To all visitors: Kalvos & Damian is now a historical site reflecting nonpop
from 1995-2005. No updates have been made since a special program in 2015.
Kalvos & Damian Logo

Chronicle of the NonPop Revolution


Past Notices - 2002

2002
December 30
New Interview Clips Posted!
December 29
New Shows Posted! Contribute at Year's End!
  • New shows are posted! Our interview with Kyoko Kobayashi is posted, with short answers that had both Kalvos and Damian scrambling, and the one with Daniel Goode, who had long answers that amounted to the same flummoxing of K & D. Oh, and don't another of our "Composers' Wisdom" series, featuring interview clips & music of Alexander Abele, Laurie Anderson, Matt Borghi, Boudewijn Buckinx, Cory Carlick, Moniek Darge, Guy de Bièvre, and Emily Doolittle. The series continues for the next three weeks! These shows join the recent two-parter with Michael Boriskin's detailed views on new music, complete with George Perle analysis & demo, followed by Steven Holochwost's tonal approach to the serial techniques, and K&D's own latest favorite tunes! Playlists are finally up, too.
  • It's the end of the year! Use K&D as your tax haven! Yes, a contribution to K&D, a project of the VCME, benefits both of us. We've got a big festival coming up, too, and are finally getting projects underway that have been waiting. So please contact us directly or click the PayPal links.
December 20
Wonderful Start to Winter
  • Aside from 12 inches of snow, that is. Kalvos & Damian's New Music Bazaar has received a major grant from The Argosy Foundation for the continued support of its work in new music. We can re-start several projects we began two years ago, and begin planning other enhancements to the website and interviews. Look for them!
  • Our guest this week is Kyoko Kobayashi. We'll be recording that interview at Dartmouth today (Friday, December 20), for broadcast on the first day of winter! With K&D, ya never know how it'll go, so listen when the show is posted (streaming of the live broadcast remains down).
  • The Kalvos & Damian Board of Advisors guides us in artistic and practical planning, ongoing economic crises, intellectual property rights issues, and much more. We welcome new member Mary Lou Newmark, composer and electro-violinist from California to our board. She joins the recent new board members Don Corson of Yverdon-les-Bains, Switzerland; Steve Layton of Seattle; and John McGuire of New York City. Our thanks to them and to the other 22 members of our international board for their continued advice and ideas!
  • Do you prefer MP3 format? We have used RealAudio on this site since 1995. Our arrangements with composers and record labels keep us at a modem-streaming mono format for archived shows, but we want to move to MP3/32K streaming. We have posted all shows since August 10 in dual formats. We do not plan to convert our earlier 370-plus shows. That means two players (Real and MP3) to listen to everything. Also, MP3 files are 50% bigger than RealAudio. So we really need your feedback on whether to switch. Please let's hear from you!
  • Loyal fans and composers Canary Burton, Steve Layton, and Matt Fields set the pace as the only K&D listeners making regular monthly support contributions. Why don't you? A few dollars a month will do it. Contact us directly or click the PayPal links. If you wonder why you should, read the latest Report to Contributors. The document, which contains a brief history from 1995-2001 and a financial picture of the past year, is in PDF format.
  • If your local radio station would like to broadcast K&D, we'll be happy to supply the show on a pair of CDs at a nominal cost. Please contact us for information.
  • September 11 Musical Gallery is one of our most listened-to features. The New York Times article, "Elegies and Tone Poems Respond to Tragedy," appeared on October 29, 2001. Read Matthew Mirapaul's thoughtful piece about this collection on K&D.
  • Have you been listening to Ought-One? Almost the entire Ought-One Festival (More about Ought-One itself is found here, including some great reviews.) has been broadcast and cybercast on K&D, and is archived in our 2001 and 2002 shows. Check out the audio archives and playlists for more info, or our past notices for a brief description of these festival concert shows.
December 3
Where the Heck Have We Been?
  • Away, busy, and composing. The show has gone on, while we've had performances and some new ones (look for Michael Arnowitt doing the music of both Kalvos (Dennis Báthory-Kitsz) and Damian (David Gunn) in performance at the FlynnSpace (Burlington, Vermont, December 3), Bethanienklooster (Barndesteeg 6, Amsterdam, December 9), Stichting Nieuwe Muziek (Kloveniersdoelen, Middelburg, Zeeland, December 10), and De Rode Pomp (Tussen 't Pas 3, Gent, December 12).
  • Latest shows have been posted! The usual late fall melange: Canadian Classix, Beano's Favorites, Fundraising Tunes, and a witty interview with the aforementioned Michael Arnowitt, whom we took advantage of as he was showing the strains of learning so many new pieces!
November 3
Latest Shows Going Up!
  • Latest shows are being posted as I speak! We've got three excellent new shows now available in RealAudio (mp3 is being uploaded -- takes a while!): The second part of Michael Boriskin's detailed views on new music, complete with George Perle analysis & demo, followed by Steven Holochwost's tonal approach to the serial techniques, and finally K&D's own latest favorite tunes! Playlists aren't up yet, as both Kalvos and Damian have been very busy once again. Soon, though, so you can know what our faves really are!
October 15
Latest Shows Posted!
  • Latest shows have been posted! We've got two remarkable new shows now available: Tom Heasley presented a stunning live concert in the studio, and Michael Boriskin gave detailed views & demos in new music. Michael's interview is in two parts, so look for the second half next week!
October 1
Where Have We Been!?
  • Yes, we've been right here. The Kalvos & Damian New Music Bazaar has been on the air every week, but we have been attending to our own music! David "Damian" Gunn has had the premiere of his A Tangoed Web by the Vermont Symphony Orchestra -- ten performances in all -- and Dennis "Kalvos" Báthory-Kitsz has been composing pieces for Eric Lyon, Michael Manion, and Michael Arnowitt. So K&D will be scarce in the new few weeks, but will update the site as often as possible.
  • Latest shows have been posted! We've got three great new shows now available: A Year Onward, our post-9/11 reflections; Avant-Garde Continuum that presents a variety of German and Austrian composers and performers; and our interview with James Grant. We've been waiting for that one for over 7 years!
  • The good news: WGDR has six months more. There's been an ongoing power struggle between a recalcitrant Goddard College Board of Trustees and the WGDR Community Programmers (who have created up 75% of the programming in the past, and now 100% of the programming since Goddard has shuttered its on-campus programs) and their 1,000 community supporters. To hang onto the license, the Goddard Board has extended the station's closing deadline for six months -- despite the fact that the Friends of WGDR has been proposing that the community purchase the license since the crisis came about in May ... when Goddard College's serious financial difficulties resulted in their disaccreditation and on-campus shutdown. The Board has refused this option, but the additional six months is time to continue negotiation. If you're not a "radio person", especially in the United States, then you may not be aware that a combination of National Public Radio (a quasi-commercial conglomerate) and religious broadcasters have been purchasing stations from colleges. This has resulted in the near-total destruction of community radio in the U.S. Alas, WGDR, K&D's home station, could be next.
September 1
New Advisor Welcomed to K&D Board!
  • The Kalvos & Damian Board of Advisors guides us in artistic and practical planning, ongoing economic crises, intellectual property rights issues, and much more. We welcome new member Mary Lou Newmark, composer and electro-violinist from California to our board. She joins the recent new board members Don Corson of Yverdon-les-Bains, Switzerland; Steve Layton of Seattle; and John McGuire of New York City. Our thanks to them and to the other 22 members of our international board for their continued advice and ideas!
