MONDAY: We will never understand why some people dislike Garrison Keillor. Personally we enjoy his folksy manner and dry sense of humor, even if A Prairie Home Companion is at times a bit hokey. Keillor will be at GW's Lisner Auditorium to read from and discuss his latest book Pontoon: A Novel of Lake Wobegon. Books will be sold by Olsson's. 7 p.m. Psychotherapist and author Amy Bloom will be at Politics and Prose to...
Reader, Meet Author
Bluegrass Listeners Upset by WAMU Changes
If you were traveling over the holiday weekend, you would have easily missed the announcement that popular local NPR affiliate WAMU 88.5 FM will be making big changes to their broadcast schedule -- most notably moving the entirety of their popular weekend bluegrass programming to an HD Radio channel, leaving many listeners upset and confused as to how the station could abandon their signature music programs on the regular FM dial. Here's what's going to happen come Sept. 17 (or check out the entire programming scheme here):
Out and About: Weekend Picks
FRIDAY: >> The Millennium Stage Conservatory Project concludes this weekend at the Kennedy Center. Promising young musicians from the nation's best conservatories will be giving free concerts in the Terrace Theater: Eastman School of Music (tonight), Jacobs School of Music, Indiana University (Saturday), and Shepherd School of Music, Rice University (Sunday). All concerts begin at 6 p.m. and can also be experienced by live simulcast through the Millennium Stage Web site. >> Garrison Keillor brings...
Putting the Public Back in Public Radio
Local NPR station WETA-FM recently completely reversed course a second time, switching back to a classical format after two unsatisfactory years as a news station. With the "New Classical" WETA came all kinds of questions about programming, complicated by the fact that WETA was also absorbing the area's last commercial classical station, WGMS. Would WETA return to its former identity before the change to news? Would it become a version of the classical lite WGMS?...
Weekly Music Agenda
The agenda's coming in a little late this week, many appologies. Before we get into our picks, we'd like to wish a very happy 5th birthday to Jammin' Java. The Vienna venue that started out small has come far since its beginning, earning acclaim and great acts along the way. Head on out to the 'burbs (and if you take the metro, wear a belt), and pay Jammin' Java a visit sometime this month. Might...
Garrison Keillor's News From Wolf Trap
Author, musician and radio personality Garrison Keillor once wrote that in Lake Wobegone, Minn., the women are strong, the men are good looking and all the children are above average. Apparently at Wolf Trap, the wolves speak fluent English and raise homeless liberals to become hosts of shows on public radio – or so we are led to believe. This was one of Keillor’s many jokes on “A Prairie Home Companion” at Wolf Trap on Saturday. Keillor is a legend in public radio, and Saturday’s sold out performance/live broadcast drew in crowds from as far as Harrisburg, Pa. For those of you who have never listened to the show, which is broadcast on Washington’s WETA, it’s family-friendly, folksy fun with a message.

