Tag: Podcast

  • Fleisher Discoveries Podcast Ends An Era

    Fleisher Discoveries Podcast Ends An Era

    Somehow, I totally missed the announcement last month that June would mark the final installment of Kile Smith’s long-running podcast, “Fleisher Discoveries.” But even if I’d known, I don’t know that it would have packed any less of a wallop. I’m not even entirely sure what I feel. Loss, maybe. A touch of separation anxiety, perhaps. Mostly melancholy for the passing of an age.

    For its musical content, “Fleisher Discoveries” draws from the vast collection of scores stored in the Edward A. Fleisher Collection at the Free Library of Philadelphia – the largest lending library of orchestral performance sets in the world. The show is a continuation of “Discoveries from the Fleisher Collection,” which Kile first produced for Philadelphia’s classical and jazz station, WRTI, 22 years ago. More often than not, the program highlights off-the-beaten-path composers and/or repertoire, sometimes heard in rare recordings, a selection of these also stored at Fleisher.

    I confess, for as much as I love the show, I have not been as conscientious as I should have been in listening to it regularly. While I save every email notification as a reminder (and for Kile’s excellent writing) – and even now, I have several tabs open on my laptop with sound files still waiting to be listened to – time has a way of passing, and before I know it, a month or two will have slipped away, before suddenly I realize I never got around to listening to that Marianne Martines show.

    But, more for me to enjoy in the future. It’s just disturbing to know there won’t be any new installments being produced. For now, the programs are archived and accessible on Soundcloud and Spotify.

    Kile is uniquely qualified to have instituted such a project, through his experience actually working at the Fleisher Collection for 30 years, beginning in 1981. In 1993, he became curator of the collection, a position he occupied for 18 years.

    Being the modest guy he is, Kile probably would never have considered ending the series with one of his own compositions. In the 22 years of the show’s existence, he’s devoted only one earlier program to his music. Fortunately, he was convinced by current Fleisher curator, Gary Galván, that there would be no more fitting conclusion. So what we get is a terrific little symphony Kile composed for Donald Spieth and the Lehigh Valley Chamber Orchestra in 2002, when he was 38-years-old – his only symphony, in fact.

    Kile has written in so many forms and for so many different vocal and instrumental combinations. In fact, the reason he gives for ending the podcast is that it is essentially a casualty of his success. Of course, Kile would never put it that way. But the fact is that he has so many commissions for substantial new works right now, that something had to give. Here’s hoping there’s another symphony in his future.

    At any rate, I hope you will enjoy the ultimate installment of “Fleisher Discoveries.” The program has a rich archive, and I will be catching up on past episodes, myself. If you are at all familiar with the show, you will find an old friend in Kile’s symphony, as he has used the opening of the last movement as his signature music for the past 22 years.

    If you are NOT familiar with the show and would like to be introduced to a lot of interesting and worthwhile music, with Kile’s spoken introductions – full of rich, creative, and often playful observations – do give it a shot on Soundcloud or Spotify.

    Here, I’ve linked it for your convenience:

    And while we’re at it, you’ll find lots more good stuff on his website, kilesmith.com.

    Onward and upward, Kile! Excelsior! Citius, altius, fortius, and all that jazz. Thank you so much for your dedication and hard work, and best wishes on your future endeavors.

  • Austin Powers Podcast Tonight

    Next week is NOW! Join us for our fourth season opener, when we put the “Mod” in “moderately amusing,” as Roy and I discuss “Austin Powers: International Man of Mystery” (1997). We’ll be taking our mojo out of mothballs for @[100063986017424:2048:Roy’s Tie-Dye Sci-Fi Corner], TONIGHT at 7:30 EDT!

    https://www.facebook.com/roystiedyescificorner

  • Bob Perkins WRTI Legend to Podcast

    After over a quarter century on the WRTI airwaves, BP is taking his GM to the PC.

