Presented by Martin Handley.
7.00-8.00: Boyce Symphony in D, Op 2 No 5 Boccherini Guitar Quintet in D, G448 No 4
8.00-9.00: Bach Brandenburg Concerto No I in F BWV1046 Stravinsky Octet
Rob Cowan introduces surprises and treasures from his record collection. Including the recording of Debussy's Syrinx recommended on yesterday's CD Review. Music also includes: Ermanno Wolf-Ferrari Overture: II Segreto di Susanna Zurich Tonhalle Orchestra conducted by the composer
Beethoven Variations on BeiMannern
Andre Navarra (cello), Pierre Sancan (piano) Guerrero Beata Dei Genitrix
Tallis Scholars , conductor Peter Philips
Bruch Violin Concerto No I in G minor Ivry Gitlis , Vienna SO, conductor Jascha Horenstein Wolf Der Feuerreiter ; Gesang Weylas ;
Der Rattenf anger Juliane Banse (soprano),
Dietrich Henschel (baritone), Berlin Radio Choir, Berlin Deutsches SO, conductor Kent Nagano Zelenka Concerto in G a 8, ZWVI86 Freiburg Baroque Orchestra
Faure Au Bord de I'Eau, Op 8 No 1; La Rose, Op 51 No 2 Ninon Vallin (soprano), Pierre Darck (piano) Spohr Clarinet Concerto No 1 in C minor
Gervase de Peyer, LSO, conductor Colin Davis Bach Adagio (Violin Sonata in C, BWV1005) Vasa Prihoda
Dlstler Wachet Auf , Ruft uns die Stimme Munich Monteverdi Choir, conductor Konrad von Abel Ravel Pavane pour une Infante Défunte Jean Doyen (piano)
Michael Berkeley asks actor Rebecca Front about her musical passions, which include concertos by Mozart and Gershwin, symphonies by Brahms and Mahler, and vocal music by Purcell and Britten.
Motets by Wert, and Gesualdo's Tenebrae
Responsories for Holy Saturday performed by the BBC Singers, conductor Andrew Carwood. Recorded at St George's Church, Belfast. Presented by Lucie Skeaping.
Bartok and Folk Music
Hungarian singer Marta Sebestyen and her great folk band Muzsikas combine with the Takacs
Quartet to interleave some of Bartok's best-known chamber music with the Hungarian, Transylvanian and Romanian folk songs and dances from which it derives, and field recordings from the Bartok archive. From the Sage,
Gateshead. Presented by Stephanie Hughes.
New series 1/4. Janet Craxton. Oboist
Nicholas Daniel tells Tom Robinson why his teacher. Janet Craxton , has become his icon, and what it was that made her the outstanding oboist of her generation. With music by Mozart and Haydn, Britten and Vaughan Williams , Francis Routh and Francis Poulenc. Producer Alan Hall
Louise Fryer introduces more listeners' requests, including Mozart's Symphony No 25 in G minor, Zelenka's Trio Sonata No 2 in G and, as part of this month's featured theme of accompanists, the partnership of Dietrich-Fischer Dieskau and Gerald Moore performing Hugo Wolf 's song-cycle the Michelangelo Lieder.
Phone: [number removed] (calls from land lines cost no more than 8p per minute) email via [email address removed] Address: 3 for All, [address removed]
Petroc Trelawny talks to German baritone Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau ; David Nice and Ismene Brown review a new book exploring the collaboration between Prokofiev and the ballet impresario
Diaghilev; and, 91-year-old Margaret Elliot talks about life in St Paul 's Girls' School in Hammersmith, London, during the years when Gustav Hoist was the music master there. Producer Paul Frankl
Aled Jones meets Westminster Abbey organist James O'Donnell and historian Roy Strong to look at the rich tradition of choral music written for royal ceremonies. He gets a perspective on the last coronation from two former Abbey choristers and speaks to Master of the Queen's Music, Peter Maxwell Davies. With music by Purcell, Walton, William Mathias , Byrd, Tomkins, Handel, Boyce, Parry and Vaughan Williams.
By Orhan Pamuk. Dramatised by James Friel. Translated by Maureen Freely.
Ka, a poet and political exile, returns to Turkey to write an investigative piece about troubling events in the mysterious snow-shrouded city of Kars - a place haunted by the silences of its own history.
Archaeologist and poet Christine Finn looks at how poets such as Seamus Heaney , UA Fanthorpe,
Jeremy Hooker and Mario Petrucci are inspired by archaeology. Featuring a new poem by Petrucci, Terranauts. Producers Marya Burgess and Julian May
1/5. With Donald Macleod.
I'm Not in Love (Film: Night Beat): On the March (Youth Music, 1st mvt); Violin Sonata No 1, Op 13: Concert Overture: May Day: Prelude (Film: The Prisoner); String Quartet No 4 Repeated from Monday at 12 noon
With John Shea.
A selection of Japanese music from the Seventh World Symposium on Choral Music at Kyoto. 2.04 Beethoven Symphony No 2 in D 2.37 Dvorak Piano Trio in F minor, Op 65 3.19 Weber Invitation to the Dance, Op 65
3.29 Boccherini Cello Concerto No 5 in D, G478
3.49 Kraus Sinfonie in D 4.08 Handel Oft on a Plat of Rising Ground (L'Allegro, il Penseroso ed il Moderate)
4.11 Pisendel Violin Sonata in C minor (attrib Bach as BWV1024) 4.27 Kadosa Sonatina on Hungarian Folk
Songs 4.32 Piazzolla Tango: Adios Noniho 4.41 Massenet Méditation (Thais) 4.47 Hldas Adagio 5.00 Beethoven Overture: Coriolan 5.07 Brahms Rhapsody in G minor, Op 79 No 2 5.15 Pachelbel Canon and Gigue in D
5.20 Ryulchl Sakamoto Cantus Omnibus Unus
5.24 Bach Brandenburg Concerto No 2 in F, BWV1047
5.36 Kodaly Adagio 5.44 Moniuszko The Reason
5.46 Noskowski Overture: Sir Zolzikiewicz 5.53 Bartok Piano Suite, Op 14 6.03 Mendelssohn Overture: Calm Sea and Prosperous Voyage 6.15 Haydn String Quartet in G, Op 76 No 16.35 Weber Symphony No 1 in C