· '

, ~\ ~\ " ' , , ~~\~ 4(,~~"O \ ~ ~ ~O'\ ' ' ~Q , The KRAB proaram guide is sent each month to subscribers, who have donated $25 (Regular) or $15 (Student, Reti red, Prisoner, ~lilitary or Poor) toward defraying our operating ex­ penses. Contributions of any size are appre- ciated, and all are tax-deductible. . . ~Ie are in need of sOlreone to take respons1b1- iity for organizing (and executing) a fu~d­ raising project (concert, perforrrance, f11M showi ng, etc). I f you I ve got the ti Ire and are willing, call the station. Also, ~Ie can always use people with -3rd-Class Radiotele­ phone licenses (easy to get) and so"*: exper­ ience with languages other than Engl1sh, for TO OUR SUBSCRIBERS IN CANADA: board- operati on and announcing. Call the sta­ tion, at 325-5110 . This mnth, again, we are investing a little KRAB broadcasts on a frequency of 107.7 MHZ extra and rrailing the ~uide to you by. first . a t a power of 45,000 watts, reachin!) mos t 0: class rrail. As you probably have not1ced, th1S western Hash i ngton, and part of southern Br1- means you get it on time (assuming the efficiency tish Colunbia. Our address is 1406 Harvard, of the postal system). To continue this ser- vice as we would like, will require an extra Seattle, \~ ashington 98122, and phone 206-325- 5110. $3.00/year from you. In other words, effe~tiye this month (as of September 1), the subscr1pt1on rates for Canadians will be $28.00/year, Regular, $18.00/year, Other And please include your Canadian postal code, if you have one.

----THE STAFF: PHIL ANDRUS - Environmental Education Coordinator TOt1 ECKELS - Chief En~ineer JEFF FOLLETTE - 11us i c Di rector LEILA GORBHAN - PrograM Dfrector GREG PALl1ER - Resident Humanist LEE READ - Production Assistant C.H. REINSCH - Station 'lanaqer STEPHEN SHORT - Librari~n ROBERT HEPPNER - Assistant Manaqer STU HITMER - Early , Graphics

... ~ , ~ MelloW' ;H-u'~VI tv. ~.,~"'" ~1\P!~Wl~ DiULit(/e Monday 1 Tuesday 2 6: 30 EARLY MUSIC. Stu Hitrrer. c. 8 AM: Program notes. 6:30' EARLY MUSIC. Stu Uitrrer. c; 9 Ar1: "Le Mort d'Arthur," Part II. c. 8 M1: ProClram Notes Launcelot's escape; the rescue of Guene­ c. 9 At1: Sir· Thomas t1alory's "Le Mort ver; King Arthur takes arms against Laun­ d'Arthur," Part 1. The healing of Sir celoto Urre; the plot against Launcelot and Guenever. 10:00 EARTH t1USIC 10:00 COUNTRY FIDDLING. Frank Ferrel. 11:55 PROGRAM NOTES

11: 55 PROGRAM NOTES 12:00 ~IRITING A HISTORY OF SEATTLE, Part IX. Iii th Roger Sa le. 12:00 OPTIONS: SHAKESPEARE, NH!TON AND REETHO­ VEN, OR PATTERNS OF CREATIVITY. During 12: 30 SHAKESPEARE AND DANCE. Dances from this talk Subramanyan Chandrasekhar, Pro­ Shakespeare's tirre and Shakespeare's sonqs fessQl" of AstronomY and Astrophysics at from another time (18th century). Dances: the University of Chicago, compares and The Boyd Neel Orchestra , : English contrasts the creati ve rrethods used by Chamber Orchestra with Apdl Cantelo, the three (leni uses. (NPR) 1:30 THE RETICENT PARTITA. Rachel-Diane Norton. 1: 00 REVENGE OF THE KI LLER CLAt1. \lith John Gerke. 3:00 INTERVIEH IHTH Atl EX-CON. Discussion of parole techniques, conditions in various 2:00 CITY COUNCIL MEETItIG: LIVE. Hashin(;lton state prisons, the "queen" sys·­ tern ana homose.xuality, the problem of ex­ 4:00 TO BE ANNOUNCED cessive bail and advice on I'ihat to do if you're in jail. An anonymously produced 5:00 VINTAGE ROCK. Gregg Ilhitcomb spins the tape from the KRAB archi ves. oldies. 4:00 SHEET AND LOI!DOHN. t,lusic from the 20's 6:00 JEAN SHEPHERD from WOR in NYC. and 30's with Jan Cole and Pat Tennant. 6:45 AFTER-DINNER STORIES FOR CHILDREN. tiith 5:00 BRIAN FENN£LLY: EVANESCENCES (1969). Zoe and Davi d and thei r daddy, Don Finkel. ~lembers of Da Capo Chamber Players 11ith e lectroni c tape. lAIN HAtH LTON: VOYAGE 6: 55 PROGRAt1 NOTES for French Horn and Chamber Orchestra (1970). Barry Tuckovell, horn; London 9infonietta 7:00 19TH CENTURY At1ERICAN BALLROOt" t1USIC. conducted by David Atherton. RORERT ER­ A collection of dances and intermission ICKSON: OCEANS. Oriainally conceived music from the "qood 01' days." Inclu­ when the compose r vias ' s itti n gin a storm ' ding: Money ~lusk Reel, t·1asonic I·larch and drain in La Jolla, California. Robert the Ch armi n g Ha ltz • The Smith s on ian So­ Erickson, percussion; Jack Logan, trum- . cia 1 Orches tra and Quadri lle di rec­ pe.t. ted by Jarres I'leaver. 6:00 TURKISH ~USIC. Bnol Bilkur. 7:30 COt~~1ENTARY: GOVERmlENT VS. RESPONSIBI­ LITY, by rrembers of the John Birch Society. 6:55 PROGRA~1 NOTES Produced by ~lark Hami lton. 7:00 NORTHI'1EST INDIAN NEilS , Presented by In­ 8:00 OLD TH1E MUSIC. Phil Hilliams. dians Into Communication.

9:aO c'HINESE RADIO. Produced in Cantonese by 7:30 EAST COAST BLUES (1926-1935). The country Euoene La i and the Chi nese t1edi a Commit­ raotirre auitarists worked concomitantly tee. with the"bluesmen of the 1920's . Like thei r blues-oriented counterparts of the 10:00 IMPERIAL RAND CONCERT: Nineteenth Cen­ Mississippi Delta, the East Coast "rag" tury l'Ialtzes and ~larches. The martial often mastered not only their tunes include the Russian favorite "A Slav own genre but a 1s 0 dre~1 hea vi ly from the Woman's Farevlell" by Agapin, and "Triumph blues tradition, Some of the musicians ' of the Vi ctors" vlhose' compose r is unknown. heard are Blind Blake, Carl Martin, Tat­ The lighter tunes include "An Orchid" by ter and Gay, Bayless Rose, and Chicken the Russian balalaika virtuoso Vasily An­ Hilson and Skeeter Hinton. dreyev. In this concert of 19th century works the U.{S.S.R. Defense Hinistry Band 8:00 BALTIC ' S BOP STOP. Guitarist Jim Hall's recrea tes one of the gl ori ous eras of work is explored by Captain Baltic. band music. 9:30 ROY ROGERS AND HIS STUFFED HORSE. Roy 10:45 AN OPEN LETTER TO YEVGENY YEVTUSHENKO. chats about old times in music, radio and A letter by Frederick Feied, writer and TV, his museum, how he had Trigger stuffed, teacher, to Yevtushenko concerning John and more. \romtu The sie~ of Joyous Guard; the parley composition. ("Liquid" -- the Daily ~ i' ) at Carllsle; Si r Launcelot surrenders Hith the KRAB Aqt.a-Infinity Arkestra, In­ the Queen. c1uding: Jeff Follette, ethereal space conduit; Leila Gorbman, Pepsi can: Lee 10:00 A taped re-broadcast from the HOUSE OF Read, orange juice bottle and shovel; REFUGE CHURCH OF GOD PENTACOSTAL, with Chuck Reinsch, tape, jar, and vacuum clean­ its choir, piano, organ, trunpet, drums, er hose; Johnny l-Jalker, heating grate: tanbourine, and a sermon by the Bishop Stu I~i trrer, condui t and soprano buckets; Robert J. Causey , Greg Palmer, bass buckets; Shanti, sty­ rofoam cup; Bob Heppner, sheet rretal and 11 :55 PROGRAtl NOTES acoustic bead curtain. Produced by Tom Ecke 1s, with the assi stance of Gra vity. 12:00 OPTIONS: HOMEN. IN tIOVIES. Part I: Film critic ~lollv Haskell talks about the treat­ 10:45 UlmER THE COUNTER rrent of worren in modern films. Part II: Joan ~~iller, author of Homen and Thei r 11:00 RIGHT HERE LEFT HEAR. P, M, ears with Jay sexualit~ in the New Film talks about Stickler and various. \~omen an fl 1m with !~UHY I s El a i ne Pros tak. (NPR) 1: 00 SPONTANEO RADEO , Leila Gorbman.

