june 2011 – radio guide

20
Bloomington crime novelist Michael Koryta on Profiles Sunday, June 5, 7 p.m. Also this month: The Promised Land: Reaching for Greatness IQ 2 : Can clean energy drive America’s economic recovery? • Traveling in John Steinbeck’s footsteps Artist of the Month: Menahem Pressler . . . and more! June 2011 W I U wfiu.org

Upload: indiana-public-media

Post on 12-Mar-2016

219 views

Category:

Documents


2 download

DESCRIPTION

Listening Guide for WFIU – Public Radio Serving South Central Indiana

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: June 2011 – Radio Guide

Bloomington crime novelist Michael Koryta

on ProfilesSunday, June 5, 7 p.m.

Also this month:

• The Promised Land: Reaching for Greatness

• IQ2: Can clean energy drive America’s economic recovery?

• Traveling in John Steinbeck’s footsteps

• Artist of the Month: Menahem Pressler

. . . and more!

June2011 W IU

wfiu.org

Page 2: June 2011 – Radio Guide

Page 2 / Directions in Sound / June 2011 Bloomington 103.7 fm • Columbus 100.7 fm • French Lick/West Baden 101.7 fm

Thank You for All the YearsA Letter from Christina Kuzmych

Dear Members,

Twenty-seven years ago I replaced Barbara Vazsonyi as WFIU’s librarian. It was to be a temporary job to help pay the bills while I finished my dissertation and looked for a “real job” teaching at a university. But public radio has a way of enticing those who enter its door, and my plans soon changed. I realized that public radio was the nation’s ideal classroom—a place that continually educates, enriches, and challenges the minds of those who discover it and listen. No tests, no grading papers! At a click of a button a student of public radio could find a world of information and cultural enlightenment. The broadcaster just had to create content and weave it into a magical tapestry of programs. I was hooked and never looked back. In 1984, our biggest challenge was converting WFIU music collection from LPs to CDs and replacing the card catalog with computerized data files. I remember cataloging WFIU’s very first CD. Even back then, WFIU was ambitious and not content to be just a pass-through station broadcasting content from elsewhere. When I arrived, the station was producing and distributing nationally the weekly Music from Indiana series. Soon after, A Moment of Science was created, delighting local listeners while tapping into a national market for Indiana University cultural and intellectual product. A few years later Harmonia debuted, followed by Night Lights and a variety of short modules. Now, downloads of some WFIU’s programs surpass those of stations such as New York’s WNYC. Today’s digital on-demand platforms increasingly drive technology requiring content for both radio and online. WFIU grew into a leader in online content development and distribution—as you can see with a visit to wfiu.org, or Indianapublicmedia.org. Through global content dissemination, WFIU has become one of Indiana University’s strongest ambassadors. WFIU has expanded its signal to cover more of Indiana and formed strong partnerships with Indiana radio and television stations. The statehouse bureau was created, and now we are adding two NPR-funded reporters who will report on education in Indiana. WFIU was one of eight stations nationally selected for this pilot project and it is one of our proudest achievements. It attests to the strength of our professional employees who are respected nationally. Over the years our audience grew in number, as well as in financial support and loyalty. Listener loyalty helped us weather many political storms, including the strongest one of them all currently playing out in Congress and affecting federal funding for public broadcasting. I believe we will continue to prevail in these ongoing arguments. The American public is not willing to give up its public radio, and in many areas of the country, the local public radio station is the only source of news and information.

June 2011Vol. 59, No . 6Directions in Sound (USPS-314900) is published each month by the Indiana University Radio and Television Services, 1229 East 7th Street, Bloomington, IN 47405-5501 telephone: 812-855-6114 or e-mail: [email protected] site: wfiu.org Periodical postage paid at Bloomington, IN

POSTMASTER Send address changes to: WFIU Membership Department Radio & TV CenterIndiana University 1229 East 7th Street Bloomington, IN 47405-5501

WFIU is licensed to the Trustees of Indiana University, and operated by Indiana University Radio and Television Services.

Perry Metz—Executive Director, Radio and Television ServicesChristina Kuzmych—Station Manager/Program Director

John Bailey—Director of Marketing and CommunicationsKatie Becker—Corporate DevelopmentJoe Bourne—Producer/Jazz DirectorCary Boyce—Operations DirectorAnnie Corrigan—Multi Media Producer/AnnouncerBrian Cox—Corporate DevelopmentDon Glass—Volunteer Producer/ A Moment of Science®

Milton Hamburger—Art DirectorBrad Howard—Director of Engineering and Operations

Questions or Comments?

Programming, Policies, or this Guide: If you have any questions about something you heard on the radio, station policies or this programming guide, call Christina Kuzmych, Station Manager/Program Director, at (812) 855-1357, or email her at [email protected].

Listener Response: You can email us at [email protected]. If you wish to send a letter, the address is WFIU, Radio/TV Center, 1229 East 7th Street, Indiana University, Bloomington, IN 47405-5501.

Membership: WFIU appreciates and depends on our members. The membership staff is on hand Monday through Friday between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. to answer questions. Want to begin or renew your membership? Changing addresses? Haven’t received the thank-you gift you requested? Questions about the MemberCard? Want to send a complimentary copy of Directions in Sound to a friend? Call (812) 855-6114 or toll free at (800) 662-3311.

Underwriting: For information on how your business can underwrite particular programs on WFIU, call (800) 662-3311.

Volunteers: Information about volunteer opportunities is available at (812) 855-1357, or by sending an email to [email protected].

Stan Jastrzebski—News DirectorDavid Brent Johnson—Producer/ Systems CoordinatorLuAnn Johnson—Program Services ManagerNancy Krueger—Gifts and Grants OfficerYaël Ksander—Producer/AnnouncerAngela Mariani—Host/Producer, HarmoniaMichael Paskash—Studio Engineer and Technical ProducerMia Partlow—Executive AssistantAlex Roy—WFIU/WTIU News ProducerAdam Schwartz—Editor, Directions In Sound; ProducerDonna Stroup—Chief Financial Officer John Shelton—Assistant Chief Engineer of RadioGeorge Walker—Producer/On-Air Broadcast DirectorSara Wittmeyer—WFIU/WTIU Bureau ChiefDavid Wood—Music DirectorMarianne Woodruff—Corporate DevelopmentEva Zogorski—Membership Director

• Announcers: LuAnn Johnson, Joseph “Bill” Kloppenburg• Broadcast Assistants: Michael Kapinus, Rachel Lyon, Josephine McRobbie• Ether Game: Mollie Ables, Dan Bishop, Steven Eddy, Delanie Marks, Consuelo Lopez-Morillas, Sherri Winks• Managing Editor Muslim Voices: Rosemary Pennington• Membership Staff: Laura Grannan, Joan Padawan, Holly Thrasher • Multimedia Journalists: Noel Brennan, Claire Murphy• Multiplatform Reporter: Dan Goldblatt• Music Library Assistant: Anna Pranger• News Assistant: Ben Skirvin• News Producer/Host: Rachel Lyon• Online Content Coordinator: Jessie Wallner• Volunteer Producer/Hosts: Moya Andrews, Mary Catherine Carmichael, Christopher Citro, Peter Jacobi, Owen Johnson, Patrick O’Meara, Shana Ritter, Bob Zaltsberg• Web Developer: Priyank Shah• Web Assistant: Margaret Aprison • Web Producer: Eoban Binder• Associate Web Producers: Sarah Kaiser, Julie Rooney, Emily Shelton

Christina Kuzmych

Page 3: June 2011 – Radio Guide

June 2011 / Directions in Sound / Page 3Greensburg 98.9 fm • Kokomo 106.1 fm • Terre Haute 95.1 fm

While WFIU had strong university support and engaged listeners, it was also blessed with an incredible staff. Our talented professionals have been a pleasure to work with, and the current WFIU staffing is superlative. Our team combines historic roots, creative talent, deep production and online skills, national connections, and fundraising experience in ways that instill confidence and ensures success. I have no doubt that they will preserve WFIU’s legacy and take the station to new and exciting levels of achievement. I myself have been blessed with incredible mentors starting with Bill Kroll, who was willing to take a gamble on me—a music major new to radio and broadcasting—and entrusted me to lead the station. Herb Seltz encouraged me to see the potential of radio as a tool for increasing cultural awareness. Don Agostino expanded WFIU’s reach outside Bloomington and laid the groundwork for digital conversion for radio and television. Perry Metz, my current director, always encouraged WFIU to innovate and invest in new platforms and to forge strong partnerships with IU academic departments. My mentors also included members of our WFIU Community Advisory Board who over the years offered rich perspectives that shaped my thinking. I am retiring from Indiana University and heading west to be closer to family. However, I will continue to work with public broadcasting through Wyoming Public Media, licensed to the University of Wyoming and deeply engaged in the educational mission of public broadcasting. Though I exchange the rolling hills of Indiana for the Rockies, my thoughts will always be with WFIU and thousands of individuals who helped build this station. And who knows, I may even play Ether Game on a cold and snowy Wyoming Tuesday evening—under a tasteful pseudonym, of course! Thank you for all the years of incredible radio. Serving you has been an honor and a joy.

Christina KuzmychWFIU Station Manager

s

‘The Christina Years’ End as WFIU’s Station Manager RetiresChristina Kuzmych has been with WFIU since 1984, starting as record librarian and finishing as station manager. She is retiring June 30th and moving to Wyoming to be closer to family interests and to serve as general manager of the Wyoming Public Media network. Christina has been the face and voice of the station for many years and knows many of you personally. What you may not know is the key role she has played in a number of public broadcasting initiatives here and throughout Indiana. These include: • Establishment of a collaborative statewide news bureau • Early involvement in new media and defining what they could mean to public radio • Development of the station’s first Web pages • Initiation of a major giving program for both stations • Hands-on direction of every fund drive • Development of co-productions with a score of academic departments at IU

We wish Christina every success. We will miss her creativity, initiative, and energy. Tributes to Christina appear below, and we invite you to send yours to [email protected].

Perry MetzGeneral Manager, WFIU/WTIU

All through the years I have admired you and your work at WFIU. For me WFIU is and has been Christina. I wish you continued good health and satisfaction in your future endeavors.

