Program Guide December 2021
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Broadcasting as a Community Service from
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Our fall fund drive is up to $53,560 towards a goal of $60,000 so we are very close
If you have already pledges, thank you! If you haven't had a chance yet to donate we really could use your support.
There are three ways to pledge:
- On line, securely at wwuh.org
- By mailing a check made out to WWUH to WWUH, Univ. of Hartford, W. Hartford, CT 06117.
- Calling 860-768-4008 during the drive.
Donations of any amount are welcome. These premiums are new for this fall:
1. WWUH Gildan heavyweight hooded zip sweatshirt, maroon, w/logo on front. $75 donation.
2. WWUH Beanie, maroon with white logo. $40 donation.
3. WWUH Plastic travel mug, black with logo in white. $25 donation.
In addition the black WWUH jacket is available in return for a $150 fulfilled pledge.
–John Ramsey
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In Central CT and Western MA, WWUH can be heard
at 91.3 on the FM dial.
Our programs are also carried on:
WDJW, 89.7, Somers, CT
smart device.
We also recommend that you download the free app TuneIn to your mobile device.
You can also access on demand any WWUH program which has aired in the last two weeks using our newly improved Program Archive.
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Real Alternative News
For over 50 years WWUH has aired a variety of unique community affairs programs.
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Here is our current schedule:
8 p.m.–9 p.m. Explorations
Wednesday: Noon–12:30 p.m. Got Science
12:30–1 p.m. UHart to Hartford
8:30 p.m.–9 p.m. Gay Spirit
Friday: Noon–12:30 p.m. Nutmeg Chatter
Sunday: 4:30 p.m.–5 p.m. Got Science
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Never Miss Your Favorite WWUH Programs Again!
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The WWUH Archive!
We are very excited to announce that our archive has been completely upgraded so that it is usable on most if not all devices. The archive allows you to listen to any WWUH program aired in the last two weeks on-demand using the "Program Archive" link on our home page.
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Do you have an idea for a radio program?
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If you have an idea for a radio program and are available to volunteer late at night, please let us know.
We may have some midnight and/or 3am slots available later this year. Email station manager John Ramsey to find out more about this unique and exciting opportunity for the right person.
Qualified candidates will have access to the full WWUH programmer orientation program so no experience is necessary. He/she will also need to attend the monthly WWUH staff meetings (held on Tuesday or Sunday evenings) and do behind the scenes volunteer work from time to time. This is a volunteer position.
After completing this process, we will review the candidate's assets and accomplishments and they will be considered for any open slots in our schedule.
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The WWUH Scholarship Fund
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In 2003 WWUH alums Steve Berian, Charles Horwitz and Clark Smidt helped create the WWUH Scholarship Fund to provide an annual grant to a UH student who is either on the station's volunteer Executive Committee or who is in a similar leadership position at the station. The grant amount each year will be one half of the revenue of the preceding year.
To make a tax deductible donation
either send a check to:
WWUH Scholarship Fund
c/o John Ramsey
Univ. of Hartford
200 Bloomfield Ave.
W. Hartford, CT 06117
Or call John at 860.768.4703 to arrange for a one-time
or on-going donation via charge card.
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CT Blues Society
Founded in 1993, the Connecticut Blues Society is a non-profit organization dedicated to the promotion and preservation of Blues music in our state. CTBS is an affiliated member of The Blues Foundation, a worldwide network of 185 affiliates with an international membership in 12 countries.
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Hartford Jazz Society
The longest continuously operating jazz society in the country
Founded in 1960, this all-volunteer organization produces jazz concerts featuring internationally acclaimed artists as well as up and coming jazz musicians. Our mission is to cultivate a wider audience of jazz enthusiasts by offering concerts, workshops and educational programs to the Greater Hartford region. The area’s most complete and up-to-date calendar of Jazz concerts and events.
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Boomer's Paradise
Monday's 1-4 PM with your host, The Turtle Man
The calendar turns to the final month of 2021, a very memorable year in many ways. Let's put a bright bow on the year and spend the month enjoying some themes.
We wrap up our look back at albums released 50 years ago in 1972 with what I couldn't finish for November and the month of December. We'll also, take a peek once again at the career of Steve Winwood.
Since we've entered into the cold months it seems fitting to listen to songs whose theme is fire, ice, water and earth.