  • Here are the recently posted K&D shows:. The August 17 show, our non-tribute to Elvis, "No Tears or Candles" is now available in our archives section. Even better than this is the August 24 show, our interview with Elliott Schwartz, co-hosted by composer Matt Borghi. This is a show of great music, great insight, and some side-splitting fun. The August 10 show, Concert #37 of the Ought-One Festival is a performance of A Sleeper's Notebook by Eleanor Sandresky. This is an exquisite & mysterious performance of a portion of a longer work for "choreographed piano" that was premiered after Ought-One. The August 3 show, Concert #36 of the Ought-One Festival is a performance of Custer and Sitting Bull by Kyle Gann Powerful and disturbing as well as gentle in musical character, full of non-tempered tuning systems! This joins The Bilitis Project by Eve Beglarian and Phil Kline. Also, the intense & detailed July 20 interview with George Lewis is posted. One heck of a show that generated phone calls and followup email -- don't miss it! Show #371 has intense commentary about politics and music from returning guest Howard Jonathan Fredrics and a live performance by Lori Joachim Fredrics. Shows #366-370 include our interviews with Steve Layton and Laurie Anderson, and the captivating Tom Heasley performing his Montpelier Meditations at Ought-One. Find our archived shows by year in the archives.
  • Do you prefer MP3 format? We have used RealAudio on this site for nearly eight years. Our arrangements with composers and record labels keep us at a modem-streaming mono format for our archived shows, but we are considering moving to MP3/32K streaming. We will not convert our earlier 370-plus shows, however -- meaning two players are needed. Also, the MP3 files are 50% bigger than RealAudio, and will eat up more server space and more of Kalvos's upload time. So we really need your feedback on whether to switch. Test files are now available for our current shows. Please let's hear from you!
  • For those of you following the crisis here at WGDR-FM 91.1 in Plainfield, Vermont, WGDR broadcasts will continue, at least during a two-month negotiation period (until October 5). The live stream, like that of 10,000 other webcasters, has shut down, but our archives remain available. You can check Friends of WGDR to see the origins and progress of this issue, and how the local community is fundraising to purchase the station. Kalvos & Damian is not in jeopardy as a web entity -- we took steps to protect our show and its guests by establishing kalvos.org five years ago, expanded with our complete audio archives last year through the good graces of pair Networks, with audio funding from the Princeton String Academy. We'll keep you updated, and in the meantime additional contributions will help us assure that Kalvos & Damian can continue to produce the show without WGDR's facilities, should that happen.
  • Loyal fan and composer Canary Burton set the pace and is now joined by Steve Layton: They're the only K&D listeners making regular monthly contributions. Why don't you? Contact us directly or click the PayPal links.
  • If your local radio station would like to broadcast K&D, we'll be happy to supply the show on a pair of CDs at a nominal cost. Please contact us for information.
  • September 11 Musical Gallery is one of our most listened-to features. The New York Times article, "Elegies and Tone Poems Respond to Tragedy," appeared on October 29, 2001. Read Matthew Mirapaul's thoughtful piece about this collection on K&D.
  • Past and potential K&D supporters are invited to read the latest Report to Contributors. The document, which contains a brief history from 1995-2001 and a financial picture of the past year, is in PDF format.
  • Have you been listening to Ought-One? This entire Ought-One Festival (More about Ought-One itself is found here, including some great reviews.) will be broadcast and cybercast on K&D. The first half is already archived, and the rest will follow shortly:
    • #1: Maja Cerar performing Doug Geers, and Gregory Beyer and Christina Towle performing Elaine Thomazi Freitas.
    • #2: Joseph Benzola and Crippled Symmetry performing their own works.
    • #3: The Ill Wind Ensemble performing their own works.
    • #6: Ensemble Wireworks performing Manfred Stahnke, Jonathan Harvey, Vinko Globokar, Annea Lockwood, Georg Hajdu, Chris Brown and Dieter Schnebel.
    • #7: The Logos Duo performing their own works.
    • #9: Brian Johnson performing Jospeh Celli, Steve Gryc, Eric Lyon, Ben Passaribu, and his own work.
    • #10: Michael Manion performing Dennis Báthory-Kitsz; Jon Appleton; and Taimur Sullivan performing Keith Moore.
    • #11: Jin Hi Kim and Joseph Celli with special guest Brenda Hutchinson performing No World Improvisations.
    • #14: Margaret Lancaster performing Paul Steenhuisen, Karlheinz Stockhausen, Kaija Saariaho, Larry Polansky, Jon Appleton, Paul Reller, Rob Constable, and Eric Lyon.
    • #16: Drew Krause performing his own works and Stuart Saunders Smith.
    • #17: Phil Kline's complete premiere of his Meditations in an Emergency.
    • #19: Steven Klimowski performing Mary Jane Leach and Peggy Madden; Mary Lou Newmark performing her own works.
    • #20: Odd Appetite performing Stefan Poetzsch, Daniel Almada, Kaija Saariaho, Eric Lyon and Ken Ueno
    • #21: Beth Anderson performing her own sound poetry
    • #22: Festival Strings performing Beth Anderson and Robert D. Polansky; Nancy Bloomer Deussen, Greg Hall, and William Harris performing their own works; and Karen Kevra performing Louis Moyse.
    • #23: Elodie Lauten performing her complete Tronik Involutions.
    • #24: Michael Lowenstern performing many of his own works.
    • #25: Ensemble Uh Maybe performing work of Gary Barwin and John Kameel Farah.
    • #26: James Bohn performing John Cage, Jackie Martelle performing Matthew Fields, Karen Kevra performing David Cleary and Louis Moyse, Daniel Goode performing his own work.
    • #29: Bill Gilliam performing his own works.
    • #31: Nurit Tilles performing work of Maurice Ravel, Alexandre Tansman, Arthur Honegger, Robert Helps, Tom Pierson, Paul Paccione and her own works.
    • #33: Tom Heasley's complete premiere of his Montpelier Meditations.
    • #34: Eve Beglarian, Phil Kline, Margaret Lancaster and Eleanor Sandresky performing Eve and Phil's Songs from the Bilitis Project.
    • #36: Kyle Gann performing his complete Custer and Sitting Bull.
    • #37: Eleanor Sandresky performing her in-progress A Sleeper's Notebook.
    • #38: NonSequitur performing work of Iannis Xenakis, Eric Lyon, Thierry de Mey, Clarence Barlow, Ned McGowan, and Charles Mingus.
    Check out the audio archives and playlists for more info.
August 25
Shows #376 and 377 are Posted!
  • The August 17 show, our non-tribute to Elvis, "No Tears or Candles" is now available in our archives section. Even better than this is the August 24 show, our interview with Elliott Schwartz, co-hosted by composer Matt Borghi. This is a show of great music, great insight, and some side-splitting fun.
  • WGDR broadcasts will continue, at least during a two-month negotiation period. The live stream, like that of 10,000 other webcasters, has shut down, but our archives remain available.
  • 10,000 webcasters shutting down? If you'd like to have more information about how corporate pressure in collaboration with government regulations are conspiring to suppress Internet radio, see Save Internet Radio.
August 18
We are Testing MP3 Format
  • Do you prefer MP3 format? Years ago, in the stone ages (May 1995) we started with MPEG 2, TrueSpeech, and RealAudio 1.0. We discontinued MP2 and TrueSpeech by 1997, but we have continued to use RealAudio on this site through RealAudio 5.0, with a few samples in other formats. Our arrangements with composers and record labels kept us at a modem-streaming mono format for our archived shows. Recently, however, the RealAudio player has become more invasive and we are considering moving to MP3/32K mono streaming. We will not be able to convert our earlier 370-plus shows, however -- meaning two players are still needed. Also, the MP3/32K files are 50% bigger than RealAudio, and will eat up more server space and more of Kalvos's upload time. So we really need your feedback on whether to switch to MP3 format. A pair of test files is available for show #375. Thanks for your opinions!
