WBAI Folio
from the
Pacifica Radio Archives
1 his co\ cr sheet created b\ Internet Arehi\ e for fomiattina.
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DECEMBER 1-20. 1964
WBAI-FM 99.
5 m,c.
30 East 39 Street IS. Y. 16, IS. Y.
Program Folio DECEMBER 7-20, 1964
Oxford 7-2288
Vol. 5. I\o. 23
WBAl's program listings, in the form of this Volio, are published each two ueeks as a service to
subscribers irho support our non-profit, non-commercial station at the yearly rate of $12.00 (student
subscriptions, $6.00 for 9 months). All donations are tax-deductible.
On the air: Mon—Thurs, 7:00 a.m.— 1:00 a.m.; Fri: 7:00 a.m.— 3:30 a.m.; Sat: 8:00 a.m. —
3/30 a.m.; Sun: 8:00 a.m.— midnight, transmitter located at 10 Fast 40 Street, 10.3 KW e.r.p.
650' above av. terr.
WBAl is owned by Pacifica Foundation, a non-profit institution. Other Pacifica stations are KPFA,
Berkeley 4, California, and KPFK, Los .-Angeles 3S, California. Subscriptions are transferable.
The duration of programs scheduled is approximate. Dates after each listing indicate past or future
duplicate broadcast. In the case of concerts. ' m' indicates playing time; '*' indicates new recordings.
MONDAY December 7
7:00 MORNING CONCERT Four four-part songs by
Hoydn; and Milhoud's 'The Four Seasons'.
8:00 NEWS Robert Potts
8:15 INDIAN OPERA Robindronath Tagore's folk
opera Shyama', based on a well known Bud-
dhist legend, utilizes musical forms practiced In
India for 2,000 years, and is based on the Raga-
system. Yehudi Menuhin introduces the opera on
an Odeon release (ALP 1855). The Tagore work is
followed by songs with Venna accompaniment by
Swami Vidyananda on Folkways FR 8903. Dec. 17
9:15 COMMENTARY Thomas Francis Ritt, former Na-
tional Director of the Catholic Council on Civil
Liberties, former board member of the National
Catholic Social Action Conference and currently
on the staff of The Catholic Worker.
9:30 THE VIRTUOSO VIOLINIST Ruggiero Ricci ploys
showpieces by Paganini, with Louis Persinger,
Ricci's teacher, accompanying at the piano: 'Le
Streghe' (The Witches' Dance) ; 'A Fantasia on
the G String'; 'Moto Perpetuo'; 'Variations on
Nel cor piu mi senlo'. (London LL 10051 Dec. 17
10:00 FROM THE CFNTER New Utopias: Looking Back-
ward or Brave New World? Is no group in the
U.S.A. sufficiently moved by the conditions of its
existence to dream? Michael Harrington, author
of The Other America, W. H. Ferry, Vice-President
of the Fund for the Republic, and Frank Keegan,
Associate Dean of the College of Arts and Sci-
ences at Georgetown University, in a lively hour
of talk about Utopias and cocotopias. Recorded
at the Center for the Study of Democratic Institu-
tions in Santa Barbara.
11:00 BEETHOVEN Music for Goethe's 'Egmonf: the
overture and the complete incidental score per-
formed by Natania Davroth, soprano, and Wal-
ther Reyer, speaker, with the Utah Symphony Or-
chestra under Maurice Abravanel. (Van 1101)
Dec. 18
11:45 CONVERSATION WITH A DUTCH ACTOR Henk
van Ulsen, who has played many roles in mony
languages throughout the world, discusses motion
pictures and theater in The Netherlands with
Herbert Feinstein. Dec. 11
12:15 TEACHER-PIANISTS llona Kobos and Rosina
Lhevinne are best known, as teachers — but they
nre also performers. Dec. 18
LISZT Variations on the Prelude 'V^einen, Klagen'
(Kabos, piono) (Bariok BRS 910) 16m
MOZART Piano Concerto No. 21 in C, K. 467
(Lhevinne, piano with Juilliard Orch/Morel)
(Col ML 5582)
1 :00 SCIENCE CRITIC Chemical theories of aging dis-
cussed by Marshall Deutsch.
1 :30 STEPPENWOLF The Expressionist novel by Nobel
Prize winner, Hermann Hesse, in the translation
by Basil Creighton (Unger). This is the first of
sixteen ports, read by Bob Alexander assisted by
Berjourie Bowler. (KPFA)
2:00 UNCLE SHELBY'S ABZ BOOK Shel Silverstein's
anti-children book is produced and read by Dana
Cannon. (KPFA) Dec. 9
2:15 SALZBURG FESTIVAL IX A concert of music by
Mozart, Strauss and Beethoven, ployed by the
Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra under Karl Bohm.
Dec. 9
MOZART Symphony in G minor, K. 550
STRAUSS Don Juan, Op. 20
BEETHOVEN Symphony No. 7 in A major. Op. 92
4:00 THE GOON SHOW Ye Bandit of Sherwood
Forest How Wallace Greenslade joined ye
bonde of Robin Hood and was placed under
locke, key and sinker by ye Sheriff.
4:30 PROGRAMS FOR YOUNG PEOPLE See listing on
page 13.
5:30 'INDIAN' MUSIC The first work is on a new re-
lease. Dec. 15
•BUSONI Indian Fantasy, Op. 44 (Mitchell, piano
with Vienna State Opera Orch/Strickland)
(Decca DL 710100) 22m
MACDOWELL Suite No. 2 in e. Op. 48 ('Indian')
(Eastman-Rochester Sym/Hanson) (Mer MG
40009) 33m
6:30 ROSEN PLAYS STRAVINSKY The Serenade in A
and Sonata for Piano (1924) performed by Charles
Rosen on Epic LC 3792. Dec. 8
7:00 news' Robert Potts
7:15 REVIEW OF THE SOVIET PRESS by William Man-
del, tronslator from the Soviet press and author of
several books on the U.S.S.R. Dec. 8
7:30 JAZZ ARCHIVES with Phil Elwood.
8:00 RACE AND LITERATURE IN ENGLAND AND THE
INDIES George Lamming, West Indian novelist,
author of In the Castle of My Skin and other
novels, talks about the problems and pleasures
of being a novelist and a West Indian in contem-
porary England in an interview with Ted Roszak,
editor of Peace News. Dec. 8
9:00 HOVHANESS' SAINT VARTAN SYMPHONY is in
five parts, subdivided inot twenty-four sections.
The mosaic texture that results from this elabo-
rately sectional work invokes a Byzantine quality.
Carlos Surinnrh lends the MGM Chamber Orrhes
tra in this MGM recording (E 3453) . Dec. 15
9:45 ART FORUM The Cubist Decade, Then and Now.
A lecture by Jacques Barzun given at the Guggen-
heim Museum during the Albert Gleizes exhibi-
tion. Dec. 9
10.45 NEWS, COMMENTARY Edward P. Morgan
H:00 STRAVINSKY-INFLUENCED MUSIC Three worlds
utilizing Strcvinskian principles. Dec. 16
HAIEFF Symphony No. 2 (Boston Sym/Munch)
(Vic LM23521 19m
BARBER Capricorn Concerto (for flute, oboe, trum-
pet and strings) (Eastman-Rochester Sym/Han-
sonl (MerMG 50224) 15m
DAHL The Tower of Saint Barbara (Louisville
Orch/Whitney) (LOU 562) 24m
12:00 COUNTRY MUSIC Tom Whitmore presents some
Southern, bluegrass and hillbilly music. Dec. 9
12:30 'MUSIC FOR HARP Niconor Zabaleta plays on
a new release. (DGG LPM 18 890) Dec. 9
CORELLI Sonata in d
SPOHR Variations for Harp, Op. 36
ALBENIZ Sonata in D; Malaguena
1:00 SIGN OFF
TUESDAY, December 8
7:00 MORNING CONCERT A Haydn piano sonata;
Bach's Suite No. 1 in C; and Hindemith's Sonata
for Solo Violin, Op. 31 No. 1,
8:00 NEWS Robert Potts
8:15 TWO SYMPHONIES Dec. 10
•HAYDN Symphony No. 83 in g ('The Hen') (New
York Philharmonic/Bernstein] (Col ML 6009) 21m
TOSHIRO MAYUZUMI Nirvana-Symphonie (NHK
Symphony and Chorus/Wilhelm Schuchter)
(Time 58004) 34m
9:15 REVIEW OF THE SOVIET PRESS by William Man-
del. Dec. 7
Page 3
9:30 WHO WROTE SHAKESPEARE? Rene Cutforth,
well-known broadcaster and writer questions sup-
porters of claims that Francis Bacon, Christopher
Marlowe, William Stanley, Edward de Vere,
Queen Elizabeth I and Edward VI, among others,
wrote the plays and sonnets. (BBC) Dec. 13
10:00 ROSEN PLAYS STRAVINSKY The Serenade in A
and the Sonata for Piano (1924) performed by
Charles Rosen on Epic LC 3792. Dec. 7
10:30 AN OUTSIDE AGITATOR Ben Legere was proud
of being one for each of the dozen or so unions
he joined and worked for. In this reminiscence he
talks about some of his activities on behalf of the
IWW and the Canadian One Big Union. (KPFA)
Dec. 10
11 :00 PAUL TEMPLE AND THE JONATHAN MYSTERY 3
The Ring. Continuing the thriller-serial of radio's
most famous sleuth, Paul Temple and his wife
Steve Trent. (BBC). Dec. 12
11 :30 ETUDES FOR PIANO Dec. 17
CHOPIN Eight Etudes from Op. 10 (Arrou, piano)
(Ang 35413) 19m
DEBUSSY Etudes, Book 1 (Ericourt, piano) (Kapp
9068) 21m
THOMSON Ten Etudes for Piano (Schapiro,
piano) (DL4083) 18m
12:30 RACE AND LITERATURE IN ENGLAND AND THE
INDIES Novelist George Lamming talks with Ted
Roszak. See Dec. 7.