1: 30 LES PAUL AND NAT 'KING' COLL The ~Iork of two musicians more frequently associated with pop recording, who were in fact ex­ Thursday 4 trerrely innovative -- Paul in pioneering multiple-track recording, and Cole as one of the most ~ifted and imaninative jazz pianists of the 40's and 50's, playin~ 6: 30 EARLY MUSIC. Stu Hitrrer . with his trio and also with musicians such c. 8 AM: Program notes. as Les ter Young. c. 9 AM: "Le Hort d'Arthur," Part IV. The treason of Si r r~ordred: ' Launcelot 2:45 THREE STffiIES BY H.P , LOVECRAFL "Reyond is banished and fights Gawaine: Arthur's the Hall of Sleep"; "From Beyond"; and Dream • . "Ex Oblivione , " Performed by the Bread- 1i ne Thea ter. 10:00 EARTH MUSIC. Robert Garfias, from last ni ght. 4:00 THE UNBAROQUEN CIRCLE. , ~Iith Galen Johnson. ' 11 : 55 PROGRAM ~JOTES 6:00 HANS 1·IERNER HENZE: THE TEDIOUS HAY TO THE 12:00 THE HOt~EN'S SURVIVAL KIT . Featuring the PLACE OF tlATASCHA UNGEHEUER. A modem mus i c of BETTY KAPLOHITZ, a blues singer mora 1ity pl ay concemi ng the sea rch for from San Francisco, ~/ho perforrred at the the "Revolution" by the new leftist bour­ Coffee Coven in July, Produced by the qeois. Natascha Ungeheuer is the siren Lesbi an Femi ni s t Radi 0 Co llecti ve . of the false Utopia of the revolution. Scored for, among other things, ' a classical 1 :00 BOB JAHES TRIO: EXPLOSIONS. Recorded quintet, a jazz quartet, and the wreckage in New York in 1965 with Bob James, piano; of an automobile. Barre Phil 1 i ps, bass; and Robert Poza r, percussi on. Hi th electroni c musi c com­ 6:55 PROGRAM NOTES posers Robert Ashley and Gordon ~,Iumma. 2-00 GOVERNMENT INSPECTED, A repeat of last 7:00 GOVERNMENT INSPECTED: ANIMAL CONTROL. night's 7 PM program. To sorre the s tray and unl'/anted ani- ma1s roamin~ about the community are a 3:00 GEORGE PHILIPP TELEMANN: TIlE DAY OF JUDG­ minor irritation, but thousands of MENT. "A Poem for Singing in Four Parts." dollars are spent trying to fight what Text by Christian ~/ilhelm Alers. Cora sorre legislators and animal experts have Canne-I~ijer, alto; Kurt Equiluz, tenor; called an epidemic. This live panel l1ax Von Egmond, bass; and Gertraud Land­ discussion will concern What can and wehr-Herrmann, soprano. I'lith the 11onte­ should be done about animal control in verdi Choir and Concentus Musicus. the community, as well as the highly controversial selling of stra'y animals 4:30 THE HORLD OF CHASSIDUS. Music and stories for research purposes. of the Chassidic Je~/s, with Rabbi Samuels. Participants include QUILLEN McHARG, Chairman of the Seattle Animal Control 5:00 REPORT TO THE LISTENER. Chuck Reinsch, Citizens Advisory Council; TONY BOSSART, station manager, and Leila Gorbman, pro­ the head of Animal Control in Seattle; gram di rector, report on stati on opera ti ons VIRGINIA KNAUSE. of PAHS: and DR. STAN­ and programming plans. LEY COE, Seattle veterinarian. Produced by Kathy Cain, and made possible in part 5: 15 OPEN by a ~rant from the ~JashinQton Commission for the Humanities. 5: 30 ENVIRONI~ENTAL NEI~S with Phil Andrus and 4:00 THE FOLK SHOt'J, featuring J. 1'1. ~1cClure Bob Burk. ("that boy sure can yodel"). \

10:00 THE ADULTEROUS H0I1AN, by Albert Camus. Saturday 6 Jan Dawson reads this short story by Ca­ mus, about a woman's inner feelinas while travelling with her husband through Arabian 8:00 SATURDAY MORNING rlUSIC. Jazz with Jeff lands. Follette. 11:00 USA FOR BEGINNERS with David Johnson. 12:00 EARTH ~lUSIC . Ethnic melodies with tlike R & B, jazz. Coolen. 2:30 BABY BISCUIT BLUES 4:00 MEN AS EMOTIONAL CRIPPLES. Several men d~scuss ~he difriculty of getting in touch wlth thelr feellngs and how this affects Friday their relationships to women and men. 5 Produced by Phil K,lei n. 5:00 HILLIMl BOLCOM: FRESCOES. The piece it­ 6:30 EARLY MUSIC. Stu Hitmer. self as well as an examination of its c. 8 AH: Program notes. genesis. Bruce ~1ather, piano and harmo­ c. 9 AM: "Le ~10rt d'Arthur, " Part V. nium; Pierrette La Page, piano and harp- The passing of Arthur; the last meeting s i chord. . of Launcelot and Guenever; the burial of Launcelot. 6:00 FIU1S. Dick Jameson and Kathleen ~1urphy.

10:00 EARTH ~'USIC. Natasha Bushnell. 6 :30 L. VAN BEETHOVEN: TRIPLE CONCERTO IN C, 11:55 PRgfRAM NOTES OP.56. "During Beethoven's lifetime the Triple Concerto did not go down at all 12:00 SPECTRUM: WO~lEN'S LIBERATION. \~ith Car­ well with concert audiences." -- Otto los Hagen; repeated from last night. Zickenheiner. Claudio Arrau, piano; Hen­ ruk Szeryng, violin; Janos Starker, cel- 1 :00 THE GREAT CONCERT OF CHARLES I~INGUS. ' 10; the New Philharmonia Orchestra con­ Organized b~ the O.R.T.F. at the Theatre ducted by Eliahu Inbal. BOCCHERINI: CEL­ des Champs Elys~es in April of 1964. With LO QUINTET, OP. 37 NO.7. Academy of St.­ Mingus, bass; Johnny Coles, trumpet; Martin-in-the-Fields. Eric Dolphy, alto. clarinet, flute; Clif­ ford Jordan, ·tenor; Jaki Byard, piano; 7:30 ARABIC MUSIC. Dawod Sweilem. and Danny Richmond, drums. 8:30 MOULDY FYGGE: LEE WILEY OF MY DREAMS. 3:30 NOT EVEN GOD IS RIPE ENOUGH: YORUBA STO­ Val Golding, with a romantic inflection RIES. "Every Trickster Will Be Fooled in his voice, presents the third of four Once." "Large Eyes Produce Many Tears." programs featuring 11s. Wiley's classic "The Pot tha t ,Boil s Ove r On ly Di rti es vocals. Itself. " Sunday 7

9:00 YESTERDAY'S SUNSHINE 11:55 KRAZY KAT. George Herriman's magical co­ mic strip is recreated for radio by Val Golding. Today's opening program incl udes some background material. 12:00 JAZZ FOR A SUNDAY AFTERNOON. Bob Gwynne. 4:00 CHUTZPA! Jewish music, humor, commentary. Hi th Chai m Rosemar.i n.

4: 30 ~URICIO KAGEL: 1898 . Inspi red by a pho­ tograph of an ensemble of Stroh-violins (a violin in which the body is replace~ by an aluminum disc with a trumpet bell Mon~ay 8 for the purposes of phonographic recor­ ding, c. 1910). Kagel had an entire set of these bizarre instruments built for 6:30 EARLY ~lUSIC. Stu Witmer. this recording. Also included are 22 c. 8 At,1: Program notes. followed by Tho­ schoolchildren (ages 1O~13) who Kagel rras Tallis and Hilliam Byrd: Cantiones enticed into joining in. Sacrae 1575, Part L The first book pub- 1i shed by Tall i s and Byrd after El i zabeth 5:15 IS THE WESTERN:N\lIR:J'I~~::NTAL TRME /,s:;o­ granted them a monopoly on the printing CIA TI ON AN ENVI RONt~ENTAL GROUP. O~ HP.A T? of music books and paper. - I~n interview wi th Chuck Keenan, the Exec­ utive Director of the ~Iestern Environmen­ 10 :00 COUNTRY FIDDLING. Frank Ferrel. ta~ Trade Association. I-lETA is a group ~lhlCh lobbies, generally, against envi r­ 11:55 PROGRAM NOTES onmenta 1 groups concerning envi ron men tal issues. 12:00 OPTIONS: THO PRIESTS. Part I: Bill Touhey 6:00 NE~1 CHINA. Produced by the U.S.-China interviews Father t1alcom Boyd, the Epis­ Friendship Association. copal priest whom the "Christian Science I~onitor" has called "the saint of action." 7:00 ~1E:: !-lOr~EN EVERYIJHERE. Local, na ti ona 1 Part II: Reverend Alison Cheek, a priest -and international feminist news and anal­ and a woman, is interviewed by Hendy Blair. ysis. Produced by the Lesbian Feminist (NPR) Radio Collective. 1 :00 DREAMS OF AN IDLE CRUSTACEAN. I-Ii th John 8:00 r~EN'S DIVORCE CO-OP. Several men dis­ Gerke. cuss how to get a di vorce without a la w­ yer and the importance of the support of 2:00 CITY COUNCIL 11EETING: LIVE. from the Mu­ other men during the divorce process . nicipal Building.

