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Also this month: • Days that changed music forever The Santa Fe Chamber Music Festival debuts Intelligence Squared: Repeal Obamacare Artist of the Month: David Baker . . . and more! Travel with Rick Steves Sundays at 3 p.m. April 2011 W I U wfiu.org

April 2011 – Radio Guide

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Listening Guide for WFIU – Public Radio Serving South Central Indiana

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Also this month:

• Days that changed music forever

• The Santa Fe Chamber Music Festival debuts

• Intelligence Squared: Repeal Obamacare

• Artist of the Month: David Baker

. . . and more!

Travelwith

Rick StevesSundays at 3 p.m.

April2011 W IU

wfiu.org

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

A Listener RespondsSome 170 million Americans use public broadcasting each day. That means more than half of all Americans use public broadcasting to connect to their communities and to the world. Congress is considering a proposal to eliminate federal funding for public broadcasting. We asked our listeners to write their representatives about how they feel about the proposed cuts. Bloomington resident Kent Owen responded and sent us a copy of his letter to Representative Todd Young. If you want to write to your representative, visit 170millionamericans.org, where you’ll find a quick link to your representative’s e-mail address.

Dear Representative Young,

The proposal to eliminate all federal funding for public broadcasting is not in the public interest. Over the last 40 years, public radio and television have immeasurably enriched the quality of American culture, education, and intellectual life. Moreover, they have achieved high standards of broadcast journalism. Since before the establishment of CPB, we have gratefully contributed to our local stations (WTIU and WFIU), and we shall continue to do so. Although we recognize the severity of the government’s fiscal crisis and support sound measures to reduce expenditures, we think that the complete cancellation of funding for such worthy enterprises does not serve “to promote the common welfare.” While some portion of the CPB’s annual budget should be scaled down—in relation to similar cuts in other government activities and programs—there is no warrant for putting an end to public broadcasting in its entirety. With such an admirable history of accomplishment, giving it all up would mark a deplorable act of bad judgment and bad policy. As a personal matter, my wife and I have been involved in our professional lives and as civic volunteers with public broadcasting. It should also be noted that we have been active for many years in the Republican party and, in the main, support its policy goals. It is our strong belief that public broadcasting merits the sustaining subsidy of the federal government as a matter of proper stewardship and responsibility.

—Kent Owen

April 2011Vol. 59, No . 4Directions 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• Multiplatform Reporter: Dan Goldblatt• Music Library Assistant: Anna Pranger• News Assistants: Regan McCarthy, Ben Skirvin• 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: Ben Serrette• Web Assistant: Margaret Aprison • Web Producer: Eoban Binder• Associate Web Producers: Sarah Kaiser, Julie Rooney, Emily Shelton

CorrectionIn last month’s Directions in Sound, we mistakenly wrote that the husband of Luba Edlina-Dubinsky, professor of piano performance at the Indiana University Jacobs School of Music and our March Artist of the Month, is active as a performer and mentor to students. In fact, Rostislav Dubinsky passed away in 1997. We deeply regret the error.

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

Travel with Rick Steves Sundays at 3 p.m.

Broaden your planetary perspective with Travel with Rick Steves. The program premieres this month, replacing Weekend Radio. Host Rick Steves shares travel information, experience, and inspiration, while helping you better understand our world through travel. Each episode mixes interviews with guest travel experts, listener call-ins with questions and comments, and music. Along with discussions of exciting destinations, Steves and his guests discuss general topics—as far-flung as keeping healthy on the road, bicycling, sabbaticals, pilgrimages, sailing, and fear of flying. Past shows have featured segments on: Spiritual Discoveries in your Travel, Exploring D-Day Sites, Rome: Beneath the Surface, Portugal’s Radical Drug Policy, Chopin 200 in Poland, Romantic Travel Destinations, and An Art-Lover’s Guide to Europe. You can participate in the program by sharing your comments about recently aired episodes or by submitting a haiku. You can also be a caller on the show by signing up at ricksteves.com to receive e-mail alerts with information about upcoming topics and recording sessions

About Rick StevesRick Steves promotes smart, affordable, perspective-broadening travel. In his forty European travel books, he encourages Americans to travel as “temporary locals”—connecting more intimately and authentically with Europe and Europeans—for less of what mainstream tourists pay. Over the past twenty years, Steves has hosted more than 100 travel shows for public television, and numerous pledge specials (raising millions of dollars for local stations). In addition to his guidebooks, TV and radio work, Steves is a syndicated newspaper columnist with the Tribune Media Services. He appears frequently on television, radio, and online as the leading authority on European travel. He also created a series of audio walking tour podcasts for museums and neighborhoods in Paris, Rome, Florence, Venice, and London. Steves took his first trip to Europe in 1969, visiting piano factories with his father, a piano importer. By the time he reached 18, he jokes, “I realized I didn’t need my parents to travel!” He began traveling on his own, funding his trips by teaching piano lessons. In 1976, he started Europe Through the Back Door, a business that has grown from a one-man operation to a company with a well-traveled staff of 70 full-time employees. ETBD offers free travel information through its travel center, Web site (ricksteves.com), European Railpass Guide, and free travel newsletters. ETBD also runs a successful European tour program with more than 300 departures annually. Steves self-published the first edition of his travel skills book, Europe Through the Back Door (now updated annually), in 1980. He has also written more than 40 other country, city and regional guidebooks, phrase books, and “snapshot” guides. For several years, Rick Steves’ Italy has been the bestselling international guidebook sold in the U.S. In 2009, Steves tackled a new genre of travel writing with Travel as a Political Act, reflecting on how a life of travel has broadened his own perspectives, and how travel can be a significant force for peace and understanding in the world. Rick Steves spends about a third of every year in Europe, researching guidebooks, taping TV shows, and making new discoveries for travelers.

The U.S. Institute of Peace: A ProfileSunday, April 3, 8 p.m.

When you visualize the National Mall in Washington, DC, what do you see? Perhaps stately buildings like the U.S. Capitol or the Smithsonian castle. Or, perhaps you see some of the monuments and memorials that remind us of conflict and war, such as the World War II, Korean, and Vietnam War memorials. Even the majestic monuments to Washington and Lincoln are reminiscent of wars that our country fought for freedom. On this edition of Peace Talks Radio, we explore a new landmark on the National Mall. The United States Institute of Peace is an independent, nonpartisan, national institution established in 1984 and funded by Congress with the goal of increasing the nation’s capacity to manage international conflict without violence. The new 150,000 square-foot, five-story USIP building on the northwest corner of the Mall will house staff offices, a library, conference center, classrooms, and a public education center designed to heighten understanding of the challenges of international conflict management. As this issue of Directions in Sound went to press, however, Congress was considering whether to end funding for the USIP. Host Suzanne Kryder talks with several staff members about the history of USIP, their national and international programs, and their new building. By virtue of its purpose and location—it faces the Lincoln and Vietnam Memorials—the headquarters of the United States Institute of Peace would serve as a symbol of the country’s efforts for peace.

Rick Steves

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

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

The Santa Fe Chamber Music Festival series debuts this month on WFIU. The Festival is among the oldest in the nation and considered among the world’s preeminent musical gatherings. It’s renowned for its innovative spirit, inspirational performances, and commitment to artistic excellence. These thirteen weekly 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. Since its beginning in 1972, the Santa Fe Chamber Music Festival has been dedicated to presenting popular and lesser-known classical repertoire, as well as new works by contemporary composers. The Festival presents over 80 events during its annual summer season. In addition to the outstanding daily performances, these include adult and youth education and outreach presentations, free open rehearsals, and concert previews and roundtable discussions with composers and musicians. The Festival’s goal is to provide listeners with the finest music of the ages performed by world-class musical artists in the timeless beauty of Santa Fe, New Mexico.

