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Also this month: • The Latin American Music Center on Fiesta! • New Friday Night Jazz Lineup • Artist of the Month: Edward Auer . . . and more! August 2012 W I U wfiu.org Carol Friedman Bobby McFerrin’s VOCAbuLarieS on Jazz at Lincoln Center Friday, August 31, 11 p.m.
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August 2012 – Radio Guide

Mar 31, 2016

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Listening Guide for WFIU – Public Radio Serving South Central Indiana
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Page 1: August 2012 – Radio Guide

Also this month:

• The Latin American Music Center on Fiesta!

• New Friday Night Jazz Lineup

• Artist of the Month: Edward Auer

. . . and more!

August2012 W IU

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Bobby McFerrin’s VOCAbuLarieS on Jazz at Lincoln CenterFriday, August 31, 11 p.m.

Page 2: August 2012 – Radio Guide

Page 2 / Directions in Sound / August 2012 Bloomington 103.7 fm • Columbus 100.7 fm • French Lick/West Baden 101.7 fm

Bobby McFerrin’s Music for the 21st CenturyJazz at Lincoln Center brings ten-time Grammy winner and vocal virtuoso Bobby McFerrin to Rose Theater for the first time with music from the critically-acclaimed album VOCAbuLarieS.

The ambitious project, seven years in the making, draws from the array of influences that have long contributed to McFerrin’s innovative style of classical, world music, R&B, gospel, and beyond. It’s characterized by dense compositional detail, rich textures, and complex arrangements.

McFerrin begins the show with his trademark solo improvisations. He’s then joined by Denmark’s Vocal Line choir, R&B singer Lisa Fischer, and members of his touring ensemble Voicestra, with whom he presents five songs from VOCAbuLarieS. He will also create improvised “Circlesongs,” enlisting both the choir and the audience to perform spontaneously composed choral music. VOCAbuLarieS is McFerrin’s first new release in nearly a decade. A collaboration with the classically-trained composer and arranger Roger Treece, it features more than fifty of the world’s finest singers. Treece listened to hundreds of hours of McFerrin’s wildly diverse archival recordings, searching for the finest threads of ideas. He enlisted vocalists from the worlds of jazz, opera, performance art, early music, cabaret, and rock and roll. He spent years in the studio recording McFerrin and Grammy-winning recording artists such as Brazilian jazz innovator Luciana Souza, Janis Siegel of the Manhattan Transfer, and the stellar ensemble singers of New York Voices. The singers were recorded one at a time and in small groups to create a virtual choir made up of over 1,400 vocal tracks. Over the course of some thousand hours of studio time, the best performances were captured and sculpted into form. Voices of different colors, types, and stylistic bents were joined to invent a new sound, combining studio R&B, classical choral blend, and African tribal chant—all melded into a new amalgam, built up layer by layer. The songs that make up VOCAbuLarieS keep the listener’s ear in a constant state of surprise. The lyrics offer a collage of Latin, Italian, Sanskrit, Zulu, Spanish, Russian, Hebrew, Portuguese, Mandarin, Japanese, French, Arabic, German, English, Gaelic as well as McFerrin’s own invented language. Within the songs of VOCAbuLarieS are many thousands of songs, each one a wondrous creation brimming with ecstasy, uplift, and a sense of infinite possibility. Join host Wendell Pierce on Friday, August 31st at 11 p.m. for this special edition of Jazz at Lincoln Center.

August 2012Vol. 60, No . 8Directions 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 Services

John Bailey—Director of Marketing and CommunicationsKatie Becker, Amber Kerezman— Corporate DevelopmentEoban Binder—Director of Digital MediaJoe Bourne—Jazz HostCary Boyce—Station Operations DirectorAnnie Corrigan—Multi Media Producer/AnnouncerDon Glass—Volunteer Producer/ A Moment of Science®

George Hopstetter—Director of Engineering and OperationsStan Jastrzebski—News DirectorDavid Brent Johnson—Jazz Director

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, e-mail us at [email protected].

Listener Response: You can e-mail us at [email protected], call us at (812) 855-1357, or mail us a letter addressed to: WFIU, Radio/TV Center, 1229 East 7th Street, Indiana University, Bloomington, IN 47401-5501

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].

LuAnn Johnson—Program Services ManagerNancy Krueger—Gifts and Grants OfficerYaël Ksander—Producer/AnnouncerAngela Mariani—Host/Producer, HarmoniaMichael Paskash—Radio Audio DirectorMia Partlow—Executive AssistantAdam Schwartz—Editor, Directions In Sound; ProducerDonna Stroup—Chief Financial OfficerGeorge Walker—Producer/On-Air Broadcast DirectorSara Wittmeyer—WFIU/WTIU News Bureau ChiefDavid Wood—Music DirectorMarianne Woodruff—Corporate DevelopmentEva Zogorski—Membership Director

• Administrative Arts Assistant: Emily Trinkle• Broadcast Assistants: Michael Kapinus, John Porter• Ether Game: Tom Berich, host• Harmonia Production Assistant: Janelle Davis• Managing Editor Muslim Voices: Rosemary Pennington• Membership Staff: Laura Grannan, Joan Padawan, Holly Thrasher • Multimedia Journalist: Kyle Clayton• Multiplatform Reporter: Dan Goldblatt• Music Library Assistant: Anna Coogan• News Producer: Julie Rawe• Online Content Coordinator: Ben Alford• StateImpact Indiana Multimedia Journalists: Elle Moxley, Kyle Stokes• Volunteer Producer/Hosts: Moya Andrews, Mary Catherine Carmichael, Christopher Citro, Peter Jacobi, Owen Johnson, Patrick O’Meara, Shana Ritter, Bob Zaltsberg• Web Assistant: Margaret Aprison, Liz Leslie

Page 3: August 2012 – Radio Guide

August 2012 / Directions in Sound / Page 3Greensburg 98.9 fm • Kokomo 106.1 fm • Terre Haute 95.1 fm

Artist of the Month WFIU’s featured artist for the month of August is pianist and IU Jacobs School of Music faculty member Edward Auer. Growing up in a musical family in Los Angeles, Auer studied piano and composition. Later, he studied piano with Rosina Lhévinne at the Julliard School and received a Fulbright grant to study in Paris with Julius Katchen.

Featured Contemporary ComposerWFIU’s featured contemporary composer for the month of August is Steven Stucky. Stucky’s extensive catalogue of compositions ranges from large-scale orchestral works to a cappella miniatures for chorus, an eight-minute work for five percussionists, solo piano pieces, and music for ensembles such as piano quartet, string quartet, wind quintet, voice and piano, and saxophone and piano. He was awarded the Pulitzer Prize in music in 2005 for his Second Concerto for Orchestra. His orchestral works have been performed by the Minnesota, Philadelphia, National, and Chicago Symphonies. Active as a conductor, writer, lecturer, and teacher, for two decades Stucky has been half of the longest relationship between a composer and an American orchestra: In 1988, André Previn appointed him composer-in-residence of the Los Angeles Philharmonic. Today Stucky directs contemporary programming, the awarding of commissions, educational projects for school children, and programming for nontraditional audiences.

Radiolab Goes WeeklySundays at 11 a.m.

Radiolab—public radio’s experiential investigation that explores themes and ideas through a patchwork of people, sounds, and stories—is now a weekly series. Co-hosted by Jad Abumrad and Robert Krulwich, Radiolab is for listeners who demand skepticism but appreciate wonder; who are curious about the world, but also want to be moved and surprised.

