This is a complimentary
Program Folio for
n^ncPnfOrmist
thinkers— searching, sensitive,
culturally attuned people.
MORE *
KPFK9O.7 F.M. Au£. 19-Sept. 1, 1963
a listener sponsored
e in radio
The PROGRAM FOLIO, a service to KPFK subscribers, is published bi-weekly by KPFK (FM 90.7 mc) which serves Southern California. KPFK broadcasts 17 hours a day of music, drama, public affairs and programs for children. The station pro- motes discussions of all points of view, but endorses none.
Anyone can listen, but those who want creative and provocative programming sup port KPFK. The basic annual subscription is S12.00. Contributions are tax-deduct- ible because KPFK is non-profit. Sustaining, $25.00; Contributing, $50.00; Patron, $100.00; Participating, $250.00; Lifetime, $1,000; Student, $5.00 (six months); Introductory, $3.00 (three months). Subscriptions are transferable to KPF.\, serving Northern California (2207 Shattuck Ave., Berkeley) and WBAI, serving the New York area (30 E. 39th St., N.Y. 16).
KPFK and these two other listener-subscription stations form Pacifica, a non-profit
corporation. KPFK programming has been favorably reviewed by The Saturday
VOL. FIVE, NO. 3 Review, The Los Angeles Times, The Nation. The New Yorker, The Christian
Science Monitor and numerous other publications. KPFK has received broadcasting's three
most outstanding awards: a PEABODY, an OHIO STATE AWARD and the AFRED I.
duPONT RADIO AND TELEVISION AWARD FOR 1961.
KPFK transmits from Wt. Wilson uith a pouer of 110,000 uatts. The mai/ins address is KPFK, Los Angeles
38, California. Studios and offices are located at 3729 Cahuenga Blvd., Morth Hollvuood.
TR 7.5583, ST 1-0150.
tU
shows a reproduction of ED SAYLAN's 1st prize winner (color) of our C4y^^t\ Images of the Faire contest to put you in the mood for Echoes of the
Faire scattered through this Folio.
P^C^^lAffx J^iClc
Two special events highlight this Folio: a live stucdio concert, to which you are invited, an(d an interview with music of the Freedom Singers. The studio concert features Donna Burrow, the comely redhead you heard at our Pleasure Faire and IsAay Market. Saturday, August 31, beginning at 9:30 p.m.. Donna will sing Irish, English, and Scots songs of all periods in our Studio D. Arrive at the station about 9:00 and welcome.
Donna's concert is part of our Echoes of the Faire series in this Folio — re- capturing the best moments of the two-day extravaganza. Other Echoes, tape-recorded, can be heard Friday, August 23, Saturday, August 24, and Thursday, August 29.
The Freedom Singers are four young men and women who perform the songs of the civil rights movement to raise funds for the Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee. They will appear at the Ash Grove in Los Angeles in August and September. On August 19, Monday, we will interview them in our studios; that interview will be rebroadcast on Sunday, August 25. AND, Ed Perl of the Ash Grove has gi^en us 150 tickets to hear the Freedom Singers on Friday, Saturday, and Sunday, August 30 and 31, and September 1. Two of these tickets will be given free with each new $12.00 subscription during this Folio period. If you are an old subscriber and want to take advan- tage of this offer, get a friend to subscribe, and we will give you or your friend the two tickets.
Still, yet, and another highlight: seven programs from the controversial convention of the Young Republican National Federation in San Francisco in June. Senator Barry Goldwater leads off the series Friday, August 30; the remaining six programs are on Saturday, August 3 1 , and Sunday, September 1 .
We have finally raised some money to keep a Pacifica correspondent in the South full-time this summer. Dale Minor will be sending reports and pro- ducing documentary programs in the spirit of Birmingham and Jackson masterpieces. These reports will be aired under the title From the South, an hour set aside the first Monday evening of each Folio. Additional programs on civil rights will be programmed on the Wide-Open Hour Saturdays, and The Eleventh Hour on Thursdays.
Page 2
BROADCAST HOURS: 7 a.tu. to 12:00 midnight, Monday through Friday, 8 a.m. to 12:00 midnight Saturday and Sunday. Dates of future broadcasts appear in BOLD FACE, caps anil parentheses. Example: (DECEMBER 30 )n Dates of original broadcasts in light face and in parentheses. Example: (December 30). ISumbers in parentheses following listing of musical selections refer to time, in minutes.
MONDAY, August 19
8:00 A.M. BAROQUE CONCERTOS— I
VIVALDI Flute Concerto Op 10 No 2
Masi/Hute; Orch San Pietro/Ruotola (Decca
10062) (11) CORELLI Harpsichord Concerto Xo 11 in E. Op 5
Canino/harps; Gli Accademici/Eckertsen (Vox
423-3) (8) A. SCARLATTI Concerto No 3 in F
Scarlatti Orch/Caracciolo (Ang 35141) (8) BACH Harpsichord Concerto No 1 in d minor
Kirkpatrick/harps, Lucerne Strings/Baum-
gartner (Arc 3132) (24) HANDEL Oboe Concerto No 3 in e minor
Tabuteau/oboe, Philadelphia Orch / Ormandy
(Col 4629) (10) BONPORTI Concerto No 6 in F, Op 11
I Musici (Epic 3542) (12) ALBINONI Oboe Concerto in d minor. Op 9 No 2
Lardrot/oboe, Wiener Solisten/Bottcher (Van
1100) (12)
8:30 CONVERSATIONAI. FRENCH AND RUS- SIAN— XI: Leonid Belozubov teaches, and it's not too late to order the lesson syllabus — call us at the station.
9:00 COMMENTARY: Hallock Hoffman. (Aug. 18)
9:15 AN AGE OF SONG — I: The drama, poetry, prose, and music of Elizabethan England, as- sembled by Lee Whiting and heard weekday mornings in this Folio.
.9:45 SCHUMANN CELUO CONCERTO: The con- certo in A minor for cello and orchestra. Op 129. Leonard Rose is the cellist and the New York Philharmonic is conducted by Leonard Bern- stein. (Col 5653) (24)
10:15 FEDERAL AID TO EDUCATION: Consultant Wilson Riles, Congressman George Brown, and LA Board of Education member Mary Tinglof. (Aug 8)
11:00 A SCOTS QUAIR — V: Miss Fredi Duncan reads the Lewis Gassic Gibbon story weekly at this time in 26 episodes.
11:30 TEACHER-PUPIL CONCERT #3
RAVEL Chansons Madecasses
Fi.'-cher-Dieskau, Ens (13) (DGG 18615) VAUGHAN-WILLIAMS O Clap Your Hands
Columbia U Chapel Choir-Chorus. Organ,
Brass, Percussion (4) (Kapp 9057)
Motet-O taste and see
St. Paul's Cathedral Choir/Bower (3) (Ang 35138) BALAKIREV Piano Sonata
Ryshna (27) (SFM 1007) RIMSKY-KORSAKOV Capriccio Espagnol
London Symphony/Martinon (15) (LM 2298) STRAVINSKY Song of the Nightingale
Suisse Romande/Ansermet (22) (Lon 1494)
1:00 TOMORROW'S WILDERNESS — I: First of five programs recorded at the 8th Wilderness Conferen:e held in March this year under the auspices of the Sierra Clulj. In this program.
Stephen Spurr of the I'niversit.v of Michigan
tells of "The Value of Wilderness to Science."
The other four talks will be heard weekdays at this time.
1:30 THE SILENT REVOLUTION — I: Creative man in contemporary society, discussed by six speakers recorded at San Francisco's 1st Uni- tarian Church. Here, Frank Barron, research psychologist, talks of "The Creative Imagina- tion." The other five programs will air weekly at this time. (Jun 16)
2:40 ANTON BRUCKNER: Willem Van Otterloo conducts the Vienna Symphony Orchestra in a performance of Bruckner's Symphony No. 7 in E major. (Epic 6006) (63)
3:45 SYNANON REVISITED: The founder and di- rector of the unifiue narcotics addiction rehab- ilitation project talk with KPFK's Art Wads- worth. (Aug 10)
5:00 FOR YOUNG PEOPLE: Se? page 6.
6:00 SOVIET PRESS AND PERIODICALS: Wil- liam Mandel with report and comment.
6:15 PACIFICA NEWS: John Ohliger, Mike Hodel.
6:40 CALENDAR OF EVENTS: Clair Brush.
6:45 COMMENTARY: Marvin Schacter. (Aug 20)
7:00 FROM THE SOUTH: A special program time left open each two weeks during this summer of protest for reports from our correspondent in the South, Dale Minor.
8:00 THE FREEDOM SINGERS: This group of young men and women now tours the country presenting the music of the civil rights move- ment, the most dynamic reflection of the folk process in America today. This program is an interview, with music, programmed to coincide with the Freedom Singers' appearance at the Ash Grove in Los Angeles. (See program talk) (AUG 25)
9:30 SEX AS RELIGION: Critic and poet Marjorie Farber on a "new variety of cultism" found in the novels and films of Mailer. Baldwin, and Truffaut. Her talk is adapted from a paper she presented this year before the Association of Existential Psychology and Psychiatry.