9:00 T~E ROBOTNOR HOURS. ROck, R & B, jazz, 4:00 TO BE ANNOUNCED Wl th Raymon d Se reb ri n • 5:00 VINTAGE ROCK. "This isn't camp ••• it's 11:00 SYNCOPATED ECSTASY. Roswell, with jazz good music!" claims Gregg Hhitcomb. until late. 6:00, JEAN SHEPHERD 6 :45 AFTER-DINNER STORIES FOR CHIL[REN . Zoe and David's dad reads them stories during those quiet moments after dinner. Your ' children are invited. Don Finkel reading. 6:55 PROGRAM NOTES

7: 30 Cor11~ENTARY

8:00 QUEEN BISCUIT TIME. Hith Clare Conrad. 9:00 CHINESE RADIO. Produced in Cantonese by Eugene Lai and the Chinese ~1edia Commit­ tee. 10:00 TINING NG PILIPINO. Filipino ethnic hour featuring traditional and contemporary , native music and news. Kuya Bebeng on the air to respond to problems. In Tag­ alog and Carabao English. 11 :00 SPAGHETTINI. Music of all over, conver­ sati ons therein. With Leila.

\ Tuesday 9

6:30 EARLY NUSIC •.Stu \~itmer. Wednesday 10 c. 8 AM: Cantiones Sacrae, Part II. 10:00 EARTH t1USIC 6:30 EARLY t1USIC. Stu Hitmer. 11:55 PROGRAM NOTES C. 8 At1: Cantiones Sacrae, Part III.

12:00 \~RITING A HISTORY OF SEATTLE, Part ~. Hith Roger Sale. ' 10:00 A taped re-broadcast from the HOUSE OF 12:30 LUKAS FOSS: BAROQUE VARIATIONS. Contain­ REFUGE CHURCH OF GOD PENTACOSTAL, with ing the "Phorion" ("stolen goods") on its choir, piano, organ, trumpet, drums, Bach's Prelude for solo violin. Buffalo tambourine, and a sermon by the Bishop Philharmonic Orchestra, ~onducted by the Robert J. Cause~. . 11:55 PROGRAM NOTES 1:00 THE CASE OF THE BLACK PAIR, by Sir Arthur Steven-Pfei ffer. A Shyrock Foames play, 12:00 OPTIONS: THE H/ENTIETH ANNIVERSARY OF produced by Norm Ahlquist. \~ritten and ROCK. By some reckonings, 1975 is the performed by Steven Carlson and r,1ichael 20th anni versary of the advent ·of rock Pfei ffer. (KRAR Archi ves). ' and roll. David Selvin reports. 1:30 THE RETICENT , PARTITA. Rachel-Diane Norton. 1 :00 BATTLE OF THE BANDS! John t1cLaughlin versus Paco de Lacia. 3:00 TURNTABLES. Tired of listeQing to radio programs? Try making one, a la KRAB. 3:00 THE GREAT SEA SERPENT. An inquiry into the animal's existence and possible na­ 4:30 FOLK DANCES AND SONGS OF YUGOSLAVIA. And tUre, as of 1974. From the BBC. discussion of various aspects of Yugoslav culture. I~ith Dragi Spasovski. 4:00 THE UNBAROQUEN CIRCLE. Classi.cal music with Galen Johnson . 5:30 RADIO UPTOHN provides a format of contin­ uing education and information around the 6:00 SCANDINAVIAN t1USIC. Carla \~ulfsberg. current issues and problems of the commun­ ity. 6:55 PROGRAM NOTES

6:00 THE CELESTIAL ART. 'Hords and music of 7:00 GOVERNMENT INSPECTED: THE UNEMPLOYED INDI­ Bharat. North Indian classical music and VIDUAL The first 'of two proqrams about un­ poetry \-lith Ellen Ziegler. employment in the Northwest: On this live pan~l discussion, the social and psycho~ 6 :55 PROGR~r·1 NOTES loglcal problems of the individual are dis­ cussed by some of those who deal with un­ 7 :00 NORTHI/EST INDIAN NElIS. Produced by Indi ans employed people, including "MTIN TOBIN Into Communication. of Sea~vest and others. Hoderated bv for­ mer KING Newsservice anchorperson JIM 7:30 MUSIC FROt1 THE FAR NORTH. The folk mu- HERRIOT, produced by Phil Coqan and Greg sic of Finland and Sweden offer two dis­ Pa'lme r, rrade possible in part by a grant tinct musical traditions. Sweden is a from the Hashington Commission for the fiddler's land. Varieties of fiddles Humanities, a state program of the Na~ such as the wooden shoe fi ddle and th~ tional Endowment for the Humanities. violin are the most common folk instru­ ments of Sweden, whereas the kantele, a type of psaltery, is the national in­ 8:00 JAt,lES BALmnN AND JEAN GmET. A rally strument of Finland. for the Soledad Brothers: Genet speaks in French, Baldwin translates, and Bald­ 8:30 LIVE FOLKS. Hosted by Dave Hannon. win speaks' from his own heart about the black experience.and political repression. 10:00 NO, YOU! Call up if you want to find Recorded in 1970, A favorite KRAB Archive out w~at he's ,reading from ••• he usually tape. ,doesn t say on the air. Funny that doesn ' t seem to be the way it's' 'sposed 8:30 ROBERT GARFIAS to be? • 10:00 JOHN HOLT speaks on the desirability of 11:00 DAVID'S FANTASY. I'lith Dave Bennett. being "philosophers" rather than "special­ ists," and the possibility of a "univer­ sal aristocracy" of learning and wisdom. Recorded in 1970 in Seattle". 10:45 UNDER THE COUNTER 11:00 RITE HEAR, LEFTIER. Incredible adventure for your ears. Jay Stickler. Thu-rsday 11 Friday 12 6:30 EARLY t1USIC. Stu Hitmer. 6:30 EARLY t1USIC. Stu Hitmer. c. 8 At,l: Canti ones Sacrae, Part V. c. 8 AM: Cantiones Sacrae, Part IV. 10:00 EARTH t1USIC. Natasha Bushnell . 10:00 EARTH t1USIC. Robert Garfias, from last ni CJht. 11 :55 PROGRAt,' NOTES

11 :55 PROGRAt~ NOTES 12:00 SPECTRUt'1: ON THE HRONG REASONS FOR HAVING CHILDREN. Repeated from last night. 12:00 THE IJOtlEN'S SURVIVAL KIT: JUDY GRAHN readinCJ her own prose as taped in San 1 :00 SHIN1\) MUSIC. Remnants of authentic Shinto Francisco last May. Also a tape of her music are rare today in Japan, and are Corrrnon vloman poems put to mus i c. Pro­ found only ~/hen it serves a specific ma­ duced by the Lesbian Feminist Radio Co1- gical or religious purpose such as exo~- , lecti ve . cising evil spirits, sUlTT'lOning".up a delty, or asking for protection. In the country, 2:00 GOVERNMENT INSPECTED. A repeat of last foxes and bi rds of prey are dri ven away night's 7 P~l program. by means of songs and accompanying per­ cussion music. In the cities, old women 3:00 J . S. BACH: t1ASS IN R tUNOR, B ~ /V 232. sing a charm whenever the digging of wells Played on the original instruments by or the laying of foundations is in pro­ Concentus t·lusicus Hien directed by Nik­ gress. A UNESCO recordi ng. olaus Harnoncort, and the \'!iener S1inger­ knaben Chorus Viennensis, directed by Has 2 :00 THE DI FFICUL TY OF EXPLAIIHNG ONE CULTURE Gi11esberger, ' THROUGH THE EYES OF ANOTHER. Edmund Car­ penter, anthropologist, speaking. 5:00 REPORT TO THE LISTENER. Chuck Reinsch and Leila Gorbman; about KRAB. 2: 30 SNAKE OUT. Bevla re of black snakes, vi pers, sidewinders and music that coils and nuz­ 5:15 OPEN TIME / zles.

5:30 JAVANESE GAt1ELAN ~'USIC. The intricate 4:00 SEATTLE FOLKLORE SOCIETY CONCERT: BRIAN textures of the Javanese game1an orches­ BO\'/ERS, DUANE ATKINS, CHRIS LUNN, AND OLD tra is in sharp contrast to the extrover­ ROSE. Nationally acclaimed for his unique ,ted bri 11iance of the CJame1ans found on style, Brian Bowers plays autoharp and the neighboring island of Bali. also pi cks a little on the guitar, Duane , Atkins plays and sings the blues. Chris 6:00 ATTACK OF THE ROGUE PIANO, Part IV. Grape Lunn sings a few of his favorites. Old ~lus i c by a dead Ins urance sa 1esman and Rose presents thei r style of countrY-\'/es­ b/o pieces by a ~1ushroom Eater fi red up tern music. Produced by Darrel t1d,lichae1 on B & B. Could you four-year-01ds do and Phil ~Ii 11iams. this good? 6:00 FLAMENCO Y SUS ESTILLOS Y SUS FLM1ENCOS. 6: 55 PROGRAt4 NOTES Allen Yonge.

