
January 2006 Articles
Worlds of Difference
These four documentaries explore the effects of global change on
local cultures worldwide. Hosted by journalist Maria Hinojosa, these
stories bring you into the homes and communities of people facing
critical decisions about their changing ways of life.
Choosing a Path
Sunday, January 8, 8 p.m.
For millennia, we depended largely on the circumstances of our
birth. Today we're exposed to nearly endless cultural options, and
identity is increasingly a matter of choice. The stories this hour
look at people and cultures at moments of decision about the path
to the future. Featured are a Roma couple in Hungary; the Maasai
people of Kenya; Hawaiian drug addicts; the Buddhist kingdom of
Bhutan; and a grassroots movement in Sri Lanka built on the dream
of an alternate road to happiness.
Finding a Voice
Sunday, January 15, 8 p.m.
More than half the languages spoken around the world today will
be gone before the century is over. What does that mean for the
people who speak them? What does that mean for the rest of us? This
hour explores the connections between language and identity at a
time of dizzying linguistic and cultural change. Stories look at
efforts to revive Ladino and Welsh; at contemporary musicians performing
in Provençal and Maori; and at an attempt to translate the
Bible into an indigenous language in Mexico.
A Home in the World
Sunday, January 22, 8 p.m.
As human beings become more mobile, the concept of home is changing
dramatically. Suddenly we can be connected without being rooted.
But real places remain important, both for individuals and for groups.
The stories this hour look at the complex connections between identity
and place-between who we are and where we live. Features come from
a boomtown in Ireland, an island off the coast of Chile, and Palestinian
refugee camps in the West Bank and Lebanon.
The Spirit Calls
Sunday, January 29, 8 p.m.
Since the 18th century, people have been predicting that the end
was near for organized religion. But religion seems to be getting
stronger-and the forces that were once thought to spell its doom
may be fueling its revival. Featured this hour are a French family
that is reconsidering its Jewish identity; intellectual pagans and
Orthodox rockers in Greece; Evangelicals and Buddhists in Korea;
and veterans of both sides of an ambitious Mormon missionary program
for the Navajo.
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Vienna Philharmonic New Year's Concert
Sunday, January 1, 8 p.m.
WFIU takes you to the Golden Hall of the Musikverein in Vienna
for the most popular classical music concert in the world: the Vienna
Philharmonic New Year's Day concert, this year conducted by Mariss
Jansons. Korva Coleman hosts.
The Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra's January 1st concert is routinely
seen by more than one billion television viewers in 46 countries,
but actually getting inside the magnificent Musikverein is no small
feat. The orchestra accepts ticket requests on one day only: the
first business day after January 1 of the previous year, and only
by mail or telegram. The lucky few will see a world-famous conductor
(rotated yearly) take the Philharmonic through some of the world's
most beloved music. As a WFIU listener, however, you will be able
to hear the concert in the comfort in your home or car.
It has long been a Philharmonic tradition at the New Year to present
a program consisting of the lively and at the same time nostalgic
music from the vast repertoire of the Johann Strauss family and
its contemporaries. Originating during a dark period of Austria's
history, these concerts were initially conceived for a local audience
as a reminder of better times and a source of hope for the future.
Today people throughout the world are similarly encouraged by the
light-hearted yet subtly profound character of this music, and draw
joy and optimism for the New Year ahead.
The Philharmonic strives to provide musically definitive interpretations
of the masterworks of this genre, and, as musical ambassadors of
Austria, to send people all over the world a New Year's greeting
in the spirit of friendship and peace.
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"Hello, World!"
Part I, Sunday, January 8, 9 p.m.
Part II, Sunday, January 15, 9 p.m.
What do popular magazines reveal about the culture of the people
who read them? Britain's Hello indulges the nation's obsession with
the royal family, soap stars, and American celebrities. Editors
of Nigeria's Ovation magazine don't think twice about featuring
a "Jet Set Pastor" displaying his mansion or a convicted
criminal throwing a lavish birthday party for his wife.
In this special from The Changing World, Zina Saro-Wiwa puts the
upwardly mobile scene under the microscope by reading between the
lines of glossy society magazines from around the world, including
Hello, Hola, and Oh La!
The program follows an edition as it is being made, revealing how
the parade of marriages, parties and "at homes" are put
together for the print run. Saro-Wiwa delves into the glitz and
glamour with interviews with editors, contributors, and readers
who explore their ideas and expectations. She talks with them about
class, extremes of wealth and poverty, global image, and about how
the developing world is seen and sees itself.
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Csárdás: The Tango
of the East
Sunday, January 22, 9 p.m.
How do Eastern European folk melodies inspire composers to write
classical masterpieces? Angel Gil-Ordoñez and Joseph Horowitz
of the Post-Classical Ensemble are your guides as they explore this
musical transformation, presenting a concert of genuine folk music
that has been absorbed into classical works.
Before European composers were exposed to such influences as Indian
ragas and Balinese gamelan, they turned to the nearby East-Hungary,
Romania and Slovakia-for exotic tone colors. To illustrate this
link between classical and folk forms, this program places pieces
by Bartók, Liszt, Schubert and Brahms next to the sort of
traditional melodies that inspired them.
