gramophone records
Serenade No. 1, in D major
LONDON SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA Conducted by ISTVAN KERTESZ
8.52* Hungarian Dances
No. 17, in F sharp minor No. 18, in D major No. 19, in B minor
BERLIN PHILHARMONIC ORCHESTRA Conducted by PAUL VAN KEMPEN gramophone records
Byrd, Morley, Gibbons gramophone records
A programme to commemorate the tenth anniversary of the composer's death
QUINTIN BALLARDIE (viola) AMBROSIAN SINGERS
LONDON PHILHARMONIC ORCHESTRA Led by Gerald Jarvis
Conducted by SIR ADRIAN BOULT
Suite: Flos campi
10.4* Symphony No. 4, in F minor
10.38* Symphony No. 5, in D major
See page 33
Job, a masque for dancing: Thurs., 5.15
England v. Australia at The Oval Fourth day
*
11.25 a.m. -1.35 p.m. including lunchtime summary
2.10*.4.20* p.m.
4.30*-6.35« p.m. including close-of-play summary
followed by Stock Market Report
See page 51
by Paul Claudel
Barbara Jefford in a new translation for radio by ADAM WATSON
Produced by CHRISTOPHER HOLME
Second broadcast
Poems by BOB COBBING orchestrated and spoken by the author himself in a production with the BBC Radiophonic Workshop
Introduced by GEORGE MAcBETH Since the success of Ernst Jandl's reading at the Albert Hall in 1965, considerable interest has been aroused in attempts to develop an art of pure sound. Bob Cobbing's word combinations form an alphabet of effects whose impact has been varied and underlined in tonight's programme by the use of radiophonic techniques, including speeding up and slowing down, multiple recording. echo and feed-back.
Produced by George MacBeth
Second broadcast
Mbrike settings sung by ERNST HAEFLIGER (tenor) with ERNEST LUSH (piano)
Fussreise; Zur Warnung: Denk' es, o Seele; Abschied: Peregrina I. II; Auf eine Christblume 1; Der Feuerreiter Ninth in a weekly series of programmes including songs by Brahms and Wolf
Female character-studies by Schubert, Brahms, and Wolf (Margaret Neville , Ernest Lush): September 2
by Magnus Pyke, F.R.S.E.
The thin end of the wedge is in. We already have some still anonymous decimal coins in our pockets. Ninety in the shade will be an unimpressive 32° Centrigade. The communistic metre - so called by an Astronomer Royal for Scotland - is on its way. Dr Pyke argues not that things have already gone too far but that they haven't gone far enough. Wouldn't a fever of 313° Kelvin be something to talk about?
(Second broadcast)
Today's overseas commodity and financial news, London Stock Market closing report