7:00 HO~I TO AVOID THAT SCREI'tED FEELING . \!att/ 6 :55 PROGRAt1 NOTES Chapin/Campbell. Call in your automotive questions: 325-5110. 7:00 ARGENTINE GUITAR t1USIC. An Arion recor­ i: 30 Cm1MENTARY: ~JAR RESISTERS' LEAGUE NORTH­ ding featuring guitarist Raul tlaldonado. HEST. 7:30 ARTISTS' CONFESSIONS. Paul Oorpat. 8 :00 CLASS IC JAZZ wi th Mi ke Duffy. The bes t of the music tlike listened to since last 8:30 CHARLES HATERTON: Portrait of an Eccen­ t''l1e. tric. By John Thompson. 18th century Britisher crav/1s around under tables bi­ 9:00 SPECTRUt~: ON THE HRONG REASONS FOR HAVING ting his guests' legs and captures alli­ CHILDREN . C

6:00 FIL~1S. Kathleen 11urphy and Dick ,Jameson . 12:00 OPTIONS: NICHOLAS JOHNSON. Barbara New­ man interviews former FCC Commissioner 6: 30 OPEN , CHANNELS with Terry Ki nca i d. Elec­ NichOlas Johnson, our hero .by default. tronlC music frequently unavailable com­ (NPR) mercially, from KB Studios in Ann Arbor. 1: 00 CONCH! Hith John Ge rke. 7:30 AR4.BIC I1USIC with Dawod Sweilem. 8:30 ~10ULDY FYGGE: BUNK JOHNSON TALKING, 2:00 THE SEATTLE CITY COUNCIL 1,1EETING: LIVE. first of tl~o parts . This noteworthy in­ terview con t ains much valuable jazz back­ 4:00 TO BE ANNOUNCED ground. Taken from an LP completel:y re­ mastered by Dan Records in Japan, Bunk's 5:00 VINTAGE ROCK. An End-of-Summer special,. comments are clearly audible for the first featuring surf music, sun, cars and gurls. time. Presented by Val Golding. And Gregg Whitcomb . 9:00 KRARGRAS S. Hith Dennis Flanni gan and Har­ 6:00 JEAN SHEPHERD. From HOR, NYC. ry St. Amand. 6 :45 AFTER-DINNER STORIES FOR CHILDREN. Hi th 12 :00 DEATHHATCH. Zoe and David and their daddy, Don Finkel.

6 :55 PROGRA~' NOTES 7:00 SEA CHANTEYS, sung by Lou Killen. Inclu­ ding "Row Billy Row," "Lord Franklin," Sunday l4 and "Shoals of Herring." 7: 30 COMMENTARY 9:00 YESTERDAY'S SUNSHINE I 8:00 KING BISCUIT TIME with Bob West. 11 :55 KqAZY KAT . George Herriman's magical co­ mic strip, recreated for radio by Val Gel­ 9:00 CHINESE RADIO. In Cantonese, with the ding. Chinese Media Committee. 12:00 LEFT HEAR RIGHT EAR . Hhat's to ear? 10:00 TINING NG PILIPINO. Community news, mu­ Musics with Jay- Stickler. si c, a ffai rs of the Pil i pino communi ty. In Tagalog. 4:00 I1USIC OF INDIA. Shantha Benegal. 11:00 SPAGHETTINI. Leila Gorbman. Tuesday 16

6: 30 EARLY ~1USIC . Stu Hi tmer . 10:00 A taped rebroadcast from the HOUS~ OF.RE­ c. 9 AM: Robert Schumann: Piano Trio FUGE CHURCH OF GOD PENTACOSTAL, Wl th 1 ts -#1 in D Minor, Op. 63. Performed by the choi r, piano, organ, trumpet, ~ruT'lS, tam­ Beaux Arts Trio. bourine, and a sermon by the B1Shop Ro­ bert J. Ca usey • 10:00 EARTH r~USIC 11:55 PROGRAM NOTES 11 :55 PROG.qAM NOTES 12:00 OPTIONS: LIFE AND DEATH. Part I: KSJN's 12:00 ~!RITING A HISTORY OF SEATILE, Part Xl. Greg Barron takes u~ on a ri de on an am­ 1·lith Roge r Sa 1e. bulance with a speclal crew of para-me­ dics who are equipped with the latest 12: 30 TilE ROI'1ANCE OF FAUVEL. A 14th century equipment to help heart-attack victims. satirical "singspiel" concemin!! the rise Part II: Bill Siemmering talks about of Fa uve 1, the errbodi ment of deceit and death and dying with Dr. Elizabeth Kub­ guile. Studio df;r FrUhen t~usik with Jean ler-Ross. Bollery, speaker. 1 :00 ADVANCE GUARD OF THE 40's. An EmArcy re­ cording of jazz musicians during the fer­ 1: 30 THE RETICENT PARTITA. Rache l-Di ane rlor ~ ton. tile transitional period of the 40's. Featuring Red Rodney's Be-boppers, the 3: 15 TilE TIIO (AND ONLY) SYI1PHONIES or KURT Lenny Tristano Trio, Jackie Paris, Billy HEILL. The First Symphony of 1921 is a Eckstine and His Orchestra, and Gene Am­ "war" symphony which moves towards a trans­ mons. figuring, implicitly religious conclusion. The sound-world is intensely, often pain­ 2: 00 TO BE ANNOurlCED fully chromatic, but not atona I -- this 3:00 FOLK FESTIVAL U.S.A.: KERRVILLE RAG. is a symphony more or less in C. The From the Kerrville Ragtime Festival a pro­ musical idiom of the Second Symphony (1933) / qram highlighted by appearances of T~ddy recalls the "popular" Hei 11 -- only raised Hi lson, Robert Shaw, and the Alamo Cl ty to a hi!!her pO ...Jer of intensity and more Jazz Band. (NPR) abs 01 ute ly functi ona 1 wi thi n the te nns of symphoni c drama. The Gewandha us Or­ 5:00 HOODY 'N' YOU. A surprise. chestra o~ Leipzig conducted by Edo de­ I'laart. 6:55 PROGRAM NOTES

4:00 SHEET AND LmIDOHN. t1usic from the 20's 7 :00 GOVERNt~ENT INSPECTED: UNEMPLOYMENT. an~ 30's with Jan Cole and Pat Tennant. Specifically, how unemployment in the Northwest can be ended and prevented 5:00 TO RE ANNOUNCED from returnin~. Participants: JOE DAVIS, Pres i dent of the Hash. State Labor Council; 6:00 TURKISH r1USIC. Dnol Bilkur. (probably) NORHARD RROOKS, Commissioner of I·/ash. Employment Security Dept.; OQUG 6: 55 PROGRAI~ NOTES MARSHALL, legal counsel for the Associa­ 7:\)0 NORTHHEST INDIAN NEHS. Produced by In­ tion of Hashington Business: (by phone) Harva rd economi stJOHN KEt{NETH GALBRAI1l1: dians Into Communication. and Councilwoman Jeanette Hi111 ams. . 7:30 Ot4BUDSrNl.N REPORTS. Your Seattle-King Moderated by former KING Newsservice an­ County Ombudsman, Paul '1eyer, untangles chorman Jm HERRIOT, produced by Greg the maze for you. Palmer and Phil Coqan. t4ade possible by a ~rant from the t-Iashington Commission 8:00 BALTIC'S BOP STOP. The music of pianist for the Humaniti es. a state program of the . National Endowment for the HUmanities. Phineas Ne""bom. 8:00 PHILLING THE GAP with banana. 9:30 LIVE Improvisation for KHENE, FINGER Cn1- B1U3", SANTY ROOSTER. SOPRANO and TAPi:. " 8:30 ROBERT GARFIAS, ethnomusicologist. From the KRAB Music Studio. 1<..rT'.!> ~l.. .. 10 :00 DUKE ELLINGTON AND RAY BROI'IN: THIS ONE'S 10:00 NO, YOU! Joe Cain and his poetry. FOR BLANTON. r~ade in 1973, this delight­ ful duet recording was dedicated to Jim­ 11:00 VARIATIONS FOR A DOOR AND A SIGH. Jeff IT\Y Blanton, the prime innovator of the Follette. bass solo with Ellington's band in the early 40's . Ellingt?n and.Br~~n pl~y ~ number of standards lncludlng SOphlStl­ cated Lady" and "Don't Do Nothin' Till You Hear From f1e" along ...,ith a new com­ pos iti on, "Fragmented Sui te for Pi ano and Wednesday 17 Bass."

