orch.<br />
VILLA-LOBOS—Ciranda das sete notas;<br />
Kim Walker, bssn.; Leonard Hokanson, p.<br />
RESPIGHI—Pini di Roma [Pines of Rome];<br />
Hebert von Karajan/Berlin Phil.<br />
1:30 PM METROPOLITAN OPERA<br />
ROSSINI—Il Barbieri di Siviglia; Bruno<br />
Campanella; cond.; Ruth Ann Swenson<br />
(Rosina); Juan Diego Flórez (Count<br />
Almaviva); Dwayne Croft (Figaro); Alfonso<br />
Antoniozzi (Dr. Bartolo); Paata<br />
Burchuladze (Don Basilio)<br />
Dwayne Croft & Juan Diego Flórez<br />
6:00 PM GARRISON KEILLOR’S<br />
A PRAIRIE HOME COMPANION<br />
With host Garrison Keillor<br />
8:00 PM HOMETOWN<br />
WITH TOM ROZNOWSKI<br />
“Unsolicited”<br />
8:05 PM THE FOLK SAMPLER<br />
“The Best of 2003, Vol. II”<br />
9:05 PM THE THISTLE AND SHAMROCK<br />
“New Year’s Ceilidh”<br />
Celebrate the New Year with live and lively<br />
music, song and dance from Leahy, the<br />
Chieftains and those Irish American women<br />
of rhythm, Cherish the Ladies.<br />
10:07 PM AFROPOP WORLDWIDE<br />
With host Georges Collinet<br />
11:07 PM PORTRAITS IN BLUE<br />
“Best Blues of 2003, New Recordings, All<br />
Styles”<br />
11:59 PM WORLDWIDE JAZZ<br />
Niels Lan Doky Qt.<br />
4 <strong>Sunday</strong><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—THE ART OF THE FUGUE, BWV<br />
1080: Contrapunctus No. 13; Emerson Qt.<br />
MILHAUD—Cello Concerto No. 1, Op.<br />
136; Janos Starker, vlc.; Walter Susskind/<br />
Philharmonia Orch.<br />
Janos Starker
11:47 AM THE POETS WEAVE<br />
With host Jenny Kander<br />
12:00 PM SAINT PAUL SUNDAY<br />
Contrasts<br />
KHACHATURIAN—Trio for clarinet,<br />
violin and piano<br />
BEETHOVEN—Piano Trio in B-Flat, Op.<br />
11 “Gassenhauer”<br />
ROREM— NINE EPISODES FOR FOUR<br />
PLAYERS: Episodes 1 & 8<br />
1:00 PM SCHICKELE MIX<br />
With host Peter Schickele<br />
2:00 PM BROADWAY REVISITED<br />
“Original Cast Recordings before LPs”<br />
3:00 PM WEEKEND RADIO<br />
Our bi-monthly Goon Show is The<br />
International Christmas Pudding. Also,<br />
excerpts from the album Monty Python.<br />
4:00 PM THE SAVVY TRAVELER<br />
With host Diana Nyad<br />
6:00 PM SOUND MEDICINE<br />
Host Barbara Lewis West interviews<br />
physicians from the <strong>Indiana</strong> <strong>University</strong><br />
School of Medicine on this program from<br />
WFYI Public Radio.<br />
7:00 PM PROFILES<br />
Donald Phinney Gregg<br />
8:00 PM HEART TO HEART<br />
“Beyond Pain”<br />
This three-part series shares the personal<br />
stories and remarkable moments of people<br />
facing death and those who are helping<br />
them along the journey. Heart to Heart:<br />
Beyond Pain focuses on how fear of<br />
addiction and the drug legislation complicate<br />
pain management at the end of life.<br />
9:00 PM A CENTURY IN SOUND: THE<br />
MINNESOTA ORCHESTRA TURNS 100<br />
November 2003 marked the centennial of<br />
the internationally acclaimed Minnesota<br />
Orchestra. Music Director Osmo Vänskä<br />
looks forward to his tenure as the orchestra<br />
begins its second century, and listeners are<br />
invited to join the celebration with archival<br />
recordings of the orchestra’s great<br />
performances along with insights from the<br />
symphony’s luminary music directors.<br />
10:05 PM MUSIC FROM THE HEARTS OF<br />
SPACE<br />
With host Stephen Hill<br />
11:08 PM LATE NIGHT MUSIC<br />
GULGOWSKI—Illusion I; Niklas Sivelöv, p.<br />
TREMBLAY—L’arbre de Borobudur [The<br />
Tree of Borobudur]; Walter Boudreau/<br />
Evergreen Club Gamelan Ens.<br />
FOX, F.—Dawnen Grey; Corigliano Qt.<br />
5 Monday<br />
9:05 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH<br />
GEORGE WALKER<br />
9am BACH, J.C.—Sinfonia Concertante in<br />
A; Stephan Schardt, vln.; Joachim Fiedler,<br />
vlc.; Reinhard Goebel/Musica Antiqua Köln<br />
10am RAVEL—Sonata for Violin and<br />
Piano; Anne Akiko Meyers, vln.; Li Jian, p.<br />
11am WIDOR—ORGAN SYMPHONY<br />
NO. 3 IN e, OP. 13: Marcia; William<br />
Aylesworth, org.<br />
3pm ELGAR—Serenade in e, Op. 20;<br />
Conrad van Alphen/Rotterdam Ch. Orch.<br />
7:06 PM EVENING CLASSICAL MUSIC<br />
MUCZYNSKI—Concerto for Alto<br />
Saxophone and Chamber Orchestra; Adam<br />
McCord, a. sax.; David Effron/IU Univ.<br />
Orch.<br />
PROKOFIEV—Andante, Op. 50 bis;<br />
Gennady Rozhdestvensky/USSR TV &<br />
Radio Large Sym. Orch.<br />
BACH—CHRISTMAS ORATORIO, BWV<br />
248: Sixth Cantata (for Epiphany); James<br />
Taylor, t. [Evangelist]; Hanno Müller-<br />
Brachmann, bar.; Sibylla Rubens, s.;<br />
Marcus Ullmann, t.; Ingeborg Danz, a.;<br />
Helmuth Rilling/Gächinger Kantorei/Bach-<br />
Collegium Stuttgart<br />
8:00 PM LIVE! AT THE<br />
CONCERTGEBOUW<br />
Royal Concertgebouw Orch.; Riccardo<br />
Chailly, cond.; Nelson Freire, p.<br />
BRAHMS—Symphony No. 3 in F, Op. 90<br />
BRAHMS—Piano Concerto No. 2 in B-flat,<br />
Op. 83<br />
Riccardo Chailly<br />
10:09 PM PIPEDREAMS<br />
“Inaugural Pleasures”<br />
Recitalists Marcus St. Julien, David<br />
Schrader and Joyce Jones present new<br />
instruments to audiences in Louisiana,<br />
Illinois and Texas.<br />
6 Tuesday<br />
9:05 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH<br />
GEORGE WALKER<br />
9am MOZART—Violin Concerto No. 5 in<br />
A, K. 219; Pinchas Zukerman, vln.; Pinchas<br />
Zukerman/Natl. Arts Centre Orch. of<br />
Canada<br />
10am MUCZYNSKI—Concerto for Alto<br />
Saxophone and Chamber Orchestra; Adam<br />
McCord, a. sax.; David Effron/IU Univ.<br />
Orch.<br />
11am SIBELIUS—Rakastava [The Beloved],<br />
Op. 14; Gennady Rozhdestvensky/USSR TV<br />
& Radio Large Sym. Orch.<br />
3pm SCHEIN—BANCHETTO MUSICALE<br />
[MUSICAL BANQUET]: Suite; Ens. Doulce<br />
Mèmoire<br />
7:05 PM FROM THE TOP<br />
Cincinnati’s famed Music Hall is the<br />
setting for this celebration of the lively<br />
music scene on the banks of the Ohio<br />
River. Listeners will be treated to a<br />
performance by one of the nation’s leading<br />
youth orchestras.<br />
8:05 PM ETHER GAME<br />
“Dueling Rivals”<br />
Ether Game takes a serious look at rivalry.<br />
Don’t forget this marks the 10 th anniversary<br />
of the famous Harding/Kerrigan duels.<br />
Just a thought…<br />
10:09 PM THE VOCAL SCENE WITH<br />
GEORGE JELLINEK<br />
“Caruso, Ruffo and Chaliapin”<br />
11:08 PM LATE NIGHT MUSIC<br />