Sunday, April 3 Mendelssohn: Concert Piece for Clarinet, Bassoon & Piano No. 1 in F Minor, Op. 113

Michael Rusinek, clarinet; Nancy Goeres, bassoon; Marc Neikrug, pianoBeethoven: Piano Trio in B-Flat Major, Op. 97, “Archduke”Benny Kim, violin; Lynn Harrell, cello; Yuja Wang, piano

Sunday, April 10J.S. Bach: Mein Freund ist mein from Cantata No. 140, Wachet auf, ruft uns die Stimme

Jamie-Rose Guarrine, soprano; David Govertsen, bass; Robert Ingliss, oboe; Timothy Eddy, cello; Kathleen McIntosh, harpsichordKodály: Serenade for Two Violins & Viola, Op. 12 Jennifer Gilbert, violin; Harvey de Souza, violin; Hsin-Yin Huang, violaBartók: Contrasts, for Violin, Clarinet, & Piano, Sz.111Giora Schmidt, violin; Todd Levy, clarinet; Victor Santiago Asuncion, piano

Sunday, April 17Brett Dean: Epitaphs, for string quintet (2010 Santa Fe Chamber Music Festival Co-commission with the Australian String Quartet and La Jolla Chamber Music Society)

Orion String Quartet: Daniel Phillips, violin; Todd Phillips, violin; Steven Tenenbom, viola; Timothy Eddy, cello; Brett Dean, viola W.A. Mozart: Wind Serenade No. 11 in E-Flat Major, K. 375 Liang Wang, oboe; Robert Ingliss, oboe; Michael Rusinek, clarinet; Todd Levy, clarinet; Milan Turkovic, bassoon; Nancy Goeres, bassoon; Philip Myers, horn; William Barnewitz, horn

Sunday, April 24Scriabin: Prelude in B Major, Op. 11, No. 11

Prelude in B Minor, Op. 13, No. 6 Prelude in G-Sharp Minor, Op. 11, No. 12Etude in G-Sharp Minor, Op. 8, No. 9Poème in F-Sharp Major, Op. 32, No. 1Yuja Wang, pianoDvorák: Piano Trio No. 4 in E Minor, Op. 90, “Dumky”William Preucil, violin; Ralph Kirshbaum, cello; Jon Kimura Parker, piano

Yuja Wang

Keeping Score: 13 Days When Music Changed Forever Thursdays at 8 p.m.

Each episode of Keeping Score explores a musical milestone that changed the face of music. The thirteen-week series debuts this month on WFIU. The series is about musical revolutions— the composers, compositions, and musical movements that changed the way people heard, or thought about, music. Delving into the historical backdrop and the musical precursors to the change, it examines the aftershock and the lasting influence of that moment in music history. With singer-songwriter Suzanne Vega as your host, the production includes musical excerpts as well as interviews with composers, musicologists, writers, and musicians. The series is sponsored by the San Francisco Symphony, and Music Director Michael Tilson Thomas is the key interview subject. The producer is Tom Voegeli, one of the leading radio producers in the United States and creator of the long-running Saint Paul Sunday.

Michael Tilson Thomas

Scriptwriters include Pulitzer Prize winners Justin Davidson, music critic for New York Magazine and Newsday, and Tim Page, former music critic for The Washington Post, Newsday, and The New York Times. The Premiere of Monteverdi’s L’Orfeo: February 24, 1607

April 7, 8 p.m.

This is a program about the dawn of opera, but also about secular music becoming through-composed high art (something that had been the exclusive

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

Intelligence Squared: “Repeal Obamacare”Sunday, April 10, 8 p.m.

In March 2010 President Obama signed into law the Affordable Care Act, the biggest overhaul of our health care system in decades. According to a November poll from the Kaiser Family Foundation, 40 percent of the public would like Congress to expand the new health reform law or leave it as is, while 49 percent are in favor of repealing all or parts of it. On this edition of Intelligence Squared, panelists debate the motion: “Repeal Obamacare.”

Douglas Holtz-Eakin Jonathan Cohn

For the motion: Douglas Holtz-Eakin, an academic, policy adviser, and strategist. He is president of the American Action Forum, commissioner on the Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission, and former director of the Congressional Budget Office. John Shadegg, a former Republican representative from Arizona who has introduced legislation to promote patient choice, individual ownership, and portability in health insurance. Against the motion: Jonathan Cohn, senior editor at the New Republic, a columnist at Kaiser Health News, and the author of Sick. Paul Starr, professor of sociology and public affairs at Princeton University and co-editor of the American Prospect magazine, author of The Social Transformation of American Medicine, and former senior advisor at the White House in the formulation of the Clinton health plan. The moderator is John Donvan, a correspondent for ABC News Nightline.

Radiolab: WordsSunday, April 17, 8 p.m. What would life be like without words or language? This hour of Radiolab explores the words in our head and how they change the way we think. It includes an interview with Indiana University neuroanatomist Jill Bolte Taylor about what happened when a stroke wiped out the language center of her brain. Susan Schaller believes that the best idea she ever had in her life had to do with an isolated young man she met one day at a community college. He was 27-years-old at the time, and though he had been born deaf, no one had ever taught him to sign. He had lived his entire life without language—until Schaller found a way to reach out to him. Charles Fernyhough doesn’t think that very young children think—at least not in a way he’d recognize as thinking. Fernyhough explains what he means by walking us through an experiment in a white room. Elizabeth Spelke weighs in with research from her baby lab that suggests a child’s brain begins as a series of islands, until it can find the right words and phrases to bridge the gaps. James Shapiro, a Shakespeare scholar at Columbia, argues that Shakespeare behaved more like a chemist than a writer: by smashing words together—words like eye and ball—he created new words, and new ways of seeing the world. One morning, Jill Bolte Taylor woke up with a headache. A blood vessel then burst inside the left hemisphere of her brain, and silenced all the chatter in her mind. She was left with no language and no memories. Just sensory intake, and an all-encompassing feeling of joy. Taylor later described the experience in her book My Stroke of Insight.

purview of church music). We’ll look at precursors to L’Orfeo in ancient Greece and Rome, as well as Jacopo Perri’s Euridice, written a generation before Monteverdi.

The Town Council of Leipzig Appoints Bach as Cantor: April 22, 1723

April 14, 8 p.m.

An exploration of the Baroque and the never-ending legacy of Bach, through Mendelssohn, Stravinsky, Schoenberg, Steve Reich, and The Doors’ Light My Fire.

The Premiere of Don Giovanni in Prague: October 29, 1787

April 21, 8 p.m.

Mozart attained his maturity with this work, writing a masterpiece that dominated opera forever afterward, echoing in Wagner and beyond.

Parisian Piano Maker Sébastian Érard Gives One of His Sturdy New Creations to Beethoven: August 8, 1803

April 28, 8 p.m.

With the piano, Beethoven was able to set aside his fortepiano and write more expressive and emotional music, beginning with the Waldstein Sonata. New instruments and new technologies have inalterably changed music many times. The pace of change quickened in the 20th century, with the phonograph, the computer, and the Internet

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

Artist of the MonthWFIU’s Artist of the Month for April is David Baker, Distinguished Professor of Music and Chairman of the Jazz Department at the Indiana University School of Music.

