© 2024 Ideastream Public Media

1375 Euclid Avenue, Cleveland, Ohio 44115
(216) 916-6100 | (877) 399-3307

WKSU is a public media service licensed to Kent State University and operated by Ideastream Public Media.
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations
On-demand interviews with local and national classical music artists.

Opera Returns to WCLV. The Toll Brothers-Metropolitan Opera International Radio Network Season Begins Dec. 2nd.

Interior of the opera house; photo courtesy of the Metropolitan Opera
Interior of the opera house; photo courtesy of the Metropolitan Opera

Since 1931, New York’s Metropolitan Opera has offered live, coast-to-coast radio broadcasts of it weekly Saturday matinees.  It is the longest continuously-running classical radio series in the history of American broadcasting.  This week begins the 87 th season of Saturday broadcasts and they will once again be heard in Cleveland on WCLV 104.9ideastream.All but two of this season’s operas will be live performances with all broadcastsbeginning at 1 p.m. with the one exception of Wagner’s Parsifal on February 17 th, which will begin at Noon because of its length.   Here is the complete season listing (with details available at the Met wibsite: http://www.metopera.org/Season/Radio/Saturday-Matinee-Broadcasts/ )

Dec. 2 – Verdi Requiem

Dec. 9 – Mozart  The Magic Flute

Dec. 16—Bellini  Norma NEW PRODUCTION

Dec. 23—Mozart  Le Nozze di Figaro

Dec. 30—Lehár The Merry Widow

Jan. 6—Humperdinck  Hansel and Gretel

Jan. 13—Mascagni /Leoncavallo   Cavalleria Rusticana& Pagliacci

Jan. 20—Massenet  Thaïs

Jan. 27—Puccini   Tosca NEW PRODUCTION

Feb. 3 —Verdi  IlTrovatore

Feb. 10—Donizetti   L’ElisirD’Amore

Feb. 17—Wagner   Parsifal (12 Noon Start Time)

Feb. 24—Puccini  La bohème

Mar. 3 —Puccini   Madama Butterfly

Mar. 10—Rossini   Semiramide

Mar. 17—R. Strauss  Elektra

Mar. 24—Puccini   Turandot

Mar. 31—Mozart  Cosi Fan Tutte NEW PRODUCTION

Apr. 7 —Donizetti   Lucia di Lammermoor

Apr. 14—Verdi   Luisa Miller

Apr. 21—Adès    The Exterminating Angel  NEW PRODUCTION

Apr. 28—Massenet  Cendrillon   NEW PRODUCTION/MET PREMIERE

May 5—Gounod  Romeo et Juliette

HISTORY OF THE MET ON RADIO:

It all began on Christmas Day, 1931,a performance of Engelbert Humperdinck's Hänsel und Gretel, a holiday favorite that has been presented many times over the years and will be heard again this season on January 6 th.  Broadcasts started during the uncertain times of the Great Depression and proved to be successful means of increasing the audience for opera in America. At first only portions of operas were broadcast butfrom the beginning of the 1933-34 season to the present,complete operas have been broadcast.

The Met was first broadcast by the NBC network, then by ABC during the forties, and CBS during the 1950s. Beginning as a sustaining service on NBC, it was variously sponsored on commercial radio by the American Tobacco Company, Lambert Pharmaceuticals, and then RCA, until Texaco began a 63-year association in 1940, which remains the longest continuous sponsorship in broadcast history.  As the age of television brought changes to network radio, the Met began its own independent Metropolitan Opera Radio Network in 1960.  The sixties also brought the rise of FM radio, eventually eclipsing AM as the dominant source of radio entertainment.  WCLV can proudly claim to have become, in 1969, the first FM-only station to carry Met broadcasts. 

In 2005, the homebuilding company Toll Brothers stepped in to become the primary sponsor, along with additional support from the Annenberg Foundation, the Vincent A. Stabile Endowment for Broadcast Media, and contributions from listeners around the world.  The Met is now heard on radio stations globally, on over 300 stations in the United States, and stations in 40 countries on five continents (Canada, Mexico,five South American countries, 27 European countries, plus China, Japan, Australia and New Zealand).  WCLV and ideastream are proud to be a part of the Met’s glorious broadcasting tradition.

The contents of broadcasts from The Metropolitan Opera are copyrighted by The Metropolitan Opera, all rights reserved, and any use or reproduction of any of the material herein without permission of The Metropolitan Opera is strictly prohibited and will be prosecuted.

jim.mehrling@ideastream.org | 216-916-7164