BOULANGER, L.—D’un jardin clair;<br />
Emile Naoumoff, p.<br />
ADAMS—Naive and Sentimental Music;<br />
David Tanenbaum, gt.; Esa-Pekka Salonen/<br />
Los Angeles Phil.<br />
7 Wednesday<br />
9:05 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH<br />
GEORGE WALKER<br />
9am COUPERIN, F.—Pièces en Concert;<br />
Jian Wang, vlc.; Camerata Salzburg<br />
10am FALLA—Nights in the Gardens of<br />
Spain; Eduardo del Pueyo, p.; Jean<br />
Fournet/Netherlands Radio Phil. Orch.<br />
11am KOECHLIN—Chansons Bretonnes<br />
Book III; Mats Lidström, vlc.; Bengt<br />
Forsberg, p.<br />
3pm RAVEL—DAPHNIS ET CHLOE:<br />
Suite No. 1; Netherlands Radio Choir;<br />
Jean Fournet/Netherlands Radio Phil. Orch.<br />
7:06 PM EVENING CLASSICAL MUSIC<br />
WAGNER—RIENZI: Overture; Ray E.<br />
Cramer/IU <strong>University</strong> Orch.<br />
CASTELNUOVO-TEDESCO—Guitar<br />
Concerto No. 1 in D, Op. 99; Ernesto<br />
Bitetti, gt.; José Buenagu/Orquesta de<br />
Conciertos de Madrid<br />
WÖLFL—Piano Sonata in d, Op. 33, no.<br />
2; Jon Nakamatsu, p.<br />
8:00 PM PITTSBURGH SYMPHONY<br />
ORCHESTRA<br />
Roberto Abbado, cond.; Gianluca Cascioli,<br />
p.<br />
VACCHI—At the Calanques of Sabbiuno<br />
MOZART—Piano Concerto No. 26 in D,<br />
K. 537<br />
STRAUSS, R.—Also sprach Zarathustra,<br />
Op. 30<br />
10:12 PM LATE NIGHT MUSIC<br />
POULENC—Trois mouvements perpétuels;<br />
Eric Parkin, p.<br />
PROKOFIEV—ROMEO AND JULIET:<br />
Suites Nos. 1 and 2 (Op. 64) and No. 3<br />
(Op. 101); Paavo Järvi/Cincinnati Sym. Orch.<br />
DEBUSSY—Violin Sonata; Anne Akiko<br />
Meyers, vln.; Li Jian, p.<br />
BARBER—Second Essay for Orchestra,<br />
Op. 17; Vladimir Golschmann/Sym. of the<br />
Air<br />
Directions in Sound Page 11
8 Thursday<br />
9:05 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH<br />
GEORGE WALKER<br />
9am SIBELIUS—Symphony No. 7 in C,<br />
Op. 105; Gennady Rozhdestvensky/USSR<br />
TV & Radio Large Sym. Orch.<br />
10am SMETANA—MA VLAST: The<br />
Moldau; Nikolaus Harnoncourt/Vienna<br />
Phil.<br />
11am TELEMANN: MUSIQUE DE<br />
TABLE, PART III: Quatour in e; Jed<br />
Wentz, fl.; Reinhard Goebel, vln.; Phoebe<br />
Carrai, vlc.; Thierry Maeder, hpsd.<br />
3pm YSAYE—Sonata No. 6 for Violin<br />
Solo, Op. 27; Maxim Vengerov, vln.<br />
7:06 PM EVENING CLASSICAL MUSIC<br />
MASSENET—WERTHER: “Pourquoi me<br />
réveiller”; Giuseppe di Stefano, t.; Franco<br />
Patanè/Tonhalle-Orchester Zürich<br />
FAURÉ—Violin Sonata No. 1 in A, Op. 13;<br />
Gil Shaham, vln.; Akira Eguchi, p.<br />
RODRIGO—Fantasía para un<br />
Gentilhombre [Fantasy for a Gentleman];<br />
David Russell, gt.; Erich Kunzel/Naples<br />
Phil. Orch.<br />
8:00 PM CENTER STAGE FROM WOLF<br />
TRAP<br />
Stanislav Ioudenitch, p.<br />
MOZART—Piano Sonata in a, K. 310<br />
Chicago Str. Qt.<br />
ZWILICH—STRING QUARTET NO. 2:<br />
Movements 2 & 3<br />
Johannes Str. Qt.<br />
MOZART—String Quartet in E-flat, K.<br />
428<br />
9:00 PM HARMONIA<br />
“American Early Music Series: Early<br />
Americana I”<br />
In an exploration of Early American Music,<br />
we’ll hear Hymnody, fiddle tunes, shapenote<br />
singing and more; music one might<br />
have heard in the homes, churches, taverns<br />
and theaters of the North American<br />
colonies.<br />
10:09 PM INDIANAPOLIS SYMPHONY<br />
ORCHESTRA<br />
Mario Venzago, cond.; Lynn Harrell, vlc.<br />
HERBERT—Cello Concerto No.2 Op.30<br />
DVORAK—Symphony No.9 in e, Op.95<br />
“From the New World”<br />
9 Friday<br />
9:05 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH<br />
GEORGE WALKER<br />
9am GLAZUNOV—Scènes de Ballet, Op.<br />
52; Gennady Rozhdestvensly/USSR TV &<br />
Radio Large Sym. Orch.<br />
10am SALIERI—Concerto in C for flute,<br />
oboe, and orchestra; Peter Lloyd, fl.;<br />
Anthony Camden, ob.; Nicholas Ward/City<br />
of London Sinfonia<br />
11am MASSENET—WERTHER: “Je ne<br />
sais si je veille…O nature pleine de grâce”;<br />
Page 12 Directions in Sound<br />
Marcelo Alvarez, t.; Mark Elder/ Phil.<br />
Orch. of Nice<br />
3pm TELEMANN—ESSERCIZII MUSICI:<br />
Trio 8 (Trio Sonata in B-flat); Michael<br />
Schneider, rec.; Harald Hoeren, hpsd.;<br />
Camerata Köln<br />
8:00 PM MARIAN McPARTLAND’S PIANO<br />
JAZZ<br />
Regina Carter<br />
9:00 PM THE BIG BANDS<br />
With host Joe Bourne<br />
10:09 PM AFTERGLOW<br />
With host Dick Bishop<br />
10 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 />
Bryan Le Beau and author Caroline<br />
Alexander discuss her latest book, “The<br />
Bounty: The True Story of the Mutiny on<br />
the Bounty.” Thomas Schwartz will share<br />
his thoughts on American policy toward<br />
Europe during the Johnson Presidency.<br />
12:09 PM CLASSICAL MUSIC<br />
GRANADOS—GOYESCAS: La Maja y el<br />
Ruiseñor [The Maiden and the Nightingale];<br />
Isabel Bayrakdarian, s.; Bryan<br />
Epperson/Cello Ens.<br />
RAVEL—DAPHNIS ET CHLOE: Suites 1<br />
& 2; Netherlands Radio Choir; Richard<br />
Dufallo/Netherlands Radio Phil. Orch.<br />
WIDOR—Cello Sonata in A, Op. 80; Mats<br />
Lidström, vlc.; Bengt Forsberg, p.<br />
BARBER—Medea’s Meditation and Dance<br />
of Vengeance, Op. 23a; Leonard Slatkin/St.<br />
Louis Sym.<br />
1:30 PM METROPOLITAN OPERA<br />
MASSENET— ; Michel Plasson, cond.;<br />
Lyubov Petrova (Sophie); Vesselina<br />
Kasarova (Charlotte); Roberto Alagna<br />
(Werther); Christopher Schaldenbrand<br />
(Albert); Paul Plishka (Le Bailli)<br />
Vesselina Kasarova<br />
6:00 PM GARRISON KEILLOR’S<br />
A PRAIRIE HOME COMPANION<br />
Live from the Oscar Mayer Theatre in<br />
Madison, Wisconsin.<br />
8:00 PM HOMETOWN<br />
WITH TOM ROZNOWSKI<br />
“Wabash”<br />
8:05 PM THE FOLK SAMPLER<br />
“What’s New”<br />
9:05 PM THE THISTLE AND SHAMROCK<br />
“Westsound”<br />
The West of Ireland has been the birthplace<br />
of a wealth of great music, and many a<br />
great artist, including Maura O’Connell,<br />
Dolores and Sean Keane and Clannad to<br />
name just a few.<br />
10:07 PM AFROPOP WORLDWIDE<br />
With host Georges Collinet<br />
11:07 PM PORTRAITS IN BLUE<br />
Howlin’ Wolf, Vol.5 1950s & 60s Chicago<br />
Blues<br />
11:59 PM WORLDWIDE JAZZ<br />
Peter Herbolzheimer’s Rhythm Combination—25<br />
th Anniversary Concert<br />
11 <strong>Sunday</strong><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 />