August 17
Show #375 -- Eleanor Sandresky at Ought-One -- is Posted!
  • The August 10 show, Concert #37 of the Ought-One Festival is now available in our archives section. This is a performance of A Sleeper's Notebook by Eleanor Sandresky. This is an exquisite & mysterious performance of a portion of a longer work for "choreographed piano" that was premiered after Ought-One.
August 11
Show #374 -- Kyle Gann at Ought-One -- is Posted!
July 28
Show #373 -- "Bilitis Project" -- is Posted!
  • The July 27 show, Concert #34 of the Ought-One Festival is now available in our archives section. This is a performance of Songs from the Bilitis Project by Eve Beglarian and Phil Kline, with Margaret Lancaster and Eleanor Sandresky. Lush, evocative, exotic, sensual! The July 20 interview with George Lewis is available in our archives section as well. One heck of a show -- don't miss it! This joins show #371, with intense commentary about politics and music from returning guest Howard Jonathan Fredrics, and a live performance by Lori Joachim Fredrics. Shows #366-370 include our interviews with Steve Layton and Laurie Anderson, and Tom Heasley performing at Ought-One.
  • WGDR broadcasts will continue, at least during a two-month negotiation period. The live stream, like that of 10,000 other webcasters, has shut down, but our archives remain available. You can check Friends of WGDR to see the origins and progress of this issue, and how the local community is fundraising to purchase the station. Kalvos & Damian is not in jeopardy as a web entity -- we took steps to protect our show and its guests by establishing kalvos.org five years ago, expanded with our complete audio archives last year through the good graces of pair Networks, with audio funding from the Princeton String Academy. We'll keep you updated, and in the meantime additional contributions will help us assure that Kalvos & Damian can continue to produce the show without WGDR's facilities, should that happen. We have purchased a small portable board for remote/recorded broadcasts, and plan to update some of our hardware.
  • If your local radio station would like to broadcast K&D, we'll be happy to supply the show on a pair of CDs at a nominal cost. Please contact us for information.
  • 10,000 webcasters shutting down? If you'd like to have more information about how corporate pressure in collaboration with government regulations are conspiring to suppress Internet radio, see Save Internet Radio.
  • Kalvos is delighted to announce that David S. Ware, an old high school classmate and now world-famous, groundbreaking jazz composer/performer, will be interviewed on K&D this summer or fall.
  • The latest K&D Newsletter is up. Read about past, present and future at K&D! -- although the WGDR closing happened after this issue was put together.
  • Loyal fan and composer Canary Burton set the pace and is now joined by Steve Layton: They're the only K&D listeners making regular monthly contributions. Why don't you? Contact us directly or click the PayPal links.
  • September 11 Musical Gallery is one of our most listened-to features. The New York Times article, "Elegies and Tone Poems Respond to Tragedy," appeared on October 29, 2001. Read Matthew Mirapaul's thoughtful piece about this collection on K&D.
  • Past and potential K&D supporters are invited to read the latest Report to Contributors. The document, which contains a brief history from 1995-2001 and a financial picture of the past year, is in PDF format.
  • Have you been listening to Ought-One? This entire Ought-One Festival (More about Ought-One itself is found here, including some great reviews.) will be broadcast and cybercast on K&D. The first half is already archived, and the rest will follow shortly:
    • #1: Maja Cerar performing Doug Geers, and Gregory Beyer and Christina Towle performing Elaine Thomazi Freitas.
    • #2: Joseph Benzola and Crippled Symmetry performing their own works.
    • #3: The Ill Wind Ensemble performing their own works.
    • #6: Ensemble Wireworks performing Manfred Stahnke, Jonathan Harvey, Vinko Globokar, Annea Lockwood, Georg Hajdu, Chris Brown and Dieter Schnebel.
    • #7: The Logos Duo performing their own works.
    • #9: Brian Johnson performing Jospeh Celli, Steve Gryc, Eric Lyon, Ben Passaribu, and his own work.
    • #10: Michael Manion performing Dennis Báthory-Kitsz; Jon Appleton; and Taimur Sullivan performing Keith Moore.
    • #11: Jin Hi Kim and Joseph Celli with special guest Brenda Hutchinson performing No World Improvisations.
    • #14: Margaret Lancaster performing Paul Steenhuisen, Karlheinz Stockhausen, Kaija Saariaho, Larry Polansky, Jon Appleton, Paul Reller, Rob Constable, and Eric Lyon.
    • #16: Drew Krause performing his own works and Stuart Saunders Smith.
    • #17: Phil Kline's complete premiere of his Meditations in an Emergency.
    • #19: Steven Klimowski performing Mary Jane Leach and Peggy Madden; Mary Lou Newmark performing her own works.
    • #20: Odd Appetite performing Stefan Poetzsch, Daniel Almada, Kaija Saariaho, Eric Lyon and Ken Ueno
    • #21: Beth Anderson performing her own sound poetry
    • #22: Festival Strings performing Beth Anderson and Robert D. Polansky; Nancy Bloomer Deussen, Greg Hall, and William Harris performing their own works; and Karen Kevra performing Louis Moyse.
    • #23: Elodie Lauten performing her complete Tronik Involutions.
    • #24: Michael Lowenstern performing many of his own works.
    • #25: Ensemble Uh Maybe performing work of Gary Barwin and John Kameel Farah.
    • #26: James Bohn performing John Cage, Jackie Martelle performing Matthew Fields, Karen Kevra performing David Cleary and Louis Moyse, Daniel Goode performing his own work.
    • #29: Bill Gilliam performing his own works.
    • #31: Nurit Tilles performing work of Maurice Ravel, Alexandre Tansman, Arthur Honegger, Robert Helps, Tom Pierson, Paul Paccione and her own works.
    • #33: Tom Heasley's complete premiere of his Montpelier Meditations.
    • #34: Eve Beglarian, Phil Kline, Margaret Lancaster and Eleanor Sandresky performing Eve and Phil's Songs from the Bilitis Project.
    Check out the audio archives and playlists for more info.
July 25
The Clock has Stopped!
  • WGDR broadcasts will continue, at least during a two-month negotiation period. The live stream, like that of 10,000 other webcasters, has shut down, but our archives remain available.
  • 10,000 webcasters shutting down? If you'd like to have more information about how corporate pressure in collaboration with government regulations are conspiring to suppress Internet radio, see Save Internet Radio.
July 21
George Lewis Interview is Posted
July 20
Goodbye for Now, WGDR Listeners!
  • Our final WGDR broadcast concluded today with the playing of the 6451st piece on K&D, Kenneth Gaburo's Exit Music I: The Wasting of Lucrecetzia. The title is especially ironic, since it was also our very first piece on May 27, 1995. Nevertheless, we will be here every week with brand-new shows as we continue to produce Kalvos & Damian in other locations. We're also exploring providing K&D to other interested broadcast stations. So WGDR listeners, we'll see you someday again, but every day on line!
  • Today's interview with George Lewis will be posted soon.
July 15
Now is the Time.
  • We are live for one last time next week, July 20. K&D will continue on-line until we find another home station, or are able to distribute the show through some other means. Our live stream is gone. You can check Friends of WGDR to see the origins and progress of this possible loss, and how the local community is fundraising to purchase the station. Kalvos & Damian is not in jeopardy as a web entity -- we took steps to protect our show and its guests by establishing kalvos.org five years ago, expanded with our complete audio archives last year through the good graces of pair Networks, with audio funding from the Princeton String Academy. We'll keep you updated, and in the meantime additional contributions will help us assure that Kalvos & Damian can continue to produce the show without WGDR's facilities.