The Gázsa Hungarian Folk Music Band of Budapest recreates
electrifying Hungarian gypsy dances and earthy peasant songs as
heard in Vienna and rural Transylvania a century ago. Celebrated
pianist Alexander Shtarkman makes a rare American appearance. The
concert, recorded at Georgetown University's Gaston Hall, includes
Hungarian dances and rhapsodies, and Romanian dances by Brahms,
Liszt, and Bartok, plus Bartok's harrowing Divertimento for String
Orchestra.
The goal of the Post-Classical Ensemble is to break with the tradition
idea of a classical music orchestra, with its implied notion of
a high-culture remote from popular art. The Washington, D.C.-based
orchestra regularly incorporates folksong, dance, film, poetry and
commentary in order to serve existing audiences hungry for deeper
engagement, and to cultivate adventurous new listeners.
The Gázsa Hungarian Folk Music Band of Budapest comprises
Hungarian musicians who have spent years studying and learning authentic
village music from famous masters of folk music in remote rural
areas.
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The
Hula Lesson
Sunday, January 29, 9 p.m.
Hula is more than girls dancing with coconut bras and grass skirts
with strains of Don Ho in the background. In fact, hula is a complete
expression of a traditional culture, using dancing and singing
for teaching social lessons and for recounting history. Studying
hula means studying art, dance, literature and music; philosophy,
science and politics.
"The Hula Lesson" visits teacher Roselle Bailey in Hawaii
as she works with her ethnically diverse students in interpreting
the songs and dances that they are learning for a hula performance
in Washington, D.C.
We listen as they work through the various levels of meaning of
the text during their practice sessions. Throughout, we hear Bailey
and her students express their thoughts about what it means to
perpetuate a traditional culture in a multi-cultural world. They
also talk frankly about their lives and their feelings about how
they try to carry out the basic lessons of humanity that they
have learned by studying hula.
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Artist of the Month: Alexander Kerr
by Adam P. Schweigert
In January, WFIU celebrates the recent appointment of violinist
Alexander Kerr to the faculty of the Indiana University Jacobs School
of Music by featuring several of Mr. Kerr's recent recordings.
At the age of 35, Kerr will become the youngest member of IU's string
faculty, and has already amassed a considerable orchestral and solo
career. In joining the ranks at IU, Kerr leaves his present post
as concertmaster of the Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra, a position
he has held for nearly ten years. He has appeared as a soloist with
orchestras throughout Europe and the United States while, as a chamber
musician, collaborating with such notable names as IU alums Joshua
Bell and Edgar Meyer. Most recently he mounted a chamber music tour
of Europe with violinist Sarah Chang and members of the Berlin Philharmonic.
This month on WFIU we'll celebrate Alexander Kerr the soloist, the
concertmaster, and the chamber musician. On Wednesday, January 4th
at 7:07 p.m. Kerr joins the Ebony Band and director Werner Herbers
for Kurt Weill's Concerto for Violin and Wind Instruments.
Saturday, January 14th at 12:09 p.m., we'll broadcast the Piano
Quintet, Op.81 of Antonín Dvo?ák in a performance
by violinists Sarah Chang and Alexander Kerr, violist Wolfram Christ,
cellist Georg Faust, and pianist Leif Ove Andsnes. The following
week we feature Kerr as violin soloist with the Royal Concertgebouw
Orchestra under the direction of Riccardo Chailly in two excerpts
from film music by Dmitri Shostakovich.
On Thursday, January 19th at 7:07 p.m. we'll hear excerpts from
The Counterplan, and then the following Sunday, January 22nd at
11:25, tune in to hear Kerr perform a romance from The Gadfly. And
finally, on Monday, January 31st at 7:07 p.m. Kerr is joined by
pianist Sepp Grotenhuis in a performance of the Violin Sonata in
f-sharp minor, Op. 20 by Dutch composer Julius Röntgen.
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Cantabile debuts on WFIU
Cantabile, a new series of vocal music programs produced in the
studios of WFIU, begins on Tuesday, January 3rd. The five-part series
will be heard on 10:12 p.m. following local news and Stardate.
According to host and producer Robert Samels, Cantabile will take
a fresh approach to the human voice, weaving a mix of lieder, choral
singing, and opera selections to draw connections across the centuries.
Programs will focus on specific composers, singers and traditions,
and will include interviews and commentary by local figures in the
arts. Special segments at the end of each episode will go behind
the curtain to examine rarely-seen aspects of singing and performing.
Cantabile's host Robert Samels is a bass-baritone who has appeared
in many IU opera productions, and most recently starred as Marco
in the collegiate premiere of William Bolcom's A View from the Bridge.
Equally at home in the oratorio repertoire, he has been heard as
a featured soloist in Haydn's The Creation and Berlioz' The Damnation
of Faust. Currently in the doctoral program at Indiana University,
he is a student of Costanza Cuccaro. He is also an associate instructor
of Music Theory at IU, and teaches ear training and sight singing
to over 200 students a year.
Samuels is also a composer, having written over 35 compositions
for a variety of media, including a full-length oratorio, incidental
music for a play, and three orchestral works performed by the Cleveland
Chamber Symphony.
Join us in January for this exciting new blend of all things vocal!
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January Community Events
WFIU is the media sponsor for the following events. Find more information
on this and other activities on the calendar page of our Web site:
www.wfiu.indiana.edu.
Espen Jenson and Friends
Saturday, January 28, 8:00 p.m.
