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Comprehensive forecast for inland areas and inshore waters
Glinka Waltz Fantasy USSR SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA conducted by EVGENY SVETLANOV
7.13* Glazunov Piano Concerto No 1, in F minor: JOHN OGDON, BOURNEMOUTH SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA conducted by PAAVO BERGLUND
7.40* Prokofiev Suite: The Love of Three Oranges: Moscow RADIO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA, Conducted by GENNADI ROZHDESTVENSKY
(gramophone records)
Vaughan Williams Overture: The Poisoned Kiss
Bournemouth Sinfonietta conducted by George Hurst
8.12* arr Britten O Waly, Waly; The plough boy: Peter Pears (tenor), Osian Ellis (harp)
8.18* Walton Cello Concerto
Paul Tortelier
Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra conducted by Paavo Berglund
8.45* Warlock Capriol Suite
English Sinfonia, conducted by Neville Dilkes: records
Beethoven Music for the Stage Fidelio: Act II
PHILHARMONIA CHORUS AND ORCHESTRA, conducted by OTTO KLEMPERER : records
Second of four analytical lectures given at Leeds University in which HANS KELLER discussed in detail Beethoven's String Quartet in B flat, Op 130. In this programme he considers the third and fourth movements, with illustrations by the AEOLIAN STRING QUARTET.
The series is being repeated to mark the 150th anniversary of Beethoven's death.
BBC Manchester
A short cantata to an anonymous 14th-century text and some new madrigals: recent music by Anthony Payne and Robin Holloway for unaccompanied voices
BBC SINGERS, director JOHN POOLE Anthony Payne A little passion-tide Cantata: Lovely tear of lovely eye
Robin Holloway Five Madrigals: Ecce puer (Joyce); Children's voices; Eyes that last I saw in tears; Voices of birds; Red river (Eliot)
Ah fading joy, how quickly art thou past! (Dryden)
(all first performances)
leader ALAN TRAVERSE conductor SIR CHARLES GROVES with MARTIN JONES (piano)
Malcolm Williamson Overture: Santiago de Espada
Sinfonia Concertante
Tchaikovsky Nutcracker Ballet: Act II (complete)
BBC Manchester
Bernadette Greevy (contralto) Paul Hamburger (piano) direct from the Royal Exchange Theatre, Manchester
Mahler Lieder eines fahrenden Gesellen
Faur6 Apres un reve; Nell Duparc Chanson triste; Phidylfi Gerard Victory An old woman of the roads arr Herbert Hughes The salley gardens; 0 men from the fields; Half a bap; My aunt she died a month ago.
(The second of twelve concerts promoted by the Manchester Midday Concerts Society with the BBC) BBC Manchester
Elizabeth Maconchy
An occasional series in which British composers talk about themselves and their music String Quartet No 10
GABRIELI STRING QUARTET Nocturnal; Sirens' Song
BBC SINGERS, director JOHN POOLE Three Bagatelles, for oboe and harpsichord
EVELYN ROTHWEtX , VALDA AVELINO Ariadne: HEATHER HARPER (sop) ENGLISH CHAMBER ORCHESTRA Conductor RAYMOND LEPPARD BBC Manchester
conducted by JAN KRENZ
Tchaikovsky Symphony No 2, in D
(Austrian Radio recording from this year's Vienna Festival)
MEMBERS OF THE NATIONAL CLAS
SICAL MUSIC INSTITUTE IN SEOUL
Introduced by JONATHAN CONDIT
BBC Manchester
Second of two recitals on instruments representative of the Viennese and English schools of piano building in the early 19th century
Dussek Sonata in B flat, Op 49 No 1; Sonata in F sharp minor, Op 61 (Elegy on the death of Prince Louis Ferdinand ) played by MALCOLM BINNS on a Broadwood piano of 1804
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The Wider World
6.30 What Right Have Yon Got? 2: Finding Out
How can you find out more about your own and other people's rights and responsibilities?
Presented by MICHAEL MOLYNEUX (Rptd: Sun 3.30 pm R4 VHF, not Scotland or N Ireland)
7.0 The Politics of Economics
Six programmes presented by DOMINICK HARROD
5: Why Blame the Governmentf How effective are politicians in understanding and running the economy - do they really have much power over the pound in our pocket?
Opera in four acts by Massenet Libretto after GOETHE by EDOUARD BLAU , PAUL MILLIET and GEORGES HARTMANN (sung in the English translation by NORMAN TUCKER ) The English National Opera production, direct from the London Coliseum
ENGLISH NATIONAL OPERA orchestra, leader BARRY COLLINS conducted by CHARLES MACKERRAS In Wetzlar, near Frankfurt, towards the end of the 18th century. Act 1: A July evening. The Magistrate's garden
Largely concealed from the wider cinema-going public, an elaborate and often acrimonious debate is being conducted in academic and para-academic film circles on the need for film theory. Robin Wood , author of monographs on Hitchcock, Ray, Bergman and Hawks, and formerly Senior Lecturer in Film Studies at Warwick University, discusses the nature and implications of this debate.
Act 2: A Sunday afternoon, the following September
Keith Gore. Fellow of Worcester College, Oxford, reflects on the recently published text of the biographical film on Sartre made by French television; and on the contrasts between the kind of intellectual whicft Sartre reveals himself to be, and the kind which he would like to be.
Act 3: Christmas Eve, 5 o'clock. Albert's house; Act 4: Later that night. Werther's study
A series about religion in the modern world
4: Unravelling the Incarnation The ' Incarnation ' doctrine, that God became man, is what makes Christianity unique. But Christians themselves are beginning to doubt whether it can be believed in any more. Series adviser TREVOR LING Presenter Angela Tilby Producers ALEC REID and ANGELA TILBY