Warm best from the old prof, Janos StarkerIU Jacobs School of Music

Bill Kroll and Christina receive a proclamation on behalf of WFIU from former Bloomington Mayor Tomi Allison, ca. 1990s

An early passport photo

Christina addresses the audience at the annual WFIU Listener Reception in 1991. In photo at right, Christina helps out at the 4th Street Fair in 2007.

Christina and a WFIU member at the 2002 Listener Reception

Christina schmoozes with conductor Julius Rudel

Page 4: June 2011 – Radio Guide

Page 4 / Directions in Sound / June 2011 Bloomington 103.7 fm • Columbus 100.7 fm • French Lick/West Baden 101.7 fm

s

Christina Kuzmych has had an impossible job. She has supported people who have new program ideas, but she has had to keep listeners who love the old programs happy. She has to make news for music lovers and music for news junkies. She has to work miracles without a miracle budget. That’s what the best of public radio is about.

Owen V. JohnsonAssociate ProfessorIU School of Journalism

Over the Christina years we have seen careful attention to programming, the development of a second HD station recognizing the dual demands for talk radio and more varied music, amazingly successful fundraising, and technological improvements which we, as lay people, can only begin to understand. What a legacy! Christina combines toughness with diplomacy in advocacy for public media. She deserves a huge thank you and very good wishes for continuing success!

Charlotte ZietlowCAB Board member and community activist

Christina Kuzmych had been the unique voice of WFIU for so long, I cannot imagine not hearing her on the radio. She has also been an excellent station manager and I have been delighted to work with her on Profiles. She has always welcomed new suggestions and ideas and has been gracious with program guests as well as with other visitors to WFIU. She has been an institution at IU and a participant on the national scene.

Patrick O’MearaVice President for International Affairs

Christina was a wonderful example for me as a young, professional woman when I worked at WFIU. I really look up to her. A compliment from Christina was always well-earned. WFIU will have a hard time filling her shoes.

Arianna ProtheroMorning Edition ProducerWLRN in Miami

Christina has the uncanny ability to look ahead on the road and plan for eventualities before others have even noticed them on the horizon. Because she is brave and courageous, she hires people in whom she sees potential and builds teams that accomplish wonderful things often with very few resources except exceptional human capital. I am personally grateful to her for all that she has taught me since I first asked her in 2004, if I could do a program on flowers.

Moya AndrewsHost/Producer, Focus on Flowers

WFIU plays an important part in our quality of life in Bloomington. One of the reasons is Christina Kuzmych and her dedication, knowledge, and enthusiasm for having a vital, interesting as well a stimulating station. Wishing her well, she will be missed by many, especially me.

Menahem PresslerIU Jacobs School of Music

I have always appreciated the dedication Christina has displayed—for compelling radio, community service, and good journalism. I have huge respect for how she reaches out in the community to learn how WFIU can better serve its audiences, especially in this tumultuous time for traditional media. WFIU has grown in stature, and grown in importance to this community, under her watch.

Bob ZaltsbergEditor, The Herald-Times

Nearly two decades ago, Christina hired me as a part-time go-fer at WFIU. What quickly followed were trial-by-fire introductions to such areas as programming, marketing, analog vs. digital issues, and funding challenges. I was fortunate to watch Christina navigate these churning waters with intelligence, courage, and a clear and constant vision of the value of public radio to the community, the state, and the nation.

Cary BoyceWFIU Interim Station Manager

Christina Kuzmych, by her own admission, can be a tough customer. She’s had to be, in order to get WFIU where it is today. When I was news director at WFIU, I used to joke that she was like a firearm—very handy when pointed in the right direction. Christina can look back at her years at Radio-TV Services and take pride in her legacy at the station and across the state. She’s shepherded WFIU to new translator communities, and helped usher the station into the digital age. Because of her vision, the station is positioned well for the future. Beyond the borders of the station, thanks to her, Indiana has one of strongest statewide broadcast news networks. She was instrumental in founding the IPBS News initiative, and played a guiding role in the nascent Impact On Government reporting project, which promises to provide the most extensive reporting effort focused on education in Indiana. Beyond the programming, Christina can take satisfaction in helping shape the careers of any number of public broadcasters, me included. Somehow (I still haven’t figured out quite how) Christina always managed to find just the right person for a given job, and then helped that person along to the next level. I can certainly say that without Christina’s help and direction, I wouldn’t be where I am now. Christina is taking on a big challenge in moving to Wyoming to manage the public broadcasting network there. But it’s a tribute to her talents that she leaves a station that is secure and can proceed to the next level despite her departure. That’s the true mark of a great manager.

Will MurphyPresident and General Manager,Northeast Indiana Public Radio

Christina with Judy Witt, retired WFIU/WTIU Development Director.

Page 5: June 2011 – Radio Guide

June 2011 / Directions in Sound / Page 5Greensburg 98.9 fm • Kokomo 106.1 fm • Terre Haute 95.1 fm

The Promised Land: Kyshun Webster, Reaching for GreatnessSunday, June 5, 8 p.m.

The Promised Land is a series about visionaries who transform lives and communities. Host Majora Carter visits locations nationwide, introducing us to passionate men, women, and young people who are changing their communities with innovative thinking and tireless effort. Smart, compelling, and powerful, The Promised Land delivers their stories with a sense of adventure that engages and inspires. In this episode, Carter travels to New Orleans and learns how Kyshun Webster has built “cradle to career” youth programs throughout the Gulf South. Kyshun Webster grew up in the St. Bernard Projects in New Orleans where, at the age of six, he saw his uncle murdered. He started struggling in school and was held back in the first grade. Thus began a lifelong makeover for Webster, who now holds a doctorate from the University of Minnesota. At age 12, he started a lending library out of his parents’ garage, which grew into a “home for homework” after-school tutoring program. Webster’s Operation Reach runs (among other programs) a full-time child development center; the Gulfsouth Youth Biodiesel Project, where kids recycle cooking oil for use as environmentally friendly fuel; and the Gulfsouth Youth Action Corps, with camps that teach young people philanthropic skills. The kids annually award $50,000 in grants to other youth-led projects. The Promised Land is produced by Launch Productions in Minneapolis and is funded by the Corporation for Public Broadcasting.

The Santa Fe Chamber Music FestivalSundays at 9 p.m.

The thirteen-week Santa Fe Chamber Music Festival series concludes this month with these four episodes. Renowned for its innovative spirit, inspirational performances, and commitment to artistic excellence, the festival is among the oldest in the nation and considered among the world’s preeminent musical gatherings. These broadcasts present performances primarily from the Santa Fe Chamber Music Festival’s 2010 season, recorded by Grammy-winning engineer Matthew Snyder. Kerry Frumkin hosts the series with commentary from Santa Fe Chamber Music Festival artistic director Marc Neikrug and remarks from many of the players.

Sunday, June 5

Haydn: Piano Trio No. 43 in C Major, Hob. XV: 27 Harvey de Souza, violin; Peter Stumpf, cello; Kuok-Wai Lio, piano Anton Arensky: Quartet No. 2 in A minor for violin, viola and two cellos, Op. 35, No. 2Benny Kim, violin; Lily Francis, viola; Eric Kim, cello; Gary Hoffman, cello

Sunday, June 12

J.S. Bach: “Ja, ja, ich halte Jesum feste” from Cantata No. 157, “Ich lasse dich nicht, du segnest mich denn!”David Govertsen, bass; Bart Feller, flute; Daniel Phillips, violin; Timothy Eddy, cello; Kathleen McIntosh, harpsichordBeethoven: String Trio in C Minor, Op. 9, No. 3 Giora Schmidt, violin; Lily Francis, viola; Eric Kim, celloRavel: Sonata for Violin and Piano No. 2 in G majorCho-Liang Lin, violin; Kuok-Wai Lio, piano

Sunday, June 19

Telemann: Trio Sonata in G Minor for Oboe, Violin, and Continuo, TWV 42:g5 Allan Vogel, oboe; Jennifer Frautschi, violin; Ralph Kirshbaum, cello; Kathleen McIntosh, harpsichordTchaikovsky: Souvenir de Florence in D Major, Op. 70Benny Kim, violin; Helen Nightengale, violin; Michael Tree, viola; Lily Francis, viola; Lynn Harrell, cello; Gary Hoffman, cello

Sunday, June 26

Schumann: Phantasiestücke for clarinet and piano, Op. 73Todd Levy, clarinet; Marc Neikrug, pianoSmetana: String Quartet in E Minor, T. 116, “From My Life” Orion String Quartet: Todd Phillips, violin; Daniel Phillips, violin; Steven Tenenbom, viola; Timothy Eddy, cello

Marc Neikrug

Todd Levy

Helen Nightengale

Kyshun Webster

Page 6: June 2011 – Radio Guide

Page 6 / Directions in Sound / June 2011 Bloomington 103.7 fm • Columbus 100.7 fm • French Lick/West Baden 101.7 fm

Intelligence SquaredSunday, June 12, 8 p.m.

Can the investment of billions into the clean energy sector trigger innovation and the creation of millions of jobs? On today’s Intelligence Squared, panelists debate the motion, “Clean energy can drive America’s economic recovery.”

For the motion:

Bill Ritter, Colorado’s 41st governor, who established Colorado as an international leader in renewable energy by building a New Energy Economy that is creating thousands of new jobs and establishing hundreds of new companies. Kassia Yanosek, an investment advisor to the energy sector and the founder of Tana Energy Capital LLC and a Steering Committee member of the U.S. Partnership for Renewable Energy Finance.

Kassia Yanosek

Against the motion:

Robert Bryce, author of Power Hungry: The Myths of “Green” Energy and the Real Fuels of the Future; former managing editor of the online publication, Energy Tribune, and a senior fellow at the Manhattan Institute’s Center for Energy Policy and the Environment.

Robert Bryce

Steven Hayward, author of Almanac of Environmental Trends and Mere Environmentalism, an examination of the philosophical presuppositions underlying the environmental movement.

Radiolab: The Good ShowSunday, June 19, 8 p.m.