10:00 THE GOON SHOW: The Spanish Suitcase.
Ned Seagoon, at the request of Senor Mori- arty, takes Major Bloodnok's place in a Span- ish prison. No, we don't understand it either, but Peter Sellers and Spike Milligan claim to.
10:30 MODERN JAZZ SCENE: Phil Elwood with something called "Round Midnight," variations on a theme. (ACG 20)
11:00 THE AUTOBIOGRAPHY OF KENNETH REXROTH: The San Francisco belles-lettrist con- tinues.
11:.30 ALBERT J. GUERARD: Dr. Guerard. novel- ist and professor at Stanford University, is interviewed by Dale Harris about the novel today. Dr. Guerard's latest work is The E.xiles, a novel of Latin America.
Page 3
TUESDAY, August 20
7:00 A.M. RICHARD STRAUSS CONCERT
Horn Concerto No. 1 in E flat
Brain/Philharmonia/Galliera (Col 4775) (15) Serenade in E flat. Op 7
Eastman Winds/Fennell (Mer 50173) (8) Oboe Concerto
Goossens/Philharmonia/Galliera (Col 4775)(22) Burleske
Janis/Chicago/Reimer (Vic 2127) (20) Taillefer, Op 52
Cebotari/Ludwig/Hotter/Cho & Radio Berlin
Orch/Rother (Ur 7042) (18)
8:30 CONVERSATIONAL FRENCH AND RUS- SIAN— XII: Leonid Belozubov.
9:00 COMMENTARY: Marvin Schacter. (Aug 19)
9:15 AN AGE OF SONG — II: Lee Whitiner presents beautiful noises from Elizabethan England.
9:45 DIE SCHONE MULLERIN: Schubert's song cycle complete with prologue and epilogue, texts by Wilhelm Muller. Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau is the baritone with Gerald Moore, piano. (Ang 3628 3s) (65)
10:45 TWO STORIES: Burton Raff el reads two un- published works: "How They Carried the Prize from Stockholm to Oshkosh" and "Snow."
11:30 TWO RUSSIAN PIANISTS:
HAYDN Sonata No 20 in C minor
Richter/piano (Artia 1550) (24) CHOPIN Etudes Nos 1-12. Op 10
Ashkenazy/piano (Artia 203B) (30) Ml'SSORGSKY Pictures at an Exhibition
Richter/piano (Artia 154) (30)
1:00 TOMORROW'S WILDERNESS— II: Wilder- ness and Wildlife. Carl W. Buchheister. presi-
1:30 THREE INDONESIAN POETS: Sitor Sirumo- rang. Toto Sudarto Bachtiar and W. S. Rendra, from a forthcoming anthologj' of Indonesian poetry edited and presented by Burton Raffel.
2:00 MODERN JAZZ SCENE: Phil Elwood. (Aug 19)
2:30 THE NERVE OF FAILURE: Dr. Thomas Billings, former assistant professor of education at Sacramento State College. (Jul 10)
3:15 DONAUESCHINGEN FESTIVAL — I: From the Southwest German Radio. Boulez's Pli seloit pli (Portrait de .Mallamie), conducted by the composer. (Jun 10)
5:00 FOR YOUNG PEOPLE: See page 6.
6:00 RACF: REL.ATIONS NEWS: Daniel Panger and Maureen Mcllroy.
6:15 PACIFICA NEWS: Henry Barzilay. John Ohliger.
6:40 CALENDAR OF EVENTS: Clair Brush.
6:45 CO.M.MENTARY: R()l)ert Gaston. (.Vl'G. 21)
7:00 .MRS. GBS: Janet Dunl)ar. author of a re- cently published l)io;;raphy of George Bernard Shaw's wife, Charlotte, talks with Frances Barry.
7:45 ISENHKI.M CONCERT: All. the music .so far availal)h- from Hindemith's operatic masterpieie, .MathiN der .>Ialer, about Mathias Grunwald, painter of the famous Ist-nheim altarpiece. Pilar Lorenger. soprano, baritone Dietrich Fischer- Dieskau and tenor Donald (Jrobe aie soloist.s with Leopold Ludwig and the Berlin Radio
orchestra. The Berlin Philharmonic under Hindemith add their bit as well, and "William Malloch ties the musical fragments with story line.
9:00 FKO.M THE CENTER: Is Individualism Es- sential to Democracy? Elmo Roper, chairman of the famous poll-taking organization and vice- chairman of the Fund for the Republic, has spent a lifetime finding out what other people think. In thi.s program he answers riuestions from an adult education group about the future of American democracy. (AUG 22)
10:00 MEET YOU AT THE STATION: KPFK goes folk again, with collector and enthusiast Alan Hjerpe biweekly at this time. Tonight Uncle Dave Macon and his heirs are discussed.
11:00 THE LONELINESS OF FEAR: Three Ameri can poet-s — Stanley Kunitz. Muriel Rukeys. : and Lenore Marshall — comment on the role the poet in the nuclear age. The commen are in verse and informal discussion.
11:40 THE BAKER'S STORY: One of a series Enzo the Barber stories written and read in Bronx Sicilian dialect by writer Joe Papale.
WEDNESDAY, August 21
7:00 .\.M. STR.WINSKY CONCERT
Ragtime for 11 Instruments
Columbia Sym/Stravinsky (Col 5772) (5) Four Norwegian Moods
NY Phil/Stravinsky (Col 4398) (8) Octet for Wind Instruments
Members of Columbia Sym/Stravinsky (Col
5672) (16) Ebony Concerto
Woody Herman Orch/Stravinsky (Col 4 398) (9) Renard
Soloists/Memb's Col Sym/Stravinsky
(Col 5772) (16) Les Noces
Soloists/Barber, Copland. Foss. Sessions, pi
anos/Columbia Ens/Stravinsky (Col 5772 (25) Circus Polka
NY Phil/Stravinsky (Col 4398) (4)
8:30 CONVERSATIONAL FRENCH AND RUS- SL\N — XIII: Leonid Belozubov.
9:00 CO.M.>IENT.\RY: Robert Gaston. (Aug 20)
9:15 AN AGE OF SONG — III: Elizabethan prose poetry and music — and non-Elizabethan Lee Whiting.
9:45 Ml SIC OF TOCH .AND COWELL: Firs?t Toch's Five Pieces for Winds and Penussion Op 83; then Cowell's String Quartet No 5 (1962). followed by Toch's Sonatinetta foi Flute, Clarinet and Bassoon. Op 84. The Phil- adelphia Woodwind Quintet performs the Todi and the Beaux-Arts String Quartet the Cowell. (Col 5788) (45)
10:30 \ VISIT TO COl NT TOLSTOY: Willard Trask reads an 1SS7 article by George Kennan, grandfather of the iliplomat (.\ug 2)
11:30 A K.VTIll.KKN FERRIKR SONCJ RKCIT.VL
sen r.M A.N.N l-'iauenliobo und Lebcn
Ferrier/contralto. Newmark/piano (Lon 5020)
(22) lOngllsh Songs and Folksongs
Feiricr ( ontialto. Spurr/i)ian() (Lon 5411) (44) IJU.Ml.MS \icr Krnste tlesange
l'\'iiicr iiintralto. Newmark piano (Lon 5020
Page 4
1:00 TOMORROW'S WILDERNESS— III: Wilder- ness In Western Culture. Paul Brooks, editor- in-chief, Houghton Mifflin Co.
1:30 ECONOMIC PLANNING FOR DISARMA- MENT: Arthur Carstens. professor of indus- trial relations at I'CLA; RAND economist Allen Ferguson; and Paul Schrade of the UAW dis- cuss, and are moderated by architect Joseph Belser.
2:30 EVENINGS ON THE ROOF: Peter Yates. (Aug 18)
3:30 THE BLACK MANS REVOLUTION: Con- gressman Adam Clayton Powell of New York. (Aug 7)
4:00 HIROYIKI IWAKIS TCHAIKOVSKY FIFTH: The Japanese conductor leads the Nippon Hoso Kyokai Symphony Orchestra in a performance of the Russian's Opus 64. (Nivico JV 2001) (47)
5:00 FOR YOUNG PEOPLE: See page 6.
6:00 FROM THE CONGRESSIONAL RECORD:
Daniel Panger.
6:15 PACIFICA NEWS: Mike Hodel, John Ohliger.
6:40 CALENDAR OF EVENTS: Clair Brush.
