WVIZ/PBS ideastream®: Applause

Applause is an Emmy award-winning locally produced TV show that celebrates artists and cultural groups around Cleveland and Northeast Ohio. Each week this on-air arts magazine broadcasts a fresh half-hour of features, performances, on-location reports, and interviews from the studios of WVIZ/PBS ideastream. Special thanks to the Oberlin Conservatory of Music at Oberlin College for the use of their Steinway Piano on Around Noon/Applause.
Applause airs:
WVIZ/PBS: Thursdays - 7:30 PM, Saturdays - 6:30 PM, Sundays - 12:30 PM
The Ohio Channel: Mondays - 12:30 AM | 4:30 AM | 8:30 PM, Tuesdays - 12:30 AM | 4:30 AM | 8:30 AM | 4:00 PM, Wednesdays - 12:00 AM | 8:00 AM
Thursday, April 17, 2008
Topics: Arts
Short URL
Share
Leave a Comment
One of Northeast Ohio's most accomplished sax players, Ernie Krivda, began his career at age 13 playing Cleveland polka clubs, and went on to play with some of the biggest names in Motown -- including the Temptations and the Four Tops -- and to sharing the stage with legends of jazz like Chick Corea and Herbie Hancock. Ernie Krivda, along with bassist Pete Dominguez and drummer Ron Godale, take the stage as part of this year's Tri-C Jazz fest on April 20th at 4 p.m. at the East Cleveland Public Library auditorium. We'll featured Ernie Krivda and the Art of the Trio.
Ever since he was a boy of 11, Bobby Selvaggio knew that jazz was his calling. It didn't hurt that Bobby's dad Pete Selvaggio was an acclaimed jazz musician who passed his passion onto his son. Today, Bobby Selvaggio is considered one of the most innovative players and composers of jazz in Northeast Ohio. We'll take a look back at an earlier episode of Applause when Bobby and his quartet joined us for a live performance in our KeyBank Studio inside the Idea Center at Playhouse Square.
Send questions and comments to applause@ideastream.org.
Production of Applause on WVIZ/PBS is made possible by grants from:
The Cleveland Foundation
The George Gund Foundation
The John P. Murphy Foundation

United Black Fund of Greater Cleveland, Inc.
The Ohio Arts Council helped fund this program with state tax dollars to encourage economic growth, educational excellence and cultural enrichment for all Ohioans.