1 :30 STEPPENWOLF Part 2 of this radio version of the
Expressionist novel by Hermann Hesse.
2:00 THE ADVENTURES OF GAMMA GLOBULIN Will
Gamma's citizenship be threatened if he accepts
the rumored knighthood? Dec. 11
2:15 EFFORT NOTATION An interview with Irmgard
Bartenieff who discusses a new tool for the arts
and sciences with Baird Searles. Dec. 12
3:00 SALZBURG FESTIVAL X An all-Brahms lieder
YOU CAN STILL BUY A CIGAR FOR A NICKEL -
BUT WOULD YOU SMOKE IT?
The price we pay for our pleasures and luxuries has kept well up with rising
costs in most other areas. If high standards of quality in a luxury product are not
maintained on a superior level, it becomes a poor substitute and no longer gives
us pleasure or pride.
High standards in broadcasting, as an ideological principle, depend upon
a number of very non-ideological realities: financial obligations and the costs
of mechanical operation. WBAI has been operating under the most stringent
conditions of austerity for some time now, and we must not take those steps
which would compromise our quality. Pacifica Foundation has asked that we
follow the example of KPFK, our sister station in Los, Angeles, California, and
raise our sponsorship minimum from $12.00 to $15.00 o year. This new tax-
deductible rate will be effective as of midnight on January 12th, 1965 ~ WBAI's
fifth anniversary of listener-sponsored broadcasting in New York.
WBAI is a luxury for you, our sponsors who support it because you consider
your lives richer, fuller and more satisfying as a consequence of your listening
pleasure. We are dedicated to sustain and encourage the freshness, variety and
vitality of our broadcasts for your future enjoyment.
Page 4
program sung by Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau, with
Gerald Moore at the piano. Dec. 12
4:30 PROGRAMS FOR YOUNG PEOPLE See page 13
5:30 MOVIE MUSIC BY PROKOFIEV Dec. 16
Lieutenant Kiie Suite (Philharmonic Orch/Leins-
dorf with Dan Lordachescu, baritone) (Cap
P8508) 20m
Alexander Nevsky (Legostoyeva, mezzo-soprono
with Chorus and Orch of USSR State Radio/
Samosud) (West SWN 181441 40m
6:30 'MUSIC FOR PIANO AND BAND Friedrich
Guide's career as a jazz pianist is augmented, in
this new release, by his gifts as a composer-con-
ductor. The three movement work, entitled Music
for Piano and Bond' combines the pianist's virtu-
osity with his unique feeling for jazz. (Col CL
2251) Dec. 18
7:00 NEWS Robert Potts
7:15 KING-HALL LONDON LETTER Commander Sir
Stephen King-Hall's fortnightly analytical report,
prepared specially for Pacifica Radio. Dec. 9
7:30 REMEMBER RADIO? Selections from Terry and
the Pirates, Lorenzo Jones, and FDR's speeches
evoke nostalgia in this eleventh program In the
series produced by Leslie Darren for WGHB-FM.
Dec. 10
8:00 CONTEMPORARY MUSIC IN EVOLUTION Gun-
ther Schuller and music from the years 1940-41.
Dec. 11
COPLAND Quiet City
WEBERN Variations for Orchestra
HONEGGER Symphony No. 2 for Strings
9:00 THE LAST MINUTE Time left open for programs
of immediacy prepored after this Folio is printed.
Dec. 11
10:00 SYMPHONY FOR CLASSICAL ORCHESTRA Har-
old Shapero's vigorous neo-classicism is inter-
preted by Leonard Bernstein leading the Colum-
bia Symphony Orchestra on Columbia ML 4889.
Dec. 14
10:45 NEWS, COMMENTARY Edward P. Morgan
1 1 :00 SALZBURG FESTIVAL — XI A concert of music by
Brahms, Beethoven, Chopin, Gounod and Strauss.
Van Cliburn is the piano soloist and the Salzburg
Wind Instrument Society is under the direction of
Rudolf Klepac. Dec. 12
BRAHMS Klavierstucke, Op. 118
BEETHOVEN Sonata in F minor, Op. 57
(Appossionata)
CHOPIN Serenade in B minor. Op. 58
GOUNOD Petit Symphonic in B flat major
STRAUSS Serenade for 13 Wind Instruments in E
flat major. Op. 7
1:00 SIGN OFF
WEDNESDAY, December 9
7:00 MORNING CONCERT A Beethoven song cycle
sung by Eleanor Steber; a Fantasia for Glass
Harmonica by Tomaschek; and Roy Harris' Third
Symphony.
8:00 NEWS Robert Potts
8:15 'SCHUBERT MASS The Mass No. 6 in E flat,
heard in a new release with Frederic Woldman
conducting the Musica Aeterna Chorus and Or-
chestra and soloists Helen Boatwright, Betty
Allen, Alva Tripp, Leo Goeke, and Chester Wat-
son on Decca DL 79422. Dec. 14
9:15 KING-HALL LONDON LETTER Dec. 8
9:30 TWO OPERAS: Sigurd and The Barber of Seville.
The former is heard in a setting by the French
composer, Ernest Reyer; the latter in one by
Giovanni Paisiello.
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at 30 East 39 Street, New York, N. Y. 10016
REYER: Sigurd
Sigurd Gustave Botiaux
Brunehild Lyne Cumia
Hilda Jacqueline Silvy
Gunther Rene Blonco
Hagen Felix Giboud
(with chorus and orchestra under Jesus Etche-
veryi (Orphee LDOE 51 .057/8) 62m
PAISIELLO 11 Barbiere di Siviglia
Rosino Elena Rizzieri
Count Almaviva Juan Oncina
Bartolo Fernando Capecchi
Figaro Sesto Bruscanini
(Ensemble of the Collegium Musicum Italicum/
Fasano) 2 hrs.
12:55 OPERA TOPICS Lorenzo Alvory talks to publi-
cist Marilyn Levine about the need for publicity
in an artist's career.
1:30 STEPPENWOLF Part 3 of the novel by Hermann
Hesse.
2:00 COUNTRY MUSIC presented by Tom Whitmore.
Dec. 7
2:30 'MUSIC FOR HARP Niconar Zobaleta plays
works by Corelli, Spohr and Albeniz. For details
see Dec. 7.
3:00 ART FORUM The Cubist Decade, Then and Now.
A lecture by Jacques Borzun. See Dec. 7
4:00 CONTEMPORARY BELGIAN PIANO MUSIC 1
Works by Jean Absil. Dec. 12
4:30 PROGRAMS FOR YOUNG PEOPLE See page 13
5:30 SHAKESPEARE MUSIC BY BERLIOZ See Dec. 20
6:30 'HARP AND ORCHESTRA A new release with
harpist Marie-Claire Jomet and the Paul Kuentz
Chamber Orchestra on Vox PL 12.730. Dec. 18
DEBUSSY Danses Sacrees et Profanes 9m
BOIELDIEU Harp Concerto in C 22m
7:00 NEWS Robert Potts
7:15 THE OTHER SIDE OF THE UNITED NATIONS by
special correspondent Betty Pilkington, who dis-
cusses some aspects of UN affairs overlooked by
the mass media. Dec. 10
7:30 REPORT TO THE SUBSCRIBER Dec. 13
7:45 THEATRE REVIEW Isaiah Sheffer reviews current
theatrical productions. Dec. 10
8:00 THIS LITTLE LIGHT III Harmony. The third pro-
gram in a series on Mississippi during the sum-
mer of 1964. This one explores a leading Negro
community, one which instituted the Leak County
desegregation school suit. The series is produced
by Chris Koch from recordings made in Missis-
sippi. Dec. 10
8:30 LIKE A BUTTERFLY'S WING A program on the
poetry of Edna St. Vincent Millay, including read-
ings of some of her poems. (WGHB) Dec. 1 1
9:00 A SHOW OF FORCE A recorded repeat broad-
cast of last Sunday's live explosion planted and
set off by Richara C. Neulweiler and Bill Alton.