OVALLE—Azulao; Isabel Bayrakdarian, s.;<br />
James Parker, p.; Bryan Epperson/Cello<br />
Ens.<br />
ELGAR—Cockaigne “In London Town,”<br />
Op. 40; Leonard Slatkin/London Phil.<br />
11:47 AM THE POETS WEAVE<br />
With host Jenny Kander<br />
12:00 PM SAINT PAUL SUNDAY<br />
Jean-Yves Thibaudet, p.<br />
Music of Eric Satie, Steve Swallow, Duke<br />
Ellington and Bill Evans<br />
Jean-Yves Thibaudet<br />
1:00 PM SCHICKELE MIX<br />
With host Peter Schickele<br />
2:00 PM BROADWAY REVISITED<br />
“Anyone Can Whistle”<br />
3:00 PM WEEKEND RADIO<br />
As is traditional, two weeks in January are<br />
all-request programs.<br />
4:00 PM THE SAVVY TRAVELER<br />
With host Diana Nyad<br />
6:00 PM SOUND MEDICINE<br />
Host Barbara Lewis West interviews<br />
physicians from the <strong>Indiana</strong> <strong>University</strong><br />
School of Medicine on this program from<br />
WFYI Public Radio.<br />
7:00 PM PROFILES<br />
William F. Schulz
8:00 PM HEART TO HEART<br />
“Children Sometimes Die”<br />
This three-part series from Heart to Heart<br />
shares the personal stories and remarkable<br />
moments of people facing death and those<br />
who are helping them along the journey.<br />
Tonight’s program is about the youngest<br />
among us who die and the support they and<br />
their families need through this difficult<br />
experience.<br />
9:00 PM DREAMS WITHIN A DREAM:<br />
THE MUSIC OF CARY BOYCE<br />
Cary Boyce’s composition, “Dreams within<br />
a Dream,” for soprano, chorus and<br />
orchestra was premiered in Bloomington on<br />
May 3, 2003 and featured soprano Susan<br />
Swaney, the Bloomington Chamber Singers<br />
and an orchestra of local musicians<br />
conducted by Gerald Sousa. The work<br />
explores words, the sounds of words and<br />
the power of music to express them.<br />
10:05 PM MUSIC FROM THE HEARTS OF<br />
SPACE<br />
With host Stephen Hill<br />
11:08 PM LATE NIGHT MUSIC<br />
SATOH—Birds in warped time II; Anne<br />
Akiko Meyers, vln.; Li Jian, p.<br />
XENAKIS—Thallein; David Dzubay/IU<br />
New Music Ens.<br />
KENINS—Piano Quartet No. 1; Qt.<br />
Canada<br />
12 Monday<br />
9:05 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH<br />
GEORGE WALKER<br />
9am MOZART—Clarinet Trio in E-flat, K,<br />
498; Richard Stolzman, cl.; Yo-Yo Ma,<br />
vlc.; Emanuel Ax, p.<br />
10am PROKOFIEV—ROMEO AND<br />
JULIET, OP. 64: Suite No. 1; Paavo Järvi/<br />
Cincinnati Sym. Orch.<br />
11am STRAUSS, JOH. JR.—THE GYPSY<br />
BARRON: Overture; Nikolaus<br />
Harnoncourt/Royal Concertgebouw Orch.<br />
3pm LEMMENS—Prelude á 5 Parties;<br />
William Aylesworth, org.<br />
7:06 PM EVENING CLASSICAL MUSIC<br />
BEETHOVEN—Leonore Overture No. 3,<br />
Op. 72a; Paul Biss/IU Phil. Orch.<br />
MOZART—Piano Concerto No. 19 in F,<br />
K. 459; Daniel Barenboim, p.; Daniel<br />
Barenboim/Berlin Phil.<br />
KOECHLIN—Chansons Bretonnes Book<br />
III; Mats Lidström, vlc.; Bengt Forsberg, p.<br />
8:00 PM LIVE! AT THE<br />
CONCERTGEBOUW<br />
Rotterdam Phil. Orch.; Valery Gergiev,<br />
cond.; Vadim Repin, vln.<br />
STRAVINSKY—Scherzo fantastique, Op. 3<br />
PROKOFIEV—Violin Concerto No. 1 in<br />
D, Op. 19<br />
STRAVINSKY—Le sacre du printemps<br />
[The Rite of Spring]<br />
10:09 PM PIPEDREAMS<br />
“In Memoriam, Catharine Crozier”<br />
A tribute to one of America’s foremost<br />
recitalists and teachers.<br />
13 Tuesday<br />
9:05 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH<br />
GEORGE WALKER<br />
9am DEBUSSY—Violin Sonata; Anne<br />
Akiko Meyers, vln.; Li Jian, p.<br />
10am BEETHOVEN—Leonore Overture<br />
No. 3, Op. 72a; Paul Biss/IU Phil. Orch.<br />
11am BACH—Brandenburg Concerto No.<br />
3 in G, BWV 1048; Ch. Orch. of Europe<br />
3pm SCHUBERT—Fantasy in c, D2e;<br />
Leonard Hokanson, p.<br />
Leonard Hokanson<br />
7:05 PM FROM THE TOP<br />
This week, From the Top returns to<br />
Interlochen Arts Academy in Michigan,<br />
recognized as a leader in arts education and<br />
quality presentations. We will hear<br />
musicians from around the world who<br />
study at Interlochen.<br />
8:05 PM ETHER GAME<br />
“Wild and Wacky Instruments”<br />
Inspired by the 150 th anniversary of the<br />
patenting of the accordion, Ether Game<br />
inspects unusual instruments. Just as a<br />
heads up—our instruments will be mainly<br />
of the musical variety.<br />
10:09 PM THE VOCAL SCENE WITH<br />
GEORGE JELLINEK<br />
“A Tribute to Victoria de los Angeles”<br />
11:08 PM LATE NIGHT MUSIC<br />
FAURE—Romance in B-Flat, Op. 28; Gil<br />
Shaham, vln.; Akira Eguchi, p.<br />
SMETANA—MA VLAST: Blaník;<br />
Nikolaus Harnoncourt/Vienna Phil.<br />
MOZART—Concerto No. 10 in E-flat for<br />
Two Pianos, K. 365; Katia Labèque, p.<br />
Marielle Labèque, p.; Semyon Bychkov/<br />
Berlin Phil.<br />
Katia & Marielle Labèque<br />
14 Wednesday<br />
9:05 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH<br />
GEORGE WALKER<br />
9am GRIEG—Holberg Suite, Op. 40;<br />
Noëmi Bodden, vln.; Monique van Zelst,<br />
vla.; Conrad van Alphen/Rotterdam Ch.<br />
Orch.<br />
10am MOZART—Symphony No. 29 in A,<br />
K. 201; Pinchas Zukerman/Natl. Arts<br />
Centre Orch. of Canada<br />
11am SMETANA—MA VLAST: Sárka;<br />
Nikolaus Harnoncourt/Vienna Phil.<br />
3pm JONES, E.—Three Welsh Songs;<br />
William Taylor, hp.<br />
7:06 PM EVENING CLASSICAL MUSIC<br />
FRESCOBALDI—Toccata; Jian Wang, vln.;<br />
Camerata Salzburg<br />
GRIEG—Holberg Suite, Op. 40; Noëmi<br />
Bodden, vln.; Monique van Zelst, vla.;<br />
Conrad van Alphen/Rotterdam Ch. Orch.<br />
SCHUMANN—Piano Quintet in E-flat,<br />
Op. 44; Emanuel Ax, p.; Cleveland Qt.<br />
8:00 PM PITTSBURGH SYMPHONY<br />
ORCHESTRA<br />
Mstislav Rostropovich, cond.<br />
PROKOFIEV—Symphony No. 1 in D<br />
“Classical”<br />
SHOSTAKOVICH—Symphony No. 9 in E-<br />
flat, Op. 70<br />
TCHAIKOVSKY—Symphony No. 5 in e,<br />
Op. 64<br />
10:12 PM LATE NIGHT MUSIC<br />
LISZT—ANNEES DE PELERINAGE,<br />
DEUXIEME ANNEE: No. 1 “Sposalizio”;<br />
Frederic Chiu, p.<br />
DVORAK—Serenade in E, Op. 22; Conrad<br />
van Alphen/Rotterdam Ch. Orch.<br />
MOZART—Clarinet Quintet in A, K. 581;<br />
Kimball Sykes, cl.; Pinchas Zukerman, vln.;<br />
Donnie Deacon, vln.; Jane Logan, vla.;<br />
Amanda Forsyth, vlc.<br />