The standard view of evolution is that living things are shaped by cold-hearted competition. And there is no doubt that today’s plants and animals carry the genetic legacy of ancestors who fought fiercely to survive and reproduce. But we wonder whether there might also be logic behind sharing, niceness, kindness, or even self-sacrifice. Is altruism an aberration, or just an elaborate guise for sneaky self-interest? Do we really live in a selfish, dog-eat-dog world? Or has evolution carved out a hidden code that rewards genuine cooperation? On this Radiolab, a question that haunted Charles Darwin: If natural selection boils down to survival of the fittest, how do you explain why one creature might stick its neck out for another? Co-host Robert Krulwich speaks briefly with Richard Dawkins, who tells him that natural selection is often a brutal arms race, full of suffering and cruelty. But if Darwin’s big idea is really predicated on pain and selfishness, why does selflessness exist? Lynn Levy brings us the story of scientist George Price, who worked on the atom bomb, transistors, computer-aided-design, and eventually turned his attention to the problem of altruism. Levy also talks to Oren Harman, author of The Price of Altruism: George Price and the Search for the Origins of Kindness, and Price’s daughters Annamarie and Kathleen, who help us get to know this complicated genius. Harman left his family, went to London, and wrote a mathematical equation to explain why one creature might sacrifice its own interests for another. His promising life ended in self-destruction. Carl Zimmer helps us understand why altruism is such a problem in the first place, and how family might hold the key to understanding apparently selfless acts. The so-called Price Equation changed

biology and ultimately led Price to spend the rest of his life trying to transcend his own equation. Is there such a thing as a purely selfless deed—one with no hidden motives whatsoever? Walter F. Rutkowski from the Carnegie Hero Fund spends his days measuring good deeds by some very stringent criteria—such as risking your life “to an extraordinary degree while saving or attempting to save the life of another person.” We got in touch with three of these bona fide heroes to ask what went through their minds the moment they leapt into action. The heroes: Lora Shrake (who squared off with a 950-pound bull); Bill Pennell (who repeatedly dove into a burning car for survivors); and Wesley Autrey (who jumped in front of a subway train to save a fellow rider). In the early ’60s, Robert Axelrod was a math major messing around with refrigerator-sized computers. Then a dramatic global crisis made him wonder about the space between a rock and a hard place, and whether being good may be a good strategy. With help from Andrew Zolli and Steve Strogatz, we tackle the prisoner’s dilemma, a classic thought experiment, and learn about a simple strategy to navigate the waters of cooperation and betrayal. Then Stanley Weintraub takes us to the trenches of World War I in the winter of 1914, and an unlikely Christmas party along the Western Front.

Richard Dawkins

Answers to the May puzzle

There are 17 musically related names and words hidden in this Word Search puzzle. They may be across, backwards, up and down or diagonal in any direction.

Page 7: June 2011 – Radio Guide

June 2011 / Directions in Sound / Page 7Greensburg 98.9 fm • Kokomo 106.1 fm • Terre Haute 95.1 fm

Travels with Mike:In Search of America 50 Years After SteinbeckSunday, June 26, 8 p.m.

In the fall of 1960, John Steinbeck, then 58, decided he’d been out of touch with America. “I’ve lost the flavor and taste and sound of it,” he wrote. “I’m going to learn about my own country.”

John Biewen with bust of John Steinbeck

Steinbeck climbed into a pickup truck with a makeshift camper on top that he’d named Rocinante, after Don Quixote’s horse, and started driving. He left his home on Long Island with a set of questions that could, he wrote, be lumped into a single one: “What are Americans like today?” With his Standard Poodle Charley by his side, the novelist traveled 10,000 miles in three months, making a loop from one coast to the other and back again—driving along a historical seam between one era and another, one kind of country and another. His account of the journey, Travels with Charley In Search of America, was published in 1962, the same year Steinbeck won the Nobel Prize for Literature. A half-century later, producer John Biewen retraces Steinbeck’s steps, traveling not with a dog but with a stereo microphone (i.e., “Mike”) on Travels with Mike. Biewen goes to key locations on Steinbeck’s itinerary and in each place collaborates with an artist who’s deeply grounded in that place. Travels with Mike comprises a series of conversations across time, between a great American writer of the last century and a diverse array of contemporary artists—conversations about issues, place, and the spirit of the country. The program is hosted by Al Letson, host of the NPR’s State of the Re:Union.

Artist of the MonthWFIU’s artist of the month for June is pianist Menahem Pressler, the Dean Charles H. Webb Chair in Music and distinguished professor of piano at the Indiana University Jacobs School of Music. Menahem Pressler fled from Germany to Israel in 1939. In 1946 he won his first major piano competition, the Debussy International Piano Competition. He made his American debut with the Philadelphia Orchestra under Eugene Ormandy, and for the next decade made appearances with many orchestras across the country and internationally. In 1955 he debuted as a chamber musician with the Beaux Arts Trio at the Berkshire Music Festival. His collaboration with this group for more than fifty years made them the “gold standard for trios throughout the world” in the opinion of The Washington Post. Throughout their time together, the Beaux Arts Trio recorded the entire standard piano trio repertoire. Following the Trio’s disbanding in 2008, Pressler has continued to work with groups such as the Juilliard, Emerson, and Cleveland Quartets. It was also in 1955 that Pressler joined the piano faculty at Indiana University. His former students hold teaching positions in prominent schools of music and conservatories across the country, and some have become internationally prominent performers. Pressler continues to teach private students as well as give master classes around the world, and serve on juries of international piano competitions. Pressler has received six Grammy nominations and is a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. In 2005 he received the German President’s Deutsche Bundesverdienstkreuz (German Cross of Merit) First Class, Germany’s highest honor, and France’s highest cultural honor, the Commandeur in the Order of Arts and Letters award. WFIU will feature music performed by Menahem Pressler throughout the month of June.

Featured Contemporary ComposerWFIU’s featured composer for June is Don Freund, professor of composition at the Indiana University Jacobs School of Music. Don Freund has composed works ranging from solo, chamber, and orchestral music to pieces involving live performances with electronic instruments, music for dance, and large theater works. He is also active as a pianist, conductor, and lecturer. Born in Pittsburgh in 1947, Freund studied at Duquesne University and earned his graduate degrees at the Eastman School of Music. His composition teachers included Joseph Willcox Jenkins, Darius Milhaud, and Samuel Adler. As founder and coordinator of Memphis State University’s Annual New Music Festival, he programmed close to a thousand new American works. Many orchestras have performed his compositions. The Kansas City Symphony has featured his poem symphony Radical Light, and both the IU Concert Orchestra and the Interlochen World Youth Symphony Orchestra have performed his Sinfonietta. In 2010, Freund was awarded a $50,000 Indiana University “New Frontiers” grant that resulted in a cross-disciplinary immersive theater production of his composition PASSION with Tropes. Collaborating with a team of artists from IU’s Departments of Theatre and Digital Arts assembled by conductor Carmen Helena Téllez, the work was presented at the Ruth N. Halls Theatre in May. Teaching composition continues to be a major component of Freund’s career; students from 30 years of teaching have won an impressive array of awards and recognitions. Lectures from his six-hour series “Composition Lessons with JS Bach” are on YouTube. WFIU will feature music written by Don Freund throughout the month of June.

Ph

oto:

Dia

na

Ga

rcia

Menahem Pressler

Ph

oto:

Mil

ton

Ha

mbu

rger

Cou

rtes

y of

In

dia

na

Un

iver

sity

Don Freund

Page 8: June 2011 – Radio Guide

Page 8 / Directions in Sound / June 2011 Bloomington 103.7 fm • Columbus 100.7 fm • French Lick/West Baden 101.7 fm

ProfilesSundays at 7 p.m.

June 5 – Michael Koryta

Michael Koryta is the author of six novels, most recently The Cypress House, released by Little, Brown and Co. His novel Envy the Night won the Los Angeles Times prize for best mystery and was selected as a Reader’s Digest condensed book. A former private investigator and newspaper reporter, Koryta graduated from Indiana University with a degree in criminal justice. He lives in St. Petersburg, Florida, and Bloomington, Indiana. Gena Asher hosts.

June 12 – Bernard Rands and J.D. McClatchy

Bernard Rands’ numerous compositions have been performed and recorded worldwide under conductors ranging from Barenboim and Maazel to Dohnanyi. Canti del Sole, premiered by Zubin Mehta and the New York Philharmonic, won the 1984 Pulitzer Prize in Music, and his Cantid’Amor, recorded by Chanticleer, won a Grammy Award in 2000. J. D. McClatchy has written six volumes of poetry and 13 librettos as well as a recent translation of seven Mozart librettos. Among his recent librettos are Lorin Maazel’s 1984, co-written with Thomas Meehan; Lowell Liebermann’s Miss Lonelyhearts; and Ned Rorem’s Our Town, premiered in 2006 at Indiana University. He is a professor of English at Yale, where he is editor of The Yale Review. Bernard Rands’ full-scale opera Vincent, based on the life and work of Van Gogh with a libretto by J. D. McClatchy, received its world premiere in April at Indiana University. Peter Jacobi hosts.

June 19 – Wendell Berry

Wendell Berry is an American man of letters; academic, cultural, and economic critic, and farmer. The author of more than forty works of fiction, nonfiction, and poetry, he has received numerous awards and honors. Born in 1934 in Henry County, Kentucky, Berry’s writing is grounded in the notion that one’s work ought to be rooted in and responsive to one’s place. His nonfiction explores aspects of the good life, including fidelity, frugality, and reverence. Shana Ritter hosts. (repeat)

June 26 – Gerry Kern

Gerry Kern is senior vice-president and editor of the Chicago Tribune. A 1971 graduate of Indiana University’s School of Journalism, Kern joined the Tribune in 1991 and held a number of senior editing roles, including associate managing editor/metro, deputy managing editor/features, and associate editor. Since becoming editor, the Tribune has increased its commitment to watchdog journalism in print and online, and launched a tabloid newsstand edition—making it the only major American daily to publish in both broadsheet and tabloid formats. Owen Johnson hosts.