6:45 COMMENTARY: Phil Kerby. (AUG 22)
7:00 MARTINU'S FIELD MASS: A 19 39 work, written in honor of the Czech war dead on the heels of the Hitler invasion. Performers are Teodor Srubar, baritone, the chorus of the Vit Nejedly Army Ensemble, V. J. Sykora, piano, organist M. Kampelsheimer and soloists of the Czech Philharmonic under Bohumir Liska. (Sup 10387) (27)
7:30 LADY MACBETH — MORAL SCAPEGOAT:
John Monteverde, associate professor of English at San Diego State College, challenges the tra- ditional view of Lady Macbeth as goader and prodder. This interpretation returns the focus of the play to Macbeth as tragic hero, engineer of his own downfall, and places the moral re- sponsibility for the tragedy entirely upon Mac- beth himself.
8:15 MACBETH: In case you don't agree with the previous speaker, lislen for yourself as the Marlowe Society does it. (Lon A4343)
AND RUS-
10:30 JAZZ ARCHIVf:S: Phil Elwood spends a he hour with Ethel Waters. (AUG 22)
11:00 CAPITAL PUNISHMENT: William Graves, former prison physician at San Quentin peni- tentiary, speaking against the death penalty with some graphic first-hand observations.
THURSDAY, August 22
:00 A.M. FRENCH VOCAL MUSIC
FAURE Lo Bonne Chanson, Op 61
Cuenod/tenor, Holetschek/piano (XWN 18707)
(22) DI-PARC SONGS
Simoneau/tenor, Rogers/piano (XWN 18788)
(23) FRENCH TROUBADOUR SONGS
Cuenod/tenor. Leeb/lute (XWN 18638) (22) FRANCAIX Le Diable Boiteaux
Cuenod/tenor. Conrad/bass, Inst Ens/ Fran-
caix (XWN 18543) (19)
8:30 CONVERSATIONAL FRENCH
SIAN — XIV: Leonid Belozubov.
9:00 COMMENTARY: Phil Kerby. (Aug. 21)
9:15 AN AGE OF SONG — IV: The arts of the era of the Virgin Queen.
9:45 FOLK SONG COLLECTORS: Bill Faier talks with Frank and Anne Warner about Sue Thomas, Tink Tillet and Joseph Henry Johnson and the songs and stories they've collected from them. (45)
10:30 FROM THE CENTER: (Aug 20)
11:30 LITTLE-KNOWN CHAMBER MUSIC:
MENDELSSOHN Quartet in E flat
Westwood String Quartet (SFM 1001) (20) VIOTTI Quartet in B flat
Baker String Quartet (SFM 1006) (24) MICHAEL HAYDN Quintet in C
Roth Quartet. Halleux/viola (SFM 1005) (20) GLINKA Quartet in F
Westwood String Quartet (SFM 1001) (18)
1:00 TOMORROW'S WILDERNES»S— IV: Man and
the Land, J. Ralph Audy, professor of human ecology at the UC Medical School.
1:30 THE BUTTERFLY AND THE TRAFFIC LIGHT: Cynthia Ozick reads her short story which first appeared in Literary Review.
2:00 JAZZ ARCHIVES: Phil Elwood. (Aug 21)
2:30 THE .ALLIANCE FOR PROGRESS: US am- bassador Teodoro ^loscoso and Mexican agrarian economist Edmundo Flores give different prog- noses for the Alliance. (Aug 9)
3:30 READINGS FROM EUGENE O'NEILL: Jason Robards, Jr., with excerpts from four of the plays. (Aug 14)
4:10 STRAVINSKY AT THE KEYBOARD: Vintage Stravinsky recordings, with the composer at the keyboard, performing Piano Ras Music, Serenade en la, and Capricoio for Piano and Orchestra — the latter with the Walther Straam Orchestra, conducted by Ernest Ansermet. (45)
5:00 FOR YOUNG PEOPLE: See page 6.
6:00 SPECL-\L REPORT: Background to the news.
6:15 PACIFICA NEV
Ohliger.
6:40 CALEND.\R OF EVENTS: Clair Brush.
Erwin Rosen, John
:45 COMMENTARY:
23)
Dr. Norman Bailey. (AUG
7:00 THE .4RMED FORCES AS EDUCATOR:
Speaking at the recent meeting of the Na- tional Philosophy of Education Society in San Francisco. William H. Boyer finds armed forces educational fare rather less than worthy. Dr. Boyer is a University of Hawaii professor.
7:30 BERLINER .MILLJOH: A background report on the times in which the Brecht-Weill collabo- rations took place, prepared by William Malloch and Dr. Richard Raack, assistant professor of history at Long Beach State College. (Jul 7)
8:30 THE ELEVENTH HOUR: No psychologists here, but open time for late program arrivals and topical fare.
9:30 CINEMA REVIEW
Page 5
9:45 NOT-SO-SILENT MOVIES MUSICS: Before talkies, each movie scene had its own high- lighting- music. When electrical recording came in. automation drove pianists and organists out of work. Fortunately for us. William Malloch has kept some of the circa 1926 re- cordings with titles like "Implorations" and "Hurry No. 3"; he gathers a nosegay of them of those who were there and those who wish they had been there when it was all like it was really happening.
10:15 BIRTHSUIT: A documentary produced by South African radio on a decompression device to ease the pres.sure on the uterus during de- livery, thus shortening labor. Included is a re- cording of an actual birth.
10:45 THE WORLD IS MY COUNTRY: Anne Mor- rissett talks about "world citizen" Gary Davis, and belatedly reviews Davis's book.
11:00 LOTTE LEHMANN'S FAREWELL CON- CERT: The great lieder singer gives a stunning concert, then really stuns her audience by tell- ing them they have just heard her for the last time. Enterprising fans secretly recorded this Town Hall performance. (62)
FRIDAY, August 23
7:00 A.M. SCHUMANN FOR THE YOUNG:
Waldscenen. Op 82
Haskil/piano (Epic 3358)) (20)
Scenes of Childhood. Op 15
Gieseking/piano (Col 4540) (18) Fairy Tales. Op 132
Demus/piano. Wlach/clarinet. Weiss/viola
(XWX 18494) (15) Kinderscenen. Op 15
Haskil/piano (Epic 3358) (17) Carnaval. Op 9
Rachmoninoff/piano (Cam 396) (23)
8:30 CONVERSATIONAL FRENCH AND RUS- SIAN— XV: Leonid Belozubov.
9:00 COMMENTARY: Dr. Norman Bailey. (Aug 22)
9:15 AN ACiE OF SONG— V: Lee Whiting with things F:iizubethan.
9:45 HO.AIOSEXUALS AND THE LAW AND SO- CIETY: A frank discussion among an attorney an officer of the Mattachine Society, and a public health official. (Aug 17)
11:30 A CHARLES IVES CONCERT:
Three IMaces in New England
Eastman-Rochester Orch/Hanson (Mar 50149) Washington's Birthday
Imperial 'Phil of Tokyo/Strickland (CRI 163) Hallowe'en; The Pond; Central I'ark in The Dark
Members of the Oslo Phil Orch/Strickland
(CRI 163) (23) Second Piano Sonata "Concord"
I'appa-Stavrou/piano, Lichter 'flute (CRI 150)
FOR YOUNG PEOPLE |
||
5:00 MONDAY. August 19 |
5:00 MONDAY. August 26 |
|
Tell-ME-AC.AIN Tale |
TELL-:\IE-AGAIN Tale |
|
Ruth Prince |
Ruth Prince |
|
WHEN WE SING |
OUNCE. DICE. TRICE |
|
Ernie Sheldon Plus Two |
lieadings from Alistair Reid |
|
BLUEY'S RUNAWAY KANGAROO— XI |
A LIGHTHOUSE IS A LONESO.ME PLACE |
|
Irene Hilton |
Written and read by Eric St. Clair |
|
5:00 TUESDAY. August 20 |
5:00 TUESD.AY. August 27 |
|
TI.ME FOR RHYME |
TIME FOR RHYME |
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Rachel Weller |
Rachel Weller |
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MUSIC OF MANY LANDS |
MUSIC OF .MANY LANDS |
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Gerald Zelinger |
Gerald Zelinger |
|
BLUEY'S RUNAWAY KANGAROO— XII |
NIXIES. PIXIES AND LEPRECHAUNS |
|
Irene Hilton |
Read by Eric St. Clair |
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5:00 WEDNESDAY. August 21 |
5:00 WEDNESDAY, August 28 |
|
FOREST LORE: Ferns |
FOREST LORE: Wild Animals vs. Tame Ones |
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Josh P>arkin |
Josh Barkin |
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MOTHER (JOOSE |
,11 ST PEANUTS |
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Cvril Rilchard. Celeste Holm. Boris Kar |
off |
Kaye Ballard and Arthur Siegel (CL1743) |
BLUEY'S RUNAWAY KANGAROO— XIII |
THE L.\ST OF THE (il.VNTS: .\ modern fair> |
|
Irene Hilton |
tale — read by Christopher Terry |
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5:00 THIRSDAY. August 22 |
5:00 THIRSD.VV. August 29 |
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SIGNPOST: To Invisihlp (iiaiitH |
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J. Niikelsl)urg — A. Sagan |
SHJNPOST: To One of .Man's First Friends |
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MUSIC FOR YOUNC; LISTENERS |
J. Nickelsburg— A. Sagan iMISIC FOR YOl NG LISTF^NERS |
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Robert Martin. Children's Music Center |
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BLUEY'S RUNAWAY KAN(JAROO— XIV |
Robert Martin. Children's .Musii' (\>nter THREE PR1N( ES AND A DRA(iON |
|
Irene Hilton |
||
5:00 FRIDAY. August 23 |
Another modern faiiy tale read by |
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FOLK TALES FROM INDONESIA |
Chiistopher Terry |
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Told by Harold Couriandrr ( l'M'7 1 02) |
5:00 FRIDAY. August 30 |
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HOW WOFLI) vol DO IT? |
FOLK TALES FROM INi>ONESlA |
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Maureen Hooper and students stage Ba |
llet |
Tohl by Harold Courlander |
Suite from "Rodeo" by Copland. |
(iilLDREN'S SON(;S FROM SPAIN |
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BLUEY'S Rl NAWAY KANCJAROO- XV |
I.salM'lita Alonso and Karen James (FC771t;> |
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Final episode lead by author, Irene Hilt |
on. |
.MOBY Dl( K |
10:00 A.M. SATIRDAY. August 24 |
With Charles Laughton as Capt. Ahab |
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THE (JREAT REBELLION— I: Mary Stolz |
10:00 A..>i. SATIRDAY. August .M |
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Read by Ruth Piincc with assistance fi |
om |
THE (iRE.VT REBELLION— (ondnsion |
Mitchell Harding iind Paul Stein. |
Ruth Prince |
Page 6
1:00 TOMORROW'S WILDERNESS — V: Exploita- tion of the Sea. Athelstan Spilhaus, dean of the University of Minnesota's institute of tech- nology-.
