Programme Index

Discover 11,128,835 listings and 279,877 playable programmes from the BBC

with Andrew Lyle.
Music, news, weather and arts news, including:
7.10 Satie Sports et Divertissements
Joanna MacGregor (piano)
7.30 Delius
In a Summer Garden
Halle Orchestra/ Vernon Handley
8.15 Mozart Kleine
Freimauerkantate (K623) Hans-Peter Blochwitz
(tenor)
Andreas Schmidt (bass) Leipzig Radio Chorus (men's voices)
Dresden Staatskapelle/ Peter Schreier (tenor)
8.50 Vivaldi Winter
(The Four Seasons)
Boston SO/Seiji Ozawa Records

Contributors

Unknown:
Andrew Lyle.
Piano:
Joanna MacGregor
Unknown:
Vernon Handley
Tenor:
Hans-Peter Blochwitz
Bass:
Andreas Schmidt
Tenor:
Peter Schreier

Meyerbeer
Overture: Dinorah
10.15 Roussel
The Spider's Feast
NBC SO/Arturo Toscanini
10.19 Debussy
Le Martyre de Saint-
Sebastien Philharmonia / Guido Cantelli
10.39 Roger-Ducasse Sarabande
10.50 Berlioz
Scherzo (Romeo et Juliette)
10.59
Ravel Daphnis et Chloe: Suite No 2
NBC SO/Toscanini
11.20 Dutilleux
Violin Concerto
Isaac Stem (violin) French National
Orchestra/Lorin Maazel Records

Contributors

Unknown:
Sebastien Philharmonia
Unknown:
Guido Cantelli
Unknown:
Roger-Ducasse Sarabande
Unknown:
Ravel Daphnis

Lyndon Jenkins presents the second of six programmes devoted to original recordings of British music.
Elgar: Coronation March
London Philharmonic/Landon Ronald
Delius: Intermezzo (Fennimore and Gerda)
London Philharmonic/Thomas Beecham
Walton: Three songs from 'Facade'
Dora Stevens (soprano) Hubert Foss (piano)
Vaughan Williams: Flos campi
William Primrose (viola) Philharmonia/ Adrian Boult
Ireland: Mai-dun
Halle/John Barbirolli
Finzi: Dies natalis
Joan Cross (soprano) Boyd Neel Orchestra
Heming-Collins: Threnody for a soldier
Halle/John Barbirolli
Rawsthome: Symphonic Studies
Philharmonia/Constant Lambert

Contributors

Presenter:
Lyndon Jenkins

conductor
Yan Pascal Tortelier
Howard Shelley (piano) live from the Free Trade
Hall, Manchester.
Ravel
Suite: Ma mere I'oye
Mozart Piano Concerto
No 23 in A (K488)
8.20
A Babble of Green Fields
"They sit side by side, the poacher and his mother, in the day room of the continuation ward, while the rattle, crash and bustle of hospital business passes them by." Henry Livings reads his own short story.
8.40 Dutilleux
Symphony No 1 Ravel La Valse

Contributors

Unknown:
Henry Livings

Five Dialogues on Art 5: A Reputation Reviewed Art critic
Andrew Graham-Dixon looks back over Bridget Riley 's career since she came to prominence as an Op artist and talks to her about some of her concerns over thirty years as a practising artist.
Series producer Judith Bumpus

Contributors

Unknown:
Andrew Graham-Dixon
Unknown:
Bridget Riley
Producer:
Judith Bumpus

Stuart Woolf presents a portrait of Turin, the dour and rather un-Italian city that has provided 20thcentury Italy with so many of its most important writers and intellectuals.
The long, straight streets, the echoing arcades and the vast Fiat factory form the backdrop to readings from Turinese writers
Primo Levi , Cesare Pavese and Natalia Ginzburg.
Readers Tom Durham and Geraldine Fitzgerald. Producer Mick Webb

Contributors

Unknown:
Stuart Woolf
Unknown:
Primo Levi
Unknown:
Cesare Pavese
Readers:
Natalia Ginzburg.
Readers:
Tom Durham
Readers:
Geraldine Fitzgerald.
Producer:
Mick Webb

From this year's
Contemporary Music
Festival in Huddersfield, a recording of a late-night show by the Glasgow band Cauld Blast
Orchestra. Their music comes from a variety of backgrounds and has been described as "a beautiful mongrel on the streets - wild and exotic - but it bites!"
Producer Andrew Kurowski
(Given in association with the Royal Bank of Scotland)

Contributors

Producer:
Andrew Kurowski

BBC Radio 3

About BBC Radio 3

Live music and the arts: broadcasts more live music than any other radio network. Classical music is its core. Genres include world and new music, jazz, speech and drama.

Appears in

About this data

This data is drawn from the Radio Times magazine between 1923 and 2009. It shows what was scheduled to be broadcast, meaning it was subject to change and may not be accurate. More