Broadcasts from the IU Jacobs School of MusicAirs at 7 p.m. Mondays, 10 a.m. Tuesdays, and 3 p.m. Fridays

June 6-10GRIEG—Funeral March in Memory of Rikard Nordraak; Edmund Cord/IU Brass Choir

Edmund Cord

June 13-17SOUSA—The Invincible Eagle; Stephen Pratt/IU Concert Band

June 20-24GRANTHAM—Kentucky Harmony; Stephen Pratt/IU Wind Ensemble

Stephen Pratt

June 27-July 1SAINT-SAËNS—Havanaise, Op. 83; Tai Murray, vln.; Joseph Silverstein/IU Philharmonic Orchestra

Cou

rtes

y of

In

dia

na

Un

iver

sity

Cou

rtes

y of

Ch

ica

go T

ribu

ne

Page 9: June 2011 – Radio Guide

June 2011 / Directions in Sound / Page 9Greensburg 98.9 fm • Kokomo 106.1 fm • Terre Haute 95.1 fm

Featured Classical RecordingsSelections from each week’s featured recording can be heard throughout WFIU’s local classical music programming. A weekly podcast of our featured classical recordings is available through our Web site, wfiu.org, under the Podcasts link.

June 5-11Liszt: The Hungarian Rhapsodies (2-CD set)

(Newton Classics 8802049)Misha Dicther, piano

The 19 Rhapsodies are barely heard in their entirety, perhaps because of the extreme technical demands made upon the performer. But Tchaikovsky Competition award winner Misha Dichter is convinced that we gain a much deeper understanding of Liszt’s keyboard genius if we move beyond the familiar barnstorming of the Second to the last four rhapsodies, with their far-reaching harmonic implications. The booklet notes by Dichter offer a guide to the style required for the interpretation of the works and a personal memoir of the pleasure he took in recording them.

June 12-18Biber: Mystery Sonatas (2-CD set)

(Sono Luminus DLS-92127)Julia Wedman, violin

Violinist Julia Wedman is a member of several notable Canadian ensembles, including Tafelmusik, The Knights, the Eybler String Quartet, and I Furiosi. Her first solo outing takes on the rollercoaster of emotion that is Heinrich Biber’s Mystery Sonatas, conceived as meditations on the joyful, sorrowful, and glorious mysteries of the Roman Catholic Rosary.

June 19-25Rossini: Sonatas for Strings Nos. 1–6 (2-CD set)

(Newton Classics 8802041)I Musici

Rossini’s six String Sonatas, composed in three days when the composer was just 12 years old, display a sound grasp of the music of Haydn and Mozart. Each player is given his own voice, and each work poses considerable difficulties for the players, especially the second violin part, which Rossini wrote for himself. The emotional depth found in these works is astonishing—especially considering the age of the composer.

June 26-July 2The Symphonic Celtic Album

(Silva Classics SILKD 6046)The City of Prague Philharmonic Orchestra

Symphonic themes from film and stage influenced by the folk music of the Celtic lands—Ireland, Scotland, Wales, Isle Of Man, Cornwall, Brittany, and Galicia—are performed by The City Of Prague Philharmonic Orchestra. Highlights include James Horner’s heart-wrenching themes to Braveheart and Titanic, Howard Shore’s Academy Award-winning music from The Lord Of The Rings Trilogy, the chilling lament “Women Of Ireland” from Barry Lyndon, and “The Donnybrook” from The Quiet Man.

An Important Victory for Public BroadcastingYou told Congress that public broad-casting is an essential public service that is too important to eliminate. Thanks to your support, Congress passed a budget bill that preserves most federal funding for WFIU and more than 1,000 local public television and radio stations across America. In eight weeks we went from the total elimination of our federal funding (as passed by the U.S. House on February 19) to the preservation of 93% of our appropriations, including a slight increase to the Corporation for Public Broadcasting (CPB) in 2013. Here are the details of the budget figures:

• $445 million for the CPB in FY 2013. This maintains a critical funding mechanism that has been in place for the CPB since 1976

• $430 million for the CPB in FY 2011

• $6 million for the CPB Digital Program. This is a cut of $30 million below FY 2010 levels. However, it is the amount requested by the White House for FY 2012. While this is a large cut, the program’s inclusion in the bill allows us to continue fighting for additional funding in the future.

In spite of the support for the CPB, public broadcasting endured numerous funding cuts in this year’s federal budget, including the elimination of the Public Telecommunications Facilities Program at $20 million. This Department of Commerce competitive grant program assisted WFIU in funding its digital conversion. But stay tuned: Public broadcasting funding will be targeted for elimination during the 2012 budget debate and we will need you to stand up once again. Add your voice at 170MillionAmericans.org. And from all of us at WFIU, thank you!

Page 10: June 2011 – Radio Guide

Page 10 / Directions in Sound / June 2011 Bloomington 103.7 fm • Columbus 100.7 fm • French Lick/West Baden 101.7 fm

Lyric Opera of Chicago

6-4 A Midsummer Night’s Dream6-11 Un Ballo in Maschera6-18 The Mikado6-25 The Golden Girl of the West

5 AM

6

7

8

9

10

11

Noon

1 PM

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

9

10

11

Mid.

1 AM

2

5 AM

6

7

8

9

10

11

Noon

1 PM

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

9

10

11

Mid.

1 AM

2

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

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

Local and State News Weekdays at 6:06 am, 7:06 am, 8:06 am, 12:01 pm, 5:04 pm, 5:33 pm Marketplace Morning Report Weekdays at 8:50 am

NPR News Weekdays at 12:01 am, 11:01 am, 12:01 pm, 2:01 pm, 3:01 pm Saturdays at 7:01 am Sundays at 7:01 am, 6:01 pm, 10:01 pm

Other Programs

A Moment of Science Weekdays at 10:58 am and 4:55 pm

Community Minute Weekdays at 8:50 am, 11:51 am and 3:25 pm Saturdays and Sundays at 5:58 am and 11:58 am

Composers Datebook Mondays through Wednesdays at 3:25 pm

Earth Eats Saturdays at 12:38 pm

Focus on Flowers Thursdays and Fridays at 3:25 pm Saturdays and Sundays at 7:07 am and Sundays 11:06 am

Hometown with Tom Roznowski Saturdays at 8:00 pm

Isla Earth Sundays at 11:23 am and 3:57 pm

Journey with Nature Wednesdays at 9:03 am

Moment of Indiana History Mondays at 11:26 am Wednesdays at 7:58 pm Fridays at 8:02 pm

The Poets Weave Sundays at 11:46 am

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

Star Date Weekdays at 11:55 am and 7:06 pm Saturdays at 12:06 pm and 10:07 pm Sundays at 11:52 am and 10:05 pm

The Writer’s Almanac Weekdays at 7:01 pmClassical Music

Classical MusicClassical Music

Sounds Choral The Record Shelf

Night Lights

Live! At the Concertgebouw

Fresh Air

Classical Music

BP Chicago Symphony Orchestra

Saint Paul Sunday

The Score

Travel withRick Steves

Music from the Hearts of Space

Classical Music with George Walker

Performance Today

Just You and Me with Joe Bourne

Marketplace

Ether Game(Quiz show) Harmonia

(Early music)

Piano Jazz

The Big Bands

Afterglow

Beale Street Caravan

Pipedreams(Organ music)

Classical Music

All Things Considered

Folk Sampler

The Thistle & Shamrock

Afropop Worldwide

Living on Earth

Classical MusicNoon Edition

Profiles

Specials

This American Life

Sound Medicine

Says You!

Wait Wait . . . Don’t Tell Me!

Jazz with Bob Parlocha

Classical Music Overnight

Schedule subject to change. See complete listing for details

Ask the Mayor Fresh Air

Fresh Air

Fresh Air

With Heart and Voice

Radio Reader The Last Boy continues to June 27

Keeping Score

Artworks

The State We’re In

10:01 am : BBC News10:58 am : A Moment of Science

11:01 am : NPR News

State and Local news :06 after the hour8:50 am : Marketplace Morning Report

2:01 & 3:01 pm : NPR News

4:55 pm : A Moment of Science

5:04 & 5:33 pm : State and Local News

SaturdaySundaySaturdayFridayThursdayWednesdayTuesdayMonday

Page 11: June 2011 – Radio Guide

June 2011 / Directions in Sound / Page 11Greensburg 98.9 fm • Kokomo 106.1 fm • Terre Haute 95.1 fm

Lyric Opera of Chicago

6-4 A Midsummer Night’s Dream6-11 Un Ballo in Maschera6-18 The Mikado6-25 The Golden Girl of the West

5 AM

6

7

8

9

10

11

Noon

1 PM

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

9

10

11

Mid.

1 AM

2

5 AM

6

7

8

9

10

11

Noon

1 PM

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

9

10

11

Mid.

1 AM

2

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

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

Local and State News Weekdays at 6:06 am, 7:06 am, 8:06 am, 12:01 pm, 5:04 pm, 5:33 pm Marketplace Morning Report Weekdays at 8:50 am

NPR News Weekdays at 12:01 am, 11:01 am, 12:01 pm, 2:01 pm, 3:01 pm Saturdays at 7:01 am Sundays at 7:01 am, 6:01 pm, 10:01 pm

Other Programs

A Moment of Science Weekdays at 10:58 am and 4:55 pm

Community Minute Weekdays at 8:50 am, 11:51 am and 3:25 pm Saturdays and Sundays at 5:58 am and 11:58 am

Composers Datebook Mondays through Wednesdays at 3:25 pm

Earth Eats Saturdays at 12:38 pm

Focus on Flowers Thursdays and Fridays at 3:25 pm Saturdays and Sundays at 7:07 am and Sundays 11:06 am

Hometown with Tom Roznowski Saturdays at 8:00 pm

Isla Earth Sundays at 11:23 am and 3:57 pm

Journey with Nature Wednesdays at 9:03 am

Moment of Indiana History Mondays at 11:26 am Wednesdays at 7:58 pm Fridays at 8:02 pm

The Poets Weave Sundays at 11:46 am

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

Star Date Weekdays at 11:55 am and 7:06 pm Saturdays at 12:06 pm and 10:07 pm Sundays at 11:52 am and 10:05 pm

The Writer’s Almanac Weekdays at 7:01 pmClassical Music

Classical MusicClassical Music

Sounds Choral The Record Shelf

Night Lights

Live! At the Concertgebouw

Fresh Air

Classical Music

BP Chicago Symphony Orchestra

Saint Paul Sunday

The Score

Travel withRick Steves

Music from the Hearts of Space

Classical Music with George Walker

Performance Today

Just You and Me with Joe Bourne

Marketplace

Ether Game(Quiz show) Harmonia

(Early music)

Piano Jazz

The Big Bands

Afterglow

Beale Street Caravan

Pipedreams(Organ music)

Classical Music

All Things Considered

Folk Sampler

The Thistle & Shamrock

Afropop Worldwide

Living on Earth

Classical MusicNoon Edition

Profiles

Specials

This American Life

Sound Medicine

Says You!

