with Catriona Young.
7.05 Holst St Paul's Suite
7.35 Mendelssohn
Song without Words, Op 19 No
7.40 Strauss Die heiligen dreiKonige
8.05 Brahms Academic
Festival Overture
8.15 Cornelius The Three
Kings
8.30 Tippett Concerto for double string orchestra Discs
Penny Gore continues her Elgarian travels with a trip to Brinkwells, the Sussex cottage where the composer spent several summers during the First World War, and talks there with pianist David Owen Norris.
Moths and Butterflies
(The Wand of Youth) Welsh National Opera Orchestra, conductor
Charles Mackerras
Le drapeau beige
Richard Pasco (narrator) Rutland Sinfonietta , conductor Barry Collett
Piano Quintet in A minor (1st mvt)
David Owen Norris (piano) Mistry String Quartet The Wind at Dawn
Brian Rayner Cook (baritone) Roger Vignoles (piano)
Violin Sonata in E minor
Lorraine McAslan (violin) John Blakely (piano)
from Belfast with Stephanie Hughes.
Ame Thou soft flowing Avon
Emma Kirkby (soprano) Parley of Instruments, director Roy Goodman
10.05 Krebs Fantasia No
1 inF
Neil Black (oboe)
Peter Hurford (organ)
10.10 Schubert, compl Weingartner Symphony No 7 in E
Ulster Orchestra, conductor Peter Hirsch
10.45 Artist of the Week: James Galway (flute)
Vivaldi Concerto in F
(Autumn) (RV293) Zagreb Soloists
10.55 Schumann Cello
Concerto in A minor
Alexander Baillie (cello)
Ulster Orchestra, conductor
Peter Hirsch
11.20 Quitter Three Shakespeare Songs
Anthony Rolfe Johnson (tenor) Graham Johnson (piano)
11.25 Schubert
Symphony No 8 in B minor (Unfinished)
Ulster Orchestra, conductor
Peter Hirsch
Jules Massenet 's opera of 1910 follows a version of Cervantes' novel, revealing the old knight errant falling in love with a young prostitute and risking life and self-esteem to reclaim her stolen necklace.
Sung in French. Presented by Clive Bennett.
Toulouse Capitole Chorus and Orchestra, conductor
Michel Plasson
Discs
Sylvia Rosenberg (violin) Caroline Palmer (piano)
Bach Violin Sonata No 1 in B minor (BWV1014)
Schubert Violin Sonata in A (D574)
Stravinsky Suite italienne
A series of six programmes in which Graham Fawcett looks at aspects of Shakespeare through musical settings.
2: TelEng Your Love
Songs by Haydn, Schubert, Morley and Anon.
conductor Jean-Bernard Pommier Ravel Pavane pour une infante defunte
Roussel Petite Suite, Op 39
with Tommy Pearson.
A young British poet called Simon
Explains scansion and metre and rhyme.
On further reflection
He makes the connection
Between poetry, music and time.
Producer Chris Wines
with David Owen Norris from
Birmingham.
5.15 Respighi The
Adoration of the Magi (Botticelli Pictures)
6.00 Telemann Concerto for four violins
6.30 Liszt Paganini Studies
7.00 J C Bach Symphony No 6 in G
Producer Jeremy Hayes
from the Free Trade
Hall, Manchester. conductor Kent Nagano Viktoria Mullova (violin)
Webem Five Pieces, Op 10 Berg Violin Concerto
8.10 During the interval
Lynne Walker looks back at Manchester's musical life
50 years ago.
8.30 Bach Chaconne
(Violin Partita in D minor) Beethoven Symphony No 5 in C minor
(Given in association with Brother international (Europe) Ltd)
4: Beerbohm recalls Sarah
Bernhardt's Hamlet and the music hall artist Dan Leno.
NEW In the first of four I programmes, Juan Martin plays flamenco music from the opening recital of the festival.
Zapateado; Solea;
Rondena (Aurora); Lamento morisco; Bulerias
Presented by Roy Porter. Producer Julian May
Lucia Popp (1939-93) lain Burnside pays tribute to the great Slovakian-born soprano who died in November, and introduces a concert she gave in July 1991 at St John's, Smith Square.
Dvorak Five Songs
Mahler Rheinlegendchen; Ablosung in Sommer; Wo die schonen
Trompeten blasen; Wer hat dies Liedlein erdacht? (Des Knaben Wunderhorn)
Strauss Himmelsboten ;
Ein Obdach gegen Sturm und Regen; Morgen;
Wiegenliedchen; Blauer Sommer ; In goldener Fülle