10:45 UNDER THE COUNTER. A l~alker and Daniels 0:30 EARLY t·1USIC. Stu Witmer. Report. c. 9 At1: Robert Schumann: Piano Trio #2 in F, Op. 80. The Beaux ~rts Trio. 11:00 RIGHT TIER LEFT 'ERE. Jay Stic~ler. ( specialiZing in , traditional fiddle music ' '/

The Fiddle Shop 5212 South Alaska Street Seattle, Wa , 98118

6:00 MUSIC IN THAILAND. In general ~ music in Thailand normally serves as entertainment in connecti on with the "wat" (Buddhist church) festivals . In the rural areas, music works as an accompaniment to repar­ Thursday 18 tee singing, shadow plays, and for dance­ drama performances of stories based on the Ramayana. It is only in i:he north­ east provinces, the area of the lao-speak­ 6:30 EARLY 11USIC. Stu Hitrrer. ing people, that solo instrurrenta1 mu- c. 9 AH: C1 a ra Sch umann : Pi ana Tri a in sic occurs . Here the can (multi-reed G 11inor, Op. 17. The Beaux Arts Trio. bamboo mouth organ der'f'Ved from the Chi­ nese cho) is Featured.

10:00 EARTH r~USIC . Robert Garfias, from last 6:30 KIDS' POETRY . Young poets read their own . night. Produced by Susan Landgraf. 11 :55 PROGRAM NOTES 6:~5 PROGRAM NOTES 12:00 THE H0I1EN'S SURVIVAL KIT . Country 'and 7 :00 LEFT PRESS REVI EH . Frank KrasnOlvsky. Hestem \~omen in music. Produced by the Lesbian Feminist Radio Collective. 7:30 AI4ERICAN SKIFFLE FAtlDS. Recorded in Al­ abama, Texas and Tennessee by Samuel B. 2:00 GOVERNMENT INSPECTED. A repeat of last Charters. The bands include the f1emphis night's 7 PI,I program. Jug Band, Canon's Jug Stompers, and the Mobile Strugblers. 3:00 FUG FESTIVAL U.S.~.: From Labonia Heights, 8:00 VINTAGE JAZZ. Hal Sherlock. r~ississippi, Fess Parker's DAVY CROCKETT III. With a rare live appearance by the Fugs culminating in a vicious Saturday 9:00 SPECTRUI4: HaNKY ETHNICITY. Carlos Ha­ night cutting contest between the Fugs (len ,explores the ethnic backgrounds of and the Spike Jones Orchestra. white Arrericans and comrrents on pride in one's heri tage and ancestry. 11any was the Eu fopean i mmi grant to thi s country 4:30 THE \~ORLD OF CHASSIDUS . Husic and stories of the Chassidic Jews, with Rabbi Josef who thought "I want to forget IllY homeland. Samuels. I want to be considered an American." Hagen explains the primitive, pre-Chris­ ~/ith 1 :00 THE ART ENSEI~BLE OF CHICAGO: REESE AND tian origin of Western man, rare re­ THE SI100TH ONES. Also, LUKAS FOSS : PARA­ corded re-enactrrents of magical ancient rituals, l iterature and poetry. DIG1·1 ("FOR ~1Y FRIENDS"). "All have notes I to play and words to speak, wh i sper, or 10:00 GOOD tlEHS AND BAD THIES. A survey of shout. ~jords are handled like notes . " gospel music from 1929-1962 produced by 5:00 REPORT TO JHE LISTENER . Report on station Tony Heilbut with Blind Willie Johnson , opera ti ons and plans, wi th Ch uck Rei ns ch The Golden Gate Jubilee Quartet, Arizona (station manager) and Leila Gorbr,'an Dranes, I~itchell's Christian Singers, 1-1a ri on Hi 11 i ams, Bess i e Griffi n, the Pil­ 5: 15 OPEN THYME grim Travelers and 14aha 1ia Jackson . 5: 30 ENVIRONI~ENTAL NEI4S with Phil Andrus and 11:00 USA FOR BEGINNERS. David Johnson. Bob Burl<. 9:40 DAMANJA R. fl00DY: "UPIN ••• rw ••• MIND. A series of improvisational compositions derived from psychoanalysis. The pieces include: 1) To me ••• 1 stretched fore IT\Y mind ••• to conceive me. 2) I walked, upon sounds, as IltY mind stayed aloft to concei ve me. 3) And now ••• I returr., ( I'd nO'1i .: havo:! returned. 4) The trip. A longer comp 0'; it jon, "Transfiguration," consists of six movements: a) Subconscious Baptism, b) The Shower, c) friction, d) · Friday 19 Subconscious Baptism, e) Astro Projection, f) COl1'f!lunication Science Fiction. The recording artist on all compositions and instruments (including piano, alto, sax­ ophone, 'guitar, drums, bass, and percus­ 6:30 EARLY t'lUSIC. Stu Hitmer. sion) is local composer/ Damanja c. 9 AM: Robert Schumann: Piano Trio R. Moody, who will be interviewed follow- #3 in G Minor, Cr. 110 , The Reaux Arts ing the recording. , Trio. 10:00 EARTH ilUSIC. Natasha Bushnell. 11 :OO'AQUARIAN VIBRATIONS. Jazz with Bob Sum­ merrisse. 11: 55 PROGRAI~ NOTES 12:00 SPECTRUt·l, with Carlos Hagen. A repeat of last night's Carlos. Saturday 2"0 1 :00 GUSTAV t1AHLER: SYtlPHONY tW , 6. Following its first performance in 1906 one critic called the symphony "the a,rotesque pro­ 8:00 SATURDAY MORNING MUSIC. Jazz with Jeff duct of a degenerate imagination." Stock­ Follette. holm Phi lha rmoni c Orchestra, conducted by Jascha Horenstein. 12·(00 EARTH MUSIC. Mike Coolen. 2: 30 OPEN TItlE 2:30 BABY BISCUIT BLUES 3:00 tlUSIC OF THE CELESTIAL ROLLERRINK. Get 4:00 MOROCCAN STREET MUSIC. Music played by out your zero-gravity skatesj itinerant musicians in public markets and social ceremonies. 4:00 THE FOLK SHQI'I. 01 d time music with the Last Chance Roys. Buddy Rattner, guitar; 4:30 CONSERVING NATURE: A NON-GOVERNMENTAL Kevin Saunder, mandolin and banjo; and APPROACH. A discussion with four people Craig Keene, banjo and fiddle. \'Jith Phil from the Nature Conservancy. Georgia Andrus. Gellert, Executi ve Secretary of the North­ west Chapter of the Nature Conservancy; 6:00 FLAMENCO Y SUS ESTILLOS Y SUS FLAMENCOS. Tony Angell, member of the Northwest AllEn Yonge. board of Di rectors of the Conservancy; Da ve Bl ack, Chai rman of the San Juan Con­ 6:55 PROGRAM NOTES servancy Committee;' and Thorrrton Thomas, 7:00 OLD SPANISH ROMANCES AND SONGS. Inclu- ex-menDer of the nati ona 1 Boa rd 'of Go­ ding Don Luis flilan's "qomance for Soprano vernors of the Conservancy. and Guitar" and "Si x 01 d Spanish Romances of the 16th Century," performed by Pilar 5:15 SONGS OF MIKIS THEODORAKIS Lorengar, soprano, and Siegfried Behrend, guitar. 6:00 FILMS. Kathleen Murphy and Dick Jameson. 7: 30 AT THE HUNT AND AFTER. 1) JOHANN STRAUSS 6:30 IGOR STRAVINSKY: THREE PIECES FOR STRING II: AT THE HUNT POLKA. 2) A GROUP OF QUARTET (1914) and CONCERTINO (1920). HUNTING SONGS sung by Gottlob Frick, in­ The Cl aremont Qua rtet. ROSS LEE FINNEY: cluding "To the Kill" and "The Big Kill." SECOND SONATA IN C (c. 1949). Jerome 3) ARNOLD SCHOENBERG~ A SURVIVOR' FROM Jelinek, cello, and Joseph Gurt, piano. t4ARSAH, OP. 46. 4), KRZYSTOF PENDERECKI: JOHANNES BRAHMS: SONATA #3 IN D MINOR, THRENODY TO THE VICTIMS OF HIROSHHtA.. OP. 108 (1886). Vong Uck Kim, violin; and Karl Engel, piano. 8:00 PETER t4AXHELL-DAVIES: VESALII ICONES (1969), Fourteen dances based on the ill ustrati ons 7:30 ARABIC MUSIC. Dawod Sweilem. by Vesalius in his "De Humani Corporis Fab ri ca" of 1543. The Fi res of Lon don, 8:30 MOULDY FYGGE: REALLY THE BLUES, Pt. I. conducted by the composer. Also in this INSTRUMENTAL BLUES. An in-depth study program a number of dances from the time of the bl ues, researched and produced by of Vesalius, performed by the Ulsamer- Val Golding. Next week, Part II looks ' Co 11egi um. at the vocal blues. 9:00 ON SUICIDE IN OUR SOCIETY . Dr. Arthur 9:00 KRABGRASS. With Dennis Flannigan and L. Kobler, Seattle psYchiatrist; deliver­ Harry St. Amand. ing a speech to the Kansas City Soci al Health Society in 1966. (KRAB Archives). 12:00 DEATHWATCH. VOLUNTEERS