STRAVINSKY—Petrushka; Antal Dorati/<br />
Minneapolis Sym.<br />
15 Thursday<br />
9:05 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH<br />
GEORGE WALKER<br />
9am FAURE—Violin Sonata No. 1 in A,<br />
Op. 13; Gil Shaham, vln.; Akira Eguchi, p.<br />
10am BACH, W.F.—Flute Concerto in D,<br />
BR C 15; Verena Fischer, fl.; Reinhard<br />
Goebel/Musica Antiqua Köln<br />
11am LISZT—Mephisto Waltz No. 1<br />
(Dance in the Village Inn); Eiji Oue/<br />
Minnesota Orch.<br />
3pm FRESCOBALDI—Toccata; Jian Wang,<br />
vlc.; Camerata Salzburg<br />
7:06 PM EVENING CLASSICAL MUSIC<br />
LEHAR—THE MERRY WIDOW: The<br />
Merry Widow Waltz; Arthur Fiedler/Boston<br />
Pops<br />
continued next page<br />
Directions in Sound Page 13
BACH, J.C.F.—Concerto for Fortepiano<br />
and Viola in E-Flat; Robert Hill, fp.;<br />
Reinhard Goebel, vla.; Reinhard Goebel/<br />
Musica Antiqua Köln<br />
SCHUMAN—New England Triptych; Ray<br />
E. Cramer/IU Wind Ens.<br />
8:00 PM CENTER STAGE FROM WOLF<br />
TRAP<br />
Judith Ingolfsson, vln.; Ronald Sat, p.<br />
BRAHMS—Scherzo in c from the F.A.E.<br />
Sonata “Sonatensatz”<br />
Pacific Str. Qt.<br />
BLACKWOOD—STRING QUARTET NO.<br />
3: Allegro moderato; Vivace<br />
Johannes Str. Qt.<br />
BRAHMS—String Quartet No. 3 in B-flat,<br />
Op. 67<br />
9:00 PM HARMONIA<br />
“American Early Music Series: Early<br />
Americana II”<br />
A continuation of the Harmonia Early<br />
American Music Series’ exploration<br />
focusing especially on the music of William<br />
Billings.<br />
10:09 PM INDIANAPOLIS SYMPHONY<br />
ORCHESTRA<br />
Christopher Wilkins, cond.<br />
BERLIOZ—Waverly Overture, Op.1<br />
Mario Venzago, cond.<br />
STRAVINSKY—The Firebird<br />
16 Friday<br />
9:05 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH<br />
GEORGE WALKER<br />
9am FALLA—Nights in the Gardens of<br />
Spain; Eduardo del Pueyo, p.; Jean Fournet/<br />
Netherlands Radio Phil. Orch.<br />
10am SAINT-SAENS—Cello Concerto No.<br />
1 in a, Op. 33; Steven Isserlis, vlc.; Michael<br />
Tilson Thomas/London Sym.<br />
11am LEHAR—THE MERRY WIDOW:<br />
“Es lebt’ eine Vilja” (Vilja-Lied); Barbara<br />
Bonney, s.; Ronald Schneider, p.<br />
17 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 />
Talking History’s Fred Nielsen joins us in<br />
conversation with Adam Rome for a<br />
discussion of suburban sprawl. David<br />
Ellwood reflects on the occupation of Italy<br />
during WWII.<br />
12:09 PM CLASSICAL MUSIC<br />
CHAMINADE— Two Mélodies; Anne<br />
Sophie von Otter, ms.; Bengt Forsberg, p.;<br />
Nils-Erik Sparf, vln.<br />
SMETANA—MA VLAST: The Moldau;<br />
Nikolaus Harnoncourt/Vienna Phil.<br />
DIAMOND—String Quartet No. 6;<br />
Potomac Str. Qt.<br />
RACHMANINOV—Piano Concerto No. 2<br />
in c, Op. 18; John Lill, p.; Tadaaki Otaka/<br />
BBC Welsh Sym. Orch.<br />
1:30 PM METROPOLITAN OPERA<br />
LEHÁR—The Merry Widow; Kirill<br />
Petrenko, cond.; Susan Graham (Hanna<br />
Glawari); Emily Pulley (Valencienne); Bo<br />
Skovhus (Danilo); Paul Groves (Camille de<br />
Rosillon); James Courtney (Baron Mirko<br />
Zeta)<br />
6:00 PM GARRISON KEILLOR’S<br />
A PRAIRIE HOME COMPANION<br />
Live from The Orpheum Theatre in Sioux<br />
City, Iowa with singer-songwriter<br />
Stephanie Davis.<br />
8:00 PM HOMETOWN<br />
WITH TOM ROZNOWSKI<br />
“Handle With Care”<br />
8:05 PM THE FOLK SAMPLER<br />
“We Can Hope”<br />
9:05 PM THE THISTLE AND SHAMROCK<br />
“On the Edge”<br />
Recordings from the exploratory edge of<br />
contemporary Celtic music are our focus<br />
this week with Kila, Martyn Bennett, and<br />
Breton world music pioneer, Alan Stivell.<br />
10:07 PM AFROPOP WORLDWIDE<br />
With host Georges Collinet<br />
11:07 PM PORTRAITS IN BLUE<br />
Taj Mahal, Vol.4 1960s Blues and Folk<br />
11:59 PM WORLDWIDE JAZZ<br />
Philip Catherine Meets Bert van den Brink<br />
11:47 AM THE POETS WEAVE<br />
With host Jenny Kander<br />
12:00 PM SAINT PAUL SUNDAY<br />
The Sixteen<br />
PALESTRINA—Tota pulchra est; Sicut<br />
lilium inter spinas<br />
BYRD—Mass for Four Voices<br />
VICTORIA—Vadam et circuibo; Ave<br />
Maria<br />
1:00 PM SCHICKELE MIX<br />
With host Peter Schickele<br />
2:00 PM BROADWAY REVISITED<br />
“The Depression”<br />
3:00 PM WEEKEND RADIO<br />
The second of our annual all-request<br />
programs.<br />
4:00 PM THE SAVVY TRAVELER<br />
With host Diana Nyad<br />
6:00 PM SOUND MEDICINE<br />
Host Barbara Lewis West interviews<br />
physicians from the <strong>Indiana</strong> <strong>University</strong><br />
School of Medicine on this program from<br />
WFYI Public Radio.<br />
7:00 PM THIRD HOUSE, THE PEOPLE’S<br />
VOICE<br />
A discussion of issues before the current<br />
legislature (The program will be simulcast<br />
on WTIU television).<br />
8:00 PM HEART TO HEART<br />
“Respecting Diversity”<br />
This three-part series shares the personal<br />
stories and remarkable moments of people<br />
facing death and those who are helping<br />
them along the journey. Heart to Heart:<br />
Respecting Diversity looks at the influence<br />
of culture, race, and religion on treatment<br />
for the dying.<br />
9:00 PM A TRIBUTE TO MARILYN<br />
HORNE<br />
In celebration of Marilyn Horne’s 70 th<br />
birthday on January 16, host Kerry<br />
Frumkin presents a recent conversation<br />
with the renowned singer. Ms. Horne<br />
reminisces about her formative years in<br />
Pennsylvania and California, from her<br />
years singing in church, in films and in the<br />
Roger Wagner Chorale to her debuts at the<br />
great opera houses of Europe and the<br />
United States.<br />
Barbara Bonney<br />
3pm BEETHOVEN—Leonore Overture<br />
No. 3, Op. 72a; Paul Biss/IU Univ. Orch.<br />
8:00 PM MARIAN McPARTLAND’S PIANO<br />
JAZZ<br />
John Medeski<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<br />
18 <strong>Sunday</strong><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 />
YSAYE—Sonata No. 3 for Violin Solo, Op.<br />
27; Maxim Vengerov, vln.<br />
COPLAND—Old American Songs, Set 1;<br />
Alan Bennett, t.; Leonard Hokanson, p.<br />
Marilyn Horne—in the 1970s<br />
10:05 PM MUSIC FROM THE HEARTS OF<br />
SPACE<br />
With host Stephen Hill<br />
11:08 PM LATE NIGHT MUSIC<br />
GULGOWSKI—Romance; Niklas Sivelöv, p.<br />
RILEY—Requiem for Adam; Kronos Qt.