1:80 STATUS OF INDIAN WOMEN: Mrs. Norman Coliver, staff member of the Asia Foundation, interviews Madame Kamaladevi Chattopadhyay.
i:00 ANTIGONAE: Carl Orffs music, Holderin's translation into the German of Sophocles, and I a German performance. (DGG 18717-19) (Aug
11)
5:00 FOR YOUNG PEOPLE: See page 6
6:00 REPORT TO THE SUBSCRIBER: KPFK manager Jerome Shore.
6:15 PACIFICW NEWS: John Ohliger.
6:40 CALENDAR OF EVENTS: Clair Brush.
6:45 COM.MENTARY: Theodore Edwards.
7:00 MUSIC FROM GERMANY: David Berger and the Association of German Broadcasters pre- sent German music of all periods. This evening, the Stuttgart Chamber Orchestra under Karl Munchinger play Handel's Concerto Grosso No. 18 in B flat major and the Mainz Chamber Orchestra plays Mozart's "Ah, lo previdi" with vocal soloist Anna de Lisa.
8:00 SIGMUND FREUD'S FAITH: Dr. Harry B. Scholefield speaking to the American Humanist A.s^ociation in San Francisco. Dr. Scholefield has made an extensive study of Freud's "arti- cles of faith," the principles which guided Freud's investigations. This is the topic for the Community Discussion Project — call HO 2-1171 for details.
9:00 ECHOES OF THE F.AIRE — I: Beginning a recap of our wond'rous May event, we hear light-hearted montage of interviews and enter- tainment originally broadcast live from the Renaissance Faire. Carl Reiner, Gary Merrill, Herschel Bernardi. the Glengary Highlanders. Quartetto di Medici. Pro Musica of Van Nuys. Immaculate Heart Baroque Ensemble, Neo- Renaissance Singers. Vicki Bond and Donna Burrow are heard from David Ossman and Mike Dayton produced this program, and credit goes also to Harve Bennett. Jerry Zelinger. Lee Whiting. Jack Hirschman. John Ohliger. Fred Haines and Dave Ossman — you hear their voices. Mike Dayton. Paul Stein. Marc Okrand. William Malloch. Phyllis Patterson, and floor manager Jane Bennett made their presence appreciated.
10:15 CIVIL RIGHTS CONFERENCE: Four speak- ers discuss Federal legisaltion and actions at a California Democratic Council meeting in June. You hear from Congressman Edward Roybal, assistant US attorney— general Norbert Schlei, LA councilman Tom Bradley and Reverend H. H. Brookins. George Seros moderates; Rome Ronconi recorded.
11:30 DMITRI SHOSTAKOVICH: Eugene Mravinsky conducts the combined Choirs and the State Orchestra of the I'SSR in a performance of the composers Sons of the Forest, Op 81.
Petrov is the tenor and Kilichevsky is the bass. (Van 422) (33)
some highlights in
music
FESTIVALS
LISZT-BARTOK-l-7 p.m. Sat 24
11-2:40 p.m. Sun 25
III-7 p.m. Thur 29
OPERAS
GLI UGONOTTI (Les Huguenots)
9 p.
Sun 25
VOCAL
MARTINU'S FIELD MASS-7 p.m. Thurs 21
SERIES
NEW AAUSIC-BBC-l-7 p.m. Fri 30
NEW RELEASES-
TOSCANINI AND THE PHILADELPHIA-
7 p.m. Sat 31
MUSIC FROM GERMANY-7 p.m. Fri 23
MEET YOU AT THE STATION-
Alan Hjerpe and Uncle Dave— 10 p.m. Tues 20
HAL HOOTS AT THE ICE HOUSE-
10 p.m. Tues Aug 27
SPECIALS
ISENHEIM CONCERT-7:45 p.m. Tues 20 NOT-SO-SILENT MOVIES MUSICS 9:45 p.m. Thurs 22 ECHOES OF THE FAIRE I— Miscellaneous artists 9 p.m. Fri 24 II— UCLA Collegium Musicum— Gilbert Reaney-2:45 Sal 24 III— Neo-Renaissance Singers- Michael Agnello-9:45 p.m. Thurs 29 IV— Donna Burrow Live Concert— 9:30 p.m. Sat Aug 31 MUSIC OF THE AUVERGNE-8:15 p.m. Men 26 MUSIC FROM SOUTH AFRICA-8:20 p.m. Tues 27
SATURDAY, August 24
9:00 A..M. VANESSA: The Pulitzer Prize-winning opera in four acts by Samuel Barber. The libretto is by Gian-Carlo Menotti and the solo- ists are Steber, Gedda, Elias, Tozzi and Resnik. Mitropoulos conducts the Metropolitan Opera Orchestra and Chorus. (RCA 6138) (113)
10:00 FOR VOING PEOPLE: See page 6.
10:30 WORKING MEN — XIII: World War II and
After — the New Era. John Ohliger's adaptation in song and words of Sid Lens' Ijook on Ameri- can labor.
11:00 JCSSI BJORLING: Opera is icumen in, so we will let Fred Hyatt spin discs from his Bjorling collection and tell us of the late Swedish tenor.
11:30 THE DEED: Dick Elman interviews Gerold Frank, author of a recent Simon and Schuster book on the assassination of Lord Moyne, Brit- ish High Commissioner in the middle East, by two young Palistinians in 1944.
Page 7
12:00 SCOPE OF JAZZ: Martin Williams and others.
12:00 THE SCOPE OF JAZZ: Martin Williams continues his series devoted to jazz of the advanced guard of the late '30's.
1:00 THE LIVELY ARTS: From Ken Eisler of San Diego State College, another look at the arts.
1:15 SLIGHTLY RADIOACTIVE AND VERY CONFUSING: Jean Thompson, a high school science teacher, gives his view of the prob- lems of the citizen in coping with public ques- tions where a knowledge of science is needed. As a case in point, he presents some testimony recorded when the LA Water Board asked per- mission of the County Planning Commission to build an atomic power station in Malibu.
2:30 FAREWELL TO THE MODEL T: Richard Strout and E. B. White's 1936 memoir. "Fare- well. My Lovely." read by Onslow Stevens.
2:45 ECHOES OF THE FAIRE — II: The UCLA Collegium Musicum appeared at KPFK's recent Elizabethan romp, directed by Gilbert Reaney. Here they are in performance elsewhere, doing it up on an amazing variety of instruments.
4:00 THE GREATEST ADVENTURE: Mitchell Harding with thought and information on the problems of a technological age.
4:30 GOLDEN VOICES: Anthony Boucher presents the graceful and underrated French baritone Andre Bauge (1893- ) in excerpts from op-
eras by Gounod. Massenet and Rossini and lighter works by Adam. Audran and Lecocq. plus a remarkable performance of Gounod's Serenade.
5:00 WIDE-OPEN HOUR: Open time for inter- esting programs arriving too late for Folio scheduling,
6:00 LETTERS FROM LISTENERS: Comment on your comment.
6:15 PACIFICA NEWS: Steve Kahn.
