Roe chosen to lead WDAV

WDAV-FM in Davidson, N.C., announced today that Ben Roe will serve as its general manager. Roe previously worked at National Public Radio for 20 years, serving most recently as its director of music and music initiatives. At WDAV, he succeeds Kim Hodgson, who has led the station for nine years. Roe assumes the job July 1. WDAV, a full-time classical station, serves Charlotte and the surrounding area. Read the full release from WDAV. You can also check out Roe’s writing about music and media on his blog.

Getting to the nitty-gritty of listeners’ musical tastes

A while back I wrote about the influential “core values” research conducted by the Public Radio Program Directors Association, which aimed to understand what listeners to classical music radio appreciate most about their stations of choice. Those studies were useful because they helped classical programmers put themselves in their listeners’ shoes and get a handle on why exactly people listen at all.

But the studies were limited in scope — they assessed the value of classical radio only in general terms and stopped short of gauging reactions to specific musical works. Last year, however, PRPD unveiled the results of the Midday Classical Music Testing Project, a study that aimed to do just that. The study asked groups of listeners to rate a wide range of musical snippets as appealing or unappealing, and programmers at classical stations are now revising their music mixes to line up with the findings in an effort to improve midday listening.

The 309 listeners in four cities who participated already listened to classical during middays on the stations in their markets. With handheld units, they registered their reactions to 150 30-second musical samples, noting positive or negative appeal.

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Classical podcasts from labels, and a new show Down Under

Authormike72x72_3 Amid our recent discussion of classical podcasts, this news item caught my eye: the host of a classical show on the Canadian Broadcasting Corp.’s radio stations found a new home for his program after the CBC dropped it in March. Rick Phillips’ Sound Advice is now available as a podcast. The interesting thing is that the new producer and distributor of Sound Advice is Universal Music Canada, the record label. As a result, the show, which discusses classical recordings, now spotlights only Universal products.

Here’s the full article at scena.org about this change. Radio stations, take note — if you create a vacuum or leave one unfilled, other producers in the new-media realm are in line to cozy up to your listeners.

Another example is the weekly podcast available from the Naxos label, featuring interviews with performers, composers, conductors and others about new recordings on Naxos. Thanks to David Srebnik for pointing that one out after I asked for podcast suggestions.

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From the Top’s new season, and a juggling act in Colorado

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Hi everyone — I’m just back from the massive Bonnaroo music festival, held every year in Tennessee, where I must admit I didn’t see any classical music performed. Not that there was any, unless you count Iceland’s wonderful Sigur Rós, whose music has “classical elements” according to their Wikipedia entry. Classical or no, the group performed a spectacular late-night set, accompanied by a string section, a quintet of costumed, drum-pounding women and a white-clad brass section that paraded around the stage. What a show.

On to other, squarely classical matters. As I was on my way home, the television version of From the Top, a show that spotlights young performers of classical music, began its second season on PBS. A release about the show says that this season From the Top at Carnegie Hall will have a different focus. “Last
year we produced a show about classical music played by kids,” says Executive Producer Don
Mischer. “This year we are making a show about kids, all of whom play
classical music.” So the show will feature documentary-style bits about the kids who perform, visiting them in their hometowns. Note that From the Top at Carnegie Hall offers video podcasts via its website.

Meanwhile, the Boston Globe profiles Jerry Slavet, creator of From the Top (which began as a radio show nine years ago and continues in that format as well). I’ve met Jerry and can second the impression conveyed by this article — he is quite the dynamo.

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