krob fm 1077 -1406 Harvard, Seattle Wn 98122 EoS-Slll 0 EaS--5110 1 Progressive Service Herein will be found a listing of the programs heard on KRAB-fM, programs you are not apt to hear anywhere else: Music ranging from ethnic to , classical and folk; Spoken arts including poetry, drama and prose readings; And public affairs programs that actually attempt to inform. This sort of diversity in programming is poss­ ible only because KRAB is not in business to make money: We are here ta use the radio med­ ium as creatively as we know how. KRABls air time cannot be bought; You will not hear the programming be interrupted by anonymous voices selling foot ointments and detergent. What you will hear is .actual humans like yourself honestly talking about what is important to ' them. KRAB is non-commercial: The people who benefit directly from its existence, our THE KRAB PEOPLE listeners, contribute to its continuance, by annual tax-deduc~ible donations. RACHEL-DIANE NORTON You can ~elp alt~rnative .radio by sending your PHJL ANDRUS GLORIA GAYDEN FRANK OLIN members hlP donatlon (or other contribution) NOR/IIAN ARKANS TONY GOLDENBERG in the amount of ' CAPTAIN BALTIC CLARE GOLDING ROBE RT ORLANDO VAL GOLDING STEPHAN PALSHA $25 Regular Rate PHIL BANNON SHANTHA BENE GAL LEILA GORBMAN JIM PARADIS $15 Student, Retired Or Poor JOHN GERKE THE PATCHMAN $100 Makes you a Patron DAViD BENNETT RICHARD BLAKLEY CARLOS HAGEN VIC PINETA MONSTER to: KRAB-FM ROMEO BLANCHETTE HOWARD HAYS THE PROTEIN 1406 Harvard RANDY BOYNTON KEN HELLER PENNY RAND Seattle, Wa 98122 KEN BROADWELL MAURY HERMAN RITA REGA NATASHA BUSHNELL ROBERT HORSLEY MICHAEL RP.ESE ALL CONTRIBUTIONS ARE TAX-DEDUCTIBLE VICTOR BUTLER JEF JAISUN chuck reinsch JOE CAIN RITA I HAIM ROSE~ARIN The Program Guide is sent free to subscribers. ' LARRY CANTIL DICK JAMESON ROSWELL JANINE CARPENTER GEORGE JARTOS ROGER SALE DAVID CHADDOCK JENNIFER RABBI SNilUELS CLINT. CHAPIN DAVID JOHNSON ALI SAN RODGER COGHLAN JEFF KIPPER MONICA SANCHEZ CLARE CONRAD PHIL KLEIN PAUL SEAMONS RAYMOND SEREBRIN TAD COOK RICK LANDRY MICHAEL COOLEN NANCY KORTUM BOB SHAPIRO International FRANK KRASNOWSKY '"BRUCE SHAPIRO BEN DAWSON JOSH DARSA JERRY LEWIS HAL SHERLOCK STEVE SHORT ART OORROS KEVIN LI MARK SISON LARRY DECKER BILL LITTLE DUANE SISSON , ELMER DIXON BUDDY LOGAN Women's RANDY MCCARTY HARRY ST. M'IAND PAUL DORP,T MIKE DUFFY MELISSA MCCLURE JODY STECHER THOMAS ECKELS JOHN MACDONALD JAY STICKLER FRANK FERREL DARREL MCMICHAEL DAI'TOD SWElLEM Day DENNIS FLANAGAN BOB MITCHELL AL SWENSON JEFF FOLLETTE BRUCE MITCHELL TERRY TAFOYA CECILIA FUNG ELIZABETH MONG JOHN VOORHEES DON FINKEL GLENN MUNGER BOB WALLER JON GALLANT KATHLEEN MURPHY CAROL WALLER ROBERT GARFIAS MONA LISA FLO "lARE MELISSA GARMAN TOM NAST CHRIS WARGO SERN WATT BOB WEPPNER Mar. 8 BOB ~rr:ST GREGG v.'HITeOMB MORRIS WHITE JOHN WISNOM PHIL WILLIAMS STU WITMER CARLA WULF'SBERG ALLEN YONGE ELLEN ZIEGLER

2 Saturday 1 Sunday 2

8: 00 SATURDAY H(1,tNING K"JSIC . Jazz with Jeff 9:00 YESTERDAY'S SUNSHINE. Elved Parry plays Follette. old 78's.

12: 00 EAf"l'H HU5IC. Jim Paradis. 12:00 OVERTONES . Overt ones, or not. Differ­ ent music presented the same by Stickler. 2:30 THE BABY BISCUIT BLUES Jay.

4:00 PIERRE HENRY: APOCALYPSE OF JOHN. The 4:00 MUSIC OF INDIA. Shantha Benegal. last book of the Bible set.to extremely graphic electronic so~ds. Beautiful, 6: 00 THE QUEEN CITY: THE SHORELINES MANAGE­ dark and frightening. Read in French. MENT ACT, Part I. A historical look at the Act -- what it is, and ho., it is ad­ 6:00 FILMS. Dick Jameson and Kathleen Murphy . ministered and enforced. I~i th John Kea­ gan (King County Prosecutor's Office) and 6: 30 CONLAN NANCARRO: STUDIES FOR PLAYER PI­ Charles Roe (Washington State Department ANO. The composer achieves the precise of Ecology). Hosted by Bruce Shapiro. rhythmic control for his works by punch­ ing the player piano rolls directly. All 7:00 WE: WOMEN EVERY\·/HERE. Feminist news and of the studies were composed ~,i th a punch­ commentary, produced by the Lesbian Fem­ ing machine that the composer had specially inist Radio Collective. built during a visit to New York City in 1947. Also, 14USIQUE INSOLlTES. The sounds . 8: 00 MORNING NEWS. "The morning newspaper has of antique clocks, pendulums and music always been sufficient to give me my news" boxes restored by John Tagger. (A. Breton). Robert Thomas Horsley .

7:30 ARABIC MUSIC. Dawod Sweilem. 9:00 THE ROBOTNOR HOURS. Raymond Serebrin.

8:30 MOULDY FYGGE. Val Golding returns to 11:00 SYNCOPATED ECSTASY. Roswell, with jazz. KRAB with his weekly program of rare re­ cordings of traditional jazz. This week: A FYGGOLOGY PRIMER, introducing the series and previewing future programs.

9: 00 BLUEGRASS

12:00 DEATHWATCH. Chaos. STOREWIDE SALE")J OFF LIST (ALL LABELS) s sa,tu.rl~ I Muck 1 t" to SR-tUr~,:Mar-Ck !5tk. PLUS ~

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Searr(f: 1 Wa. 98101 622-311 7 3 Monday 3 Tuesday 4

6:30 EARLY MUSIC. Stu witmer. 6:30 EARLY MUSIC. Stu Witmer.

10:00' COUNTRY FIDDLING. Frank Ferrel. 10:00 EARTH MUSIC. Music of Asia with Rita I.

11:55 PROGRAM NOTES 11':55 PROGRAM NarES

12: 00 THE QUEEN CITY: THE SHORELINES MANAGE­ 12:00 MULTINATIONAL CORPORATIONS. How multi­ MENT ACT, Part I. Re-broadcast from last national corporations, vying with nation­ night. states for the loyalties of their citiz­ ens, are acting often in our own worst 1:00 ONDINE. From the sto~ by Friedrich Ba­ interests. (NPR) \ ron de la Moffe Fouque. In Part I, the water-nymph Ondine, against the advice 1:00 SPONTANEO RADEO. Rachel-Diane Norton. of the water-king KUhleborn, falls in love with a mortal, Paul, who had ventured in­ 2:30 BLACK LABOR STRUGGLES REMEMBERED. An in­ to the woods one stormy night. In Part terview with veteran black trade union II, Ondine joins the human world but is organizer John T. Williams. (Pacifica) eventually forced to return to the water because of her lover's betrayal. In Part 3:00 PRISON WORKSONGS. Recorded at the Lou­ III, Ondine ·is finally united with her isiana State Penitentiary at Angola in beloved as a result of Paul's death as 1959.. "I don't want no trouble (with) a mortal. Poems by Eriko Kishada; music the boys I know,/I don't know you buddy by Akira Miyoshi; Ondes Martinot played though you live next door./You talk about by Reiko Honsho and electronic music from ' my buddy, you talk about a dangerous blue,/ NHK (Japanese Broadcasting Corporation). If I had my pistol, be a dangerous too ... "

2:00 CITY COUNCIL MEETING: LIVE from the Mu­ 4:00 LANGSTON HUGHES: "ASK YOUR !'lAMA" (12 nicipal Building. MOODS FOR JAZZ). The poet of the Harlem Renaissance reading his own poem. The 4:00 ' TO BE ANNOUNCED major motif employed is the traditional "Hesi tation Blues," which asks the ques­ 5:00 VINTAGE ROCK. Oldies, played by Gregg tion: "Tell me how long/must I wait? Whitcomb. can I get it now? or must I hesitate?"

6:00 JEAN SHEPHERD 4:35 FATS WALLER. As played by various jazz artists (Part I). Versions of "Ain't 6:55 PROGRAM NOTES Misbehavin:" "Jitterbug Waltz," and "Squeeze Me." 7:00 "WHAT'S GOIN' DOWN." Community issues; Flo Ware and guests. 6:00 TURKISH MUSIC. Ali San.