  • Kalvos is delighted to announce that David S. Ware, an old high school classmate and now world-famous, groundbreaking jazz composer/performer, will be interviewed on K&D this summer or fall.
  • The latest K&D Newsletter is up. Read about past, present and future at K&D! -- although the WGDR closing happened after this issue was put together.
  • Loyal fan and composer Canary Burton set the pace and is now joined by Steve Layton: They're the only K&D listeners making regular monthly contributions. Why don't you? Contact us directly or click the PayPal links.
  • Have you been listening to Ought-One? This entire Ought-One Festival (More about Ought-One itself is found here, including some great reviews.) will be broadcast and cybercast on K&D. The first half is already archived, and the rest will follow shortly:
    • #1: Maja Cerar performing Doug Geers, and Gregory Beyer and Christina Towle performing Elaine Thomazi Freitas.
    • #2: Joseph Benzola and Crippled Symmetry performing their own works.
    • #3: The Ill Wind Ensemble performing their own works.
    • #6: Ensemble Wireworks performing Manfred Stahnke, Jonathan Harvey, Vinko Globokar, Annea Lockwood, Georg Hajdu, Chris Brown and Dieter Schnebel.
    • #7: The Logos Duo performing their own works.
    • #9: Brian Johnson performing Jospeh Celli, Steve Gryc, Eric Lyon, Ben Passaribu, and his own work.
    • #10: Michael Manion performing Dennis Báthory-Kitsz; Jon Appleton; and Taimur Sullivan performing Keith Moore.
    • #11: Jin Hi Kim and Joseph Celli with special guest Brenda Hutchinson performing No World Improvisations.
    • #14: Margaret Lancaster performing Paul Steenhuisen, Karlheinz Stockhausen, Kaija Saariaho, Larry Polansky, Jon Appleton, Paul Reller, Rob Constable, and Eric Lyon.
    • #16: Drew Krause performing his own works and Stuart Saunders Smith.
    • #17: Phil Kline's complete premiere of Meditations in an Emergency.
    • #19: Steven Klimowski performing Mary Jane Leach and Peggy Madden; Mary Lou Newmark performing her own works.
    • #20: Odd Appetite performing Stefan Poetzsch, Daniel Almada, Kaija Saariaho, Eric Lyon and Ken Ueno
    • #21: Beth Anderson performing her own sound poetry
    • #22: Festival Strings performing Beth Anderson and Robert D. Polansky; Nancy Bloomer Deussen, Greg Hall, and William Harris performing their own works; and Karen Kevra performing Louis Moyse.
    • #23: Elodie Lauten performing the complete Tronik Involutions.
    • #24: Michael Lowenstern performing many of his own works.
    • #25: Ensemble Uh Maybe performing work of Gary Barwin and John Kameel Farah.
    • #26: James Bohn performing John Cage, Jackie Martelle performing Matthew Fields, Karen Kevra performing David Cleary and Louis Moyse, Daniel Goode performing his own work.
    • #29: Bill Gilliam performing his own works.
    • #31: Nurit Tilles performing work of Maurice Ravel, Alexandre Tansman, Arthur Honegger, Robert Helps, Tom Pierson, Paul Paccione and her own works.
    • #33: Tom Heasley performing his own work.
    Check out the audio archives and playlists for more info.
  • September 11 Musical Gallery is one of our most listened-to features. The New York Times article, "Elegies and Tone Poems Respond to Tragedy," appeared on October 29, 2001. Read Matthew Mirapaul's thoughtful piece about this collection on K&D.
  • Past and potential K&D supporters are invited to read the latest Report to Contributors. The document, which contains a brief history from 1995-2001 and a financial picture of the past year, is in PDF format.
July 14
Latest Show Available; WGDR Still to Close
  • Yesterday's show #371 is now posted! We heard intense commentary about politics and music from returning guest Howard Jonathan Fredrics, and a live performance by Lori Joachim Fredrics. This show joins shows #366-370 which include our interviews with Steve Layton and Laurie Anderson, and Tom Heasley performing at Ought-One.
  • Goddard College will still close WGDR on July 26. This is the last chance to get your support email in, and join the Friends of WGDR. See WGDR.net for more info and signup. Please continue to send your support email to (respectively) pro and con Goddard trustees Jonathan Woocher and Ellen Ratner, with a copy to Friends of WGDR president Dennis Darrah. Please address them to us and we will forward them so their email addresses are not harvested by spambots! Thank you! And thanks to all for the supportive email and contributions. K&D will continue as an archived cybershow (without live streaming), and our air and performance studios are scheduled to shut up shop. This has a serious impact on our central Vermont listeners, of course, from whom we have received continuing assistance and enthusiasm over the past eight years. We will keep you all posted -- and if your local radio station would like to broadcast K&D, we'll be happy to supply the show on a pair of CDs at a nominal cost. Please contact us for information.
  • The live stream is, of course, now gone.
July 7
Latest Show Now Available!
July 6
Station Closing Imminent
  • Goddard College will still close WGDR on July 26, if negotiations to purchase the station license fall through. See WGDR.net for more info. Thanks to all for the supportive email and contributions. K&D will continue as an archived cybershow, but we do not presently have a live streaming option, and our air and performance studios are scheduled to shut up shop. This has a serious impact on our central Vermont listeners, of course, from whom we have received continuing assistance and enthusiasm over the past eight years. We will keep you all posted -- and if your local radio station would like to broadcast K&D, we'll be happy to supply the show on a pair of CDs at a nominal cost. Please contact us for information.
  • Next week's guest is Howard Jonathan Fredrics. Be around for the guy who thinks "Screams from Lima" is all about beans!
June 30
Latest Shows Now Available!
June 29
Station Closing Imminent
  • Goddard College will close WGDR on July 26, according to our latest information. Thanks to all for the supportive email and contributions. K&D will continue as an archived cybershow, but we do not presently have a live streaming option, and our air and performance studios are scheduled to shut up shop. This has a serious impact on our central Vermont listeners, of course, from whom we have received continuing assistance and enthusiasm over the past eight years. We will keep you all posted -- and if your local radio station would like to broadcast K&D, we'll be happy to supply the show on a pair of CDs at a nominal cost. Please contact us for information.
  • Shows #366-369 will be posted shortly, which include our interview with Steve Layton and Tom Heasley performing at Ought-One. We've obviously had other things on our minds ... Kalvos will be converting the shows on Sunday, June 30, and they should be available by late night or Monday.
  • Next week's guest is Laurie Anderson. Laurie gives things a political spin, including why cheerleaders aren't hated because they're beautiful. Our live stream will be absent, but we'll archive the show shortly after broadcast!
June 22
Uncertain Future
  • Goddard College is closing its resident program and the Librarian of Congress has approved streaming royalties. The loss of Goddard's resident program could spell the end for our home station WGDR, and the new royalties (retroactive to 1998, and handed over to the RIAA) may put us down. We're pretty doggone tired at the moment. Email and contributions (both together) would cheer us up, at least for a while.
June 9
What a whirlwind! Wish it were about music!
  • We are still live, and were during our mini-show yesterday. Goddard has postponed for eight weeks its decision to close. If WGDR closes, K&D will continue on-line until we find another home station, or are able to distribute the show through some other means. We cannot predict what will happen by September. Our live stream may disappear without warning, so please check back here at kalvos.org for updates before clicking on the live stream links. You can also check Friends of WGDR to see the origins and progress of this possible loss, and how the local community is fundraising to purchase the station. Kalvos & Damian is not in jeopardy as a web entity -- we took steps to protect our show and its guests by establishing kalvos.org five years ago, expanded with our complete audio archives last year through the good graces of pair Networks, with audio funding from the Princeton String Academy. We'll keep you updated, and in the meantime additional contributions will help us assure that Kalvos & Damian can continue to produce the show without WGDR's facilities. Please read this editorial about the WGDR issue. The college vice-president called a few days later to apologize, but the administration did not show up during our pre-emption, so it was all for nothing anyway.
