Time: gts 7.0 am
Haydn Symphony No 84, in E fiat: ENGLISH CHAMBER ORCHESTRA conducted by COLIN DAVIS
7.32* Beethoven Romance in G DAVID OISTRAKH (Violin)
ROYAL PHILHARMONIC ORCHESTRA conducted by SIR EUGENE GOOSSENS
7.40* Clementi Symphony in D HAIFA SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA conducted by SERGIU COMISSIONA
Morning Concert: part 2
8.5 Rossini Overture: William Tell: PHILHARMONIA ORCHESTRA conducted by CARLO MARIA GIULINI
8.18* Tchaikovsky Pezzo capriccioso: MAURICE GENDRON (cello) VIENNA SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA conducted by CHRISTOPH VON DOHNANYI
8.28* Schumann SymphonyNo4 VIENNA PHILHARMONIC ORCHESTRA conducted by GEORG SOLTI gramophone records
Twelve Studies, Op 25 TAMAS VASARY (piano) gramophone record
The first of 12 programmes devoted to songs by British composers
Michael Head Six Sea Songs
The homecoming of the sheep Had I a golden pound to spend Mamble
Sweet chance that led my steps abroad
Money Oh
MICHAEL WAKEHAM (baritone) MICHAEL HEAD (piano)
Bizet Symphony in c
FRENCHNATIONALRADIOORCHESTRA conducted by CHARLES MUNCH
10.44* Liszt Symphonic Poem: Hunnenschlacht
SUISSE ROMANDE ORCHESTRA conducted by ERNEST ANSERMET
10.59* d'Indy Symphony on a French Mountaineer's Song NICOLE HENRIOT-SCHWEIZER (piano) *
BOSTON SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA conducted by CHARLES MUNCH gramophone records
Third
Test Match at Headingley Fourth day
Ball-by-ball commentaries by JOHN ARLOTT , BRIAN JOHNSTON and NEIL DURDEN-SMITH with comments and summaries by TREVOR BAILEY and KHAN MOHAMMED
Close-of-play summary by E. W. SWANTON
11.25-1.35*
1.35*-1.40' News
1.50-1.55 Lunchtime Scoreboard
2.10*-4.20* and 4.30*-6.37
On days when play finishes early or is abandoned at any time after it has begun, the normal Radio 3 music programmes will be resumed approximately one hour after play has ceased.
Seven programmes on the place of General Studies in vocational training
6: With the student in mind
What are the students' preferences? Should they be given a choice of subject? How can their work be assessed? How can problems of time-tabling be tackled?
An enquiry by ALLAN KINGSBURY , Principal of Wansfell College, Theydon Bois , with contributions from teachers and students
Producer EDITH R. BAER
6.40-7.40 VHF Open University: see Radio 3 VHF on facing page
A guide to selling abroad 19: USA (ii)
The Americans have an appetite for imported goods but they demand high standards in quality and design. This programme looks at the consumer goods market in the United States and deals particularly with how the smaller exporter can penetrate this market. Introduced by HENRY DESCHAMPSNEUFS , Chairman of the Institute of Export Written by DOUGLAS TOOKEY of Ashridge Management College Producer DAVID TURPIN
KIRI TE KANAWA (soprano) JOHN MITCHINSON (tenor) JOHN NOBLE (baritone) BBC CHORUS
BBC SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA leader ELI GOREN conducted by JOHN PRITCHARD
Humphrey Searle Symphony No 3
Rachmaninov Choral Symphony: The Bells
(Given before an invited audience in BBC Studio 1, Maida Vale, London)
(Kiri Te Kanawa broadcasts by permission of the General Administrator, Royal Opera House Covent Garden)
A series of five talks
1: The Idea of Intelligence by LIAM HUDSON
A number of concepts used in discussing human biology, such as Intelligence, Race, Aggression, are confusing because they can mean different things to laymen and to scientists. Tonight the meaning of intelligence is examined by Professor Hudson of Edinburgh University, author of Contrary Imaginations and other books in this field.
played by the AMADEUS STRING QUARTET Norbert Brainin (violin) Siegmund Nissel (violin) Peter Schidlof (viola) Martin Lovett (cello) with CECIL ARONOWITZ (viola)
Haydn Quartet in B flat major, Op 76 No 4 (The Sunrise)
Mozart Quintet in G minor (K 516)
Brahms Quintet in F major, Op 88
by J. F. WATERHOUSE Part 1
J. F. Waterhouse. who was Professor of English at the University of Birmingham, and for 20 years the music critic of the Birmingham Post, examines the central poets and the intellectual climate of the 1780s.
Readers
NICOLETTE BERNARD
HUGH DICKSON , ANTHONY JACOBS and DIANA ROBSON
Producer R. D. SMITH
Derek Bailey (solo guitar) Evan Parker (saxophone) Paul Lytton (percussion)
RICHARD WILLIAMS introduces the controversial work of these musicians, which may strike the listener as ugly or even frightening, but could well form the basis for tomorrow's jazz.
Producer JOHN F. MUIR
(This Week's Sounds: page 11)