This past weekend Ian and I got to go do something fun. We are seldom able to wrangle any time free from the fixed schedule of work and army and rehearsals and school, etc. But back in August I found out that the NPR program Radiolab was planning a live version of their show in Milwaukee at the end of September and I decided we were going.
I'm a bit of a Radiolab junkie. It's a peculiar show with a unique sound and rhythm, and is somewhat of an acquired taste. It has a heavy science slant, but some shows are purely about music, and others touch on philosophy or history or just good storytelling. The program airs sporadically because they don't produce many shows and they wind up temporarily in slots replacing reruns of other things, so I only ever find it on the radio by accident.
The way I regularly listen to Radiolab is through their podcasts. I have as many shows as I can get on my ipod and every time I walk the dog I listen to another snippet. Radiolab has also kept me from going insane with boredom on very long car trips that include traffic jams in Chicago and has actually made those drives enjoyable. Even when all I have time to hear is whatever I can catch on one spin around the block with Chipper, I learn something or am surprised or delighted, I often laugh and am occasionally reduced to tears. I love Radiolab.
I began listening to it entirely because of Robert Krulwich who, along with Jad Abumrad (whose perspective and style I've come to love as well), hosts the show. I saw a piece he did as a reporter for ABC News back when I was in high school and was so taken with his approach and presentation that I made a point to memorize his name. He's serious enough to feel trustworthy, but usually sounds ready to be amused. Robert Krulwich has been my favorite reporter for most of my life, and anytime I catch his voice on the radio or television I stop to listen because I know it will be interesting. Several years ago I turned on NPR and found an odd program about ethics and how our brains work that I almost turned off because the sound design was distracting and the level to which it seemed to be trying so hard was annoying, but then I caught the voice of Robert Krulwich. So I stayed with it and got sucked in, and have been a Radiolab fan ever since.
The live show was great. Dave Foley (from 'Kids in the Hall' and 'News Radio') did standup and helped move things along, Robert and Jad did their familiar banter that somehow doesn't feel scripted even when it is, there was wonderful live music by Thao Nguyen, and the Pilobolus dance troupe not only danced but assisted the program with a kind of informational science prop comedy. It was entertaining and engrossing from beginning to end.
The theme was In the Dark, and was presented in roughly three segments.
Showing posts with label NPR. Show all posts
Showing posts with label NPR. Show all posts
Friday, October 5, 2012
Radiolab Love
Labels:
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blindness,
Dave Foley,
eyes,
In the Dark,
Jad Abumrad,
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Radiolab,
Robert Krulwich,
Thao Nguyen
Friday, November 18, 2011
On the Radio (Babble)
In 2005 when I made a conscious decision to try my hand at writing
the first thing I wrote was an essay for the This I Believe project. It
felt like a school assignment, and since the last place I’d formally
written anything was in school it seemed like a good way to get my feet
wet. I posted the essay on my blog last year when it was selected for inclusion in a book.
This year I’m pleased to announce that they recorded my reading of the
essay for broadcast on public radio. If you happen to catch The Bob
Edwards Show anytime the weekend of the 25th through the 27th you might
hear me!
The show is not, however, broadcast in Wisconsin, so I won’t be able to hear it. But they did send me a link if anyone wants to hear me read on the This I Believe website:
Amazing Grace by Korinthia Klein
It was interesting doing the recording. I went into the local studio here in Milwaukee and worked with someone over the phone. I would read, and they would record, and then the person on the phone would ask me to repeat a particular line with a different inflection or ask me to pause in a new place. All the reading went fine. It was the guitar playing that freaked me out.
It makes perfect sense that the producers would read my essay and then want me to actually play “Amazing Grace” on the guitar. What a natural moment for radio! Except that I don’t really play guitar. I took some lessons in high school, kept a guitar nearby to mess around on in college, but I don’t really play. Not the way I play viola in any case. So when they asked if I would bring an instrument with me to the studio I got very nervous. The stings on my acoustic guitar I’m pretty sure are the same ones I actually learned “Amazing Grace” on the first time. There’s nostalgia and then there is simply ridiculous. So I borrowed a guitar, practiced for a week, and then stumbled my way through the song in a real recording studio feeling rather guilty. There are actual guitar players who slave away at what they do who will never get the kind of exposure my pitiful little plunking could get, even if it is just on a public radio show that I won’t even hear in my own state. But it is what it is. I did my best and I hope it works.
The link above does not include my guitar playing, just my words, but if I find a new link after the broadcast that does include my playing I will put it up.
Reviewing that essay again has put me in the proper frame of mind for the upcoming holiday. I love Thanksgiving. I love that it’s about making a grand meal and sharing it with others and remembering to be thankful. This year we are having friends over to our home and we will eat too much and the kids will play, and our new dog will follow Ian around (Chipper gazing at Ian is the embodiment of ‘thankful’) and it will be great.