7:30 COMMENTARY: DR. FRED C. SCHWARZ, presi­ 6:55 PROGRAM NOTES dent of the Christian Anti-Communist Cru­ sade. "Who are the Marxists, the Soviet 7:00 THE FASCINATING WORLD OF AMBIENT NEWS. Union or Communist China?" During the early years of the Nixon ad­ ministration a new concept in federal aid 8:00 OLD-TIME MUSIC. Phil Williams. was proposed and implemented to replace tne massive number of Federal programs. 9:00 CHINESE RADIO. Produced in Cantonese by The program is called General Revenue Eugene Lai and the Chinese Media Commit­ Sharing and it has had a tremendous ef­ tee. fect on cities and states throughout the nation. How does this affect you and 10:00 HEADING FOR BETTER TIMES. Howard Hays your city? Listen as Bruce Shapiro asks i~ the 30's and 40's. that same question to a man who knows. .11:00 SPAGHETTINI. Music and talk. Leila Bill Stafford from the mayor's Office gives up. of Policy and Planning.

7: 45 ROGER REYNOLDS: BLIND MEN. A modern choral piece based on an assemblage of fragments extracted from Herman Melville's JOURNAL UP THE STRAITS, 1856-57, and pro­ voked by Melville's observations of blind­ ness in Cairo. Performed by ~he Peabody Co~cert Singers ~d Chamber Ensemble. (Pre-empted last month and the month be­ fore. )

8:00 BALTIC'S BOP STOP: BEBOP DRUM LEADERS. Bop ' drummers had an important effect on the direction the music went, particularly those who led their own groups. Tonight we explore Kenny Clarke, Max Roach and' Art Blakey, along with some others.

9:30 NO, YOU! The id., ego and superego of va­ riety programs. Can ~ sit through it? Listen and try.

11: 00 DAVID'S FANTASY. "A free-form feather 4 drifting in the late night: sky." David Bennett hosts. Wednesday 5

6:30 EARLY MUSIC. Stu Witmer.

10:00 Taped re-broadcast from the HOUSE OF RE­ FUGE CHURCH OF GOD PENTACOST, with its choir, piano, organ, drums, trumpet, tam­ bourine and a sermon by Bishop Robert J. Causey.

11:55 PROGRAM NOTES

12:00 THE FASCINATING' WORLD OF AMBIENT NEWS. Rebroadcast from last night at 7:00.

12:45 SPONTANEO RADEO. Ellen Ziegle~.

3:00 THE QUEEN CITY: SENTENCING PROCEDURES IN KING COUNTY are examined. Guests are Judge Jerome Johnson, Jay Ritche (King County Prosecutor's Office), Phil Ginsberg (the Public Defender), and Bill Absher (head of the Public Defender's Pre-Sentence Counseling Department). Repeated from last month, and followed by a LIVE phone-in discussion on sentenc­ ing in King County. Listen, then call in with your opinion; at 325-5110. Bruce Shapiro hosts.

4:30 NINETEENTH-CENTURY VIOLIN CONCERTOS, Part I: CONCERTO IN D MAJOR by LUDWIG VAN , BEETHOVEN. The violin concerto was in many ways the height of 19th-century com­ position. Beethoven's was completed the day of performance, but despite initially poor notices has become regarded as a masterpiece. 5:30 TO BE ANNOUNCED

6:00 VARIATIONS ON NO THEME (OR CARL ORFF MEETS THE IMPERIAL COURT OF JAPAN). A special music concert designed to destroy cats.

6: 55 PROGRAM NOTES

7:30 PIKE PLACE MARKET, Part I. "GOD BLESS JOE DESIMONE." First in a three-part series on the Pike Place Market. This week Bruce Shapiro discusses the . history of the mar­ ket with Alice Shorett of the ~ike Place Project.

7:30 COMMENTARY: THE , SEATTLE BLACK PANTHER PARTY . . 8:00 ROBERT GARFIAS. Tonight, the first in a series on Burma.

9:30 LOL COXHILL: EAR OF BEHOLDER. An album of live performances and studio sessions involving this unique British man of mu­ sic. Children's spontaneity (a memorable "I Am the Walrus"), saxophone improvisa­ tions~ith tape alterattons, torch songs, and general merriment make for a varied collection. ~esented by Jay Stickler.

11: 00. VARIATIONS FOR A DOOR AND A SIGH. Jeff Follette, sounds and words.

Miss Mal./me P.ixley, the only

5 Thursday 6

6:00 COMPUTER MUSIC: LEJAREN HILLER AND ROBERT 6:30 EARLY MUSIC. Stu Witmer. BAKER, "COMPUTER CANTATA (1963)." One of the earliest attempts at using the 10:00 EARTH MUSIC. ' Robert Garfias' Burma se­ computer in the process of composition. ries, Part I, repeated from last night. Performance by the Illinois Contemporary Chamber Players. JOHN MELBY: 91 PLUS 5 11:55 PROGRAM NOTES (1971). For brass quintet and computer. This piece, rather than involving the 12:00 THE WOMEN'S SURVIVAL KIT. Poetry, music, computer in the act of composing, uses interviews. For women. Produced by the it to transmit a "human-scored" piece of Lesbi~n Feminist Radio Collective. music into audible sound. Performance by an IBM 91 digital computer and the 1: 00 BOHUSLAV MARTINU: FIRST PIANO QUARTET Contemporary Brass Quintet. (1942). Performed by Alexander Schnei­ der, violin; Milton Katims, violin; 6: 45 JON APPLETON: THREE ELECTRONIC MUSIC Frank Miller, cello; Mieczyslaw Horszow­ PIECES. Including ZEOTROPE (1974), ski, piano. BELA BARTOK: CONCERTO NO. 'OTAHITI (1974), and SEREOPTICON (1972). 1 FOR PIANO AND ORCHESTRA, OP. 1. The Appleton is Associate Professor of Music ~ork is basically a small-scale piano and Director of the Bregman Electronic concerto in two movements, the second Music Studio at Dartmouth College. These following the first without a pause. recent compositions were realized at the ' The basic form is that of the Hungarian studio and are not available on record. dance in two sections, slow and quick. Performed by Geza Anda, piano, and the Radio Symphony Orchestra Berlin, Ferenc 6:55 PROGRAM NOTES Fricsay, conductor. 7:00 LEFT PRESS REVIEW. Frank Krasnowsky. 2:00 KEEPING WASHINGTON GREEN WITH THE EVER­ 7:30 COMMENTARY: Steve zemke and Linda Haver­ GREEN HAND TRUST. A conversation with field: "DOES WASHINGTON STATE NEED LAND­ Tom Bahr and Henry Booth of the Evergreen Hand Trust, an organization dedicated to USE PLANNING?" preserving from development rural and 8:00 VINTAGE JAZZ. Hal Sherlock. wildernes's land in the Pacific Northwest. Hosted for KRAB by Phil Andrus. . 9:00 SPECTRUM, with Carlos Hagen. I 3:00 FOLK MUSIC AND BERNSTEIN. A visit with 10:00 PERCUSSION. A concert of percussion mu­ Liam Taafe and Dan Gleeson from Ireland. sic beginning with Carlos Chavez and end­ (NPR) ing with Billy Cobham; along the way you'll hear the Shell Steel Band, Lucu­ 4 :00 GOLDEN RING. A Folk-r,egacy recording of mi Drums, Milford Graves, Batwa knuckles, friends gathering in the studios of WFMT Sun Ra, Bengali drums, Latin percussion in to sing a variety of tradition­ al songs including "The Blind Man's Song," ensembles, and others. "Captain Kidd," and "Dipper of ,stars." 11:00 U.S.A. FOR BEGINNERS with David Johnson. (Courtesy of Fifth Avenue Records.) R €I B, jazz. 4: 30 OPEN TIME

5:00 REPORT TO THE LISTENER. Station operations programming plans, crises, criticism. With Chuck Reinsch (station manager) and Leila Gorbman (prog~am director). Call at 325- 5110.

5:30 ON THE FOUL LINE. Basketball, with Ro­ ger Sale and Norman Arkans.

6 You get clearer pictures from over 100 ml'I es away Friday 7

5: 00 A MUSICAL SALUTE TO BRIDGES. Performed 6:30 EARLY MUSIC. Stu Witmer. by the Washington State Dental Association Choir. 10: 00 EARTH MUSIC. Natasha Bushnell. 6:00 THE WHITE HANDED GIBBON. Unorganized is 11: 55 PROGRAM NOTES not unstructured. Is it the function of sound to communicate ideas, or emotions.? 12: 00 SPECTRUM, with Car16s Hagen. Repeated From the Malay Peninsula, a fellow crea­ from last night. ture "speaks." Produced by C. Reinsch with the assistance of the Woodland Park 1:00 THE HIROSHIMA MASSES. In 16th-century Japan, Jesuit missionaries made several Zoo. attempts to build up Japanese liturgical 6: 55 PROGRAM NOTES music; those experiments carne to an end, however, when all Catholic priests were 7:00 ART WORKS. Produced by Me~issa Garman. expelled from Japan. In the Meiji era Christian missionaries were again per­ 7:30 SUNTREADER. The eternal voice of a Rus­ mitted, for by then Japan was anxious to sian monk lost in the inferno of a Tibet­ accept anything from abroad. Consequent­ an ritual while riding the range. With ly, the hymns t