Page 5
2^=" ANNOUNCEMENT *=^1
^ IN view of the imminent ^^ in-
crease in sponsorship rate, we wish to
^ urge and admonish ^ you to renew
your present subscription now, CS- be-
fore midnight January 12, 1985. Don't
keep it a 't;v° secret your ^ friends
have a right to know^. "^"^
New subscriptions are available at the
present rate until the deadline.
10:00 MORE STOCKHAUSEN This interview between
Stockhausen and David Berger took place in
Cologne. It is followed by performances of his
music, including 'Study No. 1', 'Study No. 2', and
'Gesang der JiJnglinge'. Dec. 14
10:45 NEWS, COMMENTARY Edward P. Morgan
11 :00 SALZBURG FESTIVAL IX The Vienna Philharmonic
Orchestra under Karl Bohm. Program on Dec. 7
12:45 UNCLE SHELBY'S ABZ BOOK Shel Silverstein's
anti-children book, produced and read by Dana
Cannon. Dec. 7
1:00 SIGN OFF
THURSDAY, December 10
7:00 MORNING CONCERT A one-act comic opera
by Cluck (Der Betrogene Kadi) is followed by
Stravinsky's 'Four Etudes for Orchestra'.
8:00 NEWS Robert Potts
8:15 MOZART'S 'A LITTLE MASON CANTATA, writ-
ten in 1791, is his last complete work. It is per-
formed by tenors Kurt Equiluz and Friedrich
Graupe, and bass Franz Wimmer, with the Vienna
Symphony Orchestra and Academy Choir under
MaxGoberman. (LRM 503) Dec. 15
8:35 MOTETS BY BRAHMS AND BRUCKNER German
a capella choral works performed by the Stuttgart
Madrigal Choir under Wolfgang Gonnenwein on
Cantate 640 230. Dec. 15
9:15 THE OTHER SIDE OF THE UNITED NATIONS
Betty Pilkington. Dec. 9
9:30 THE CONFEDERACY A comedy by John Van-
brugh, as it was acted in 1705, depicts a society
rebelling against puritanism, and all that it holds
sacred, in strong and witty language. (BBC)
Dec. 20
Columbia Artists Management presents
ANNUAL CARNEGIE HALL recital of
SERKiN
TUES., DEC. 8-8:30 P.M.
SCHUMANN • BEETHOVEN - MENDELSSOHN - BRAHMS • CHOPIN
Tickets: $5.95, $4.00, $3.00,
^ $2.50, $2.00 on sale af Car-
negie Hall Box Office. Mall
orders to Judson Hall Box
^ Office, 165 W. 57 St. Please
enclose self-address stamped
envelope.
'J^ Steinway Piano
Columbia Records
Page 6
10:30 THIS LIHLE LIGHT III Harmony. This program
explores a leading Negro community in Missis-
sippi during the summer of 1964. Dec. 9
11:00 MAHLER'S SECOND SYMPHONY in a perform-
ance by the Philharmonia Orchestra and Chorus
conducted by Otto Klemperer, with Heather Har-
per, soprano and Janet Baker, contralto. (BBC)
1:00 REMEMBER RADIO? II Here are selections from
Terry and the Pirates, Lorenzo Jones and FDR's
speeches. Dec. 8
1:30 STEPPENWOLF Part 4 of the novel by Hermann
Hesse.
2:00 VIENNA FESTIVAL XVII Soloists Fritz Wunder-
lich, tenor, and Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau, baritone,
witfi the Vienna Symphony Orchestra directed by
Josef Krips. Dec. 1 1
SCHUBERTSymphony No. 3
MAHLER Das Lied von der Erde
3:45 THEATRE REVIEV/ by Isaiah Sheffer. Dec. 9
4:00 CONTEMPORARY POETRY III The poems of
Louis Zukovsky introduced and read by Paul
Blackburn. Dec. 13
4:30 PROGRAMS FOR YOUNG PEOPLE See page 13
5:30 'MORE NEW VIVALDI The epidemic spreads.
This time the performers are I Solisti di Zagreb
under Antonio Janigro on Bach Guild BG 665.
Concerto in G for Tv^o Mandolins, Strings and
Organ (Ganoci and Pavlinek mandolins) 11m
Concerto in g ('La Notte') for Flute, Bassoon,
Strings and Harpsichord (Baker, flute; Hoff-
man, bassoon) 10m
Concerto in A for Strings and Harpsichord 8m
Concerto in g for Bassoon, Strings and Harpsi-
chord (Klepac, bassoon) 11m
Concerto in C for Violin, Strings and Harpsi-
chords ('Per La SS. Assunzione di Maria Ver-
gine'l (Stanic, violin)
6:30 MUSIC FOR V/IND INSTRUMENTS Two works
by Stravinsky, in contrasting moods. Dec. 17
STRAVINSKY Symphonies of Wind Instruments
(1920-21) (Eastman Symphonic Wind Ensemble/
Fennell) (Mer MG 50143) 9m
STRAVINSKY Octet for Wind Instruments (1922)
(Wind Group/Stravinsky) (Col ML 5672) 15m
7:00 NEV^S Robert Potts
7:15 LARRY BIRNS INTERVIEWS Thomas Aitken, Jr.,
vice-president of Infoplan, and author of 'Poet
in the Fortress". He talks about the early youth
and later career of Puerto Rico's architect of
commonwealth and first elected Governor, Luis
Mufioz Marin. Dec. 11
8:00 STRAVINSKY IN REHEARSAL In 1947, William
Malloch recorded a rehearsal of Stravinsky's new
revision of his Symphonies of Wind Instruments
(in memory of Debussy). The sound is antique, but
the picture of what Stravinsky is striving for musi-
cally comes through clearly enough. It is followed
by a complete performance of the work.
9:00 BENTLEY ON BRECHT The Manual of Piety.
Lesson 1: 'Petitions'. The first of four programs
in which Eric Bentley sings and reads the five
lessons. The music is by Stefan Wolpe. Dec. 11
9:45 THE CHRISTIAN VOCATION A discussion of
the Christian clergy and layman in the modern
world. The panel is composed of Chris Kearns,
of The Catholic Worker; James Forest, chairman
of the Catholic Peace Fellowship,- Father Philip
Bernigan, Professor of Epiphany Apostolic Col-
lege; and Thomas Francis Ritt, also of The Catho-
lic Worker. Dec. 13
10:45 NEWS, COMMENTARY Edward P. Morgan
11:00 TWO SYMPHONIES One by Haydn and a con-
temporary Japanese symphony. Details on Dec. 8
12:00 AN OUTSIDE AGITATOR Details on Dec. 8
12:30 JAZZ LEGENDS Noted jazz authority and rec-
ord producer Don Schlitten presents The Legend-
ary Johnny Dodds.
1:00 SIGN OFF
FRIDAY, December 1 1
7:00 MORNING CONCERT Bach's English Suite in
A minor; and Schumann's Second Symphony.
8:00 NEWS Robert Potts
8:15 CONTEMPORARY FINNISH MUSIC from the
Finnish Radio Dec. 19
ERIK BERGMAN The Birds (Soloists, percussion
instruments and electronic effects with the
Akademiska Saengfoereningen/ Berg man)
JOONAS KOKKONEN Sinfonio do Camera (Lu-
cerne Festival Strings)
AULIS SALLINEN Variations for Cello and Or-
chestra (Seppo Laomanen, cello, with Fin-
nish Radio Sym Orch/Ehrling)
OTTO DONNER Cantata Profono (Soloists with
the Stephen Porthman Ensemble)
9:15 LARRY BIRNS INTERVIEWS Thomas Aitken, Jr.,
vice-president of Infoplan, who talks about
Luis Murioz Marin. See Dec. 10
JU2T RELEAXED
MfiDUVfll jDflNCES & CAROLS
performed by the
Renaissance Chamber Ensemble'
Paul Ehrlich, director
English, Prenci? &. Spanish Carols
Medieval Estanjpies k Dances fronj
the Collections of Xusato, 2er~
vaise and Attaingnant on the Bar-
oque Record Label.
IT
Available at your local record
shop or send check to:
Renaissance Chamber Players
924 West End flvc New York 25
monaural $4.95 Stereo $5.95
10:00 'WOLF'S ITALIAN SONGBOOK, the Italieni-
sches Liederbuch, is heard in a new release per-
formed by soprano Erna Berger and baritone
Hermann Prey with pianist Gijnther Weissenborn
onVoxLDL532. Dec. 19
11:15 THE LAST MINUTE Dec. 8
12:15 BENTLEY ON BRECHT The Manual of Piety:
Lesson 1 : 'Petifitlons'. See Dec. 10
1:00 NUBIAN MUSIC Hamzo El Din accompanying
himself on the Oud, sings a group of traditional
Nubian songs on Vanguard VRS 9164. Dec. 18
1 :30 STEPPENWOLF Part 5 of the novel by H. Hesse.
2:00 CONTEMPORARY MUSIC IN EVOLUTION Gun-
ther Schuller and music from the years 1940-41.