John Waldron Arts Center
Corner of Walnut and 4th Streets
Bloomington
812-334-3100
In a welcome return performance, classical guitarist Espen Jensen
and a few of his guitarist friends will provide an evening of engaging
American, Spanish and Latin American musical compositions. Produced
by the Bloomington Classical Guitar Society. Tickets available in
advance or at the door prior to the performance.
Martin Luther King Birthday Celebration
Monday, January 16th
"A Day On, Not a Day Off" is the City of Bloomington's
Martin Luther King volunteer initiative. The City invites volunteers
to get involved by helping local nonprofit organizations that have
created service projects. Volunteers and organizations who participate
in "A Day On, Not a Day Off" will be honored at the King
Holiday Celebration at the Buskirk-Chumley Theatre. Information
on how to get involved is available on the City of Bloomington's
Web site: www.bloomington.in.gov, or by calling 812-349-3471.
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January Jazz Highlights
by David Brent Johnson
The New Year's here, and we've made our resolution in the WFIU
jazz department-not just to continue to provide you with jazz programming
every weekday afternoon and on Friday and Saturday nights, but to
make that jazz programming better than ever before. We're also continuing
to build and improve our program Web sites for Just You and Me (www.justyouandme.indiana.edu),
Night Lights (www.nightlights.indiana.edu) and The Big Bands (www.thebigbands.indiana.edu)
where you can listen to archived programs, view playlists, find
links to Indiana jazz artists and various jazz online resources,
and check out jazz event calendars for southern and central Indiana.
As we usher in 2006, Just You and Me and Afterglow host Joe Bourne
will be marking notable birthdays and anniversaries throughout the
month, including trumpeter Wild Bill Davison (100), trumpeter Roy
Eldridge (95), pianist Jay McShann (90), trombonist and arranger
Melba Liston (80), pianist Horace Parlan (75) and vibraphonist Bobby
Hutcherson (65). Another January jazz baby and a composer of many
jazz standards, Benny Golson, will be a guest on Marion McPartland's
Piano Jazz, broadcast on WFIU every Friday evening at 8.
Other guests of Marion's this month include singer-pianist Nellie
Lutcher, vocalist Dena Derose, and Johnny Costa (yes, of Mr. Rogers'
Neighborhood fame). Piano Jazz is followed on Fridays by The Big
Bands at 9, with programs in January devoted to the 1940s orchestra
of Freddie Slack (featuring many vocals by Ella Mae Morse and songwriter
Johnny Mercer), 1960s movie themes (including "The Apartment,"
"Days of Wine and Roses," and more), and the neglected
late-1940s work of the Tommy Dorsey big band, with many arrangements
by a young Bill Finegan.
If you're looking for some music to stay warm with on a late Saturday
evening, try our "Java Jive: Coffee Songs" edition of
Night Lights on January 6, including odes to the black brew from
Jeri Southern, Sonny Criss, Carmen McRae, and many others. On January
14, Night Lights offers a tribute to Martin Luther King Jr. in a
program titled "Dear Martin," featuring music from artists
such as Oliver Nelson, Nina Simone, and Duke Ellington. Other Night
Lights programs this month focus on pianist Ran Blake and the 1970s
recordings of progressive hardbop trumpeter Charles Tolliver.
Ring out the old, ring in the new-just stay tuned to WFIU!
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New Releases for
January
Selected by Adam P. Schweigert
Barrière: Sonatas for Cello and Bass Continuo (Alpha 015)
Bruno Cocset, violoncello, basse du violon, ténor de violoncello;
Les Basses Reunies
" Book II, Sonata No. 6: Saturday, January 7th at 12:09 p.m.
" Book III, Sonata No. 2: Sunday, January 8th at 11:25 a.m.
" Book IV, Sonata No. 4: Thursday, January 12th at 7:07 p.m.
" Book II, Sonata No. 3: Wednesday, January 18th at 10:12 p.m.
" Book I, Sonata No. 1: Monday, January 23rd at 7:07 p.m.
" Book III, Sonata No. 4: Tuesday, January 31st at 11:13 p.m.
Cellist Bruno Cocset turns in virtuosic performances on an array
of period instruments in this 2000 Alpha Records release of six
sonatas by one of the greatest cellists of the French High Baroque.
Mozart: Piano Concertos 6, 15, and 27 (Warner Classics: 2564 62259-2)
Pierre Laurent Aimard, p. and dir./Chamber Orchestra of Europe
" Piano Concerto No. 6 in B-flat, K.238 on Thursday, January
5th at 7:07 p.m.
" Piano Concerto No. 27 in B-flat, K.595 on Wednesday, January
18th at 10:12 p.m.
" Piano Concerto No. 15 in B-flat, K.450 on Saturday, January
21st at 12:09 p.m.
Mozart associated the key of B-flat major with "happiness of
the most uncomplicated kind." Pianist Pierre Laurent Aimard
and the Chamber Orchestra of Europe find irrepressible joy in these
works written at the height of Mozart's career.
Nielsen: Orchestral Works (MSR Classics: MS1150)
Members of the Jutland Opera Chorus; Lance Friedel/Aarhus Sym. Orch.
" Rhapsodic Overture - An Imaginary Journey to the Faroe Islands,
FS 123:
Monday, January 2nd at 7:07 p.m.
