The Michigan Daily - michiganclaily.com Friday, February 3, 2012 -- 5 The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Friday, February 3, 2012 - 5 WCB Student-run station balances tradition and the Internet By GEOFF MARINO Daily Arts Writer In the basement of the Stu- dent Activities Building, nestled alongside that dreaded area 'U' students visit only after losing their MCard, is the student radio station, WCBN. The station defines itself as: "A student-run community free- form radio station" that broad- casts to the "University and its surrounding communities." Of course, what exactly freeform entails is up to interpretation, but in the world of radio, the term brings to mind the model of the longest-running freeform radio station, New Jersey-based WFMU. WCBN and WFMU pro- vide DJs with total control over the content of their shows. WCBN has been operating for about 40 years, and today's increasingly Internet-based music culture has put its philoso- phy under pressure. With the emergence of streaming services and the music blog, the utility of traditional radio is brought into question. The average music lover might think: Why should I have music fed to me through radio when my favorite blog and Pan- dora can help me find what I like? Rackham student Ben Yee, general manager of WCBN, revealed that he thinks Inter- net music services such as Pan- dora, Spotify, Grooveshark and Turntable.fm aren't necessar- ily competitors with WCBN and that Internet music services and freeform radio have separate utilities. "There's two different mind- sets," Yee said. "I'll be honest, there are times when I'm doing work and I can't listen to WCBN because it commands my atten- embraces change Mozart on billfor :oz'U' Symphony Band B Att atre & comp than versit' phony which showc talent first t year t Hill rium pieces The will ductec Direct Haith symph acclai wind gram. seconc to hol off a condu mance WCBN is a freeform radio station, allowing student DJs to play whatever they want. ADAM GLANZMAN/Daily tion. On the other hand, I can go on Pandora, put in the names of a few ambient artists, and let it roll for five hours and I don't even notice it's there." Yet it's hard to know when a listener might prefer the active listening experience that the station provides. Those Internet services may be easier to shut out than the unusual tracks found on 88.3 FM, but individuals who crave active listening can turn on Pandora and be satisfied. In clarifying its role, WCBN seeks to offer more. "We are the original music blog," Yee said about the station's role as he elaborated upon the differences between freeform radio DJs and music blogs. He highlighted the personal aspect of music discovery and its impor- tance in balancing out the more depersonalizing effects of the Internet, citing a real-life encoun- ter with a fan of a particular DJ, Heidi Madagame, from WCBN. "I went to Little Caesars Pizza the other day, and someone looked at my shirt and said, 'Hey, you're with that radio station? Yeah, that Heidi girl, she had a great show the other day. I really liked it.' The guy talked about her for five minutes," Yee said. WCBN prides itself on those kinds of connections, valuing the community aspect it can pro- vide. Unlike Internet music sites, in which the listener interacts with a computer, WCBN wants to foster the experience of com- munal music listening. But when asked whether WCBN will embrace the Internet, he stuck to his philosophy of inte- gration rather than competition. "A radio station isn't real- ly going to succeed unless it embraces the Internet," he said. Ambitious developments are planned. The station has been authorized by the FCC to increase its terrestrial transmit- ting capacity from 300 watts to 2,000 watts, an effect that will expand its reach to cover areas such as Dexter, Ypsilanti, Celine and even part of Chelsea. This spirit of development will be carried to the Internet. A new website will allow listeners to interact with the DJ and oth- ers who are listening, fostering interaction and group explora- tion of music. "Back in the day, listening to music was a group experience," he said. "Being able to recreate something like that, where peo- ple can stop by, talk about the music, and be able to figure out from other people what's similar out there, would be a way of cre- ating a community around the radio station." These developments intend to offer the greater Ann Arbor area another option to explore music interactively, and the zeal for further expansion is certainly there. When asked about the future of WCBN, Yee expressed optimism. "We want to take over the world," Yee said. ' y DHRUV MADEKA group was met with praise for its Daily Arts Writer performance and for its embrace of cultural boundaries between the School of Music, The- the countries. Dance, no band is more MT&D senior Alex Akin etitive for undergraduates describes the thought of per- the Uni- forming with the famous sym- y Sym- Un*,er ' phony band as "intimidating." r Band, "They're really great," Akin will be of Michigan said. "It's intimidating going into asing its Symphony rehearsal, trying to collaborate for the with so many people and getting time this Band the piece to work. We just came onight at Tonight at together to produce this great Audito- 8P~m work." with four The band will first perform Hill Auditorium selections from Mozart's Sere- show Free nade No.10. The piece, composed be con- between 1781 and 1782, consists d by of seven movements of varying tor of Bands Michael moods and themes. cock, who conducts the The second piece in tonight's hony band and guides the performance, Persichetti's med graduate band-and- "Divertimento," was written ensemble conducting pro- with Mozart's work as the basic Haithcock, who is only the point of reference. The composi- d person in the last 80 years tion, originally conceived in 1949, d this position, is coming consists of six movements and summer during which he features a vast array of instru- cted the band's perfor- ments. The third and fourth piec- es across the world. es to be played at the concert are works by University alumni Syd- ney Hodkinson