Friday, September 04, 2009

New programs via Deutsche Welle

European Business Week
European Business Week looks at the major happenings in the world of money and provides insights into the business climate in Europe. We explore the major issues in the economic world, with a personal touch. Curious about the financial crisis? What does it mean to each
individual sector? Who are some of the winners in the time of turmoil?

European Business Week taps the knowledge of experts, officials and reporters to answer these questions and many more. The show also takes a look into the corners of markets that may be less explored, yet impact the way people live and conduct trade. Look to European Business Week for a unique, and at times entertaining, perspective on the economic world.
www.dw-world.de/dw/article/0,,4142066,00.html

Living in Germany
Germany is the land of music and poetry, great thinkers and philosophers, art and culture, science and invention and, of course, sausage and beer, and it's home to some 82 million people. But what is it really like to live in Germany? This is what Living in Germany sets out to explore, by looking at the lives of Germans and non-Germans who live here. Join Sue Cox and the rest of the team every week for an exciting and entertaining look at what Living in Germany is really like. www.dw-world.de/dw/article/0,,4146361,00.html

Music This Week
Music can change lives, and it has down through the ages. Just how that has happened is the theme of DW's new five-minute mini documentary Music This Week.

Each episode looks at a particular date, a world premier, the birthday or death date of a musician, or an important historical event, and explores the music that went along with it.

Did you know, for example, that Smetana's The Moldau eventually led to the birth of a nation? Or that Frederick the Great, the "soldier king," played the flute and invited Johann Sebastian Bach to improvise on one of Frederick's melodies?

That the Beatles owed some of their early success to their gigs in Hamburg's red light district, or that Elvis, already hugely popular, came to Germany as a GI in the 1950's? How did Martin Luther come to discover that he could deliver as many sermons as he wanted, but it was the church hymns set to popular tunes of the day that really got the message across? What about the great men and women who set the style and defined the musical idiom for generations to come: George Frideric Handel, Bob Marley, Billie Holiday?

In a fast paced dialogue of spoken word and music excerpts, we cover it all in Music This Week.
www.dw-world.de/dw/article/0,,4146345,00.html

European Business Week can be heard on UT Fridays. Living in Germany and Music This Week can be heard on UT Tuesdays.
(Fred Waterer/ODXA/Programming Matters/Sept 09)



Deutsche Welle English service
All times UTC
0000-0100 As 9885sl, 15595ru, 17525ru
0300-0400 As 11975sl, 13770ru, 15595ae
0400-0500 Af 7245rw, 7430po, 12045 15445sl
0500-0530 Af 7430po, 9700rw, 9440uk, 9825za
0500-0600 As 17525sl DRM
0600-0630 Af 7310po, 15275rw
0600-0700 Eu 3995uk DRM, 6130po DRM
0700-0800 Eu 5790uk DRM, 9545po DRM
0800-0900 As 12095sl DRM
0800-0900 Eu 9545po DRM, 13810po DRM
0900-1000 As 15340si, 17705sl
0900-1000 Eu 9545po DRM, 13810po DRM
1000-1100 Eu 9545po DRM, 13810po DRM
1100-1200 Eu 9545po DRM, 13810po DRM
1200-1300 Eu 9545po DRM, 13810po DRM
1600-1700 As 6170sl, 9485sl, 9540sl, 15640uk
1700-1800 Eu 5790uk DRM, 9960no DRM
1800-1900 Eu 5790uk DRM, 9960no DRM
1900-1930 Af 6150rw, 11795uk, 15620sl, 17860po
1900-2000 Eu 3995uk DRM, 5875no DRM
2000-2100 Af 6150rw, 11795uk, 11865po, 15205sl
2100-2200 Af 9735po, 11865rw, 15205rw