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Handel Suite: Water Music SCHOLA CANTORUM BASILIENSIS conducted by AUGUST WENZINGER
7.30* Salleri Concerto in C, for flute, oboe and orchestra
AURELE NICOLET, HEINZ HOLLIGER, BAMBERG SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA conducted by PETER MAAG
7.51* Boyce Symphony No 4, in F
WURTTEMBERG CHAMBER ORCHESTRA conducted by JORG FAERBER gramophone records
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Liszt Hungarian Rhapsody No 1 NEW YORK PHILHARMONIC
ORCHESTRA conducted by LEONARD BERNSTEIN
8.18* Glazunov Violin Concerto in A minor
JOSEF SIVO
SUISSE ROMANDE ORCHESTRA conducted by HORST STEIN
8.38* Sibelius Symphonic Poem: Tapiola
VIENNA PHILHARMONIC ORCHESTRA conducted by LORIN MAAZEL gramophone records
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The week's programmes include instrumental music by Bach interpreted in a wide variety of performing styles. Suite No 4, in D (BWV 1069) COLLEGIUM AUREUM
S.30* Brandenburg Concerto No 1, in F (mono)
ADOLF BUSCH (violin)
EVELYN ROTHWELL (oboe)
AUBREY BRAIN (horn)
FRANCIS BRADLEY (horn)
ADOLF BUSCH CHAMBER ORCHESTRA gramophone records
BRYAN AND KEYS DUO
Keith Bryan (flute) Karen Keys (piano)
Donizetti Sonata (1819)
Beethoven, arr Kleinheinz Serenade , Op 41
Damase Sonate en concert, Op 17
FELICITY PALMER (Soprano) HAZEL HOLT ( soprano)
SARAH WALKER (mezzo-soprano) JOHN ELWES (tenor). BRIAN ETHERIDGE (baritone), HEINRICH SCHUTZ CHORALE AND CHOIR conductor ROGER NORRINGTON with HAROLD LESTER (organ)
Six Anthems, Op 79, for unaccompanied chorus
Psalm 22: My God, My God, for unaccompanied chorus
Beati mortui, for men's chorus Ave Maria, for tenor, chorus and organ
Veni Domine , for women's chorus and organ
Hear my prayer, for soprano, chorus and organ
(medium wave only from 5.45 pm)
Test Match Special England v Australia at Headingley (Fourth day) Ball-by-ball commentary
11.25-1.35* inc lunch summary
1.35*-1.40* News; weather
1.40*-2.0* Your Letters Answered: The commentators answer points raised in your letters.
2.0*-2.10* Lunchtime Scoreboard
2.10*-4.20*, 4.30*-6.40 Commentary with teatime and close-of-play summaries
6.40 Early Promise
3: Special music schools Presented by LEONARD PEARCEY
7.0 The Deceptive Ear 1: Sound Barriers
In the first of four programmes, CHRISTOPHER HOGWOOD discusses with PROFESSOR JAMES BEAMENT the sensitivity of the body to audible and inaudible sounds.
Series producer DAVID EPPS
direct from the Royal Albert Hall , London
MICHEL BEROFF (piano)
BBC SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA leader BELA DEKANY conducted by Colin Davis Part 1
Mozart Symphony No 36, in c major (Linz) (K 425)
Bartok Piano Concerto No 1
The Autobiography of James Agate
A series of readings from the diaries of JAMES AGATE , the leading English dramatic critic between the two world wars. 4: The Last Entries of All (from Ego 9)
Reader CARLETON HOBBS Footnote to Ego 9 Reader ALAN DENT
Readings selected and produced by STUART GRIFFITHS
Vaughan Williams Symphony No 4, in F minor
Sir Lennox Berkeley says:
'Vaughan Williams's fourth symphony, with its wildly plunging 'motto' theme, its violent outbursts and menacing gestures, was found somewhat disconcerting, I remember, at the time of its first performance in 1935. It revealed a new and unexpected side to his musical personality, and some thought the work was influenced by the troubled atmosphere of those post-war days. This may be so - though I don't believe that exterior events necessarily produce an immediate reaction in music: some of Mozart's most serene work, for instance, was written at times of extreme stress.'
George MacBeth introduces new poems by MILES BURROWS, HUGH DAVID , DAVID DAY, GEOFFREY HOLLOWAY , PAUL MILLS, SUSAN MUSGRAVE , DAVID POSNER and PETER REDGROVE. followed by an interlude
Cantata No 135: Ach Herr, mich armen Sunder
EMMY LISKEN (contralto)
JOHANNES HOEFFLIN (tenor) JAKOB STAMPFLI (bass)
HELMUT WINSCHERMANN (Oboe) GUNTER ZORN (oboe)
SOUTH GERMAN MADRIGAL CHOIR, STUTTGART, GERMAN BACH SOLOISTS conducted by WOLFGANG GÖN-NENWEIN: gramophone record
The celebrated Indian sarangi player with SURESH TALWALKAR (tabla)
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