August 5Where am I?Maybe you’re in your office in Indiana, Chicago, or Tuvalu. You’re on planet Earth. But where are you really? This hour, Radiolab tries to find out. We examine the bond between brain and body, and look at what happens when it breaks.

August 12Race When the human genome was first fully mapped in 2000, Bill Clinton, Craig Venter, and Francis Collins took the stage and pronounced that “The concept of race has no genetic or scientific basis.” What does that really mean, and where does it leave us? Our genes are nearly all the same, but that hasn’t made race meaningless, or wiped out our evolving conversation about it.

August 19Parasites In this hour, Radiolab uncovers a world full of parasites. We explore nature’s moochers with tales of lethargic farmers, zombie cockroaches, and maybe even mind-controlled humans. And we examine claims that some parasites may actually be good for you.

August 26MoralityThis hour of Radiolab, we peer inside the brains of people contemplating moral dilemmas. We watch chimps sharing blackberries, observe toddlers fighting over toys, tour the country’s first penitentiary, and hear a story of land grabbing, indentured servitude, and slumlording in the fourth grade.

Since his 1964 New York debut in Carnegie Hall, Auer has spent his career playing extensively throughout the United States, Europe, and Asia, performing solo recitals and concerts in thirty countries, including the United States, Europe, Japan, Israel, and Australia. He has performed as a soloist with many of the world’s major orchestras under the baton of such luminaries as Zubin Mehta, Herbert Blomstedt, Charles Dutoit, and Riccardo Chailly. In 1965, Auer was the first American pianist to win a prize in the International Chopin Competition in Warsaw, Poland, and now is recognized throughout the classical music world as a leading interpreter of the music of Frédéric Chopin. He was also a prizewinner in the Tchaikovsky, Beethoven, and Queen Elizabeth competitions, as well as the Concours Marguerite Long competition. Professor Auer has recorded for RCA Japan, Toshiba EMI, Erato, Camerata, TownHall, and other labels. He is currently working on a multivolume set of the works of Chopin, to celebrate the bicentennial of that composer’s birth in 2010. WFIU will feature performances of Edward Auer during the weekday morning program Classical Music with George Walker throughout the month of August.

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Stucky is an active proponent of new music, directing the Los Angeles Philharmonic New Music Group, and his own group, Ensemble X. A composer of works for diverse ensembles, his music has also been performed by the Raschèr Quartet, pianist Emanuel Ax, and percussionist Evelyn Glennie. Since 1980, Stucky has been on the faculty of the music department at Cornell University, as department chair and now professor. He is active in giving master classes and serving as a composer-in-residence, a position he will fill with the Berkeley Symphony in the 2012-13 season. WFIU will feature compositions by Steven Stucky throughout the month of August.

Page 4: August 2012 – Radio Guide

Page 4 / Directions in Sound / August 2012 Bloomington 103.7 fm • Columbus 100.7 fm • French Lick/West Baden 101.7 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.

August 6–12Saros

(BiBimBop Music)Beata Moon and various artists

Indiana-raised pianist and composer Beata Moon made her debut at age 8 with the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra and is self-taught as a composer. She has released two CDs of chamber music and one of solo piano. This new CD brings together seven past works that orbit through a varied menu of moods through chamber pieces, piano music, and songs.

August 13–19Los Ministriles in the New World

(Navona Records NV5875)Piffaro

The eight members of the Renaissance band Piffaro use a variety of wind instruments: entire families of shawms, recorders, and crumhorns; along with sackbuts, a bass dulcian and bagpipes; accompanied by Spanish essentials such as harp, vihuela, guitar, and percussion. Their new CD presents a collection of early music by Spanish composers of the 16th and 17th centuries.

August 20–26Adam Gyorgy Plays Liszt, Bach, andMozart

(AGP Records)Adam Gyorgy, piano

The selection of music on this album is a dizzying and dazzling group of fourteen pieces from Franz Liszt (both as composer and arranger), J.S. Bach, Mozart, and Gyorgy’s arrangements of Rimsky-Korsakov’s Flight of the Bumble Bee and Mendelssohn’s Wedding March. August 27–September 2Corelli: 12 Violin Sonatas, Op. 5 (2 CDs)

(Bridge 9371 A/B)Trio Corelli

This complete recording of Corelli’s magnificent Op. 5 violin sonatas is performed the Danish ensemble Trio Corelli on period instruments. The six church sonatas represent a more serious and solemn style, while the remaining six chamber sonatas consist mainly of preludes and dance movements. The trio performs the church sonatas from an edition found in Amsterdam that some speculate contains Corelli’s own embellishments of the otherwise plain slow movements. The chamber sonatas were not adorned by Corelli’s own hand, but Trio Corelli adds embellishments in keeping with the tradition of the day.

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

August 6–10ELGAR—Serenade in e, Op. 20; Joseph Silverstein/IU Chamber Orchestra

August 13–17SHOSTAKOVICH—TWENTY-FOUR PRELUDES AND FUGUES, OP. 87: No. 14 in E-flat; Edward Auer, piano

August 20–23MARINI—Sonata Quarta, Op.8; Stanley Ritchie, violin; Nigel North, theorbo

August 27–31WHITACRE—Leonardo Dreams of his Flying Machine; Jan Harrington/IU University Singers

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August 2012 / Directions in Sound / Page 5Greensburg 98.9 fm • Kokomo 106.1 fm • Terre Haute 95.1 fm

ProfilesSundays at 7 p.m.

August 5 – David Ward-Steinman

Composer David Ward-Steinman is an adjunct professor of music at Indiana University. His compositions reflect popular and jazz music, electronic music, and music from other cultures. His works have been performed in all the major cities of the U.S. and on every continent except Africa and Antarctica, by such ensembles as the Japan Philharmonic, San Diego Symphony, and Seattle Symphony. His music has been recorded on a number of labels including Harmonia Mundi. His teachers have included Darius Milhaud, Milton Babbitt, Aaron Copland, and Nadia Boulanger. Annie Corrigan hosts.

August 12 – David Margolick

David Margolick is a contributing editor at Vanity Fair and previously at Newsweek and The New York Times, where he wrote a weekly legal affairs column and was nominated four times for the Pulitzer Prize. His is the author of Beyond Glory: Joe Louis vs. Max Schmeling and a World on the Brink; Strange Fruit: The Biography of a Song; At the Bar: The Passions and Peccadillos of American Lawyers; and most recently, Elizabeth and Hazel: Two Women of Little Rock. Owen Johnson hosts.

August 19 – Twesigye Jackson Kaguri

Twesigye J. Kaguri is founder and executive director of the Nyaka AIDS Orphans Project, which provides free education to children who have lost one or both parents to AIDS. He has been involved in international community efforts as a human rights advocate, fundraiser, and inspirational speaker. He was named a Heifer International Hero, recognized in Time magazine’s Power of One Series, and spoken to the UN about his work. He is the co-author of The Price of Stones, Building a School for My Village. Shana Ritter hosts. (repeat)

August 26 – Andrew Lam

Andrew Lam is a journalist, commentator for NPR’s All Things Considered, and an editor with New America Media, a national collaboration of 2,000 ethnic news organizations. His essays have appeared in dozens of newspapers, including The New York Times and the San Francisco Chronicle. He has won multiple literary and journalism awards including the Outstanding Young Journalist Award from the Society of Professional Journalists. Lam was born in South Vietnam and left with his family during the fall of Saigon. His collection of essays, Perfume Dreams, discusses the problem of identity as a Vietnamese living in the U.S. Gena Asher hosts.