David Baker

David Nathaniel Baker, Jr. was born in 1931 in Indianapolis and throughout his education he did not stray too far from home. He received both his bachelor’s and master’s degrees in music education from Indiana University and has studied with a wide range of teachers, performers, and composers including J.J. Johnson, Bobby Brookmeyer, Janos Starker, Bernard Heiden, and Gunther Schuller. A virtuoso performer on multiple instruments and top in his field in several disciplines, Baker has taught and performed in many countries. He is also the conductor and musical and artistic director of the Smithsonian Jazz Masterworks Orchestra. As a composer, Baker has been commissioned by more than 500 individuals and ensembles, including Josef Gingold, Ruggerio Ricci, Harvey Phillips, and the New York Philharmonic. His compositions total more than 2,000 in number, including jazz and symphonic works, chamber music, and ballet and film scores. Baker has received numerous awards, including the National Association of Jazz Educators Hall of Fame Award, the President’s Award for Distinguished Teaching from Indiana University, and the American Jazz Masters Award from the National Endowment for the Arts. His score for the PBS documentary For Gold and Glory earned him an Emmy. In 2001 he was honored as an Indiana Living Legend. WFIU will feature music performed by David Baker throughout the month of April.

Economic Club of Indiana: Gwen IfillSunday, April 24, 8 p.m.

Gwen Ifill has a storied 33-year journalism career, working for several of the nation’s largest newspapers and television news outlets. She is senior correspondent for The PBS Newshour and moderator and managing editor of Washington Week, the longest-running prime-time news and public affairs program on television. She is also the author of the bestselling book The Breakthrough: Politics and Race in the Age of Obama. Ifill reports on a wide range of issues from foreign affairs to U.S. politics and policies interviewing national and international newsmakers. She has covered six Presidential campaigns and moderated two vice presidential debates. She has a reputation for fairness and sharp political insights into the biggest issues of our time. “I always knew I wanted to be a journalist, and my first love was newspapers,” Ifill says. “But public broadcasting provides the best of both worlds, combining the depth of newspapers with the immediate impact of broadcast television.” Before coming to PBS in 1999, Ifill was chief congressional and political correspondent for NBC News, White House correspondent for the New York Times, and a local and national political reporter for the Washington Post. She also reported for the Baltimore Evening Sun and the Boston Herald American. Her work as a journalist has been honored by the Radio and Television News Directors Association, Harvard’s Joan Shorenstein Center, Ebony magazine, and Boston’s Ford Hall Forum. Gwen Ifill’s luncheon talk to the Economic Club of Indiana is titled “Politics, Policy, and Reality: What’s Really Going on in Washington.”

The Candidates DebateWFIU and WTIU will host a live debate among Bloomington mayoral candidates Mark Kruzan, John Hamilton, and John Gusan on Thursday, April 21st from 8 to 9 p.m. A studio audience will be on hand to pose questions for the candidates. Questions will also come from Facebook, Twitter, and an online chat. Prior to the debate, reporters will go out into the community for pre-recorded questions as well. The debate’s moderator is WFIU News Director Stan Jastrzebski. In addition to the live broadcast, the debate will be streamed live on wfiu.org. If you’d like to attend, come to the Radio-TV Building, Studio 6, by 7:30 p.m. Questions? E-mail us at [email protected].

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

April 4-8BACH—Flute Sonata in E, BWV 1035; Barbara Kallaur, fl.; Thomas Gerber, hpsd.; Liam Byrne, viol

April 11-15BACH, J.C.—SIX SYMPHONIES, OP. 6: No. 6 in g; Thomas Dunn/IU Chamber Orchestra

April 18-22PONCE—Sonatina Meridional; Ernesto Bitetti, gt.

April 25-29RAVEL—La valse; Mario Venzago/IU Festival Orchestra

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

Featured Contemporary ComposerWFIU’s Contemporary composer for the month of April is Veljo Tormis. Veljo Tormis is considered one of the most important Estonian composers of the twentieth century. He is mostly known for his choral music, which incorporates folk songs and commemorates important events in Estonia’s history. He began his education at the Tallinn Music School in 1943 but it was briefly interrupted by World War II. By 1949, he had entered the Tallinn Conservatory where he studied organ and composition. He won his first composition prize in 1950, and the next year he began a program in composition at the Moscow Conservatory where his teachers included Vissarion Shebalin and Yury Fortunatov. Most of his musical inspiration comes from Estonian legend or folk songs. He drew inspiration from mythological characters such as Kalevipoeg—the equivalent of Paul Bunyan—for his thesis composition, an epic cantata. He has written pieces that draw directly from folk songs, but also some that inspired him. During the 1970s and 1980s, his music had an anti-Soviet sentiment to it, which caused many musicians to not perform his works. Other than this period of time, the Ministry of Culture in Estonia has purchased many of Tormis’ manuscripts. In addition to his choral works, Tormis has also composed music for various settings. He has written incidental music for over thirty films, various instrumental works, a ballet/cantata Eesti ballaadid, and an opera, Liugelend. He has received commissions from the King’s Singers and the Hilliard Ensemble, the University of Toronto, and the combined men’s choruses of the Universities of Uppsala and Helsinki. WFIU will feature the music of Veljo Tormis throughout the month of April.

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.

April 3–9Bach: A Strange Beauty

(Sony Classical 88697 81742 2)Simone Dinnerstein, piano

This CD made its debut at No. 1 on the Billboard Traditional Classical Chart in its first week on sale. It includes Bach’s Keyboard Concerti in D minor and F minor with the Kammerorchester Staatskapelle Berlin, plus solo works (the English Suite in G minor, and transcriptions of three chorale preludes by Busoni, Kempff, and Hess).

April 10–16Barbara Harbach, Vol. 6: Chamber Music III

(MSR Classics MS 1257)University of Missouri-St. Louis Chamber Soloists

Barbara Harbach has a large catalog of works, including symphonies, works for chamber ensemble, string orchestra, organ, harpsichord, piano, musicals, choral anthems, film scores, modern ballets, and arrangements for brass and organ of various Baroque works. This CD of her chamber music includes a set of dances for harpsichord inspired by Spanish flamenco, the blues-tinged Perambulations for trumpet and piano, and music for cello incorporating the American shape-note tradition.

April 17–23Ursula Bagdasarjanz: Seven Poems for Violin and Piano

(Gallo CD-1251)Melanie Di Cristino, violinRaluca Stirbat, pianoUrsula Bagdasarjanz, violin

This new CD features sumptuous restored performances of Bagdasarjanz from the 1960s, including works from the Baroque and early Classical periods. The remainder

of the album is devoted to Ursula Bagdasarjanz’s original compositions for violin and piano.

April 24–30Gordon Getty: Orchestra Works

(PentaTone Classics PTC 5186 356)Academy of St. Martin in the FieldsNeville Mariner, conductor

Besides being one of the wealthiest men in America, septuagenarian Gordon Getty is a serious classical music composer. Best known for his operatic and choral compositions, this recording is the first collection of his orchestra works. It features the overture from his retelling of the story of Falstaff, Plump Jack, the score to a ballet based on The Fall of the House of Usher, and a few delightful shorter pieces.

Veljo Tormis

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

ProfilesSundays at 7 p.m.

April 3 – Debby Herbenick Debby Herbenick is a research scientist and associate director at The Center for Sexual Health Promotion in IU’s School of Health, Physical Education and Recreation and a sexual health educator at The Kinsey Institute for Research in Sex, Gender and Reproduction. She runs the blog MySexProfessor.com, is the author of the book Because It Feels Good: A Woman’s Guide to Sexual Pleasure and Satisfaction, and writes the sex advice columns for Time Out Chicago and Men’s Health. She has appeared several times as an expert in human sexuality on The Tyra Banks Show. Annie Corrigan hosts.