6:30 UNCOM.MON SENSE: Lawrence Carmen and Steve Kandel with nuclear informatio.
6:45 CO.M.MENTARY: To be announced.
7:00 LIZST-BARTOK FESTIVAI.— I: The Hun- garian State Concert Orchestra under Constan- tin Iliev. with violist Paul Lucas. XICOLOV Concerto for Strings PROKOFIEV Chout (The Clown) — ballet suite MILHACD Viola Concerto
8:00 HISPANIC-AMERICAN REPORT: Another program from the Institute of Hispanic-Amer- ican and Luso-Hrazilian Studies at Stanford, on an aspect of Latin America today.
8:30 JEAN SHEPHERD: The original night peo- ple'.s humorist in performance at New York's One Sheridan S(iuare.
8:45 AN ELIZABETH SCHWARZKOPF SON(J RFX'ITAL: Miss Schwarzkopf sings songs of Bach, Gluck, Mozart, Beethoven, Schubert, Schumann, Brahms, Wolf and Strauss. Her accompani.st is Gerald Moore. (Ang 35023) (45)
9:30 SHOl LD THE IS ESTABLISH FRIENDLY RELATIONS WITH (ASTRO?: Vint.nt Hal- linan. nottMl attorney and chairinan of the Bay Area Fair I'lay for Cuba Committee, in heated debate with Edward Heavey, also an attorney, world traveler and lecturer. Recorded in S.in Franci.sco in July.
SUNDAY, August 25
:00 A.M. BACH CANTATAS
Cantata No 17. "Wer Dank opfert, der preiset mich" (18)
Soloists, orch, and chorus/Thamm (Can
641210) Cantata No 33, "AUein zu dir"
Orch & Orch of Radio Denmark/Woldike
(BG 603) (25) Cantata No 68, "Also hat gott die welt geliebt"
Soloists, orch, & chorus/Thomas (Odeon
80609) (19) Cantata No 133, "Ich freue mich in dir"
Vienna Orch & Choir/Gielen (BG 523) (23) Cantata No 140, "Wachet auf, ruft uns die
Stinime" Shaw Chorale, RCA orch/Shaw
(Vic 1100) (30)
10:00 REPORT TO THE SUBSCRIBER:
Manager Jerome Shore. (Aug. 23)
KPFK
10:15 A RENUNCIATE: A member of the oldest monastic order in the world, the Indian order Sanyas Ashram, talks to Elsa Knight Thomp- son about his life and his impressions of America.
11:00 SEEN AT THE GALLERIES: Earl "We will beret you" Carter talks of art. exhibitions, and artists, and sometimes to them.
11:30 THE FREEDOM SINGERS: An interview, with music, of the civil rights music-makers. (Aug 19)
1:00 JOHN CROWE RANSOME: The poet and j critic reads and comments on his poetry to an j audience at the University of California.
2:40 LISZT-BARTOK FESTIVAL — II: The Hun- | garian State Concert Orchestra, conducted by { Vilmos-Komor, with David Oistrakh, violin. !
SHOSTAKOVICH Symphony No. 9 PROKOFIEV Violin Concerto No. 1 KADOSA Divertimento No. 1 BARTOK Violin Concerto No. 1 Note this last entry, not the wel-known Bartok concerto, numbered 2. but a rediscovered earlier work in the same form.
4:30 THE REITII LECTURES. 1962 — V: Living
and Partly Living. G. M. Carstairs in the BBC broadcast series on England now.
5:00 CONTEMPORARY MUSIC IN EVOLl TION:
Gunther SchuUer.
6:00 ADDENDA TO THE REITII LECTl RES: A
reading of two items on the above lectures, both culled from the Observer of London. The first is a news story, the second a comment by dis- tinguished sociologist Lady Wooton.
6:15 PACIFICA NEWS: Gil Robinson.
6:30 THIS WEEK .\T THE UN: From IN radio, a weekly repoit.
6:45 CO.M.MENTARY
d L
(Ai (;
Hi)
:45 NI(;HTS0UNDS:
proof of uUiinalc a
.More of the Berkclcy-Hclk i )Hur(iity.
7:00 FREEDO.M NOW!: A rebroadcast of Dale i .Minor's eyewitness program on Birmingham, selected — we pioudly point out— as the Ameri- can entry in tlie I'lix Italia competition. the< Cannes »)f radio.
9:00 (JLl U<JONOTTI: Ov. The Hiiciienots. by Mey- erbeer. Not thi' lackluster commenial version, but an Italian Radio masterpiece with Lauri- \'oll>i. Tozzi. Taddei. Formichini. and the RAI orchestra and chorus under Seralini. (Uesclied- uled fiom July 7)
Page 8
MONDAY, August 26
7:00 A.M. BAROQUE CONCERTOS— II
VIVALDI Bassoon Concerto Xo. 17 In C
Walt/bassoon. Zimbler Sinfonietta (LM 2353) TORELLI Concerto for Strings in D. Op. 6, No.
10. Societas Orch of Copenhagen (BG 566) (6) BACH Concerto for Three Pianos in C
Fischer. Smith, Matthews/pianos; Philhar-
monia Orch Fischer (LM 1004) (18) HANDEL. Organ Concerto No. 5 in F, Op. 4
Moe/organ. Unicorn Orch/Liepmann (Kapp
9018) (16) MANFREDINI Concerto No. 12 in C. Op. 3
I Musici (Epic 3514) (10) ALBINONI Oboe Concerto in D, Op. 7, No. 6
Zanfini/oboe, Virtuosi di Roma/Fasano (Ang
45019) (9) CORELLI Harpsichord Concerto Xo. 9 in A, Op. 5
Canino/harpsichord. Gli Accademici/Eckertsen
(Vox 423-3) (14)
8:30 CONYERSATION'AL FRENCH AND RUS- SIAN— XVI: Leonid Belozubov.
9:00 COMMENTARY: Sidney Lens. (Aug 25)
9:15 AN AGE OF SONG — VI: Lee Whiting presents the music, poetry, and prose of Elizabethan England.
9:45 DONAUESCHINGEN FESTIVAL — II: The
Southwest German Radio orchestra under Hans Rosbaud presents an all-Stravinsky program of pieces composed between 1915 and 1944. (Jun 24)
11:00 A SCOTS QUAIR — VI: Miss Fredi Dundee with another chapter from the Lewis Gassic Gibbon work, regarded as a classic of modern Scotland.
11:30 SCHNABEL WRITES. SCHNABEL PLAYS
SCHNABEL Duodecimet
Monod Ensemble (Col ML 5447) SCHUBERT Piano Sonata in D. Op. 53
Artur Schnabel (Ang COLH 83) SCHNABEL Rhapsody for Orchestra
Kletzki, Philharmonic Orch. (Eng. Col.) BEETHOVEN Sonata No. 23 in F for piano (Appassionata)
Artur Schnabel (Vic LM 2153) (84)
1:00 THE CHANGING COMPLEXION OF PSY- CHOTHER.\PY — I: First in a series of four programs to be heard daily at this time, pre- pared by Dr. Arthur Burton, psychotherapist. This program. "The Analysis of Existence," is a talk by Dr. Burton.
1:30 THE SILENT REVOLUTION— II: Consoious- iiess-ExpandinR Druss. Author, scientist and philosopher Gerald Heard.
2:30 DVORAK'S STABAT MATER: A new record- ing, with soloists, chorus and the Czech Phil- harmonic under Vaclav Smetacek. (DGG 818/9) (JUN 15)
4:00 BACK STAGE WITH HERMIONE GINGOLD: Intrepid Herbert Feinstein at the mike. (Aug 7)
5:00 FOR YOUNG PEOPLE: See page 6. 6:00 SOVIET PRESS AND PERIODICALS: Re- port, with comment, by William Mandel.
6:15 P.\CIFICA NEWS: Mike Hodel, John Ohliger.
6:40 CALENDAR OF EVENTS: Clair Brush.
45:45 C0.M:MENTARY: Helen Nelson. California's consumer counsel, joins this series to talk of getting value for your money. (AUG 27)
7:00 ISHERWOOD AT WORK: Speaking at the Pacific Coast Writers' Conference at LA State College. Christopher Isherwood reads from and talks about his novel-in-progress and answers audience questions.
8:15 MUSIC OF THE AUVERGNE: Lucie De Vi- enne Blanc. French-Canadian folklorist. sings French Auvergne songs just naturally, with and without accompaniment by Jean Paul Vinay's oboe or English horn. Each song is fol- lowed by its setting for soprano and orchestra by Joseph Canteloube (1879-1957). These set- tings are sung by Madeleine Grey and the Is- raeli concert star. Netania Davrath.
9:00 THE CHINESE-RUSSIAN DIVORCE: Joseph Starobin, writer and political analyst, former Comunist party member and for many years foreign editor of the Daily Worker, believes that the estrangement opens the way for several forward moves by the US. He is interviewed by Elsa Knight Thompson.