Cary Boyce

Cary Boyce Heads WestStation Operations Director Cary Boyce is leaving WFIU. On September 1, he will start as CEO and general manager of Spokane Public Radio in Spokane, Washington.

“It has been a great privilege to be a part of WFIU’s growth and tremendous service to our communities,” Boyce said. “The station is an extraordinary cultural and educational resource in Indiana. It became so with vision of its leaders, hard work of its staff and crew, support of individual listeners and business partners, and the generous support of Indiana University and the state of Indiana. Together, we have built not just a local treasure, but also one of national rank and respect. “WFIU is a leader in the broadcast industry, including the delivery of state and local news in Indiana, adoption of new media, and training of the next generation of journalists. You can find WFIU alumni in positions of responsibility in public radio and public service across the country, at NPR, and other national organizations. It is a legacy and a service we point to with pride.” General Manager Perry Metz credits Cary with ensuring a smooth transition when longtime station manager Christina Kuzmych left to head Wyoming Public Radio. “Cary was generous with his praise for individual staff and showed confidence in many by giving them increased responsibility within the station,” Metz said. “He has a good ear for traditional radio as well as a great appreciation for what new technologies are bringing to the field.”

Page 6: August 2012 – Radio Guide

Page 6 / Directions in Sound / August 2012 Bloomington 103.7 fm • Columbus 100.7 fm • French Lick/West Baden 101.7 fm

MemberCard BenefitsFor complete details, visit membercard.com/wfiu or call 800-662-3311.

Benefits of the Month:Bluespring Caverns Park (#385) – NEW NAME!1459 Bluespring Caverns RoadBedford(812) 279-9471bluespringcaverns.com

Valid for two-for-one general admission during August 2012. Subject to availability; call or visit Web site for more information.

The Cabaret at the Columbia Club (#163)121 Monument CircleIndianapolis(317) 275-1169thecabaret.org

Valid for two-for-one admission to Carol Woods: Singin’ the Blues on Broadway, August 10-11. Subject to availability; call or visit Web site for information. Food or two-beverage minimum required.

New Dining Benefits:Concannon’s Pastry Shop (#59)4801 North Baker LaneMuncie(765) 288-9820

Valid any time for two-for-one menu item.

Concannon’s Pastry Shop (#58)620 North Walnut StreetMuncie(765) 288-8551

Valid any time for two-for-one menu item.

Pita Pit (#15)509 South Martin StreetMuncie(765) 288-8551pitapitusa.com

Valid any time for two-for-one menu item.

Benefit Changes:Irish Lion (#236)BloomingtonOffer expired

Nestle Inn (#140)IndianapolisOffer expired

Community EventsMonroe County United MinistriesEach One, Feed One August 17–19Various locations

Each One, Feed One is an annual community food drive held at grocery stores around Monroe County made possible by the help of more than 200 volunteers. The volunteers collect food, cleaning supplies, and hygiene products between Friday the 17th and Sunday the 19th. This food drive will help restock the MCUM’s Emergency Food Pantry after the summer season, which typically brings a reduction in donations but not in demand. In 2011, the Monroe County United Ministries’ pantry distributed enough food to make more than 36,000 meals and provided nearly 10,000 cleaning and hygiene items to people in financial crisis. Also last year, the Each One, Feed One drive collected more than 16,000 pounds of donated items, accepted financial donations from shoppers, and prepared items for redistribution.

Highlights this Month on WFIUSounds ChoralTuesday, August 7, 9 p.m.

Host Marjorie Herman devotes a program to Tenebrae, a professional English chamber choir that performs medieval chant and renaissance works interspersed with contemporary compositions to create an ethereal mood of contemplation. Tenebrae and its members are drawn from such musical backgrounds as the Monteverdi Choir, the choirs of Westminster Abbey and Cathedral, and King’s College, Cambridge. Many of Tenebrae’s singers have worked with the leading specialist vocal groups including I Fagiolini, The Tallis Scholars, The Swingle Singers, and The King’s Singers.

With Heart and VoiceSunday, August 12, 1 p.m.

Host Peter DuBois visits with John Scott, the man behind so much of the music played on With Heart and Voice.

An English-born organist and choirmaster, Scott directed the Choir of St. Paul’s Cathedral in London for twenty-six years. He then moved to take up the post of organist and director of music at Saint Thomas Church, New York, where he now directs the renowned choir of men and boys.

The ScoreSunday, August 12, 2 p.m.

Host Edmund Stone honors Elmer Bernstein, composer of more than 200 films scores including The Magnificent Seven, The Ten Commandments, and To Kill a Mockingbird. In a career that spanned fifty years, Bernstein (1922–2004) won an Oscar for his score to Thoroughly Modern Millie and was nominated for fourteen Oscars in total. For the Martin Scorsese remake of Cape Fear, Bernstein adapted the original score of another great Hollywood composer, Bernard Herrmann—who is the subject of the August 26th edition of The Score.

Fiesta! Thursday, August 23, 8 p.m.

This installment of Fiesta! highlights music from the Latin American Music Center at Indiana University’s Jacob School of Music. The program features performances by El Taller, Bossa De Bloomington, and violinist Daniel Stein. The Latin American Music Center has the largest archive of recorded Latino music—and the most extensive teaching program for Latin American Music—in the world. Founded in 1961 by composer and musicologist Juan Orrego-Salas, the LAMC is the oldest center of its kind in the United States. Fiesta! is hosted by Uruguayan-born composer and scholar Elbio Barilari.

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Page 7: August 2012 – Radio Guide

August 2012 / Directions in Sound / Page 7Greensburg 98.9 fm • Kokomo 106.1 fm • Terre Haute 95.1 fm

Daily E-mails Bring the News to YouEven when you’re away from home or unable to catch Morning Edition or All Things Considered, you can still catch regional news from WFIU—with our new daily news summary. You can get the summary delivered every weekday to your e-mail inbox. Simply go to the “Subscribe” box on our home page and enter your e-mail address. From there, you can choose from a number of e-mail subscription options, including the weekday summary of all the day’s top stories in south-central Indiana. It’s another way for you to get the latest from us when it’s convenient for you. Remember, too, that all the top headlines are available on demand in your Facebook and Twitter feeds, and by visiting wfiu.org/news.

Fridays Nights on WFIU: All That JazzWFIU has a new Friday night lineup that gives you more jazz and American popular song! After Fresh Air at 7 p.m., listen in at 8 p.m. for Afterglow, David Brent Johnson’s trip through decades of jazz and American popular song. Then at 9, it’s Standards by Starlight, the new Great American Songbook program hosted by Afterglow’s founder and longtime host, Dick Bishop. Stay tuned at 10 for a WFIU institution in a new timeslot: Night Lights, a weekly program of Cold War-era jazz that moves from its longtime location at 11 p.m. on Saturdays. Then at 11, it’s Jazz at Lincoln Center, the Peabody Award-winning series that offers an exclusive live celebration of America’s original art form. Airing on both Friday and Saturday nights, Bob Parlocha keeps the party going from midnight into the overnight hours. Beale Street Caravan moves from Friday nights to Night Lights’ old home—Saturdays at 11 after Afropop Worldwide—putting all of WFIU’s nighttime jazz in one irresistible place!

StateImpact UpdateStateImpact reporters Kyle Stokes and Elle Moxley have been busy keeping us informed on the effects of state education policy on our lives. Recent stories covered Gov. Mitch Daniels’ decision to head Purdue University, the effects on Indiana’s inmates of the loss of a prison college program, and how schools are using a tornado to teach emergency preparedness.