April 10 – Christoph Irmscher Christoph Irmscher is a professor of English at Indiana University in Bloomington. He teaches and writes about 19th century American and Canadian literature and culture. His books include The Poetics of Natural History: From John Bartram to William James and Longfellow Redux. He is the editor of John James Audubon: Writings and Drawings, the only critical edition of Audubon’s literary output, and the co-editor of the ecocritical anthology, A Keener Perception. He was a consultant on the PBS documentary John James Audubon and he guest-curated the Bicentennial Longfellow exhibit at Harvard University’s Houghton Library. Gena Asher hosts.

April 17 – Eileen Myles Eileen Myles has written thousands of poems since she gave her first reading at New York City’s CBGB in 1974. She’s since read to audiences at colleges, performance spaces, and bookstores across America and around the world. Her books include the poetry collections include Sorry, Tree, Skies, and on my way; the novels Chelsea Girls and Cool for You; and a collection of essays, The Importance of Being Iceland. She wrote the libretto for the opera Hell. She’s a professor emeritus of writing and literature at UC San Diego. Shana Ritter hosts. (repeat)

April 24 – Christine Barbour Christine Barbour is the former food columnist for the Bloomington Herald Times, and is the food editor for Bloom magazine. She is the author, with Scott Feickert, of Indiana Cooks! Great Restaurant Recipes for the Home Kitchen and, with Scott Hutcheson, Home Grown Indiana: A Food Lover’s Guide to Good Eating in the Hoosier State. With her husband she co-wrote the textbook Keeping the Republic: Power and Citizenship in American Politics. She is a co-director of Slow Food Bloomington, part of a movement that promotes a way of eating that is local, seasonal, leisurely, and convivial. Annie Corrigan hosts.

The Radio Reader with Dick Estell

The Confession by John GrishamAirs: April 4 to May 18

For every innocent man sent to prison, there is a guilty one left on the outside. He doesn’t understand how the police and prosecutors got the wrong man, and he certainly doesn’t care. Longtime criminal Travis Boyette is such a man. In the small East Texas city of Slone, he abducted and strangled a popular high school cheerleader. He buried her body so that it would never be found, then watched in amazement as police and prosecutors arrested and convicted Donte Drumm, a local high school football star, and marched him off to death row. In four days Drumm is scheduled to die in the Texas death chamber. Boyette, who says he’s dying of a brain tumor, visits St. Mark’s Church in Kansas and tells the Rev. Keith Schroeder that an innocent man is about to be executed for a crime that he committed. Schroeder and Boyett meet with lawyer Robbie Flak, whose clients are “the abused, the accused, the mistreated, the injured,” and who has spent years trying to free Drumm. But a corrupt cop and prosecutor and a former classmate who lied about Drumm’s relationship to the cheerleader aren’t about to see a case that made them famous become unraveled. A governor who wants voters to see him as tough on crime isn’t about to issue a pardon or even a delay. How can a guilty man convince lawyers, judges, and politicians that they’re about to execute an innocent man? “The Confession is the kind of grab-a-reader-by-the-shoulders suspense story that demands to be inhaled as quickly as possible. But it’s also a superb work of social criticism in the literary troublemaker tradition of Upton Sinclair’s The Jungle.” —The Washington Post

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

Samels was an announcer at WFIU, and in his memory we set up The Robert Samels Memorial Fund for training initiatives at WFIU. This year, WFIU announcers and producers participated in several training opportunities as a direct result of contributions to the Fund. To those listeners and friends of Robert who gave generously to the Fund, the WFIU staff gives thanks. Together we can preserve Robert’s memory and continue to teach and influence those who, like him, come to WFIU to learn the art and craft of public radio.

To contribute to the Fund, make your tax-deductible donation out to “IU Foundation/WFIU” and put “Samels Fund” in the memo line. Mail to WFIU/Samels Fund, Radio-Television Center, 1229 E. 7th Street, Bloomington, IN 47405, or contact Nancy Krueger at 812-855-2935 or [email protected] Courtesy of Indiana University

Robert Samels RememberedIt’s been five years since IU Jacobs School of Music students Robert Samels, Chris Carducci, Zachary Novak, Georgina Joshi, and Garth Eppley died in a plane crash on April 20, 2006.

NPR CEO Vivian Schiller Resignsby Christina Kuzmych, WFIU Station Manager

On March 9th, the chair of NPR’s Board of Directors Dave Edwards issued a statement following the resignation of NPR President and CEO Vivian Schiller which read in part: “The Board accepted [Vivian’s] resignation with understanding, genuine regret, and great respect for her leadership of NPR these past two years. Vivian . . . led NPR back from the enormous economic challenges of the previous two years. She was passionately committed to NPR’s mission, and to stations and NPR working collaboratively as a local-national news network.” Edwards said that Joyce Slocum, SVP of Legal Affairs and General Counsel, has been appointed to the position of Interim CEO, and that the Board is establishing an Executive Transition Committee to develop a timeframe and process for the recruitment and selection of new leadership. “I recognize the magnitude of this news,” he added, “and that it comes on top of what has been a traumatic period for NPR and the larger public radio community.” WFIU noted the transition at the top of NPR’s executive with regret. In her brief tenure, Vivian Schiller conveyed vision and passionate commitment to mission and growth within the network and its member stations. WFIU recognizes that a series of damaging events occurred over the past several months for which Ms. Schiller was not directly responsible, but was ultimately accountable. WFIU wishes her well in her forthcoming endeavors, and is setting its sights forward to a new chapter in which capable, confident leadership enables positive partnership between NPR and its affiliate stations. If you have questions or comments about the recent changes within NPR’s executive ranks, you’re encouraged to visit NPR.org and click on the Contact Us page, or to call the NPR Listener Care line at 202-513-3232.

Robert Samels Chris Carducci

Zachary Novak Georgina Joshi

Garth Eppley

Vivian Schiller

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

Metropolitan Opera

4-2 Das Rheingold 4-9 Le Comte Ory4-16 Wozzeck4-23 Capriccio4-30 Il Trovatore

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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, 11:01 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

Congressional Moments Fridays at 7:00 pm Sundays at 7:55 am and 6:04 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 pm

Classical 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 Confession begins April 4

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

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

Metropolitan Opera

4-2 Das Rheingold 4-9 Le Comte Ory4-16 Wozzeck4-23 Capriccio4-30 Il Trovatore

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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, 11:01 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

Congressional Moments Fridays at 7:00 pm Sundays at 7:55 am and 6:04 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 pm

Classical 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 Confession begins April 4

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

Bill Kloppenburg

David Brent Johnson

Marianne Woodruff

Annie Corrigan

Yaël Ksander

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

MemberCardFor a complete listing of more than 300 Indiana membership benefits or for an updated brochure, call us at 800-662-3311.

Benefits of the month:

Bloomington Symphony Orchestra (#391)718 North Walnut Street, Bloomington(812) 331-2320bloomingtonsymphony.comValid for two-for-one admission to “Violapalooza!” Saturday, April 30. Visit Web site for details; subject to availability.

Indianapolis Museum of Contemporary Art (#121)1043 Virginia Avenue, Indianapolis317-634-6622indymoca.orgPurchase one year-long individual membership ($30 value) for $5. Call or visit Web site for details.

Dining Updates:

Handel’s Homemade Ice Cream & Yogurt (#907)8760 East 116th Street, Fishers 317-585-8065handelsicecream.comValid anytime for two-for-one cone

Culver’s (#144)4701 Kentucky Avenue, IndianapolisNew Culver’s (#139)5525 North Post Road, IndianpolisClosed

Hot Tuna with a Sizzle #20IndianapolisOffer expired

New Online Benefits:

Visit membercard.com for offer details:littlesmudgeez.com.comUnlimited 10% discount

OliveCart.comUnlimited 15% discount

Alex Roy is WFIU/WTIU’s new reporter & producer Alex Roy received his bachelor’s in Journalism from Indiana University in 2010 with a concentration in broadcasting.

