Comprehensive forecast for UK land areas and inshore waters
SLOVAK CHAMBER ORCHESTRA directed by BOHDAN WARCIIAL
Corelli Concerto Grosso in r, Op 6 No 2
7.17' Richter Flute Concerto in D With VLADISLAV BRUNNER
7.42* Johann Stamitz Symphony in A gramophone records
Sibelius Karelia Suite
HELSINKI RADIO SYMPHONY
ORCHESTRA conducted by OKKO KAMU
8.21* Nielsen Symphony No 3 (Sinfonia espansiva) (1911) KIRSTEN SCHULTZ (soprano) PETER RASMUSSEN (baritone) DANISH RADIO SYMPHONY
ORCHESTRA conducted by HERBERT BLOMSTEDT gramophone records
Vivaldi
Sonata in B flat, Op 14 No 1 ANNER BYLSMA (cello)
HERMANN HOBARTH (cello)
GUSTAV LEONHARDT (harpsichord)
9.17* Sonata in c, Op 13 No 5 ALFRED SOUS (Oboe)
WALTER STIFTNER (baSSOOn)
HUGUETTE DREYFUS (harpsichord)
9.30* Sonata in G minor. Op 55 No 1: JULIAN BREAM (lute)
GEORGE MALCOLM (harpsichord) gramophone records
led by ROGER GARLAND conductor NORMAN DEL MAR
Rossini Overture: La Cenerentola
Delius On heating the first cuckoo in spring; Summer night on the river
Mendelssohn Symphony No 4, in A (Italian) BBC Bristol
A piano recital given In the Queen Elizabeth Hall , London, on 16 October 1975 Part 1
Chopin Impromptu in A flat, Op 29; Impromptu in F sharp, Op 36; Impromptu in G flat, Op 51; Fantaisie-Impromptu in c sharp minor, Op 66: Nocturne in c minor. Op 48 No 1; Polonaise in A fiat, Op 53
11.15* Interval Reading
11.25* Recital Part 2
Beethoven Bagatelles , Op 33: No 1, in E flat; No 2. in c; No 3, in F; No 7, in A flat
Variations and Fugue in E flat on a theme from Prometheus, Op 35
direct from the Concert Hall,. Broadcasting House, Cardiff ESTHER GLAZER (violin)
BBC WELSH SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA conducted by IRWIN HOFFMAN Dvorak Overture: Carnival
12.19* Schoenberg Violin Concerto, Op 36
A weekly news bulletin
(Repeated: Wednesday 8.40 pm)
Part 2
Beethoven Symphony No 2, in D (Before an invited audience) BBC Wales
Quartet in E flat, Op 64 No 6 NEW BUDAPEST STRING QUARTET
A Tuesday afternoon divertissement
Opera in three acts by Nicolai Rimsky-Korsakov
Mark Elder introduces excerpts from ' this charming Ukrainian Midsummer Night's Dream the story of which was taken by the composer from a collection of stories by Nicolai Gogol. It's a fascinating and unusual mixture of love, magic and Ukrainian country life, and for it Rimsky has written one of his most colourful, lively and evocative scores.
AND ORCHESTRA, conducted by VLADIMIR FEDOSEYEV : records
Charles Fox with records
A magazine which explores music in the making
Introduced by Robert Prizeman Producer ARTHUR JOHNSON
(continued)
Work and Training
6.30 Can You Help?
Nine programmes about needs and opportunities for voluntary service in the community
Presented by HELENE CURTIS
5: Coping with Handicap
Some examples of ways in which volunteers are helping stroke patients and people with physical or mental handicap.
7.0 Teaching Adults to Read
5: The Choice of Approach
Developing the skills of independent and fluent reading. Presented by RUTH LESIRGE
(BBC Adult Literacy Handbook: £1.10 from bookshops)
conducted by its music director Seiji Ozawa and with its concert-master Joseph Silverstein as the solo violinist
Vaughan Williams The Lark Ascending, for violin and orchestra
Vieuxtemps Violin Concerto No 5, in A minor
Sir Neville Cardus was one of the great critics of this century. He was equally outstanding as a writer on music and cricket, but above all he was a wonderful conversationalist. "One night I sent up a paragraph and Scott called me into his room. "The phrase from thence - that's very bad English." Being young and rather bold, I said, "There are precedents in English Literature, you know. Henry Fielding often uses the phrase." "Oh does he? Well, Cardus, Mr Fielding wouldn't use the phrase twice on my newspaper. Goodnight." And I thought if he's going to sack the father of the English novel, the sooner I get out the better." In the first of two programmes Robin Daniels introduces a selection from the reminiscences of Sir Neville Cardus, recorded over the last years of his life.
Part 2 Tchaikovsky
Symphony No 5. in % minor
(Given in Symphony Hall, Boston, on 10 Feb; Boston Symphony Transcription Trust recording)
Fun Balloons by DON HAWORTH
' Some customer's got to be disappointed.' ' Why? '
' The engineers want all the jobs they can get. They're on a productivity bonus.
'Why don't they do the jobs then? '
' Because, old son, the computer prints out more jobs than they're likely to do to make sure there isn't a shortfall. There'll be a few calls not done nine days out of ten.'
' But if they know they're not coming....''
' They can't know they're not coming, old son, until they haven't been.'
Produced and directed by ALFRED BRADLEY. BBC Manchester followed by an interlude
Music presented at last year's International Rostrum of Compo,sers in Paris
McKinley Paintings No 2 (first broadcast in this country): NEW ENGLAND CONSERVATORY CONTEM
PORARY CHAMBER MUSIC ENSEMBLE conducted by GUNTHER SCHULLER (US National Music Council recording)
Marco Autodafé (Baroque Concerto No 1) (first broadcast in thus country): JEAN-PIERRE DUPUY (piano), INSTRUMENTAL. ENSEMBLI conducted by JOSÉ MARIA FRANCO-GIL
(Spanish Radio recording) Druckman Lamia JAN DE GAETAN1I (soprano), NEW YORK PHILHARMONIC ORCHESTRA conducted by PIERRE BOULEZ
(US National Music Council recording)