From Governor to President As Kyle Stokes reported, Indiana Governor Mitch Daniels has decided to become the next president of Purdue University when his gubernatorial term expires in January of 2013. It’s an interesting career move for Daniels, Stokes wrote, who has said Indiana students need more career and technical training. He’s advocated for alternatives to four-year universities and appeared in commercials for the online Western Governors University. (Daniels attended Princeton and Georgetown universities.) He’s also asked the legislature to cut the number of hours it takes to earn some degrees. As the 49th governor of Indiana, Daniels has backed a statewide voucher system, merit pay for teachers, and the expansion of charter schools since taking office in 2005. His Commission on Local Government Reform issued the Kernan-Shepard report, which advocated the streamlining of local government, including school consolidation.

Prison Education

Prisons may seem an unlikely place for a StateImpact education story, but a change in policy can have an effect on people going to school—behind bars. In his story, “What Indiana Will Miss with the State Prisons’ College Programs Gone,” Kyle Stokes reported on how a program that allowed Indiana prisoners to earn college degrees in prison produced its last class of graduates this past year. Lawmakers barred offenders from receiving state scholarships in 2011, cutting off the primary source of funding for Indiana’s Correctional Education Program. Once one of the largest initiatives of its kind in the nation, the educational program filled a critical need. Research has

long shown offenders with post-secondary education are much less likely to return to prison. Corrections officials say they’ll now focus on more “realistic” alternatives, such as the job-training and certification programs the prisons already offer. But others say vocational education isn’t enough.

Tornado Lessons

StateImpact reporter Elle Moxley reported on how tornadoes that devastated Henryville, Indiana, gave the school board an opportunity to better prepare for such emergencies in the future. In her report, “Henryville Tornado Can Teach Schools Lessons in Emergency Preparedness,” she reported that the West Clark Community School Board has met 34 times since tornadoes devastated the Henryville School Complex in March.Principals at the combined elementary/secondary building decided to dismiss classes early—a decision that ultimately saved lives, said Assistant Superintendent John Reed. “We would have had children killed if we followed protocol,” said Reed. Bus drivers also sent students into the homes of classmates to take cover rather than wait until they could be released to a parent or guardian. One driver, Angel Perry, returned to the school when she saw the tornado approaching. The eleven students on her bus made it into the building before the tornado blew the bus into a neighboring business.

Adam Gaunt, 37, and his fiancée Vicki Bowman pose for a photograph in the office where Adam is working this summer. They plan to marry next year. After five years in prison, Gaunt is completing a bachelor’s degree at Indiana State University in Terre Haute.

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Page 8: August 2012 – Radio Guide

Page 8 / Directions in Sound / August 2012 Bloomington 103.7 fm • Columbus 100.7 fm • French Lick/West Baden 101.7 fm

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

Indiana Business News Weekdays at 8:59 am (immediately following Marketplace)

Local and State News Weekdays at 6:06 am, 7:06 am, 8:06 am, 12:04 pm, 5:04 pm, 5:33 pm Saturdays at 7:04 am, 8:34 am, 9:34 am Marketplace Morning Report Weekdays at 8:51 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, 3:01 pm, 4:01 pm, 6:01 pm, 10:01 pm

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

Community Minute Weekdays at 8:50 am, 11:51 am and 3:27 pm Saturdays at 5:58 am Sundays at 5:58 am

Composers Datebook Mondays through Wednesdays at 3:25 pm

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

Hometown with Tom Roznowski Saturdays at 8:00 pm

Moment of Indiana History Mondays at 11:26 am Wednesdays at 7:58 pm Fridays at 11:00 pm

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

Star Date Weekdays at 11:55 am Saturdays at 10:07 pm Sundays at 10:05 pm The Poet’s Weave Sundays at 2:01 pm

The Writer’s Almanac Weekdays at 7:01 pm

Classical Music

Classical MusicArtworksClassical Music

Horizons in Music The Record Shelf

Live! At the Concertgebouw

Fiesta!

Fresh Air

BP Chicago Symphony Orchestra

Harmonia

The Score

The State We’re In

Hearts of Space

Classical Music with George Walker

Performance Today

Just You and Me with David Brent Johnson

Marketplace

Ether Game

HarmoniaSounds Choral Standards by Starlight

Afterglow

Night LightsChamber Musicfrom Spoleto

Jazz atLincoln Center

Beale StreetCaravan

Jazz with Bob Parlocha

Pipedreams

Classical Music

All Things Considered

The Folk Sampler

CelticConnections

Afropop Worldwide

Earth EatsNoon Edition

Profiles

The New YorkPhilharmonicThis Week

This American Life

Sound Medicine

Says You!

Wait Wait . . . Don’t Tell Me! Radiolab

Jazz with Bob Parlocha Through the Night with Peter Van de Graaff

Schedule subject to change. See complete listing for details

Ask the Mayor Fresh AirFresh Air

Fresh Air

With Heart and Voice

Travel withRick Steves

The Radio Reader Anatomy of Injustice airs from August 17 to September 13

LA OPERA ON THE AIR8/4: Albert Herring8/11: La Bohème

SF OPERA8/18: Turandot8/25: Don Giovanni

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

11:01 am : NPR News

State and Local news :06 after the hour8:51 am : Marketplace Morning Report

2:01 & 3:01 pm : NPR News

4:58 pm : A Moment of Science

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

SaturdaySundaySaturdayFridayThursdayWednesdayTuesdayMonday

Page 9: August 2012 – Radio Guide

August 2012 / Directions in Sound / Page 9Greensburg 98.9 fm • Kokomo 106.1 fm • Terre Haute 95.1 fm

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

Indiana Business News Weekdays at 8:59 am (immediately following Marketplace)

Local and State News Weekdays at 6:06 am, 7:06 am, 8:06 am, 12:04 pm, 5:04 pm, 5:33 pm Saturdays at 7:04 am, 8:34 am, 9:34 am Marketplace Morning Report Weekdays at 8:51 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, 3:01 pm, 4:01 pm, 6:01 pm, 10:01 pm

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

Community Minute Weekdays at 8:50 am, 11:51 am and 3:27 pm Saturdays at 5:58 am Sundays at 5:58 am

Composers Datebook Mondays through Wednesdays at 3:25 pm

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

Hometown with Tom Roznowski Saturdays at 8:00 pm

Moment of Indiana History Mondays at 11:26 am Wednesdays at 7:58 pm Fridays at 11:00 pm

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

Star Date Weekdays at 11:55 am Saturdays at 10:07 pm Sundays at 10:05 pm The Poet’s Weave Sundays at 2:01 pm

The Writer’s Almanac Weekdays at 7:01 pm

Classical Music

Classical MusicArtworksClassical Music

Horizons in Music The Record Shelf

Live! At the Concertgebouw

Fiesta!

Fresh Air

BP Chicago Symphony Orchestra

Harmonia

The Score

The State We’re In

Hearts of Space

Classical Music with George Walker

Performance Today

Just You and Me with David Brent Johnson

Marketplace

Ether Game

HarmoniaSounds Choral Standards by Starlight

Afterglow

Night LightsChamber Musicfrom Spoleto

Jazz atLincoln Center

Beale StreetCaravan

Jazz with Bob Parlocha

Pipedreams

Classical Music

All Things Considered

The Folk Sampler

CelticConnections

Afropop Worldwide

Earth EatsNoon Edition

Profiles

The New YorkPhilharmonicThis Week

This American Life

Sound Medicine

Says You!