and Roshanne The band Etezady. Hodkinson's "Duae Cantatae Breves" and Etezady's performed "Points of Departure" will be played by the band. Before the vows in China concert, a lecture will be given by Hodkinson and Etezady, along his summer. with Professor Haithcock. Etezady, who received her doctorate in 2005, is known for her effort in exposing audiences band spent the summer on to new music. The performance oric tour of China as a com- of her piece will be a departure ration of the 50th anniver- from the norm because it will f the band's travel to the showcase the Soprano Soloists Union, Eastern Europe the Musical Theatre Depart- e Middle East. In 1961, they ment, who will perform in dif- chosen, along with the New ferent movements of Etezady's Philharmonic, by the U.S. piece. Department as emissaries "It's melodically challenging," height of the Cold War. said Alex Akin, who will be per- e band played its tour forming in the second movement. gh China - including Bei-F'It's classical music but it tells a hanghai, Shenyang, Hang- story. The most challenging part tnd Xi'an -before traveling of the song was ... being musically Angeles to perform at the precise and leaving the song open Disney Concert Hall. The to interpretation." shy ti The a histt memo sary o Soviet andth were c York: State at the The throu jing, S zhou a to Los Walt3 Canterbury to host 24-hour " improvisation fundraiser By LAUREN CASERTA Daily Community Culture Editor She's known about this musical performance for months, though she hasn't practiced a single piece or even brought a Canterbury single page of sheet music House with her. ConCert.24 While she Hours of unpacks her instrument Improvisation on stage, she nods and Tonight at 6 chats with p.m.through the other tomorrow musicians at 6p.m. who will Canterbury House soon play From $10 alongside her. They too have foregone the pre-composed music and formal rehearsals that many people instinctively associ- ate with a musical life in the lime- light. once she's ready, she takes a deep breath and remains poised, instrument held aloft. A hush falls over the crowd, and their eyes fix eagerly on the performers. The audience has no idea what they're about to hear. Then again - as an artist of improvised music - neither does she. Tonight, the International Society for Improvised Music will pull together some of Ann Arbor's most talented musicians for a fundraiser as unpredictable as the songs the artists will cre- ate on a whim: a 24-hour impro- vised musical extravaganza at Canterbury House. The event will feature spontaneous per- formances by local professors, students and residents, whose unorthodox artistic passion springs from their one-of-a-kind musical methods. "There's no pretense that this is high art music," said Matt Endahl, Canterbury House musical director and a School of Music, Theatre & Dance graduate student. "This is music for which the process is the interesting part ... because it's more of a direct creative process than learning a piece of music and then perform- ing it." The first and last performanc- es of the fundraiser will be given by members of MT&D's Creative Arts Orchestra, while the rest of the event will showcase the colorful collection of Ann Arbor improvisational talent, uniting to create a truly eclectic experience. "People will have a very wide variety of instruments and also a wide variety of opinions about what it means to improvise music rather than play composed music," Endahl said. Though the standards of scripted music may dominate the world of musical performance, many devotees of get-togethers and concerts that celebrate music made on-the-spot enjoy exploring the inner source of their artistic inspiration. "Improvised music strives a.m. performance - Sarath will to tap into that wellspring of perform alongside fellow MT&D whatever creative impulse is in Prof. Stephen Rush in an impro- people," Endahl said. "It kind of vised piano and flugelhorn duet. directly harnesses that, whatever Even with all of the willing- it is. You can choose any word and-able talent involved, the for it, and you can get spiritual if event needed - and found - a you want, but there's no denying place to call home. The fundrais- that same thing exists across our er is hosted through the Concert entire species." Series at Canterbury House, Ann It was the presence of this per- Arbor's Episcopal student cen- vading inventive spirit that led ter. Canterbury House has long MT&D Prof. Ed Sarath to found used the series to support music the International Society for of all sorts, including ISIM's Improvised Music in 2006 and improv-inspired fundraisers. unite a fragmented but passion- "We've booked numerous ate community of artists. well-known acts for this concert series over the years," Endahl said. "The Concert Series has 'U' nrof and been running for at least a decade in its current form. There's been founder of ISIM a long history of Canterbury House supporting the arts, both Ed Sarath will local and touring." Though the fundraiser has not also perform. been held since 2007, its reviv- al has already garnered eager attention from Ann Arbor's music lovers. Above all, it's the "(Sarath) founded the organi- freedom and unpredictability of zation because he felt that there improvisation that makes each were a lot of people around the performance different and keeps world who were making impro- artists and audiences coming vised music," Endahl said. "They back for more. had numerous small organiza- "It can be both (fun and con- tions, but there wasn't any inter- fusing)," Endahl said. "Even the national group with a conference performer doesn't know exactly and that sort of thing, and he kind what's going to happen. They of saw a need for that, so he put go in there with kind of a rough (ISIM) together." sketch about who they're going Attendees eager to meet the to work with, but no one knows man who started it all should the precise music that will be be sure to stay for tomorrow's 9 played." WRITING FOR FINE ARTS IS LIKE DRINKING FINE WINE... AND THEN WRITING ABOUT IT, AND OTHER FINE THINGS. 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