Wait Wait . . . Don’t Tell Me!

Jazz with Bob Parlocha

Classical Music Overnight

Schedule subject to change. See complete listing for details

Ask the Mayor Fresh Air

Fresh Air

Fresh Air

With Heart and Voice

Radio Reader The Last Boy continues to June 27

Keeping Score

Artworks

The State We’re In

10:01 am : BBC News10:58 am : A Moment of Science

11:01 am : NPR News

State and Local news :06 after the hour8:50 am : Marketplace Morning Report

2:01 & 3:01 pm : NPR News

4:55 pm : A Moment of Science

5:04 & 5:33 pm : State and Local News

SaturdaySundaySaturdayFridayThursdayWednesdayTuesdayMonday

Perry Metz

John Shelton

Nancy Krueger

Moya Andrews

Claire Murphy

Page 12: June 2011 – Radio Guide

Page 12 / Directions in Sound / June 2011 Bloomington 103.7 fm • Columbus 100.7 fm • French Lick/West Baden 101.7 fm

MemberCard BenefitsFor a listing of more than 300 Indiana membership benefits and offer details for each participating business, visit membercard.com or call 800-662-3311.

Benefits of the Month:Cave County Canoes (#366)112 Main StreetMilltown812-365-2705Valid for two-for-one canoe trip tickets during June, subject to availability.

Theatre on the Square (#93)627 Massachusetts AvenueIndianapolis317-685-8687tots.orgValid for two-for-one admission to performances during June, subject to availability.

Benefit Updates:Blueberry Hill Pancake House (#56)IndianapolisOffer expired

Cedar Creek Winery (#271)3820 Leonard Rd.Martinsville765-342-9000cedarcreekwine.comComplimentary wine tasting for two and 20 percent discount on regularly priced non-alcohol merchandise. Valid any time.

Chateau Pomije (#274)25060 Jacob Rd.Guilford812-623-3332cpwinery.comComplimentary wine tasting for two and 20 percent discount on regularly priced non-alcohol merchandise. Valid any time.

Kilroy’s Bar & Grill (#351)BloomingtonOffer expired

Kilroy’s Sports Bar/Rib Cage (#347)BloomingtonOffer expired

Oliver Winery (#272)8024 North State Road 37 Bloomington812-876-5800Valid for 20 percent discount on non-wine merchandise.

Putter’s Park (#213)BloomingtonOffer expired

Scott Mountain Winery (#269)2145 Scout Mountain Road NWCorydon812-738-7196Complimentary wine tasting for two and 20 percent discount on regularly priced non-alcohol merchandise. Valid any time.

Shanti Indian Cuisine (#201)BloomingtonOffer expired

Limestone Grill (#364)BloomingtonClosed

Simmons Winery (#270)8111 E. 450 N.Columbus812-546-0091simmonswinery.comComplimentary wine tasting for two and 20 percent discount on regularly priced non-alcohol merchandise. Valid any time.

Stream Cliff Herb Farm, Tearoom & Winery (#273)8225 S. County Road 90 WestCommiskey812-346-5859streamclifffarm.comComplimentary wine tasting for two and 20 percent discount on regularly priced non-alcohol merchandise from the tasting room (not valid for plans, tearoom, gift shop, or classes). Valid any time.

Windy Knoll Winery (#268)845 Atkinson Rd.Vincennes812-726-1600windyknollwinery.comComplimentary wine tasting for two and 20 percent discount on regularly priced non-alcohol merchandise. Valid any time.

Online Shopping Updates available through membercard.com:

Bellalunatoys.comTen percent discount on all purchases, plus free shipping on orders over $75. (Does not apply to shipping, taxes, or gift wrapping.) Bella Luna Toys offers a unique selection of natural, wooden, and eco-friendly toys for babies and children.

Fairtradewinds.netUnlimited 15 percent discount on all purchases. Certified fair trade and environmentally sustainable products supporting artisans, farmers, and craftspeople from around the world.

Haleyhats.comTwenty percent discount on all purchases. Excludes sale items, shipping and taxes; not to be combined with other discounts. Eco-friendly hats, scarves, crocheted baskets, and more by artisan Ann Haley.

Ritechocolate.comUnlimited 15 percent discount on all purchases. Spoonable chocolate made with raw, organic, and local ingredients.

Itsallaboutgreenstore.comUnlimited 15 percent discount on all purchases. A wide array of organic, reusable, recycled, reclaimed and natural products.

Thecleanbedroom.comTen percent discount on all purchases; may not be combined with other discounts. An independent resource for fine organic mattresses, bedding, and non-toxic bedroom furniture.

Tincansally.comUnlimited 10 percent discount on all purchases. Switch plates and outlet covers are hand cut from vintage and collectible advertising tins.

Page 13: June 2011 – Radio Guide

June 2011 / Directions in Sound / Page 13Greensburg 98.9 fm • Kokomo 106.1 fm • Terre Haute 95.1 fm

Community EventsPALS Mane Event

Thursday, June 9, 6 p.m.IU Alumni Hall

An evening of local wine and beer tasting, hors d’oeuvres, and silent auction bidding to benefit People and Animal Learning Services, an equine-assisted program that provides therapeutic riding lessons for people with disabilities.

Shawnee Theatre

Beginning Thursday, June 9, times varyBloomfield

Indiana’s oldest continuous professional summer theatre launches its summer season June 9th with Ring of Fire: The Johnny Cash Musical Show. Later in the month will be Picasso at the Lapin Agile by Steve Martin, and Arthur Miller’s All My Sons.

Terre Haute Community Band

Saturday, June 11, 8 p.m.Fairbanks ParkTerre Haute

This summer’s series of outdoor concerts near the banks of the Wabash gets underway with “Straight from the Heart.” It’s a showcase of love themes by composers from John Philip Sousa to John Lennon and Paul McCartney, performed by area volunteer musicians.

Crossroads Repertory Theatre

Beginning Friday, June 17, times varyTerre Haute

The Crossroads Rep is a professional theater company associated with Indiana State University’s Department of Theatre. This summer’s season begins with the Stephen Schwartz musical Godspell and the single mom comedy Bad Dates.

Summer Garden Walk Saturday and Sunday, June 18 and 19

The Bloomington Garden Club presents its 22nd annual benefit for civic beautification projects held at five private gardens. One ticket also includes a flower show and admission to the Monroe County History Center.

Brown County Studio and Garden Tour

Friday to Sunday, June 24–26

This free, self-guided event showcases the works of 27 juried artists and artisans who open their studios for demonstrations and all-ages activities at locations in and around Nashville—the art colony of the Midwest.

Meowy by Brown County artist Monique Cagle (grayscale reproduction)

5 “Brown-eyed girl” singer, Morrison 6 Bounce back, in a way 7 Union agreements 8 “__ I love you” song 9 “_____ Weeks” Morrison album10 One of the main functions of 1 across12 Providence locale14 A musician needs a good one15 For example16 ___-friendly20 Quality of sound22 Element name for vocal cord freezer23 Chopin musical piece24 “Use me” singer first name28 Faith or Ant29 Plagiarize31 Gounod opera32 Sends a message on the Internet, abbr.33 Dover’s state35 ___ Dre (rapper)37 Pomp and Circumstance composer38 Tex Mex band start39 ___ track40 Mephistopheles’ usual name41 Orchestra players’ org.42 Comes between Charlie and Parker45 Last word of “America, the Beautiful”46 Time segment, for short47 Prai___ul (like Gospel music?)48 Rushed50 Music holder ending53 Rock ’n Roll Hall of Famer, Diddley

Across 1 Musicians’ org. 3 “Tears of a Clown” singer, first name 7 Number cruncher, abbr.11 ____over (appeal to a new audience)13 Violin great (two words)17 “We’re in this love together” singer, Jarreau18 Genesis lead singer initials19 “Blow wind, ____ Chicago of him” line from JayZ from Beyoncé’s “Deja Vu”20 It describes trembling effects21 Air22 Tijuana Brass man, first name25 Frank Sinatra’s way26 Tchaikovsky composition27 Progress slowly30 “I Am Woman” singer, Helen31 Charlie Daniels’ favorite instruments?33 Julie Andrews, e.g.34 Tom Hulce role36 Strain43 One man band is44 Canadian musicians’ org.47 Orchestra instruments49 Executive, for short51 Enya’s country52 Mena’s state53 Career desc.54 “Under the Influence” album singer, first name55 Stratocaster makers56 Time-tested

Down 1 “Back to Black” singer, Winehouse 2 Austrian composer, Gustav 4 Beat

Tunes for June by Myles Mellor

Page 14: June 2011 – Radio Guide

Page 14 / Directions in Sound / June 2011 Bloomington 103.7 fm • Columbus 100.7 fm • French Lick/West Baden 101.7 fm

1 Wednesday 9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH

GEORGE WALKER Brahms, Piazzolla, and Chopin 8:00 PM LIVE! AT THE

CONCERTGEBOUW Gustavo Dudamel/Royal Concertgebouw

Orchestra Jean-Yves Thibaudet, piano CHAVEZ—Symphony No. 2, Sinfonia India GRIEG—Piano Concerto in A Minor, Op.

