Airwaves
by Brian Goslow
For the next two weeks, Worcester's history is celebrated
on The Worcester Heart Beats: 150 Years of Connecting History, People and
Cultures, a series of six one-hour programs that air from February 10
through 19 on WCUW (91.3 FM). The idea for the program, which will be broadcast
from 5 to 6 p.m., was spawned last summer when producer Dr. Stephen Soreff
attended an ACCORD conference. "We were originally thinking about doing a
program for the national humanities, then we found we could do more in
conjunction with the city's 150th anniversary." A grant from the Worcester
Cultural Commission helped fund the production. "We've been recording for the
last two months with a lot of different people in town. Joe Cutroni [WCUW's
station manager] has been marvelous in utilizing his audio and production
skills."
The program's theme song, "Living in the Heart," was written and recorded by
Worcester's Peter and Ellen Allard. "We were on [Soreff's] show,
Shirim, a couple of months ago to preview our new CD, Sing
Shalom: Songs for the Jewish Holidays [80Z Music]; and between songs, he
invited us to record a song for the series," Peter Allard says. "It's an
NPR-type of song bite for between segments. We contacted Cliff Goodwin,
who's had a lot of experience with jingles and commercials, and recorded it at
Bill Nelson's Big Deal Studio on Southbridge Street, where we record all
of our stuff." Michael Allard added percussion, Duke Levine
contributed his trademark guitar work, and Valerie and Walter Crockett
sang the backing vocals.
Soreff says he plans to include additional work by the Allards, in particular,
cuts from 1997's Raise the Children, which included material from the
husband-and-wife team's pre-marriage solo albums.
Also included in the series will be music by Jack and Present Co., who
recorded instrumental segments, and the Worcester Men of Song barbershop
quartet, who provided "Worcester: My Home Town," written in the 1980s by Earl
Byl and former Worcester mayor George Wells.
The February 12 segment, "The Arts: Poetry, Literature, Music, and
Entertainment," will feature Assumption College professor and poet Michael
True, author of Worcester Writers, who talks about the city's
more-renowned authors; Tatnuck Bookseller owner Larry Abramoff, who reads
Ernest Thayer's "Casey at the Bat"; and there's a segment on last summer's
Forum Theatre production of West Side Story. "We have a rich literary
and musical tradition where artists help out artists," Soreff says of the local
arts community. "It's a warm community for a lot of the arts."
Other segments in the series include "Innovation" (airing on February 10),
which covers "new things which came about because of Worcester, including
Goddard's rocket, shredded wheat, and our loose history with the valentine";
"Women" (on February 11), which explores the city's ties with the early days of
the women's movement and its major role in the underground railroad;
"Diversity" (February 17), which celebrates the city's multicultural vibrancy;
"Education and Health" (February 18), which explores "its long medical and
collegiate history"; and "Youth and the Senior Citizens" (February 19), which
attempts to tie all of the city's current inhabitants into one happy ball.
"Worcester is third only to South Florida and Sun City, Arizona, as a place
with an extraordinary amount of senior citizens -- for some reason, they choose
to remain here," says Soreff, who brought the city's generations together to
talk about their hometown. "They're united in their love for the city and its
feeling of home."