Then first thing on Friday morning I’m driving off alone to visit my parents for a couple of days. My dad has been back in the hospital. He’s currently doing rehab again. With luck he will be home by the time I visit so we can spend time at the house instead of in a hospital. I don’t like associating Thanksgiving with cancer. But I still like the holiday. And I am thankful every single day.
The show is not, however, broadcast in Wisconsin, so I won’t be able to hear it. But they did send me a link if anyone wants to hear me read on the This I Believe website:
Amazing Grace by Korinthia Klein
It was interesting doing the recording. I went into the local studio here in Milwaukee and worked with someone over the phone. I would read, and they would record, and then the person on the phone would ask me to repeat a particular line with a different inflection or ask me to pause in a new place. All the reading went fine. It was the guitar playing that freaked me out.
It makes perfect sense that the producers would read my essay and then want me to actually play “Amazing Grace” on the guitar. What a natural moment for radio! Except that I don’t really play guitar. I took some lessons in high school, kept a guitar nearby to mess around on in college, but I don’t really play. Not the way I play viola in any case. So when they asked if I would bring an instrument with me to the studio I got very nervous. The stings on my acoustic guitar I’m pretty sure are the same ones I actually learned “Amazing Grace” on the first time. There’s nostalgia and then there is simply ridiculous. So I borrowed a guitar, practiced for a week, and then stumbled my way through the song in a real recording studio feeling rather guilty. There are actual guitar players who slave away at what they do who will never get the kind of exposure my pitiful little plunking could get, even if it is just on a public radio show that I won’t even hear in my own state. But it is what it is. I did my best and I hope it works.
The link above does not include my guitar playing, just my words, but if I find a new link after the broadcast that does include my playing I will put it up.
Reviewing that essay again has put me in the proper frame of mind for the upcoming holiday. I love Thanksgiving. I love that it’s about making a grand meal and sharing it with others and remembering to be thankful. This year we are having friends over to our home and we will eat too much and the kids will play, and our new dog will follow Ian around (Chipper gazing at Ian is the embodiment of ‘thankful’) and it will be great.
Then first thing on Friday morning I’m driving off alone to visit my parents for a couple of days. My dad has been back in the hospital. He’s currently doing rehab again. With luck he will be home by the time I visit so we can spend time at the house instead of in a hospital. I don’t like associating Thanksgiving with cancer. But I still like the holiday. And I am thankful every single day.
Wednesday, November 3, 2010
This I Believe (Babble)
This is sort of a moment of shameless self-promotion, but I don’t profit from it so I don’t feel too weird.
Five years ago I was inspired to try my hand at writing by the ‘This I Believe’ project on public radio. I’ve heard some fascinating essays on that segment, and have even printed out a few so I can revisit them when I like. I’ve always enjoyed writing and missed not having an excuse to do it since college, and I’ve always regretted the essay I submitted with my school applications. I was overly influenced by suggestions I’d read and didn’t write the essay that I should have. I decided to write the essay over and put it into the ‘This I Believe’ format and submit it.
They loved the essay, but it didn’t make the final cut to go on the radio. The local paper in Milwaukee picked it up and ran it on Christmas Eve and it got a very nice response. After that, other than the link on my website to the archive of the This I Believe project, I didn’t think about it anymore.
But I got a nice surprise earlier this year when an editor from This I Believe tracked me down and asked if they could include my essay in a collection they were putting together specifically about love. All proceeds from the book go to continue collecting stories for the project, and my compensation was a single copy of the book, but I was honored to be included. I got my copy in the mail the other day and it’s still sort of unreal to me that I can open up something off my bookshelf and see my words in print. With my name in a table of contents like a real writer.
In any case, there are some surprising and touching essays in the book which is called “This I Believe: On Love”, and is available to order now, as well as many interesting essays in the This I Believe archive.
Amazing Grace
My grandfather died twenty years ago. I was fifteen. He was kind, strong, fair, and very funny. When I was a young musician, he was my biggest fan. My grandpa used to applaud when I tuned, and I would roll my eyes and shrug off his enthusiasm as too biased. I played my violin for him when he visited, and he loved everything, but each time he had one request. “Could you play ‘Amazing Grace’?” he asked, full of hope and with a twinkle in his eye, because he knew my answer was always, “I don’t know that one!” We went through this routine at every major holiday, and I always figured I’d have time to learn it for him later.
About the time I entered high school and had switched to viola and started guitar, Grandpa got cancer. The last time I saw him alive was Thanksgiving weekend in 1985. My mom warned us when we turned onto the familiar street that Grandpa didn’t look the same anymore and that we should prepare ourselves. For a moment I didn’t recognize him. He looked so small among all the white sheets, and I had never thought of my grandpa as small in any sense. We had all gathered in Ohio for the holiday, and I’m sure we all knew we were there to say good-bye. I can see now that Grandpa held on long enough to see us each one more time. I remember how we ate in the dining room and laughed and talked while Grandpa rested in his hospital bed set up in the den. I wonder if it was sad for him to be alone with our voices and laughter. Knowing Grandpa, he was probably content.