Being the holidays where dreaming for presents or a White Christmas is on some people's mind, we'll cover songs with a dream theme.
Mid month will be a bacchanalia of music of varying sounds and styles and we'll end the month where musical riffs rule the airwaves. Happy holidays.
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WWUH Classical Programming – December 2021
Sunday Afternoon at the Opera… Sundays 1:00 – 4:30 pm
Evening Classics… Weekdays 4:00 to 7:00/ 8:00 pm
Drake’s Village Brass Band… Mondays 7:00-8:00 pm
(Opera Highlights Below)
Wednesday 1st
Marin Marais: Pieces en trio: Suite No. 2 in G minor; Paul Hindemith: Quartet for Clarinet, Violin, Cello, and Piano; Johann Sebastian Bach: Cantata for Advent 1: "Nun komm der Heiden Heiland", BWV 61; Georg Philipp Telemann: Arias from cantatas for Advent 1; Ivor Gurney: Selected Songs; Robert Schumann: Symphony No. 3 in E-Flat Major, Op. 97, "Rhenish"; Anton Reicha: L'art de varier, Op. 57
Thursday 2d
New Releases – A sampling of recent acquisitions in the WWUH Library
Friday 3d
George Gershwin's Concerto in F; Charlie Byrd’s classical side
Sunday 5th
Schuller: The Fisherman and His Wife; Holst: The Cloud Messenger
Monday 6th
In Memoriam Bernard Haitink conducting, Bruckner: Symphony #1 and Shostakovich: Symphony #9; Stravinsky: Symphony in E Flat
Drake’s Village Brass Band - Robert Simpson Music for Brass Band – Desford Colliery Band
Tuesday 7th
Mozart: Clarinet Concerto; Goetz: Piano Concerto No. 1; Rachmanbinoff: Symphony No. 1; Barber: Medea
Wednesday 8th
Chausson: Symphony in B♭, Op. 20; Grieg: String Quartet in g, Op. 27; Smetana: String Quartet in e, No. 1, 'From My Life'; Sibelius: Violin Concerto in d, Op. 47
Thursday 9th
Waldteufel: Espana, The Skaters, Estudiantina; Lindpaintner: Bassoon Concerto in F Major, Op. 44; Sirmen: String Quartet No. 2 in B; Turina: Piano Trio No. 1 in D, Op. 35; Suppe: The Beautiful Galatea Overture, Leichte Kavallerie Overture.
Friday 10th
Jascha Heifetz writes and plays; Music of Morton Gould
Sunday 12th
Wuorinen: Haroun and The Sea of Stories
Monday 13th
Arnold: Symphony #5; Rorem: Sunday Music; Piazzolla: Four Tango Sensations
Drake’s Village Brass Band
John Rutter: Anthems, Hymns and Gloria for Brass Band with the Black Dyke Band
Tuesday 14th
Roussel: Piano Concerto ; Bizet: Chants du Rhin; Rontgen: Symphony No. 15 in f sharp minor; Parfenov: Orchestral Suite
Wednesday 15th
Dvořák: Miniatures for Two Violins and Viola, Op. 75a; Zemlinsky: Symphony in B♭; Danzi: Wind Quintet in F, Op. 68, #2; Klughardt: Concerto in a for Cello & Orchestra, Op. 59
Thursday 16th
Holmès: Overture for a Comedy; Shchedrin: Concerto for Orchestra No. 1 ‘Naughty Limericks’; Boieldieu: La dame blanche Overture; Hill: As Night Falls; Sviridov: The Snowstorm; Beethoven: Symphony No. 9; Kodaly: Hary Janos Suite; Telemann: Concerto for Violin, Cello and Trumpet in D, TWV 53:D5, Concerto for Recorder and Viola da Gamba in a, TWV 52:a1.