Wait Wait . . . Don’t Tell Me! Radiolab

Jazz with Bob Parlocha Through the Night with Peter Van de Graaff

Schedule subject to change. See complete listing for details

Ask the Mayor Fresh AirFresh Air

Fresh Air

With Heart and Voice

Travel withRick Steves

The Radio Reader Anatomy of Injustice airs from August 17 to September 13

LA OPERA ON THE AIR8/4: Albert Herring8/11: La Bohème

SF OPERA8/18: Turandot8/25: Don Giovanni

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

11:01 am : NPR News

State and Local news :06 after the hour8:51 am : Marketplace Morning Report

2:01 & 3:01 pm : NPR News

4:58 pm : A Moment of Science

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

SaturdaySundaySaturdayFridayThursdayWednesdayTuesdayMonday

Shana Ritter

Michael Paskash

LuAnn Johnson

David Wood

Emily Trinkle

Page 10: August 2012 – Radio Guide

Page 10 / Directions in Sound / August 2012 Bloomington 103.7 fm • Columbus 100.7 fm • French Lick/West Baden 101.7 fm

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.

1 Wednesday 8:00 PM LIVE! AT THE

CONCERTGEBOUW Mariss Jansons/Royal Concertgebouw

Orchestra Eva-Maria Westbroek, soprano WAGNER—Wesendonck, Lieder BEETHOVEN—Symphony No. 7

2 Thursday 8:00 PM FIESTA! Dazzling, colorful music based on literary

sources, and related to Latin American Native and Afro-American traditions

GUILLÉN—Sensemaya REVUELTAS—Sensemaya CARLOS GOMEZ—Son Giunto In Tempo,

Il Guarani RIVERA—Popol-Vuh (Four Mayan Scenes

for Orchestra) BARILIARI—Alturas de Machu Picchu 9:00 PM HARMONIA Catchy Tunes: Gloria tibi Trinitas We’re solving an antiphon mystery this week

on Harmonia. It seems that every composer worth his salt in England from the mid-16th to the end of the 17th century composed at least one, and sometimes many pieces, titled “In nomine.” We’ll find out why, as well as explore the sackbut as part of our Listener’s Guide to the Renaissance.

10:06 PM SPOLETO CHAMBER MUSIC SCHUBERT—String Quintet in C Major,

D. 956; Geoff Nuttall, violin; Mark Fewer, violin; Lesley Roberston, viola

3 Friday 10:00 PM NIGHT LIGHTS The Big Speakeasy: Jazz and Prohibition Historian Michael McGerr joins us for a

look at the emergence of jazz in an era when one of America’s favorite social activities had become criminalized.

12:00 PM HARMONIA Birds, Beasts, and Battles The noble falcon, a crazed Cyclops, and

music imitating the sounds of battle. This week, Harmonia explores the themes of birds, beasts, and battles in renaissance and baroque music.

1:00 PM WITH HEART AND VOICE The Venetian Poly-Choral Style Dietrich Buxtehude’s choral music reflects

the influence of his Italian contemporaries. This week we’ll hear Buxtehude’s Benedicam Dominum, along with music by Felix Mendelssohn and Arvo Pärt.

2:00 PM THE SCORE Avast, Ye Moviegoers Edmund Stone plays music for

swashbuckling, including the thrilling scores to the Pirates of the Caribbean films and classics such as The Sea Hawk and Captain Blood.

7:00 PM PROFILES Composer David Ward-Steinman 8:00 PM NEW YORK PHILHARMONIC

THIS WEEK CONDUCTOR: Andrey Boreyko SOLOIST: Benjamin Grosvenor, piano FALLA—Ritual Fire Dance from El Amor

Brujo SAINT-SAËNS—Piano Concerto No. 2 BRAHMS—Symphony No. 1

6 Monday 8:00 PM CHICAGO SYMPHONY

ORCHESTRA Muti Conducts Cherubini Requiem Riccardo Muti showcases the Chicago

Symphony Chorus on this program. Brahms’ Song of Destiny, which shares musical characteristics with the German Requiem, is followed by Schoenberg’s arrangement of the solemn Yom Kippur prayer, and the grand Requiem in C Minor by Cherubini, whom Beethoven called the greatest living composer of his time.

10:00 PM PIPEDREAMS Sunday Music Several select and sonorous scores explore

the notion of “sacred” from a different point of view.

7 Tuesday 8:00 PM ETHER GAME Family In this season of family reunions, Ether

Game guides you through those potentially dysfunctional familiar gatherings.

9:00 PM SOUNDS CHORAL Spotlight on Tenebrae We look at this professional English

chamber choir that often performs by candlelight, creating an atmosphere of spiritual and musical reflection.

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11:00 PM JAZZ AT LINCOLN CENTER Basie and the Blues In the hands of “Count” Bill Basie, churning

rhythms and unforgettable riffs helped define Kansas City swing. Now, guitarist James Chirillo, pianist Cyrus Chestnut, and vocalist Gregory Porter join the Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra to make the Basie classics burn.

4 Saturday 1:00 PM LOS ANGELES OPERA BRITTEN—Albert Herring Albert Herring: Alek Shrader Lady Billows: Christine Brewer James Conlon conducts 8:00 PM HOMETOWN WITH TOM

ROZNOWSKI I Swear it’s True 9:00 PM CELTIC CONNECTIONS New Releases Songs and tunes from new and recent

releases, featuring some of the best in Celtic music

5 Sunday11:00 AM RADIOLAB Where Am I?

Page 11: August 2012 – Radio Guide

August 2012 / Directions in Sound / Page 11Greensburg 98.9 fm • Kokomo 106.1 fm • Terre Haute 95.1 fm

10:06 PM HORIZONS IN MUSIC Pros on Prose New settings of classic poetry from Haskins,

Lauridsen, and others

8 Wednesday 8:00 PM LIVE! AT THE

CONCERTGEBOUW John Storgards/Netherlands Radio

Philharmonic Orchestra MUSSORGSKY—Overture to Khovantchina RAUTAVAARA—Cello Concerto, Towards

the Horizon SIBELIUS—Symphony No. 2

9 Thursday 8:00 PM FIESTA! FRANCISCO—Jose Francisco Vazque:

Romanza No. 2 & Romanza No. 3 AGUADO—Introduction and Rondo Op. 2

No. 2 in A Minor PONCE—Trozos Romanticos-Romantic

Sketches souvenir WHITE—Violin Concerto in F- Sharp minor 9:00 PM HARMONIA Birds, Beasts, and Battles See August 5th description10:06 PM SPOLETO CHAMBER MUSIC MENDELSSOHN—Rondo Capriccioso,

Op.14 BARBER—Dover Beach ARENSKY—Piano Trio No. 1 in D minor

10 Friday 10:00 PM NIGHT LIGHTS Birth of the Cool Songbook Interpretations of the music used for Miles

Davis’ landmark recording by Bill Evans, Gerry Mulligan, and others.

11:00 PM JAZZ AT LINCOLN CENTER The Music of Gillespie and Puente Between 1946 and 1956, Dizzy Gillespie,

Mario Bauza, Chano Pozo, and “Mambo King” Tito Puente brought the irresistible mix of Latin Jazz to the world. Bassist Carlos Henriquez leads the Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra with Giovanni Hidalogo and Ignacio Berroa in Jazz Latin classics.

11 Saturday 1:00 PM LOS ANGELES OPERA PUCCINI—La Bohème Rodolfo: Stephen Costello Mimi: Allyn Perez Patrick Summers conducts 8:00 PM HOMETOWN WITH TOM

ROZNOWSKI Miracle

9:00 PM CELTIC CONNECTIONS Harte Songs The late Dublin singer Frank Harte inspired

many contemporary singers. We play recordings by Harte and Donal Lunny, as well as by singers like Karan Casey who are carrying on Harte’s tradition.