EL.LEN AQUINO FRANK OLIN ANDY DE LOS ANGELES JE·1 PARADIS CAPTAIN BALTIC ELVED PARRY PHIL BANNON RON PARRY SHANTHA !1ENEGAL DAVID BENNETT VIC PINETA ~NOL flIKUR PENNY RAND TERRY BROW~ HAH1 R05n1ARIN BOg BURK ROSHELL NATASHA BUSHNELL HARRY ST. A ~1AND JOE CAl N RABB I SArlUE LS RON CN1P13ELL MONICA SANCHEZ LARRY CANTI L RAY SEREBRIN JANINE CARPENTER OAVIO CHADDOCK BOB SHAPIRO CLINT CHAPIN BRUCE SHAPIRO HAL SHERLOCK RODGER COGHLAN STEPHEN SHORT JAN COLE LIRBY SINCLAIR CLJl.RE CONRAD ~ lARK SISON 1~ICHAEL COOLEN DUANE SISSON BEN DAuSON DRAG I SPASOVSKI JOSH DARSA JAY STICKLER PAIIL ,DORPAT DA\~OD S!'IF.I LEtl mKE [lUFFY AL SHENSON LUCY DUNSt·1QOR TERRY TAFOYA LAURIE DRAf\I1LE PAT TENNANT FRANK FERREL LOIS THETFORD DENNIS FLANNIGAN GARY TOSELArlD CECILIA FUNG JOIINNY I'/ALKER DON FINKEL FLO HARE ZOE FINKEL CHRIS I'/ARGO DAVID FINKFL SERN \1ATT ROBERT GARFIAS GLORIA GAYDEN VAL ' GOLDING flOB I·JEST BOr. Gl1YNNE GREGG HHITCmm PHIL I ' /ILLIM~S

CARLOS HAGEN KEN HELLER CARLA HULFSflERG JE RI HA~'LEY ALLEN YONGE ~1AlIRY HERMAN ELLEN ZI EGLER RITA I OICK JAf1ESOrJ DAVID JOHNSON GALEN JOHNSON JOE KURLAND RICK LANDRY EUGENE LAI FRANK KRASNOHSKY SUSAN LANDGRAF r·1ARI LAHLESS . ANN MANLY DARREL ~1CtUCHAEL

RICH MINOR ~'ONA LISA KATHLEEN r1URPHY RACHEL- DIANE NORTON Monday 22

6:30 EARLY MUSIC. Stu Witmer. c. 8 AM: This week Henryk Szeryng plays Bach's solo Sonatas and Partitas. Today: Sonata #1 in G Major. 10:00 COUNTRY FIDDLING. Frank Ferrel. 11:55 PROGRAM NOTES 12:00 CONSERVING NATURE: A NON-GOVERNMENTAL Sunday 21 APPROACH. (Repeated from yes terdilY.) 1 :00 THE ANATOMY OF THE TANGO. With John Gerke. 9:00 YESTERDAY'S SUNSHINE 2:00 CITY COUNCIL MEETING: LIVE. 11:55 KRAZY KAT. George Herriman's magical co­ 4:00 TO BE ANNOUNCED mic strip, recreated for radio by Val Golding. 5:00 VINTAGE ROCK • . Gregg Whitcomb selects for your listening pleasure: fine, aut­ 12:00 JAZZ FOR A SUNDAY AFTERNOON. Bob Gwynne. hentic, credible performances from various musical styles including groups, R & B, 4:00 CHUTZPA! Jewish music, humor, literature. rock 'n' roll, pop and rockabillY. With Chaim Rosemarin. 6:00 JEAN SHEPHERD 4:30 IS THE TACOMA SMELTER A HAZARD TO PUBLIC HEALTH? A discussion of the effects of 6:45 AFTER-DINNER STORIES FOR CHILDREN. David the air-born emissions of the Tacoma Smel­ and Zoe's dad reads for them, and for ter. Incl uded are statements from: Doug­ your ki ds too. Wi th Don Fi nke 1. las Hansen, of the EPA; Dr. John Allen, of the Washington Thoracic Society; Terry 6:55 PROGRAM NOTES Strong, of the Departffient of Social and Hea lth Servi ces ; Dr. Lawrence Bergner, 7:00 WHAT ARE THE LEGAL RIGHTS OF JUVENILE of the Seattle-King County Department of RUNAWAYS? Roundtable discussion of legal Public Health; Armand Labbe and Kenneth rights of runaways with attomeysfrom Nelson, representing the Smelter owners; the Publ i c Defender's offi ce and Youth and Dr. Jeffery Bland and Bart Klein, of Advoca tes worke rs. GASPT, the Group Agai ns t Smog and P'oll u­ tion in Tacoma. Most of the statements 7:30 FUNKY BLUES: A NORMAN GRANZ JAM SESSION. are from a public meeting held by the EPA A s teami ng 1952 recordi ng of a sess ion in Tacoma on May 21, 1975. . in Hollywood with Charlie Parker, Benny Carter and Johnny Hodges, altos; Ben Web­ 6:20 MUSIC OF . 14ithin the framework ster and Flip Phillips, tenors; Charlie of the numerous religious systems and the Shavers, trumpet; Oscar Peterson, piano; rituals of secret societies, music plays Ray Brown, bass; Bamey Kessel, guitar; a very important role -- as it does in and J.C. Hearst, drums. the di ffering ci rcumsta(\ces of everyday life: walking, sailing, fruit-picking, 8:00 QUEEN BISCUIT TIME. 14ith Clare Conrad. games, etc. It is used to accompany the famous epi c narrati ves of the "muet" play­ 9:00 CHINESE RADIO. Produced in Cantonese by ers. Eugene Lai and the Chinese Media Commit­ tee. 7:00 WE: WOMEN EVERniHERE . A special docu­ mentary on young women itn the law. Pro­ 10:00 TINING NG PILIPINO. Filipino ethnic hour, duced by the Lesbian Feminist Radio Col­ featuring traditional and contemporary lective. music, and news. Kuya Bebeng on the air to respond to your problems. In Tagalog 8:00 GEORGE CRUMB: NIGHT MUSIC I. Began as and Carabao English. purely instrumental, but two poems of Fed­ erico Garcia Lorca were incorporated into 11:00 SPAGHETTINI. Music and talk. Leila gives the piece. Louise Toth, soprano; Paul up. Parmelee, piano; David Burge and Thomas MacCluskey, percussion. HARRY PARTCH: WIND SONG . The Gate 5 Ensemble . WALTER/ OLNICK/SCHAEFFER: SUMMER IDYLL. An elec­ tronic piece originally intended for twl­ evision. PETER MAXWELL-DAVIES: THE BELL­ TOWER. Stomu Yanash'ta, percussion. 9:00 THE ROBOTNOR HOURS. Raymond Serebrin. 11:00 SYNCOPATED ECSTASY. Roswell, with jazz. .. ' Tuesday 23 T 'f p E"F:'R R \ T E R. 6:30 EARLY MUSIC. Stu Witmer ~ ~" \...€ (eo\iteo) c. 8 AM: J.S. Bach: Partita #1 in B ...... ------Minor. Henryk Szeryng • . o L.'1m v\ A 5>w\ - '\ '\>E.\'u1.e 10:00 EARTH t4USIC fO~,,(,I\~e: ~"tJuA.\.... 11:55 PROGRAM NOTES .J\J~T o~e."\-\ ~\..E.O " 12:00 WRITING A HISTORY OF SEATTLE, Part XII. fEtt..fEa Cool'll> \T\oN. Roger Sa leo . ~ W\\~ c.ASfC. I \:! 0 . 12:30 THREE WORKS BY DARIUS MILHAUD. CONCERTO - CA,-,- (h:.'.' : FOR VIOLIN AND ORCHESTRA. Claire Bernard, ~ot> ~"lS -~'t11.\ violin, with the National Orchestra of ", ~1.S.S\\O' 1'",0) the Monte Carlo Opera. SECOND CONCERTO FOR TWO PIANOS AND PERCUSSION. Genevieve Joy and Jacqueline Robin-Bonneau, pianos, Jean-Claude Casadesus, Jean-Pierre Drouet, Di ego Masson, Jean-Charles Francoi s, per­ cussion. LA CR~ATION DU MONDE. The Con­ temporary Chamber Ensemble, Arthur Weis­ berg, conductor. w ~ w 1:40 THE RETICENT PARTITA. Rachel-Diane Nor­ ton. 3:00 TURNTABLES. Ti red of listening to ti red old radio programs? Try making a spiffy new one, by dialling 325-5110 with your cogen t req ues ts • AND, 4 PM to MIDNIGHT: AN EVENING IN SOUTH AMERICA. Ho1a! To­ night KRAB will feature the music and literature of South America. Drawing upon material from its arthives and other sources, KRAB will highlight some of the di verse art forms found i.n the South Am­ erican continent. Music will include classical, folk and popular styles: from the bossa nova and candomb 'le of Brazil to the Venezua 1an harp of Juan Vi cente Torrea1bos to the popular guitar style of Atahua1pa Yupanqui of Argentina. Throughout the evening will be live read­ ings from contemporary South American literature, ranging from Nobel Poet Lau­ reate Pablo Neruda (Chile) to surrealist philosophers Jorge Luis Borges (Argen­ tina) and Gabriel Garcia Marquez (Colom­ bia). Support in the form of contributions wi 11 be encouraged. 12:00 DAVID'S FANTASY: Classical guitarist STEVEN KRITSONIS, 1974 graduate of the Cornish School of Art, has just returned to the Northwest from a series of engage­ ments in the San Francisco area. Tonight. he will be performing works of De Falla, Vil.la-Lobos, and Ponce. LIVE! David Bennett hos ts.