19 Monday<br />
9:05 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH<br />
GEORGE WALKER<br />
9am SAINT-SAENS—Fantaisie in E-flat;<br />
William Aylesworth, org.<br />
10am SAINT-SAENS—TROIS<br />
RHAPSODIE SUR DE CANTIQUES<br />
BRETONS, OP. 7: Rhapsodie I; William<br />
Ayleworth, org.<br />
11am HENRY VIII—Three Pieces; Sirinu<br />
3pm YSAYE—Sonata No. 2 for Violin<br />
Solo, Op. 27; Maxim Vengerov, vln.<br />
7:06 PM EVENING CLASSICAL MUSIC<br />
RIMSKY-KORSAKOV—<br />
SCHEHERAZADE, OP. 35: I.The Sea and<br />
Sinbad’s Ship; David Effron/IU Univ. Orch.<br />
SHOSTAKOVICH—Piano Concerto No. 1<br />
in c, Op. 35; Yefim Bronfman, p.; Thomas<br />
Stevens, tpt.; Esa-Pekka Salonen/Los<br />
Angeles Phil.<br />
RAVEL—Sonata for Violin and Piano;<br />
Anne Akiko Meyers, vln.; Li Jian, p.<br />
8:00 PM LIVE! AT THE<br />
CONCERTGEBOUW<br />
Royal Concertgebouw Orch.; Bernard<br />
Haitink, cond.; Barbara Frittoli, s.<br />
MOZART—Symphony No. 32 in G, K.<br />
318<br />
MOZART—”Vado, ma dove” K. 583<br />
MOZART—”Bella mia fiamma…Resta oh<br />
cara,” K. 528<br />
MAHLER—Symphony No. 4<br />
10:09 PM PIPEDREAMS<br />
“One On One”<br />
Ten players tackle first symphonies by two<br />
famous blind Frenchmen, Louis Vierne and<br />
Jean Langlais.<br />
20 Tuesday<br />
9:05 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH<br />
GEORGE WALKER<br />
9am BACH, J.C.F.—Concerto for<br />
Fortepiano and Viola in E-Flat; Robert<br />
Hill, fp.; Reinhard Goebel, vla.; Reinhard<br />
Goebel/Musica Antiqua Köln<br />
10am RIMSKY-KORSAKOV—<br />
SCHEHERAZADE, OP. 35: I.The Sea and<br />
Sinbad’s Ship; David Effron/IU Univ. Orch.<br />
11am CORELLI—Sonata da camera a tre<br />
in e, Op. 2, No. 4; Charles Medlam/<br />
London Baroque<br />
3pm DEBUSSY—Violin Sonata; Anne<br />
Akiko Meyers, vln.; Li Jian p.<br />
1:30 PM METROPOLITAN OPERA<br />
WAGNER—Das Rheingold; James Levine,<br />
cond.; Jennifer Welch-Babidge (Freia);<br />
Yvonne Naef (Fricka); Elena Zaremba<br />
(Erda); Philip Langridge (Loge); Gerhard<br />
Siegel (Mime); James Morris (Wotan);<br />
Richard Paul Fink (Alberich); Evgeny<br />
Nikitin (Fasolt); Sergei Koptchak (Fafner)<br />
7:05 PM FROM THE TOP<br />
From the Top returns to Lincoln Center as<br />
guests of the New York Philharmonic.<br />
8:05 PM ETHER GAME<br />
“Much Ado About Nothing”<br />
An Ether Game about absolutely nothing,<br />
zero, zilch, nada.<br />
10:09 PM THE VOCAL SCENE WITH<br />
GEORGE JELLINEK<br />
“A Collector’s Ballo in Maschera”<br />
11:08 PM LATE NIGHT MUSIC<br />
GULGOWSKI—Intermezzo; Niklas<br />
Sivelöv, p.<br />
DIAMOND—String Quartet No. 1;<br />
Potomac Str. Qt.<br />
MEYER—Violin Concerto; Hilary Hahn,<br />
vln.; Hugh Wolff/Saint Paul Ch. Orch.<br />
21 Wednesday<br />
9:05 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH<br />
GEORGE WALKER<br />
9am SMETANA—MA VLAST: From<br />
Bohemia’s Meadows and Fields; Nikolaus<br />
Harnoncourt/Vienna Phil.<br />
10am DVORAK—Serenade in E, Op. 22;<br />
Conrad van Alphen/Rotterdam Ch. Orch.<br />
11am GRAUPNER—Ouverture à 3<br />
chalumeaux, No. 2; <strong>Indiana</strong> Clarinet Trio<br />
7:06 PM EVENING CLASSICAL MUSIC<br />
HOLST—Hammersmith, Op. 52, H.178;<br />
Ray E. Cramer/IU Wind Ens.<br />
BERLIOZ—La Mort de Cléopâtre [The<br />
Death of Cleopatra]; Béatrice Uria-<br />
Monzon, ms.; Nord-Pas-de-Calais Chorus;<br />
Jean-Claude Casadesus/Orchestre National<br />
de Lille, Région Nord/Calais<br />
DEBUSSY—Suite Bergamasque; György<br />
Sebok, p.<br />
8:00 PM PITTSBURGH SYMPHONY<br />
ORCHESTRA<br />
Gunther Herbig, cond.; Richard Page, b. cl.<br />
WEILL—THE THREEPENNY OPERA:<br />
Excerpts<br />
LADERMAN—Concerto for Bass Clarinet<br />
and Orchestra<br />
BEETHOVEN—Symphony No. 5 in c, Op.<br />
67<br />
10:12 PM LATE NIGHT MUSIC<br />
ROUSSEL—Impromptu, Op. 21; Susann<br />
McDonald, hp.<br />
GLAZUNOV—Scènes de Ballet, Op. 52;<br />
Gennady Rozhdestvensky/USSR TV &<br />
Radio Large Sym. Orch.<br />
STRAVINSKY—Suite italienne; Dora<br />
Bratchkova, vln.; Aldo Orvieto, p.<br />
TCHAIKOVSKY—Serenade in C for<br />
Strings, Op. 48; Kaler, Ilya/IU Ch. Orch.<br />
FAURÉ—Piano Trio in d, Op. 120; Gil<br />
Shaham, vln.; Brinton Smith, vlc.; Akira<br />
Eguchi, p.<br />
22 Thursday<br />
9:05 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH<br />
GEORGE WALKER<br />
9am MOZART—Clarinet Quintet in A, K.<br />
581; Kimball Sykes, cl.; Pinchas Zukerman,<br />
vln.; Donnie Deacon, vln.; Jane Logan, vla.;<br />
Amanda Forsyth, vlc.<br />
10am MONN—Cello Concerto in g; Jian<br />
Wang, vlc.; Camerata Salzburg<br />
11am BOYCE—Symphony No. 1 in B-flat,<br />
Op. 2; William Boughton/English Str.<br />
Orch.<br />
3pm FAURÉ: Romance in B-Flat, Op. 28;<br />
Gil Shaham, vln.; Akira Eguchi, p.<br />
7:06 PM EVENING CLASSICAL MUSIC<br />
PUCCINI—MADAMA BUTTERFLY:<br />
Intermezzo from Act 2, Part 2; Kent<br />
Nagano/Orchestre de l’Opéra National de<br />
Lyon<br />
SHOSTAKOVICH—Piano Trio No. 2 in e,<br />
Op. 67; Borodin Trio<br />
SIBELIUS—Rakastava [The Beloved], Op.<br />
14; Gennady Rozhdestvensky/USSR TV &<br />
Radio Large Sym. Orch.<br />
8:00 PM CENTER STAGE FROM WOLF<br />
TRAP<br />
Stanislav Ioudenitch, p.<br />
ADÉS—Darknesse Visible<br />
American Brass Qnt.<br />
RIETI—Incisioni<br />
Cathy Basrak, vla.; William Koehler, p.<br />
LIEBERMANN—VIOLA SONATA:<br />
Movement 1<br />
Jon Nakamatsu, p.; Berlin Phil. Wind Qnt.<br />
MOZART—Quintet in E-flat for Piano and<br />
Winds. K. 452<br />
9:00 PM HARMONIA<br />
“American Early Music Series: Early Latin<br />
American Music I”<br />
The mix of cultures present in 17 th and 18 th<br />
Century Latin America gave rise to music<br />
with European, African-American, and<br />
Native American elements. This week, the<br />
first of two programs in Harmonia’s<br />
American Series dedicated to music of early<br />
Latin America.<br />
10:09 PM INDIANAPOLIS SYMPHONY<br />
ORCHESTRA<br />
Jajah Ling, cond.<br />
MOZART—LE NOZZE DI FIGARO, K.<br />
492: Overture<br />
Mario Venzago, cond.<br />
ROSSINI—SEMIRAMIDE: Overture<br />
Andrew Litton, cond.<br />
BERLIOZ—Roman Carnival Overture, Op.<br />
9<br />
Joseph Swensen, cond.; Nadja Salerno-<br />
Sonnenberg, vln.<br />
MENDELSSOHN—Concerto for Violin in<br />
e, Op.64<br />
Directions in Sound Page 15
23 Friday<br />
9:05 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH<br />
GEORGE WALKER<br />
9am PROKOFIEV—ROMEO AND<br />
JULIET, OP. 64: Suite No. 2; Paavo Järvi/<br />
Cincinnati Sym. Orch.<br />
10am RAVEL—DAPHNIS ET CHLOE:<br />
Suites 1 & 2; Netherlands Radio Choir;<br />
Richard Dufallo/Netherlands Radio Phil.<br />
Orch.<br />
11am PUCCINI—MADAMA BUTTER-<br />
FLY: “Un bel dí” [One fine day]; Renée<br />
Fleming, s.; Charles Mackerras/London<br />
Phil. Orch.<br />
3pm RIMSKY-KORSAKOV—<br />
SCHEHERAZADE, OP. 35: I.The Sea and<br />
Sinbad’s Ship; David Effron/IU Univ. Orch.<br />
8:00 PM MARIAN McPARTLAND’S PIANO<br />
JAZZ<br />
Albert Dailey<br />
9:00 PM THE BIG BANDS<br />