10:00 THE GOON SHOW: Forog. London is fogged artificially with a substance that makes people think the best of one another — the capital's commercial life is threatened.
10:30 MODERN JAZZ SCENE: Phil Elwood with the second of two programs "Round Midnight." variations on a theme. (AUG 27)
11:00 THE AUTOBIOGRAPHY OF KENNETH REXROTH: Raconteur, poet, critic — and enough of the-^e to publish a self-study this fall, of which he gives us a preview.
11:30 RAVEL'S DUO: A performance prepared espe- cially for KPFK by Stanley Plummer, violin, and cellist Howard Coif. An exciting and oddly enough, little-known work. (Jun 20)
THURSDAY, August 29
7:00 A.M. STERN PLAYS BRAH.MS: Sonatas 2 and 3 are played by violinist Isaac Stern and pianist Alexander Zakin, along with the Trio No. 1 in B Op. 8 performed by Stern. Pablo Casals and Myra Hess. (COL 202) (COL 4719) (83)
8:30 CONVERSATIONAL FRENCH AND RUS- SIAN— XVII: Leonid Belozubov.
9:00 COMMENTARY: Helen Nelson. (Aug 26)
9:15 AN AGE OF SONG— VII: Elizabethan jam sessions, pre-peanut butti>r.
9:45 THE BUDDHIST MAJORITY: Chris Koch interviews a South Vietnamese Buddhist monk on the persecution of his faith in that country.
10:15 LES NUITS D'ETE: Eleanor Steber sings Berlioz's song cycle. Mitropoulos conducts the Columbia Symphony. (Col 5843) (32)
10:45 SOUTHERN INFLUENCE IN NATIONAL POLITICS: Howard Zinn. professor of history at Spelman College, Atlanta. Georgia. (Aug 3)
11:30 CHORAL CONCERT
CARISSLMI Jephte
Feyerbend. Schwarzweller. Ens/Wolters (Arch
3005) (23) SCHUTZ Requiem
Soloists. Heilbronn Schutz Chorus/Werner
(We.^t 18467) (40) ^LA^F^CELLO Psalm XVIII
Turn Cho. Milan Orch/Janes (West 18837)
(24)
Page 9
1:00 THE CHANGING COMPLEXION OF PSY- CHOTHERAPY— II: In this program, Dr. Arthur Burton interviews two patients now in therapy.
2:00 MODERN JAZZ SCENE: Phil Elwood. (Aug 26)
2:30 CRICKETS* FICTION: Luther Link reads his own poetry in the WBAI studios.
3:10 WHERE DO WE GO FROM HERE?: From Jackson. Mississippi, another Pacifica documen- tary on the freedom movement. The conflicts in the Jackson civil rights organization, the death of Medgar Evers, and the determination of Jackson's Negro citizens are treated. (Aug 10)
5:00 FOR YOUNG PEOPLE: See page 6
6:00 MISCELLANY
6:15 PACIFICA NEWS: Henry Barzilay. John Ohliger.
6:40 CALENDAR OF EVENTS: Clair Brush.
6:45 CO.MMENTARY: Marshall Neel. (AUG 28)
7:00 MAX RAFFERTY: The California superin- tendent of public instruction speaks of modern art, drama and literature, the Dictionary of American Slang, and the future of California education. Recorded at the Crescenta Valley High School under auspices of the American Freedom Academy.
7:50 THE JEWISH WIFE: Viveca Lindfors stars in the Brecht play from the "Brecht on Brecht" production. (Col OL 2278)
8:20 MUSIC FROM SOUTH AFRICA: Anton Hart- man conducts the South African Broadcasting Corporation Symphony in a program of Belgian, Dutch and South African music. MARCEL POOT Overture: "Joyeuse" HENK BADINGS Variations on a South Afri- can Theme ARNOLD VAN WYK Symphonic Suite: "Prima- vera"
9:10 LETTER FROM BIRMINGHAM JAIL: Martin Luther King, Jr.'s, April 15 letter to his fel- low clergy is ready Ijy Theodore Roszak, as- sistant professor of history at Alameda State College.
10:00 HAL HOOTS AT THE ICE-HOUSE: Hal
Lynch and others at the well-known thing.
11:00 ANGER AS A FINE ART: Choleric disposition and satiric literature, discussed by professor of English Edward Rosenheim of the University of Chicago, specialist in the Augustan period.
11:45 HUMOR IN SPACE: Orson Bean, Jonathan AVinters, Carl Reiner and Mel Brooks view the astronautical scene.
WEDNESDAY, August 28 GOETHE'S BIRTHDAY
7:00 A.M. FAUST 3IUSIC— I
WAGNER A Faust Overture
Southwest German Radio Orch/Horenstein
(Vox 10902) (8) BERLIOZ The Damnation of Faust — Suite
Concertgel)ouw Orch/Mengelberg (Cap L8127)
(13) LISZT A Faust Symphony
Southwest German Radio Orch/Horenstein
(Vox 10902) (67)
8:30 CONVERSATIONAL PRENCH AND RUS- SI.VN — XVIII: Leonid Belozuliov.
9:00 CO.M."MENTARY: Marshall Neel. (Aug 27)
9:15 AN AGE OF SONG — VIII: Lee Whiting and the noises Shakespeare heard.
9:45 FAUST Ml SIC — II
SCHT.MANX Faust — Overture
DDR Orchestra (DDR) (8) SMETANA Music to a puppet play, "Doktor F'aust' '
FOK Sym Orch/Vaclav Smetacek (I'LT 41203) GOrXOD Faust— Ballet Music
Boston Pops/Fiedler (RCA 2141) (15) GINASTERA Overture to the Creole "Faust"
p:astnian Rochester Orch/Hanson (Mer 50257)
10:30 POVERTY IN A.MERICA: Pulitzer Prize-win- ner Edgar May talks with Philip Merwin. (Aug 17)
11:30 FAUST .Ml SIC — III: MAULERS EIGHTH:
The second movement of this work Is a setting of Part II of Goethe's Faust, for soloists, chorus and orchestra. We hear the entire two- movement work, the first part of which is a setting of the Latin h.vmn, Veni Creator .Spiritiis. performed by soloists, the Comiiincd Ilotterdain Choirs and Rotterdam Philliannonic under I'M- uard Flip.^-e. (Kpic SC-6004) (89)
1:00 THE CHANGING COMPLEXION OF PSV- CHOTIIER.VPY — III: Discus.sing family therapy.
Dr. Burton interviews Dr. Jon Jackson, MD. director of the Mental Research Institute of the Palo Alto Clinic.
1:45 COASTLINES LITERARY MAGAZINE: Se- lections from the latest issue. (Aug 8)
2:30 CONTE.AIPORARY MUSIC IN EVOLUTION:
Gunther SchuUer. (Aug 25)
3:30 THE AMERICAN REPUBLIC IN TRANSI- TION: Peter Odegard. professor of political science at the I'niversity of California. (Aug 4) 5:00 FOR YOUNCJ PEOPLE: See page 6 6:00 FRO.M THE CONGRESSIONAL RECORD: Daniel Panger.
6:15 PACIFIC.V NEWS: Mike Hodel, John Ohliger. 6:40 CALENDAR OF EVENTS: Clair Brush. 6:45 CO-M.-MENTARY: Dorothy Healey. (AUG 29) 7:00 SO.ME FOLK WITH SONGS: How many folk
songs would a folksonger song if a folksonger
. . . never mind.
7:30 FAUST: The Tragedy, First Part, by Goethe in the CJruendgen Production of the Dusseldorf Theatre. An English introduction and commen- tary is provided by Walter Bodlander and Har- old Innocent. (DGG NK 201/20.3)
10:30 JAZZ ARCHIVES: Phil Elwood and a half hour of Leadl)elly. (.\U(; 29)
11:00 POLITICS AND THE EN(iLISIi LANCil .\(;E:
Orwell's 1946 essay, read by Bernard .Mayes and others, and produced with effects by John Mc- Intyre. Orwell thinks l);i(l prose and sloppy jjolitics are symbiotic.
11:40 F.VUST Ml SIC— IV: MEFISTOFELE PRO- LOGl'E: Arluro Toscanini conducts the Colum- l)us Boy-Choir, the Robert Shaw Chorale and the NB(^ Symphony in the opening scene of Hollo's opera. Nicola Moscona plays The Evil One. (RCA 1S49) (26)
Page 10
THURSDAY, August 29
7:00 G & S's lOLAXTHE: Ifs trouble in the House of Lords again. Seems those Peers didn't know their place even then, mixing it up with the Fairies and all. All is not only sung, but also explained verbally. Talk and songs are all. of course, by D'Oyly Carte. John Reed is the highly susceptible Chancellor. (Lon A 4242) (90)
8:30 CONVERSATIONAL FRENCH AND RUS- SIAN— XIX: Leonid Belozubov.