For program see Dec. 8
3:00 LIKE A BUTTERFLY'S WING A program from
WGBH in Boston on the poetry of Edna St. Vin-
cent Millay, including some poems. Dec. 9
3:30 BELTRAFFIO by Henry James, adapted as a
play for radio with a peculiarly Jamesion horror,
a 'respectable' infanticide. (BBC) Dec. 13
4:00 CONTEMPORARY BELGIAN PIANO MUSIC II
Francis de Bourguignon. Dec. 13
4:30 PROGRAMS FOR YOUNG PEOPLE See page 13
5:30 HAWAIIAN COMPOSER: Dal-Keong Lee His
Symphony No. 1, cast in a Hindemithian mold, is
contrasted with his 'Polynesian Suite' on a new
CRI release (1951] performed by the NiJrnberg
Symphony Orchestra under George Barati. Dec. 17
6:05 PIANO RECITAL Gloria Whitney, young Phiio-
delphian pianist, plays a highly varied program
recorded last season specially for WBAI. Dec. 18
SCHOENBERG Three Piano Pieces, Op. 11 15m
IVES Three Page Sonata 7m
WOLPE Dance in Form of a Chaconne 3m
BEETHOVEN Sonata No. 21 in C, Op. 53 (Wald-
steln) 24m
7:00 NEWS Robert Potts
7:15 OPINION Dr. Fred Exner, Conservative, radiolo-
gist, fluoridation expert, and jazz buff. Dec. 14
7:45 CONVERSATION WITH A DUTCH ACTOR Henk
van Ulsen with Herbert Feinstein. Dec. 7
8:15 VIENNA FESTIVAL XVII A concert of music by
Schubert and Mahler. See Dec. 10
10:00 THE ADVENTURES OF GAMMA GLOBULIN He
again gives evidence of his seemingly super-
human sovoir-foire. Dec. 8
Ad?'t
Page 7
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while enjoying group playing.
ADVANCED — acquire performance level
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included in all classes.
recorder ■ viol - flute - violin ■ baroque flute
CIm »t PrlTiu
ny recorder workshop un 6-1603
directed by Paul Ehrlich
formerly with NY Pro Musica
some highlights in
PUBLIC AFFAIRS
THIS UniE LIGHT: III Harmony
Dec. 9th 8 p.m. Dec. 10th 10:30 a.m.
IV The Invasion
Dec. 16th 8 p.m. Dec. 17th 3:30 p.m.
RACE AND LITERATURE IN
ENGLAND AND THE INDIES
Dec. 7th 8 p.m. Dec. 8th 12:30 p.m.
Krishnamurti SELF-KNOWLEDGE:
Beliefs, Seeking
Dec. 13th 9:15 a.m.
Simplicity, Ennui, Impulses
Dec. 20th 9 a.m.
THE CHRISTIAN VOCATION
Dec. 10th 9:45 p.m. Dec. 13th 11:30 a.m.
THE FACE OF THE COMING FASCISM
Dec. 16fh 9:30 a.m. Dec. 17th 8:35 p.m.
HOLLOW DREAM
Dec. 12th 11 :30 p.m. Dec. 15th 12n
VIOLENCE AND LOVE
Dec 16th 3:45 p.m. Dec. 19th 10 p.m.
FROM THE CENTER:
New Utopias
Dec. 7th 10 a.m.
A Socialist Knight at the Center
Dec. 13th 7 p.m. Dec. 14th 1 1 :30 a.m.
10:15 NUTRITON Dr. Marshall Deutsch discusses pro-
tein requirements. Dec. 14
10:45 NEWS, COMMENTARY Edward P. Morgan
11:00 ASPECTS OF MUSIC Seldom heard music intro-
duced and presented by Leonard Altman.
Dec. 13
12:00 NEGRO FOLK MUSIC Charles Hobson and the
music of Calypso singer The Mighty Sparrow.
1:00 SIGN OFF
SATURDAY, December 12
8:00 THE CHANGING FACE OF STRAVINSKY Wil-
liam Malloch presents a program sliowing how
performance attitudes toward Stravinsky's music
(including those of the composer himself) have
changed through the years, (KPFK) Dec. 17
9:00 CONTEMPORARY BELGIAN PIANO MUSIC 1
V^orks by Jean Absil. Dec. 9
9:30 PROGRAMS FOR YOUNG PEOPLE See page 13
10:30 BOOKS FOR YOUNG PEOPLE Ellyn Beaty
10:45 SALZBURG FESTIVAL XI Works by Brahms, Bee-
thoven, Chopin, Gounod and Strauss played by
Van Clibern, pianist, and the Salzburg Wind
Instrument Society under the direction of Rudolf
Klepac. Dec. 8
12:45 PROTEUS, a satirical comedy in two acts by
Paul Claudel: with John Sharp as Proteus; Fenella
Page 8
Fielding as The nymph Bryony; Tony Britton os
MeneiouS; June Tobin and Helen,- and Denis
Blokelock OS a sort of satyr-major-domo. (BBC)
2:00 JAZZ with Soundra Sharp
4:00 TAKING STOCK OF WALL STREET by William
A Kent of H. M. Frumkes & Co. Dec. 14.
4:30 MUSIC BY REVUELTAS
Homage to Garcia Lorca (MGM Chomber Orch/
Surinach) (MGM E3496) 14m
Three Pieces for Violin ond Piano (Anohid and
Aiemian) |MGME3180| 8m
Sensemoya (New York Philhormonic/Bernsteinl
(Col ML 5914) 7m
5:00 PAUL TEMPLE AND THE JONATHAN MYSTERY
3 The Ring. See Dec. 8
5:30 AVANT GARDE CONCERT III Third in a series
of concerts recorded by WBAl this fall at Judson
Holl. Cellist Charlotte Moorman is ossisted by
pianist Nam June Poik and soprano saxophonist
Terry Jennings. In the cage opus she utilizes not
only her cello, but additional whistles, chains,
balloons (for breokingl, etc. with recorded sup-
plements such as the Queen Mary's departure
blast and sounds from Big Ben. In Stockhcusen's
'Plus-Minus', Miss Moorman is assisted by a full-
sized robot named Robot Opera, built by Nam
June Paik. Dec. 17
EARLE BROWN Synergy (World Premiere) (Tape
and Cello) 5m
JOHN CAGE 26' 1.1499" for a String Player 30m
(with rubatos)
GUISEPPE CHIARI Per Arco (American Premiere)
(for tape and reactions of a cellist) 11m
KORLHEINZ STOCKHAUSEN Plus-Minus (realized
by Poik) (World Premiere) 6m
TERRY JENNINGS Piece for Cello and Saxophone
(the composer ploys soxophone) 3m
TOSHI ICHIYANAGI Duet II (American Premiere)
13m
7:00 OLD JAZZ with Chris Albertson
8:00 THE GOON SHOW The Dreaded Batter Pod-
ding Hurler. How young Ned Seogoon tracked
down the Traitor who caused such havoc during
the blackout of 1941. Dec. 14
8:30 UNITED NATIONS DAY CONCERT Recorded
at the General Assembly on October 24, 1964.
Isaac Stern is the violin soloist with Georg Soiti
leading the London Symphony Orchestra. The
concert concludes with on address by UN Sec-
retory-General U Thant. Dec. 14
BLISS Three Dances from 'Checkmate' 9m
BRUCH Violin Concerto No. 1 in g (Stern, violin)
23m
BRITTEN Variations and Fugue on a Theme of
Purcell 16m
9:30 EFFORT NOTATION An interview with Irmgord
Bortenieff. Dec. 8
10:15 SALZBURG FESTIVAL X Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau
sings Brahms lieder. Dec. 8
11:30 HOLLOW DREAM An extended interview with
on ex-heroin-addict in Hong Kong, produced by
Patricio Pern for Radio Hong Kong. (KPFA) Dec 15
1:00 IN SIDE Chris Albertson s weekly smorgasbord.
3:30 SIGN OFF
Columbia Artists Management Presents
lEatf rl|azg ®rrl|palra
1964 65 Season in TOWN HALL following iirst national tour
David BLI"!!! Mus.c Director
"A valuable contribution to musical culture"— Pablo Casals
Wed. eve. Dec. 16
Mezzo Coloratura
Handel. Haydn, Mozart anas: Haydn Symphony No 75
Rameau Concert No 5: Mozart Divertimento k 136
Thurs. eve. Jan. 14
•lolin OfpllOX
pianist
A Bach Haydn program honoring ttie 90th Birthday of
DR. ALBERT SCHWEITZER
Proceeds for ttie Lambarene Hospital
Wed. eve. Feb. 24
Miirlov VKIIIIKTT
Mezzo Soprano
Gluck Orfeo ed Eundice Act II with Esterhazy Chorus
Haydn Ttie Storm. Mozart ' Parto. Parto " from La Clemenza di Tito
b.ibscr.piio" pncrs 3 concerts Orchestra center $8 50 sides S6 ?5
LriKPS ilO 00 Balcony Front J6 ?5 Rear J4 00
CHrcks p,(yahl.. tn ESTERHAZY ORCHESTRA FOUNDATION INC
JUDSON HALL BOX OFFICE- 165 W 5;ttlSt NY 19 N V
M.iii Orrti-rs Enclose stamped self addressed envelope
Single
Tickets
at Box
Office
$4.00
$3.50
$2.75
$2.00
SUNDAY, December 13
8:00 HINDEMITH'S 'DAS MARIENLEBEN" (Life of
the Virgin Mary) on poems by Rilke, is per-
formed by soprano Frances James with pianist
George Brough. (Lyr LL 97) Dec. 18
9:15 SELF-KNOWLEDGE III Beliefs, Seeking. The
third in a series of talks by J. Krishnamurti on
the pursuit of self-knowledge, given at Ojai in
1949. A lecturer and teacher throughout the
world for over forty years, Krishnamurti is wide-
ly respected for his psychological insights. (KPFK
Archives)
10:00 ASPECTS OF MUSIC by Leonard Altman. Dec. 11
11 :00 WHO WROTE SHAPESPEARE? See Dec. 8
11:30 THE CHRISTIAN VOCATION A panel discus-
sion. Details on Dec. 10
12:30 CONTEMPORARY POETRY ill Louis Zukovsky.