With host Joe Bourne<br />
10:09 PM AFTERGLOW<br />
With host Dick Bishop<br />
24 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 />
Drew Bergerson discusses the fate of<br />
globalization with Harold James, professor<br />
of history at the <strong>University</strong> of<br />
Princeton. Thomas Doherty reflects on<br />
Hollywood’s Golden Age.<br />
12:09 PM CLASSICAL MUSIC<br />
VILLA-LOBOS—BACHIANAS<br />
BRASILEIRAS NO. 5: Aria; Isabel<br />
Bayrakdarian, s.; Bryan Epperson/Cello<br />
Ens.<br />
BERNSTEIN—Serenade, after Plato’s<br />
“Symposium”; Anne-Sophie Mutter, vln.;<br />
André Previn/Boston Sym. Orch.<br />
WÖLFL—Piano Sonata in C, Op. 33, no.<br />
1; Jon Nakamatsu, p.<br />
JANACEK—Sinfonietta; Charles<br />
Mackerras/Vienna Phil.<br />
1:30 PM METROPOLITAN OPERA<br />
PUCCINI—Madama Butterfly; Pácido<br />
Domingo, cond.; Veronica Villarroel (Cio-<br />
Cio San); Marco Berti (Pinkerton); Bruno<br />
Caproni (Sharpless)<br />
6:00 PM GARRISON KEILLOR’S<br />
A PRAIRIE HOME COMPANION<br />
Live from The Warner Theatre in Erie,<br />
Pennsylvania.<br />
8:00 PM HOMETOWN<br />
WITH TOM ROZNOWSKI<br />
“Forwarding Address”<br />
8:05 PM THE FOLK SAMPLER<br />
“My Kinda Blues”<br />
Page 16 Directions in Sound<br />
9:05 PM THE THISTLE AND SHAMROCK<br />
“In Flight Entertainment”<br />
Traditional songs and tunes often pay<br />
homage to the birds that share our<br />
environment — gulls, corncrakes, ravens,<br />
eagles — and sometimes ascribe to them<br />
extraordinary powers. We listen to some of<br />
this music, the old and the new.<br />
10:07 PM AFROPOP WORLDWIDE<br />
With host Georges Collinet<br />
11:07 PM PORTRAITS IN BLUE<br />
Todd Rhodes, Vol.3 1950s Detroit Jump<br />
Blues<br />
11:59 PM WORLDWIDE JAZZ<br />
Lucas van Merwijk and his Cu-Bop City<br />
Big Band<br />
25 <strong>Sunday</strong><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 />
FAURÉ—Andante for Violin & Piano, Op.<br />
75; Gil Shaham, vln.; Akira Eguchi, p.<br />
GRAINGER—Hill-Song No. 1; Geoffrey<br />
Simon/Melbourne Sym.<br />
11:47 AM THE POETS WEAVE<br />
With host Jenny Kander<br />
12:00 PM SAINT PAUL SUNDAY<br />
Guarneri Str. Qt.<br />
SCHUMANN—STRING QUARTET IN A,<br />
OP. 41, NO. 3: I. Andante espressivo; III.<br />
Adagio molto<br />
ARRIAGA—STRING QUARTET NO. 2<br />
IN A: II. Andante con variazioni<br />
KODALY—String Quartet No. 2, Op. 10<br />
1:00 PM SCHICKELE MIX<br />
With host Peter Schickele<br />
2:00 PM BROADWAY REVISITED<br />
“Two by Vincent Youmans”<br />
4:00 PM THE SAVVY TRAVELER<br />
With host Diana Nyad<br />
6:00 PM SOUND MEDICINE<br />
Host Barbara Lewis West interviews<br />
physicians from the <strong>Indiana</strong> <strong>University</strong><br />
School of Medicine on this program from<br />
WFYI Public Radio.<br />
7:00 PM PROFILES<br />
Violette Verdy (repeat)<br />
8:00 PM A TRIBUTE TO MARTIN<br />
LUTHER KING, JR.<br />
The Choral Arts Society of Washington led<br />
by music director Norman Scribner<br />
presents this stirring musical tribute to<br />
Martin Luther King. Jr.<br />
10:05 PM MUSIC FROM THE HEARTS OF<br />
SPACE<br />
With host Stephen Hill<br />
11:08 PM LATE NIGHT MUSIC<br />
GULGOWSKI—Piano Sonata; Niklas<br />
Sivelöv, p.<br />
DIAMOND—String Quartet No. 5;<br />
Potomac Str. Qt.<br />
CORIGLIANO—Elegy for Orchestra;<br />
Rudolf Werthen/I Fiamminghi<br />
26 Monday<br />
9:05 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH<br />
GEORGE WALKER<br />
9am LEFEBURE-WELY—Sortie in E-flat;<br />
William Aylewsowrth, org.<br />
10am WEBER—Symphony No. 2 in C;<br />
Neville Marriner/Acad. of St. Martin-inthe-Fields<br />
11am LISZT—Orpheus; Ondrej Lenárd/<br />
Slovak Phil. Orch.<br />
3pm CHAMINADE—Concertino, Op. 107;<br />
Mary Palchak, fl.; John Novacek, p.<br />
7:06 PM EVENING CLASSICAL MUSIC<br />
RIMSKY-KORSAKOV—<br />
SCHEHERAZADE, OP. 35: II. The Tale of<br />
the Kalandar Prince; David Effron/IU Univ.<br />
Orch.<br />
RAVEL—Rapsodie Espagnole; Bernard<br />
Haitink/Boston Sym. Orch.<br />
8:00 PM LIVE! AT THE<br />
CONCERTGEBOUW<br />
Orch. of the XVIIIth Century; Frans<br />
Brueggen, cond.<br />
BEETHOVEN—Symphony No. 1 in C, Op.<br />
21<br />
BEETHOVEN—Symphony No. 5 in c, Op.<br />
67<br />
10:09 PM PIPEDREAMS<br />
“In Concert”<br />
Lively performances from Iowa, Alabama,<br />
Washington, D.C. and Texas, featuring<br />
Brett Wolgast, Harald Rohlig, Robert<br />
Knupp and Jane Schmidt-Ahsan.<br />
27 Tuesday<br />
9:05 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH<br />
GEORGE WALKER<br />
9am SCHUBERT—Sonata in a, D. 821<br />
“Arpeggione”; Gervase de Peyer, cl.;<br />
Gwenneth Pryor, p.<br />
10am RIMSKY-KORSAKOV—<br />
SCHEHERAZADE, OP. 35: II. The Tale of<br />
the Kalandar Prince; David Effron/IU Univ.<br />
Orch.<br />
11am ORTIZ, W.—Abrazo; Buffalo Gt. Qt.<br />
3pm CORRETTE—LES DELICES DE LA<br />
SOLITUDE, Op. 20: Bassoon Sonata No.<br />
5; Danny Bond, bssn.; Richte van der Meer,<br />
vlc.; Robert Kohnen, hpsd.<br />
7:05 PM FROM THE TOP<br />
This week, From the Top features a special<br />
guest, Peter Schickele. Each of the young<br />
musicians featured performs a piece by<br />
Schickele, and From the Top’s guest<br />
performs one of his own songs.<br />
8:05 PM ETHER GAME<br />
“A Penny For Your Thoughts”<br />
In honor of the State of the Union address,<br />
Ether Game contemplates the economy,<br />
one penny at a time.<br />
10:09 PM THE VOCAL SCENE WITH<br />
GEORGE JELLINEK<br />
“Puccini: How to End an Opera”
11:08 PM LATE NIGHT MUSIC<br />
Happy Birthday, Wolfgang!<br />
MOZART—DIE ZAUBERFLOTE [THE<br />
MAGIC FLUTE], K. 620: Overture; Colin<br />
Davis/Staatskapelle Dresden<br />
MOZART—Violin Concerto No. 5 in A,<br />
K. 219; Pinchas Zukerman, vln.; Pinchas<br />
Zukerman/Natl. Arts Centre Orch. of<br />
Canada<br />
MOZART—Concert Aria, K. 505 “Ch’io<br />
mi scordi di te”; Cecilia Bartoli, ms.;<br />
András Schiff, p.; György Fischer/Vienna<br />
Ch. Orch.<br />
Cecilia Bartoli<br />
28 Wednesday<br />
9:05 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH<br />
GEORGE WALKER<br />
9am KOECHLIN—Chansons Bretonnes<br />
Book III; Mats Lidström, vlc.; Bengt<br />
Forsberg, p.<br />
10am SMETANA—MA VLAST: Tábor;<br />
Nikolaus Harnoncourt/Vienna Phil.<br />
11am SIBELIUS—Rakastava [The Beloved],<br />
Op. 14; Gennady Rozhdestvensky/USSR<br />
TV & Radio Large Sym. Orch.<br />
3pm RAVEL—DAPHNIS ET CHLOE:<br />
Suite No. 2; Netherlands Radio Choir;<br />
Richard Dufallo/Netherlands Radio<br />
7:06 PM EVENING CLASSICAL MUSIC<br />
BACH—THE ART OF THE FUGUE, BWV<br />
1080: Contrapunctus No. 13; Emerson Qt.<br />
FALLA—Nights in the Gardens of Spain;<br />
Eduardo del Pueyo, p.; Jean Fournet/<br />
Netherlands Radio Phil. Orch.<br />
BRAHMS—Clarinet Sonata in f, Op. 120,<br />
No. 1; Eli Eban, cl.; Melinda Coffey, p.<br />
8:00 PM PITTSBURGH SYMPHONY<br />
ORCHESTRA<br />
Pinchas Zukerman, cond. and vln.; Stewart<br />
Goodyear, p.<br />
MOZART—Piano Quartet in g, K. 478<br />
MOZART—Piano Concerto No. 21 in C,<br />