  • Kalvos is delighted to announce that David S. Ware, an old high school classmate and now world-famous, groundbreaking jazz composer/performer, will be interviewed on K&D this summer or fall.
  • Thanks to James Bohn, John Levin, Eric Boyer, Dennis Darrah and Bea Philips for joining us during our birthday celebration at the end of May!
  • Best of the Bazaar Mark LXX and LXXI are posted! Listen to these and all of Damian's incredible sound collages! And did you know we post K&D Show IDs? These are short clips contributed by the guest composers. Lots of fun if you've got nothing else to do!
  • The latest K&D Newsletter is up. Read about past, present and future at K&D!
  • The Kalvos & Damian Board of Advisors guides us in artistic and practical planning, ongoing economic crises, intellectual property rights issues, and much more. We welcome three new members to our board: Don Corson of Yverdon-les-Bains, Switzerland; Steve Layton of Seattle; and John McGuire of New York City. Our thanks to them and to the other 22 members of our international board for their continued advice and ideas!
  • The K&D Deli is opening this summer! Yup, the best recipes from composers around the world. On-air and on-line. Watch for it!
  • Shows #363 and #364 are now available, featuring Christopher deLaurenti and David Mahler. #364 is also our 8th birthday party show with Eric Boyer, John Levin, and James Bohn dropping in to be on the air. Shows #359-362 are also recently available. Hear music from & interviews with Janice Giteck, Elizabeth Falconer and Jarrad Powell, as well as a preview of all the Seattle composer shows.
  • There are new music clips available!. We've been behind on getting examples of music on the guest composer pages, but here they are: James Drew, Ellen Fullman, Jarrad Powell, Evan Johnson, Scott Johnson, Elliott Schwartz, Elizabeth Falconer, David Mahler, Janice Giteck, Christopher DeLaurenti, Steve Layton, with some score excepts from Michael Manion. Don't forget there are also recently posted new interview clips with Andrew Schulze, Evan Johnson, Matt Borghi, and Cory Carlick. Hear what they have to say!
  • Loyal fan and composer Canary Burton is setting the pace: She's the only K&D listener making a regular monthly contribution. Why don't you? Contact us directly or click the PayPal links.
  • Have you been listening to Ought-One? This entire Ought-One Festival (More about Ought-One itself is found here, including some great reviews.) will be broadcast and cybercast on K&D. The first half is already archived, and the rest will follow shortly:
    • #1: Maja Cerar performing Doug Geers, and Gregory Beyer and Christina Towle performing Elaine Thomazi Freitas.
    • #2: Joseph Benzola and Crippled Symmetry performing their own works.
    • #3: The Ill Wind Ensemble performing their own works.
    • #6: Ensemble Wireworks performing Manfred Stahnke, Jonathan Harvey, Vinko Globokar, Annea Lockwood, Georg Hajdu, Chris Brown and Dieter Schnebel.
    • #7: The Logos Duo performing their own works.
    • #9: Brian Johnson performing Jospeh Celli, Steve Gryc, Eric Lyon, Ben Passaribu, and his own work.
    • #10: Michael Manion performing Dennis Báthory-Kitsz; Jon Appleton; and Taimur Sullivan performing Keith Moore.
    • #11: Jin Hi Kim and Joseph Celli with special guest Brenda Hutchinson performing No World Improvisations.
    • #14: Margaret Lancaster performing Paul Steenhuisen, Karlheinz Stockhausen, Kaija Saariaho, Larry Polansky, Jon Appleton, Paul Reller, Rob Constable, and Eric Lyon.
    • #16: Drew Krause performing his own works and Stuart Saunders Smith.
    • #17: Phil Kline's complete premiere of Meditations in an Emergency.
    • #19: Steven Klimowski performing Mary Jane Leach and Peggy Madden; Mary Lou Newmark performing her own works.
    • #20: Odd Appetite performing Stefan Poetzsch, Daniel Almada, Kaija Saariaho, Eric Lyon and Ken Ueno
    • #21: Beth Anderson performing her own sound poetry
    • #22: Festival Strings performing Beth Anderson and Robert D. Polansky; Nancy Bloomer Deussen, Greg Hall, and William Harris performing their own works; and Karen Kevra performing Louis Moyse.
    • #23: Elodie Lauten performing the complete Tronik Involutions.
    • #24: Michael Lowenstern performing many of his own works.
    • #25: Ensemble Uh Maybe performing work of Gary Barwin and John Kameel Farah.
    • #26: James Bohn performing John Cage, Jackie Martelle performing Matthew Fields, Karen Kevra performing David Cleary and Louis Moyse, Daniel Goode performing his own work.
    • #29: Bill Gilliam performing his own works.
    • #31: Nurit Tilles performing work of Maurice Ravel, Alexandre Tansman, Arthur Honegger, Robert Helps, Tom Pierson, Paul Paccione and her own works.
    Check out the audio archives and playlists for more info.
  • September 11 Musical Gallery is one of our most listened-to features. The New York Times article, "Elegies and Tone Poems Respond to Tragedy," appeared on October 29, 2001. Read Matthew Mirapaul's thoughtful piece about this collection on K&D.
  • Past and potential K&D supporters are invited to read the latest Report to Contributors. The document, which contains a brief history from 1995-2001 and a financial picture of the past year, is in PDF format.
June 8
No, We Are Not On Today
  • We will be back live as soon as possible. If WGDR closes, K&D will continue on-line until it finds another home station, or is able to distribute its show through some other means.
June 1
Our Home Station is in Crisis
May 30
Latest Shows Available
  • Shows #363 and #364 are now available, featuring Christopher deLaurenti and David Mahler. #364 is also our 8th birthday party show with Eric Boyer, John Levin, and James Bohn dropping in to be on the air. (Apologies if you were waiting for these shows earlier; our upstream cable modem system kept dropping the connection midway through our 19MB-per-show uploads.)
May 25
Ellen Fullman Next Week
May 19
Celebrate the Start of our Eighth Year!
May 17
K&D Welcomes Three New Advisors
  • The Kalvos & Damian Board of Advisors guides us in artistic and practical planning, ongoing economic crises, intellectual property rights issues, and much more. We welcome three new members to our board: Don Corson of Yverdon-les-Bains, Switzerland; Steve Layton of Seattle; and John McGuire of New York City. Our thanks to them and to the other 22 members of our international board for their continued advice and ideas!
  • The K&D Deli is opening this summer! Yup, the best recipes from composers around the world. On-air and on-line. Watch for it!
  • May 25 is the beginning of our eighth year! How can that be happening? Somehow it is -- we think -- assuming we can last one more week. Celebrate with us! Visit WGDR from 2:30-4:30pm on Saturday, May 25, or call us at +1-802-454-7762 or -9962. We'll be happy!
May 13
Four New Shows Now Available!
May 12
David Mahler Next Week; New Music Clips
  • David Mahler is our guest during our Seattle Slew Series on Saturday, May 18. Listen to a man with, as they say, history.
  • There are new music clips available!. We've been behind on getting examples of music on the guest composer pages, but here they are: James Drew, Ellen Fullman, Jarrad Powell, Evan Johnson, Scott Johnson, Elliott Schwartz, Elizabeth Falconer, David Mahler, Janice Giteck, Christopher DeLaurenti, Steve Layton, with some score excepts from Michael Manion. Don't forget there are also recently posted new interview clips with Andrew Schulze, Evan Johnson, Matt Borghi, and Cory Carlick. Hear what they have to say!