See Dec. 10
1:00 OPERA TOPICS Lorenzo Alvarys guests are
Dorothy Pattison, English stage director and
opera teacher,- and Martin Rich, associate con-
ductor at the Metropolitan Opera. Dec. 16
1:50 'HANDEL'S BELSHAZZAR A new recording of
the oratorio with the Stuttgart Memorial Church
Choir and Orchestra of the Stuttgart Kirchenmu-
siktage under the young German conductor Hel-
muth Rilling. (VOX VBX 209) Dec. 16
Nitocris Sylvia Stohlman, soprano
Belshazzor Wilfred Jochims, tenor
Cyrus Helen Raab, contralto
Daniel Heidrun Ankersen, contralto
Gobrias; Messenger Helge Birkeland, bass
4:20 REPORT TO THE SUBSCRIBER Dec. 9
4:30 CONTEMPORARY BELGIAN PIANO MUSIC II
Francis de Bourguignon. Dec. 11
5:00 A SHOW OF FORCE in the most ramshackle
military tradition: tactics and strategy from the
nightmares of Richard C; Neuweiler and Bill Al-
ton, carried out by themselves and other figments
of their imaginations.
6:00 A CONCERT FROM THE THIRTY-NINTH HASLE-
MERE FESTIVAL performed by members and pu-
pils of the Dolmetsch family, with Ian Wilson,
oboe soloist, and Christopher Wood, harpsi-
chord. (BBC) Dec. 19
TELEMANN Overture in C major for recorders,
flute, oboe, bassoon, strings and harpsichord.
LOEILLET Suite in A major for harpsichord
ALBINONI Concert No. 12 in C, for oboe and
strings
VIVALDI Concerto in D major. Opus 3 No. 3 (II
Cordellino)
CABEZON Fantasy for five viols on the tradi-
tional theme 'Suzanne un Jour'.
7.00 FROM THE CENTER A Socialist Knighf af the
Center. W. H. Ferry, Vice-President of the Fund
for the Republic, asks his guest Sir Jock Camp-
bell how he reconciles his capitalist role as
Chairman of Booker Bros. McConnell Co. Ltd., the
largest commercial-industrial interest in British
Guiana, with his socialist political views. Dec. 14
8:00 THE WORLD'S GREAT STAGE by Calderon.
This highly poetic work translates complex theo-
logical and moral arguments into a dramatic alle-
gory. (BBC) See Dec. 19
9:00 VIOLIN AND CELLO Dec. 15
KODALY Duo for Violin and Cello, Op. 7 (Hei-
fetz, Piatigorsky) (Vic LM 2550) 24m
RAVEL Sonata for Violin and Cello (Shumsky
Page 9
some highlights in
MUSIC
SALZBURG FESTIVAL 1964
IX Dec. 7th 2:15 p.m. Dec. 9th 11 p.m.
X Dec. 8th 3 p.m. Dec. 12th 10:15 p.m.
X! Dec. 8th 11 p.m. Dec. 12th 10:45 a.m.
VIENNA FESTIVAL 1964
XVII Dec. 10th 2 p.m. Dec. 11 th 8:15 p.m.
XVIII Dec. 14th 9:45 a.m. Dec. 19th 10:45 a.m.
XIX Dec. 14th 2 p.m. Dec. 16th 11 :15 p.m.
XX Dec. 15th 2 p.m. Dec. 20th 6:15 p.m.
RECITALS:
Raymond Lewenthal
Dec. 14th 7:30 p.m. Dec. 16th 2 p.m.
Gloria Whitney
Dec. 11th 6:05 p.m. Dec. 18th 9:15 a.m.
CONTEMPORARY FINNISH MUSIC
Dec. 11th 8:15 a.m. Dec. 19th 10:45 p.m.
UNITED NATIONS DAY CONCERT
Dec. 12th 8:30 p.m. Dec. 14th 8:15 a.m.
AVANT GARDE CONCERT III
Dec. 12fh 5:30 p.m. Dec. 17th 11 a.m.
STRAVINSKY IN REHEARSAL
Dec. 10th 8 p.m.
THE CHANGING FACE OF STRAVINSKY
Dec. 12th 10 a.m. Dec. 16th 9:30 p.m.
OPERAS
Tagore'i SHYAMA
Dec. 7th 8:15 a.m. Dec. 17th 1 1 p.m.
SIGURD and THE BARBER OF SEVILLE
Dec. 9th 9:30 a.m.
Berlioz' BEATRICE AND BENEDICT
Dec. 20th 2 p.m.
Greenhouse) 1IRMS1123) 18m
9:45 HENRY OF ANJOU A portrait of King Henry II,
compiled by Nesto Pain. (BBC)
10:30 BELTRAFFIO An adaptation of Henry James'
'The Author of Beltroffio'. See Dec. 11
11 :00 THE SCOPE OF JAZZ with Dan Morgenstern
12:00 SIGN OFF
MONDAY, December 14
7:00 MORNING CONCERT Beethoven's Archduke'
Trio; and Ives' Third Symphony.
8:00 NEWS Robert Potts
8:15 UNITED NATIONS DAY CONCERT Recorded at
the UN on October 24, 1964. For Details see Dec. 12
9:15 OPINION Dr. Fred Exner. Dec. 11
9:45 VIENNA FESTIVAL XVIII A concert of orchestral
works by Webern, Ravel, Dvorak, and Smetono;
Ivan Morovic pianist, with the Prague Philhar-
monic Orchestra conducted by Vaclav Neumann.
Dec. 19
11:30 FROM THE CENTER A Socialist Knighf ot the
Page 10
Center. W. H. Ferry and Sir Jock Campbell. See
Dec. 13
12:30 BRESS PLAYS BLOCH The Canadian violinist
is heard performing Ernst Bloch's 'Violin Sonata'
on Folkways FM 3357. Dec. 16
1:00 NUTRITION Protein requirements by Dr. Mar-
shall Deutsch. Dec. 11
1 :30 STEPPENWOLF Port 6 of the novel by Hermann
Hesse, More details on Dec. 7
2:00 VIENNA FESTIVAL XIX The Prague Philharmonic
Orchestra conducted by Karel Ancerl. Dec. 16
KLUSAK Variations on a Theme of Gustov Mahler
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PACIFICA PROGRAM DUBS — WBAI will pro-
vide interested listeners with tape recordings of any
Pacifica produced programs, at a total cost of
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THE KING-HALL NEWSLETTER: published
monthly. An independent survey of current events.
Subscription airmail $5.00. Specimen copy on re-
quest from Sir Stephen King-Hall, 162 Buckingham
Palace Road, London, S. W. 1. England.
Let POSTHORN RECORDINGS preserve your
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Classified Rales per insertion: 30c per word, 10- word
minimum. Special rate for 5-9 continuous insertions:
28c per word; 10 or more insertions: 25c per word.
DEBUSSY La Mer
MAHLER Symphony No. 1 in D major
3:45 THE GOON SHOW The Dreaded Boffer Pud-
ding Hurler. How the Hurler was finally cornered
in North Africa by young Ned Seogoon. Dec. 12
4:15 THE BABY'S FAMILY by Heitor Villa-Lobos,
played on the Siena pianoforte by Morisa Re-
gules.
4:30 PROGRAMS FOR YOUNG PEOPLE See page 13
5:30 SYMPHONY FOR CLASSICAL ORCHESTRA Har-
old Shapero's vigorous neo-classicism. See Dec. 8
6:15 MORE STOCKHAUSEN An interview with the
composer, and some of his music. Dec. 9
7:00 NEWS Robert Potts
7:15 CRITICAL VIEWS OF THE NEWS by Robert
Potts, Dec. 15
7:30 RAYMOND LEWENTHAL AT TOWN HALL His
recital on September 22, 1964, included some
of the works which he performed and explained
on WBAI in a previous program, and some new
pieces. As one would expect, Alkan was well in
evidence. Dec. 16
LISZT Praeludium on a Theme of Bach 11859) 3m
CHOPIN Sonata No, 3 in b. Op. 58 (1844)
ALKAN Symphonic (for piano) iPub. 1887) 23m
ALKAN La Vision (Pub. 1861) 3m
ALKAN Le Feslin d'Esope (Pub, 1857) 9m
ALKAN Barcarolle, Op, 65 No, 6 (Pub. 1861) 3m
ALKAN Quasi-Faust (from Grande Sonata Op.