K. 467<br />
MOZART—Adagio in E, K. 261; Rondo in<br />
C, K. 373<br />
MOZART—Symphony No. 29 in A, K. 201<br />
10:12 PM LATE NIGHT MUSIC<br />
SCHUBERT—Fantasy in c, D2e; Leonard<br />
Hokanson, p.<br />
BRUCKNER—Symphony No. 9 in d;<br />
Nikolaus Harnoncourt/Vienna Phil.<br />
HAYDN—String Quartet in D, Op. 76,<br />
No. 5, Hob. III:79; Cleveland Qt.<br />
CHAUSSON—Poème, Op. 25; Joshua Bell,<br />
vln.; Andrew Litton/Royal Phil.<br />
29 Thursday<br />
9:05 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH<br />
GEORGE WALKER<br />
9am HAYDN—Symphony No. 55 in E-flat,<br />
Hob. I:55 “Der Schulmeister”; Adam<br />
Fischer/Austro-Hungarian Haydn Orch.<br />
10am BACH, C.P.E.—Concerto for<br />
Harpsichord and Fortepiano in E-Flat, WQ<br />
47 (H 479); Léon Berben, hpsd.; Robert<br />
Hill, fp.; Reinhard Goebel/Musica Antiqua<br />
Köln<br />
11am RAVEL—Sonata for Violin and<br />
Piano; Anne Akiko Meyers, vln.; Li Jian, p.<br />
3pm WÖLFL—Piano Sonata in E. Op. 33,<br />
No. 3; Jon Nakamatsu, p.<br />
7:06 PM EVENING CLASSICAL MUSIC<br />
MUSSORGSKY—BORIS GODOUNOV:<br />
Coronation Scene; Valery Gergiev/Kirov<br />
Orch. & Chorus of the Kirov Opera<br />
MOZART—String Quintet in g, K. 516;<br />
Pinchas Zukerman, vln.; Jessica Linnebach,<br />
vln.; Jethro Marks, vla.; Donnie Deacon,<br />
vla.; Amanda Forsyth, vlc.<br />
DELIUS—Summer Night on the River;<br />
Vernon Handley/London Phil.<br />
8:00 PM CENTER STAGE FROM WOLF<br />
TRAP<br />
American Brass Qnt.<br />
EWAZEN—Colchester Fantasy<br />
David Finkel, vlc.; Wu Han, p.<br />
BEETHOVEN—Cello Sonata No. 3 in A,<br />
Op. 69<br />
9:00 PM HARMONIA<br />
“American Early Music Series: Early Latin<br />
American Music II”<br />
We continue with Harmonia’s Early<br />
American Music Series’ focus on the music<br />
of early Latin America, especially music<br />
dedicated to Our Lady of Guadalupe.<br />
10:09 PM INDIANAPOLIS SYMPHONY<br />
ORCHESTRA<br />
Jajah Ling, cond.<br />
RACHMANINOFF—Symphony No.2 in e,<br />
Op.27<br />
30 Friday<br />
9:05 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH<br />
GEORGE WALKER<br />
9am TAKEMITSU—Distance de Fée<br />
[Distant Fairy]; Anne Akiko Meyers, vln.;<br />
Li Jian, p.<br />
10am GLAZUNOV—Scènes de Ballet, Op.<br />
52; Gennady Rozhdestvensky/USSR TV &<br />
Radio Large Sym. Orch.<br />
11am MUSSORGSKY—BORIS<br />
GODOUNOV: Introduction & Polsky;<br />
Evgeny Svetlanov/State Sym. Orch. of<br />
Russia<br />
3pm RIMSKY-KORSAKOV—<br />
SCHEHERAZADE, OP. 35: II. The Tale of<br />
the Kalandar Prince; David Effron/IU<br />
8:00 PM MARIAN McPARTLAND’S PIANO<br />
JAZZ<br />
Bruce Hornsby<br />
Bruce Hornsby<br />
9:00 PM THE BIG BANDS<br />
With host Joe Bourne<br />
10:09 PM AFTERGLOW<br />
With host Dick Bishop<br />
31 Saturday<br />
10:00 AM CAR TALK<br />
With hosts Tom and Ray Magliozzi<br />
11:00 AM SAYS YOU!<br />
11:30 AM TALKING HISTORY<br />
This week on Talking History we talk<br />
about “The New York Loyalists”, an<br />
account of the supporters of the British and<br />
what happened to them. James Brooks<br />
reflects on the history of captive exchange<br />
in the Southwest Borderlands.<br />
12:09 PM CLASSICAL MUSIC<br />
CANTELOUBE—CHANTS<br />
D’AUVERGNE: Five Songs; Kate Van Eck,<br />
s.; Ray E. Cramer/IU Wind Ens.<br />
SCHUBERT—Symphony No. 5 in B-flat,<br />
D. 485; Vladimir Spivakov/Moscow<br />
Virtuosi<br />
YSAYE—Sonata No. 6 for Violin Solo, Op.<br />
27; Maxim Vengerov, vln.<br />
1:00 PM METROPOLITAN OPERA<br />
MUSSORGSKY—Boris Godunov; Semyon<br />
Bychov, cond.; Irina Mishura (Marina);<br />
Sergej Larin (Dimitri); David Kuebler<br />
(Shuisky); Sergei Leiferkus (Rangoni);<br />
James Morris (Boris Godunov); Vladimir<br />
Matorin (Pimen); Vladimir Ognovenko<br />
(Varlaam)<br />
6:00 PM GARRISON KEILLOR’S<br />
A PRAIRIE HOME COMPANION<br />
With host Garrison Keillor<br />
8:00 PM HOMETOWN<br />
WITH TOM ROZNOWSKI<br />
“Sleight Of Hand”<br />
8:05 PM THE FOLK SAMPLER<br />
“Our Little Town”<br />
9:05 PM THE THISTLE AND SHAMROCK<br />
“The Seasons”<br />
Our music marks time through the<br />
changing year, with William Jackson, Deaf<br />
Shepherd, Boys of the Lough and more.<br />
10:07 PM AFROPOP WORLDWIDE<br />
11:07 PM PORTRAITS IN BLUE<br />
Rosetta Tharpe, Vol.2 1940s Gospel Guitar<br />
11:59 PM WORLDWIDE JAZZ<br />
Greetje Kauffeld and the RIAS Big Band<br />
Directions in Sound Page 17
Variety of Music<br />
Programs on Television<br />
Tune in to WTIU this month for the following music specials.<br />
Walter Cronkite<br />
Great Performances continues a time-honored holiday<br />
tradition with From Vienna: The New Year’s Celebration<br />
2004, returning to the stately splendor of Vienna’s<br />
Musikverein Hall for its 20th annual New Year’s Day<br />
celebration with the Vienna Philharmonic and host<br />
Walter Cronkite. Riccardo Muti returns as guest<br />
conductor to lead the renowned orchestra in a selection<br />
of buoyant Strauss Family waltzes. This year’s telecast<br />
also features the Vienna State Opera Ballet dancing<br />
Johann Strauss II’s “Acceleration Waltz” and “Champagne<br />
Polka,” live from the elegant Liechtenstein Palace,<br />
as well as a visit to the magnificent Hofburg Palace,<br />
once the seat of the imperial Hapsburg dynasty. And in a<br />
special addition to this year’s festivities, a montage of ice<br />
skating performances will accompany Josef Strauss’s “Skating Polka.” The<br />
festivities air on WTIU Thursday, January 1 at 8pm<br />
Great Performances Degas and the Dance airs Wednesday, January 7 at 8pm.<br />
No artist has ever been more closely associated with images of dancers than the<br />
French Impressionist Edgar<br />
Degas; more than half of<br />
Degas’ vast output of<br />
paintings, drawings and<br />
sculptures is devoted to the<br />
activities of the ballet<br />
dancers and dance students<br />
of late 19th-century Paris.<br />
These works, recently<br />
organized in an acclaimed<br />
exhibition by the American<br />
Federation of Arts, the<br />
Detroit Institute of Arts and<br />
The Opéra Dance Studio on the Rue Le Peletier, 1872.<br />
the Philadelphia Museum of<br />
Art, are featured in this unique documentary exploring Degas’ intimate connection<br />
to the Paris Opéra, where for years he attended performances and watched<br />
ballet classes.<br />
Violinist and Bloomington favorite Joshua Bell<br />
performs with the Orpheus Chamber Orchestra in<br />
the Kaplan Penthouse at Lincoln Center. The<br />
Grammy Award-winner, only the second violinist,<br />
Joshua Bell<br />
after Itzhak Perlman, to be featured in the 27-year<br />
history of Live From Lincoln Center, has just<br />
released his 27th CD, Romance of the Violin. The<br />
Orpheus Chamber Orchestra, one of the world’s<br />
foremost performing ensembles, is renowned for<br />
its discipline, precision and quality of interpretation.<br />
This Live from Lincoln Center program airs<br />
Wednesday, January 14 at 8pm.<br />