    Anyone who listens to jazz on the radio in Philadelphia is familiar with broadcast legend Bob Perkins’ shorthand. “BP with the GM” is “Bob Perkins with the Good Music,” naturally.

    Perkins eased into semi-retirement last year, going from full-time hosting on WRTI to anchoring its “Sunday Jazz Brunch.”

    The “PC” is my own unauthorized addition to Perkins’ lingo. It stands for podcast. At 89, Perkins will be taking the leap into producing fresh digital audio content. You can learn more about it at the link.

    During my time at WRTI, we crossed paths occasionally, if I happened to be filling in on an afternoon classical shift. Knowing his sly sense of humor, I offered once, “It’s not every day that British Petroleum meets American Oil Company” – a play on BP and Amico (Amoco).

    I wish Bob the best. With a lifetime of experience in jazz and the media, the man himself is living history. And of course he’s always had impeccable taste. Whether it’s Yusef Lateef’s “Love Theme from Spartacus” or Dakota Staton’s “The Late, Late Show,” I’ve always enjoyed his GM.

    https://www.wrti.org/wrti-spotlight/2023-03-29/as-bob-perkins-signs-off-at-wrti-a-broadcasting-legend-looks-ahead?fbclid=IwAR0GnvcZ-hHUhffcgm0ZI5RlZOd47j3KjAC9zKjMAvxLTkfwt5yP7c6Q2XA

  • Princeton Pioneers Digital Music Podcast

    Princeton Pioneers Digital Music Podcast

    60 years ago, Princeton University engineers noticed members of the music department, staring agog at a recently-installed computer. It wasn’t long before a not-so-unlikely alliance was formed that helped to change history.

    The story of New Jersey’s role in the creation of digital music is the subject of a new podcast. “Composers & Computers” will span six decades in five installments and include interviews with 20 people. Their commentary will be punctuated by vintage computer and electronic music clips.

    Princeton music faculty shared an analog synthesizer with Columbia University in the 1950s. In 1962, composers entered Princeton’s new Computer Center in the Engineering Quadrangle, and were soon engaged in trying to figure out how to harness the new IBM 7090 to make music. Then they worked to improve that music.

    Some of the most complex works ever written drove numerous technological innovations, and vice versa. Princeton composers and computer engineers worked together to program some of the earliest music composition software, invented a device to hear the music they were creating, synthesized some of the earliest computer-generated speech for use in music, and more.

    The story has a distinctly New Jersey flavor, illuminating the work of engineers at RCA in Princeton in the 1950s and Bell Labs in Murray Hill in the 1960s.

    The podcast will tackle the science of sound in a refreshing and accessible way. The series promises to be full of human drama, as participants in the project became great friends in their shared quest to coax sound out of a previously-silent, room-sized machine.

    The podcast will be available on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Google Podcasts, as well as the Princeton Engineering website, https://engineering.princeton.edu/series/composers-computers-podcast. The first two episodes will drop today, and one episode will run each week for the next three weeks.

    Here’s a link to the series’ introduction:

    Introducing “Composers & Computers,” a new podcast about digital music

    Episode 1:

    Episode 1: Serial(ism)

    Episode 2:

    Episode 2: Composers in the Computer Center


    PHOTO (left to right): Columbia-Princeton Electronic Music Center personnel Milton Babbitt, Mario Davidovsky, Pril Smiley, Vladimir Ussachevsky, Otto Luening, and Alice Shields, circa 1970

  • Roy’s Tie-Dye Sci-Fi Corner Delay

    Roy’s Tie-Dye Sci-Fi Corner Delay

    “Would you believe…”

    Due to unforeseen circumstances, the much-anticipated ONE HUNDREDTH EPISODE celebration of Roy’s Tie-Dye Sci-Fi Corner will be postponed until this SUNDAY EVENING AT 7:00 EDT. Thank you for your understanding!

    “Missed it by that much…”

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