33) (Pub. 1847) 12m
(encores by Saint-Saens/Godowsky ; Moszkow-
ski; Chopin/Godowsky and Dohnanyi)
9:15 ART FORUM England's New Generation of Ar-
tists. A discussion with English artists now in the
United Stotes: Allen Jones, Peter Phillips and
Richard Smith talk with Bruce Glozer. Dec. 17
10:15 TAKING STOCK OF WALL STREET William A.
Kent, Dec. 12
10:45 NEWS, COMMENTARY Edward P. Morgan
11 :00 'SCHUBERT MASS No, 6 in E flot. See Dec. 9
12:00 COUNTRY MUSIC Southern, bluegross and hill-
billy music presented by Tom Whitmore, Dec. 17
12:30 'COUPERIN'S LES NATIONS was written in the
1690's. Selections from it are performed on a new
release by the Stuttgart Boroque Ensemble under
Marcel Couraud, (Merc MG 50402) Dec. 17
1:00 SIGN OFF
TUESDAY, December 15
7:00 MORNING CONCERT Twelve medieval Spanish
songs; followed by a Tchaikovsky sextet.
8:00 NEWS Robert Potts
8:15 'INDIAN' MUSIC by Busoni and MocDowell.
For details see Dec, 7
9:15 CRITICAL VIEWS OF THE NEWS Robert Potts.
Dec, 14
9:30 THE FILM MAKER'S FESTIVAL A discussion. For
details see Dec, 19
10:45 -THE BIRD FANCYER'S DELIGHT Or, Choice Ob-
servations and Directions Concerning ye Teoching
of all Sorts of Singing Birds. This collection of
recorder and harpsichord pieces written by a Mr,
Hill about 1717, is divided into sections such as
'Tunes for the Bullfinch' or 'Tunes for the Linnet'.
A new Vox release, with Richard and Theodora
Schuize on winds and percussion, and Dorothy
Walters on Harpsichord and virginal. (PL 12 750)
11:30 PAUL TEMPLE AND THE JONATHAN MYSTERY 4
The Encounter. A further installment of the thriller-
serial from the BBC. Dec. 19
12:00 HOLLOW DREAM An extended interview with
on ex-heroin-addict in Hong Kong. See Dec. 12
1 :30 STEPPENWALF Par 7 of the novel by H. Hesse.
2:00 VIENNA FESTIVAL XX Kurt Ropf directs the
Vienna Symphony Orchestra. Dec. 20
STRAVINSKY THistoire du Soldat
MILHAUD rHomme et son Desir
La Creation du Monde
3:45 COMMITTEE PIANIST An interview by Chris
Albertson with Ellsworth Milburn, pianist for
San Francisco's satirical group, and some sam-
ples of his playing with them. Dec. 18
4:30 PROGRAMS FOR YOUNG PEOPLE See page 13
5:30 HOVHANESS' SAINT VARTAN SYMPHONY For
more details see Dec. 7
6:15 VIOLIN AND CELLO works by Kodoly and
Ravel. Details on Dec. 13
7:00 NEWS Robert Potts
7:15 OPINION Hallock Hoffman, Director of the
Study of Political Affairs at the Center for the
Study of Democratic Institutions. Dec. 16
7:30 REMEMBER RADIO? Sgt. Preston of the Yukon,
Fred Allen and Porltand Hoffa, and Sammy Kaye
ore the nostalgic personalities revived in this
program produced by Leslie Darren IWGBH)
Dec. 17
8:00 CONTEMPORARY MUSIC IN EVOLUTION Gun
fher Schuller with music in the years 1941-42.
Dec. 18
HARRISON Canticle No. 3
CAGE-HARRISON Double Music
CAGE Wonderful Widow of 18 Springs
SCHOENBERG Piano Concerto
9:00 THE LAST MINUTE Time saved for programs
not prepared before printing this Folio. Dec. 18
10:10 AMERICAN FILMS AND AUTEUR CRITICISM
Seven French film directors, including Truffout,
Chabrol and Luc-Goddard, participated in a
symposium on American movie-making which
was published in the December-January issue
of Cahiers du Cinema. John Fell reads from the
article and comments on it. (KPFAl Dec. 19
10:45 NEWS, COMMENTARY Edward P. Morgan
11.00 MOZART'S A LITTLE MASON CANTATA". De-
tails on Dec. 10
11:20 MOTETS BY BRAHMS AND BRUCKNER Details
on Dec. 10
12:00 THE ADVENTURES OF GAMMA GLOBULIN Is
Albert Portcullis but a pseudonym? Dec. 18
12:15 THE RENEGADE Erik Bouerfeld in a virtuoso
performance of Albert Camus' story about a
missionary driven mod by the natives he was
sent to convert. (KPFA) Dec. 19
1:00 SIGN OFF
adv
Page 1 1
RUTH ABRAMS - paintings
December 16 through January 6
Personal selection of
IRENA URDANG By appointment
315 West 70 St. SU 7-0873
some highlights in
DRAMA, LITERATURE
AND ART
Vanbrugh's THE CONFEDERACY
Dec. 10th 9:30 a.m. Dec. 20th 9:30 p.m.
Calderon's THE WORLD'S GREAT STAGE
Dec. 13th 8 p.m. Dec. 19th 4 p.m.
Claudel's PROTEUS
Dec. 12fh 12:45 p.m.
Henry James' BELTRAFFIO
Dec. 11th 3:30 p.m. Dec. 13th 10:30 p.m.
POETRY: Edna St. Vincent Millay
Dec. 9fh 8:30 p.m. Dec. 1 1th 3 p.m.
Louis Zukowsky
Dec. 10th 4 p.m. Dec. 13fh 12:30 p.m.
Emily Dickinson
Dec. 16th 8:30 p.m. Dec. 18th 4 p.m.
Ed Dorn
Dec. 16th 10:15 p.m. Dec. 20th 12n
Hermann Hesse's STEPPENWOLF
Jeginnig a new serialized radio adaptation
at 1 :30 p.m. weekdays.
ART FORUM: The Cubist Decade
Dec. 7fh 9:45 p.m. Dec. 9th 3 p.m.
England's New Generation of Artists
Dec. 14th 9:15 p.m. Dec. 17th 2:30 p.m.
WEDNESDAY, December 16
7:00 MORNING CONCERT Beethoven's 'Hammer-
klavier' sonata played by Eduardo del Pueyo;
and Glinka's String Quartet in F.
8:00 NEWS Robert Potts
8:15 MOVIE MUSIC BY PROKOFIEV See Dec. 8
9:15 OPINION Hallock Hoffman. Dec. 15
9:30 THE FACE OF THE COMING FASCISM Novelist,
biographer and critic Truman Nelson, speaking
at 0 Harlem rally, argues that those helping to
preserve the current structure of American so-
ciety are building fascism. Dec. 17
10:00 'HANDEL'S BELSHAZZAR A new recording of
the oratorio. Details on Dec. 13
12:30 OPERA TOPICS Lorenzo Alvory's guests are
Dorothy Pattison and Martin Rich. Dec. 13
1:30 STEPPENWOLF Part 8 of the novel by Hermann
Hesse.
2:00 RAYMOND LEWENTHAL AT TOWN HALL His
recital on September 22, 1964. Complete program
on Dec. 14
3:45 VIOLENCE AND LOVE A lecture by psycho-
analyst R. D. Laing, member of the Tavistock
Institute for Human Relations and author of many
books. Joseph H. Berke, who has worked with
Dr. Laing, provides the introduction. Dec. 19
4:30 PROGRAMS FOR YOUNG PEOPLE See page 13
5:30 STRAVINSKY-INFLUENCED MUSIC See Dec. 7
Page 12
AdT't
SALZBURG MARIONETTES
The renowned SALZBURG MARIONETTE THEATRE, an enchanting Christmas
attractioin, will be performing at New York's TOWN HALL Dec. 17-Jan. 8.
By special arrangement with the management, a percentage of the purchase price
of tickets ordered through WBAI will benefit the station. When ordering please
indicate: 1) number of tickets 2) title of performance 3) time of day, and 4) an
alternate date should the preferred one be sold out. Please send your order to Marion-
ettes, WBAI, 30 East 39 Street, New York 16,N.Y. Make checks payable to Town Hall.
Children performances: ull seats $3.75:
SNOW WHITE ; p.m. Dec. 19th, 28th, 2yth. 3 1st. _' p.m. Dec. 2()th
4 p.m. Dec. 21st, 22nd, 23rd, 28th, 29th 5 p.m. Jan. 3rd
RUMPELSTILTSKIN 1 p.m. Dec. 2 1st, 22nd, 23rd, 24th, 26th, 3()th. Jan. 2nd, 3rd.