16 PROKOFIEV—Symphony No. 5 in B-Flat

Major, Op. 10010:06 PM RECORD SHELF A comparative survey of the recordings of

Elgar’s Cockaigne Overture

2 Thursday 9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH

GEORGE WALKER Chopin, Albrechtsberger, and Vivaldi 8:00 PM KEEPING SCORE: 13 DAYS

WHEN MUSIC CHANGED FOREVER May 29, 1913: The Premiere of the Ballet

The Rite of Spring Stravinsky’s original instrumentation and

rhythms and his use of dissonance have made this work one of the most important of the 20th century, while the riot and ensuing scandal surrounding this Paris premiere is one of the most shocking events in all of performance history.

9:00 PM HARMONIA Listener Favorites: Gesualdo, Taverner,

Dalza, Pergolesi, and More Harmonia asked listeners for their favorite pieces, and the response was enthusiastic. From the Llibre Vermell to the Pergolesi “Stabat Mater,” we’ll explore various works from the Middle Ages, Renaissance, and Baroque. Also on the program, Wendy Gillespie and Giovanni Zanovello join us to talk about a John Stafford Smith manuscript, including a performance by the Indiana University Concentus Ensemble.

3 Friday 9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH

GEORGE WALKER Liszt, Chopin, and Britten 8:00 PM MARIAN McPARTLAND’S

PIANO JAZZ Eliane Elias Brazilian-born pianist and singer Eliane

Elias is one of the most original and popular artists on the jazz scene today. Widely recognized as one of the preeminent interpreters of Antonio Carlos Jobim, Elias has lately begun exploring the works of Bill Evans. She plays and sings a previously unreleased Evans tune, “Here Is Something for You,” for which she has written a lyric, and McPartland gives her own Evans tribute on “B Minor Waltz.”

Eliane Elias

10:09 PM AFTERGLOW Songs of the Season: Summer Afterglow’s annual tribute to the warm

weather months

4 Saturday 1:00 PM LYRIC OPERA OF CHICAGO BRITTEN—A Midsummer Night’s Dream Starring David Daniels, Anna Christy,

Peter Rose, and Erin Wall. Rory McDonald conducts.

8:00 PM HOMETOWN WITH TOM ROZNOWSKI Group Portrait 8:05 PM THE FOLK SAMPLER A Train In My Dreams: the sounds of the

old trains

9:05 PM THE THISTLE AND SHAMROCK Soundtracks From The Chieftains Oscar-winning Barry

Lyndon soundtrack in the 1970s, to the ’90s movies Last of the Mohicans, Braveheart, Rob Roy, and Titanic, cinematic Celtic music has our attention this week.

11:00 PM NIGHT LIGHTS The Randy Weston Songbook The music of pianist Randy Weston,

performed by Weston himself and others

5 Sunday 12:00 PM SAINT PAUL SUNDAY Matt Haimovitz, cello; Jean Marchand,

piano BACH—Unaccompanied Cello Suite No. 3 GOLIJOV—Omaramor SHOSTAKOVICH—Cello Sonata in d

minor, Op. 40 1:00 PM WITH HEART AND VOICE The season of Easter is coming to a close,

and this week we’ll hear music that celebrates the Ascension of Jesus and looks forward to his second coming.

2:00 PM THE SCORE WITH EDMUND STONE

Summer Blockbusters From Jaws and Batman to this year’s Thor

and Kung Fu Panda, summer movies have produced some amazing scores.

7:00 PM PROFILES Michael Koryta 8:00 PM THE PROMISED LAND Kyshun Webster, Reaching for Greatness

6 Monday 9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH

GEORGE WALKER Liszt, Rossini, and Chopin 8:00 PM CHICAGO SYMPHONY

ORCHESTRA This Berlioz spectacular comes from

Riccardo Muti’s opening residency of the 2010-2011 season.

BERLIOZ—Symphonie Fantastique BERLIOZ—Lélio, or the Return to Life

(Gérard Depardieu, Narrator; Mario Zeffiri, tenor; Kyle Ketelsen, bass-baritone; Chicago Symphony Chorus, Duain Wolfe, director)

Riccardo Muti

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

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

Page 15: June 2011 – Radio Guide

June 2011 / Directions in Sound / Page 15Greensburg 98.9 fm • Kokomo 106.1 fm • Terre Haute 95.1 fm

10:00 PM PIPEDREAMS The Next Generation Winners of the Mader Competition in

California and the St. Alban’s Competition in England show a way to the future for the King of Instruments.

7 Tuesday 9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH

GEORGE WALKER Bach, Grieg, and Liszt 8:00 PM ETHER GAME Take Me Out to the Ballgame Ether Game suits up for and takes to the

playing field.10:06 PM SOUNDS CHORAL A Profile of Ricky Ian Gordon Ricky Ian Gordon has made a name as a

successful Broadway composer. We’ll hear his setting of “O sacrum convivium” and other works.

8 Wednesday 9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH

GEORGE WALKER Bach, Liszt, and Handel 8:00 PM LIVE! AT THE

CONCERTGEBOUW Hannu Lintu/Netherlands Radio Chamber

Philharmonic Lavinia Meijer, harp BEETHOVEN—Overture to Die Weihe des

Hauses BADINGS—Concerto for Harp and

Orchestra YUN—In Balance, for Solo Harp SHOSTAKOVICH—Symphony No. 1 in F

Major, Op. 1010:06 PM RECORD SHELF Casals Live Historic recordings of live performances

recorded at cellist Pablo Casals’ Prades Festival in the 1950s

9 Thursday 9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH

GEORGE WALKER Liszt, Beethoven, and Dufay 8:00 PM KEEPING SCORE: 13 DAYS

WHEN MUSIC CHANGED FOREVER December 26, 1926: The Premiere of

Tapiola This tone poem by Sibelius was his last

major work before thirty years of silence, during which the world waited for an eighth symphony that never came. Sibelius in his time was seen as a nationalist along the lines of Grieg, but we now hear his music as radical and astonishingly prescient.

9:00 PM HARMONIA New Music/Early Music: The New

Brandenburgs, pt. 3 Harmonia continues to explore the Orpheus

Chamber Orchestra’s commissions of new works inspired by the Brandenburg concertos of J.S. Bach. Plus, early music consort The Cardinall’s Musick finishes their recording series of William Byrd’s complete Latin Church music, and Jordi Savall explores music around Dimitrie Cantemir.

10 Friday 9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH

GEORGE WALKER Dittersdorf, Bach, and Verdi 8:00 PM MARIAN McPARTLAND’S

PIANO JAZZ Marian McPartland Selects: Hazel Scott Singer and pianist Hazel Scott was one of

the first black women to break the color barrier with roles in major Hollywood films, and the first to host her own television show in 1950. On this 1980 Piano Jazz, Scott performs “Memories of You” and duets with McPartland on “Do Nothing Till You Hear From Me.”

Hazel Scott

10:09 PM AFTERGLOW Ella and Mel At the Crescendo Small group jazz performances by Ella

Fitzgerald and Mel Tormé at the Crescendo nightclub in Hollywood

11 Saturday 1:00 PM LYRIC OPERA OF CHICAGO VERDI—Un Ballo in Maschera Starring Frank Lopardo, Sondra

Radvanovsky, Mark Delavan, and Stephanie Blythe. Asher Fisch conducts the performance.

8:00 PM HOMETOWN WITH TOM ROZNOWSKI

Prepared Remarks 8:05 PM THE FOLK SAMPLER It’s Not That Easy: falling in and Out of Love 9:05 PM THE THISTLE AND SHAMROCK Saying Something How do you deliver a message of

social justice, peace, or environmental

consciousness in a way that guarantees an audience? Find out in the songs of Christy Moore, Dougie MacLean, Máire Brennan, Sally Barker, and others.

11:00 PM NIGHT LIGHTS Chick Corea in the 1960s A 70th birthday tribute to the pianist,

featuring his recordings with Stan Getz, Blue Mitchell, Miles Davis, and as a leader in the 1960s.

12 Sunday 12:00 PM SAINT PAUL SUNDAY Mark O’Connor’s Appalachia Waltz Trio O’CONNOR—Appalachia Waltz O’CONNOR—Vistas 1:00 PM WITH HEART AND VOICE The Feast of Pentecost commemorates the

gift of the Holy Spirit to the disciples in the Upper Room. Join Peter DuBois for music that celebrates the “Birthday of the Church.”

2:00 PM THE SCORE WITH EDMUND STONE

Second Chance From Mozart in Elvira Madigan to

Boccherini in The Lady Killers; music by classical composers that was made popular by the movies.

7:00 PM PROFILES Bernard Rands and J.D. McClatchy 8:00 PM INTELLIGENCE SQUARED Panelists debate the motion, “Clean energy

can drive America’s economic recovery.”

13 Monday 9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH

GEORGE WALKER Biber, Liszt, and Arnold 8:00 PM CHICAGO SYMPHONY

ORCHESTRA Gianandrea Noseda returns RIMSKY-KORSAKOV—Russian Easter

Overture (Charles Dutoit, conductor) STRAVINSKY—Suite from The Fairy’s Kiss BORODIN—Polovtsian Dances from Prince

Igor BRAHMS—Piano Concerto No. 2 in B-Flat

Major, Op. 83 (Leif Ove Andsnes, piano)10:00 PM PIPEDREAMS In Memoriam Jean Langlais A second tribute to the accomplished French

organist, master improviser, and prolific composer, featuring performances and comments by his students, friends, and wife.

14 Tuesday 9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH

GEORGE WALKER Rossini, Sousa, and Biber

Page 16: June 2011 – Radio Guide

Page 16 / Directions in Sound / June 2011 Bloomington 103.7 fm • Columbus 100.7 fm • French Lick/West Baden 101.7 fm

8:00 PM ETHER GAME Wet and Dry Listeners in the front row may need a poncho

or a towel for this edition of Ether Game.10:06 PM SOUNDS CHORAL A Little Wedding Music Music by Bernstein, Tavener, Bach, and

Pinkham

15 Wednesday 9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH

GEORGE WALKER Debussy, Biber, and Spohr 8:00 PM LIVE! AT THE

CONCERTGEBOUW Lothar Zagrosek/Royal Concertgebouw

Orchestra Detlef Roth, baritone MAHLER/MATTHEWS—Nicht zu schnell WOLF—Penthesilea VAN KEULEN—Fünf tragische Lieder (WP) STRAUSS—Don Juan

Lothar Zagrosek

10:06 PM RECORD SHELF More recordings featuring Pablo Casals (and

friends) recorded live at the cellist’s Prades Festival.

