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September 1963 KPFA FolioPage 10: Image | Text Nessel on literary and subliterary matters. 9:00 OPEN HOUR. Reserved for new programs in the arts, theater, or politics. 10:00 COLLEGE THEATER: IS IT WORTH IT? Richard Schechner, editor of the Tulane Drama Review, is interviewed by R. G. Davis. 10:30 JAZZ ARCHIVES. Philip F. Elwood (OCT. 2) 11:00 REPORT FROM LONDON. Harry Collins—historian, lecturer, and Parliamentary Labor candidate—with another report. (WBAI) 11:30 FOLK SONGS SUNG BY WILFRED BROWN. More traditional songs from various countries, accompanied by guitarist John Williams. (L'Oiseau Lyre OL 50203) WEDNESDAY, October 27:00 SCANDANAVIAN COMPOSERS
9:00 COMMENTARY. Roger Kent (Oct. 1) 9:15 THE FIDDLER AND THE DEAN. An imaginary conversation between Jonathan Swift and George Handel. (BBC) (Sept. 22) 9:45 ORCHESTRAL MUSIC OF RAMEAU. From the ballets and operas, performed by the chamber orchestra of the Concerts Lamoreux conducted by Louis de Froment. (Sep. 24) 10:30 BERLIN REVISITED. Dr. Fred Warner Neal, professor of government and international affairs at Claremont Graduate School. (KPFK) (Sept. 9) 11:30 AN ALFRED DELLER RECITAL. Music of Buxtehude and lutenist songs sung by the countertenor Deller with Desmond Dupre, viola do gamba and lute, violinists Eil Goren and Leonard Friedman, organist Denis Vaughan and cellist Anna Shuttleworth. (L'Oiseau Lyre 0L 50102) 12:15 WEDNESDAY NOON CONCERT. Milton Saier, Cellist, and Jeanne Saier, pianist, perform the Brahms Sonata in F major and the Beethoven Sonata in G minor, in a UC Berkeley noon concert broadcast live. 1:00 THE SHAPE OF MUSIC-V. The series by Robert Erickson continues. (Archives) 1:30 THE PRESERVATION OF INDIVIDUAL LIBERTIES. Harry S. Ashmore is the speaker in one of six talks in the series "Prospects for Democracy" sponsored by the Center for the Study of Democratic Institutions in Santa Barbara. 2:30 JAZZ ARCHIVES. Philip F. Elwood (Oct. 1) 3:00 111TH STREET. Arnold Federbush tells Mike Tigar about a semidocumentary film he produced in a highdelinquency area of Manhattan. (KPFK) 4:15 PROGRAMS FOR YOUNG PEOPLE
5:30 CHAMBER SERIES
6:30 KPFA NEWS 7:00 COMMENTARY. Herbert Hanley (OCT. 3) 7:15 PREVIEW. Claire lsaacs talks about coming attractions in the arts, theater, and music. (OCT. 3) 7:30 SONGS FOR COURTIERS AND CAVALIERS-II. Songs by Henry Lawes of the 17th century, sung by contralto Helen Watts accompanied by Thurstan Dart. (L'Oiseau Lyre 0L 50128) 8:00 THEORY OF LITERATURE. Rene Wellek, critic and Sterling Professor of Comparative Literature at Yale, delivers the main address at the July Belmont Conference on Literature. 8:30 OPERA REVIEW. The latest performances by the San Francisco Opera company under scrutiny by diverse reviewers. 9:00 CLARA HASKIL PLAYS CHOPIN. From the final recording made by Clara Haskil before her death in 1960, the Chopin Concerto No. 2 in F minor, Opus 21. The Orchestre des Concerts Lamoreux is conducted by Igor Markevich. (Philips PHM 500034) 9:35 THE BELL AND THE LIGHT. Aaron Kramer reads a group of poems and other selections from his published work. 10:00 GOLDEN VOICES. Anthony Boucher again presents Conchita Supervia, this time in the coloratura contralto roles of the Rossini operas II barbiere di Siviglia, La Cenerentola, and L'ltaliana in Algeri. (OCT. 4) 10:30 THE CULTURAL ARTS IN CALIFORNIA-VI: Genesis of the Cultural Climate in California, discussed by Carey McWilliams, editor of The Nation. (KPFK) 11:15 U. C. NOON CONCERT, rebroadcast from earlier today. | |
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