Alex Roy

Alex’s parents, both teachers, used public radio and television to keep him educated, informed, and well-spoken. “Public radio or public television was always on in my house at some point during the day,” he says. “We didn’t have cable TV. In the mornings my parents would listen to NPR and when I came home from school I would watch Arthur everyday.”

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Sudoku by Myles Mellor and Susan Flanagan

To solve the puzzle, each row, column and box must contain each of the numbers 1 to 9. This puzzle’s difficulty level is medium.

Community EventsEvent details are subject to change. Get updates and learn more about these and other goings-on at wfiu.org/events.

The Lonesome West

Thursday, March 24 to Sunday, April 10, times varyWaldron Rose Firebay

It’s not the American West, but it’s just as wild. Set in windswept Connemara in the West of Ireland, playwright Martin McDonagh’s black comedy features two bickering brothers whose rivalry knows no bounds. Adult language and situations; recommended for ages 17 and up.

Banff Mountain Film Festival World Tour

Saturday, April 2, 7 p.m.Buskirk-Chumley Theater

IU Outdoor Adventures presents the globe-spanning Banff Mountain Film Festival World Tour, a selection of the best films entered into the annual competition in Alberta, Canada. Scale mountain peaks from the comfort of the Buskirk-Chumley Theater.

Barbra and Frank: The Concert That Never Was

Saturday, April 9, 7:30 p.m.Bedford North Lawrence Performing Arts Center

What if Barbra Streisand and Frank Sinatra had sung together? Sharon Owens and Sebastian Anzaldo, in face and voice, channel these two stars in a concert filled with hits and lively banter that shows you what might have been.

Sebastian Anzaldo and Sharon Owens

April 2011 / Directions in Sound / Page 13Greensburg 98.9 fm • Kokomo 106.1 fm • Terre Haute 95.1 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 feature only those programs for which we have detailed content information. For a complete list of WFIU’s schedule, see the program grid on pages 10 and 11.

1 Friday 9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH

GEORGE WALKER Bach, Harbach, and Wagner 8:00 PM MARIAN McPARTLAND’S

PIANO JAZZ Roberta Gambarini Vocalist Roberta Gambarini continues the

legacy of Sarah Vaughan, Ella Fitzgerald, and Carmen McRae, and she is well-qualified to fill their famous shoes. She recorded with legendary accompanist to ladies of song Hank Jones, and received a 2010 Grammy nomination for Best Jazz Vocal Album. On this Piano Jazz, she sizzles on a set of tunes from the Great American Songbook.

Roberta Gambarini

10:09 PM AFTERGLOW Down Here Below: Abbey Lincoln A tribute to the singer that highlights several

of her own compositions

A Celebration of Jazz

Sunday, April 10, 6 p.m.KRC Catering

Jazz from Bloomington and Leadership Bloomington present a gala jazz concert and a silent auction to benefit the Jazz Masters in the Schools program, an out reach project that brings free interac-tive jazz performances by professional musicians to area elementary schools.

A Celebration of Paradise Kitchen

Monday, April 25, 6 p.m.FARMbloomington

Porch Light Indiana, in conjunction with IU Press and Bloomingfoods, celebrate Chef Daniel Orr’s new cookbook Paradise Kitchen. This event will feature samples of the cookbook’s recipes, wine and beer tasting, book-signing opportunities, and original music by Tom Roznowski and his band The Living Daylights.

Monty Python’s Spamalot

Wednesday and Thursday, April 27 and 28, 8 p.m.IU Auditorium

The quest for the Holy Grail is on in this Tony Award-winning Broadway musical. It includes King Arthur and the Knights of the Round Table and plenty of men in tights, along with Laker Girls cheerleaders and a Killer Rabbit.

Indiana Wine Fair

Saturday, April 30, 12:30–7 p.m. Story Inn, Nashville

Nearly every Hoosier winery will be represented in this rain-or-shine event. The wineries will pour one-ounce samples for all comers 21 and older, and offer specialty wines by the glass and bottle.

Bloomington Symphony Orchestra

Saturday, April 30, 7:30 p.m.St. Mark’s United Methodist Church

The Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra’s concertmaster Zach De Pue and principal violist Michael Strauss join in as the BSO’s Life Begins at 40 season continues with Violapalooza! The program includes Mozart’s Sinfonia Concertante in E-flat, Weber’s Andante and Rondo Ungarese for viola and orchestra, and Kodaly’s Hary Janos Suite.

Zach De Pue

Four Horns Front & Center

Columbus Indiana PhilharmonicSaturday, April 30, 7:30 p.m.Columbus East – Robbins Auditorium

It’s a musical thrill ride as the Philharmonic’s four-piece horn section moves to the front of the stage for Schumannn’s Konzertstück. Beethoven’s Symphony No. 7 is on the bill, as well as Bach’s Orchestral Suite No. 3—the best known among Bach’s four orchestral suites due to the fame of the second movement, known as “Air on the G String.”

Solution to March puzzle

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

1:00 PM WITH HEART AND VOICE Lent 4 Psalm 23 is one of the appointed readings

for this Fourth Sunday in Lent. We’ll hear several settings of this beloved text; some familiar, and some intriguing. Join Peter DuBois for this interesting exploration.

4:00 PM THE STATE WE’RE IN 7:00 PM PROFILES Debby Herbenick 8:00 PM PEACE TALKS RADIO A profile of a new landmark on the National

Mall: The U.S. Institute of Peace—an independent, nonpartisan, national institution with the goal of increasing the nation’s capacity to manage international conflict without violence.

9:00 PM THE SANTA FE CHAMBER MUSIC FESTIVAL

4 Monday 9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH

GEORGE WALKER Bach, Dittersdorf, and Bagdasarjanz 8:00 PM CHICAGO SYMPHONY

ORCHESTRA Sakari Oramo makes his CSO debut SIBELIUS—Finlandia TCHAIKOVSKY—Violin Concerto in D

Major, Op. 35 (Vadim Repin, violin) PROKOFIEV—Symphony No. 6 in E-Flat

Minor, Op. 111 TCHAIKOVSKY—Suite from Sleeping

Beauty (Andrey Boreyko, conductor)

Sakari Oramo

10:00 PM PIPEDREAMS Some Spring Notes Enhancing that spring feeling with scores

from the classics to Broadway songs, tuneful takes on the change of seasons.

5 Tuesday 9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH

GEORGE WALKER Mozart, Bach, and Harbach 8:00 PM ETHER GAME Spring Has Sprung Everything’s coming up roses on this edition

of Ether Game.10:00 PM SOUNDS CHORAL Choral Music of Igor Stravinsky We’ll honor Stravinsky’s April 6th birthday

with his Canticum Sacrum of 1955, among other pieces.

6 Wednesday 9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH

GEORGE WALKER Baker, Getty, and Bach 8:00 PM LIVE! AT THE

CONCERTGEBOUW Jan Willem de Vriend/Royal Concertgebouw

Orchestra Gregor Horsch, cello HANDEL—Music for the Royal Fireworks MOZART —Idomeneo Overture HAYDN—Cello Concerto in D SCHUBERT—Symphony No. 5 in B-Flat

Major, D 485

7 Thursday 9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH

GEORGE WALKER Enesco, Bach, and Delius 8:00 PM KEEPING SCORE: 13 DAYS

WHEN MUSIC CHANGED February 24, 1607: The Premiere of

Monteverdi’s L’Orfeo This is a program about the dawn of opera,

but also about secular music becoming through-composed high art (something that had been the exclusive purview of church music). We’ll look at precursors to L’Orfeo in Ancient Greece and Rome, as well as Jacopo Perri’s Euridice, written a generation before Monteverdi.