PROGRAMMING AND<br />
OPERATING SUPPORT<br />
<strong>Indiana</strong> <strong>University</strong><br />
CORPORATE SILVER<br />
Friends of the Unitarian<br />
Universalist Church,<br />
Bloomington<br />
Pynco, Inc., Bedford<br />
CORPORATE BENEFACTORS<br />
Bunger & Robertson—Attorneys<br />
at Law<br />
Clay City Pharmacy, Clay City<br />
KP Pharmaceutical Technology,<br />
Inc.<br />
Dr. Rajan Mehta<br />
Dr. David Southwick, Hand and<br />
Microvascular Surgeon, Terre<br />
Haute<br />
Oliver Winery<br />
The Village Candlemaker,<br />
Nashville<br />
CORPORATE SPONSORS<br />
Brown Hill Nursery, Columbus<br />
Crystal Pure Water and Filtration<br />
Systems<br />
Drs. David J. Howell & Timothy<br />
A. Pliske<br />
Tipton Lakes Athletic Club,<br />
Columbus<br />
CORPORATE MEMBERS<br />
Avers Electric<br />
Bloomington Veterinary Hospital<br />
Dr. Philip Crooke, Obstetrics and<br />
Gynecology Physician<br />
Dermatology Center of <strong>Indiana</strong>,<br />
Drs. Byrne, McTigue and<br />
Reeck<br />
Designscape Horticultural Service<br />
Hob Nob Restaurant of<br />
Nashville<br />
Dr. Michael Hoffman, Podiatrist<br />
Innovative Medical Care,<br />
Dr. Michael Kane<br />
Jack Walker’s Amoco Station<br />
Page 18 Directions in Sound
Mt. Gilead Counseling Center—<br />
Claire Bamberg<br />
Orthopedics of Southern <strong>Indiana</strong>,<br />
Dr. Matthew Parmenter<br />
Dr. John Records, Diplomate<br />
Family Practice, Franklin<br />
Sare Associates<br />
Smart and Johnson Title<br />
Company, Columbus<br />
Star Tech of Nashville<br />
Strategic Development Group<br />
Incorporated<br />
Surgical Services of Southern<br />
<strong>Indiana</strong>—Board Certified Paul<br />
Taiganides, M.D., Bedford<br />
The Trojan Horse<br />
World Wide Automotive Service<br />
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 />
Blue Door Bistro<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 />
Elements Gallery of Fine Crafts<br />
Evans Violins<br />
First Christian Church,<br />
Disciples of Christ<br />
Fossil Rain<br />
Four Seasons Retirement<br />
Gallery North on the Square<br />
The Framing Guild<br />
Goods for Cooks<br />
Grant St.<br />
Hamilton Center<br />
Hanover College<br />
The Herald-Times<br />
Hills O’Brown Realty<br />
Hills O’Brown Property<br />
Management<br />
Hirons & Company<br />
The Hob Nob Restaurant of<br />
Nashville<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>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 />
Irwin Union Bank, Bloomington<br />
and Columbus<br />
ISU/The May Agency<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 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 />
Leahy’s Greenhouse<br />
Limestone Grille<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 />
Mikade Homes<br />
Monroe Bank<br />
Monroe County Solid Waste<br />
Management<br />
N.R. Hiller Design<br />
Old National<br />
Oliver Winery<br />
Organization of American<br />
Historians<br />
Pak Mail<br />
Providence Center<br />
Roadworthy Guitar & Amp<br />
Royal Toyota Volvo<br />
Dr. Byron Rutledge<br />
Ryder Magazine<br />
St. Francis Hospital<br />
Salaam<br />
The Scholar’s Inn Bakehouse<br />
Sheer Elegance Drapery Designs<br />
Smithville Telephone Company<br />
Sprint PCS<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 />
TIS Music Shop<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 />
Warren Ward Financial<br />
Planning &<br />
Investments—Columbus<br />
Woman’s Way<br />
World Wide Automotive Service<br />
Yarns Unlimited<br />
Elizabeth A.York MS, LCSW<br />
Ira B. Zinman, Attorney at Law<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 />
Closets Too!<br />
(Noon Edition)<br />
The Gallery (Afterglow)<br />
Pygmalion’s Art Supplies<br />
(Ether Game)<br />
Romy Remodeling<br />
(Big Bands)<br />
NATIONALLY<br />
SYNDICATED PROGRAM<br />
SUPPORT<br />
DADC - Sony, Terre Haute<br />
(Hometown)<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 />
Textillery Weavers<br />
(A Moment of Science)<br />
Happy New Year!<br />
Directions in Sound Page 19
January 2004<br />
5 AM<br />
6<br />
7<br />
8<br />
9<br />
10<br />
11<br />
Noon<br />
1 PM<br />
2<br />
3<br />
4<br />
5<br />
6<br />
7<br />
8<br />
9<br />
10<br />
11<br />
Mid.<br />
1 AM<br />
2<br />
<strong>Sunday</strong> Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday<br />
OVERNIGHT<br />
CLASSICAL<br />
MUSIC<br />
WEEKEND EDITION<br />
with Liane Hansen<br />
THIS AMERICAN<br />
LIFE<br />
LIVING ON EARTH<br />
CLASSICAL MUSIC<br />
SAINT PAUL<br />
SUNDAY<br />
SCHICKELE<br />
MIX<br />
BROADWAY<br />
REVISITED<br />
WEEKEND RADIO<br />
with Robert Conrad<br />
THE SAVVY<br />
TRAVELER<br />
ALL THINGS<br />
CONSIDERED<br />
SOUND<br />
MEDICINE<br />
PROFILES<br />
SPECIALS<br />
see detailed listings<br />
MUSIC FROM THE<br />
HEARTS OF SPACE<br />
CLASSICAL MUSIC<br />
LIVE! AT THE<br />
CONCERTGEBOUW<br />
PIPEDREAMS<br />
LATE NIGHT MUSIC<br />
LATE NIGHT MUSIC<br />
NPR’S MORNING EDITION with Bob Edwards<br />
FROM THE TOP<br />
CLASSICAL MUSIC with George Walker<br />
RADIO READER with Dick Estell: The Turtle Warrior by Mary Relindes Ellis<br />
FRESH AIR with Terry Gross<br />
NOON EDITION<br />
Live Call-in<br />
PERFORMANCE TODAY<br />
ADVENTURES IN GOOD MUSIC with Karl Haas<br />
CLASSICAL MUSIC with George Walker<br />
ETHER<br />
GAME<br />
THE<br />
VOCAL SCENE<br />
BBC WORLD SERVICE<br />
JUST YOU AND ME with Joe Bourne<br />
NPR’S ALL THINGS CONSIDERED<br />
MARKETPLACE<br />
EVENING CLASSICAL MUSIC<br />
PITTSBURGH<br />
SYMPHONY<br />
ORCHESTRA<br />
LATE NIGHT<br />
MUSIC<br />
CLASSICAL MUSIC OVERNIGHT<br />
CENTER STAGE<br />
FROM WOLF TRAP<br />
HARMONIA<br />
INDIANAPOLIS<br />
SYMPHONY ORCH.<br />
FRESH AIR<br />
Marian McPartland’s<br />
PIANO JAZZ<br />
THE BIG BANDS<br />
with Joe Bourne<br />
AFTERGLOW<br />
with<br />
Dick Bishop<br />
OVERNIGHT<br />
CLASSICAL<br />
MUSIC<br />
WEEKEND EDITION<br />
with Scott Simon<br />
CAR TALK<br />
SAYS YOU!<br />
TALKING HISTORY<br />
CLASSICAL MUSIC<br />
METROPOLITAN<br />
OPERA<br />
1-3 Il Barbieri di Siviglia<br />
1-10 Werther<br />
1-17 The Merry Widow<br />
1-24 Madama Butterfly<br />
1-31 Boris Godunov<br />
ALL THINGS<br />
CONSIDERED<br />
Garrison<br />
Keillor’s<br />
A PRAIRIE HOME<br />
COMPANION<br />
FOLK<br />
SAMPLER<br />
THE THISTLE &<br />
SHAMROCK<br />
AFROPOP<br />
WORLDWIDE<br />
PORTRAITS<br />
IN BLUE<br />
WORLDWIDE<br />
JAZZ<br />
Check Saturday, <strong>Sunday</strong>, Weekday and detailed listings concerning air times for A MOMENT OF SCIENCE ® , ASK THE MAYOR, STAR DATE, SPEAK YOUR MIND!,<br />
THE POETS WEAVE, EARTHNOTE, HOMETOWN, MARKETPLACE, NPR NEWS, BBC NEWS, INDIANA BUSINESS NEWS, WEATHER NOTEBOOK, and THE WRITER’S<br />
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6<br />
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<strong>Indiana</strong> <strong>University</strong><br />
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