Friday 17th
Borge meets PDQ
Thursday 18th
Loeillet: Recorder Sonata in a, Op. 3, No. 4; Fasch: Concerto in E for Trumpet, Oboe d'amore and Violin; Prince Louis Ferdinand Christian of Prussia: Octet; Lyapunov: Rhapsody on Ukrainian Themes, Op. 28; Weber: Clarinet Concerto #1 in f Op. 73, Invitation to the Dance; Paderewski: Polish Fantasy; Suppe: The Beautiful Galatea Overture, Light Cavalry Overture
Sunday 19th
Paisiello: Le Gore Generose
Monday 20th
Dupré: Symphonie-Passion, Op. 23; A Carnegie Hall Christmas Concert – André Previn et al.;
Drake’s Village Brass Band
Holiday Fanfare – United States Coast Guard Band
Tuesday 21st
Music in anticipation of Christmas
Wednesday 22d
Shostakovich: Piano Trio #2 in e, Op. 67; Stravinsky: Symphony of Psalms; Schubert: String Quintet in C, D. 956
Thursday 23d
Boismortier: Sonata in D Op. 91/1; Ropartz: Prelude, Marine and Chansons. Music for the Season.
Friday 24th
Music of Libby Larson
Sunday 26th
Shakespeare: The Winter’s Tale
Monday 27th
Monday Night at the Movies- Rózsa Conducts Rózsa
Herrmann Conducts Great British Film Music.
Selections from “It’s a Wonderful Life”
Drake’s Village Brass Band
The Antiphonal Music of Gabrieli – The Philadelphia, Cleveland and Chicago Brass Ensemble
Tuesday 28th
Wolf: Symphony in C major; Bartok: Sonata for 2 Pianos & Percussion; Brahms: Symphony NO. 4; Schoenberg_ Pelleas und Melisande (suite)
Wednesday 29th
Classical music for the Christmas season
Thursday 30th
Messager: Les Deux Pigeons Act 2; Foerster: Violin Concerto No. 1; Croft: Overture in D, O God Our Help in Ages Past; Kraft: Cello Concerto #1, Op. 4; Glière: The Red Poppy Act 1; Kabalevsky: Piano Sonata No. 3 in F, Op. 46; Wranitzky: Symphony in D, Op. 36.
Friday 31th
Happy New Year – music new to our library in 2021
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Sunday Opera Highlights
- SUNDAY AFTERNOON AT THE OPERA
- your "lyric theater" program
- with Keith Brown
- programming for the month of December,2021
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SUNDAY DECEMBER 5TH Schuller, The Fisherman and His Wife, Holst, The Cloud Messenger The Christmas holiday season, it's often said, is a magical time meant for the delight of the children. It's the time of year to listen to opera written with the age group in mind. There is indeed a whole genre of such lyric theater music. One excellent specimen is Gunther Schuller's The Fisherman and His Wife (1970)., commissioned by the Junior League of Boston to celebrate its sixtieth anniversary. They approached Professor Schuller of Boston's New England Conservatory to write the music. Literary great John Updike was engaged to update the 19th century Brothers Grimm fairytale for modern staging. The Opera Company of Boston premiered it. It was televised on Boston's WBZ. The Boston Modern Opera Project revived the opera in 2015 in celebration of Schuller's 90th birthday, but he did not live quite long enough to witness the new production. Gil Rose conducts BMOP and Odyssey Opera of Boston. Released in 2020 on CD through the proprietary BMOP Sound label.
- Gunther Schuller's The Fisherman and His Wife is an operatic parable about greed. Since it runs for merely an hour, there's time remaining for a choral setting by Gustav Holst of a love story drawn from ancient Sanskrit epic poetry. Holst completed composing The Cloud Messenger in 1910 just before he started work on his famous orchestral suite The Planets. Holst prepared his own English language text. He tweaked the old story somewhat for his own modern musical purposes. He conceived a gigantic oratorio-style opus, which was a disappointment at its first performance, so it was put aside: that goes to explain why The Planets became Holst's best known work, and why nobody has ever even heard of its predecessor. There's a scaled-down arrangement of The Cloud Messenger for chamber orchestra and voices, recorded in 2019 with the Choir of King's College, London and the instrumentalists of the Strand Ensemble, conducted by Joseph Fort, who is also the arranger. It was released last year through the Scottish Delphian record label.