9:00 PM HARMONIA Renaissance Poetry: Madrigals, Chansons,

and Villancicos Harmonia looks at the poetry behind the

most popular Renaissance vocal music from Italy, France, and Spain. Plus, Nigel North performs in a featured release of lute music by Robert Johnson.

8 Friday 9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH

GEORGE WALKER Rands, Rosetti, and Rossini 8:00 PM MARIAN McPARTLAND’S

PIANO JAZZ Remembering Dr. Billy Taylor The jazz world lost a great performer,

friend, and advocate when pianist Dr. Billy Taylor died in 2010. On this 2007 program recorded before a live audience at the John F. Kennedy Center, Taylor performs his tunes “In Loving Memory” and “If You Really Are Concerned”; then he joins McPartland for a duet of “These Foolish Things.”

10:09 PM AFTERGLOW That Old Devil Moon: Yip Harburg A birthday salute to the lyricist who wrote

words for “Over the Rainbow,” “April in Paris,” “It’s Only a Paper Moon,” and others.

Scott LaFaro

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2 Saturday 1:00 PM METROPOLITAN OPERA WAGNER—Das Rheingold Starring Wendy Bryn Harmer, Stephanie

Blythe, Patricia Bardon, Richard Croft, Gerhard Siegel, Dwayne Croft, Bryn Terfel, Eric Owens, Franz-Josef Selig, and Hans-Peter König. James Levine conducts.

Wendy Bryn Harmer Stephanie Blythe

8:00 PM HOMETOWN WITH TOM ROZNOWSKI My Feathered Friends 8:05 PM THE FOLK SAMPLER Nothing Good About Goodbye It’s just goodbye. 9:05 PM THE THISTLE AND SHAMROCK Jim Malcolm Meet a vocalist, guitarist and songwriter,

once a member of Old Blind Dogs, who now plies his musical trade as a solo performer.

11:00 PM NIGHT LIGHTS The Jade Bass: Scott LaFaro The life, music, and

impact of bassist Scott LaFaro, who died in a car crash in 1961 at the age of 25. Bassist and Indiana University faculty member Jeremy Allen joins the program, which features LaFaro’s recordings with pianist Bill Evans and others.

3 Sunday 12:00 PM SAINT PAUL SUNDAY Dale Warland Retrospective BACH—Christ lag in Todesbanden, B.W.V.

4 (“Christ lay in bonds of death”) WALKER—Electronic Alice, Part One (in

two movements) WHITACRE—Lux Aurumque STENHAMMER—Three Choral Ballads JANSEN—Nocturne HOWELLS—Requiem VAUGHAN WILLIAMS—Three

Shakespeare Songs TORMIS—Jannilul GOLOVANOV—Ochte Nash

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

9 Saturday 1:00 PM METROPOLITAN OPERA ROSSINI—Le Comte Ory Starring Diana Damrau, Joyce DiDonato,

Susanne Resmark, Juan Diego Flórez, Stéphane Degout, and Michele Pertusi. Maurizio Benini conducts.

Diana Damrau Juan Diego Flórez

8:00 PM HOMETOWN WITH TOM ROZNOWSKI Brief Respite 9:05 PM THE THISTLE AND SHAMROCK Lowlands From the shipyards on the Banks of the

Clyde, to the mining villages in the south and the farms of the Borders and east coast, the Scottish Lowlands have always been a hive of human activity. Take a walk through time in the Lowlands with Archie Fisher, Deaf Shepherd, Alison Kinnaird, and Croft No. 5.

Archie Fisher

8:05 PM THE FOLK SAMPLER What’s New: New artists to the Folk Sampler11:00 PM NIGHT LIGHTS Benny Carter: Evening Star Benny Carter survived and thrived

throughout many different eras of modern jazz, and he was a pioneer for black jazz musicians working in the film industry. This salute to the saxophonist, composer, and arranger features recordings from the wide span of his career.

10 Sunday 12:00 PM SAINT PAUL SUNDAY Amelia Piano Trio SCHUBERT—Piano Trio in E-flat No. 2,

Op. 100 HARBISON—Short Stories (2003) MENDELSSOHN—Piano Trio No. 1 in d

minor, Op. 49

1:00 PM WITH HEART AND VOICE Lent 5 Hints of resurrection and new life appear in

the music and readings for the Fifth Sunday in Lent. We’ll hear settings of Psalm 130 and John 3 by John Rutter, Philip Wilby, and others as we draw nearer to Holy Week.

4:00 PM THE STATE WE’RE IN 7:00 PM PROFILES Christoph Irmscher 8:00 PM INTELLIGENCE SQUARED The panelists debate the motion “Repeal

Obamacare.” 9:00 PM THE SANTA FE CHAMBER

MUSIC FESTIVAL

11 Monday 9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH

GEORGE WALKER Harbach, Stamitz, and Bach 8:00 PM CHICAGO SYMPHONY

ORCHESTRA A program from October 2010, conducted

by Pierre Boulez STRAVINSKY—Four Studies for Orchestra WEBERN—Passacaglia for Orchestra, Op. 1 MAHLER—Symphony No. 7 MOZART—Divertimento in F Major, K.

138

Pierre Boulez

10:00 PM PIPEDREAMS Tennessee Tales A survey of instruments old and new,

including the venerable Austin organ at Soldiers and Sailors Memorial Auditorium in Chattanooga

12 Tuesday 9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH

GEORGE WALKER Quantz, Bach, and Harbach 8:00 PM ETHER GAME Bon Appétit! Ether Game gets out the fine china and

dusts off the recipe books for a scrumptious evening.

10:06 PM SOUNDS CHORAL Spotlight: The University of Utah Singers In their short history, this ensemble of forty-

five singers has achieved both national and international acclaim under the leadership of Dr. Bradley R. Allred.

13 Wednesday 9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH

GEORGE WALKER Baker, Harbach, and Bagdasarjanz 8:00 PM LIVE! AT THE

CONCERTGEBOUW Jaap van Zweden/Netherlands Radio

Philharmonic Orchestra Felipe Rojas, tenor; Piero Terranova,

baritone; Netherlands Radio Choir RESPIGHI—Vetrate di chiesa PUCCINI—Messa di Gloria10:06 PM RECORD SHELF

14 Thursday 9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH

GEORGE WALKER Harbach, Mozart, and Baker 8:00 PM KEEPING SCORE: 13 DAYS

WHEN MUSIC CHANGED April 22, 1723: The Town Council of

Leipzig Appoints Bach as Cantor An exploration of the Baroque and the

neverending legacy of Bach, through Mendelssohn, Stravinsky, Schoenberg, Steve Reich, and The Doors’ “Light My Fire”

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

Brandenburgs, pt. 1 Harmonia explores the Orpheus Chamber

Orchestra’s commissions inspired by the Brandenburg Concertos of J.S. Bach, we look at prominent countertenors from the 1990s, and Rolf Lislevand performs music of the Italian Renaissance in the featured recording “Diminutito.”

15 Friday 9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH

GEORGE WALKER Porter, Getty, and Tailleferre 8:00 PM MARIAN McPARTLAND’S

PIANO JAZZ Veronia Nunn with Travis Shook Vocalist Veronica Nunn grew up in Little

Rock, Arkansas, absorbing all kinds of music, from jazz to funk to gospel. When she moved to New York in 1978, she split her time between Harlem’s jazz clubs and the theology department at Lehman College. Now a full-time jazz singer, Nunn, accompanied by her pianist and husband, Travis Shook, demonstrates her soulful touch on “One Note Samba” and “I’m Old Fashioned.”