  • Best of the Bazaar Mark LXX is posted. Hear this and the other 69 special mixes by David "Damian" Gunn! And did you know we post K&D Show IDs? These are short clips contributed by the guest composers. Lots of fun if you've got nothing else to do!
  • Loyal fan and composer Canary Burton is setting the pace: She's the only K&D listener making a regular monthly contribution. Why don't you? Contact us directly or click the PayPal links.
  • Damian's back from Seattle loaded up with interviews: We've broadcast those by Janice Giteck, Elizabeth Falconer and Jarrad Powell already, but coming up are Steve Layton, Ellen Fullman, Christopher deLaurenti, and David Mahler, plus a locally recorded interview scheduled with George Lewis and other upcoming guests including P. Kellach Waddle and Elliott Schwartz (both TBA). Watch for announcements!
  • Have you been listening to Ought-One? This entire Ought-One Festival (More about Ought-One itself is found here, including some great reviews.) will be broadcast and cybercast on K&D. The first half is already archived, and the rest will follow shortly:
    • #1: Maja Cerar performing Doug Geers, and Gregory Beyer and Christina Towle performing Elaine Thomazi Freitas.
    • #2: Joseph Benzola and Crippled Symmetry performing their own works.
    • #3: The Ill Wind Ensemble performing their own works.
    • #6: Ensemble Wireworks performing Manfred Stahnke, Jonathan Harvey, Vinko Globokar, Annea Lockwood, Georg Hajdu, Chris Brown and Dieter Schnebel.
    • #7: The Logos Duo performing their own works.
    • #9: Brian Johnson performing Jospeh Celli, Steve Gryc, Eric Lyon, Ben Passaribu, and his own work.
    • #10: Michael Manion performing Dennis Báthory-Kitsz; Jon Appleton; and Taimur Sullivan performing Keith Moore.
    • #11: Jin Hi Kim and Joseph Celli with special guest Brenda Hutchinson performing No World Improvisations.
    • #14: Margaret Lancaster performing Paul Steenhuisen, Karlheinz Stockhausen, Kaija Saariaho, Larry Polansky, Jon Appleton, Paul Reller, Rob Constable, and Eric Lyon.
    • #16: Drew Krause performing his own works and Stuart Saunders Smith.
    • #17: Phil Kline's complete premiere of Meditations in an Emergency.
    • #19: Steven Klimowski performing Mary Jane Leach and Peggy Madden; Mary Lou Newmark performing her own works.
    • #20: Odd Appetite performing Stefan Poetzsch, Daniel Almada, Kaija Saariaho, Eric Lyon and Ken Ueno
    • #21: Beth Anderson performing her own sound poetry
    • #22: Festival Strings performing Beth Anderson and Robert D. Polansky; Nancy Bloomer Deussen, Greg Hall, and William Harris performing their own works; and Karen Kevra performing Louis Moyse.
    • #23: Elodie Lauten performing the complete Tronik Involutions.
    • #24: Michael Lowenstern performing many of his own works.
    • #25: Ensemble Uh Maybe performing work of Gary Barwin and John Kameel Farah.
    • #26: James Bohn performing John Cage, Jackie Martelle performing Matthew Fields, Karen Kevra performing David Cleary and Louis Moyse, Daniel Goode performing his own work.
    • #29: Bill Gilliam performing his own works.
    • #31: Nurit Tilles performing work of Maurice Ravel, Alexandre Tansman, Arthur Honegger, Robert Helps, Tom Pierson, Paul Paccione and her own works.
    Check out the audio archives and playlists for more info.
  • Larry Austin's interview was postponed.. We're waiting for a recording of a recent concert; then we'll be ready to go!
  • September 11 Musical Gallery is one of our most listened-to features. The New York Times article, "Elegies and Tone Poems Respond to Tragedy," appeared on October 29, 2001. Read Matthew Mirapaul's thoughtful piece about this collection on K&D.
  • Past and potential K&D supporters are invited to read the latest Report to Contributors. The document, which contains a brief history from 1995-2001 and a financial picture of the past year, is in PDF format.
May 10
Kalvos is Back
  • Kalvos, who does all this web stuff, was off-duty for a vacation until early May. Composer page updates, playlists, and show archives are now back in progress.
  • Jarrad Powell is our guest during our Seattle Slew Series on Saturday, May 11. Our live stream is down again (I think), so check in, but be sure to look for that archived show on Sunday or Monday.
  • Loyal fan and composer Canary Burton is setting the pace: She's the only K&D listener making a regular monthly contribution. Why don't you? Contact us directly or click the PayPal links.
  • Damian's back from Seattle loaded up with interviews: We've broadcast those by Janice Giteck and Elizabeth Falconer already, but coming up are Jarrad Powell, Steve Layton, Ellen Fullman, Christopher deLaurenti, and David Mahler, plus a locally recorded interview scheduled with George Lewis and other upcoming guests including P. Kellach Waddle and Elliott Schwartz (both TBA). Watch for announcements!
  • Have you been listening to Ought-One? This entire Ought-One Festival (More about Ought-One itself is found here, including some great reviews.) will be broadcast and cybercast on K&D. The first half is already archived, and the rest will follow shortly:
    • #1: Maja Cerar performing Doug Geers, and Gregory Beyer and Christina Towle performing Elaine Thomazi Freitas.
    • #2: Joseph Benzola and Crippled Symmetry performing their own works.
    • #3: The Ill Wind Ensemble performing their own works.
    • #6: Ensemble Wireworks performing Manfred Stahnke, Jonathan Harvey, Vinko Globokar, Annea Lockwood, Georg Hajdu, Chris Brown and Dieter Schnebel.
    • #7: The Logos Duo performing their own works.
    • #9: Brian Johnson performing Jospeh Celli, Steve Gryc, Eric Lyon, Ben Passaribu, and his own work.
    • #10: Michael Manion performing Dennis Báthory-Kitsz; Jon Appleton; and Taimur Sullivan performing Keith Moore.
    • #11: Jin Hi Kim and Joseph Celli with special guest Brenda Hutchinson performing No World Improvisations.
    • #14: Margaret Lancaster performing Paul Steenhuisen, Karlheinz Stockhausen, Kaija Saariaho, Larry Polansky, Jon Appleton, Paul Reller, Rob Constable, and Eric Lyon.
    • #16: Drew Krause performing his own works and Stuart Saunders Smith.
    • #17: Phil Kline's complete premiere of Meditations in an Emergency.
    • #19: Steven Klimowski performing Mary Jane Leach and Peggy Madden; Mary Lou Newmark performing her own works.
    • #20: Odd Appetite performing Stefan Poetzsch, Daniel Almada, Kaija Saariaho, Eric Lyon and Ken Ueno
    • #21: Beth Anderson performing her own sound poetry
    • #22: Festival Strings performing Beth Anderson and Robert D. Polansky; Nancy Bloomer Deussen, Greg Hall, and William Harris performing their own works; and Karen Kevra performing Louis Moyse.
    • #23: Elodie Lauten performing the complete Tronik Involutions.
    • #24: Michael Lowenstern performing many of his own works.
    • #25: Ensemble Uh Maybe performing work of Gary Barwin and John Kameel Farah.
    • #26: James Bohn performing John Cage, Jackie Martelle performing Matthew Fields, Karen Kevra performing David Cleary and Louis Moyse, Daniel Goode performing his own work.
    • #29: Bill Gilliam performing his own works.
    • #31: Nurit Tilles performing work of Maurice Ravel, Alexandre Tansman, Arthur Honegger, Robert Helps, Tom Pierson, Paul Paccione and her own works.
    Check out the audio archives and playlists for more info.
