Good evening, it's Tuesday,
November 15th. This is the Jive at Five, our daily community calendar and
rundown of nighttime programming, here on 88.1 FM WESU Middletown. By day, WESU
offers talk radio from NPR and Pacifica, as well as independent and local
public affairs sources. Weeknights and weekends our student and community
volunteers bring you the best in free-form programming.
Whether you tune in to
WESU for daytime talk radio and free form music programming, or perhaps even
the Jive at Five, please understand that WESU is listener-supported community
radio and we need your help to wrap up our Fall Pledge drive. We’ve come a long
way in the last month and your donation will helps end this drive. You
can make that donation online at www.wesufm.org/pledge where you can also see our thank you
gifts. We appreciate your generosity.
I’m Marianne O’Hare,
producer of CHC Radio. Now, here's a
rundown of what's happening in our area this week:
The Decorative Arts
Council holds its annual lecture “Artistry and Innovation in American Glass”
this Tuesday at 5:30 at the Connecticut Historical Society in Hartford. Details
at www.chs.org
Wesleyan’s Center for the
Arts presents “Place in Exhaustion” by Warren Enström at World Music Hall
tonight at 9 pm. On Friday and Saturday they present “Hoo-Ha,” with
choreographer Darrell Jones, also in World Music Hall. Full details at www.wesleyan.edu/cfa
Tonight, The
Buttonwood Tree in Middletown presents Laughter Yoga Interplay at 6:30, followed by Crystal Bowl Sound
Healing. They host Andrew presenting Shake the Tree Gong and Sound Meditation
on Thursday at 7 pm. Story City Troupe takes the stage on Friday at 7:30. Annaita Ghandy’s Aligned with Source Workshop
happens Saturday morning at 10:30, with this week’s theme of “Channeling Higher
Frequencies.” At 8 pm the Sue Lopes Quartet performs favorites from the Great
American Songbook. The Hearing Voices Network meets Monday mornings at 10:30.
Details at http://buttonwood.org
Tonight, down in New
Haven at Café Nine, they bring you Alex Burnet, Olive Tiger, S.G. Carlson, and
Wes Swing. A Comedy Open Mic hosted by Dan Rice is on deck for Wednesday. On
Thursday they’ve got Ill-Literate Wordsmiths. Friday’s Happy Hour at 5 features
Lynn Malavolte & Friends this week. Later, Manic Productions brings you
Mount Moriah and Jake Xerxes Fussell. Saturday’s Jazz Jam Session is with Tony
Dioguardi & Friends, and later they headline Sammus, Ceschi, Laundry Day,
and Siul Hughes. Sunday Buzz Matinee at 3 features Seth Adam and
Frank Critelli, on Sunday night you can end your weekend with Cheetah Chrome,
The Lost Riots, and Zombii. www.cafenine.com
Up in Hartford at
Black-Eyed Sally’s, on Tuesday nights, Michael Palin’s Other Orchestra works
out new material on Sally’s stage. On Wednesdays they present their
long-running Community Blues Jam hosted by Tommy Whalen. On Thursday it’s
Sally’s house band The Po’ Boys, with blues, rock, and boogie-woogie. On
Friday, they bring you the Michael Cleary Band with groove, funk, and rock. On
Saturday, they headline the Alexis P. Suter Band with blues, soul, and rock.www.blackeyedsallys.com
Artists for World Peace
presents High Voltage Baroque, music for flute, violin, and clavinet, tomorrow/
Wednesday at 7:30 at the Hubbard House in Middletown as part of their ongoing
One Concert-One Child series. Proceeds benefit the Children of Peace Project
and the Amazing Grace Food Pantry. Contact rnastamail@aol.com for details.
At the Russell Library
in Middletown, tomorrow/Wednesday at 5:30 the Cultural Connections Women’s
Group meets, bringing together immigrant women from all countries. At 6:30 The Library
host the Great Reads Book Discussion with Hedda Kopf, featuring selections from
“Binocular vision: New and Selected Stories” by Edith Pearlman. The Veteran’s
Writing Group meets Thursday at 7. Also on Thursday, the Readers’ Theater
presents “The Sunset Limited” by Cormac McCarthy. Middletown Poet Laureate
Susan Allison holds a Poet’s Corner on Friday at 1 pm. The Friends of the
Library Book Sale happens this weekend from Friday through Sunday, and there’s
Yoga in the Courtyard on Saturday at 11.www.russelllibrary.org
At Toad’s Place in New
Haven, on Friday, they’ve got Dave East, YFN Lucci, and Jus BeatZ. Saturday
brings their annual Toys For Tots Benefit Concert, featuring Kung Fu, The
Alpaca Gnomes, and the Funky Dawgz Brass Band. www.toadsplace.com
Mindfulness After Work
happens every Wednesday at the Hartford Mindfulness Center starting at 6:15.
Register atwww.hartfordmindfulnesscenter.org
Middletown Scottish
country dancers offer classes for beginners & experienced dancers at First
Church on Court Street in Middletown, Every Wednesday from 7 - 9:30p.
Partners not necessary but soft-soled shoes are! For information,
call Lucile Blanchard at 860-347-0278.