10:09 PM AFTERGLOW What’s New: April 2011 New music from Kurt Elling and Charlie

Haden’s Quartet West group, featuring guest vocalists Cassandra Wilson, Norah Jones, Diana Krall, and Melody Gardot

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

16 Saturday 1:00 PM METROPOLITAN OPERA BERG—Wozzeck Starring Waltraud Meier, Stuart Skelton,

Gerhard Siegel, Matthias Goerne, and Walter Fin. James Levine conducts.

Waltraud Meier Stuart Skelton

8:00 PM HOMETOWN WITH TOM ROZNOWSKI Diaspora 8:05 PM THE FOLK SAMPLER Homesick There’s no place like home. 9:05 PM THE THISTLE AND SHAMROCK Spring is in the Airs For Joe McKenna, Kim Robertson, Liz

Carroll, and Jacqui McShee, spring is certainly in the airs, and also the jigs, reels and songs.

11:00 PM NIGHT LIGHTS Too Little, Too Soon: Booker Little A tribute to a trumpeter who died at the age

of 23 after making significant jazz recordings with Max Roach and Eric Dolphy

Booker Little

17 Sunday 12:00 PM SAINT PAUL SUNDAY St. Lawrence String Quartet HAYDN—Quartet in E flat major, Op. 33,

No. 2 “The Joke” BERGER—Doubles (2004) RAVEL—Quartet in F major BERGER—Eli Eli (in memory of Daniel

Pearl) 1:00 PM WITH HEART AND VOICE Music for Palm Sunday and Holy Week The program, and the week, begins with

music to mark Jesus’ triumphal entry into Jerusalem. But the focus quickly turns to the Passion that unfolds. Join Peter DuBois for some of the most powerful music of the church year.

4:00 PM THE STATE WE’RE IN 7:00 PM PROFILES Eileen Myles 8:00 PM RADIOLAB This edition of Radiolab explores the

words in our head and how they change the way we think. It includes an interview with Indiana University neuroanatomist Jill Bolte Taylor about what happened when a stroke wiped out the language center of her brain—an event she described in her book My Stroke of Insight.

Jill Bolte Taylor

9:00 PM THE SANTA FE CHAMBER MUSIC FESTIVAL

18 Monday 9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH

GEORGE WALKER Mozart, Baker, and Handel 8:00 PM CHICAGO SYMPHONY

ORCHESTRA In excerpts from Beyond the Score, CSO

commentator Gerard McBurney delves into the literary and historical roots of Tchaikovsky’s Symphony No. 4. Alexander Polianichko conducts.

BEETHOVEN—Overture to The Creatures of Prometheus, Op. 43

BEETHOVEN—Piano Concerto No. 1 in C Major, Op. 15 (Piotr Anderszewski, piano)

TCHAIKOVSKY—Marche slave in B-Flat Minor, Op. 31 (Claudio Abbado, conductor)

TCHAIKOVSKY—Symphony No. 4 in F Minor

10:00 PM PIPEDREAMS An Easter Awakening Music to commemorate the Christian

Resurrection Festival and celebrate the earth’s joyful rebirth in springtime

19 Tuesday 9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH

GEORGE WALKER Kamen, Ravel, and Bagdasarjanz 8:00 PM ETHER GAME That Sounds Familiar What’s a little idea theft between musicians?

10:06 PM SOUNDS CHORAL The Bell Song by Max Bruch We’ll hear a complete recording of Part I of

Bruch’s setting of Schiller’s popular poem about the casting of a bell with the phases of human life.

20 Wednesday 9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH

GEORGE WALKER Bach, Bagdasarjanz, and Getty 8:00 PM LIVE! AT THE

CONCERTGEBOUW Daniel Harding/Royal Concertgebouw

Orchestra Lang Lang, piano CHOPIN—Piano Concerto No. 2 in F

Minor, Op. 21 BRAHMS—Symphony No. 2 in D Major,

Op. 73

Lang Lang

10:06 PM RECORD SHELF

21 Thursday 9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH

GEORGE WALKER Baker, Handel, and Theodor Schwartzkopff 8:00 PM KEEPING SCORE: 13 DAYS

WHEN MUSIC CHANGED October 29, 1787: The Premiere of Don

Giovanni in Prague With this work, Mozart attained his

maturity and wrote a masterpiece that dominated opera forever afterwards, echoing in Wagner and beyond.

9:00 PM HARMONIA The Tudor Choir in Seattle The Tudor Choir performs live on the Early

Music Guild’s International Series, the Hilliard Ensemble interprets the music of Perotin, and Ensemble Sarband re-imagines Bach in the Arabian Passion.

22 Friday 9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH

GEORGE WALKER Bagdasarjanz, Haydn, and Strauss 8:00 PM MARIAN McPARTLAND’S

PIANO JAZZ Marian McPartland Selects—Mercer

Ellington

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

10:09 PM AFTERGLOW Songs of the Season: Spring Our annual popular song tribute to the

arrival of fairer weather, featuring music from Ella Fitzgerald, June Christy, Tony Bennett, Billie Holiday, and others.

23 Saturday 1:00 PM METROPOLITAN OPERA STRAUSS—Capriccio Andrew Davis conducts. Starring Renée

Fleming, Sarah Connolly, Joseph Kaiser, Russell Braun, Morten Frank Larsen, and Peter Rose.

Sarah Connolly Joseph Kaiser

8:00 PM HOMETOWN WITH TOM ROZNOWSKI What I Felt Like Doing 8:05 PM THE FOLK SAMPLER Easter Season: Once on an April evening 9:05 PM THE THISTLE AND SHAMROCK Hands On Old songs provide a lens through which

we can view lifestyles and work-ways, now passed into history, when manual labors filled the day. Hear of horse drawn ploughs, hand loom weavers, coalface workers and fishing under sail with Davy Steele, Dick Gaughan, Christine Kydd, and others.

11:00 PM NIGHT LIGHTS Sacred Blue: Jazz Goes to Church in the

1960s In the 1960s Mary Lou Williams, Duke

Ellington, and other jazz artists began to write religious or so-called “sacred jazz,” to be performed in churches and at masses. Historian Michael McGerr and jazz educator Keith McCutchen join the program.

24 Sunday 12:00 PM SAINT PAUL SUNDAY St. Olaf Choir PALESTRINA—Sicut cervus BILLINGS—Easter Anthem GRETCHANINOFF—Our Father CHRISTIANSEN—Psalm 50 (mvmts. ii, iii) ORBAN—Daemon Irrepit Callidus JENNINGS—The Lord is the Everlasting

God (mvmt. ii) COPLAND—The Promise of Living (from

The Tender Land)

COHEN—Yom Seh Le-Yisrael SCHOLZ—Children of the Heavenly Father HOGAN—My Soul’s Been Anchored in the

Lord HAMPTON—Praise His Holy Name! 1:00PM WITH HEART AND VOICE An Easter Celebration “Come, ye faithful, raise the strain of

triumphant gladness . . . Christ hath burst his prison.” Host Peter DuBois has chosen glorious choral and organ music from England and America to celebrate the Resurrection.

4:00 PM THE STATE WE’RE IN 7:00 PM PROFILES Christine Barbour 8:00 PM ECONOMIC CLUB OF INDIANA Gwen Ifill 9:00 PM THE SANTA FE CHAMBER

MUSIC FESTIVAL

25 Monday 9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH

GEORGE WALKER Getty, Handel, and Molino 8:00 PM CHICAGO SYMPHONY

ORCHESTRA Sir Mark Elder conducts a program that

includes the CSO’s new production of Beyond the Score: Prokofiev Symphony No. 5, along with the final performance in Stephen Hough’s cycle of Tchaikovsky Piano Concertos.