WORK IN' WITH THE GERKIN: Peter Fedyszen (center), Social Studies Department Chairman and Bicentennial Coordinator of Turtle Hook Junior High School, Uniondale, N.Y., accepts from Student Council President Jeff Conca (right) and 9th Grade Homeroom Representative linda Marsh (left) the $69 that the Student Council raised by selling 660 pickles. during one week in May. The proceeds from the sale went toward the purchase ot a set of 12 Bicentennial/colonial flags to be used during Turtle Hook's celebration of the country's 200th anniversary. Wednesday 24

6:30 EARLY MUSIC. Stu Witmer. c. 8 AM: J . S. Bach: Sonata #2 in A Mi­ nor. Henryk Szeryng. 10 :00 KRAB RAND R: OFF THE AIR. The transmitter goes to Zihuatenejo, for a little rest and relaxation, and the control room and stu­ dios undergo long-needed repairs. A time also for preparing the old fire station for winter. If you want to help, give us a call; we're at 325-5110. We'll re­ turn when repairs are completed, probably no earlier than 6:00 PM, or whenever the engineer's fingers go numb. Thursday 25

6:30 EARLY MUSIC. Stu Witmer , c. 8 AM: J,S. Bach: Parti ta #2 in D Minor. Henryk Szeryng. 10:00 EARTH MUSIC. Robert Garfias, from last night (if he was on). 11:55 PROGRAM NOTES 12:00 THE WOMEN'S SURVIVAL KIT. A special docu­ mentary on young women and the law. Pro­ duced by the Lesbian Feminist Radio Col­ lecti ve. 1 :00 SPONTANEO RADEO 3:20 GROVELLING IN THE GRIME IN OLYMPIA •. Three 5:15 orificial people from Common Cause discuss thelr efforts towards reform of the state legis­ 5:30 ENVIRONMENTAL NEWS with Bob Burk and Phil lature. Participants are Chuck Sauvage, Andrus. the state Director of Common Cause; Ju­ 6:00 THE TAMING OF THE ROGUE PIANO. PIERRE dith Hein, a member of the state board; BOULEZ: STRUCTURES FOR TWO PIANOS. Al­ and Jim Sorrels, chairman of the state fons and Aloys Konta rsky." ARNOLD SCHOEN­ board. ' BERG: THREE PIANO PIECES, OP. 11. Paul 4:00 FRANZ SCHUBERT: OCTET IN F MAJOR, OP. Jacobs. CLAUDE DEBUSSY: ESTAMPES,(PRINTS). 166. During the time that Schubert wrote Michel Beroff. IGNAZ MUSCHELES: ETUDES, this piece he was a victim of depression OP. 70. Michael Ponti. brought on by ill health and the knowledge that he would not recover. Part of the 6:55 PROGRAM NOTES time he was keeping a fourteen-day fast. 7:00 HOW TO AVOID THAT SCREWED FEELING. Own­ He wrote: "Each night ••• I hope I will ing an automobile and coming out on top. not wake again." Performed by /lembers With Watt, Chapin and Campbell. A live of the Melos -Ensemble. phone-in 'show. 5:00 REPORT TO THE LISTENER. Station oper­ ations programming plans, crises, criti­ 7:30 WHAT, ME WORRY? A discussion with Carl cism. '!~ith Chuck Reinsch, station manager, Wa1ske, Tom Hunt and Ron Szalay of the and Leil a Gorbman, program di rector. Atomic Industrial Forum. The AIF is the trade association of the nuclear industry, representing those companies which design and construct nuclear reactors and power plants. This discussion took place dur­ ing a conference' on licensing and sit~ng regulations for nuclear plants, held 1n Seattle during July. 8:00 CLASSIC JAZZ, with Mike Duffy. 'I' n GVJ\.,\ 9:00 SPECTRUM: NATIONAL ANTHEMS. Recordings of several countries' national anthems are used to illustrate the uses of these compositions and the lore built up around them through history. With Carlos Hagen. 10:00 PEOPLE, PARKS, AND LARRY PENBERTHY. Larry Penberthy is suing the National Park Ser­ vice over restrictions on backcountry ac­ tivities in lit. Rainier National Park. In 1973, the Park Service instituted a program of controls on hiking, camping; and climb­ ing within the Park in order to prevent damage to wilderness areas. Penberthy charges that the 'p'togram is ,in violation of the Park Service's legislated mandate to 'make parklands available to the public. Here, Penberthy is interviewed by Rob Burk and Tom Eckels of KRAB. 10:40 AN ANALOGY. With Ken Heller. 11:00 ECLECTIC BISCUITS. Wep returns after a . protracted (about 46°) absence. Friday 26

6:30 EARLY MUSIC. Stu Witmer. c. 8 AM: J.S. Bach: , Sonata #3 in C Major. Henryk Sze~yng. 10:00 EARTH MUSIC. Natasha Bushnell. , 11:55 PROGRAM NOTES 12:00 SPECTRUM: NATIONAL ANTHEMS. With Car­ 1os ~agen. Repeated from last night.

1:00 AN INTERVIEW WITH LARRY CORYELL. David Utevsky and Don Weaver interviewing Cor­ yell at his home, with recordings docu­ menting his career beginning with the Dynamics up through his latest group, the Eleventh House. 3: 10 OPEN TIME

3:30 NEW DEAL BLUES (1933-1939). f', us : cia ~ ;.; include Bo Carter, Peanut the Kidnaper, the Chatman Brothers, Bumble Bee Slim, 111 Jio"JUl and Scrapper B1 ack~!e 11.

4:00 SEATTLE FOLKLORE SOGIETY CONCERT. JOE PANCERZEWSKI and bluegrass at the HUB Auditorium. Joe Pancerzewski, current Washington State Senior Fiddle Champion, plays western Canadian-stYle fiddle. From another concert, Northwest bluegrass mu- s i'cians gathered together to play a ben­ efi t at the HUB. 6:00 FLAMENCO Y SUS ESTILLOS Y SUS FLAMENCOS. Allen Yonge. 6:55 PROGRAM NOTES 7:00 THE Th!O DEATHS OF QUINCAS WATERYELL, by the Brazil i an a uthor, Jorge Amado . An apparently "correct" and mi 1d-mannered ,civil servant in Bahia suddenly leaves wi fe, home and chil d -- and erroarks on a new life in the slums of the city. A disgrace to his family, he befriends the poor: bums, pimps, prostitutes and fish­ ermen . He dies. Yet his independence from bourgeoi s pretens ions pers i s ts. A ta le in the spi rit of Mark Twa in. "Ev­ erybody look out for his own funeral; nothing's impossible . " Produced by Chuck Reinsch. 10:00 A SANTUR RECITAL BY NASSER RASTEGAR-NEJAR. Abu Nasre Farabi, the great Persian musi­ cian and musical theoretician of the 9th century, classified music into three ca­ tegories. " ••• The first calls forth in us an agreeable sensation, delicious, reposeful. The second has these same qualities and, in addition, it excitesr our imagination, creates pictures ;,n our soul ••• The fi rst acts on our ear as a decora ti ve des i gn does on our eye. The second is comparable to that of an imi­ tative painting. The third kind of music is inspired by our passions, by the state of our souls. Man, and every animal en­ dowed with a voice, emits special sounds according to Whether he is joyful or un­ der the S~lay of suffering ••• " 11 :00 AQUARIAN VIBRATIONS. Jazz, with Bob Sum­ I'Mrri sse. CC»1ING IN SEPTEMBER: 4th, 5th and 6th, CHAMELEON; nth, 12th and 13th, G. R. CERUTTI BLUES BAND; 18th, 19th and 20th, TOM McFARLAND; and 25th, 26th and 27th, TO BE ANNOUNCED. Saturday 27 8:00 SATURDAY MORNING MUSIC. Jazz with Jeff Follette. 12:00 EARTH MUSIC with Jim Paradis. 2:30 BABY BISCUIT BLUES Sunday 28 4:00 NUCLEAR SABOTAGE: HOW EASY IS IT? A talk by Dr. L. Douglas DeNike, a clinical psychologist formerly on the faculty at 9:00 YESTERDAY'S SUNSHINE UCLA, and now a technical consultant for People for Proof, a California group con­ 11 :55 KRAZY KAT. George Herriman's magical co­ cerned about nuclear safeguards. mic strip. recreated for radio by Val Gol­ ding. 4:50 DARIUS MILHAUD: THE FOUR SEASONS. These four seasona 1 concerti nos were wri tten 12:00 LEFT EAR RIGHT HEAR. What's two ears? at widely different periods of the compo­ Musing with Jay Stickler. ser's art. "SPRING" from 1934 in the south of. France; "SUMMER AND AUTUMN," 4:00 MUSIC OF INDIA. Shantha Benegal. from 1951 in California and "WINTER" aboard ship in the Atlantic in 1953. Ensemble 6:00 TRADITIONAL MUSIC OF AMOY. This music of Soloists of the Lamoureux Concerts, is believed by Chinese musicologists to di rected by Milha ud. preserve one branch of court music of classical China which re~ched a peak of 5:30 YOKO ONO: CONCERT OF EVENTS or "DON'T cosmopolitan splendor in the T'ang dy­ CALL IT AAT." From DIA Sympos i um in Lon­ nasty. Though much scholarly attention don. Yoko, Audience and Comments. has been di rected toward the "Gagaku" mu­ sic of the Japanese imperial court (also 6:00 FILMS. Dick Jameson and Kathleen Murphy. a descendant of T'ang court music). this "nan-kuan" tradi ti on remai ns unknown and 6:30 OPEN CHANNELS with Terry Kincaid. Electron­ almost totally neglected. ic music. Produced at KB Studios in Ann Arbor. 7:00 WE: I~OMEN EVERYWHERE. Local. national and international feminist news and com­ 7:30 ARABIC MUSIC, with Dawod Sweilem. mentary. Produced by the Lesbian Femin­ ist Radio Collective. 8:30 MOULDY FYGGE: REALLY THE BLUES. Part II. VOCAL BLUES. Val Golding continues his in-depth stuQy of the blues. Joe Turner 8:00 A LIVE CONCERT with guitarist DON MOCK and B.B. King are among the featured sin­ and his TRIO. gers • 9:00 THE ROBOTNOR HOURS. Raymond Serebrin. 9:00 KRABGRASS. with Dennis Flannigan. 11:00 SYNCOPATED ECSTASY. Roswell. jazz. 12:00 DEATHWATCH. Monday 29