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SUNDAY DECEMBER 12TH Wuorinen, Haroun and the Sea of Stories Following his death in 2020 American composer Charles Wuorinen (b. 1938) left us at least 270 compositions, among them two operas: Brokeback Mountain (2014), after the same short story by Anne Proulx that inspired the 2004 movie by that name, and the fanciful, fairytale-like Haroun and the Sea of Stories, based on the book by Salman Rushdie. Haroun was premiered, also in 2004, by the New York City Opera, but had to wait until 2019 for its world premiere recording by the Boston Modern Orchestra Project and Chorus, Gil Rose conducting. On the surface of it, Haroun seems like a children's opera, pure and simple, but underneath all the lighthearted highjinks there is a parable about censorship- something Rushdie knew about all too well as a writer from personal experience. Of the BMOP Sound recording, Fanfare magazine's reviewer Andrew Desiderio wrote, "The music's rich palette does justice to the magic of Rushdie's story, and meshes with a libretto [by James Fenton] filled with ingenious wordplay and tongue-in-cheek allusions that Lewis Carroll would have been proud of. It's a joy to hear the playful side of Wuorinen... The performers are not only impeccable in diction and musicality, they sound like they're having an absolute blast embodying the opera's over-the-top characters and haunted poignancy. The BMOP romps along with them... a wonderful recording of a delightful opera." (Fanfare, Sept/Oct, 2021 issue). The recording was kindly donated for broadcast by my colleague, WWUH classics deejay Larry Bilansky.
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SUNDAY DECEMBER 19TH Paisiello, Le Gare Generose The Wuorinen opera was a lot of fun for the kiddos last Sunday. Now for an opera that's amusing for adults. At Christmastime adults are supposed to be as generous in gift giving as Santa Claus. With that cliche in mind, listen to a comic opera called in Italian Le Gare Generose, which translates something like "The Rivals in Generosity" by Giovanni Paisiello (1740-1816). Paisiello composed some eighty operas in his long career- way more than his younger contemporary Mozart. Most of Paisiello's operas fall within the genre of the Italian opera buffa, and they sound very much like the famous comic works of Mozart. Paisiello even wrote a "Barber of Seville" opera, first produced in 1782, that was enormously popular until Rossini's "Barber" came along in 1816. Le Gare Generose, first staged in Naples in 1786, was also very popular right up to the beginning of the 19th century, and was produced all over Europe. Mozart himself saw a production of it in Prague in 1787. "The Rivals in Generosity" is a middle class comedy, with no characters of noble rank, and is set not somewhere in Europe, but in America- Boston, to be exact. The story centers upon a not-so-pious Quaker gentleman's household and his servants. There are serious elements in this lyric comedy, like slavery, which-remember- was still quite legal back then in America. This work therefore borders on the genre of opera semiseria.Le Gare Generose was recorded live in performance in 2018 at Taranto, with Giovanni di Stafano directing the Giovanni Paisiello Festival Orchestra and a cast of six singers. This was the first staging of the opera in modern times for the sixteenth annual Paisiello Festival. The Italian Bongiovanni label released the presumed world premiere recording on two compact discs in 2019. Over the years I have broadcast several of Paisiello's recorded works, especially his "Barber," and a couple of his serious or semi-serious operas, too.
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SUNDAY DECEMBER 26TH Shakespeare, The Winter's Tale Christmas has come and gone, and with the passage of the Winter solstice on the 21st we embark upon the Winter season in earnest. So put another log on the fire, draw closer to the hearth with its flickering light, and listen to The Winter's Tale by William Shakespeare, recorded complete and uncut in the text of The New Shakespeare, edited by the renowned Shakespeare scholar John Dover Wilson. The Winter's Tale (1611) is one of the Bard's late tragicomedies. The paranoia of King Leontes sets off a chain of events, the results of which stretch out over sixteen years. As the Bard works it out on stage, what was sown in sorrow and discord is eventually reaped in joy and reconciliation. The Argo Records complete series of Shakespeare's plays and poems on stereo LP vinyl discs, recorded in studio between 1957 and 1964, has long been out of print. British Decca launched this monumental recording project to mark the 400th anniversary of Shakespeare's birth. During that same period Decca was also recording Wagner's Ring cycle complete for the first time in stereo sound. The Decca Solti Ring cycle cycle has subsequently gone from vinyl disc to CD reissue. In 2016, to commemorate the 400th anniversary of the Bard's death, Decca finally reissued the entire Argo Shakespeare project on silver disc in a deluxe 100 CD boxed set. I have broadcast The Winter's Tale on LP on two previous Sundays in January of 1993 and 2005. Hear it again today as presented in the silver disc reissue. George Rylands directs the voices of the Marlowe Dramatic Society and Professional Players. The voice of Britain's veteran Shakespearean actor Ian McKellen is heard at the start of his career in two small roles.