LIGHTS ON • f~at~tr'il)$ ~~~ b~st ,.~tiQl) of folk. ~ti b[~­ .9ra?,,$ il)5tru~e~ i~ i.lJR: t>istricl!. W~ r.ep-­ air $ick accu-skic $£:ril';J!~c5" in$~ru~~l)~'s /~r.$1) .bU~ a~.6 ~r~uSIl-. l1)f"r~ai:iol) a&ou~ folk ~U~l1i? ?(1)¢ mn$ic - NO WASHOUT il)st~'uc~iOlJ ju~~ a"k.,!

tlp~~: fO:30.,"Jo 1l)01)-'Fri (7 y-1tl- E'hur,..) lZ·f ,$a1;. 7~j6 nl\i~.er.$ft~ U1a~ W:£. 't.1\. 1'-111° II 7 6:00 MUSIC OF WOMEN OF THE WORLD. Featuring THIoS IS OUR THIRD YEAR OF PRESENTING ALL WO­ women's choruses from the Soviet Union MEN'S PROGRAMMING ON MARCH 8TH. MOST and the Balkans, Amalia Rodrigues of Por­ PROGRAMS ARE LOCAL PRODUCTIONS, DONE WITH tugal, La Calandria of Puerto Rico, vio­ WOMEN IN THE COMMUNITY AND PRODUCED BY letta Parra of Chile, and music from other THOSE ALREADY AT KRAB. WE WELCOME YOUR places where women sing out. With Natasha. COMMENTS, BY PHOOE OR LETTER. :'AND THIS IS THE WAY THEY RING THE BELLS 7: 00 WOMEN IN LABOR. A prepared tape on the IN BEDLAM ... " --Anne Sexton (1928-1974) hers tory of women in labor struggles fol­ lowed by statements and discussion on current issues, specifically the Equal Rights Amendment, by women workers and Women for Working Rights. 8:00 INSIDE THE LOOKING-GLASS. Five women dis­ cuss the pros and cons of being female in the male wonderland of Seattle's com­ mercial media. with Veronica Weikel (KVI) , Mary Fain (KING), Ann Martin (KlRO) , Ka­ ren Denard (KYAC) and Helene Mitchell (KUOW and president of American Women in Radio and Television). Rita Rega hosts.

WHERE DO WE GO AFTER 40? Interviews and discussion with women in nursing homes, grandmothers and older women workers.

ART WORKS LIKE A WOMAN. Me lis sa Garman Saturday 8 talks with Northwest women artists in this special edition of ART WORKS. 8:00 THE VOICE OF WOMAN. A kaleidoscopic view. With Rita Rega. 10:00 WOMEN BEHIND THE MEN IN BLUES AND JAZZ. Clare Conrad. 10: 00 INDIAN MUSIC BY WOMEN. Shantha Benegal. 11.00 Shan ahd the rest wind up the day with 11:00 ISSUES IN WOMEN'S HEALTH. A discussion a musical celebration of womankind. Thank by women's clinic workers from four local you for listening, sisters. women's clinics on why the clinics exist, why women go to them and some of the prob­ 12:00 DEATHWATCH. You will not be given another lems of working in them. S. Lipsky, L. Thetford, Eliz Regele, Veronica Weikel and Robin.

12:00 YOUNG WOMEN BEGINNING MENSES. Interviews and discussion done by two young women with their classmates on beginning men­ struation and how the schools deal with it.

12:30 MUSIC AND COMMENTARY FROM THE THIRD WORLD. Literature, discussion and musica!_ pre­ sentations by the Third World Women's Alliance. M. Stone, Mayumi.

1:30 THE FEMALE EXPERIENCE. Poetry of woman­ kind. With Melissa Garman.

2:00 WOMEN IN PRISON. Poems and music on and by women in prision by Women Out Now with herstory and discussion of the work being done with women in prison. Rita, Therese, and Martha.

3:00 THREE WOMEN: A POEM FOR THREE VOICES. Written by Sylvia Plath during the tran­ sitional period between THE COLOSSUS and ARIEL. Plath's poem is set in a maternity ward. With Sheliey- Rae -, -Leila Gorl::rnan, and Rita Rega (who also directs the pro­ duc.tion) • 3:30 RAPE. A cross-cultural phenomenon. Dis­ cussions, case histories, news stories from international sources. Music, po­ etry. Includes a discussion of legal problems in rape prosecution and the new Women's commission Rape Law now being con­ sidered by the state legislature. with Lois, Mari, Shan of LFRC, and Marie Che­ valier of Rape Relief. "You needn't leave home to find it."

5: 00 INTERNATIONAL NEWS HIGHLIGHTS OF THE PAST YEAR, BY THE LESBIAN FEMINIST RADIO COL­ LECTIVE.A special news show done by A. 8 Manley, J. Carpenter, from the regular KRAB feminist news team. Sunday 9

9:00 YESTERDAY'S SUNSHINE. 78'5 with Elved 7:00 WE: WOMEN EVERYWHERE. Local, national Parry. and international feminist news and com­ mentary. Produced by the Lesbian Femin­ 12: 00 JAZZ FOR A SUNDAY AFTERNOON ist Radio Collective.

4:00 CHUTZPA! Jewish music, humor, literature. 8:00 FLACCID RADIO. Tune in. Turn on. Drop Produced by Haim Rosemarin. out. Robert Thomas Horsley.

4:30 MONSTER MUSIC. A presentation of 20th­ 9: 00 THE ROBOTNOR HOURS. Raymond Serebrin. century music, emphasizing avant-garde compositions from western and non-Western 11:00 SYNCOPATED ECSTASY. Roswell: jazz. sources. Today featuring the· works of Olivier Messiaen. With Michael Coolen.

6: 0 0 THE QUEEN CITY: THE SHORELINES MANAGE­ MENT ACT, Part II. This week we will be looking at the different attitudes which various people have towards the Act. Different interests desire different re~ sults from the Act, hence we see lobby­ ing activities by different special inter­ est groups. TwO· of these groups -- the Washington Environmental Council (a cit­ izen's conservation group) and the Western Environmental Trade Association (com­ prised of business and industry) -- dis­ cuss their reaction to the S.M.A. tonight on THE QUEEN CITY. Hosted by Bruce Sha­ piro. 9 Monday 10 Tuesday 11

6:30 EARLY MUSIC. Stu Witmer. 6:30 EARLY MUSIC. Stu Witmer,

10:00 COUNTRY FIDDLING. Frank Ferrel. 10:00 EARTH MUSIC. Music of Africa with Mi­ chael Coolen. 11:55 PROGRAM NOTES 11: 55 PROGRAM NOTES 12:00 THE QUEEN CITY: THE SHORELINES MANAGE­ MENT ACT, Part II. Repeated from last 12:00 ARTHUR ASHE ON SOUTH AFRICA. The tennis night. player who was refused a visa to S.A. in 1970 for the South .African Open tennis 1:00 J.S. BACH: TWO CONCERTOS FOR TWO PIANOS. c?ampionships, has visited the country CONCERTO NO. 1 IN C MINOR (BWV 1060) and Slnce then, and talks of the economical CONCERTO NO. 2 I~ C MAJOR (BWV 1061). and social ~onditio~s facing non-whites The second of these works became a proto­ there. (NPR) type for two-piano literature from the Baroque through to present times, nota­ 1:00 SPONTANEO RADEO. Rachel-Diane Norton. bly in Stravinsky's CONCERTO FOR TWO PI­ ANOS and Bartok's SONATA FOR TWO PIANOS 2:30 EDWARD SAID. An interview with a pro­ AND PERCUSSION. Robert and Gaby Casadesus., fessor of American Literature at Colum­ pianists; with the Zurich Chamber Orc­ bia University who has written extensively hestra. on questions of the Mitldle East and Arabs ~nd Jews. He suggests that the underly­ 2: 00 CI TY COUNCIL MEETING: LIVE, from the Hu­ lng problem is a recognition of the fact nicipal Building. that the Israeli Jews will not go away. (Pacifica) 4:00 TO BE ANNOUNCED 3:30 TURNTABLES. Tired of listening to radio 5:00 VINTAGE ROCK. Gregg Whitcomb. programs? Try making one, a la KRAB.

6:00 JEAN SHEPHERD. From WOR in nyc. 5:30 RADIO UPTOWN. Radio Uptown provides a format for community organizations andl 6: 55 PROGRAM NOTES citizen-based coalitions to discuss cur­ rent issues of concern· to the community. 7: 00 "WHAT'S GOIN' DOWN." Flo Ware hosts dis­ Hosted by Bob Shapiro. cussions of co~nunity issues. 6:00 ISKRA 1903. Conceptual art manifested 7: 30 COMl1ENTARY: TYEE SCO'rT, on "No Separate in music by three European improvisors. Not IIjazz." not "classical," but .... Peace. II Paul Rutherford, trombone and piano; 8:00 KING BISCUIT TIME. Bob West presents jazz Derek Bailey, acoustic/amplified guitar; from Louisiana and Texas featuring Joseph and Barry Guy, acoustic/amplified bass. Robechaux, John H. Bragg, Oscar Celes­ Recorded in London in May of 1972. tin, and Thomas Valentine. 8:55 PROGRAM NOTES

7:00 NORTHWEST INDIAN NEWS. Produced by In­ dians into Communication.

7: 30 KEN KESEY ON "EGYPTIANS, VENUTIANS AND WASHINGTONIANS. " A speech recorded Feb­ ruary 12 at the U. of W. during a workshop en ti tIed "Finding Communi ty in an Urban Environment. "

9:30 NO, YOU! The monkey ward catalog of va­ riety programs. Use the Speedy index.

