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Browse the playlist from this week's show

"Domestic Music Scene" by Johannes Voorhout, 1674.

Join us this week on Harmonia for part two of our series on intabulation. We’ll hear choral works become large organ pieces and explore how Bach turned a chamber sonata into an intricate solo work for the keyboard. / Plus, on our featured release—music from the early Reformation period in Denmark.

Karen Rigby headshot

Karen Rigby reads "Why My Poems Arrive Wearing Black Gloves" and "Black Roses."

Fred Astaire

Put on your dancing shoes as we cut a rug with the American Songbook. On this episode, we look at jazz standards meant for dancing, including “I Could Have Danced All Night” and “Cheek To Cheek.”

episode-51-minerva-society.jpg

One of the most difficult adjustments during this past year? Limiting and navigating personal contact. There is clearly more acceptance for this than there is understanding.

Our staff are away this week. We will not be running a live scoreboard tonight. Please play from home and check your answers with our playlist.

Buskirk-Chumley Theater Director Steve Versaw

New Buskirk Chumley Theater Executive Director talks plans for the BCT, career trajectory

Buskirk-Chumley Theater Director Steve Versaw

We’ll hear some of the artists such as Cassandra Wilson, Maria Schneider, Renee Rosnes, and Diana Krall who rose to prominence during the decade, as well as a trio of veterans who enjoyed a late-career renaissance, including Abbey Lincoln, Shirley Horn, and Betty Carter.

Miniature of a bear with bees and a beehive from a medieval manuscript

Busy bees buzz as they journey from flower to flower and back to the hive. But this week on Harmonia, bees aren’t all that’s a buzz—we’ll hear music featuring the crumhorn. Plus, our featured release is Handel Concerti Grossi, Op. 3 performed by Akademie für Alte Musik Berlin.

Llama sniffing a hand.

Daniel Lassell reads "How to Pet a Llama," "Mom Woke to a Coyote Staring in Her Window,""Taking in the Stray," "The Llama Named James and John Sons of Thunder," and "An Account of a Llama’s Death."

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Browse our playlist from this week's game.

Horace Parlan and Stanley Turrentine

Pittsburgh has produced many great jazz artists, and at the beginning of the 1960s two of them teamed up to make a notable series of albums for the Blue Note label.

Portrait of the Duarte Family by Gonzales Coques, c. 1653.

This hour, music associated with the Duarte family, patrons of music and the arts through several generations from the 13th through the 17th centuries in Portugal, the Netherlands, Italy, and England, including seventeenth-century musician and composer Leonora Duarte.

Poet Colleen Wells

Colleen Wells reads "Watching" and "Summertime and the Livin’ is Almost Easy."

episode_49_bedford_flag_man.jpg

In the wake of the pandemic, a deeper appreciation and a broadened perspective. Visits from Pops Staples, Marcel Proust, and Burt Lancaster.

János Starker

An installment of the series IUMusicArchive, a collaboration between the IU Jacobs School of Music and WFIU made possible through the support of the Wennerstrom-Phillips Fund for Classical Music.

Submit answers for tonight's game. Try bonus trivia challenges and get helpful hints. Fight the power!

James Reese Europe and 369th

Celebrate America’s Independence Day with a legacy of swing from Duke Ellington, Mary Lou Williams, Glenn Miller, Machito, and other iconic American artists and ensembles.

Sucre Cathedral, Bolivia

The construction of La Plata Cathedral, now known as the Metropolitan Cathedral of Sucre in Bolivia, began in 1559. This week on Harmonia, we’ll hear music written for this sparkling venue, with its white marble lit up by the stained glass windows. Plus, our featured release is Tommaso Giordani: Six Duos for Two Cellos.

Cattle skull against the night sky

Michael Luis Dauro reads selections from his poem "Woman With No Name."

Come Fly With Me

We’re living life among the jet set this week on Afterglow, as we explore songs about traveling from the Great American Songbook, including “Come Fly With Me,” “Travelin’ Light,” and "It's Nice to Go Trav'ling."

Vintage car with cattle horn

The past has too many witnesses to establish any certainty as to what actually happened.

LaWaSo Ground, Columbus Indiana

A walk among memorials and public art pieces in the fall of 2021. We talk with creators, participants, and passers-by about the meaning of public art, about Native presence in a state named for Indians, about immigration, Christopher Columbus, Columbus, Indiana, who we choose to remember, and how.

Steve Allen Jazz

Steve Allen is remembered today as the founder of “The Tonight Show” and a lasting influence on late-night television. But he was also an important advocate for jazz in the 1950s.

No submissions this week while our staff is away. Please play along at home!

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Stories from around Indiana...coming to you from the Wabash and Erie Canal Park in Carroll County.

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