Presented by Penny Gore . Music includes:
7.00-8.30: Herold Overture:
Zampa Saint-Saens Caprice-Valse , Op 76 (Wedding Cake) Bach Keyboard Concerto in F, BWV1057 8 .30-10.00: Buffardin Concerto a 5 Schubert Deutscher, 0618 Gounod Ballet music: Faust
With Rob Cowan. Music includes:
D Scariatti Sonatas: in D, Kk33; in A minor Kk54; in D Kk491 Vladimir Horowitz (piano)
10.12 Nicolai Nun eilt herbei.... Frohsinn und Laune (Die lustigen Weiber von Windsor, Act 1) Lotte Lehmann (soprano), Berlin State Opera Orchestra, conductor Manfred Gurlitt
10.18 Massenet Suite No 3: Scenes Dramatiques National Orchestra of Monte-Carlo Opera, conductor John Eliot Gardiner
10.39 Bartok Violin Sonata No I, Sz84
David Oistrakh , Sviatoslav Richter (piano)
11.13 A Scarlatti Concerto Grosso No 1 in F minor Soloists of the Scarlatti Orchestra of Naples, conductor Ettore Gracis
11.26 Brahms Brauner Bursche ; Kommt dir manchmal in den Sinn; Hochgeturmte Rimaflut (Zigeunerlieder, Op 103)
Lotte Lehmann (soprano), Paul Ulanowsky (piano)
11.34 Dohnanyi Variations on a Nursery Song, Op 25 Zoltan Kocsis (piano), Budapest Festival Orchestra, conductor Ivan Fischer
3/5. Donald Macleod advances a year in Schumann's life to 1841, when vocal music gave way to orchestral music.
Schlusslied des Narren (Funf Lieder und
Gesange, Op 127) Jonathan Lemalu (baritone), Graham Johnson (piano)
Symphony No 1 in B flat (Spring)
Berlin PO, conductor James Levine Overture, Scherzo and Finale, Op 52
Seattle SO, conductor Gerard Schwarz
Repeated on Tuesday at 12 midnight
Edinburgh International Festival
Aspiring medic David Fung deferred his studies to take to the concert platform when he won the Symphony Australia Young Performer of the Year Award in 2002. He makes his Edinburgh
International Festival debut at the Queen's Hall with a programme of music by Liszt, Ravel, Schumann and Rachmaninov. Presented by Sara Mohr-Pietsch .
David Fung (piano)
Schumann Arabeske in C, Op 18
Rachmaninov Variations on a Theme ofCorelli, Op31 Ravel La Valse
Liszt Piano Sonata in B minor
Ian Bostridge (tenor), Orchestra of St Luke's, conductor Donald Runnicles
Stravinsky Concerto in E flat (Dumbarton Oaks) Lutoslawski Paroles Tissées
Wagner Siegfried Idyll
Mozart Symphony No 41 in C. K551 (Jupiter) Repeated from Thursday
Live from the Priory Church, Edington,
Wiltshire,during the 2006 Festival of Music within the Liturgy. Introit: Before
Abraham Was , I Am (Antony Pitts ) First performance. Responses: Tomkins. Office Hymn: Caelestis Urbs Jerusalem (Plainsong). Psalms: 114, 115 (Tonus Peregrinus, Elvey). First Reading:
Jeremiah 43. Magnificat Ouinti Toni (Praetorius). Second Reading: Mark 3, vv19b-end. Nunc
Dimittis (Plainsong). Anthem: Lord, Thou Hast Been Our Refuge (Vaughan Williams). Final
Hymn: Praise to God Whose Word Was Spoken (St Helen). Organ Voluntary: Variations sur
I'Hymne Lucis Creator (Alain). Choir directors
Andrew Carwood , Robert Ouinney and Jeremy Summerly. Organist Matthew Martin.
Petroc Trelawny presents a selection of music.
Live from the Royal Albert Hall , London.
Bach, Shakespeare and the Requiem Mass are all influences behind tonight's UK premiere by one of Britain's most exciting composers. Mark-Anthony Turnage 's A Relic of Memory is a kind of memorial frieze with tumultuous full orchestra and contrasting cool a cappella passages. The rest of the evening is distinctly Russian, with Prokofiev's virtuosic and ground-breaking piano concerto, which caused a near-riot at its premiere in 1913, followed by Rachmaninov's epic choral symphony. Presented by Martin Handley.
Tatiana Monogarova (soprano),
Vsevolod Grivnov (tenor), Sergei Leiferkus (baritone),
Nikolai Lugansky (piano), Philharmonia Chorus, London Philharmonic Choir and Orchestra, conductor Vladimir Jurowski
Mark-Anthony Turnage A Relic of Memory (first UK performance)
Prokofiev Piano Concerto No 2
8.30 TWenty Minutes: Poe the Poet
Taking his cue from Edgar Allan Poe 's The Bells, which inspired Rachmaninov, poet
Lemn Sissay goes in search of Poe the poet.
With readings by Kerry Shale.
8.50 Rachmaninov The Bells
Also broadcast on B8C4
This Prom is repeated on Wednesday 6 September at 2pm Kerry Shale's Face Behind the Voice: page 111
Singer Dessislava Stefanova travels back to her native Bulgaria in search of the roots of the women's choral tradition there, exploring its
Soviet-era growth, and showing how it became a most captivating and successful world genre. <R)
Verity Sharp introduces the sound of bells from Camille and Marin Marais, and specially recorded music from the Mehinako people of Brazil.
4/5. With Donald Macleod. Merci, Doux
Crépuscule; Nature Immense (Damnation of Faust); Harold in Italy Repeated from Thursday
With Jonathan Swain.
Chopin Scherzos: No 2 in B flat minor, Op 31; No 3 in C sharp minor, Op 39 Lipattl Sonatine for the left hand Beethoven Piano Sonata in C minor, Op 111 John Oqdon (piano)
1.54 Brahms Violin Concerto in D 2.33 Mahler, arr Schoenberq and Riehn Das Lied von der Erde
3.39 Anon 12th-century English Worldes Blis Ne Last No Throwe 3.51 Tournier Images, Op 35
4.02 Debussy L'lsle Joyeuse 4.08 Chabrier Espana
4.15 Boccherini, arr Squarcia String Quintet in C, G324 (Musica Notturna delle Strade di Madrid) 4.30 Brahms, arr Lee Wiegenlied (Funf Lieder, Op 49 No 4)4.32 Lehar No-One Loves You So (Paganini) 4.37 Franck Le Chasseur Maudit 4.52 Jongen Allegro Appassionato , Op 95, No 2
5.00 Bach, arr anon Prelude (Partita No 3 in E, BWV1006)
5.04 Mendelssohn Overture: Die schone Melusine
5.16 Cavalli Salve Regina 5.25 Sweelinck Ricercare in A minor 5.37 Marais Deuxieme Suite de Pièces; Trio in G
5.59 Vivaldi Violin Concerto in D, RV234 (L'lnquietudine)
6.06 Kodaly Duo, Op 7 6.31 Liszt Valse Oubliee No
6.34 Zarebski, orch Maklakiewicz Dances Polonaises