" Pan and Syrinx, Op. 49, FS 87 on Saturday. January 14th at
12:09 p.m.
" Suite from the incidental music to "Aladdin," FS
89
Wednesday, January 25th at 10:12 p.m.
From MSR classics comes a notable new disc of some lesser known
orchestral works by the Danish late romantic Carl Nielsen. The Aarhus
Symphony Orchestra does its countryman proud with finely polished
performances under American conductor Lance Friedel.
Górecki: Symphony No.3, Canticum graduum (Naïve Classics:
V5019)
Ingrid Perruche, s.; Alain Altinoglu/Sinfonia Varsovia
" Canticum graduum, Op. 27 on Sunday, January 1st at 11:08
p.m.
" Symphony No. 3, Op. 36 "Symphony of Sorrowful Songs"
Saturday, January 28 at 12:09 p.m.
Sinfonia Varsovia presents their rendition of Gorecki's emotional
tribute to victims of the Holocaust, the "Symphony of Sorrowful
Songs." Soprano Ingrid Perruche performs the heart-rending
vocal solos. Be sure to join us for this new recording of what is
likely to be remembered as one of the hallmark works of the late
20th century.
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New
Year's Eve A Prairie Home Companion
We interrupt the January program guide for this late breaking good
news bulletin!
WFIU presents a live broadcast of a special New Year's Eve edition
of A Prairie Home Companion live from the Fitzgerald Theater on
December 31st from 11 p.m. to 2 a.m. It will be a hopeful, resolute,
and musical New Year's Eve party with guests jazz pianist Butch
Thompson, trumpetist Duke Heitger, Chicago harmonica player Howard
Levy, Prudence Johnson, Jearlyn Steele, the Guy's All-Star Shoe
Band, and former United States Poet Laureate Billy Collins.
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Profiles
Sundays at 7 p.m.
January 1 - Alan Kostelecky
In this centennial year of Albert Einstein's publication of
his paper on the special theory of relativity, Sarah Stevens speaks
with theoretical physicist Alan Kostelecky. He is one of the major
contributors to the continuing refinement of Einstein's ideas and
to our understanding of the physical universe. Trained at Yale,
he is currently professor in the Physics dept at IU. His work is
at the frontier of unification theory-the attempt to combine all
the known particles and forces into a single consistent unified
description of nature. Experiments based on his theories have produced
some of the most sensitive tests of relativity to date.
January 8 - Matt Haimovitz
Musical maverick Matt Haimovitz is a classically trained cellist
who is known for bringing classical music to the people. The 35-year-old
musician plays in bars, coffeehouses, and in punk rock clubs (such
as New York's notorious CBGBs) throughout the country. He is perhaps
best known for his cello arrangement of Jimi Hendrix's electric
guitar take on "The Star-Spangled Banner." His goal is
to use music to bring people together, giving listeners a fresh
appreciation of old music, while championing the work of contemporary
composers. George Walker interviewed Haimovitz prior to his appearance
in Bloomington at Second Story.
January 15 - Larry David
Known for his off-kilter sensibility, Larry David was the co-creator
of the sitcom "Seinfeld." Prior to that, the Brooklyn
native had spent years as a stand-up comedian known for walking
off the stage if he didn't like the audience. He has been a staff
writer for "Saturday Night Live" and an actor and writer
for "Fridays," and has appeared in several movies. He
writes and stars in "Curb Your Enthusiasm," a verité-style
comedy series in which the actors improvise their dialogue. From
City Arts & Lectures.
January 22 - Third House
This hour-long question-and-answer session with legislators from
the Indiana General Assembly provides insight into current legislative
activities. The featured legislators represent most of the WFIU
listening area and answer questions from local residents. Produced
in the studios of WTIU, Third House is simulcast live on that station.
If you have any questions that you would like to submit, send them
in advance to wtiu@indiana.edu or call 855-2102 or 800-553-7893.
January 29 - Josh Kornbluth
In his autobiographical monologues, including "Ben Franklin:
Unplugged," and "Haiku Tunnel," (now a feature film),
Josh Kornbluth explores the eccentric characters of his life. With
sharp, honest, and surprisingly heartfelt comedic turns, he paints
unforgettable portraits of an unconventional world. Raised in New
York City by communist parents, Kornbluth drew on his personal and
family history for his off-Broadway hit "Red Diaper Baby."
In this City Arts & Lectures program, Kornbluth performs excerpts
from his monologue "The Mathematics of Change" in which
he describes his turn as a Princeton math major and his ill-fated
attempt to fulfill his father's prophecy to be "the greatest
mathematician who has ever lived."
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December Jazz Highlights
by David Brent Johnson
December is a favorite time of the year around the WFIU jazz department.
We're always grateful for all the support we've received throughout
the November fund drive, and, in addition to our usual musical fare,
we look forward to offering you holiday music both old and new.
December also brings us the anniversary of jazz director Joe Bourne's
arrival at WFIU. This month Joe begins his twenty-second year as
the host of our weekday jazz program Just You and Me. You can also
hear Joe Friday nights at 10:10 on Afterglow. Be sure to tune in
for Joe's traditional playing of Louis Armstrong's "The Night
Before Christmas" on the Friday, December 23rd edition of Afterglow.