16 Thursday 9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH

GEORGE WALKER Biber, Schumann, and Liszt 8:00 PM KEEPING SCORE: 13 DAYS

WHEN MUSIC CHANGED FOREVER January 10, 1931: The Debut of Charles

Ives’ Three Places in New England Though this work received only mild

applause the first time it was performed (at a concert funded by the composer himself), Ives’ music was revolutionary. Before him, American concert music was almost entirely based on European models. After him, through Copland and others, American “classical” music found its own voice.

9:00 PM HARMONIA Birds, Beasts, and Battles The noble falcon, a crazed cyclops, and

music imitating the sounds of battle. No, it’s not a plot for a bizarre reality TV show. This week Harmonia explores the themes of birds, beasts, and battles in Renaissance and Baroque music.

17 Friday 9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH

GEORGE WALKER Pichl, Handel, and Sullivan 8:00 PM MARIAN McPARTLAND’S

PIANO JAZZ Bucky Pizzarelli with guest host John

Pizzarelli Guitarist Bucky Pizzarelli is known for

playing the great guitar compositions of the 1930s on his seven-string guitar. He played with Benny Goodman and for many years was a member of Doc Severinson’s Tonight Show Band. In honor of Father’s Day, Bucky Pizzarelli joins his son and fellow guitarist John Pizzarelli. They play together on “Tangerine” and “In A Mellow Tone.”

10:09 PM AFTERGLOW A Mezzanine and a Casino: Buselli-Wallarab

Jazz Orchestra and Claude Thornhill Music from the Buselli-Wallarab Jazz

Orchestra’s recent release “Mezzanine,” as well as live broadcasts by the Claude Thornhill big band from Glen Island Casino in 1947.

18 Saturday 1:00 PM LYRIC OPERA OF CHICAGO GILBERT AND SULLIVAN—The Mikado Starring James Morris, Neal Davis,

Stephanie Blythe, and Toby Spence. Andrew Davis conducts.

James Morris Stephanie Blythe

8:00 PM HOMETOWN WITH TOM ROZNOWSKI

Making a Name for Myself 8:05 PM THE FOLK SAMPLER Father’s Day: songs about our dads 9:05 PM THE THISTLE AND SHAMROCK Best of the Best From The Chieftains’ vintage collection The

Very Best of the Claddagh Years, to Dusk till Dawn, which telescopes the long and successful career of Capercaillie, we explore some of the finest “best of” compilations this week.

11:00 PM NIGHT LIGHTS Bop! Go the Big Bands In the late 1940s, bop challenged the

world of big band swing. We’ll hear how bandleaders such as Woody Herman, Claude Thornhill, Boyd Raeburn, and Benny Goodman incorporated it into their sound.

19 Sunday 12:00 PM SAINT PAUL SUNDAY Marilyn Horne & Friends MARX—Hat dich die liebe beruhrt SHALIT—Eili, Eili MOORE—In the Dark Pine-Wood CHAMINADE—L’Été RACHMANINOFF—Son, Op. 38 no. 5;

Zdyes kharasho, Op. 21 no 7; Kakoye Shastye, Op. 34 no. 12

SCHUMANN—Im wunderschönen Monat Mai; Aus meinen Tränen spriessen; Die Rose, die Lilie, die Taube, die Sonne; Ich grolle nicht

IVES—Ich grolle nicht COPLAND—The Dodger BATES—Your Genius Made Me Shiver BERNSTEIN—Rabbit at Top Speed 1:00 PM WITH HEART AND VOICE Trinity Sunday celebrates the doctrine of the

three Persons of God as Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. On the next program, we’ll hear music on Trinitarian themes.

2:00 PM THE SCORE WITH EDMUND STONE

Star Trek, the Franchise Since its humble beginnings on television in

1966, Star Trek has spawned eleven feature films. Set the helm to warp speed as we travel through space—the final frontier.

7:00 PM PROFILES Wendell Berry (repeat) 8:00 PM RADIOLAB “The Good Show” examines goodness and

altruism.

20 Monday 9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH

GEORGE WALKER Rossini, Mozart, and Liszt 8:00 PM CHICAGO SYMPHONY

ORCHESTRA Esa-Pekka Salonen returns for the Chicago

premiere of his Violin Concerto. DEBUSSY—Prelude to The Afternoon of a

Faun SALONEN—Violin Concerto (Leila

Josefowicz, violin) (CSO co-commission) SIBELIUS—Symphony No. 2 in D Major,

Op. 43 FAURÉ—Suite from Pelléas et Melisande

(Philippe Jordan, conductor)10:00 PM PIPEDREAMS Getting a Little Bossi A sesquicentennial tribute to Marco Enrico

Bossi (1861-1925) the composer, virtuoso, and teacher who modernized the art of the organ in Italy with his passionate, romantic music.

Page 17: June 2011 – Radio Guide

June 2011 / Directions in Sound / Page 17Greensburg 98.9 fm • Kokomo 106.1 fm • Terre Haute 95.1 fm

21 Tuesday 9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH

GEORGE WALKER Handel, Grantham, and Rossini 8:00 PM ETHER GAME Health and Wealth Things are on the up and up on this edition

of Ether Game.10:06 PM SOUNDS CHORAL Famous Fathers Celebrating Father’s Day, we’ll turn to

choral music by Bach and Haydn: Singet dem Herrn (Sing Ye to the Lord) by Bach, and “Summer” from The Seasons of Haydn.

22 Wednesday 9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH

GEORGE WALKER Sammartini, Rossini, and Biber 8:00 PM LIVE! AT THE

CONCERTGEBOUW Jaap van Zweden/Netherlands Radio

Philharmonic Orchestra BEETHOVEN—Symphony No. 1 BEETHOVEN—Symphony No. 4 BEETHOVEN—Symphony No. 5

Jaap van Zweden

10:06 PM RECORD SHELF A Buyer’s Guide to the Beethoven Piano

Sonatas An updated survey of the best of the readily

available recordings

23 Thursday 9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH

GEORGE WALKER Rossini, Liszt, and Brahms 8:00 PM KEEPING SCORE: 13 DAYS

WHEN MUSIC CHANGED FOREVER January 28, 1936: The Publication in Pravda

of the Article “Chaos Instead of Music” This article signaled Stalin’s displeasure

with Shostakovich’s opera Lady Macbeth of Mtsensk and led to the composer’s “redemption” in his Symphony No. 5. This program explores Shostakovich and the sometimes mutually beneficial, sometimes terrifying, relationship between music and the totalitarian state.

9:00 PM HARMONIA Feasting and Gluttony Harmonia explores one of the downsides

of too much feasting—gluttony—found in music of the Renaissance and baroque, and Les Voix Baroques performs in a featured release of early 17th century carnival music, Humori.

24 Friday 9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH

GEORGE WALKER Hummel, Telemann, and Hasse 8:00 PM MARIAN McPARTLAND’S

PIANO JAZZ Geri Allen Detroit-born pianist, composer, and

university professor Geri Allen is a musician of great depth and creativity. Her album of solo piano works, Flying Toward The Sound, was one of the critical highlights for 2010. Allen’s compositional skills are on display as she plays her own tune “Avatar,” and she gets together with McPartland on Monk’s “Well You Needn’t.”

10:09 PM AFTERGLOW This Is All I Ask: Gordon Jenkins A salute to songwriter and arranger Gordon

Jenkins, featuring recordings by Nat King Cole, Frank Sinatra, Judy Garland and more.

25 Saturday 1:00 PM LYRIC OPERA OF CHICAGO PUCCINI—The Golden Girl of the West Starring Deborah Voigt, Marcello Giordani,

Marco Vratogna, and Rene Barbera. Andrew Davis conducts.

8:00 PM HOMETOWN WITH TOM ROZNOWSKI A Chance Encounter 8:05 PM THE FOLK SAMPLER More than Just a Song: the magic of the

poets 9:05 PM THE THISTLE AND SHAMROCK Mile of Isles From the Northern Isles of Shetland and

Orkney to the Hebrides, the Isle of Man, and Rathlin Island off the northern Irish coast, this week’s diverse choice of music is insular only in the geographical sense.

11:00 PM NIGHT LIGHTS Bob Brookmeyer and Some of His Friends A tribute to the trombonist and composer,

featuring his 1950s and ’60s dates both as a leader and as a sideman with Stan Getz, Gerry Mulligan, and others.

26 Sunday 12:00 PM SAINT PAUL SUNDAY Paul Coletti, viola; Lydia Artymiw, piano MENDELSSOHN—Viola Sonata in c minor SCHUMANN—Märchenbilder, Opus 113

(Scenes of a Fairyland) BRAHMS—Viola Sonata No. 2 in Eb, Opus

120 1:00 PM WITH HEART AND VOICE This week we’ll meet the man behind much

of the music we hear on With Heart and Voice. John Scott talks about his work at St. Paul’s Cathedral, London and St. Thomas Church, Fifth Avenue, and we’ll hear from those choirs in glorious music for men and boys.

2:00 PM THE SCORE WITH EDMUND STONE

Tribute to Bernard Herrmann Whether composing for Alfred Hitchcock

or Orson Welles, Francois Truffaut or Martin Scorsese, this composer was in a league of his own. In this centenary year of Herrmann’s birth, we honor the man and his music.

7:00 PM PROFILES Gerry Kern 8:00 PM TRAVELS WITH MIKE In search of America fifty years after John

Steinbeck’s cross-country trip

27 Monday 9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH

GEORGE WALKER Danzi, Telemann, and Rachmaninoff 8:00 PM CHICAGO SYMPHONY

ORCHESTRA Charles Dutoit conducts the concert, as well

as the accompanying multimedia production10:00 PM PIPEDREAMS Beyond Stars and Stripes A sampler of American music, both patriotic

and sacred, in celebration of Independence Day

28 Tuesday 9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH

GEORGE WALKER Rossini, Saint-Saëns, and Vivaldi 8:00 PM ETHER GAME I Do It’s wedding season, and we’re heading

down the aisle on this edition of Ether Game.