9:00 COMMENTARY: Dorothy Healey. (Aug 28)
9:15 AN AGE OF SONG — IX: Pentameter, prose and music of Elizabethan England. Who's a pentameter? Iamb.
10:00 :\IAl RICE MAETERLINK — PELLEAS ET MELISANDE: Today is the playwright's birth- day, so we celebrate by presenting various composers' music to his play. FAURE Pelleas et Melisande — Suite
Suisse Romande/Ansermet (Lon 9289) (16) DEBUSSY Pelleas et Melisande — Interludes
Cleveland Orch/Leinsdorf (Col 4090) (27) SIBELIUS Pelleas et Melisande — Suite I Lon Cym/Collins (Lon 1277) (14)
:00 TELE ME A MOVIE: Seller and one-man movie scripts.
Winters, Bruce
11:30 BEETHOVEN OVERTURES
Leonore Xo. 2, Op. 72a
Vienna Orch/Scherchen (West 18273) (14) Creatures of Prometheus, Op. 43
Vienna Orch/Scherchen (West 18294) (5) Coriolan. Op. 62
Vienna Orch/Scherchen (West 18294) (8) Egmont. Op. 84
New York Phil/Walter (Col 5232) (8) Consecration of the House, Op 124
Vienna Orch/Scherchen (West 18294) (11) Ruins of Athens. Op. 113
Vienna Orch/Scherchen (West 18294) (6) Fidelio. Op. 72c
Chicago Sym Orch/Feiner (Vic 1991) (7) m_ King Stephen, Op. 117
K Vienna Orch/Scherchen (West 18294) (8)
^f Namensfier, Op. 115
K Vienna Orch/Scherchen (West 18294) (6)
H Leonore No. 3, Op. 72b
New York Phil/Walter (Col 5368) (14)
1:00 THE CHANGING COMPLEXION OF PSY- CHOTHERAPY— VI: Dr. Arthur Burton con- cludes the series with observations on employ- ment, unemployment, and mental health.
1:45 POEMS OF GEORGE BOGEN: The poet reads work which has appeared in Nation, Noble Sav- age, and The Contemporary Reader,
2:00 JAZZ ARCHIVES: Phil Elwood. (Aug 28)
'2:30 RADIO FREE DIXIE: An aircheck from Ha- vana Radio of one of Robert Williams' regular programs beamed to the American South. Wil- liams was a Negro leader in South Carolina before going to Cuba.
P
3:30 DONAUESCHINGEN FESTIVAL — III: A
concert of contemporary music from the South- west German Radio orchestra under Hans Ros- baud, with Jeanne Deroubai.x, mezzo— soprano, and Maria Bergmann, piano. (Jul 8)
5:00 FOR YOUNG PEOPLE: See page 6
6:00 SPECI.\L RETORT: News in depth.
6:15 PACIFIC.\ NEWS: Erwin Rosen, John Ohliger.
6:40 CALENDAR OF EVENTS: Clair Brush.
6:45 COMMENTARY: Thomas Francis Ritt. (AUG 30)
7:00 LISZT-B.VRTOK FESTIVAL — III: An all- Kodaly program performed in Hungary by the "Philharmony" Orchestra under Miklos Lukas. Soloists are Imre Pallo, baritone, and Robert Ilosfalvy, tenor. Pallo. incidentally, is the man who created the role of Hary Janos on the operatic stage. Kodaly works performed are: Hary Janos: Suite Kadar Kata: Folk Ballad Galanta Dances Psalmus Hungaricus
8:30 THE ELEVENTH HOUR: Held open for ex- citing and last-minute programs.
9:30 THE.YTER REVIEW
9:45 ECHOES OF THE FAIRE — III: Neo-Renais- sance Singers. Another group from the central stage at our Pleasure Faire, directed by Michael Agnello in a program of medieval and baroque music.
10:45 THE HIDDEN, THE UNKNOWABLE, THE UNTHINKABLE: Captain Sir Richard Francis Burton. KCMG, was a journalist, ethnologist, translator and linguist. Lee Whiting reads an essay of his exploits by Fawn M. Brodie, ac- tually an introduction to her edition of Burton's The City of the Saints, to be published shortly by Knopf.
11:40 NETHERLANDS SOLOISTS — IV: This time we hear two violinists, Willem Xoske and Jo Juda. Xoske plays Pieter Hellendaal's Sonata in G minor. Op. 1, Xo. 3 and Three Romantic Pieces by Dvorak. Juda plays Max Reger's Sonata for solo violin, Op. 4 2. (Radio Xeder- land) (26)
FRIDAY, August 30
7:00 A.M. PRIMITIVE MUSIC/EXPERIMENTAL ^lUSIC: Strangely compatible incompatibles from either end of the musical spectrum. Coun- tries covered include Africa, the Philippines, Hawaii, Xew Guinea, Indonesia, India, Bolivia. People covered include Varese, Birger— Blomdahl, Bussotti, Raa.vmakers, Berio, Badings. Pre- pared by Arnold Schwarzwald of Universal Studios.
8:30 CONVERSATIONAL FRENCH AND RUS- SIAN— XX: Leonid Belozubov.
9:00 COMMENTARY
(Aug 29)
Thomas Francis Ritt.
9:15 AN AGE OF SONG — X: The final program in Lee Whiting's series on Elizabethan England.
9:45 RACH.MANINOFF'S QUARTET IN G MINOR:
He seems to have written two. in part, that is. In each case he left behind two completed movements and (^ketches for the others. This one, written in 1889, consists of a Romance and Scherzo only. The Guilet String Quartet plays. (MGM E3133) (25)
10:15 INNOVATION AND REACTION IN HIGHER EDUCATION: Famed sociologist David Kiesman at Cal Tech. (Aug 4)
Page 11
11:30 MUSIC FOR HORN
MOZART Horn Concerto No. 3 in Eb. K 447
Linder/horn, Vienna Orch/Swarowsky (Van
1069) (15) DUKAS Villanelle for Horn and Piano
Stagliano/horn, Ulanov. sky/piano (Bos 212)(8) SCHUBERT Auf Dem Strom, Op. 119
Bloom/horn, Valente/sop, Serkin/pf (Col 5643) MOZART Concerto No. 4 in Eb. K 495
Linder/horn, Vienna Orch/Swarowsky (Van
1069) (16) GLAZOUNOV Reverie, Op. 24
Stagliano/horn, Ulanowsky/piano (Bos 212) (4) BRAHMS Horn Trio, Op. 40
Bloom/hn, Tree/vln, Serkin/pf (Col 5643) (30)
1:00 JEWISH FOLKLORE: Another program in Lila Ha.ssid's monthly series in Yiddish and English.
1:30 MINORITIES AND GOVERNMENT: Wilson Record, professor of sociology at Sacramento State College, interviewed by Elsa Knight Thompson.
2:30 LA TRAVIATA: Verdi's opera, with Renata Scotto as Violetta, Gianni Raimondi as Alfredo, and Ettore Bastiani as Giorgio. (DGG 18832-4) (Aug 18)
4:30 OF COCKNEYS. CHI.MNEYS WEEPS:
innkeeping couple, ii
COSTERMONGERS AND
Connacht Davis and an London.
5:00 FOR YOUNG PEOPLE: See page
:00 REPORT TO THE
Manager Jerome Shore.
SUBSCRIBER:
(SEP 1)
6:15 PACIFICA NEWS: John Ohliger.
fi:40 CAL?:NDAR of EVENTS: Clair Brush.
6:45 COMMENTARY: Roger Kent.
7:00 NEW MUSIC — I: First of three BBC pro- grams: in this one works by Dorothy Gow and Richard Rodney Bennett are presented in per- formance l)y Yfrah Neaman, violin, and the Amici String Quartet.
8:00 YOl NG REPUBLICANS: Barry Gold water.
The Senator from Arizona, addressing the na- tional convention of the Young Republicans on June 27. Listen tomorrow and Sunday for six more programs from the convention. This one is the topic for the Community Discussion Project —call HO 2-1171 for details.
0:00 TREASl RY OF THE 78: .Muck coiidiirts Wag- n«T. Karl Muck, the outstanding turn-of-thc- century Wagner conductor, leads the Boston Symphony in an earl.v recording of the Prelude to Act III of Lohengrin, and the Berlin State Opera Orchestra in the I'reludc to Tristan, with Wagner's own <(jri( crt ending, Uie Overture to
The Fb'ing Dutchman, Siegfried's Rhine Jour- ney and Funeral Alarch from Gotterdainnierung and the Prelude to Die Meistersinger.
10:00 BLUES IN THE MISSISSIPPI NIGHT: Three delta blues men discuss life on the river around 1940, in a recording by pioneer folklorist Alan Lomax.
11:00 REMINISCENCES OF MR. DOOLEY: Finley Peter Dunne's saga of the streets, portrayed by Mark Hammer, talks of "The Victorian Era" and "The Vice-Presidency."