Along with other holiday favorites, Joe will be featuring a new
release from Diana Krall, Christmas Songs, on which the star singer
and pianist is backed by the Clayton-Hamilton Orchestra. That ensemble
includes drummer Jeff Hamilton and bassist Bob Hurst, who both studied
with David Baker at Indiana University once upon a time.
Speaking of David Baker, you can hear a new CD of David's compositions
performed by Indiana's own Buselli Wallarab Orchestra on the Friday,
December 2nd edition of The Big Bands. Other Big Bands programs
in December will feature the film appearance music of Tommy and
Jimmy Dorsey, a near-Christmas Eve special ("Soon It Will Be
Christmas Day"), and "Santa's Big-Band Bag," a December
9th program featuring CD gift recommendations for the swing lover
on your holiday shopping list. All of these shows can be heard at
any time after the Monday following broadcast on www.thebigbands.indiana.edu.
Another staple of our Friday-night jazz lineup is Marion McPartland's
Piano Jazz. This month Marion's guests include trumpeter Jon Faddis,
pianist Andrew Hill, saxophonist Jerry Dodgion, singer-songwriter
Susan Werner, and pianist Ruth Laredo. Scientists are currently
exploring better ways of staying warm on a December Friday night
than staying indoors and listening to Piano Jazz on WFIU, but they
have yet to yield positive results.
Weekend jazz listeners can also catch a special Yuletide edition
of Marion's Piano Jazz on Sunday, December 18th at 9 p.m., with
special guests that include singer Karrin Allyson, vibraphonist
Stefon Harris, and Nashville, Indiana resident Lynne Arriale on
piano. Our late Saturday evening program Night Lights will offer
its own observation of the holidays with the Christmas Eve broadcast
"The Night Before Christmas" and the December 31st "Slim's
Jam: New Year's Eve Party," featuring live music from Slim
Gaillard and Harry the Hipster Gibson, as well as recordings from
June Christy and spoken word performances by Ken Nordine. Earlier
December broadcasts will focus on three artists who are emerging,
in one way or another, from obscurity: "Another Holiday,"
about the 1950s recordings of West Coast jazz singer Johnny Holiday;
"Now Found," about the return of legendary bassist Henry
Grimes, who vanished from the jazz world for more than thirty years
(this program includes an interview I did with Grimes when he recently
visited WFIU), and "Not Afraid to Live," about Frank Hewitt,
a pianist with roots in the bop era who died at the age of 66 in
2002 just before the release of his first CD. These programs can
also be heard on our website at www.nightlights.indiana.edu.
Many thanks again for the support you showed for jazz and public
radio during our recent fund-drive. Through the years we hope you'll
be together here with us on WFIU . . . happy holidays.
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New
Releases for December
By: Adam P. Schweigert
In December WFIU is thrilled to feature four noteworthy new releases.
On Thursday, December 1st at 7:06 p.m., join us for Johannes Brahms'
Second Violin Sonata in A Major, Op. 100 in a performance by violinist
Renaud Capuçon and pianist Nicholas Angelich from a new release
of the complete violin sonatas of Johannes Brahms on the Virgin
Classics label. Also from that disc on Thursday, December 15th also
at 7:06 p.m. tune in for Brahms' First Violin Sonata in G Major,
Op. 78 and on Wednesday, December 28th at 10:12 p.m. we'll conclude
with the Sonata No. 3 in D minor, Op. 108.
Next, we have a new group of spirited performances of Bach's Brandenburg
Concertos from the Naïve Classics label played by the period
instrument ensemble Concerto Italiano and led from the harpsichord
by their music director Rinaldo Alessandri. We begin with the Concerto
No. 2 in F Major, BWV 1047 on Saturday, December 3rd at 12:09 p.m.
and will also hear the Concerto No. 4 in G major, BWV 1049 on Wednesday,
December 14th at 10:12 p.m., the Concerto No. 1 in F major, BWV
1046 the following week on Wednesday, December 21st, also at 10:12
p.m., and the Concerto No. 3 in G major, BWV 1048 on Wednesday,
December 18th at 7:06 p.m.
Also, this month we have a new release on EMI Classics of the Berlin
Philharmonic under the direction of Simon Rattle in a performance
of Éclairs sur l'Au-Delà . . . [Illuminations of the
Beyond . . .] by French 20th century master Olivier Messiaen. We'll
hear that work on Wednesday, December 7th during late night classical
music at 10:12 p.m.
And finally, we have a real treat, a new audiophile quality recording
of the rarely heard first two symphonies of Camille Saint-Saëns
in a new release from Pentatone Classics. The Radio Symphony Orchestra
of Frankfurt performs under the direction of Eliahu Inbal in these
recently remastered performances dating back to 1975. We'll hear
the First Symphony in E-flat, Op. 2 on Wednesday, December 14th
at 10:12 p.m. and then the following week, on Wednesday, December
21st at 7:06 p.m. join us for the Second Symphony in A minor, Op.
55.
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Profiles
Sundays at 7 p.m.
December 4 - Jill Taylor
Dr. Jill Bolte Taylor is a neuroscientist and neuroanatomist specializing
in the postmortem examination of the cerebral cortex of the human
brain. She spent seven years performing brain research at Harvard
Medical School in the Departments of Neuroscience and Psychiatry
and then, at the age of 37, she had a rare form of stroke that forced
her to relearn basic motor and mental skills. She has a sibling
diagnosed with schizophrenia and served for three years on the National
Board of Directors of the National Alliance for the Mentally Ill.