2 p.m. Dec. 27th, Jan. 3rd. 4 p.m. Dec. 19th, 26th, Jan. 2nd.
Adull evening performances: all seats $4-30:
THE MAGIC FLUTE 8:3U p.m. Dec. 17th, 19th. 21st, 29th. Jan. 7th.
9 p.m. Dec. 27th, Jan. 3rd.
THE ABDUCTION FROM THE SERAGLIO fl:30 p.m. Dec. 18th, 23rd. 26th, 3()th. Jan. 2nd, 8th
DIE FLEDERMAUS 8:30 p.m. Dec. 22nd, 28th, 31st., Jan. "ith. 6th.
9 p.m. Dec. 2()th.
6:30 BRESS PLAYS BOCH Program on Dec. 14
7:00 NEWS Robert Potts
7:15 THE OTHER SIDE OF THE UNITED NATIONS
Some aspects of UN affairs usually ignored by
the mass medio are discussed by special corre-
spondent Betty Pilkington. Dec. 17
7:30 JAZZ ARCHIVES witfi Pfiil Elwood.
8:00 THIS LITTLE LIGHT IV The Invasion. Tfiis pro-
gram presents tfie arrival in Mississippi of almost
one thousand volunieers. V\/hat mode these large-
ly Northern, and largely middle-class Whites
come to Mississippi and what did they find?
Produced by Chris Koch as port of his series
made from field recordings during the past sum-
mer. Dec. 17
8:30 THE LEAF OF LOVE TURNED BACK A program
on the poetry of Emily Dickinson with examples
of some poems. (WGBHi Dec. 18
9:00 REPORT TO THE SUBSCRIBER News of WBAI.
Dec. 20
9:15 A SHOW OF FORCE by the novice Veterans,
Richard C. Neulweiier, Bill Alton and others.
10:15 CONTEMPORARY POETRY IV Ed Dorn, intro-
duced by Paul Blackburn. Dec. 20
10:45 NEWS, COMMENTARY Edward P. Morgan
11:00 THE LADY OF NOHANT Robert Baldick, Fellow
of Pembroke College, Oxford, reappraises here
the work and personality ot George band. iBBC)
Dec. 19
11 :15 VIENNA FESTIVAL XIX Music by Klusak, Debussy
and Mahler. Program on Dec. 14
1:00 SIGN OFF
THURSDAY, December 17
7:00 MORNING CONCERT Borber s Toccata Fes
tiva' for organ and orchestra; and Prokofiev's
Sixth Symphony.
8:00 NEWS Robert Potts
8:15 'MORE NEW VIVALDI A group of concert! for
diverse instruments. Details on Dec. 10
9:15 THE OTHER SIDE OF THE UNITED NATIONS
Betty Pilkington. Dec. 16
9:30 COUNTRY MUSIC presented by Tom Whit-
more. Dec. 14
10:00 'COUPERIN'S LES NATIONS on a new release.
Details on Dec. 14
10:30 REMEMBER RADIO? Here ore Sgt. Preston of the
Yukon, Fred Allen, Portland FHofto and Sammy
Kaye. Dec. 15
11 :00 AVANT GARDE CONCERT III Third in a series of
concerts recorded by WBAI this fall ot Judson
Hall. For a detailed account of the proceedings
see Dec. 12.
12:30 URBAN TRANSIT A discussion of New York's
transit problem with members of the Committee
for Better Transit: Stephen Dobrow, a graduate
assistant at N.Y.U.; Henry Deutch, an estimator
for Harris Stell Fabricators; David Gurin, a city
planner with Mobilization for Youth; and Mayer
Horn, a civil engineer with the New York City
Transit Authority The moderator is Chris Koch.
Dec. 20
1:30 STEPPENWOLF Port 9 of the novel by Hermann
Hesse.
2:00 MUSIC FOR WIND INSTRUMENTS Two works
by Stravinsky. For details see Dec. 10
2:30 ART FORUM England's New Generation of
Artists. See Dec. 14
3:30 THIS LITTLE LIGHT IV The Invasion. A program
on the reasons for almost a thousand volunteers'
going to Mississippi during the past summer, and
of what they found there. Dec. 16
4:00 CONTEMPORARY BELGIAN PIANO MUSIC III
Works by Joseph Jongen. Dec. 20
4:30 PROGRAMS FOR YOUNG PEOPLE See page 13
5:30 THE VIRTUOSO VIOLINIST Ruggiero Ricci plays
showpieces by Poganini. Program on Dec. 7
6:00 ETUDES FOR PIANO Study pieces by Chopin,
Debussy and Thomson. Details on Dec. 8
7:00 NEWS Robert Potts
7:15 LARRY BIRNS INTERVIEWS Peace Corps people:
the director, a trainee, and two who have re-
turned otter two years in Peru. Dec. 18
7:45 AT THE DROP OF A STETSON Michael Flanders
and Donald Swann discuss with Sidney Carter
their record-braking two-man revue and its suc-
cessful tour of America. Dec. 20
8:00 HAWAIIAN COMPOSER: Dai-Keong Lee See
program on Dec. 1 1
8:35 THE FACE OF THE COMING FASCISM Truman
Nelson, novelist, biographer and critic, speaks
at a Harlem rally held under the ouspices of the
Harlem Defense Council. He argues that, at its
core, American society is rotten, and that those
who work to preserve the current structure are
building fascism. Dec. 16
9:00 BENTLEY ON BRECHT The Manual of Piefy.
Lesson 2: Spiritual Exercises. Eric Bentley sings
and reads the second of Brecht's five lessons in
his Manual of Piety. Dec. 18
9:30 THE CHANGING FACE OF STRAVINSKY. A
program about changed performance attitudes.
William Malloch comments. Dec. 12
10:45 NEWS, COMMENTARY Edward P. Morgan
11:00 INDIAN OPERA Rabindronath Tagore's folk
opera "Shyamo." Details on Dec. 7
12:00 ONE-SHOT A program created from the tope
scraps and unbroadcastable records accumulated
on the shelves of Jack Nessel, Drama and Litera-
ture Director of KPFA, who writes: I promise
nothing and I am a man of my word'. (KPFA)
Dec. 19
12:30 JAZZ LEGENDS Tenormon Fronkie Socolow,
presented by Don Schlitten.
1:00 SIGN OFF
FRIDAY, December 18
7:00 MORNING CONCERT Music from the Anna
Mogdolena Notebook; Webern-orchestroted
Schubert dances,- and Florent Schmitt's Lo Trage-
die de Salome'.
8:00 NEWS Robert Potts
8:15 PIANO RECITAL Gloria Whitney plays a highly
varied program. Complete program on Dec. 11
9:15 LARRY BIRNS INTERVIEWS Peace Corps people
See Dec. 17
9:45 HINDEMITH'S DAS MARIENLEBEN' See Dec. 13
11:00 THE LAST MINUTE Dec. 15
12:00 'MUSIC FOR PIANO AND BAND Friedrich
Gulda on a new release. Details on Dec. 8
12:30 BENTLEY ON BRECHT The Manual of Piety.
Lesson 2: Spiritual Exercises. Dec. 17
1:00 'HARP AND ORCHESTRA A new release of
works by Debussy and Boieldieu. See Dec. 9
1:30 STEPPENWOLF Port 10 of this radio version of
the Expressionist novel by Hermann Hesse, which
will be continued on Dec. 21
2:00 CONTEMPORARY MUSIC IN EVOLUTION
Gunther Schuller with music of 1941-42. Program
on Dec. 15
Page 13
PROGRAMS FOR
YOUNG PEOPLE
4:30 — 5:30 P.M.
MONDAY. DECEMBER 7
"Magic or Not" by Edward Eager, read by Baird
Searles. Part One.
•'The Little Prince" - Part One of the St. Exupery
story read by David and Jean Birney.
Piano Music for Children by Dimitri Shostakovitch.
TUESDAY, DECEMBER 8
Magic or Not — Part Two.
Let's Join In (BBC)
The Little Prince — Conclusion.
WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 9
Magic or Not — Part Three.
Tales from the East - Chrystabel Weerasinghe.
Adventures of a Zoo — an orchestral excursion.
THURSDAY, DECEMBER 10
Magic or Not — Part Four.
A Signpost to a Ribbon Maker.
"The Dheeps and the Dillycods" - a story by Elsa
Bailey read by Don Calfa.
Children's Songs — Bonnie Dobson.
FRIDAY, DECEMBER 11
Magic or Not — Part Five (Continued Monday)
Gumdrop Follies — Jim Copp and Ed Brown.
SATURDAY, DECEMBER 12 9:30 - 10:30 a.m.
The Adventures of Clara Chuff — Conclusion.
MONDAY, DECEMBER 14
Magic or Not — Part Six.
Danny Kaye tells a story from Scotland.
The Singing Lady tells "Beauty and the Beast".
Sam Hinton sings.
TUESDAY, DECEMBER 15
"Why the Owl Behaves as It Does" — a story in a
series entitled 'How The Whale Became' by Ted
Hughes, read by Frances Barry.
Magic or Not — Part Seven.
