AM With Penny Gore, including Marcello Oboe
Concerto in D minor Academy of Ancient Music, director Clare Shanks (Baroque oboe) 6.40 Debussy Images: Book 1
Kathryn Stott (piano), BBC Philharmonic, conductor Van Pascal Tortel ier 7.00 Delius
On Hearing the First Cuckoo in SpringHalle Orchestra, conductor John Barbirolli
7.30 Poulenc Flute Sonata
William Bennett , Clifford Benson (piano)
8.00 Beethoven Overture: Fidelio Vienna
Philharmonic, conductor Claudio Abbado
8.30 Bach Prelude and Fugue No 1 in C (The Well-Tempered Clavier, Book 1) AndrasSchiff (piano)
Donald Macleod continues his chronological survey of Faure's works. 2: Turning Points
Piano Quartet No 2 in G minor (1st mvt)
Marguerite Long , Jacques Thibaud (violin), Maurice Vieux (viola), Pierre Fournier (cello) Pavane Ensemble Vocal Jean Sourisse , director Emmanuel Strosser (piano)
Impromptu, Op 86 Marisa Robles (harp) La Bonne Chanson, Op 61 (Song cycle to poems by Verlaine) Suzanne Danco (soprano), Guido Agosti (piano)
Jatinder Verma. The second of this week's five programmes in which writer and director Jatinder Verma charts the process of staging his new play Genesis with his theatre company Tara Arts - Britain's first Asian theatre company.
With Stephanie Hughes.
Bach Oboe Concerto in F, BWV1053 Paul Goodwin , the King's Consort, director Robert King
10.26 Schumann Drei Fantasiestucke, Op 111
Shura Cherkassky (piano)
10.37 Schubert Fantasia in C, D934
Gidon Kremer (violin),
Valery Afanassiev (piano)
11.04 Haydn Symphony No 44 in E minor (Trauer)
Berlin Radio Symphony Orchestra, conductor Ferenc Fricsay
Artist in Focus: Alfred Brendel
The second of this week's five programmes in which Humphrey Burton introduces performances by the great
Austrian pianist Alfred Brendel drawn from the BBC archives. Today he concentrates on the 18th- and 19th-century German and Austrian classics.
Haydn Sonata in G, H XVI 40 Schubert Sonata in G, D894
Schumann Fantasy in C, Op 17
Beethoven Bagatelle in A minor, Wo059 (FurElise)
PM John Toal introduces a recital given earlier this year in the BT Studio of Belfast's
Waterfront Hall. Thomas Bowes (violin), Eleanor Alberga (piano)
Eigar Violin Sonata in E minor, Op 82 Alberga No-Man's-Land Lullaby
Szymanowski Nocturne and Tarantella, Op 28
BBC National Orchestra of Wales
Bizet L 'Arlesienne: Suite No
Conductor Paul Murphy lbert Flute Concerto Jonathan Snowden , conductor Paul Murphy
Massenet Orchestral Suite No 4 (Scenes Pittoresques) Conductor Paul Murphy
Sairrt-Saens Piano Concerto No 2 in G minor
Cecile Ousset , conductor Yan Pascal Tortelier
Poulenc Sinfonietta
Conductor Paul Murphy
lain Burnside introduces a recital given last month intheWigmore Hall, London, by baritone Stefan Genz and pianist Roger Vignoles , who perform settings of Mayrhofer by Schubert and a selection of Wolf's Morike-Lieder. Producer Clive Portbury
With Sean Rafferty. Music includes
Massenet's Orchestral Suite No 3 (Scenes Dramatiques) performed by the Monte Carlo Opera Orchestra, conductor
John Eliot Gardiner, and Chopin's Polonaise in F sharp minor, Op 44, played by pianist Maurizio Pollini.
Chris de Souza introduces a concert given last month in Symphony Hall, Birmingham, featuring a rarely performed work by Constant Lambert, an overture by Vaughan Williams and a concerto by Walton. Lambert studied at the Royal College of Music at the same time as Vaughan Williams in the twenties. Summer's Last
Will and Testament is a choral piece that uses words from Thomas Nashe 's masque about London during the plague years and is based upon Elizabethan dance forms.
Philip Dukes (viola), Jeremy Huw Williams (baritone), City of Birmingham Symphony Chorus and Orchestra, conductor Sakari Oramo
Vaughan Williams Overture: The Wasps Walton Viola Concerto
Lambert Summer's Last Will and Testament
Fifty years on from the foundation of the People's Republic of China, Isabel Hilton and guests discuss the architect of the Chinese Revolution - Mao Tse-tung - and his legacy. And in the second of this week's series The Lost Voices of British
Poetry Ruth Padel makes her case for a writerwho deserves a wider public.
Verity Sharp explores more connections and contrasts from North America. Plus old and new responses to the question of life and death.
Alyn Shipton introduces the second of two sets this week by singer Claire Martin and her band, recorded recently at Ronnie Scott 's club in London as part of the club's 40th anniversary celebrations.
With Jonathan Swain.
12.05am Ravel Tzigane Dongho An
(violin), Myungseon Kye (piano) 12.15
Gershwin Second Rhapsody William Tritt
(piano), Hamilton Philharmonic, conductor Boris Brott 12.35 Gesualdo Ave
Dulcissima Maria Monteverdi Choir, conductor John Eliot Gardiner 12.45 Pieter
Hellendaal Cello Sonata,0p5No 7Jaap ter Linden, Ton Koopman (harpsichord)
1.00 Cherubini // Giocatore Rinaldo di
Capua LaZingara I Solisti di Bologna, director Rudolfo Bonucci2.35 Lehar
Overture: Zigeunerliebe Saarboicken Radio Symphony Orchestra, conductor Franz Lehar 2.45 Horatio Parker A
Northern Ballad Albany Symphony Orchestra, conductor Julius Hegyi
3.00 5.00 Schools
Playtime 3.15 Time to Move 3.35 Let's
Make a Story 3.50 Drama Workshop 4.10 Together Stories 4.30 Hop, Skip and Jump
4.45 Sgeul an Orain
5.00 Mozart Clarinet Quintet in A, K581 Kalman Berkes, Bartok Quartet 5.25 Borodin In the Steppes of Central Asia Edmonton
Symphony Orchestra, conductor Uri Mayer
5.35 Balakirev Islamey Valerie Tryon (piano)5.45 Frederico Chueca ElAno
Pasado porAgua (excs) Ensemble de Madrid