11:00 WHAT'S TO HERE. Loving every minute of • 9:00 CHINESE RADIO. Produced in Cantonese by it. Sticking with it. with Jay. Eugene Lai and the Chinese Hedia Committee.

10:00 TINING NG PILIPINO. Filipino ethnic hour, fea turing tr adi tional and contemporary native music and news. Kuya Bebeng on the air to respond to problems. In Tag­ alog and Carabao English.

11:00 SPAGHETTINI.' Visual allusions. Leila Gorbman.

10 Wednesday 12

6:30 EARLY lIDSIC. Stu Witmer. 8:00 ROBERT GARFIAS

10:00 Taped re-broadcast from the HOUSE OF RE­ 9: 30 FRANK'S TALES FROM SHAKESPEARE. Story , FUGE CHURCH OF GOD PENTACOST, with its comments and excerpts from Shakespeare's choir, piano, organ, trumpet, drums, tarn­ plays, presented every month by Frank bourine and a sermon by Bishop Robert J. Krasnowsky. This month, "The Taming of Causey. the Shrew."

11: 55 PROGRAM NOTES

12:00 MARRIAGE SPEAK OUT. Excerpts from a N.Y. Radical Feminist conference in February, Aft e ~ 1973. Women speak of their changing con­ 6 Ye ars, sciousness about their marriages, many 3TILL Ol~ LY of which ended in divorce.

1:00 SPONTANEO RADEO. Ellen Ziegler.

3: 00 CLEM MAVERICK, by R.G. Vliet. A poetic 25' documentary and ballad describing the ra­ pid rise to stardom and the early death of a young country and western singer. (NPR)

4: 00 IS THERE A WOOD STOVE IN YOUR FUTURE? If so, you'll appreciate Ray Verbeck's wealth of experience with wood-burning heat sources and cook stoves. Learn how to heat your home with a 50-gallon oil Upcoming Th~mes drum -- after the oil has been removed. In terviewed by Phil Andrus.

4:15 NINETEENTH-CENTURY VIOLIN CONCERTOS, Part photography II. PETER ILYICH TCHAIKOVSKY. Critic Eduard Hanslick wrote in 1881: "The vi­ gardening olin is no longer played; it is yanked about, it is torn asunder, it is beaten black and blue ... " This. work has come to be known as the height of the violin concerto and is undoubtedly the most dif­ ficult to play. pe,o,ple's

5:30 THE WORLD OF CHASSIDUS. Mosie and stories 'biceRtenllial of the Chassidic Jews, with Rabbi Samuels.

6:00 SCp~DINAVIAN MUSIC. Carla Wulfsberg. The Passage Is Sold 6:55 PROGRAM NOTES Throu~hout The state 7: 00 THE PIKE PLACE MARKET, Part II. Tonight, "FIGHTING THE GOOD FIGHT." Second in a OR SU.BSCR·IBE series looking 'at the development of the Pike Place Market. This week a discussion To N. \./.P.Box 105' South Bellingham Sta. 98225 with Victor Steinbrueck. Mr. Steinbrueck was critical in changing the format of the urban renewal plan for the Market 10: 30 BALLADS AND SONGS OF SCOTLAND. Sung by from bulldozers to renovation. Produced and hosted by Bruce Shapiro. Norman Kennedy. To impress on him the value of the songs, Kennedy's mentor (An­ 7:30 COMMENTARY: GOVERNMENT VS. RESPONSIBI­ nie Johnstone) insisted that he complete LITY. Commentary by members of the John some household chore for every song or Birch Society, produced by John MacDonald. tale she gave him. In this way he got . to know the everyday aspects of highland life as well as the traditional arts. The West Coast style is apparent in all, his Singing, not only that in Gaelic.

11: 00 VARIATIONS FOR A DOOR AND A SIGH. Hear him; it's Jeff Follette.

11 Thursday 13

6:30 EARLY MUSIC. Stu Witmer. 6:00 VARIATIONS ON "TIMESTEPS" by Walter Car­ los. With Mickey Hart, John Neihardt, 10:00 EARTH MUSIC. R~bert Garfias, from last John Fahey, George Crumb, and a studio night. full of Buddhists. Assembled by Thomas Nast. 11: 55 PROGRAM NOTES 6:55 PROGRAM NOTES 12:00 THE WOMEN'S SURVIVAL KIT. Music, inter­ views, poetry, drama. For feminists, 7:00 HOW TO AVOID THAT SCREWED FEELING. Cav­ other women, and the rest. Produced by eat emptor no more. Participate, at 325- . the Lesbian Feminist Radio C.ollective. 5110. Sern Watt, Clint Chapin and Ron Today, ASIAN WOMEN, with emphasis on the Campbell. women in China and Vietnam. 7: 30 COMMENTARY: HAR RESISTERS' LEAGUE NORTH­ 1: 00 FATS WALLER., As played by various jazz WEST. A program of interviews, discus­ artists (Part II). Versions of "Honey­ sions, literature, information and commen­ suckle Rose," "Stealing Apples," and med­ tary about efforts affirming life and leys by Earl Hines and Gene Krupa. non-violent methods of saying no to war and the military. With Irwin Hogenauer, 2: 30 THE PIKE PLACE I1ARKET, Part II: "FIGHT­ commentary and coordination. ING TilE GOOD FIGHT." Turning the tide from bulldozers to renovation. Re-broad­ 8: 00 CLASSIC JAZZ with MIKE DUFFY. Clancy cast from last night. Rayes is featured along with Son House, 3:00 FOLK FESTIVAL U.S.A.: EISTEDDFOD. From Bix Beiderbecke, Len Barnard, Bob Scobey the ancient Welsh word for "a gathering and Henry Al,len. of bards and minstrels," this festival of Anglo folk music is held each year in 9:00 SPECTRUH, with Carlos Hagen. North Dartmouth, Massachusetts. This 10: 00 HANK BRADLEY AND JODY STECHER. String first of two programs from the 1974 event band music of many lands played by Jody will highlight performances by Gordon Stecher and Hank Bradley (winner of the Bok, Norman Kennedy, Hargaret MacArthur, first annual KRAB Fiddle Contest and Alan Block, Dwane Thorpe, Dick Fegy and Washington State Old-Time Champion). Fennig's All-Star String Band. (NPR) LIVE.

5:00 REPORT TO THE LISTENER. Chuck Reinsch 11:00 THE ITURI JURY (station manager) and Leila Gorbman (program director) answer your questions, read your letters, report on ~B prog­ ress and plans. Call us up: 32~-5110.

5:30 ON THE FOUL LINE. Basketball, like you never heard it before, with Roger Sale and Norman Arkans. A-l Plano Sales tJ Rental if J u J PCanoMov(ng Service

J(m Floberr, 0W~€~

7020 qrtmwo£Ji Statrk-,Wash. 9&10] ~(6)5U2-+592 12 Friday 14 Saturday 15

6:30 EARLY MUSIC. Stu Witmer. 8: 00 SATURDAY MORNING MUSIC. Jazz with Jeff Follette. 10:00 EARTH MUSIC. With Natasha Bushnell. 12:00 EARTH MUSIC. Jim Paradis. 11:55 PROGRAM NOTES 2:30 BABY BISCUIT BLUES 12:00 SPECTRUM, with Carlos Hagen. A repeat of last night's program. 4:00 "THE BALD SOPRANO." An all-KBOO produc­ tion of the Ionesco play. Sue Sargent, 1: 00 THE GEOGRAPHY OF LOGRAI RE. Sections of as Mrs. Smith; John Eccles, as Mr. Smith; Thomas Merton's "final testament" are read Connie Filkins, as Mrs. ' Martin; Barry , wi th appropriate musical interruptions.' Schwam, as Mr. Martin; Lisa Heath, as The work was completed in 1968, a few the Maid; and Bill Reinhardt, as the months before Merton set out from Our La­ Fire Chief. dy of Gethsemani monastery in Kentucky on the Asian journey from which he has 4: 45 HARRY PARTCH RETROSPECTIVE. The first not r~turned. Produced by C. ~insch. in a series of programs devoted to the music and ideas of Harry Partch (1901- 3: 00 SEATTLE FOLKLORE SOCIETY CONCERT: SON 1974). Partch devised his own instru­ HOUSE (WITH MIKE RUSSO). One of the ments, scale, and harmonic system to serve greatest exponents of country blues, his concept of integrated theater, draw­ Eddie "Son" House is featured on this ing from various cultures, past and pre­ program. Produced by Darrel MCMichael sent. Music, drama, and dance are all and Phil Williams. integrated to convey the dramatic idea. In this first program his method of tu­ 4:30 BUSING, RACISM AND QUALITY EDUCATION. ning and concept of the corporeal are Racism and education, in Boston and the discussed, and Partch introduces his in­ entire country. A collage, produced by struments. Presented by Phil Arnautoff. Pacifica affiliate WBUR-FM, ' in Boston. 6:00 FILMS. Dick Jameson and Kathleen Murphy. 6,25 PROGRAM NOTES 6:30 OPEN CHANNELS with TERRY KINCAID. A pro­ 6:30 EZRA AND ARNOLD. The famous duo reco~ded gram of electronic music, frequently un­ live at the Village Vanguard, featuring available commercially. Produced at KB Schoenberg's VARIATIONS ON A RECITATIVE Studios in Ann Arbor, Michigan. Tonight, FOR ORGAN, OP. 40, performed by Gerd Zac­ a program of concrete music, containing her, and Ezra Pound reading CANTO 99. pieces by Tod Dockstader and others.