10:06 PM SOUNDS CHORAL Georg Phillip Telemann Honoring the anniversary of the death

of this early Baroque master, we’ll hear a complete performance of Die Donner-Ode, among other works.

Page 18: June 2011 – Radio Guide

Page 18 / Directions in Sound / June 2011 Bloomington 103.7 fm • Columbus 100.7 fm • French Lick/West Baden 101.7 fm

Keeping Score: MahlerThursdays at 10pm, starting June 23

The San Francisco Symphony and music director Michael Tilson Thomas present new episodes exploring the life and music of Gustav Mahler. This year marks the centenary of both the death of Mahler and the birth of the San Francisco Symphony, and the Keeping Score project focuses on the enigmatic composer with two one-hour documentary-style episodes, two live-performance programs, new online Mahler-related content anda 13-part national radio series premiering Summer 2011. In Origins, Michael Tilson Thomas journeys to rural Bohemia to rediscover the inspirations of Gustav Mahler’s music, and traces Mahler’s life through the premiere of his first symphony in 1888. Legacy examines Mahler’s grand achievements and great sorrows—his career-crowning appointments in Vienna and New York, and the sudden, tragic death of his daughter—and shows how his stormy inner life inspired new heights of creativity.

Michael Tilson Thomas Thomas Hampson

These specials will be followed by performances of works by Mahler. On June 23 at 11pm, Michael Tilson Thomas and the San Francisco Symphony will perform Mahler’s Symphony Number 1, Titan. On June 30 at 11pm, Maestro Thomas will perform Mahler’s famous and poignant love song, Adagietto from Symphony No. 5, the Scherzo from Symphony No. 7 in E minor and the Rondo Burleske from Symphony No. 9 in D major. World-renowned baritone Thomas Hampson performs Songs of a Wayfarer.

W IUwfiu.org

PROGRAMMING AND OPERATING SUPPORTIndiana University

CORPORATE MEMBERSHIPBloomington Chiropractic CenterBloomington Iron & Metal, Inc.Bloomington Veterinary HospitalBrown Hill Nursery of ColumbusDr. Phillip Crooke Obstetrics & GynecologyDelta Tau Delta Fraternity— Indiana UniversityDuke EnergyG. C. Magnum & Son ConstructionDr. David Howell & Dr. Timothy Pliske, DDS of Bedford & BloomingtonJoie De Vivre | MedicalKP Pharmaceutical TechnologyLaborers Union #204-Terre HautePynco, Inc.—BedfordSmithvilleStrategic Development

PROGRAM UNDERWRITERS 4th Street Festival of the Arts and CraftsA Summit of Awesome Art GirlsAllen Funeral HomeAnderson Medical ProductsAndrews, Harrell, Mann, Carmin, and Parker P.C.Aqua PROArgentum JewelryArts IllianaArts WeekBaugh Enterprises Commercial Printing & Bulk Mail ServicesBell TraceBicycle GarageBloom MagazineBloomingfoods Market & DeliBloomington Convention & Visitors BureauBloomington PopsBloomington Symphony OrchestraBrown County Art Guild, Inc.The Buskirk-Chumley TheaterBy Hand GalleryCafé Django

This month on WTIU television.

29 Wednesday 9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC

WITH GEORGE WALKER Beethoven, Danzi, and Suppé 8:00 PM LIVE! AT THE

CONCERTGEBOUW Sakari Oramo/Royal

Concertgebouw Orchestra Janine Jansen, violin LINDBERG—Chorale JANÁCEK—Taras Bulba SHOSTAKOVICH—Violin

Concerto No. 1 in A Minor, Op. 77

10:06 PM RECORD SHELF In the first of two programs,

a conversation with one of the world’s most adventurous conductors (and President of Bard College), Leon Botstein

30 Thursday 9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC

WITH GEORGE WALKER Pleyel, Biber, and Liszt 8:00 PM KEEPING SCORE: 13

DAYS WHEN MUSIC CHANGED FOREVER

November 4, 1964: The Premiere of Terry Riley’s In C

This piece, which premiered at the San Francisco Tape Music Center, and the minimalist outpouring that it sparked, were a reaction to the rigid strictures of serialism and the stranglehold of the academic composers of the time.

Terry Riley

9:00 PM HARMONIA Retrospective: Early Music America

Competition Winners, pt. 1 Harmonia marks the 25th

anniversary of Early Music America with a look at its past competition winners. Part one of two looks at the accomplishments of Ensemble La Rota, Asteria, and the Catacoustic Consort. Plus, Jordi Savall and Le Concert des Nations perform in a featured release of music from the time of Louis XV.

Page 19: June 2011 – Radio Guide

June 2011 / Directions in Sound / Page 19Greensburg 98.9 fm • Kokomo 106.1 fm • Terre Haute 95.1 fm

LOCAL PROGRAM PRODUCTION SUPPORTAllen Funeral Home (Ask the Mayor-Bloomington)Bicycle Garage (Afterglow)Bloomingfoods Market & Deli (Earth Eats)The Bloomington Brewing Company (Just You and Me)Café Django (Just You and Me)The District-MCSWMD (Ask the Mayor-Bloomington)Ferrer Gallery (Artworks)Goods for Cooks (Earth Eats) The Funeral Chapel (Classical Music with George Walker)Mark Adams, Financial Advisor (Classical Music with George Walker)Indiana Humanities Council (Moment of Indiana History)Lennie’s (Just You and Me)The Nature Conservancy (Journey with Nature)Pizza X (Just You and Me)Periodontics & Dental Implant Center of Southern Indiana (Classical Music with

George Walker)Smithville (Profiles) (Noon Edition)

Sole Sensations (Classical Music with George Walker)The Trojan Horse (Just You and Me) Vance Mucic Center (Classical Music with George Walker)Wandering Turtle (Artworks)

NATIONALLy SyNDICATED PROGRAM SUPPORTAmerican Society of Plant Biologists (A Moment of Science)Christel DeHaan Family Foundation (Harmonia)Brabson Foundation (A Moment of Science)Laughing Planet (Night Lights)Landlocked Music (Night Lights)E. Nakamichi Foundation (Harmonia—The Traditions Series)The Oakley Foundation, Terre Haute (Hometown)Office of the IU Provost, Bloomington (A Moment of Science)Pynco, Inc., Bedford (A Moment of Science) (Harmonia)Raymond Foundation (A Moment of Science)Soma Coffee House and Juice Bar (Night Lights)

Camerata OrchestraCardinal Stage CompanyCenterstoneChildren’s VillageClay City PharmacyColumbus Area Arts CouncilColumbus Container Inc.Columbus Indiana PhilharmonicColumbus OpticalThe Community Foundation of Jackson CountyCommercial Service of BloomingtonCrawlspace DoctorCrossroads Repertory TheatreCurry Auto CenterDell BrothersDermatology Center of Southern IndianaDePauw UniversityDesignscape Horticultural Services, IncThe District-MCSWMDEco Logic, LLCThe Electrical Workers of the IBEW Local 725 and the National Electrical Contractors AssociationExperience TechnologyFarm BloomingtonFiber Art Furniture Finch’s BrasserieFirst United ChurchFirst United Methodist ChurchFriends of Art BookstoreFriends of the Library-Monroe CountyThe Funeral ChapelGarden VillaGilbert ConstructionGlobal GiftsGoode Integrative Health CareGoods for CooksGolden Living CenterGrant Street InnGreene & Schultz, Trial Lawyers, P.C.The Herald-TimesHills O’Brown RealtyHills O’Brown Property ManagementChristopher J. Holly, Attorney at LawHoosier Environmental CouncilHoosiers for Higher EducationDr. Howard & Associates Eye CareIn A Yarn BasketIndiana Daily StudentIndiana History Museum

Indiana State MuseumIndiana State UniversityIndiana University HealthIndianapolis Chamber OrchestraIndianapolis Symphony OrchestraIndianapolis-Marion County Public Library FoundationThe Irish Lion Restaurant and PubISU Hulman CenterIU Art MuseumIU AuditoriumIU Bloomington Continuing StudiesIU Campus Bus ServicesIU College of Arts & SciencesIU Credit UnionIU Credit Union—Investment ServicesIU Department of Theatre & DramaIU Campus Recreational SportsIU Division of Residential Programs & ServicesIU Friends of Art BookshopIU Jacobs School of MusicIU Medical Sciences ProgramIU PressIU School of Fine ArtsIU University Information Technology ServicesIUB Early Childhood Educational ServicesIvy Tech Community CollegeJ. L. Waters & CompanyJoie De Vivre | MedicalKappa Alpha Theta Antique ShowKentucky Symphony OrchestraLaughing Planet CaféL. B. Stant and AssociatesLake Monroe VillageLotus PilatesMallor | Grodner Attorneys Mann Plumbing Inc.Meadowood Retirement CenterMeadowood Health PavilionMidwest Counseling Center-Linda AlisMonroe County History CenterMusical Arts Youth OrchestraNicki Williamson CounselingOliver WineryPeriodontics & Dental Implant Center of Southern IndianaPictura GalleryProBleuQuality Surfaces The RedemptionRelishRentbloomington.netRestore/Habitat for Humanity

Ron Plecher-RemaxRose Hulman Performing Arts SeriesScholars Inn BakehouseSerendipity Martini Bar and RestaurantShawnee Summer TheatreSmithvilleShowers Inn Bed & BreakfastSole SensationsSoma Coffee House and Juice Bar

Saint Mary of the Woods CollegeTerry’s Banquets & CateringThe Venue Fine Arts & GiftsTraditions CateringTrojan Horse RestaurantTwisted Limb PaperworksVance Music CenterVillage DeliWonderLabWorld Wide Automotive ServiceYarns Unlimited

These community minded businesses support locally produced programs on WFIU. We thank them for their partnership and encourage you to thank and support them.

Page 20: June 2011 – Radio Guide

Indiana University1229 East 7th StreetBloomington, IN 47405-5501

29-200-91

Periodicals Postage

PAIDBloomington, Indiana

TIME DATEDMATERIAL

W IUwfiu.org

HD2 scheduleJune 2011