Let's Join In (BBC)
WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 16
Magic or Not — Part Eight.
Tales from the East — Chrystabel Weerasinghe.
Vivien Leigh tells the "Tale of Mrs. Tiggy-Winkle"
by Beatrix Potter.
THURSDAY, DECEMBER 17
Magic or Not — Conclusion
A Signpost to Rocks Made by Dripping Water.
The Badmen — Songs and stories of the Wild West.
Afternoon in Amsterdam.
FRIDAY, DECEMBER 18
"Boxes" — a story by Jean Merrill.
"The Man Who Could Work Miracles" — Mary
Alan Hokanson reads the story by H. G. Wells.
SATURDAY, DECEMBER 19 9:30 - 10:30 a.m.
"Moonfleet" — Parts One and Two of a new BBC
serial about smugglers, excisemen and a villain-
ous tide-race that has cau.sed the wrecking of
many a tall ship.
Page 14
WBAI IS HAVING
A
BIRTHDAY PARTY
January 10th 1965
Y'ALL COME!
For details
see your next Folio
3:00 THE ADVENTURES OF QkhAfAA GLOBULIN For
whom? Dec. 15
3:15 MUSIC BY CHARLES IVES Chamber and or-
chestral works, including 'Over the Pavements',
'The Rainbow', 'Tone Roads No. 1', 'The Indians',
'The Pond', 'Tone Roods No. 3', 'Hymn', and
'Hallowe'en', all performed by the Boston Cham-
ber Ensemble under Harold Farbermon, and
'Three Places in New England', performed by
the Eastman-Rochester Symphony under Howard
Hanson. Dec. 20
4:00 THE LEAF OF LOVE TURNED BACK The poetry
of Emily Dickinson. Dec. 16
4:30 PROGRAMS FOR YOUNG PEOPLE See page 13
5:30 TEACHER-PIANISTS llona Kobos and Rosina
Lhevinne ore best known as teachers — but they
are also performers. See program on Dec. 7
6:15 BEETHOVEN Music for Goethe's 'Egmonf. De
tails on Dec. 7
7:00 NEWS Robert Potts
7:15 COMMENTARY Thomas Francis Ritt, former Na-
tional Director of the Catholic Council on Civil
Liberties, former board member of the Notional
Catholic Social Action Conference and currently
on the staff of The Catholic Worker.
7:30 MUSIC BY GORDON BINKERD Works loaned
to WBAI by the composer.
Nativitos est hodie; On the Shortness of Human
Life; Madrigal (Chamber Choir/Carter) 11m
String Quartet No. 1 (Walden Quartet) 30m
Piano Sonata (Claire Richards) 24m
String Quartet No. 2 (Walden Quartet) 15m
9:00 COMMITTEE PIANIST Ellsworth Milburn talks
with Chris Albertson. Dec. 15
9:45 NUBIAN MUSIC Hamzo El Din accompanying
himself on the Oud on Vanguard VRS 9164. Dec. 1 1
10:15 SCIENCE CRITIC Fads and fallacies in the name
of science discussed by Dr. Marshall Deutsch.
10:45 NEWS, COMMENTARY Edward P. Morgan
11:00 ASPECTS OF MUSIC Seldom heard music pre-
sented by Leonard Alfman, with his comments.
12:00 NEGRO FOLK MUSIC Charles Hobson with a
full hour of blues sung by Lightning Hopkins.
1:00 SIGN OFF
SATURDAY, December 19
8:00 A CONCERT FROM THE THIRTY-NINTH HASLE-
MERE FESTIVAL Music by Telemonn, Loeillet,
Albinoni, Vivaldi and Cabezon. Complete pro-
gram on Dec. 13.
9:00 AMERICAN FILMS AND AUTEUR CRITICISM A
reading, with commentary, by John Fell. Dec. 15
9:30 PROGRAMS FOR YOUNG PEOPLE See page 13
10:30 BOOKS FOR YOUNG PEOPLE Ellyn Beaty
10:45 VIENNA FESTIVAL XVIII Works by Webern,
Ravel, Dvorak and Smetana. See Dec. 14
12:30 ONE-SHOT A program which has been de-
scribed OS spontaneous unstifled creativity' —
of what, we shall see. Dec. 17
1:00 LOW, COLONEL BLIMP AND THE HORSE. Car-
toonist David Low in conversation with Robert
Finnegan. (BBC) Dec. 20
1:20 THE RENEGADE Erik Bauerfeld reads Camus'
story. Dec. 15
2:00 JAZZ with Bob Potts.
4:00 THE WORLD'S GREAT STAGE Colderon's dra-
matic allegory was written in the 1630s and dis-
plays a range of social types in a 'play-within-o-
ploy'. More information on Dec. 13
5:00 THE LADY OF NOHANT Robert Baldick, Fellow
of Pembroke College, Oxford, reappraises the
work of George Sand. Dec. 16
5:15 'WOLF'S ITALIAN SONGBOOK See Dec. 11
6:30 PAUL TEMPLE AND THE JONATHAN MYSTERY
4 The Encounter. See Dec. 15
7:00 NEW JAZZ with Don Heckman
8:00 THE GOON SHOW Lurgi Strikes Again. This
story opens when poor Arnold Fringe is suddenly
striken with the dreaded Lurgi in a Lancashire
bus, baffling even Dr. Neddie Seogood.
8:30 ART OF THE FUGUE Bach's fifteen fugues and
four canons, in a performance by the Cologne
Soloists Ensemble under Helmut Miller-Bruhl's
direction, on a German Radio tape.
10:00 VIOLENCE AND LOVE A lecture by psycho-
analyst R. D. Laing. More details on Dec. 16
10:45 CONTEMPORARY FINNISH MUSIC See Dec. 11
11:45 THE FILM MAKER'S FESTIVAL Gregory Mork-
opoulis, maker of 'Twice a Man', and Jack Smith
('Flaming Creatures' and 'Normal Love'), two of
the iudges of the third Los Angeles Festival, dis-
cuss movie criticism, the New American Cinema,
obscenity, and other subjects with 'underground'
film star Dennis Hopper and Dave Ossman.
(KPFK) Dec. 15
1 :00 IN SIDE or, spelled backwards, Edis ni.
3:30 SIGN OFF
SUNDAY, December 20
8:00 SHAKESPEARE MUSIC BY BERLIOZ Sir Hamilton
Harty is heard conducting on some dubs from
KPFK, with comment by William Malloch. See
Dec. 9
9:00 SELF-KNOWLEDGE IV Simplicity, Ennui, Im-
pulses. The fourth in the series of talks by J.
Krishnamurti. More information on Dec. 13
10:00 MUSIC BY CHARLES IVES Chamber and orches-
tral works. Details on Dec. 18
10:45 REPORT TO THE SUBSCRIBER Dec. 16
11:00 ASPECTS OF MUSIC presented by Leonard Alt-
man. Dec. 18
12:00 CONTEMPORARY POETRY IV Ed Dorn. Dec. 16
12:30 CONVERSATION WITH SIR JULIAN HUXLEY
The distinguished biologist answers questions
about his many interests, which include the
study of animal behavior, philosophy, and popu-
lation growth. (BBC]
1:00 OPERA TOPICS Lorenzo Alvary's guest is tenor
Mario del Monaco, who talks about his recovery
and experiences since his automobile accident
last year.
2:00 BERLIOZ' 'BEATRICE ET BENEDICT' written in
1860-1, uses the composer's adaptation of
Shakespeare's 'Much Ado About Nothing.' In
this recording, the soloists, chorus and London
Symphony Orchestra are conducted by Colin
Davis. (L'Oiseou-Lyre SOL 256/7)
Beatrice Joseph Veasey
Hero April Contelo
Ursula Helen Watts
Benedict John Mitchinson
Claudio John Cameron
Don Pedro John Shirley
Semarone Eric Shilling
Page 15
3:45 LOW, COLONEL BLIMP AND THE HORSE David
Low talks with Robert Finnegan. Dec. 19
4:00 PRIMITIVE SURVIVALS IN EUROPEAN MUSIC
compiled and introduced by A. L. Lloyd who has
travelled extensively recording these songs which
celebrate rites far less innocent than modern
Christian interpretations would suggest. (BBCl
5:00 A SHOW OF FORCE or the Murray Hill Mas-
sacre, with Richard C. Neulweiler and Bill Alton
leading their tattered bond.
6:00 AT THE DROP OF A STETSON Sidney Carter in
discussion with Michael Flanders and Donald
Swann, Dec. 17
6:15 VIENNA FESTIVAL XX Works by Stravinsky and
Milhaud. Details on Dec. 15
8:00 URBAN TRANSIT A discussion on New York's
transit problems. See Dec. 17
9:00 CONTEMPORARY BELGIAN PIANO MUSIC III
Joseph Jongen. Dec. 17
9:30 THE CONFEDERACY The Restoration comedy by
Jan Vanbrugh. See Dec. 10
ll:00THESCOPEOF JAZZ with Ira Gitler
12:00 SIGN OFF
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Cover drawing by Pavlof Giovanopolous from thr collection of Irena Urdnng.
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