  • Larry Austin's interview was postponed.. We're waiting for a recording of a recent concert; then we'll be ready to go!
  • September 11 Musical Gallery adds music by Eve Beglarian and Elodie Lauten. A studio performance of Eve's Five Things is joined by the release of Elodie's complete, 16-track S.O.S.W.T.C.. The New York Times article, "Elegies and Tone Poems Respond to Tragedy," appeared on October 29, 2001. Read Matthew Mirapaul's thoughtful piece about The September 11 Musical Gallery on K&D.
  • Past and potential K&D supporters are invited to read the latest Report to Contributors. The document, which contains a brief history from 1995-2001 and a financial picture of the past year, is in PDF format.
  • New interview clips have been posted for Andrew Schulze, Evan Johnson, Matt Borghi, and Cory Carlick. Hear what they have to say!
  • Did you know we post K&D Show IDs? These are short clips contributed by the guest composers. Lots of fun if you've got nothing else to do!
April 20
Kalvos Off Duty 2 Weeks
  • Kalvos, who does all this web stuff, is off-duty for a vacation until May 3 or so. So please have patience with expectations for web updates, show archives, and especially email answers (He gets 100+ per day, and dreads what he'll see in two weeks! So be kind!).
April 13
Damian Back from Seattle
  • Damian's back from Seattle loaded up with interviews: Steve Layton, Ellen Fullman, Christopher deLaurenti, David Mahler, Janice Giteck, Jarrad Powell, Liz Falconer plus a locally recorded interview's scheduled with George Lewis and other upcoming guests including P. Kellach Waddle (April 27) and Elliott Schwartz (TBA). Watch for announcements!
April 6
Seattle Soon
  • Damian's on his way back from Seattle loaded up with interviews: Steve Layton, Ellen Fullman, Christopher deLaurenti, David Mahler, Janice Giteck, Jared Powell, Liz Falconer plus a locally recorded interview's scheduled with George Lewis and other upcoming guests including P. Kellach Waddle (April 27) and Elliott Schwartz (TBA). Watch for announcements!
March 24
New Interview Clips, IDs, and Shows
March 10
Ought-One Concerts and More
  • The live cybercast is back!. You no longer have to wait for the Kalvos & Damian Archives. The live cybercast is back from WGDR. Check it out -- tell us if it works (remember we're on Saturdays 2:30-4:30 pm US Eastern Time)..
  • Upcoming guests: Elena Ruehr (March 23), P. Kellach Waddle (April 27), Elliott Schwartz (TBA). Watch for announcements!
  • Have you been listening to Ought-One? This entire Ought-One Festival (More about Ought-One itself is found here.) will be broadcast and cybercast on K&D. The first half is already archived, and the rest will follow shortly:
    • #1: Maja Cerar performing Doug Geers, and Gregory Beyer and Christina Towle performing Elaine Thomazi Freitas.
    • #2: Joseph Benzola and Crippled Symmetry performing their own works.
    • #3: The Ill Wind Ensemble performing their own works.
    • #6: Ensemble Wireworks performing Manfred Stahnke, Jonathan Harvey, Vinko Globokar, Annea Lockwood, Georg Hajdu, Chris Brown and Dieter Schnebel.
    • #7: The Logos Duo performing their own works.
    • #9: Brian Johnson performing Jospeh Celli, Steve Gryc, Eric Lyon, Ben Passaribu, and his own work.
    • #10: Michael Manion performing Dennis Báthory-Kitsz; Jon Appleton; and Taimur Sullivan performing Keith Moore.
    • #11: Jin Hi Kim and Joseph Celli with special guest Brenda Hutchinson performing No World Improvisations.
    • #14: Margaret Lancaster performing Paul Steenhuisen, Karlheinz Stockhausen, Kaija Saariaho, Larry Polansky, Jon Appleton, Paul Reller, Rob Constable, and Eric Lyon.
    • #16: Drew Krause performing his own works and Stuart Saunders Smith.
    • #17: Phil Kline's complete premiere of Meditations in an Emergency.
    • #19: Steven Klimowski performing Mary Jane Leach and Peggy Madden; Mary Lou Newmark performing her own works.
    • #20: Odd Appetite performing Stefan Poetzsch, Daniel Almada, Kaija Saariaho, Eric Lyon and Ken Ueno
    • #21: Beth Anderson performing her own sound poetry
    • #22: Festival Strings performing Beth Anderson and Robert D. Polansky; Nancy Bloomer Deussen, Greg Hall, and William Harris performing their own works; and Karen Kevra performing Louis Moyse.
    • #23: Elodie Lauten performing the complete Tronik Involutions.
    Check out the audio archives and playlists for more info.
  • Larry Austin's interview was postponed.. We're waiting for a recording of a recent concert; then we'll be ready to go!
  • September 11 Musical Gallery adds music by Eve Beglarian and Elodie Lauten. A studio performance of Eve's Five Things is joined by the release of Elodie's complete, 16-track S.O.S.W.T.C.. The New York Times article, "Elegies and Tone Poems Respond to Tragedy," appeared on October 29, 2001. Read Matthew Mirapaul's thoughtful piece about The September 11 Musical Gallery on K&D.
  • Past and potential K&D supporters are invited to read the latest Report to Contributors. The document, which contains a brief history from 1995-2001 and a financial picture of the past year, is in PDF format.
March 2
Larry Austin Postponed; Other Guests Soon!
  • Larry Austin's interview was postponed.. We're waiting for a recording of a recent concert; then we'll be ready to go!
  • Upcoming guests: Elena Ruehr (March 23), P. Kellach Waddle (April 27), Elliott Schwartz (TBA). Watch for announcements!
February 23
Larry Austin Next Week! More Ought-One Cybercasts! Live Cybercast Returns!
February 9
Smoked
  • Kalvos's mastering computer smoked on Friday. Updates, including the archived show with Cory Carlick will be posted as soon as the new motherboard is in place.
  • Next Week: More Ought-One Concerts. Unless the studio fills with unexpected guests again, we'll be continuing our series of concerts presented at last August's Woodstock of NonPop.
February 3
Next Week: Cory Carlick
  • Next week's guest is Cory Carlick -- we hope. Last week, Canada Post and the U.S. Postal Service didn't cooperate in getting his material to us in a week. So let's try this again. Cory Carlick joins us all the way from his high school studies in Ottawa ... the youngest composer ever to appear on K&D.
  • Matt Borghi was our surprise guest last week.. It was a cool show. It'll be encoded and up within the next day or so. Look for it!
January 26
Next Week: Cory Carlick
  • Next week's guest is Cory Carlick, all the way from his high school studies in Toronto ... the youngest composer ever to appear on K&D.
January 19
New Shows, New Essays
  • Shows #339-346 are now available! Listen to Ought-One Festival Concerts #1, 2, 3, 6, 7, 9, 10, 11, 14 and 16 and our interview with Andrew Schulze. Already available shows include many interviews, along with our special September 11 reflections. Our September 11 programs began with show #328, WTC Reflections. Shows #329-330 welcomed guest Emily Doolittle, and we had a recently-received releases show (#331) the following week. October 13 saw our second WTC Reflections (#332). We took a look at new trends in live & electronic performance (#333) and improvisation (#334), followed by a surprise visit from composer Fred Szymanski on show #335. Our final September 11 reflections, The Towers Recalled III, was show #336, and we just completed our on-the-road visit with Martín Alejandro Fumarola on show #337-338. They are all here!
  • Hit our Essays Index! There are five new pieces by recent guest Andrew Schulze. Read "Muppets Revisited -- Teletubbies Regurgitated," "4'33": The Sound of Silence", "Hit Me Baby One More Time", "The Three R's", "Snowflake: A Theory of Composition". And yes, there are 50 other essays well worth a read!