The Wadsworth Atheneum
in Hartford presents “Art Talk: The Photographic Object,” this Wednesday at 6
pm. Mark Osterman from the George Eastman Museum will speak on the materiality
of photography. The talk is free and open to all. www.thewadsworth.org
Manic Productions
presents Balance and Composure, Foxing, and Mercury Girls at The Ballroom at
The Outer Space in Hamden on Wednesday. Manic also has Xylouris White, Marisa
Anderson, and Rivener at Bar in New Haven tomorrow/Wednesday night. Thursday,
they’ve got Sad13 (pronounced Sade), Vagabon, and Sam Evian at The Space, and
The Orbiting Human Circus Feat, Julian Koster and The Music Tapes at The
Ballroom at The Outer Space in Hamden. They’re back at the Ballroom on Friday
presenting Jonathan Richman, along with Tommy Larkins. On Saturday it’s the In
Flames & Hellyeah: Forged in Fire Tour 2016 at The College Street Music
Hall in New Haven, featuring Ashes to New, and Source. http://www.manicproductions.org/
The Charter Oak Cultural
Center presents a free staged reading of “Superman,” the award-winning play
about the two men who created Superman in World War II-era Cleveland, Thursday
at 7 in Hartford. On Sunday at 7, the Hartford Opera Theater presents its 7th annual
New In November Festival, featuring original ten-minute operas. Details
at www.charteroakcenter.org
At Infinity Hall in
Hartford, they bring you Americana with Martin Sexton and Brothers McCann on
Thursday. On Friday, it’s Jeff Pitchell, Charles Neville, and The Sheila Raye
Charles Band. Saturday, you can catch Satisfaction, the world’s #1 Rolling
Stones Tribute Band. On Sunday they host the Connecticut Humane Society Benefit
featuring Charmagne Tripp’s Tribute to Whitney Houston. www.infinityhall.com
The Circophony Showcase
happens this Friday at 7 pm at Oddfellows Playhouse in Middletown. Enjoy the
teen talent of the partnership between Oddfellows and ARTFARM. www.arts2go.org
The 6th annual
Hartford Harvest Market happens this Saturday from 10 am to 5 pm at the Knox
Greenhouse in Hartford. Get fresh veggies and food from local vendors and enjoy
music, arts & crafts for the kids, and more. www.knoxhartford.org
Now here's a rundown
of cinema off the beaten track in Central Connecticut:
Through Thursday,
Hartford’s Real Art Ways holds over its run of “A Man Called Ove,” (ooh-veh.
Also continuing is “Dying to Know: Ram Dass & Timothy Leary,” a documentary
about the two Harvard psychology professors and their renowned experiments with
mind-expanding psychedelics. Both run through Thursday. On Friday they open
“Christine,” about a news anchor whose life spirals out of control in 1970’s
Florida. It runs through the weekend.www.realartways.org.
Though Thursday,
Trinity College’s Cinestudio continues the run of “The Beatles: Eight Days a
Week – The Touring Years,” Ron Howard’s documentary about the iconic band and their
music, through Thursday. On Friday and Saturday they’re screening “The Light
Between Oceans,” the story of a lighthouse keeper and his wife who rescue an
infant girl adrift at sea. Sunday’s National Theatre Live matinee is “Hamlet.”
On Sunday night they open a run of “The Wanderers,” a 1979 drama about teenage
rival gangs in 1963 Bronx.www.cinestudio.org
The Wadsworth Atheneum
in Hartford screens a double feature this Saturday at 2 pm, including “Dreams,”
a 1955 film about a Stockholm photographer who is the ‘other woman,’ and the
1966 “Blow-Up,” starring Vanesa Redgrave as a London photographer who finds
suspicious happenings in her work. The films complement their photo exhibition,
“The Thrill of the Chase.” On Sunday at 2 pm you can see “The Day the Earth
Stood Still,” a 1951 classic about an alien and his robot who land on earth
after WWII to bring an important message to all nations. Details at www.thewadsworth.org
Now here’s what’s on
the air tonight on WESU Middletown:
Right after the
jive, we’ve got The Soul Spoke with DJ Skaz, brings you some new soulful tunes
from around the world.
From 6-6:30 pm it’s
the Production Report, where Kiley and Allis will bring a comedic perspective
to the newest news from the entertainment industry.
At 6:30 until 8 pm,
Acoustic Blender with Bill Revill offers an eclectic selection of folk,
Americana, bluegrass, and blues from old to new.
The Voice of the CITY
with J-Cherry takes you from 8 to 9 pm, featuring live and local Connecticut
arts and music.
Up next is The
Hometown Browns with DJ jaFREE, where you can get your fix of culture, history,
and art featuring South Asian artists.
From 10 to 10:30 pm,
stay tuned for This Is Water with Eric Hagen to hear quality discussion about a
variety of human issues like the meaning of life.
After that it’s
Underdogs Edge with DJ Malik1Fam from 10:30 to 12 am featuring local hip hot
artists and little-known tracks from mainstream artists.
Next up is the Karl
Marx Social Hour from 12 to 1 am, where DJ Fat Marco and DJ Ninjoo Pinjoo will
play music relating to a story, social event, or historical event of their
choosing.
The Chain with DJ JB and
DJ EA Sportz will take you from 1 to 2 am, featuring old and new music
connected through artists' collaborations, performance histories, and personal
lives.
From 2 to 4 am, settle
in for Histrotronics to experience the evolution of electronic music throughout
the ages.
BBC World News airs
from 4 to 5 am, and we get the day started at 5 with NPR’s Morning Edition.
That’s all for today’s
Jive at Five. If you missed anything, you can find the written version online
at wesufm.org/jive. And tune in each
and every weekday at 4:55 p.m. to hear about what’s going on in the community,
and on the air right here at WESU 88.1 FM, a community service of Wesleyan
University since 1939.
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