13 Monday 8:00 PM CHICAGO SYMPHONY

ORCHESTRA Elder Conducts Dvořák’s New World

Symphony Sir Mark Elder and the CSO share the

stage in a program from the 2009 Dvořák Festival.

10:00 PM PIPEDREAMS Revisiting England From Bath and Bristol and under the big

dome of Saint Paul’s, an album of reflections from the Pipedreams spring tour in Britain.

14 Tuesday 8:00 PM ETHER GAME Hey, Remember the 80s? Ether Game takes you back in time to

the best music of the eighties—the 1680s, 1780s, 1880s and 1980s, that is.

9:00 PM SOUNDS CHORAL Choral Music of Giovanni Gabrieli On the 400th anniversary of the death of this

Baroque master, we’ll hear a good swath of his choral music and underscore his legacy at St. Mark’s in Venice.

10:06 PM HORIZONS IN MUSIC Icons: Aaron Jay Kernis Our series profiling the careers of some of

today’s most influential composers continues with American composer Aaron Jay Kernis.

Karan Casey

12 Sunday 11:00 AM RADIOLAB Race12:00 PM HARMONIA A Musical Tour of Ferrara This week on Harmonia, we’ll travel

to city of Ferrara, exploring sounds of its renaissance. We also pay tribute to a pioneer in the field of early music, Gustav Leonhardt, who died this year, and we hear “new music” from 17th-century Italy on a featured release by the ensemble Quicksilver.

1:00 PM WITH HEART AND VOICE A Visit with John Scott We meet the man behind so 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, New York, and we hear from those choirs in glorious music for men and boys.

2:00 PM THE SCORE Elmer Bernstein Tribute Edmund Stone honors Elmer Bernstein,

composer of more than 200 films scores including The Magnificent Seven, The Ten Commandments and To Kill a Mockingbird.

7:00 PM PROFILES Author and Vanity Fair editor David

Margolick 8:00 PM NEW YORK PHILHARMONIC

THIS WEEK CONDUCTOR: Alan Gilbert SOLOISTS: Yefim Bronfman piano; Jennifer

Zetlan soprano; Joshua Hopkins baritone NIELSEN—Symphony No. 3, Sinfonia

Espansiva BRAHMS—Piano Concerto No. 2

Aaron Jay Kernis

15 Wednesday 8:00 PM LIVE! AT THE

CONCERTGEBOUW Mariss Jansons/Royal Concertgebouw

Orchestra Leif Ove Andsnes, piano BRAHMS—Piano Concerto No. 2, Op. 83 WAGNER—Vorspiel und Liebestod from

Tristan und Isolde STRAUSS—Der Rosenkavalier Suite, Op. 59

Page 12: August 2012 – Radio Guide

Page 12 / Directions in Sound / August 2012 Bloomington 103.7 fm • Columbus 100.7 fm • French Lick/West Baden 101.7 fm

16 Thursday 8:00 PM FIESTA! Flamenco Music BULERIAS—Na es eterno FLAMENCO—Macarena DE FALLA—Danza Del Terror FLAMENCO TANGO—Miro Tus Ojos ALBENIZ—Suite Espanola No. 1; I.

Granada Serenata MORENTE—Sale el Sol GRANADOS/CASSADO—Intermezzo from

Goyesca FANDANGO—Aguita de Cielo DE FALLA—Danza Ritual Del Fuego TURINA—Sinfonia Sevillana, Opus 23, II,

Por El Rio Guadalquivir 9:00 PM HARMONIA A Musical Tour of Ferrara See July 12th description10:06 PM SPOLETO CHAMBER MUSIC PAGANINI—“Moses Phantasy” Variations

on a Theme by Rossini HANDEL—“Da Tempeste” (aria from

Giulio Cesare) BEETHOVEN—Violin Sonata No. 9 in A

Major, Op. 47 (“Kreutzer”)

17 Friday 10:00 PM NIGHT LIGHTS Sesjun Radio Shows: Chet Baker, Art Blakey,

and Bill Evans Recently released 1970s radio broadcasts by

three legendary jazz artists 11:00 PM JAZZ AT LINCOLN CENTER Artistry in Rhythm: Stan Kenton Centennial

18 Saturday 1:00 PM SAN FRANCISCO OPERA PUCCINI—Turandot Turandot: Iréne Theorin Calaf: Marco Berti Liù: Leah Crocetto Nicola Luisotti conducts

8:00 PM HOMETOWN WITH TOM ROZNOWSKI

Spike on Piano 9:00 PM CELTIC CONNECTIONS Seventies Bands We survey some of the leading Irish and

Scottish bands of the 1970s, including The Bothy Band, Planxty, De Danann, and Silly Wizard.

19 Sunday 11:00 AM RADIOLAB Parasites12:00 PM HARMONIA What’s New This week we take a look at some recently

released recordings of early music. We’ll hear works of Neidhart, Ockeghem, Pierre de la Rue, Falvetti and Vivaldi. Plus, we’ll feature the first recording ever made by the ensemble La Petite Bande.

1:00 PM WITH HEART AND VOICE Visions of Heaven Choral and organ music that depicts visions

of heaven and points to eternal life 2:00 PM THE SCORE Before They Were Famous Before there was Star Wars, there was Jane

Eyre. Edmund Stone explores the film music of John Williams and other big-name film composers long before they were famous.

7:00 PM PROFILES Human Rights activist Twesiqye Jackson

Kaguri (repeat) 8:00 PM NEW YORK PHILHARMONIC

THIS WEEK CONDUCTOR: Alan Gilbert SOLOISTS: Yefim Bronfman, piano LINDBERG—ExPo LINDBERG—Souvenir in Memoriam of

Gerard Grisey LINDBERG—Grand Duo LINDBERG—Piano Concerto No. 2 LINDBERG—Kraft

20 Monday 8:00 PM CHICAGO SYMPHONY

ORCHESTRA Yo-Yo Ma Plays Haydn Yo-Yo Ma joins the CSO for Haydn’s Cello

Concerto in D Major. Dutch early music authority Ton Koopman conducts Mozart’s Symphony No. 20, paired with Haydn’s Symphony No. 6.

10:00 PM PIPEDREAMS Northern Lights Composers, performers, and instrument

builders provide a brilliant outlet for musical imagination in Nordic countries.

21 Tuesday 8:00 PM ETHER GAME Art Music We listen to music that inspired or was

inspired by art—from Bach to Brian Eno. 9:00 PM SOUNDS CHORAL Symphony No. 8 by Gustav Mahler:

Movement I We delve into history and Latin textual

choices of one of the largest works in the choral repertoire.