She writes and performs her own songs promoting knowledge about
the brain and brain donation, bringing uplifting messages about
the brain to families, patients, and professionals. She spoke with
Sarah Stevens. (repeat)
December 11 - Alasdair Hutton
Alasdair Hutton worked as a radio journalist for radio in Australia,
as a print journalist for The Age newspaper in Melbourne, and then
as an announcer for the BBC in his native Scotland. He was a volunteer
paratrooper for 32 years with the British Army, and later swapped
his parachute for a longbow as a Member of the Queen's Body Guard
for Scotland, which accompanies the Queen on her public ceremonial
duties in Scotland. He left broadcasting to go into politics and
was a member of the European Parliament for ten years. He is now
narrator of the Edinburgh Military Tattoo and Convenor of the Scottish
Borders Council. Patrick O'Meara is the host. (repeat)
December 18 - Michael Steinberg
Michael Steinberg is a musicologist, teacher, chamber music coach,
narrator, and was music critic of The Boston Globe for twelve years.
He is the program annotator of the San Francisco Symphony and the
New York Philharmonic and is considered the premier writer of program
notes for symphony orchestra concerts. His books-"The Symphony,"
"The Concerto" and "Choral Masterworks"-have
been praised for their delightful blend of biography, musical analysis
and humor. Peter Jacobi is the host. (repeat)
December 25 - Tom Wolfe
As an astute novelist, hilarious and often satirical social historian,
and a razor-sharp cultural critic, Tom Wolfe has been a chronicler
of American culture for over thirty-five years. His decade-defining
books include "The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test" and "The
Right Stuff." His first novel, "The Bonfire of the Vanities,"
captured the materialism and social isolation of Wall Street and
the increasingly complex racial politics of urban American life
in the 1980s. In his latest novel, "I Am Charlotte Simmons,"
Wolfe again peers into America's underbelly, this time uncovering
the excesses of modern college life. He spoke with Michael Lewis
for City Arts and Lectures. (repeat)
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December Jazz Highlights
by David Brent Johnson
December is a favorite time of the year around the WFIU jazz department.
We're always grateful for all the support we've received throughout
the November fund drive, and, in addition to our usual musical fare,
we look forward to offering you holiday music both old and new.
December also brings us the anniversary of jazz director Joe Bourne's
arrival at WFIU. This month Joe begins his twenty-second year as
the host of our weekday jazz program Just You and Me. You can also
hear Joe Friday nights at 10:10 on Afterglow. Be sure to tune in
for Joe's traditional playing of Louis Armstrong's "The Night
Before Christmas" on the Friday, December 23rd edition of Afterglow.
Along with other holiday favorites, Joe will be featuring a new
release from Diana Krall, Christmas Songs, on which the star singer
and pianist is backed by the Clayton-Hamilton Orchestra. That ensemble
includes drummer Jeff Hamilton and bassist Bob Hurst, who both studied
with David Baker at Indiana University once upon a time.
Speaking of David Baker, you can hear a new CD of David's compositions
performed by Indiana's own Buselli Wallarab Orchestra on the Friday,
December 2nd edition of The Big Bands. Other Big Bands programs
in December will feature the film appearance music of Tommy and
Jimmy Dorsey, a near-Christmas Eve special ("Soon It Will Be
Christmas Day"), and "Santa's Big-Band Bag," a December
9th program featuring CD gift recommendations for the swing lover
on your holiday shopping list. All of these shows can be heard at
any time after the Monday following broadcast on www.thebigbands.indiana.edu.
Another staple of our Friday-night jazz lineup is Marion McPartland's
Piano Jazz. This month Marion's guests include trumpeter Jon Faddis,
pianist Andrew Hill, saxophonist Jerry Dodgion, singer-songwriter
Susan Werner, and pianist Ruth Laredo. Scientists are currently
exploring better ways of staying warm on a December Friday night
than staying indoors and listening to Piano Jazz on WFIU, but they
have yet to yield positive results.
Weekend jazz listeners can also catch a special Yuletide edition
of Marion's Piano Jazz on Sunday, December 18th at 9 p.m., with
special guests that include singer Karrin Allyson, vibraphonist
Stefon Harris, and Nashville, Indiana resident Lynne Arriale on
piano. Our late Saturday evening program Night Lights will offer
its own observation of the holidays with the Christmas Eve broadcast
"The Night Before Christmas" and the December 31st "Slim's
Jam: New Year's Eve Party," featuring live music from Slim
Gaillard and Harry the Hipster Gibson, as well as recordings from
June Christy and spoken word performances by Ken Nordine. Earlier
December broadcasts will focus on three artists who are emerging,
in one way or another, from obscurity: "Another Holiday,"
about the 1950s recordings of West Coast jazz singer Johnny Holiday;
"Now Found," about the return of legendary bassist Henry
Grimes, who vanished from the jazz world for more than thirty years
(this program includes an interview I did with Grimes when he recently
visited WFIU), and "Not Afraid to Live," about Frank Hewitt,
a pianist with roots in the bop era who died at the age of 66 in
2002 just before the release of his first CD. These programs can
also be heard on our website at www.nightlights.indiana.edu.