LIADOV—Baba-Yaga, Op. 56 LIADOV—The Enchanted Lake, Op. 62 TCHAIKOVSKY—Piano Concerto No. 1

in B-Flat Minor, Op. 23 (Stephen Hough, piano)

PROKOFIEV—Symphony No. 5 in B-Flat Major, Op. 100

TCHAIKOVSKY—The Storm (Alexander Polianichko, conductor)

10:00 PM PIPEDREAMS Two from Texas Selections from inaugural-series concerts on

a pair of exceptional new instruments, by Richards, Fowkes & Co. and Martin Pasi, in Houston and Dallas

26 Tuesday 9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH

GEORGE WALKER Hummel, Ponce, and Bach 8:00 PM ETHER GAME Like Singing about Architecture Ether Game builds on a solid foundation of

musical trivia.10:06 PM SOUNDS CHORAL Easter Oratorio by J. S. Bach We’ll examine the evolution of this oratorio

which in story begins where Bach’s Passions end.

27 Wednesday 9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH

GEORGE WALKER Telemann, Baker, and Harbach 8:00 PM LIVE! AT THE

CONCERTGEBOUW Werner Herbers/The Brabant Orchestra Amedeo Modigliani Quartet VAN KEULEN—Chords SCHULHOFF—Concerto for String Quartet

and Winds DE LEEUW—Symphonies of Winds DEBUSSY—String Quartet KETTING—Time Machine10:06 PM RECORD SHELF

28 Thursday 9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH

GEORGE WALKER Baker, Getty, and Bagdasarjanz 8:00 PM KEEPING SCORE: 13 DAYS

WHEN MUSIC CHANGED August 8, 1803: Parisian piano maker

Sebastien Erard gives one of his sturdy new creations to Beethoven

With this instrument, the composer was able to set aside his fortepiano and write more expressive and emotional music, beginning with the Waldstein Sonata.

9:00 PM HARMONIA The Mexican Baroque A special Harmonia devoted to the baroque

music of Mexico that includes works by Gaspar Fernandes and Juan Gutiérrez de Padilla, a brief look at the Jesús Sánchez Garza Collection of Spanish colonial manuscripts, and Lee Santana leading Ensemble Continuo in an unusual take on the guitar music of Santiago de Murcia.

29 Friday 9:03 AM CLASSICAL MUSIC WITH

GEORGE WALKER Danzi, Valentini, and Verdi 8:00 PM MARIAN McPARTLAND’S

PIANO JAZZ Bela Fleck With his instrumental group The Flecktones,

Béla Fleck has expanded the banjo repertoire far beyond bluegrass and folk music, and is a regular collaborator with jazz players including Chick Corea, Stanley Clarke, and Jean-Luc Ponty. On this session, Fleck joins McPartland and bassist Gary Mazzaroppi for trio renditions of “In Walked Bud,” “All The Things You Are,” and “Polka Dots and Moonbeams.”

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

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 Symphony OrchestraBrown County Art Guild, Inc.The Buskirk-Chumley TheaterBy Hand GalleryCafé DjangoCamerata Orchestra

This month on WTIU television.

Masterpiece Classic: Upstairs DownstairsSundays, April 10, 17, and 24 at 9pm with a rebroadcast on Friday, April 15, 22, and 29 at 9:30pm.

The saga continues at 165 Eaton Place with new characters upstairs and down in a three-part sequel to the much-loved Masterpiece series, more than three decades after its last episode on PBS. The story opens in 1936, six years after the Bellamy family moved out of 165 Eaton Place at the end of the original series. Recently inherited by young Sir Hallam Holland (Ed Stoppard), the house has been long vacant and its considerable needs are taken in hand by Hallam’s vivacious wife, Agnes. Her first order of business is to hire servants, for which she retains Rose, the proprietor of a domestic employment agency, although Agnes is unaware of Rose’s previous association with 165. After lining up a butler, a cook, a housemaid, and other staff, Rose realizes she may be of no further use to the new family. Our story begins, just as it did thirty-odd years ago, with stories of the upper-class and working-class intertwining in complex and interesting ways against a backdrop of world events—in this case, the abdication crisis of Edward VIII, the growing belligerence of Hitler and Mussolini on the continent, and the rise of the British Union of Fascists under Sir Oswald Mosley. Amid the triumphs, disasters, joys, and tears, it’s just like old times at 165 Eaton Place.

(left to right) Eileen Atkins as Lady Maud Holland, Claire Foy as Lady Persie, Nico Mirallegro as Johnny Proude, Art Malik as Amanjit Singh, (on stairs) Ellie Kendrick as Ivy Morris, Neil Jackson as Harry Spargo, (center front) Keeley Hawes as Lady Agnes Holland, Ed Stoppard as Sir Hallam Holland, Adrian Scarborough as Mr. Pritchard, Jean Marsh as Rose Buck, and Anne Reid as Mrs. Thackeray

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10:09 PM AFTERGLOW George Shearing and the

Singers A tribute to the late pianist,

featuring albums he made with Nancy Wilson, Nat King Cole, Peggy Lee, Mel Torme, and Dakota Staton.

30 Saturday 1:00 PM METROPOLITAN

OPERA VERDI—Il Trovatore Starring Sondra Radvanovsky,

Dolora Zajick, Marcelo Álvarez, Dmitri Hvorostovsky, and Stefan Kocán. James Levine conducts.

8:00 PM HOMETOWN WITH TOM ROZNOWSKI Like Thunder 8:05 PM THE FOLK SAMPLER The Duets: Two voices are

better than one. 9:05 PM THE THISTLE AND

SHAMROCK Passing The Torch The National Centre of

Excellence in Traditional Music (Sgoil Chiùil na Gàidhealtachd) has developed a reputation for a high musical standard, by any measure. Enjoy youthful voices and instrumental excellence this week.

11:00 PM NIGHT LIGHTS Handy On the Horn: John

Handy Tenor saxophonist John Handy

gained prominence with Charles Mingus’ late-1950s group and went on to record as a leader for both the Roulette and Columbia labels in the 1960s. We’ll feature music from those albums and his appearances with Mingus.

John Handy

April 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)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)

Cardinal 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, LLCEffingham Performance CenterThe Electrical Workers of the IBEW Local 725 and the National Electrical Contractors AssociationExperience TechnologyFarm Bloomington Finch’s BrasserieFirst United ChurchFirst United Methodist ChurchFriends of Art BookstoreFriends of the Library-Monroe CountyThe Funeral ChapelGarden VillaGilbert ConstructionGlobal GiftsGood Earth Compost & MulchGoode Integrative Health CareGoods for CooksGolden Living CenterGrant Street InnGredy Insurance AgencyGreene & 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 Student

Indiana History MuseumIndiana State MuseumIndiana State UniversityIndiana University HealthIndianapolis Chamber 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 Division of 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 ShowLaughing 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, MSW, LCSWOliver WineryPeriodontics & Dental Implant Center of Southern IndianaPictura GalleryProBleuPygmalion’s Art SupplyQuality SurfacesRelishRentbloomington.netRestore/Habitat for HumanityRon Plecher-Remax

Rose Hulman Performing Arts SeriesScholars Inn BakehouseSerendipity Martini Bar and RestaurantShawnee Summer TheatreSmithvilleShowers Inn Bed & BreakfastSole SensationsSoma Coffee House and Juice BarSaint Mary of the Woods CollegeStorage Express

Terry’s Banquets & Catering Traditions 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.

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