10:06 PM HORIZONS IN MUSIC Rising in the East Celebrating the music of Asian-American

composers

22 Wednesday 8:00 PM LIVE! AT THE

CONCERTGEBOUW Jukka-Pekka Saraste/Rotterdam

Philharmonic Orchestra Karita Mattila, soprano BARTÓK—Dance Suite SAARIAHO—Quatre instants SIBELIUS—Luonnotar SIBELIUS—Symphony No. 4

Iréne Theorin as Turandot

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Karita Mattila

23 Thursday 8:00 PM FIESTA! Music from the Latin American Music

Center at Indiana University GARDEL—Lejana Tierra Mía Argentina

(Yuriria Rodriguez, vocal; Daniel Stein, violin)

MOLEIRO—Joropo (Jasmin Arakawa, piano)

VIECO—Patasdilo (Traditional Pasillo) (Jorge Montilla, Jennifer Everhart, Salvador Oriola, clarinets)

SIMONS—El Manisero (Son) (Jorge Montilla, Jennifer Everhart, Salvador Oriola, clarinets)

MATAMOROS—Son De La Loma (Son Montuno) (Jorge Montilla, Jennifer Everhart, Salvador Oriola, clarinets)

SANCHEZ-PORTUGUEZ—Rapsodia

Page 13: August 2012 – Radio Guide

August 2012 / Directions in Sound / Page 13Greensburg 98.9 fm • Kokomo 106.1 fm • Terre Haute 95.1 fm

En Bolero (based on: Noche inolvidable, Solamente Una vez, Sabor A Mi) (El Taller and the IU Latin American Popular Music Ensemble)

SANCHEZ-PORTUGUEZ—Ódiame (El Taller and the IU Latin American Popular Music Ensemble)

ORTIZ—Tu Ventana (El Taller and the IU Latin American Popular Music Ensemble)

SANCHEZ-PORTUGUEZ—Benzinho Brazil/Choro (Bossa De Bloomington: Bugni-Rasmussen-Wittman Jazz Trio)

FERNANDEZ—Batuque (Simon Bolivar Symphony Orchestra of Venezuela; Keri-Lynn Wilson, conductor.)

9:00 PM HARMONIA What’s New See August 19th listing.10:06 PM SPOLETO CHAMBER MUSIC MENDELSSOHN—Piano Sextet in D

Major, Op 110 BACH—Ich habe genug, BWV 82

24 Friday 10:00 PM NIGHT LIGHTS Communion: Don Cherry In The 1960s A tribute to the late trumpeter, featuring his

recordings both with Ornette Coleman and as a leader

11:00 PM JAZZ AT LINCOLN CENTER The Music of Thelonious Monk Pianist Marcus Roberts re-imagines the

work of Thelonious Monk with the Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra. Band members offer fresh arrangements of Monk’s “Epistrophy,” “Criss Cross,” “Blue Monk” and others. Wendell Pierce hosts.

25 Saturday 1:00 PM SAN FRANCISCO OPERA MOZART—Don Giovanni Don Giovanni: Lucas Meachem Donna Anna: Ellie Dehn Donna Elvira: Serena Farnocchia Niccola Luisotti conducts

8:00 PM HOMETOWN WITH TOM ROZNOWSKI

What Money Can’t Buy 9:00 PM CELTIC CONNECTIONS The Birds of the Air Songs about birds or with birds in their

titles, including “The Lark in the Morning,” and “The Yellow Bittern.”

26 Sunday 11:00 AM RADIOLAB Morality12:00 PM HARMONIA Great Musician Series: William Christie The week we enjoy the work of William

Christie, early music pioneer and founder of Les Arts Florissants. Plus we study the Parisian chanson, and listen to music by German composer Heinrich Isaac on a featured release by Capilla Flamenca.

1:00 PM WITH HEART AND VOICE The Trumpet Shall Sound Peter DuBois offers a program of festive

hymns, anthems and organ music, all enhanced by brass and percussion.

2:00 PM THE SCORE The Film Music of Bernard Herrmann Whether writing scores for Alfred Hitchcock

or Orson Welles, Francois Truffaut or Martin Scorcese, this composer was in a league of his own. Edmund Stone hosts.

7:00 PM PROFILES Author Andrew Lam 8:00 PM NEW YORK PHILHARMONIC

THIS WEEK CONDUCTOR: Alan Gilbert SOLOISTS: Glenn Dicterow, violin DVOŘÁK—Carnival Overture BARTÓK—Violin Concerto No. 1 TCHAIKOVSKY—Symphony No. 4

27 Monday 8:00 PM CHICAGO SYMPHONY

ORCHESTRA Triple Concerto Times Two Trevor Pinnock leads the orchestra and three

young virtuosos in Beethoven’s concerto for piano, violin and cello. Then he plays double duty as conductor and one of three soloists in Mozart’s Concerto for Three Pianos. Mendelssohn paid homage to the British Isles, one of his favorite places, with his rousing Scottish Symphony.

10:00 PM PIPEDREAMS Dance Party Contrary to common opinion, the

supposedly staid old pipe organ can, when it wishes, get down and boogie.

28 Tuesday 8:00 PM ETHER GAME Back to School

We help you drag the kids out of bed and shove them on the school bus on this school-related edition of Ether Game.

9:00 PM SOUNDS CHORAL Symphony No. 8 by Gustav Mahler:

Movement II Goethe’s Faust is immortalized in the second

movement of this colossal work, integrating the theme of redemption with the first movement.

10:06 PM HORIZONS IN MUSIC What’s Dropping Our monthly exploration of recent releases

29 Wednesday 8:00 PM LIVE! AT THE

CONCERTGEBOUW Lorin Maazel/Royal Concertgebouw

Orchestra MAHLER—Symphony No. 6

30 Thursday 8:00 PM FIESTA! From the familiar music of Latin America

to the hidden treasures of three popular composers—Juan Pablo Moncayo, Lorenzo Fernández, and Joaquin Rodrigo

MONCAYO—Huapango MONCAYO—Muros Verdes MONCAYO—Viola Sonata MONCAYO—Huapango FERNÁNDEZ—Batuque FERNÁNDEZ—Três Invenções Seresteiras

for Clarinet and Bassoon RODRIGO—Concierto de Aranjuez 9:00 PM HARMONIA Great Musician Series: William Christie See August 26th description10:06 PM SPOLETO CHAMBER MUSIC GOLIJOV—Yiddishbbuk SHOSTAKOVICH—Piano Quintet in G

Minor, Op. 57

31 Friday 10:00 PM NIGHT LIGHTS Jazz from Monterey, 1958: Birth of a

Festival Music from the first-ever Monterey Jazz

Festival, featuring Dave Brubeck, Billie Holiday, Gerry Mulligan, and others.

11:00 PM JAZZ AT LINCOLN CENTER Bobby McFerrin: VOCAbuLarieS McFerrin fills the stage at the Rose Theater

with his composition for a rhythmically charged, internationally cast, 48-voice choir. This sprawling work evokes African chants, gospel energy, Motown soul, minimalism and jazz polyphony, and includes a role for the Rose Theater audience. Wendell Pierce hosts.Lucas Meachem as Don Giovanni

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Page 14: August 2012 – Radio Guide

Page 14 / Directions in Sound / August 2012 Bloomington 103.7 fm • Columbus 100.7 fm • French Lick/West Baden 101.7 fm

PROGRAMMING AND OPERATING SUPPORTIndiana University

CORPORATE MEMBERSHIPBloomington Chiropractic CenterBloomington Iron & Metal, Inc.Bloomington Veterinary HospitalBlues at the Crossroads Festival— Terre HauteJudson Brewer, M.D., P.C., Obstetrics and GynecologyBrown Hill Nursery of ColumbusDr. Phillip Crooke Obstetrics & GynecologyDelta Tau Delta Fraternity— Indiana UniversityDuke EnergyDr. David Howell & Dr. Timothy Pliske, DDS of Bedford & BloomingtonJoie De Vivre | MedicalKP Pharmaceutical TechnologyLaborers Union #204-Terre HautePynco, Inc.—BedfordSmithville

PROGRAM UNDERWRITERS 4th Street Festival of the Arts and CraftsAllen Funeral HomeAnderson Medical ProductsAndrews, Harrell, Mann, Carmin, and Parker P.C.Aqua PROArgentum JewelryArts IllianaArts WeekBANFF Mountain Film FestivalBaugh Enterprises Commercial Printing & Bulk Mail ServicesBell TraceBicycle GarageBloom MagazineBloomingfoods Market & DeliBloomington Playwrights ProjectBloomington Project SchoolBloomington Symphony OrchestraBrown County Art GalleryBrown County Playhouse

W IUwfiu.org

This month on WTIU television.

