With Penny Gore .
CPE Bach Flute Concerto in D minor, Wq22 Rachel Brown (Baroque flute), Brandenburg Consort , director Roy Goodman
6.25 Clemens non Papa Ego Ros Campi Henry's Eight
7.20 Chick Corea Children's Songs Colin Currie (vibraphone), Robin Michael (piano)
7.45 Spohr Potpourri, Op 23
Ulf Hoelscher (violin), Berlin RSO , conductor Christian Frohlich
8.00 George Anthell Archipelago
Hamburg State Philharmonic Orchestra, conductor Ingo Metzmacher
8.40 Wagner Siegfried Idyll
Academy of St Martin in the Fields, conductor Neville Marriner
With Donald Macleod. 5: Bach the Dramatist. Apparently, Bach never had the opportunity to write an opera, but invested his dramatic talents in his Passion settings, secular cantatas, and in his virtuoso keyboard performances.
Mer Hahn en Neue Oberkeet, BWV212 (Peasant's Cantata) (excerpts)
Emma Kirkby (soprano), David Thomas (bass), Academy of Ancient Music, director Christopher Hogwood
The Pacified Aeolus, BWV205 (excerpt) RIAS Chamber Choir, Akademie fur Alte Musik , director Rene Jacobs
Mit Verlangen Druck 'lch Deine Zarten Wangen (Phoebus and Pan, BWV201) Peter Lika (bass), Akademie fur Alte Musik , director Rene Jacobs
Toccata and Fugue in D, BWV538 Gerhard Weinberger (organ)
Partita No 2 in C minor, BWV826 Angela Hewitt (piano)
Artist John Keane reflects on his work to date and looks ahead to new projects.
With Jonathan Swain.
Poulenc Piano Concerto Francois-Rene Duchable, Rotterdam Philharmonic Orchestra, conductor James Conlon
10.25 Britten Our Hunting Fathers
Peter Pears (tenor), London Symphony Orchestra, conducted by the Composer
Edinburgh International Festival
Live from the Queen's Hall, Sandy Burnett introduces a song recital from mezzo
Petra Lang and pianist Charles Spencer. Brahms Es Schauen die Blumen, Op 96 No 3; Liebestreu, Op 3 No 1; Mein
Wundes Herz Verlangt, Op 59 No 7; Dein Blaues Auge , Op 59 No 8; Meine Liebe 1st Grun, Op 63 No 5
Wagner Wesendonk Lieder
11.40 Twenty Minutes: Shan Khan at the Hub
Andrew McKinnon speaks to Scottish playwright Shan Khan and director Abigail Morris about Khan's play Office.
12.00 Liszt Es Muss ein Wunderbares
Sein; Freudvoll und Leidvoll;
UberAllen Gipfeln 1st Ruh; 0 Lieb, So LangDu Lieben Kannst; DerDu Von dem Himmel Bist
Strauss Wir Beide Wollen Springen; Du Meines Herzens Kronelein, Op 21 No 2; Seitdem Dein Aug' in Meines Schaute, Op 17 No 1; Wiegenlied, Op 41 No 1; Zueignung, Op 10 No 1
Susan Sharpe introduces another concert in the series from all around Wales.
Today's recital was recorded earlier this year in Aberysthwyth University's Great Hall as part of the town's Musicfest.
Scott Dickinson (viola), Nicholas Jones (cello), Schidlof Quartet
Brahms Sextet in G, Op 36
Another chance to hear Monday's concert from the Royal Albert Hall . Moscow Soloists, director Yuri Bashmet (viola) Britten Two Portraits
Hindemlth Trauermusik
Shostakovich Sinfonia in B flat minor for viola and strings (arr Alexander Tchaikovsky from String Quartet No 13)
Britten Lachrymae
Tchaikovsky Souvenir de Florence (R)
Another chance to hear Julian Joseph's profile of the British pianist and composer George Shearing. (R)
Sean Rafferty presents a selection of music for early-evening listening, plus news of what's happening in the arts world.
Live from the Royal Albert Hall.
Ligeti's Requiem brought him international fame when its haunting vocal clusters were used by Stanley Kubrick in the film 2001: A Space Odyssey. Two concertos fill the second half of tonight's Prom - Bartok's Concerto for Orchestra, written in New York in 1943, and Stravinsky's neoclassical showpiece, written in Paris in 1931. Presented by Chris de Souza.
Caroline Stein (soprano), Charlotte Hellekant (mezzo), Thomas Zehetmair (violin), London Voices, BBC Symphony Orchestra, conductor Esa-Pekka Salonen
Ligeti Requiem
8.05 Twenty Minutes
Writer Bonnie Greer delivers another talk on the experience of exile, reflecting one of the themes of this season's Proms.
8.25 Stravinsky Violin Concerto
Bartok Concerto for Orchestra
(Repeated next Tuesday at 2pm)
Another chance to hear Ray Davison arguing the case for Albert Camus as the pre-eminent novelist/philosopher of the 20th century. (R)
John Surman and Jack DeJohnette
Another chance to hear saxophonist John Surman with drummer Jack DeJohnette and London Brass at Norwich Cathedral, in a work commissioned by Jazz On 3for the Norwich Festival. Plus
Jack DeJohnette 's Suite fora Better World.
Producers Steve Shepherd and Kathryn Willgress (R)
With Jonathan Swain.
Rachmaninov Piano Concerto No 3 in D minor
Brahms, orch Schoenberg Piano Quartet No 1 in G minor, Op 25
2.30 Bach Goldberg Variations, BWV988
3.55 Boufii Grand Duo for clarinets, Op 2 No 1
4.10 Schreker Symphonic Interlude (Der Schatzgraber)
4.25 Corelli Sonata da Chiesa in G minor, Op 1 No 10
4.40 Purcell Begin the Song, and Strike the Living Lyre
4.50 Poulenc Elegie for two pianos
5.00 Liszt Hungarian Rhapsody No 1 in F minor
5.10 Fesch Concerto in G minor for two flutes, Op 5 No 2
5.20 Schutz Vater Abraham Erbarme Dich Mein
5.35 Ambrosio Rostiboli Gioioso
5.50 Kabalevsky Overture: Colas Breugnon