7:00 LIVE music concert: JODY STECHER plays 7:30 ARABIC MUSIC. Dawod Sweilem. North Indian classical pieces on the oud (traditionally a middle eastern instru­ 8:30 MOULDY FYGGE: PUNCH MILLER. Excerpts ~ent). Accompanied by Ellen Ziegler, ta­ of interviews from his 1972 PBS program bla. "Till the Butcher Cut Him Down" and rare recordings. With Val Golding. 3:00 JUGALBANDI. Recorded at a concert in New York City in 1972 following the death of 9: 00 BLUEGRASS their guru, the legendary Ustad Allaudin Khan, two of his disciples, Ali Akbar Khan 12:00 DEATHWATCH. Street Walkin'. and Ravi Shankar perform evening ragas, HEM BIHAG and MANJ KHAMAJ. Alla Rakha accompanies on tabla.

):,30 "SORRY, I'LL READ THAT AGAIN." Comedy from the BBC. Silly but harmless.

): 00 SONGS MY MOTHER USED TO SING HER MONKEY. A collection of simian lullabies, popu­ lar songs, and epithets by Yma Sumac, St. Louis Jimmy, Melvin Van Peebles, Car­ men McRae, Lord Flea, and other~ (in­ cluding monkeys) •

1:00 BUMBLING WITH BALTIC. Jazz.

IS Sunday 16

9:00 YESTERDAY'S SUNSHINE. 78's with Elved Pa:r:>ry. Olg-6rM·>j

12:00 ONTHERADIO. Self-imposed order of vinyl. Separate and in wads. Varied menu pre­ pared by J.D. Stickler.

4: 00 MUSIC OF INDIA. S'elected by Shantha Ben­ egal.

6:00 DARK WATERS. Mona Lisa presents Northwest poets and notes on the art world.

7 : 00 WE: WOMEN EVERYWHERE. Local, national and international feminist news and com­ mentary. Produced by the Lesbian Femin­ ist Radio Collective.

8:00 "STOP THE BUBBLE MACHINE." Heads bob and fingers snap to the waltz of death, the march of time, and the twist of fate. Robert Thomas Horsley.

9:00 THE ?OBOTNOR HOURS. Raymond Serebrin.

11:00 SYNCOPATED ECSTASY. Roswell, with jazz.

The Fiddle Shop Specializing in traditional music Lessons R,confs slutr .Mus{c .J\I(mor R!p«{rs FIDDLES BOUGHT l:r SOLD call or Wrtte for (t free ~~tU) and hl ,jure to Hsren to Franlt fern!:S :/ww, "COUNTRY FIDDLING;' ac 10 A~, :NCon~ mornf!!fs, :K!!J-B Raclio, 1°77. 723-2700 5212 South Alaska Street

14 Monday 17 Tuesday 18

6:30 EARLY MUSIC. Stu Witmer. 6:30 EARLY MUSIC. Stu Witmer.

0:00 COUNTRY FIDDLING. Frank Ferrel. 10:00 EARTH MUSIC. With Al Swenson.

1: 55 PROGRAM NOTES 11:55 PROGRAM NOTES

2: 00 THE HISTORY OF' PUERTO RICO: COLONIAL 12: 00 SIGHTLESSNESS. ,Interviews with two wo­ HISTORY AND ITS EFFECT ON ECONOMICS TO­ men who are experiencing blindness as DAY. A history, from a view of the In­ adults. One who will be eventually to­ dian culture prior to 1493, and P. R. 's tally blind, one who is blind, and is a involvement with, and control by, the painter. (NPR) Spanish and then the Americans. (WEAl, Pacifica) 1:00 SPONTANEO RADEO. Rachel-Diane Norton.

2:25 LOVE LETTERS OF THE IRISH PATRIOTS. We 2:30 SHAFIG AL-HOOT. An interview by Paul hear Theobald Wolfe Tone confiding to his McIsaac of WEAl with the chief spokesman young wife, Matilda, ,~ho was only sixteen for the P.L.O. at the United Nations. when they wed, before and after the abor­ He gives a sense of history, the make-up tive Insurrection of 1798. We listen of the P.L.O., its accomplishments (espe­ to the courting by the young advocate, cially in education), the origins of P.L.O. Daniel O'Conn!>,ll, of his cousin Mary and mili tancy. "If I want to learn from the hear again their exchange of love more Zionists, I WOUldn't like to learn ter­ than a quarter of a century later. We rorism." (Pacifica) share the confidence and love of Robert Emmett and Sarah Curran after the rebel­ 3:30 MUSIC OF THE OTHER IMPRESHIES. Michael lion of 1803. And finally there are the Coolon presents music of Liszt, Brahms, passionate letters of Charles Stewart Par­ Scott et alia. nell to Kitty O'Shea -- from the uncrowned King of Ireland to his secret queen. 5: 10 PENDERECKI: UTRENJA, THE ENTOMBMENT OF CHRIST. This work is Penderecki's sequel 1:25 PLANXTY. Songs for St. Patricks Day sung to his Passion According to St. Luke. by the popular Irish group including "si It's text is sung in old Slavonic, the Bh~ag, si Mh6r," a piece depicting a leg­ . language spoken by Sts. Cyril and Metho­ endary battle fought by the inhabitants dius c. 1000 A.D. This is one of the of two fairy hllls, and "Andrew McBride," principal languages of the Eastern Or­ an anti-recruiting song from Donegal. thodox Church, from whose 'ancient rites, extending back in some portions to 400 2:00 CITY COUNCIL MEETING: LIVE, from the Mu- A.D., this "morning service" comes. Per­ nicipal Building. formed by the Temple University Choirs and the Orchestra, Eugene 4:00 TO BE ANNOUNCED Ormandy, conductor.

5:00 VINTAGE ROCK. Gregg Whitcomb spins the 6:00 TURKISH MUSIC. Ali San. oldies. 6:55 PROGRAM NOTES 6: 00 JEAN SHEPHERD 7:00 THE QUEEN CITY. Seattle's 4.5 million­ 6 : 55 PROGRAM NOTES dollar HOUSING REHA8~LITATION PROJECT is the topic this week. What is it? Who 7: 00 "WHAT'S GOIN' DOWN." Flo Ware explores is eligible? What is the city's commit­ community issues with guests involved ment? Is it ' a good program? These ques­ therein. tions and others will be put to two very knowledgeable people, Dale Miller (Seattle 7: 3 0 ENVIRONMENTAL NEWS. The month's news in Office of Housing Policy) and Steve Melt­ environmental affairs, with Bob Burk and Phil Andrus. zer (from the North Greenwood Neighborhood , Development program). Hosted by Bruce 8:00 OLD TIME MUSIC. Phil Williams. Shapiro.

9:00 CHINESE RADIO. Produced in Cantonese by 8:00 BALTIC'S BOP STOP. Tonight, CHARLES MIN­ Eugene Lai and the Chinese Media Commit­ GUS: EXTENDED WORKS. tee. helped launch the post-bop extended solo and the beginnings of "free" jazz. His 0:00 HEADING FOR BETTER TIMES. The 30's and groups have been responsible for the first 40's, with Howard Hays. major exposure of such artists as Booker Ervin, Roland Kirk, John Handy, Booker 1:00 SPAGHETTINI. Mixed music, psychotic breaks. Little, Jaki Byard and Eric Dolphy. Lei 1<.. Featured are long compositions including FABLES OF FABUS and MEDITATIONS ON INTE­ GRATION. An impartial and import~nt transition~l bridge between bop and the "new" jazz.

9:30 NO, YOU' Readings, lipograms, clerihews, little ~llies, voyage, tripe, onions, mythology, psychology, liver, poetry, lists. Music, too. Far too shotgun for "straight" radio. NO FLOP·OVER 11:00 DAVID'S FANTASY. Music with David Bennett. 15 "From Christian to Coryell, the jazz gui- tar greats are featured tonight." Wednesday 19 6:30 EARLY MUSIC. Stu Witmer. 5:00 NINETEENTH-CENTURY VIOLIN CONCERTOS, Part III. CONCERTO IN D by Johannes Brahms. 10:00 A taped re-broadcast from the HOUSE OF Written in the classic German tradition, REFUGE CHURCH OF GOD PENTACOS-T, wi th its Brahms' concerto in its chaste grandeur choir, piano, organ, trumpet, drums, tam­ ' is the opposit~ of Tchai~ovsky's master- bourine, and a sermon by Bishop Robert piece. J. Causey. 6:00 PLAY, GYPSY, PLAY. Natasha, Friday mor­ 11: 55 PROGRAM NOTES nings' Earth Woman presents music of the Romany (the name the gypsies use for them­ 12:00 THE QUEEN CITY: SEATTLE'S 4.5 MILLION­ selves) living in Europe and perhaps be­ DOLLAR HOUSING REHABILITATION PROGRAM. yond. With Dale Miller and Steve Meltzer, hos­ ted by Bruce Shapiro. Repeated from last 6:55 PROGRAM NOTES night. 7:30 COMMENTARY: MAURY SHERIDAN, ON "THE RIGHT 1:00 SPONTANEO RADEO. Ellen Ziegler. TO LIFE."

3:25 THE OUTSIDER. A story by H.P. Lovecraft, 8:00 ROBERT GARFIAS, ethnomusicologist. adapted and performed by Eric Bauersfeld. 9:30 DEREK BAILEY AND HANS REICHEL: SOLO GUI­ 3:40 THE CLASSIC FLUTE IN SYRIA. Selim Kusur, TAR (ALTERED AND ODD). Two recordings solo, on the classic Arabic bamboo flute. of solo guitar music, alrgely improvised.