  • Next week's guest is Evan Johnson, coming from Yale to be the second in our series of young composers and their new ideas. We are setting aside our Ought-One Festival concert broadcasts for a few weeks as we open the studio to some interviews for a special 'emerging composers' series. On February 2, all the way from his high school studies in Toronto comes Cory Carlick, the youngest composer ever to appear on K&D.
January 12
Ought-One Concerts
  • The "Movement" in Contemporary Art Music: Opinions and Questions, a new essay by Steve Layton, has been posted. Ponder along with Steve how music has changed forever in the past short time. There is also a new essay by Scott Johnson, The Counterpoint of Species. Don't miss it! Ten chapters of insight and challenge! Also check out the other 50 essays by composers.
  • Next week's guest is Andrew Schulze, coming up from Bard College to be the first in our series of young composers and their new ideas. We'll be setting aside our Ought-One Festival concert broadcasts for a few weeks as we open the studio to some interviews for a special 'emerging composers' series. On January 26, Evan Johnson will take the trek up from Yale; and on February 2, all the way from his high school studies in Toronto comes Cory Carlick, the youngest composer ever to appear on K&D.
  • Have you been listening to Ought-One? This entire Ought-One Festival will be broadcast and cybercast on K&D. The first ones are already archived, and the rest will follow shortly:
    • #1: Maja Cerar performing Doug Geers, and Gregory Beyer and Christina Towle performing Elaine Thomazi Freitas.
    • #2: Joseph Benzola and Crippled Symmetry performing their own works.
    • #3: The Ill Wind Ensemble performing their own works.
    • #6: Ensemble Wireworks performing Manfred Stahnke, Jonathan Harvey, Vinko Globokar, Annea Lockwood, Georg Hajdu, Chris Brown and Dieter Schnebel.
    • #7: The Logos Duo performing their own works.
    • #9: Brian Johnson performing Jospeh Celli, Steve Gryc, Eric Lyon, Ben Passaribu, and his own work.
    • #10: Michael Manion performing Dennis Báthory-Kitsz; Jon Appleton; and Taimur Sullivan performing Keith Moore
    • #11: Jin Hi Kim and Joseph Celli with special guest Brenda Hutchinson performing No World Improvisations.
    • #14: Margaret Lancaster performing Paul Steenhuisen, Karlheinz Stockhausen, Kaija Saariaho, Larry Polansky, Jon Appleton, Paul Reller, Rob Constable, and Eric Lyon.
    • #16: Drew Krause performing his own works and Stuart Saunders Smith.
    Check out the audio archives and playlists for more info.
  • Best of the Bazaar Mark LXV and Mark LXVII are both ready! Listen to David "Damian" Gunn's collages -- as well as all 65 others for nearly seven hours of questionable entertainment!
  • Did you know most composer pages have audio comments and music clips?. There are hundreds, and we've just posted more by André Posman and Guy de Bièvre.
  • The 2001 Golden Bruce has been awarded. See who deserves this year's award for ignominious behavior in the contemporary arts. It's not who you think.
  • September 11 Musical Gallery adds music by Eve Beglarian and Elodie Lauten. A studio performance of Eve's Five Things is joined by the release of Elodie's complete, 16-track S.O.S.W.T.C..
  • Past and potential K&D supporters are invited to read the latest Report to Contributors. The document, which contains a brief history from 1995-2001 and a financial picture of the past year, is in PDF format.
  • Our audio is available on the kalvos.org server courtesy of pair Networks. We've been a long-time pair Networks customer, and recommend them. Our audio streaming is sponsored by the brilliant faculty of the Princeton String Academy. More information and a link soon -- our thanks to them! Viva violas! (Because there is no Real Audio server, it is not possible to scan through the audio quickly. The live Saturday cybercast will return in late November.)
  • Times are rough all around, and K&D's financial support is thinning along with that for other arts groups. So we're selling out! T-shirts, mugs, recordings. So head for out page with items for sale, or click one of the images on the right. CDs from Pogus, Logos, THUMP, Margaret Lancaster, Mary Lou Newmark, Waveformation, James Bohn, MaltedMedia, Frédéric Rossille; Festival T-shirts; Vermont composer mugs; 100-page program/essay book, and special 1- and 3-CD limited editions of "NonPop NoBounds" from on-air K&D performances and presentations. For those waiting: the special editions are done and just about ready to ship!
  • The latest composer up for distortion is Guy de Bièvre. Distort him!
  • Shows #328-338 are now available! Catch up with interviews you missed, along with our special September 11 reflections. Our September 11 programs began with show #328, WTC Reflections. Shows #329-330 welcomed guest Emily Doolittle, and we had a recently-received releases show (#331) the following week. October 13 saw our second WTC Reflections (#332). We took a look at new trends in live & electronic performance (#333) and improvisation (#334), followed by a surprise visit from composer Fred Szymanski on show #335. Our final September 11 reflections, The Towers Recalled III, was show #336, and we just completed our on-the-road visit with Martín Alejandro Fumarola on show #337-338. They are all here!
  • The New York Times article, "Elegies and Tone Poems Respond to Tragedy," appeared on Monday, October 29. Read Matthew Mirapaul's thoughtful piece about The September 11 Musical Gallery on K&D. A Musical Gallery of the September 11 Tragedies contains the music sent to us in response to our request. More than 50 compositions can be heard in a 6-hour online concert.
  • The following sponsors made possible the Ought-One Festival (in order of contribution): Matthew Fields, Northfield Savings Bank, Carson Cooman, David Drucker, Trans-Video.Net, Charlie Messing, Jean Piché, Erling Wold, Jeff Harrington, Alfredo Santos, Anonymous EM, P. Kellach Waddle, Steve Rathe, Activist Music, David Baird, Dean Dierschow, Daron Hagen, Tom Hamilton, Beata Moon, Tim Thompson, Jeana Malachowski, Linda Catlin Smith, Anthony Cornicello, Juliet Kiri Palmer, Jacques Bailhé, Larry Austin, Don Corson, Susan Bettmann, Belinda Reynolds, Patricia Goodson, Dave & Sue Poitras, Mike Swinchoski, John Kennedy, ASCAP, William Pfaff, Emily Doolittle, Robert Bonotto, Tom Duff, Ian Chuprun, Argosy Foundation, Steve Layton, Kathy Supové, Randy Woolf, Moshe Budmor, Erik Nielsen, Carlos Haase, Frog Peak Music, Mark Gibbons, Greg Hall, Patrick Grant, Richard DeCosta, Robert D. Polansky (matched by HMCo.), Josephine M. Maggio, Martin Schiff, Joseph Benzola, Susan Lyon, Brad Smith, David Dramm, Anne LaBerge, Laurie Hollander, Eleanor Dimoff, Aggie Birdsong Smee, Antonio Celaya, Timothy Nelson, Gary Barwin, *Kawai Shigeru Piano Company, Randy Hostetler Living Room Music Fund, Jenny Undercofler, Christopher Penrose, Vermont League of Cities and Towns, Lorraine Day, Janet Ressler.
January 7
Happy New Year!
  • Happy New Year, everyone! Things have turned very busy; Kalvos will be away for a few days and this site won't be updated, including the playlists, until about January 15.
  • Upcoming guests Schulze, Johnson, Carlick. We'll be setting aside our Ought-One Festival concert broadcasts for a few weeks as we open the studio to some interviews for a special 'emerging composers' series. On January 19, Andrew Schulze will take a break from studenthood at Bard to join us; on January 26, Evan Johnson will take the trek up from Yale; and on February 2, all the way from his high school studies in Toronto comes Cory Carlick, the youngest composer ever to appear on K&D.