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NPT Music Monthly April 2009
Tuesday, 31 March 2009

 

Raise a toast to Saint Joe Strummer
I think he might have been our only decent teacher

So sings Craig Finn of the band The Hold Steady on "Constructive Summer," from its 2008 album Stay Positive. They may be the two best lines in one of the best rock songs of last year (at least according to one specific NPT Music Monthly writer). The song's refrain of "we're gonna build something this summer" was a call-to-arms when the album came out last July. Put perhaps it's never been more appropriate of a song than right now, when it seems like we're falling apart. So here it is, my first official Music Monthly proclamation. It may only be April, and still chilly outside, but let's reclaim "Constructive Summer" -- and the album's title track while we're at it -- and make it the official song of Summer 2009 where it rightfully belongs. Let's build something this summer.

The Hold SteadyThe Hold Steady plays the gorgeously-shot new music series LIVE FROM THE ARTISTS DEN on Friday, April 24 at 11:00 p.m. Recorded at the Old Emigrant Savings Bank Building, at the base of the Brooklyn Bridge in lower Manhattan, in September of last year. The richly decorated banking hall’s marble floors and stained-glass skylights provide the perfect setting for the band Billboard hailed as “Brooklyn’s working class heroes.”

Each episode of LIVE FROM THE ARTISTS DEN takes place in an extraordinary setting with an intimate, invitation-only concert by cutting-edge, contemporary musicians, along with artist interviews and insights about the unusual venues chosen. Included in the series in April is soul singer/producer Raphael Saadiq (Tony! Toni! Toné!; Lucy Pearl), recorded at the Harvard Club in Boston, on April 3; singer/songwriter Jakob Dylan, lead singer of platinum-selling band The Wallflowers, recorded at Desmond Tutu Cultural Center in New York City, on April 10; and indie-pop sensation Ingrid Michaelson (“The Way I Am”) recorded at Cape Cinema, a 1930s movie theater in Cape Cod, on April 17. Other artists featured this season include Aimee Mann, Patty Griffin, Ben Harper, The Swell Season, Crowded House, KT Tunstall and Josh Ritter.

What Philip Glass builds in one summer will make your head spin. In American Masters' "Glass: A Portrait of Philip in Twelve Parts," Wednesday, April 8 at 8:00 p.m., filmmaker Scott Hicks follows him for a year as he romps with his young children on the Nova Scotia coastline, cooks pizza and deconstructs philosophy in the farmhouse kitchen, creates new works in his cluttered Baltimore studio and collaborates with Chuck Close, Ravi Shankar and Woody Allen. The film follows Glass across three continents — including to the world premiere of his new opera in Germany and in performance with a didgeridoo virtuoso in Australia. It is an intimate, often verité, portrait of artistic sensibility and pursuits.

Wynton Marsalis is Live at Lincoln Center; the Arcade Fire, Van Morrison and The Raconteurs encore on Austin City Limits; and Anna Netrebko portrays Lucia di Lammermoor at the Met. It's another great month of music programming on NPT.

Build something.

Last Updated ( Monday, 18 May 2009 )
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NPT and Tennessee Pub TV Stations Partner on "Underage and Under the Influence"
Tuesday, 03 March 2009
The Cautionary Tale of Tennis Star Blake McMeans Is an Opportunity to Educate the State on the Dangers of Drunk Driving
 
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NASHVILLE, Tennessee -- March 11, 2009 -- Knoxville's Blake McMeans was a rising tennis star before his career was cut tragically short after a drunk driving accident. He has since dedicated his life to educating others on the dangers of drunk driving.  UNDERAGE AND UNDER THE INFLUENCE, airing on Nashville Public Television and all Tennessee public television stations (check local listings) on Tuesday, April 21, 2009 at 7:00 p.m. CDT, combines his story with a half-hour discussion on the perils of drinking and driving. The program, produced by the Renaissance Center and made possible by the Tennessee Governor's Highway Safety Office, is part of a statewide initiative by Tennessee Public Television stations to educate the state's youth on the dangers of driving under the influence.

"Blake's story is a tragic one, but also an inspiring one," says Beth Curley, NPT President and CEO, "and he has used his story as an opportunity to educate others. Now NPT, and all public television stations in Tennessee, have an even greater opportunity to work together with a common purpose and spread Blake's message throughout the state."

"We always appreciate the opportunity to produce programming that can help make a difference in our communities," says producer Steve Hall, Senior Director of Multimedia, The Renaissance Center. "The Blake McMeans Story is one example."

McMeans started playing tennis when he was three-years-old. By the time he was 12, he had won his second Southern regional title in tennis, plus the Sportsmanship Award in Tenneesee and in the 11-state Southern section, altogether winnning five Southern titles. He was soon being exempted from playing in the state and regionals and would go right to the nationals. His life became a grueling schedule of school, practice, and workouts that began two hours before school and continued for two hours afterward. But he loved it, and worked hard at it, and even took extra classes so he could graduate early, looking forward to college and a career in professional tennis.

Last Updated ( Thursday, 02 July 2009 )
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