6:30 EARLY MUSIC. Stu Witmer. c. 8 AM: J.S. Bach: Partita #3 in E Major. Henryk Szeryng. 10:00 COUNTRY FIDDLING. Frank Ferrel. 11:55 PROGRAM NOTES 12:00 AN INTERVIEH 1·IITH JOHN FORSTER OF THE PEOPLE'S lOBBY. The People's Lobby is a "public interest" or~anization based in los Angeles. This discussi on focuses on the Safe Energy Initiative, for which the People's Lobby is campaigning in fifteen states, including Washington. 12:35 FOLK MUSIC OF RUMANIA. Examples of local traditions, limited in style and tradi­ tion t.o a specific geographical area, and also the more professional and "national" style, which is the tradition of the "lau­ teri," the Rumanian fiddle players. 1:05 THE FEATHERED WEDDING. Hi th John Gerke. 2:00 CITY COUNCIL MEETING: lIVE, from the Council's chambers in the I~unicipal Buil­ ding. 4:00 TO BE ANNOUNCED 5:00 VINTAGE ROCK. Have you ever heard Clyde McPhatter sing rockabilly? With Gregg 6. Whi tcomb. 6:00 JEAN SHEPHERD. The bard speaks. . , 1. · fI"YJ\~~ " . "\Af..' I\O"'O,"~V5 ' 6:45 AFTER-DINNER STORIES FOR CHILDREN. Read by Don Finkel, with Zoe and David. 6:55 PROGRAM NOTES 7:00 TRADITIONAL MUSIC FOR RANJO, FIDDLE AND BAGPIPES. Played by John H. Sumers and Franklin George. 7:30 COMMENTARY 8:00 OLD TIME MUSIC. Phil Hilliams or his friend. 9:00 CHINESE RADIO. Produced in Cantonese by Euqene lai and the Chinese Media Commit­ tee.

J "' • ./J " " 10:00 WAR OF THE WORLDS. The original Orson ~-----"'----1 God· DIXIT ENIM. DEVS:rAcIAMvs 14e lles radi 0 drama. HO)M.lNE.M..AD I MAGINDl ITSI.MIUTY. 1JJJi(~)105T~ 11:00 SPAGHETTINI. Visual allusions. leila Gorbman. Tuesday 30

6:30 EARLY t1.iSIC. Stu Hitmer. 10:00 EARTH MUSIC 11:55 PROGRAM NOTES 12:00 WRITING A HISTORY OF SEATTLE, Part XIII. With Roger Sale.

12:30 CAMINO DE SANTIAGO. The Early ~~usic Quartet performs medieval son~s that were sung along the pilgrims' route through northern Spain to Santiago in the 13th century. 1 :15 THOMAS JEFFERSON. An interesting paper on Jefferson including SOIre readings from his writing. Read by Virginia Maynard and Lewi sHill. 1:30 THE RETICENT PARTITA. Rachel-Diane Nor­ ton. 3:00 GERMAN STRING MUSIC OF THE SEVENTEENTH CENTURY. A L' Oiseau-Lyre recording pre­ senting SOIre of the string music by three leading of German-speaking Eur.­ ope: Hans Leo Hassler (1564-1612); Mel­ chior Franck (1573-1639); and Christoph Demantius (1567-1643). Perforlred by the Philomusica of London directed from the harpsichord by Thurston Dart. 3:35 INSIDE SCIENCE: THE FATE OF THE WHALE. Dr. Victor Sheffer, chairperson of the A-l V'Rental u.s. Marine Mammal Commission. He has PlanO Sales written "The Year of the 11hale" -(1969), and "The Year of the Sea 1" (1970). KRAB Archi ve tape. tr 4: 00 SWEET AND LOHDOHN. The 20' sand 30' s , with Jan Cole and Pat Tennant. 5:00 OPEN TIME J u J Plano Mov(ng Service 6:00 TURKISH MUSIC. ~nol Bilkur. 6:55 PROGRAM NOTES 7:00 NORTHWEST INDIAN NEWS. Produced by In­ dians 'Cnto Communication. 7:30 JOHN CAGE: ATLAS ECLIPTICALIS; WINTER Jim Floberc, OU)~e~ MUSIC; and CARTRIDGE 'MUSIC. Three works by Ca qe perforlred s i mul taneous ly. Don't b1 alre us; it's tha t way on the record" 8:00 BALTIC'S BOP STOP: THE JONES BROTHERS. Hank, Thad and Elvin. 9:30 INDIAN CHIEFTAINS AND A QUEEN. Three stories read by Bob ~Jhitely: "Queen Kopachiqui," "King Philip," and "Tecumseh." (KRAB Archives.) 10:00 NO, YOU! The Monkey Hard catalog of va- - riety programs. Use the speedy index. Don't forget to add sa les tax. Heard any good jokes lately? Call 'em in. 11:00 VARIATIONS FOR A DOOR AND A SIGH. Jeff Follette. THE KRAR ·CDrl ilUNITY SPONSOR PROGRArl ["hereby memers of KRAB (subscribers and volunteers) receive rliscounts and other special benefi ts at. lo­ cal businesses.

PARITICIPATING SPONSORS INCLUDE: CAMERA AND SOUND HUT, 1419 3rd Ave. -- 10% off list price of Compact Cassette brand tape. THE SOUP AND SALAD RESTAURANT, in the Pike Place Mar­ ket -- one free cup of soup or stew, on Wednesdays. NEPTUNE THEATER, 1303 NE 45th -- Admittance at stu­ dent rates. MOTHER MORGAN'S GUMBO FACTORY, 431 15th E. -- 50% off cost of souP, bread and salad on Sundays. PRONTO PRINT, 210 Broadway E. -- 5% off purchases of $2.00 or more. THE OLD BOATHOUSE, 2770-C Westlake N. -- 10%off cost of rental of classic rowing and sailing boats. week­ YA AZIM SILVER AND TURQUOISE, in the Pike Place Mar­ days, April - October. ket -- 1/3 off on all merchandise. BEGGAR'S BANQUET RESTAURANT, 4741 12th NE -- 50% off CAESAR SHEPHERD GALLERY, 7218 Greenwood Ave. N. -- cost of desserts purchased with dinner. 10% off on sales, cleaning and restoration of orien­ ta 1 rugs. RED AND BLACK BOOKS, 4736 University Way NE -- 10% off cost. of b09ks. ROSEBUD THEATER, 202 3rd S. -- Admittance at student rates. HORIZON BOOKS, 425 15th E. -- 10% off cost ·of used books and records. EDGEMONT THEATER, l-lain St., Edmonds -- Admittance­ for $1.50 any night except Thursday, When it is two HORIZON BOOKS AND HODGE PODGE, 720 Pike Street -- for the price of one. 10 % off cost of used books and records. THE FIDDLE SHOP, 304 Lakeside Ave. S. -- 25% off cost MATZOH MOMMA DELI, 509 15th E. -- 10% off cost of of fiddles, parts, books and records. carry-out items, between 2:30 - 5:30 PM THE FOLKSTORE, 5236 University Way NE -- 10% off cost THE INDOOR SUN SHOPPE, 911 NE 45th -- 10% off all of most merchandise except records, books, and con- merchandise. signed used merchandise. / BUTTERFLY BOB'B SALAD BAR, 214 Spring St. -- one free basic green salad or bowl of soup, 11 AM - 3 PM on All of this can be yours by becoming a KRAB member. Sat.urdays . Your BANKAMERIKRAB is good fO!' one year, though some offers may be limited in duration. If you have any questions, or IF YOU ARE INTERESTED IN BECOMING A KRAB COMMUNIJY SPONSOR, please call 325-5110 •

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