The next morning I found my moment alone with him. I pulled out my guitar, tuned to his appreciative gaze, and finally played for him “Amazing Grace.” I had worked on it for weeks, knowing it never mattered if I actually played it well and choosing not to believe as I played that it was my last concert for my biggest fan. The cancer had stolen his smile, but I saw joy in his eyes and he held my hand afterward, and I knew I had done something important.
I argued with people all through college about my music major. I was told by strangers that music wouldn’t make me any money and it wasn’t useful like being a doctor. But I know firsthand that with music I was able to give my grandpa something at a point when no one else could. Food didn’t taste good, doctors couldn’t help, and his body had betrayed him and left him helpless. But for a few minutes listening to me with my guitar, he seemed to find beauty and love and escape. At its best music is the highest expression of humanity’s better nature, and I’m privileged to contribute to such a profound tradition.
So, this I believe: Love matters. Music matters. And in our best moments they are one and the same.
Five years ago I was inspired to try my hand at writing by the ‘This I Believe’ project on public radio. I’ve heard some fascinating essays on that segment, and have even printed out a few so I can revisit them when I like. I’ve always enjoyed writing and missed not having an excuse to do it since college, and I’ve always regretted the essay I submitted with my school applications. I was overly influenced by suggestions I’d read and didn’t write the essay that I should have. I decided to write the essay over and put it into the ‘This I Believe’ format and submit it.
They loved the essay, but it didn’t make the final cut to go on the radio. The local paper in Milwaukee picked it up and ran it on Christmas Eve and it got a very nice response. After that, other than the link on my website to the archive of the This I Believe project, I didn’t think about it anymore.
But I got a nice surprise earlier this year when an editor from This I Believe tracked me down and asked if they could include my essay in a collection they were putting together specifically about love. All proceeds from the book go to continue collecting stories for the project, and my compensation was a single copy of the book, but I was honored to be included. I got my copy in the mail the other day and it’s still sort of unreal to me that I can open up something off my bookshelf and see my words in print. With my name in a table of contents like a real writer.
In any case, there are some surprising and touching essays in the book which is called “This I Believe: On Love”, and is available to order now, as well as many interesting essays in the This I Believe archive.
Amazing Grace
My grandfather died twenty years ago. I was fifteen. He was kind, strong, fair, and very funny. When I was a young musician, he was my biggest fan. My grandpa used to applaud when I tuned, and I would roll my eyes and shrug off his enthusiasm as too biased. I played my violin for him when he visited, and he loved everything, but each time he had one request. “Could you play ‘Amazing Grace’?” he asked, full of hope and with a twinkle in his eye, because he knew my answer was always, “I don’t know that one!” We went through this routine at every major holiday, and I always figured I’d have time to learn it for him later.
About the time I entered high school and had switched to viola and started guitar, Grandpa got cancer. The last time I saw him alive was Thanksgiving weekend in 1985. My mom warned us when we turned onto the familiar street that Grandpa didn’t look the same anymore and that we should prepare ourselves. For a moment I didn’t recognize him. He looked so small among all the white sheets, and I had never thought of my grandpa as small in any sense. We had all gathered in Ohio for the holiday, and I’m sure we all knew we were there to say good-bye. I can see now that Grandpa held on long enough to see us each one more time. I remember how we ate in the dining room and laughed and talked while Grandpa rested in his hospital bed set up in the den. I wonder if it was sad for him to be alone with our voices and laughter. Knowing Grandpa, he was probably content.
The next morning I found my moment alone with him. I pulled out my guitar, tuned to his appreciative gaze, and finally played for him “Amazing Grace.” I had worked on it for weeks, knowing it never mattered if I actually played it well and choosing not to believe as I played that it was my last concert for my biggest fan. The cancer had stolen his smile, but I saw joy in his eyes and he held my hand afterward, and I knew I had done something important.
I argued with people all through college about my music major. I was told by strangers that music wouldn’t make me any money and it wasn’t useful like being a doctor. But I know firsthand that with music I was able to give my grandpa something at a point when no one else could. Food didn’t taste good, doctors couldn’t help, and his body had betrayed him and left him helpless. But for a few minutes listening to me with my guitar, he seemed to find beauty and love and escape. At its best music is the highest expression of humanity’s better nature, and I’m privileged to contribute to such a profound tradition.
So, this I believe: Love matters. Music matters. And in our best moments they are one and the same.
Labels:
Amazing Grace,
book,
essay,
grandpa,
NPR,
This I Believe,
This I Believe: On Love
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