with Andrew McGregor.
7.05 Strauss Prelude:
Capriccio
7.16 Kodaly Dances of Marosszek
7.32 Geminiani Concerto grosso in D, Op 3 No 1
8.05 Bach Overture (Suite No 4 in D, BWV 1069)
8.26 Schubert Ganymed (D544)
8.35 Dohnanyl Variations on a Nursery Song, Op 25 Discs
The Fragments
Some of the surviving keyboard fragments are heard on instruments of our own and Mozart's day.
For two hands: Movement in G minor (K312); Fantasy in D minor (K397);
Variations on Sarti's "Come un agnello" (K460)
For four hands: Fragments of a Sonata in G (K497a and K500a); Fugue in G minor (K401); and a Larghetto and Allegro not known to Kochel. Presented by Piers Burton-Page . Discs
with Chris de Souza , including at approximately
10.00 Artist of the Week:
Anthony Halstead
(harpsichord/director)
Abel Symphony in F sharp, Op 17 No 6
Hanover Band
10.10 Bach Brandenburg Concerto No 5 in D
(BWV 1050)
Pavlo Beznosiuk (violin) Rachel Brown (flute)
Hanover Band, director
Anthony Halstead (h'chord)
10.30 Mozart Quintet in E flat for piano and wind (K452)
Neil Black (oboe)
Thea King (clarinet)
Robin O'Neill (bassoon) Anthony Halstead (horn) Nina Milkina (piano)
11.00
Janacek Rikadla London Sinfonietta Chorus
Members of the London
Sinfonietta, conductor
David Atherton
11.15 Bemhard
Stavenhagen Piano Concerto
Roland Keller (piano) Berlin Symphony
Orchestra/Jorg Faerber
11.40 Weber Concertino in E minor, Op 45
Anthony Halstead (horn)
Hanover Band /Roy Goodman
Repeated from yesterday
11.30pm
Nicholas Vallis Davies (flute) Sian Vallis Davies (oboe)
Paul Searle Barnes (piano) lbert Two Interludes
Damase Trio
Widor Suite for flute and piano, Op 34
Gaubert Tarantelle
The Song Tree: Music
Course 1 - The Vanishing Hole 2.15 Together Stories
2.30 Dance Workshop 2.50 Poetry Corner
John Amis introduces choice and interesting performances by famous Purcellians of the recent past: two Fantasias and the Chacony in G minor for strings directed by Thurston Dart : an Elegy on the Death of Queen Mary performed by Patricia Clark and Ann Dowdall ; Jennifer Vyvyan singing The Blessed
Virgin's Expostulation;
George Malcolm introducing a selection of harpsichord pieces; Peter Pears , James Bowman and John Shirley -Quirk singing with Benjamin Britten at the piano; and a Trio Sonata directed by Arnold Goldsborough. Producer Patrick Lambert
Margaret Bennett celebrates the music of the wedding dance and the social gathering, in the first of three programmes exploring the song and instrumental traditions of Scotland.
Producer lain Maclnnes
One of the most enduring musical forms is the verse-and-chorus one. Tommy Pearson takes a look at why this form has been around for so long and is still going strong. With the help of Tanita Tikaram.
with Natalie Wheen , including the findings of the recent conference of the Association of British
Orchestras.
Producer Gwen Hughes
conductor David Atherton
Bryn Terfel (baritone) Mozart
Symphony No 40 in G minor Mahler Kindertotenlieder
8.25 Interval
Meirion Hughes explores the uneasy relationship between Elgar and the music critics of his day.
8.45 Elgar Enigma Variations Given in the Brangwyn Hall. Swansea, sponsored by the Wales Tourist Board
5: Founding an English School. Dr lain Pears, historian, discusses the formal nature of Lely's and Kneller's Restoration portraits in an era of excess, and describes how the developing popularity of the portrait spurred new methods of mass-production and the rise of the travelling painter.
The Hilliard Ensemble's
1994 festival in Cambridge included this concert from
Great St Mary's.
Ivan Moody is the guide on a musical journey through the night: first performances by Veljo Tormis ,
Elena Flrsova and Paul Robinson are juxtaposed with Renaissance music on the theme of night by Lassus, de Rore and Goudlmel. A Magenta Music production
Perpendicular Gothic architecture, a new style for a new age, coincided with the emergence of the English state in the years 1330-1530. Professor Joe Mordaunt Crook, of London University, visits five examples: King's College Chapel, Cambridge; Gloucester Cathedral; the Pilgrims' Inn in Glastonbury; the Divinity School, Oxford University; and Wrexham Parish Church, Wales. He talks to Professor Jacques Heyman, Dr Christopher Wilson, Dr Caroline Barron, Dr John Blair and Professor Rees Davies about these miracles of structural engineering, and the society this style expressed.
Reader: Samuel West.
Beats on the drum of creation in a cross-cultural edition that brings together Jonathan Harvey 's evocation of Shiva as the four-armed dancer Nataraja, his mystical use of computer technology in From Silence and tracks from the recent collaboration of saxophonist Jan Garbarek with oud player
Anouar Braham and tabla player Shaukat Hussain.
Presented by Sarah Walker. Producer Alan Hall