11:15 COPLAND'S SECOND HURRICANE: Little children lead us, with Leonard Bernstein's help, through a spirited performance of a condensed version with story line of Copland's unmistak- ably 30's product. They are the soloists and chorus of the New York High School of Music and Art. The New York Philharmonic helps out too. (Col 5581) (48)
SATURDAY, August 31
8:00 A.M. VINGT REGARDS SUR L'ENFANT — JESUS: Yvonne Loriod. carefully watched over by the composer, plays Olivier ^lessiaen's twenty pieces gathered together under the above title. (West 18469/70) (117)
10:00 FOR YOUNG PEOPLE: See page 6.
10:30 WORKING MEN— XIV: Unfinlshe<l Tasks. The
last episode in John Ohliger's adaptation of Sid Lens' l)ook on American labor, published by G. P. Putnam's Sons.
11:00 GIOVANNI MARTINELLI: Anticipating the San Francisco opera season, F'red Hyatt tells of the fabulous Italian tenor, and we find out what we are missing.
11:30 YOUNG REPUBLICANS: Senator Jack Miller.
From Iowa, at the San Francisco convention.
12:00 TIGHT LIKE THAT: Joe Boyd with gospel, blues and records.
1:00 POETS' POTPOl'RRI: Ben Wright and Rachel Weller read listener-suggested poetry.
l:3(^ BR.VH.MS: Francescatti plays Violin Concerto under Leonard Bernstein. (Col. 5871)
2:10 THE DISCOVERY OF MEANINCJ: Evelyn Ames, a poet her.self and an author, relates the poetry of today to a search for moaning. She illustrates with reading from contemporary poets.
3:00 YOUN(i RKPl BUCANS: Donald E. "Buz " Lukens. The man elected to lead the YR's is interviewed on his platform and the resolutions
a<I()pt('(l by the convention.
^^^^^^ Discover the Best'.
■ ^CHILDREN'S MUSIC CENTER, INC
a treasure house of records, books and gifts for children of all ages, their parents, too*. Phone or write - a staff of experts to serve you
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Page 12
4:00 THE SOUL OF THE WHITE .4lNT: A poetic interpretation of the habits of the termite, written by Eugene Marais. one of South Africa's most gifted writers, adapted by Cecil Jubber with music by Stephen O'Reilly. From South African Broadcasting Corporation and our Archives.
4:30 GOLDEN VOICES: Anthony Boucher presents the most feminine and captivating of sopranos. Lucrezia Bori (1887-1960), in a gallery of opera's enchanting gjirls; Violetta. Despina, Juliette. Musetta, Magda and Xorina, with the male assistance of Beniamino Gigli and Giu- seppe de Luca.
5:00 AVIDE-OPEN HOUR: Open for programs which we think should be heard in advance of regular Folio scheduling.
Praise and
I
6:00 LETTERS FROM LISTENERS:
high dudgeon.
6:15 PACIFIC A NEWS: Steve Kahn.
6:30 UNCOM.AION SENSE: Lawrence Carmen and
Steve Kandel.
.6:45 COMMENTARY: Lewis Parker Miller.
7:00 NEW RELEASES: Toscanini and the Phila- delphia. A recording of Schubert's Great C Major Symphony, the first ever issued of a famed series made by this combination in 1942. The recordings were never released because, due to a processing disaster, the masters had become pitted. Technicians are now able to re- move such blemishes by deft snippings and splic- ings of taped copies of the masters. An RCA Soria series release. U5)
8:00 YOUNG REPUBLICANS: Senator Hugh Scott:
June 28 was the day, the Young Republican convention the place, for this talk by the Senator from Pennsylvania.
8:30 THE ONE-WOMAN THEATER: Ruth Draper, who is, presents "Three ^Vomen and Mr. Clif- ford." (Spoken Arts 800)
9:30 ECHOES OF THE FAIRE — IV: Donna Bur- row Live Concert. From our Pleasure Faire comes a young lady to sing again before a live audience. Any of you who care to come and sit among the fallen splendor of Studio D and hear English, Irish, and Scots ballads of all sorts are welcome. AVilliam Malloch will interview her at half time.
10:45 NIGHT SOUNDS: The boys from Berkeley make therapeutic noises.
SUNDAY, September 1
:00 A.M. MUSIC BY SCANDINAVL\N COM- POSERS
BERWALD Estrella di Soria — Overture
Stockholm Royal Op Orch/Frykberg (HMV-
Z310) ALFEN Symphony No. 3 in E major. Op. 23
Stockholm Concert Ass Orch/Alfen (HMV-
DB11026/9) NIELSEN Concerto for Violin and Orchestra
Menuhin violin, Danish Nat Or/Woldike
(Od MOAK-7) JOHANSEX Symphonic Music. "Pan"
Oslo Phil/Granger-Hegge (Mer 90002) HALVORSEX Norwegian Rhadsody Xo. 1
Oslo Phil Fjelstad (Mer 10150)
LUMBYE Drmmebilleder (Dream Pictures) Danish St Rad Or/Grndahl (HMV-Z345)
SVEXDSEX Fest — Polonaise
Danish St Rad Or/Malko (HMV-Z341)
10:00 REPORT TO THE SUBSCRIBER: Our man- ager Jerome Shore. (Aug 30)
10:15 THE VIEW FROM HARLEM: Four young people from Harlem, ages 18 to 26, discuss civil rights, racial conflict, and their views of the future. The program is moderated by Ray Rogers, public relations director of Harlem Youth Opportunities Board, a federally-sup- ported planning project in Central Harlem.
11:30 YOUNG REPUBLIC.\NS: William Knowland.
The former Senator from California.
12:10 DON GIOVANNI: Mozart's, performed by Mario Stabile as the not-so-good Don, Alois Pernerstorfer as Leporello. The Vienna State Opera Chorus and Vienna Symphony are con- ducted by Hans Swarowsky. Requested by a lady from Pomona Valley.
3:00 YOUNG REPUBLICANS: Philosophy of a
Republican. A panel workshop held during the June Young Republican National Convention in San Francisco. The speakers are: Hon. Bill Brock, Tennessee; Hon. Ed Foreman, Texas; Hon. Catherine May, VTashington; Hon. Thomas B. Curtis, Missouri; Hon. Fred Schwengel. Iowa; Hon. Frank Ferrar. attorney-general of South Dakota, and John Grenier, Alabama GOP State chairman.
4:30 THE REETH LECEURES. 1962— VI: Unde- veloped Potentials in Personality. G. M. Car- stairs concludes his six lectures on Britain today.
5:00 EVENINGS ON THE ROOF: Peter Yates talks about and plays music from the Swedish Radio. Bergt Hambraens plays his Constellations for Organ — Version I, and then you'll hear Con- stellations— Version II, which is an electronic version of Version I. (Al^G 4)
6:00 MISCELLANY
6:15 PACIFICA NEWS: Gil Robinson.
6:30 THIS WEEK AT THE UN: From UN Radio, another report on the world organization.
6:45 COMMENTARY: Hallock Hoffman. (SEP 2)
7:00 A POET .\MONG SCIENTI.STS: Robert Graves lecturing this spring at the Massachusetts In- stitute of Technology. Recorded for us by WGHB.
8:00 YOUNG REPUBLICANS: Governor Mark
Hatfield of Oregon. At the June convention.
8:45 ROMEO AND JULIET: Prokofiev's version, the complete ballet in three acts, performed by the "Ballets Russes Orchestra," possibly a Yugoslavian group, under Mladen Bashich.
10:30 PAUL ROCHE: The poet and translator reads from his book of poems. The Rank Obstinacy of Things, talks about the problems of trans- lating Greek tragedy, and reads some of that.
11:30 THE CYCLE CYCLE: The big wheel turns while the little wheel plays: MOZART Symphony Xo. 4 in D major. K 19
London Phil/Leinsdorf (West 18861) (14) BEETHOVEX String Quartet in C minor. Op. 18. Xo. 4
Amadeus String Quartet (West 18533) (20) SCHUBERT Piano Sonata in C major (1815)
Friedrich Wuhrer (Vox VBX 9) (16)
Page 13
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Page 14
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SCHOOLS AND INSTRUCTION
JEAX BEXXETT Folk Guitar Instruction. Children and Adults. Private or Group. XO 1-5258, HO 4-2831
CHARLES LEWIS Teacher of Piano — over 30 years Modern, practical method — encourages creativity. Studio: STate 8-6454
LOU MAURY, Class Piano. Fastest way to learn. One hour per week, $15 month. 4354 Tujunga, Xorth Hollywood. TR 7-3S47 769-4523.
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THE ARMED FORCES AS EDUCATOR
7:00 p.m. Thurs 22
CIVIL RIGHTS CONFERENCE
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SLIGHTLY RADIOACTIVE
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MAX RAFFERTY
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MACBETH AND THE LADY
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