Many thanks again for the support you showed for jazz and public
radio during our recent fund-drive. Through the years we hope you'll
be together here with us on WFIU . . . happy holidays.
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New
Releases for December
By: Adam P. Schweigert
In December WFIU is thrilled to feature four noteworthy new releases.
On Thursday, December 1st at 7:06 p.m., join us for Johannes Brahms'
Second Violin Sonata in A Major, Op. 100 in a performance by violinist
Renaud Capuçon and pianist Nicholas Angelich from a new release
of the complete violin sonatas of Johannes Brahms on the Virgin
Classics label. Also from that disc on Thursday, December 15th also
at 7:06 p.m. tune in for Brahms' First Violin Sonata in G Major,
Op. 78 and on Wednesday, December 28th at 10:12 p.m. we'll conclude
with the Sonata No. 3 in D minor, Op. 108.
Next, we have a new group of spirited performances of Bach's Brandenburg
Concertos from the Naïve Classics label played by the period
instrument ensemble Concerto Italiano and led from the harpsichord
by their music director Rinaldo Alessandri. We begin with the Concerto
No. 2 in F Major, BWV 1047 on Saturday, December 3rd at 12:09 p.m.
and will also hear the Concerto No. 4 in G major, BWV 1049 on Wednesday,
December 14th at 10:12 p.m., the Concerto No. 1 in F major, BWV
1046 the following week on Wednesday, December 21st, also at 10:12
p.m., and the Concerto No. 3 in G major, BWV 1048 on Wednesday,
December 18th at 7:06 p.m.
Also, this month we have a new release on EMI Classics of the Berlin
Philharmonic under the direction of Simon Rattle in a performance
of Éclairs sur l'Au-Delà . . . [Illuminations of the
Beyond . . .] by French 20th century master Olivier Messiaen. We'll
hear that work on Wednesday, December 7th during late night classical
music at 10:12 p.m.
And finally, we have a real treat, a new audiophile quality recording
of the rarely heard first two symphonies of Camille Saint-Saëns
in a new release from Pentatone Classics. The Radio Symphony Orchestra
of Frankfurt performs under the direction of Eliahu Inbal in these
recently remastered performances dating back to 1975. We'll hear
the First Symphony in E-flat, Op. 2 on Wednesday, December 14th
at 10:12 p.m. and then the following week, on Wednesday, December
21st at 7:06 p.m. join us for the Second Symphony in A minor, Op.
55.
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Profiles
Sundays at 7 p.m.
December 4 - Jill Taylor
Dr. Jill Bolte Taylor is a neuroscientist and neuroanatomist specializing
in the postmortem examination of the cerebral cortex of the human
brain. She spent seven years performing brain research at Harvard
Medical School in the Departments of Neuroscience and Psychiatry
and then, at the age of 37, she had a rare form of stroke that forced
her to relearn basic motor and mental skills. She has a sibling
diagnosed with schizophrenia and served for three years on the National
Board of Directors of the National Alliance for the Mentally Ill.
She writes and performs her own songs promoting knowledge about
the brain and brain donation, bringing uplifting messages about
the brain to families, patients, and professionals. She spoke with
Sarah Stevens. (repeat)
December 11 - Alasdair Hutton
Alasdair Hutton worked as a radio journalist for radio in Australia,
as a print journalist for The Age newspaper in Melbourne, and then
as an announcer for the BBC in his native Scotland. He was a volunteer
paratrooper for 32 years with the British Army, and later swapped
his parachute for a longbow as a Member of the Queen's Body Guard
for Scotland, which accompanies the Queen on her public ceremonial
duties in Scotland. He left broadcasting to go into politics and
was a member of the European Parliament for ten years. He is now
narrator of the Edinburgh Military Tattoo and Convenor of the Scottish
Borders Council. Patrick O'Meara is the host. (repeat)
December 18 - Michael Steinberg
Michael Steinberg is a musicologist, teacher, chamber music coach,
narrator, and was music critic of The Boston Globe for twelve years.
He is the program annotator of the San Francisco Symphony and the
New York Philharmonic and is considered the premier writer of program
notes for symphony orchestra concerts. His books-"The Symphony,"
"The Concerto" and "Choral Masterworks"-have
been praised for their delightful blend of biography, musical analysis
and humor. Peter Jacobi is the host. (repeat)
December 25 - Tom Wolfe
As an astute novelist, hilarious and often satirical social historian,
and a razor-sharp cultural critic, Tom Wolfe has been a chronicler
of American culture for over thirty-five years. His decade-defining
books include "The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test" and "The
Right Stuff." His first novel, "The Bonfire of the Vanities,"
captured the materialism and social isolation of Wall Street and
the increasingly complex racial politics of urban American life
in the 1980s. In his latest novel, "I Am Charlotte Simmons,"
Wolfe again peers into America's underbelly, this time uncovering
the excesses of modern college life. He spoke with Michael Lewis
for City Arts and Lectures. (repeat)
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The Radio Reader
with Dick Estell
"Golfing with God"
by Roland Merullo
Beginning Monday, January 2
Number of episodes: 18
In a previous life, Herman "Hank" Fins-Winston had been
a golf pro-an excellent teacher of the game who never quite made
it on the circuit. He now resides in a condominium on the 13th fairway
of one of heaven's golf courses. God and his closest companions
play the game often. Jesus never bothers to keep score, Buddha never
takes a practice swing, and Moses doesn't consider it cheating when
he parts the courses' water hazards, yet they all take the sport
very seriously. In heaven, even God replaces His divots.
