Programme Index

Discover 11,128,835 listings and 279,705 playable programmes from the BBC

with Chris de Souza.
Including:
7.00 Schubert
Overture in E minor (D648) Liverpool PO/Leppard
7.40 Haydn Symphony No 35 in C (Echo)
L'Estro Armonico/Derek Solomons
8.00 Smetana Symphonic poem: Richard III
Bavarian Radio Symphony Orchestra/Rafael Kubelik
8.40 Berg Sonata , Op 1 Daniel Barenboim. Discs

Contributors

Unknown:
Chris de Souza.
Unknown:
Berg Sonata
Unknown:
Daniel Barenboim.

Marc-Antoine Charpentier
Ver (Quatuor Anni Tempestates)
Francoise Semellaz and Noemi Rime (sopranos) Le Parlement de
Musique/Martin Gester Orphee descendant aux enfers Sonata a 8 Epitaphium Carpentarij Henri Ledroit
(countertenor)
Guy de Mey (tenor) Jacques Bona (bass) Ricercar Consort
Discs

Contributors

Unknown:
Marc-Antoine Charpentier
Unknown:
Francoise Semellaz
Unknown:
Epitaphium Carpentarij
Unknown:
Henri Ledroit
Tenor:
Guy de Mey
Bass:
Jacques Bona

Barry Tuckwell (horn/director)
Ingolf Turban (violin) Stephen Hough (piano) conductor Marcello Viotti
Mendelssohn
Overture: Son and Stranger
10.09 Rosetti
Horn Concerto in E
10.28 Respighi
Pastorale for violin and string orchestra
10.41 Hummel
Piano Concerto in A minor
11.11 Mozart
Horn Concerto No 4 in E flat (K495)
11.30 Schubert
Symphony No 2 in B flat

Contributors

Horn:
Barry Tuckwell
Piano:
Stephen Hough
Conductor:
Marcello Viotti

The second of two programmes of music by Benedictus a Sancto Josepho.
Loma Anderson and Tessa Bonner (sopranos) Rogers Covey-Crump and Charles Daniels (tenors) Richard Savage (bass) London Baroque/
Charles Medlam

Contributors

Unknown:
Sancto Josepho.
Unknown:
Loma Anderson
Sopranos:
Tessa Bonner
Tenors:
Charles Daniels
Unknown:
Charles Medlam

Between the 14th and 16th centuries, the Grand Duchy of Lithuania was one of the largest and most powerful empires in Europe. In their recorded concert for Radio 3, the New Music Ensemble of Vilnius sing and play marriage and calendar songs and polyphonic sutartines, using an array of traditional instruments, including zithers, pipes, goathoms and birchbark trumpets.

Contributors

Producer:
John Thornley

Mary King (mezzo) Andrew Ball (piano) live from Studio One, Pebble Mill.
Bartok Village Scenes
Ives Ann Street, The Side Show, The Circus Band; The Housatmuc at Stockbridge
Cowell Two piano pieces: Aeolian Harp; Tiger
Ives Charlie Rutledge ; The Indians; Majority
8.15 Moderne, not Modem The creation of a new international style, Art Deco, was a conscious attempt by the French government to reassert the primacy of French design. But did later practitioners betray the principles and practice of the style?
Christopher Cook considers the origins of "modeme-ism".
8.35
Eisler Zeitungsausschnitte , Op 11 Protopopov Piano Sonata No 2, Op 5
Mosolov Four Newspaper Announcements, Op 21; Children's Songs, Op 18 Satie Ludions
Bemers Three Sea Shanties

Contributors

Piano:
Andrew Ball
Unknown:
Pebble Mill.
Unknown:
Ives Charlie Rutledge
Unknown:
Christopher Cook
Unknown:
Eisler Zeitungsausschnitte

The fourth of five tales to coincide with the publication of the BBC's annual anthology of original radio stories.
Have You Had a Nice Day? by Francis King.
"Was politeness to foreigners truly the reason? Or did the foreman think that in trying out the makeshift bridge, it was foreign, not Japanese, lives which should be risked?"
Read by Deborah Findlay. (Final story tomorrow 9.15pm)

Contributors

Unknown:
Francis King.
Read By:
Deborah Findlay.

Wilfred Owen was a Shropshire lad who struggled to get an education and then struggled to find a poetic voice. Sent to the battlefields of the First World War, it was only when he painfully renounced his unquestioning jingoism that he produced his masterpieces. Russell Davies considers the achievements of Owen, who was bom 100 years ago. Producer David Perry
(Kenneth Branagh reads Wilfred Owen 's letters and poems starting next Monday at 9.25pm)

Contributors

Unknown:
Wilfred Owen
Unknown:
Russell Davies
Producer:
David Perry
Producer:
Kenneth Branagh
Unknown:
Wilfred Owen

A studio session from jazzman Django Bates , whose songs take flight on Jane Chapman 's smoky vocals and Bates's E flat hom solos; and a classic from the 1960s: George Crumb 's atmospheric settings of Lorca,
Songs, Drones and Refrains of Death.
Presented by Alan Hall.
Producers Andrew Kurowski and Philip Tagney

Contributors

Unknown:
Django Bates
Unknown:
Jane Chapman
Unknown:
George Crumb
Presented By:
Alan Hall.
Producers:
Andrew Kurowski
Producers:
Philip Tagney

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