Highlights of the third day's play. (Details: p 22)
Beethoven Cello Sonata in c, Op 102 No 1. with DANIEL BARENBOlM (piano) Mendelssohn Song without words in D, Op 109. with GERALD MOORE (piano) Haydn Cello Concerto in D, with the LONDON
SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA conducted by SIR JOHN BARBIROLLI : records
Berlioz Overture: Le corsaire: LONDON SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA, conducted by SIR COLIN DAVIS
Mozart Concerto in c for flute, harp and orchestra (K 299)
JAMES GALWAY. FRITZ HELMIS BERLIN PHILHARMONIC
ORCHESTRA, conducted by HERBERT VON KARAJAN
Tchaikovsky Suite No 3, in G: VIENNA PHILHARMONIC ORCHESTRA, conducted by LORIN MAAZEL : records
Introduced by Michael Oliver
A Question of Taste:
graham SADLER considers Italian and French Gout in the 18th century and how Couperin and others reunited them.
A conversation with CHRISTOPH VON DOHNANYI. Faure and his Piano
Quartets by ROGER NICHOLS Producer GRAHAM SHEFFIELD
AMSTERDAM CONCERTGEBOUW ORCHESTRA, concert-master
JAAP VAN ZWEDEN conductor BERNARD HAITINK Mozart Symphony No 35 in D (Haffner) (K 385)
11.45* Interval Reading
11.50* Bruckner Symphony No 9
The sort of Mozart-playing we hear only from our finest string quartets.
(THE GUARDIAN)
(This appearance of the Amsterdam Concertgebouw Orchestra at the Henry
Wood Promenade Concerts was made possible by support from Rank Xerox (UK) Limited)
A BBC digital recording
BENJAMIN LUXON (baritone) DAVID WILLISON (piano)
Schubert An die Leier; Erster Verlust ; Der
Einsame; Dass sie hier gewesen: Im Friihling; Der Wanderer an den Mond; Dem Unendlichen
Brahms Four Serious Songs
A BBC digital recording
conducted by SERGE BAUDO Respighi Symphonic
Poem: Fountains of Rome Gounod Symphony No 2, in E flat
Debussy Symphonic Suite: Printemps
A story by EDWARD BOND Read by David Ryall
A reluctant juror fights a moral battle with the legal system. Producer
ANTHONY vivis
(piano) plays
Boucourechliev Six
Etudes d'apres Pyranese (first UK broadcast)
Beethoven Sonata in D major. Op 10 No 3 Schumann Etudes symphoniques
by WILLIAM MAKEPEACE THACKERAY adapted in four parts and read by Manning Wilson 2: Royal Snobs
Charles II was a rogue but not a snob. His contemporary, Louis XIV - a great worshipper of Bigwiggery - was a most undoubted and Royal Snob.
Producer JOHN CARDY
(Part 3: Tuesday 8.55pm)
Lydia; Automne; Nocturne CHARLES PANZERA (bar) MAGDALEINE PANZERA-BAILLOT (piano)
Violin Sonata No 1 in A, Op 13
JACQUES THIBAUD (violin) ALFRED CORTOT (piano) L'horizon chimérique,
Op 118: CHARLES PANZERA
(bar), MAGDALEINE PANZERA-BAILLOT (piano)
Piano Quartet No 1 in c minor, Op 15
MARGUERITE LONG (piano) PASQUIER trio: records
YVONNE MINTON (soprano) BBC SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA leader BELA DEKANY
Schoenberg Four Songs, Op 22
Bartok Four Orchestral Pieces, Op 12
DOROTHY DOROW (soprano) ALDEBURGH FESTIVAL
CHAMBER ENSEMBLE conducted by OUVER KNUSSEN
Britten Suite: The Sword in the Stone (1938) (first concert performance)
Pro Bono Publico The Columbia
Broadcasting System is being sued for libel by General William Westmoreland after alleging he suppressed figures about enemy size during the Vietnam war. David Wheeler discovers that much of the hostility provoked, by the programme, has been directed at news organisations. The attorneys for both sides, top managers at CBS and NBC, the offending programme's producer and General Westmoreland himself reflect on whether newsmen are now abusing their privileges under the First Amendment of the United States Constitution.
Producer LOUISE PURSLOW
Mozart Trio in G (K 564) Beethoven Trio in E flat, Op 70 No 2
9.50* Interval Reading
9.55* Brahms Piano
Quartet in G minor. Op 25 YOUNG UCK KIM (violin) NOBUKO imaj (viola) YO YO MA (cello)
EMANUEL AX (piano)
An abridged translation into modern English verse by TERENCE TILLER. Music composed and conducted by Michael Berkeley with Stephen Moore as the Narrator;
Graham Pountney as the Lover; David Gooderson as Bel Accoyle
Stuart Organ as Danger Katherine Parr as Reason
Stephen Garlick as the Friend
Jill Lidstone as Franchise Frances Jeater as Venus Patience Tomlinson as Pity
6: Exile and Return