Hank's afterlife takes an unexpected turn when he is summoned to
help a player whose game is in a slump. To his dismay, his new pupil
is God himself. Or herself., depending on the day. As they play
the most heavenly courses in paradise and back on earth, Hank realizes
that it's he who's learning the lessons-about the fear of failure,
second chances, the connectedness of all living things, and about
our ability to improve ourselves-one stroke at a time.
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Broadcasts
from the IU School of Music
FAURÉ-Piano Trio in d, Op.120; Emile Naoumoff, p.; Federico
Agostini, vln.; Tsuyoshi Tsutsumi, vlc.
Airs: 1/2 at 7 p.m., 1/3 at 10 a.m., 1/6 at 3 p.m.
MUFFAT-FLORILEGIUM PRIMUM: Suite No. 2; Stanley Ritchie/IU Baroque
Orch.
Airs: 1/9 at 7 p.m., 1/10 at 10 a.m., 1/13 at 3 p.m.
BEETHOVEN-Leonore Overture No.3, Op.72a; Paul Biss/IU Phil. Orch.
Airs: 1/16 at 7 p.m., 1/17 at 10 a.m., 1/20 at 3 p.m.
MENDELSSOHN-Rondo Capriccioso in E, Op.14; Edward Auer, p.
Airs: 1/23 at 7 p.m., 1/24 at 10 a.m., 1/27 at 3 p.m.
SHOSTAKOVICH: Prelude and Fugue in e-flat, Op.87, No.14; Edward
Auer, p.
Airs: 1/30 at 7 p.m., 1/31 at 10 a.m., 2/3 at 3 p.m.
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We Couldn't Have Done it Without
You!
Thank you to all the contributors, donors, and volunteers who
helped make the 2005 Fund Drive a success.
Food Donors
We extend our appreciation to the following local businesses, all
of which provided food for our staff and volunteers during the Fund
Drive:
Arby's, South Walnut
Aver's Pizza
Buffalouie's
Bloomington Bagel Company
Bloomington Sandwich Company
Chili's
Chipotle
Crescent Donut Shops
Grazie!
Hardee's, West 3rd Street
Heavenly Ham
Kroger
The Laughing Planet
Mother Bear's Pizza
Olive Garden
Penn Station
Pizza Hut on Winslow Road
Pizza Hut, Franklin Road
Roly Poly
Starbuck's on South Indiana
Subway, Kinser Pike
The Trojan Horse
Placemat Participants
Thanks to the following restaurants who featured the WFIU placemat
during Fund Drive.
Bedford
Hoover's Candy & Eatery
Bloomington
Bobby's Pub
Bobby's Too
Cloverleaf Restaurant
Ladyman's Restaurant
Pammy's Diner
Runcible Spoon
Village Deli
Waffle House
Yogi's Bar and Grille
Ellettsville
Nutmeg House
Mitchell
Joe's Family Restaurant
Volunteers
We extend our sincerest thank you to the following organizations
and individuals who answered the pledge phones during Fund Drive:
Bloomington Early Music Festival
Bloomington Rotary Club
Bloomington Worldwide Friendship
Calamity Jane - the IU Women's Ultimate Frisbee Team
Carla's Wellness Center
Columbus Area Arts Council
Ether Game Staff
Master Gardeners of Monroe County
Walking Women of Brown County
WFIU's Community Advisory Board (Pam Davidson, Charlotte Zietlow,
Mike McGregor, Becky Cape)
Alex Cartwright
Alex Gul
Alexander & Virginia Buchwald
Anne Fraker
Anne Hereford
Pat & Bob Bayer
Barb Randall
Bernard Waldier
Betty Greenwell
Bill Kroll
Bob Brookshire
Bob & Ginny Stockton
Carl Horne
Carla Carson
Carol Campbell
Charles Sprague
Deborah Wilkin
Diane Miller
Dick Bishop
Dorothy Soudakoff
Emilie Murray
Eve Corrigan
Felicia Fellmuth
Fran Weinberg
Frank & Brenda Zody
Gena Asher
Gerald Marker
Ginger Tieman
Jean Person
Jeanie Cox
Janet Rowland
Jennifer Bimbrey
Jenny Noble-Kuchera
Joyce Jordan-Peek
Julia BeBeau
Kelli Weinhaus
Kevin Rudin
Kris Floyd
Laura Ginger
Libby DeVoe
Louise Hillery
Lynn Schwartzberg
Mady England
Marc Castiglione
Margaret Dalle-Ave
Marianne Woodruff
Marie Shakespeare
Marilynn & Derek Burleson
Mark Ronan
Martin Horne
Mary Beth Hannah-Hansen
Mary Beth & Peter Kaczmarczyk
Patrick McAleer
Patrick Medland
Preston Gwinn
Rose Marie Walter
Rupert Wentworth
Sandy Churchill
Sue Dixon
Vera Grubbs
Victor Root
Virginia Metzger
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WFIU
Created and maintained by Michael
Toler
Last updated:
Saturday, December 31, 2005
Copyright 2005, The Trustees of
Indiana
University
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