Airwaves
by Brian Goslow
For the past 14 years, Marcel Raymond, who moved to
Worcester 30 years ago from Maine (where he lived after a 15-year stay in
Canada), has been hosting L'Heure française on WCUW (91.3 FM)
every Saturday from noon to 2 p.m. He hopes the upcoming "Franco Worcester '98"
festival bring Franco-Americans and their neighbors together to celebrate
north-of-the-border culture. On his June 20 program, he'll present a special
program in conjunction with the event, which is being held to coincide with the
city's ongoing 150th-anniversary celebration.
In promotional literature for "Franco Worcester '98," Raymond draws attention
to past Worcester First Night performers Lucie Therrier, Lilianne
Labbé, and Don Hinkley, regional Cajun favorites the
Boogaloo Swamis, Boston Haitian combo Volo Volo, and contemporary
Quebec folk musicians Chanterelle and vocalist Josée
Vachon (who performs at the event's opening ceremony this Sunday at the
Italian American Cultural Center), as examples of how French-rooted music has
contributed to the region's way of life. He also mentions frequent Worcester
visitors Michael Doucet avec Beausoleil and Steve Riley and the Mamou
Playboys. Listeners to his program can expect to hear a mixture of all the
above, along with Michel Legrand, Jean-Pierre Rampal, Philippe
Entremont, and Nana Mouskouri.
VOCALIST KATRINA LANDON will visit the WCUW studios this Tuesday (June 16) at
7:30 a.m. during Rich Fox's New Traditions program. The singer, who
first performed at a Virginia Howard Johnson's, where she sat in with Bruce
Hornsby, recently released River Voice (Encrypted Records), a
multi-textured disc that runs the gamut from acoustic ("The Lucky Ones") to
neo-classical ("This Moment") to rock and roll ("Quiet Desperation").
Philadelphian Susan Piper will visit Fox on June 23, the same day she's
slated to perform at Johnny D's, in Somerville. On her latest CD, New on the
Planet (Sliced Bread), she's assisted coffeehouse favorites Richard
Shindell, Catie Curtis, Jennifer Kimball, and Lucy Kaplansky. Another
Pennsylvanian, Ben Kaplan, drops by on June 30 to play selections from
Deeper Down (Ton of Mun), an esoteric mix of rock, country, blues, and
island sounds. If listeners are lucky, he'll give them an advance listen to the
debut CD from his "other" group, Crash Simpleton's Laugh Riot, who are
waiting to release Do the Hurky Jurky Albuquerque. When he's not playing
music, Kaplan is a member of the Truckstop Prostitute traveling circus. This is
certainly not a normal nine-to-five guy, so don't expect a normal early-
morning kind of interview.
WE HAVEN'T HAD THE CHANCE to check in with the Adult Children's Dysfunction
Room for some time now, but rest assured Laura Kiritsy still presents 90
minutes of untamed radio every Wednesday from 9 to 10:30 p.m. A recent show
featured "Projecting" from Trona's new CD, Red River (Cherry
Disc), and a couple of tracks ("A Little Bird Flew over You" and "Fairy Tales
on My Brain") from Ratsy's latest, the subway songstress years,
which also includes "The Trilogy of Stupid Boy Songs: "The Boy Who Loved Me,"
"Big Dudes in Polyester Suits," and "Willy." She also spun the Needs'
"Pony for Honey" (Chainsaw), the Palidromes' "Wedding Day" and
"Someone To Talk to," and went techno with BT's "Blaming June." Don't
think she's becoming a full convert however. She got sick of the drone and
ended the track abruptly. Some things never change!