Four compositions: "Kurdi , II "5ikah," The British Bailey almost never plays the "Hijaz" and "Saba." (Courtesy Fifth Avenue same note twice; the German Reichel em­ Records. ) ploys a home-made ll-string electric gui­ tar, altered variously by a schnapps glass 4:15 FLUTE PLUS. The contemporary classical or an electric shaver. Some truly new western flute in different contexts: picking. Presented by Jay Stickler (grin­ "THE JET WHISTLE" for flute and cello, ning) • by VILLA-LOBOS; SONG OF TAYUMANAVAR FOR FLUTE AND SOPRANO by Schramm; "SE­ , 11:00 VARIATIONS FOR A DOOR AND A SIGH. Jeff RENADE NO. 10 FOR FLUTE AND HARP" by Per­ Follette. s1.chetti; "DUO FOR FLUTE AND OBOE" by Ginastera; "FIVE APHORISMS FOR FLUTE AND HARP" by Barner; and "PHANTASMAGORIA FOR FLUTE, CLARINET AND CONTRABASS" by Peter­ son. Performed by Samuel Baron, flute.

YA K I M A ',." OlANS AND THEIR TEPEES- P20t

16 Thursday 20

;:30 EARLY MUSIC. Stu witmer. 3:00 FOLK FESTIVAL U.S.A.: FLATPICKIN'. The Third National Guitar Flatpicking Cham­ ):00 EARTH MUSIC. Robert Garfias, from last pionship, features highlights of this night. three-day event held at Winfield, Kansas and includes performances by Doc and Merle l: 55 PROGRAM NOTES Watson, Norman Blake and Tut Taylor.

2: 00 THE WOMEN'S SURVIVAL KIT. Today, LATIN 5:00 REPORT TO THE LISTENER. Chuck Reinsch WOMEN. Interviews, poetry and music of (station manager) and Leila Gorbman (pro­ women in Portugal, Chile, Spain and Latin gram director) and various others report America. Produced by the Lesbian Femin­ on station operations and programming ist Radio Collective. plans. 1:00 LA NINA DE LOS PEINES (THE GIRL OF THE 5: 30 ON THE FOUL LINE. The Sonics, basketball' 'COMBS). Historic recordings made in the and other wisdom. Norman Arkans and Ro­ 20's and 30's of Pastora Pavon, perhaps ger Sale. the best-known "cantaora" (female singer) in the history of flamenco. 6:00 A DRUM IS A WOMAN. A musical fantasy pa­ rallelling the history of the origins of 1:30 LOU HARRISON: PACIFICA RONDO plus other jazz. Composed, arranged and narrated works. Mr. -Harrison '~rites: "In com­ by Duke Ellington and originally produced posing Pacifica Rondo, I have thought, (with dancers) for CBS-TV in May, 1957. with love, around the circle of the Pa­ Performed by Ellington and his band. cific." Each of the sections (except one, "Hatred of the filthy bomb") refers to 6:55 PROGRAM NOTES a particular part of the Pacific Basin, and employs Western and Oriental instru­ 7:00 LEFT PRESS REVIEW. Frank Krasnowsky. ments. Also heard are "FOUR PIECES FOR HARP," "TWO PIECES " FOR PSALTERY" and 7: 30 COMMENTARY: CLAUDE ALLEN, on "DEMYTHOL­ "MUSIC FOR VIOLIN AND VARIOUS INSTRUMENTS OGIZING OURSELVES." EUROPEAN, ASIAN AND AFRI CAN. " 8:00 VINTAGE JAZZ. Hal Sherlock. 2: 15 OPEN TIME 9:00 SPECTRUM, with Carlos Hagen. 2:30 PIKE PLACE MARKET: Part III, "WE STILL HAVE TO SAVE THE MARKET." Final program 10:00 SOUTHERN JOURNEY. A collection of field in a three-part series on the Pike Place recordings made in Virginia, the Caroli­ Market. Although the bulldozers have nas, and Georgia in 1959-60, exploring been stopped there are still problems to the roots of American Negro folk music. surmount in the restoration of the mar­ Groups include the Bright Light Quartet, ket. Discussing with Bruce Shapiro the the Bellville A Capella Choir, the Peer­ problems to come is David Guren of the less Four and Bessie Jones. Pike Place Merchants Association. 11:00 U.S.A. FOR BEGINNERS with David Johnson.

O~CeN6€R'f sooks 7:lt pike sr. s~~t::Le, WN. 98101 rou 2-S3b3 used. books bought tr soLd " ftm -5:3 0ym Monda~ rhrough Sa£urdat

17 Friday 21 Saturday- 22 6:30 EARLY MUSIC. Stu Witmer. 8:00 SATURDAY MORNING MUSIC. Jazz with Jeff Follette. 10:00 EARTH MUSIC, with Natasha Bushnell. 12:00 EARTH MUSIC. Ethnic melodies with Jim 11: 55 PROGRAM NOTES Paradis.

12:00 SPECTRUM, with Carlos Hagen. 2:30 BABY BISCUIT BLUES ...... _ ...___:::;~"'e;... .. ' fd !iI

1:00 GREEN. A spring sound construction for 4:00 TRIO SAN ANTONIO. In the late 1940's Diana, Daphne and Artemis. From the po­ Fred Zimmerle combined elements from the etry of Lorca, Thomas, Neruda and others. styles of Narciso Martinez and Santiago Produced by C. Reinsch. Jimenez to form his own unique accordion sounds. To this he added the vocal duet 3:00 THE FOLK SHOW. The music and poetry of singing tradition, and thus pioneered the JOQY ALIESAN, for to welcome the spring­ Norteno Sound in San Antonio. Today he time. LIVE. leads the popular group ("conjunto") Trio San Antonio. 5 : 0,0 OPEN TIME. 4: 30 THE HISTORY OF PUERTO RICO: ECONOMIC AND 5:15 DAVID COPE: ELECTRONIC MUSIC FOR TAPES POLITICAL FEASIBILITY OF INDEPENDENCE. A / AND INSTRUMENTS. "K," for traditional second interview with Anna zentella, of sound sources (piano, string quartet, the Hunter College of Puerto Rican stu­ voice and orchestra) processed electro­ dies, by Bonnie Bellow of WEAl. (Paci­ nically, stands symbolically for Beckett's fica) Krapp (as in "Krapp's Last Tape"). The composer makes use of tapes of earlier 5:00 HARRY PARTCH RETROSPECTIVE (Part II). works in creating "K." WEEDS involves a Words and music attain synthesis in LYRICS constant, slow, and modulating electronic BY LI-PO (1930-33), THE INTRUSIONS (1949- background contrasted by a repeating waltz 50), and several shorter works. The first performed on piano. aspect of the corporeal idea. Presented by Phil Arnautoff. 6:00 Select readings and music from the JAPA­ NESE NOH DRAMA. With Rita I and Ellen 6:00 FILMS. Dick Jameson and Kathleen Murphy. Ziegler. 6:30 THE TRIAL OF JOSEPH BRODSKY. A transcrip t 6: 55 PROGRAM NOTES of the trial of the jailed Soviet poet was smuggled out of the USSR. This is 7:00 ART WORKS. Produced by Melissa Garman. a re-enactment of the trial according to notes taken by a member of the Leningrad 7: 30 MORE STRINGS PLUCKED, AND .•. As last Writer's union. (WEAl, Pacifica) month, music from one person employing 8 fingers, 2 thumbs and/or variously. 7:30 ARABIC MUSIC, with Dawod Sweilem. Different times and places in the world. ,Presented by Victor Vibrator. 8:30 MOULDY FYGGE: LEE WILEY, Part I. Clas­ sic vocals by the jazz man's singer of 8:30 LATIN LIGHT. Inner-city Latin-Afro, from the 30's. Part II next week. the vicinity of Harlem River Drive. with Robert Orlando. 9 : 00 BLUEGRASS

9: 30 "SORRY, I'LL READ THAT AGAIN." Comedy 12:00 DEATHWATCH. Close your eyes and decom­ from the BBC. pose.

10:00 THE DAY WE FOUND A PIANO ON THE BEACH .• OR WAS IT A WOMAN'S BODY? A concert in­ cluding Luc Ferrari's SOCIETE II ("And If the Piano Were A Female Body"), Keats' LA BELLE DAME SANS MEReI read by Margaret Rawlings, THE MATING CALL OF A WILD RHINO (rarely heard except in irate snorts), Shelley's ODE TO THE WEST WIND read by Gary Watson, and Luc Ferrari's PRESQUE RIEN #1 (Daybreak on the Beach) •

11:00 FREE ACTION. Jazz with John Voorhees.

18 Sunday 23

9:00 YESTERDAY'S SUNSHINE. 78's with Elved 6 :55 "WHAT'S GOIN' DOWN." Flo Ware hosts an Parry. hour focusing on topical issues of concern to the Seattle communities. Usually dis­ 12: 00 JAZZ FOR A SUNDAY AFTERNOON cussing the particular issues with guests actively involved in them, Flo gets at the 4:00 CHUTZPA 1 Jewish music, humor, commentary. heart of controversial topics. Individual Produced by Haim Rosemarin. topics to be announced.