Summer Thoughts on Planning for the FutureYour will: Don’t leave home without it

It has been said that people spend more time planning their vacation than they do planning their estate. Before you get behind the wheel for your summer vacation, consider signing a new will or updating your old will. It will give you peace of mind. What footprints will you leave behind on the beach?

Everyone leaves footprints—the positive impressions our lives leave on others. Thoughtful estate planning and making a will are ways to make prints in the sand that help others recall our values.

Separate fact from fiction

There are many false beliefs about wills. Here are some:• Only the rich need a will. • A will is too expensive to make. • Why make a will? Everything will

go to my spouse anyway. • The court will name the person I

would choose as guardian for my minor children.

For information on planned giving to support public broadcasting, go to wfiu.org/support or contact Nancy Krueger at [email protected] or 812-855-2935.

Sample wording to leave a bequest to WFIU – “I hereby give, devise, and bequeath to the Indiana University Foundation, a nonprofit corporation with principal offices in Bloomington, Indiana, [the sum of /a percentage of/the remainder of] my estate to be used for the benefit and unrestricted support [or specific purpose, i.e., news broadcasting, or support of a specific fund or program genre] of WFIU Public Radio from Indiana University, Bloomington campus.”

Hoosier Hospitality: WinePremieres Sunday, August 19, 8:30 p.m.

Additional air times: Wed, August 22 at 1pm; and Thu, August 23 at 8pm on 30.1Wed, August 22 at 8:30pm; Thu, August 23 at 1:30 and 5:30pm; and Sat, August 25 at 8pm on 30.2 World

Did you know that Indiana can claim to be the birthplace of the American commercial wine industry?

WTIU’s Hoosier Hospitality: Wine is an hour-long informative television documentary that takes you on a journey into the world of wine in Indiana. Travel through Indiana’s rich wine history from the early 1800s through Prohibition and up to the present day. This history demonstrates how the obstacles that had to be overcome by early producers are similar to the roadblocks that wineries struggle with today. Explore Indiana’s wineries, from Satek Winery at the state’s northern border to Huber Winery on the banks of the Ohio River. Follow the annual timeline found in a vineyard and winery by visiting wineries throughout the state, from winter vine pruning, to spring planting and summer positioning and training of the vines to harvest. We’ll discuss fighting animal and insect pests as well as plant diseases that have to be overcome. We’ll talk with experts from the Indiana Wine Grape Council at Purdue University and go behind the scenes at the largest scientifically organized and independent wine competition in the U.S.—the Indy International Wine Competition. More information is at indianapublicmedia.org/hoosierhospitality

A wine tasting

Page 15: August 2012 – Radio Guide

August 2012 / Directions in Sound / Page 15Greensburg 98.9 fm • Kokomo 106.1 fm • Terre Haute 95.1 fm

LOCAL PROGRAM PRODUCTION SUPPORTMark Adams, Financial Advisor (Classical Music with George Walker)Bloomingfoods Market & Deli (Earth Eats)The Bloomington Brewing Company (Just You and Me)Brown County Art Gallery (Classical Music with George Walker)Brown County Art Guild (Artworks)Café Django (Just You and Me)Ferrer Gallery (Artworks)Dr. Howard and Associates (Artworks) Mark Adams, Financial Advisor (Classical Music with George Walker)Indiana Humanities Council (Moment of Indiana History)ISU/The May Agency (Community Minute)IU Credit Union (Community Minute)IU Kelley School of Business (Community Minute) (Just You and Me)IU Office of the Vice Provost for Research (Just You and Me)Lennie’s (Just You and Me)Malcolm Webb Wealth Management (Classical Music with George Walker)Meadowood Senior Living (Classical Music with George

Walker)The Nature Conservancy (Journey with Nature)Periodontics & Dental Implant Center of Southern Indiana (Classical Music with George Walker) Pizza X (Just You and Me)Premier Ortho (Noon Edition)Touchstone Wellness Massage and Yoga (Earth Eats)The Trojan Horse (Just You and Me) Vance Music Center (Classical Music with George Walker)Smithville (Noon Edition) (Profiles

NATIONALLy SyNDICATED PROGRAM SUPPORTChristel DeHaan Family Foundation (Harmonia)Laughing Planet (Night Lights)Landlocked Music (Night Lights)Indiana University (A Moment of Science)The Oakley Foundation, Terre Haute (Hometown)Pynco, Inc., Bedford (A Moment of Science) (Harmonia)Soma Coffee House and Juice Bar (Night Lights)

The Buskirk-Chumley TheaterBy Hand GalleryCafé DjangoCamerata OrchestraCardinal Stage CompanyCenterstoneChildren’s VillageColumbus Area Arts CouncilColumbus Container Inc.Columbus Indiana PhilharmonicColumbus OpticalCrawlspace DoctorCrossroads Repertory TheatreCurry Auto CenterDell BrothersDePauw UniversityDesignscape Horticultural Services, IncThe District-MCSWMDEco Logic, LLCThe Effingham Performance CenterElder Care ConnectionsFamily Christian StoresFarm BloomingtonFinch’s BrasserieFirst United ChurchFirst United Methodist ChurchFriends of Art BookstoreFriends of the Library-Monroe CountyGarden VillaGilbert ConstructionGoode Integrative Health CareGoods for CooksGreene & Schultz, Trial Lawyers, P.C.Grunwald Gallery of ArtThe Herald-TimesHills O’Brown RealtyHills O’Brown Property ManagementChristopher J. Holly, Attorney at LawHome Instead Senior CareHoosiers for Higher EducationDr. Howard & Associates Eye CareIn A Yarn BasketIndiana Daily StudentIndiana InternIndiana State UniversityIndianapolis Early MusicIndianapolis Marion County

Public LibraryThe Irish Lion Restaurant and PubISU Hulman CenterIU Art MuseumIU AuditoriumIU Bloomington Continuing StudiesIU Bloomington Early Childhood Educational ServicesIU Campus Bus ServicesIU College of Arts & SciencesIU Credit UnionIU Credit Union—Investment ServicesIU Department of Theatre & DramaIU Friends of Art BookshopIU Jacobs School of MusicIU Kelley School of BusinessIU Medical Sciences ProgramIU Poynter Center for the Study of Ethics and American InstitutionsIU PressIU University Information Technology ServicesIvy Tech Community CollegeJ. L. Waters & CompanyJoie De Vivre | MedicalLaughing Planet CaféMallor | Grodner Attorneys Mann Plumbing Inc.Midwest Counseling Center-Linda AlisMonroe County YMCANicki Williamson CounselingOliver WineryPeriodontics & Dental Implant Center of Southern IndianaProBleuQuality SurfacesRelishRentbloomington.netRestore/Habitat for HumanityRose Hulman Performing Arts SeriesRotary International 6580Saint Mary of the Woods CollegeSchneck Medical CenterScholars Inn BakehouseShawnee Summer TheatreSmithvilleSoma Coffee House and Juice BarTerry’s Banquets & Catering

Touchstone Wellness Massage and YogaTrojan Horse RestaurantVance Music CenterVillage DeliThe White Violet Center for Eco-JusticeWorld Wide Automotive ServiceYarns UnlimitedYouth Theatre

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 16: August 2012 – Radio Guide

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