Music includes:
7.00-8.30: J Strauss (son)
Waltz: Where the Lemons Bloom, Op 364
Boston Pops Orchestra, conductor Arthur Fiedler Paganini, arr Auer Caprice, Op 1 No 24
Ivry Gitlis (violin), Tasso Janopoulo (piano)
Brixi Symphony in D Czech Philharmonic Chamber Orchestra, conductor Vojtech Spurny
8.30-10.00: Bach Toccata in G, BWV916 Gustav Leonhardt (harpsichord)
Weiner Presto (Hungarian Folk Dance Suite) Danubia SO, conductor Domonkos Heja
Debussy Cortege etAir de Danse (LEnfant Prodigue) Royal Philharmonic Orchestra, conductor Thomas Beecham
Presented by Sarah Walker.
Faure Impromptu No 5 in F sharp minor, Op 102 Vladimir Horowitz (piano)
10.04 Strauss Opening, Act 1: Der Rosenkavalier Elisabeth Schwarzkopf (soprano: Marschallin), Christa Ludwig (mezzo: Octavian),Ã Philharmonia, conductor Herbert von Karajan
10.21 Grainger Ramble on Love (Final Duet: Rosenkavalier) - Marc-Andre Hamelin (piano)
10.29 Tchaikovsky Violin Concerto in D - Vadim Repin, Kirov Orchestra, conductor Valery Gergiev
11.06 Trad Green Forest; In the House - Pokrovsky Ensemble
11.11 Schoenberg Five Pieces, Op 16 - South West German RSO, conductor Michael Gielen
11.30 Haydn Piano Trio in G minor, H XV - Beaux Arts Trio
11.44 Sibelius Night-Ride and Sunrise - Bavarian RSO, conductor Eugen Jochum
3/5. Like many of his fellow patriots, Janacek had a great enthusiasm for exploring his Slavonic birthright, and developed an admiration for all things Russian. Donald Macleod asks John Tyrrell about Janacek's most eastward-looking music. Prelude: From the House of the Dead
London Sinfonietta, conductor Charles Mackerras Hospodine Petr Sovadina (organ),
Ludmila Solarova (harp), Prague Philharmonic Choir and Symphony Orchestra, conductor Jiri Pinkas
Prophecy and Death of Taras Bulba (Taras Bulba) Bavarian RSO, conductor Rafael Kubelik String Quartet No 1 (Kreutzer Sonata) Alban Berg Quartet
Glagolitic Mass (excerpt) Eva Urbanova (soprano), Marta Benackova (mezzo), Vladimir Bogachov (tenor), Richard Novak (bass), Thomas Trotter (organ), Slovak Philharmonic Choir, Vienna
Philharmonic Orchestra, conductor Richard Chailly
Repeated at 8.45pm
Radio 3 Lunchtime Concert
A recital recorded at the Queen's Hall during last year's Edinburgh International Festival.
Emily Beynon (flute), Andrew West (piano) Prokofiev Five Melodies, Op 35 Debussy Syrinx
Poulenc Flute Sonata
Prokofiev Flute Sonata
Borne Carmen Fantasy
Poulenc La Reine de Coeur (La Courte Paille)
2.00 Dresden Staatskapelle
Introduced by Fiona Talkington.
Wagner Prelude: Parsifal Conductor Paavo Jarvi Liszt Piano Concerto No I in E flat
Yundi Li, conductor Paavo Jarvi Schumann Symphony No 2 in C conductor Paavo Jarvi
Galuppi Mass forSt Mark's Basilica
Kornerscher Sing-Verein , Dresden, Dresdner Instrumental-Concert, director Peter Kopp Shostakovich Violin Concerto No I, Op 99 Vadim Repin , conductor Vladimir Jurowski Mozart Symphony No 33 in B flat, K319 director Christian Zacharias
Sean Rafferty presents a selection of music, with studio guests and news from the arts world.
Presented by Petroc Trelawny . Edward Gardner , now music director of the English National Opera, conducts an all-English programme. Sarah Connolly (mezzo), BBC Symphony Orchestra, conductor Edward Gardner Britten, orch Colin Matthews A Charm of Lullabies
Britten Phaedra
Julian Anderson Symphony Walton Symphony No 1
Repeated from 12 noon
Matthew Sweet talks to Ian Jack , who is about to step down as editor of one of Britain's leading literary magazines, Granta, after more than a decade in the job. How does he assess the changing face of fiction and non-fiction in this country and abroad during his time in charge?
Plus a discussion of a new exhibition of the work of the artist Euan Uglow. Producer Zahid Warley
Presented by Petroc Trelawny. Violinist Vadim Repin begins tonight's programme with Prokofiev's Five Melodies.
Lingua Franca 2
3/4. Frontiers of the Tongue. What happens when two very different language families rub up against each other? Is it a case of oil and water, or do they merge happily into a new hybrid linguistic brew? Luxembourg, Brussels and Strasbourg may have different stories to tell. Michael Rosen finds out.
Verity Sharp 's selections include instrumental music from the southern Appalachians,
Argentinian tango from Juan Carlos Caceres , and a Chopin nocturne recorded by theremin pioneer Clara Rockmore.
Presented by Jonathan Swain.
Schubert Octet in F, D803 Vilde Frang Bjoerke and Elisabeth Dingstad (violins), Bendik Foss (viola), Audun Sandvik (cello), Hakon Thelin (double bass), Andreas Sunden (clarinet), Audun Halorsen (bassoon), Jukka Harjo (horn)
2.03 Lassus Au Feu, au Feu, Venez-Moi Secourir Anon Istampita Parlamento
2.10 Debussy Estampes
2.25 Haydn Symphony No 67 in
2.51 Korngold Violin Concerto
3.19 Lehar Aria: Nem Szeret Igy Teged Mas (Paganini)
3.23 Stravinsky Concerto in D (Baste Concerto)
3.36 Strauss Suite in B flat, Op 4
4.00 Glinka Overture: Ruslan and Lyudmila
4.05 Hummel Piano Trio in F, Op 22
4.19 Roussel Coeur en Peril, Op 50 No 1
4.22 Debussy Beau Soir
4.24 Vivaldi Violin Concerto in D. RV234
4.31 Wllbye Weepe, Mine Eyes
4.34 Sweelinck Unter der Linden grime
4.40 Vaughan Williams Norfolk Rhapsody No 1 in E minor
4.52 Purcell Sonata No 9 in F. ZBIO (Golden)
5.00 Svendsen Norwegian Artists' Carnival
5.07 Debussy Fetes Galantes, Set 2
5.15 Vlerne Clairde Lune
5.26 Bach Lobet den Herrn, alle Heiden, BWV230
5.32 Mihelcic Nocturne
5.38 Dvorak In Nature's Realm
5.53 Hellendaal Cello Sonata, Op 5 No 5
6.06 Beethoven Symphony No 5 in C minor
6.40 Collizi/Kauchlltz Organ Sonatina I in G, Op 8
6.43 Szokolay Harpsichord Sonatina
6.47 Tchaikovsky Voyevoda in A minor - Symphonic Ballad