4:30 MONSTER MUSIC. A presentation of 20th­ 7:30 COMMENTARY: EL CENTRO DE LA RAZA, on century music, emphasizing avant-garde "THE IMMIGRATION QUEST.J:ON AND SCAPEGOAT­ compositions from both Western ~ non­ ING." Western sources. Today, BERIO AND THE BOyS. With Michael Coolen. 8:00 QUEEN BISCUIT TIME: DEPRESSION SONGS. Featuring Louis Armstrong and the Mills 6:00 NEW CHINA. Produced by the U.S.-China Brothers, Casey Bill Weldon, Mississippi Friendship Association. Sarah, and the Soul stirr~rs. With Clare Conrad. 7 :00 WE: WOMEN EVERYWHERE. Local, national and international feminist news and anal­ ysis. Produced by the Lesbian Feminist Radio Collective.

8:00 COPESETIC RADIO. Your radio pats you on the head and laughs behind your back. With Robert Thomas Horsley.

9 :00 THE ROBOTNOR HOURS. Rock, R & B, and jazz. With RaYmond Serebrin. 9:00 CHINESE RADIO. Produced in Cantonese by Eugene Lai and the Chinese Media Commit­ 11:00 SYNCOPATED ECSTASY •. Roswell, with jazz. tee.

10:00 TINING NG PILIPINO. Filipino ethnic hour, featuring traditional and contemporary native music and news. Kuya Bebeng on Mond.ay 24 the air to respond to problems. In Tag­ alog and Carabao English.

6:30 EARLY MUSIC. Stu Witmer. 11:00 SPAGHETTINI. Leila.

10:00 COUNTRY FIDDLING. Frpnk Ferrel.

11:55 PROGRAM NOTES

12:00 OPTIONS: BILINGUAL EDUCATION IN AMERICA. Is bilingual education of all children a legitimate national goal? Options on Education takes you inside bilingual schools in Crystal City, Texas, and Washington, D.C. (NPR)

1:00 CHAMBER MUSIG BY THE YOUNG BEETHOVEN on ORIGINAL INSTRUMENTS. Including TRIO FOR PIANO, CLARINET AND VIOLIN CELLO IN B FLAT MAJOR, OP. 11, ALLEGRO AND MINUET FOR TWO FLUTES IN G MAJOR, SONATA FOR PIANO AND HORN IN F MAJOR, OP. 17, and QUIN­ TET FOR OBOE, THREE HORNS IN E FLAT AND BASSOON IN E FLAT (fragment). Music of Beethoven's first years in Vienna (1792- 1800) in which he struggled and experimen­ ted to find his own meanS of musical ex­ pression and free himself from the then­ oppressive influence of Mozart and Haydn.

2:00 CITY COUNCIL MEETING. LIVE, from the Municipal Building.

4: 00 TO BE ANNOUNCED

·5:00 VINTAGE ROCK. Oldies with Gregg Whitcomb.

6: 00 JEAN SHEPHERD.

19 / Tuesday 25 Wednesday 26 ..

6:3,0 EARLY MUSIC. Music of Turkey, with Maury 6:30 EARLY MUSIC. stu witmer. Herman. 10:00 A taped re-broadcast from the HOUSE OF 11: 55 PROGRAM NOTES REF,UGE CHURCH OF GOD PENTACOST, with its choir, piano, organ, trumpet, drums, tam­ 12:00 THE NEW CONGRESS. David.Broder (of the bourine, and a sermon by Bi shop Robert washington Post) and James sundquist (of J. Causey. the Brookings Institution) discuss the new, post-watergate Congress, and the 11: 55· PROGRAM NOTES problems it will face. (NPR) 12:00 OPTIONS: BEING YOUR OWN AGE. KCRW's Ruth 1:00 SPONTANEO HADEO. Rachel-Diane Noocton. Mills investigates problems of. retired people: adjusting to changes in living 2:30 ADI BEN ZUI. Paul McIsaac of WBAI inter­ habits, depression, and nutrition. (NPR) views Adi Ben-Zui, currently Vice-Counsel for the S.W. area area of the U.S. for 1:00 SPONTANEO HADEO; Ellen ziegler. the Israeli Fore ~ gn Service. He presents the Israeli government's analysis and po­ 3:30 OPTIONS: NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF HEALTH. sition on the question of the P.L.O: (Pa­ A report on the Clinical Center of the cifica) N.I.H., one of the few hospitals equipped to treat cancer. (NPR) 3:30 TURNTABLES. Tired of listening to radio programs? Try making one, a la KRAB. 4:30 NINETEENTH-CENTURY VIOLIN CONCERTOS, Part 325-5110. IV: CONCERTO IN E MINOR by Felix Mendels­ sohn. An instantaneous hit at its 1845 5:30 HADIO UPTOWN. Community issues and prob­ debut, Mendelssohn's chief wish was that lems. Hosted by Bob Shapiro. the concerto be easy for the talented vi­ olinist to play. 6:00 G.F. HAND~L: CONCERTI GROSSI, NO. 's 1 AN!), 2 IN B FLAT, NO.3 IN G, NO.4 IN F, 5:30 THE WORLD OF CHASSIDUS. Music and sto­ and NO. 5 IN D MINOR. In a magnificent ries of the Chassidic Jews, with Rabbi burst of energy, Handel knocKed out these Samuels. concerti in only 14 years, between 1716 and 1730. Performed by Collegium Aureum. 6:00 SCANDINAVIAN MUSIC. Carla Wulfsberg.

6:55 PROGRAM NOTES 6: 55 PROGRl'M NOTES

7:00 NORTHWEST INDIAN NEWS. Produced by In­ 7: 00 YOUR SEATTLE/KING COUNTY OMBUDSMAN. Paul dians Into Communication. Meyer and his staff return to give this month's report from the Ombudsman's of­ 7:30 THE FASCINATING WORLD OF AMBIENT NEWS. fice. A monthly feature made possible On March 1st a new service agency opened through the auspices of the KRAB Public its doors. Called the Ravenna Center for Affairs people and the Bohemian Broad­ Older Adults, it utilizes a new concept casting Company. in helping those who otherwise might need to be institutionalized. By providing 7: 30 COMMENTARY: INDOCHINA REPORT, wi th Dave them with day care in their homes, the Chaddock. center is able to help older people stay in their communities rather than be shun­ 8:00 ROBERT GARFIAS ted off to an institution and forgotten. Bruce ' Shapiro discusses the center's pro­ 9:30 WEARING A BLUE DOG. Readings from Amer­ gram with its director, Char,lotte Sand­ ica, a Prophecy, Blue Dog Soles, Black born. Si los, and Naked Teeth Mothers. Rick Landry from Sequim. 8:00 LIVE FOLKS. Local folk musician, Jeff Rice, picks and sings original and stan­ ·dard tunes LIVE from the KRAB music studio. Hosted by David Hannon. 10: 30 BAHAMAS , FOLK GUITAR. 'Joseph Spence re­ corded at Fresh Creek Settlement, A4dros, 9:30 NO, YOU! Call up if you want to find out Bahama Islands in 1958. what he's reading from ••• he usually doesn't say on the air. Funny, that doesn't seem 11: 00 VARIATIONS FOR A DOOR AND A SIGH. Jeff to be the way it 'sposed to be (?) . Follette,'music and verbal atrocities.

11:00 ACCEPT MY HANDKER th h ' CHIEF .•• It is shiny 'cause t e s ow 1S over (sez p. Brown). No need o be upset. Music and musings for us ,20 and them. Thursday 27

6:30 EARLY MUSIC. stu witmer. 6:55 PROGRAM NOTES

10:00 EARTH MUSIC. Robert Garfias, from last 7:00 HOW TO AVOID THAT SCREWED FEELING. Com­ night. mon sense for auto owners. Call in on 325-5110, to Sem Watt, Clint Chapin-, Ron 11:55 PROGRAM NOTES Campbell.

12:00 WOMEN'S SURVIVAL KIT: Today, AFRICAN 7: 30 COMMENTARY: WAR RESISTERS' LEAGUE NORTH­ WOMEN. Poetry, music and interviews. WEST. Interviews, discussion, literature, Produced by the Lesbian Feminist Radio information and commentary about efforts Collective. . affirming non-violent ways of saying no to war and the mi li tary. Wi th Irwin H.o­ genauer,. commentator/coordinator.

8:00 CLAS SIC JAZZ, with MIKE DUFFY. Tonight, music by Don Redman, Carl Kress, Django Reinhardt, the Firehouse Five Plus Two, and more.

9:00 SPECTRUM, with Carlos Hagen.

10:00 KEITH JARRETT: IN THE LIGHT. Pianist Jar­ rett puts his attention' to Wes'tern clas­ sical forms and instrumentation. Music for: flute and strings, harpsichord tran­ scribed for piano, brass quintet, solo 1: 00 "BOISEC": TRADITIONAL CREOLE MUSIC of piano, string quartet, guitar and strings, the French-speaking Blacks of southwest celli and trombone group, and piano, per­ Louisiana, which later gave rise ·to the cussion and orchestra. Musicians inc lude remarkable musical gumbo known as Zydeco the composer, guitarist Ralph Towner, the or La L?, of which Clifton Chenier is to­ Sonnleitner Quartet, and members of the day the most popular exponent. 'Performed SUdfunk Symphony Orchestra. by Alphonse "Boisec" Ardoin with Canray Fontenot and The Ardoin Brothers. Also, 11:00 THE ITURI JURY FOLKSONGS OF THE LOUISIANA ACACIANS. ' A new Arhoolie recording, featuring Wallace "Cheese" Reed, Milton Molitor, Lurlin Le­ june and other Cajun ~usicians.

