
Eric Teel
After a failed attempt at structured music instruction at Washington State University, Eric earned a broadcast journalism degree from WSU's renowned Edward R. Murrow College of Communication.
Over the next 25-plus years, Eric has drawn upon his extensive music knowledge to host programs in nearly every genre for commercial and public radio. He joined the JPR staff in 1996, hosting Siskiyou Music Hall from JPR’s Redding studios. In 2002, he moved to Ashland and took over as one of the hosts of Open Air. In addition to music, he’s put his journalism background to use reporting for NPR, managing JPR's award-winning newsroom, and producing feature-length public radio specials carried nationwide.
As FM Network Program Director, Eric oversees many aspects of JPR's broadcast day. He still hosts the occasional Open Air or classical music shift, and is the driving force behind JPR Live Sessions - our popular series of live in-studio music performances and interviews.
When not at JPR he can be seen in the crowd or on stage at music events around the region, or building hiking and biking trails in the hills around the Rogue Valley.
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Andrew Bird ruminates on a line from Joan Didion's 1968 essay collection Slouching Towards Bethlehem.
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"I Wonder Why" made Stigers a star all the way back in 1991. Now, he revisits it from the perspective of a fiftysomething who's learned how to best harness his own talents.
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Bon Iver's S. Carey offers love song for whom he holds most dear.
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A new single that still retains the full-band treatment found on Keb' Mo's more recent albums, but leans more heavily into the kind of acoustic guitar sound that originally put him on the map.
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The first single from Reed's tribute to Merle Haggard retains the song's personality and gives it a Memphis soul twist.
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The group takes inspiration from Pablo Picasso's alter-ego, the minotaur, to examine the darker parts of ourselves that we hope to hide.
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"Feel Alright" showcases LeGrow's confidence and attitude as a singer, teetering on the edge of rasp and growl, while thoroughly maintaining control.
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After more than a year and a half of loss, uncertainty and change, Michael Kiwanuka's "Beautiful Life" strikes like an arrow.
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"Partisans," a newly unearthed track from Icelandic composer-producer Ólafur Arnalds, is a beautiful and haunting song ready to transport you to another world.
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The folk duo's new single, from its forthcoming album Juniors, highlights a poignant sentiment about love and loss.