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Connecticut Valley Symphony Orchestra
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The Connecticut Valley Symphony Orchestra is a non-profit Community Orchestra. They present four concerts each season in the Greater Hartford area, performing works from all periods in a wide range of musical styles. The members of Hartford’s only community orchestra are serious amateurs who come from a broad spectrum of occupations
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The West Hartford Symphony Orchestra
In collaboration with the WWUH Classical Programming we are pleased to partner with the West Hartford Symphony Orchestra to present their announcements and schedule to enhance our commitment to being part of the Greater Hartford Community.
Richard Chiarappa, Music Director 860.521.4362
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The Musical Club of Hartford
The Musical Club of Hartford is a non-profit organization founded in 1891. Membership is open to performers or to those who simply enjoy classical music, providing a network for musicians from the Greater Hartford area. Club events take place normally on selected Thursday mornings at 10:00 a.m, Fall through Spring. The usual location is the sanctuary at Westminster Presbyterian Church, 2080 Boulevard, West Hartford, CT (between Ridgewood and Mountain Avenues). Information on time and location is given at the bottom of each event description.
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Connecticut Lyric Opera
Connecticut Lyric Opera is the state’s leading opera company, performing to thousands in Hartford, Middletown, New Britain, and New London. We have earned the reputation as an innovative company that is renowned for our world-class singers, phenomenal concert-quality orchestra and programming choices that go beyond the well-loved standards of the repertoire to include lesser-performed yet equally compelling works.
https://ctlyricopera.org/
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Connecticut Virtuosi Chamber Orchestra
The Connecticut Virtuosi Chamber Orchestra is the state’s premier professional chamber orchestra dedicated to presenting both traditional and contemporary classical chamber works to the public. The Orchestra, led by Founder and Artistic Director Adrian Sylveen, continues to grow in size and repertoire, presenting approximately 35 times a year in many major performing arts centers throughout Connecticut and New York.
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The Hartford Choral
The Hartford Choralehttp://www.hartfordchorale.org/The Hartford Chorale is a volunteer not-for-profit organization that presents, on a symphonic scale, masterpieces of great choral art throughout southern New England and beyond, serving as the primary symphonic chorus for the Greater Hartford community. Through its concerts and collaborations with the Hartford Symphony Orchestra and other organizations, the Hartford Chorale engages the widest possible audiences with exceptional performances of a broad range of choral literature, providing talented singers with the opportunity to study and perform at a professional level.
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Manchester Symphony Orchestra and Chorale
Bringing Music to our Community for 60 Years! The Manchester Symphony Orchestra and Chorale is a nonprofit volunteer organization that brings quality orchestral and choral music to the community, provides performance opportunities for its members, and provides education and performance opportunities for young musicians in partnership with Manchester schools and other Connecticut schools and colleges.
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Beth El Temple Music & Art
WHERE ELSE COULD MUSIC BE THIS HEAVENLY? Music at Beth El Temple in West Hartford is under the direction of The Beth El Music & Arts Committee (BEMA). With the leadership of Cantor Joseph Ness, it educates and entertains the community through music. The BEMA committee helps conceive and produce musical performances of all genres, while supporting the commemoration of Jewish celebrations and prayer services.
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Voce
Founded in 2006 by Mark Singleton, Artistic Director, and Tom Cooke, President, Voce has grown to become New England’s premier chamber choral ensemble. With a mission to Serve Harmony, Voce is best known for its unique sound; for bringing new works to a wide range of audiences; and for collaborating with middle school, high school and collegiate ensembles to instill the values of living and singing in harmony, further developing the next generation of choral artists.
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The New Britain Symphony Orchestra
The 70+ year old New Britain Symphony Orchestra is a professional orchestra which presents several concerts each season in the Greater New Britain area, performing works from all periods in a wide range of musical styles. In addition to its full orchestra concerts under the direction of Music Director and Conductor, Toshiyuki Shimada, including a free concert for children, members of the orchestra perform in various free chamber music concerts during the concert season.
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Celebrating 53 Years of Public Alternative Radio
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Our programming can also be heard on:
WDJW - Somers, 89.7 Mhz
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