2:30 THE' MOTHER by Bertolt Brecht. The San Francisco Mime Troupe in a live perfor­ mance of Brecht's play about the worker and the strike. Produced and narrated by Kim Aubry of WYSO at Antioch College.

3:00 FOLK MUSIC AND BERNSTEIN. Highlights from the 1974 NEWPORT FOLK FESTINAL. (NPR)

4:00 OPEN TIME

4: 30 YOUR SEATLE/KING COUNTY OMBUDSMAN Paul Meyer and his .staff return for this month's report. Repeated from last night. Hos- ted by Bruce Shapiro.

5:00 REPORT TO THE LISTENER. Chuck and Leila and others on station operations here at 1US KRAB. The latest, up-to-the-minute poop. Q'RAZ p 3 · Call in with criticism, ideas, etc: 325- 5ll0. 1''' QRAZ 5:30 ON THE FOUL LINE. Basketball, with Ro­ ger Sale and Norman Arkans. ~ BOUTIQUES 6 :00 THE MIGHTY SPARROW SINGS TRUE-LIFE SONGS at YOUR PERSONAL~ FASHION BOUTIOUE Pike Street Market AND STORIES OF PASSION, PEOPLE AND POLI­ TICS. The mighty sparrow, "King of Ca­ -WIGS- lower level lypso," is heard perforilling several of OAYWEAR - SPORTSWEAR - EVENING WEAR Go'vns his greatest hits recorded in Trinidad - HOSIERY - UNDIES - LEATHER GOODS - A, R T ESSENTIAL OILS ~ INCENSE FRAGRANCES - Cosmetics in the late 50's and early 60's. Refer­ IEWElRY Hand Made Jewel ry ences to Castro, Khruschev, Kennedy and Exotic Gifts of the East ALL AT 3.d and PIKE bananas, 'slaves and the village ram. 622-3415 624-4004 (Courtesy 5th Avenue Records)

21 Friday 28 6:55 PROGRAM NOTES 6:30 EARLY MUSIC. Stu Witmer. 7:3.0 ARTISTS' CONFESSIONS. Paul Dorpat.

10:00 EARTH MUSIC. Natasha Bushnell. 8:3.0 GOD BLESS THE CHILD. Various adaptations of the Holiday-Herzog standard by Billie 11: 55 PROGRAM NOTES Holiday, Eric Dolphy, Sonny Rollins, Ken­ ny Burrell and others. 12:00 SPECTRUM, with Carlos Hagen. Repeat of .last night's program. 9: 3.0 "SORRY, I'LL READ THAT AGAIN." Comedy from the BBC. 1: 00 CAMI LLE SAINT-SAENS: SYMPHONY NO.3, "THE ORGAN SYMPHONY." Actually the sixth sym­ 1.0:.0.0 STREET MUSIC OF NEW ORLEANS. A Folkways phony, Sain-Sa~ns wrote, he disowned the recording of street cries for watermelons, first, third and fifth. The Philadelphia blackberries, peaches and bananas; shoe­ Orchestra with Virgil Fox at the Rodger's shine songs; hambones; a musical saw. organ. Plus, Saint-Sa~ns' CO~CERTO NO.4, Also, Mardi Gras festivities including on the' mighty Steinberg piano. the Uptown Dances and the Bourbon Street Parade. (Courtesy of 5th Avenue Records) 2: 00 TWO PIECES by FOLKE RABE and BO ANDERS PERSSON. Two Swedish musi~ian/composers 11:.0.0 ~UMBLING WITH BALTIC. Jazz. at work in the electronic studios of Swe­ dish Radio, Stockholm. WAS is primarily a piece with sustained but manipulated signal tone. PROTEINIMPERIALISM is a Saturday 29 verbal drone/tape-splice piece a la Steve Reich's "Come out" or "Genna Rain. II 8:.0.0 SATURDAY MORNING MUSIC. Jazz with Jeff Haunting. (Courtesy of 5th Avenue Re­ Follette. cords) I 3: 00 SEATTLE FOLKLORE SOCIETY CONCERT: BILL 12:0.0 EARTH MUSIC. Jim Paradis. MONROE. The father of bluegrass music, Monroe sings and plays in his only Seat­ 2:30 BABY BISCUIT BLUES tle appearan'ce to date. 5:.0.0 HARRY PARTCH RETROSPECTIVE, Part III. THE WAYWARD-BARSTOW (1941) and U.S. HIGH­ 4:30 BELL RINGING IN THE EMPTY LUNCH. A con­ BALL (1943). This might be viewed as a cert including KOKU-REIBO, Biber's SONATA rebirth of the epic chant of the Here and #1 FOR TRUMPETS, STRINGS AND CONTINUO, Now of the Great Depression. With Phil Alsina's CONSECUENZA, OP. 17 FOR SOLO Arnautoff. TROMBONE, and Dolphy's OUT TO LUNCH. 5:30 INSIDE SEATTLE. Ever wondered who's who, 6:0.0 FILMS. Dick Jameson and Kathleen Murphy. and what's what in your local city go­ vernment? Want to know how things get 6:3.0 OPEN CHANNELS with TERRY KINCAID. A pro­ done or not done? Steve Me It'zer , a long­ gram of electronic music, frequently un­ time participant in the city aren~, com­ available commercially. Produced at KB ments on the workings of the city. A Bo­ Studios in Ann Arbor, Michigan. hemian Broadcasting Production, produced by Bruce Shapiro. 7:3.0 ARABIC MUSIC. With Dawod Sweilem.

6: 00 WORDS AND MUSIC OF BHARAT. North Indian 8:3.0 MOULDY FYGGE. LEE WILEY, Part II. More music and prose/poetry for your heart and classic jazz vocals. mind. Listen. with Ellen Ziegler. 9:.0.0 BLUEGRASS

12 :.0.0 DEATHWATCH. A repeat.

Han.1it AI'. Spe'ltl',~ef 1ft JC\1.~ U.ad Recard. 'lIfe I"rfJe se.le,bon of RO(K ~ '8~"ES' t\nn llJof ~'Tlim' (lnJ) 8L.U~; ... n'Ero "6'\:1- S~LllC'T'On Or l3"O'T"~G Jib(" t\\.SL)1715 ?~ o. 0 J'J 1) JJiITITJ

t :. 2 srot"~s: .51.0 E. Pi~ 51:"., O«r' d~ ~urni,,"r~ c~~~et1 and. fooo Unwerf,t.9 WQ~ Q.F. Jl:qo 10 7:00 mt117.-S~t. 22 63+-151-4 Sunday 30 Monday 31

6:30 EARLY MUSIC. stu Witm~r. 9:00 YESTERDAY'S SUNSHINE. 78's with Elved Parry. 10:00 COUNTRY FIDDLING. Frank Ferrel.

12:00 PRESENCE. Music manifest on vinyl. The 11: 55 PROGRAM NOTES dimension you bring to it. Stickler with' it. 12:00 A SPEECH BY WILSON CLARK. Wilson Clark is the author of Energy for Survival, a 4: 00 MUSIC OF INDIA. Shantha Benegal. book about the use and misuse of energy resources, especially in agriculture. 6:00 VASECTOMY. Get better acquainted with Following the speech Clark is interviewed this form of birth control under which by Phil Andrus. Taped at the Northwest ' men take the responsibility. Hear the Conference on Alternative Agriculture experiences of men who've gone' this route, in November, 1974. a doctor who's performed many of these operations, and women's reactions. Pro­ 1:00 SET FOR ELECTRONICS, VOICE AND VIOL DA duced by the Men's Resource Center. GAMBA. Including John Cooper's FANTASIA FOR THREE VIOL DA GAMBA (c. 1700), Roland 7:00 WE: WOMEN EVERYWHERE. Local, national, Kayn'·s CYBERNETICS III (1969), Iannis and international feminist news and com­ Xenakis' POLLA TA DHINA (1962), Luigi mentary. Produced by the Lesbi'an Femin­ Nono's CONTRAPPUNCTO DIALETTICO ALLA MEN­ ist Radio Collective. TE (1968), and John Nesbett's MAGNIFICAT FROM THE EATON .CHOI R BOOK (c. 1500). 8:00 WEATHER REPORT. Usual lies. Lessons in obscure forecasting techniques. Robert 2:00 CITY COUNCIL MEETING. Live from the· Se­ Thomas Hors ley. attle City Council Chambers.

9:00 THE ROBOTNOn HOURS. Raymond Serebrin. 4:00 TO BE ANNOUNCED

11,00 SYNCOPATED ECSTASY. Roswell, with jazz. 5:00 VINTAGE ROCK. Gregg Whitcomb.

6:00 . JEAN SHEPHERD speaks from WOR in NYC.

6:55 PROGRAM NOTES

7 : 00 "WHA1:' S GOIN' DOWN." Communi ty issues, discussed by Flo Ware and guests.

7:30 COMMENTARY: VIRGINIA BISHOP, JEAN-MARIE BROUGH: "NOW AND LEGISLATIVE PRIORITIES."

8:00 OLD TIME MUSIC. Phil Williams. '.

9:00 CHINESE RADIO. Produced in Cantonese by Eugene Lai and the Chinese Media Commit­ tee.

HEADING FOR BETTER TIMES. Old stuff, the 30's and 40's, with Howard Hays.

SPAGHETTINI. Leila Gorbman, music and

. ' .'. f •

~ ..: -~ . I , /

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