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Judith Krummeck

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About Judith

Judith is WBJC's afternoon host. Her full bio can be read here.

Jan. 25 2012

Pop socks

By Judith Krummeck | Posted in Host Blogs | 2 Comments

If you think that Mark has sounded blue or Dyana has sounded green the past couple of days, it’s not because they are, respectively, sad or sick, it’s that all the WBJC announcers now have individualized multicolored pop socks.  (For the uninitiated, a pop sock is the cover that goes over a microphone to minimize […]

Jan. 24 2012

Getting in on the conversation

By Judith Krummeck | Posted in Host Blogs | Comments Off on Getting in on the conversation

With “The Help” picking up four Oscar nominations today, I confess I’m only just catching up with this highly successful phenomenon.  I was certainly not one of those who contributed to its being on the New York Times best seller list for more than 100 weeks!  Having grown up under the egregious apartheid system in […]

Jan. 19 2012

As natural as … breathing

By Judith Krummeck | Posted in Host Blogs | Comments Off on As natural as … breathing

You know how it is that until you get a paper cut you have no idea how much you use that particular finger?  Well, until I fractured a rib during my brush with suspected whooping cough last week (when my angelic colleagues, Mark, Dyana and Reed, worked extra long hours to cover for me!) I […]

Dec. 19 2011

Christmas making sense

By Judith Krummeck | Posted in Host Blogs | Comments Off on Christmas making sense

Having grown up celebrating Christmas in Africa — with the Christmas holidays falling at the height of summer — white Christmases, steaming hot Christmas dinners and all the Christmas traditions were things that came alive for me in a Dickensian novel, not in real life. We’d all be hanging around in Fourth of July attire […]

Dec. 07 2011

Lethal urbanity

By Judith Krummeck | Posted in Host Blogs | Comments Off on Lethal urbanity

I am so incensed by the corporate greed that precipitated the financial meltdown with no (as yet) obvious repercussions, that I couldn’t imagine I would be able to sit still through a movie about it. Still, after reading some positive reviews, I went down to The Charles to see “Margin Call”. I have to say […]

Dec. 05 2011

Overcoming groundedness

By Judith Krummeck | Posted in Host Blogs | Comments Off on Overcoming groundedness

It’s so wonderful to go to a concert and recognize a musician’s particular style of playing from their CD covers! Steven Isserlis looks just like this when he performs (although his hair is grayer now!) I remember the first time I heard him live was at at Severance Hall when he played the Schumann Cello […]

Nov. 23 2011

“…deep down in their private lives”

By Judith Krummeck | Posted in Host Blogs | Comments Off on “…deep down in their private lives”

I sometimes wonder if a musician feels inhibited by great performers that have gone before. If a cellist, say, is learning Bach’s cello suites for the first time, would they listen to Pierre Fournier or Yo-Yo Ma for inspiration, or would they just try to interpret the music strictly from the notes they read on […]

Nov. 21 2011

Jeanne d’arc au bucher

By Judith Krummeck | Posted in Host Blogs | Comments Off on Jeanne d’arc au bucher

Marin Alsop is a fearless conductor. For her inaugural concert with the BSO she conducted Stravinsky’s unruly Rite of Spring, then came Bernstein’s Mass, which includes a full orchestra, three choirs, actors, a rock band and a marching band, and now comes Arthur Honegger’s oratorio, Jeanne d’arc au bûcher, Joan of Arc at the Stake. […]

Nov. 16 2011

Othello

By Judith Krummeck | Posted in Host Blogs | Comments Off on Othello

I adore going to the Folger Shakespeare Theatre on Capitol Street in DC. Their productions are always inventive and wonderfully true to the text. On Sunday I went down to hear Othello. (I was seated right on the aisle of their little Elizabethan theatre and almost had Cassio on my lap at one point — […]

Nov. 14 2011

Degas’s intimate dancers

By Judith Krummeck | Posted in Host Blogs | Comments Off on Degas’s intimate dancers

There are any number of reasons why Edgar Degas is a contender to be my favorite French Impressionist. For one thing, he was the most superb draftsman. Then there’s his subject matter, and the amount of time and talent he spent painting horses and ballet dancers – both exquisite creatures in their own ways. It […]

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