and summary of today's programmes for the Forces
on gramophone records
Exercises for men : Coleman Smith
7.40 For women : May Brown
At the pianos, Barbara Laing and Andrew Bryson.
Movements from Mozart's Violin Concertos
Rev. Leslie Weatherhead
' Feeding our Factory-Workers ', by Irene Clift
and his Orchestra, with Pat Macor mac, Maureen, Harry Kaye , and Elizabeth Batey
at the organ of the Granada, Tooting
Conductor, Stanley Berkeley
-from page 105 of ' New Every Morning and page 24 of ' Each Returning Day '. Awake, our souls I Psalm 11 ; Lord, thy word abideth
Reg. Pursglove and his Orchestra
Alexander Keith presents some songs of Scotland, sung by Jean Summers (soprano) and Duncan Murray (baritone). At the piano, Ian Whyte
Concert given by war-workers during their lunch-hour break in a factory in the South
' The Making of a Breed' : talk for poultry-keepers by Alan Thompson and Michael Pease *
played by Tom Bromley and Mantle Childe
Charles Maxwell presents recorded memories of well-known artists
Singing and instrumental music by the prize-winners in the twenty-third year of the Edinburgh Musical Festival Association, and thirty-second year of the Glasgow Musical Festival Association
Richard Crean and his Orchestra
Octet, Op. 166 played by the Menges Quartet, with James Merrett , Jun. (double bass) ; Pauline Juler (clarinet) ; Dennis Brain (horn) ; Cecil James (bassoon)
The ever-changing moods of the English countryside, with music and songs on records. No. 15-' Oxfordshire '. written by Denis Preston and produced by Charles Maxwell and Frederick Piffard
Sgwrs gan T. Hughes Jones. (Talk in Welsh)
' Donkey Serenade ' : programme in praise of the donkey, written by Loftus Wigram , with Bettie Bucknelle. Vera Lennox , Fred Yule , Ewart Scott , BBC Revue Orchestra ; conductor, Mansel Thomas. Programme produced by Morfudd Mason Lewis
' Nature's Manufacturers ' : talk by William Aspden
National and Regional announcements
with a hay-maker, a fly-fisherman, and an exasperated Lord Mayer
Conductor, Leslie Woodgate
Conductor, Stanford Robinson
with the Bachelor Girls, Peter Akister , and George Elliott. Presented by James Moody
by William Gallacher , M.P.
adapted by Howell Davies from the novel by Antoine Saint-Exupery . Produced by Robert Speaight. (Previously broadcast on December 16, 1942)
An Anglo-American show, introducing ' Brothers-in-Arms ', ' Salute with Music', and guest stars from both sides of the Atlantic. With ' Slim' Allan, the Dorothe Morrow Singers, and Leslie Mitchell (by courtesy of British Movietonews). Augmented Dance Orchestra, conducted by Billy Ternent. Script by Hal Block. Directed by Gordon Crier.
Ernest K. Lindley
Play by Edgar Wallace , adapted and produced by Hugh Stewart
Evening prayers
' Listen, Miss Wilkes', written by Kathleen Treves , and read by Molly Maureen.
sung by Engel Lund (mezzo-soprano). Accompanist,
Ferdinand Rauter Denmark : Paaskeklokken kimed mildt
(The Easter bell pealed)
Norway : Eg heiter Anne Knutsdatter (I am called Anne Knut 's daughter)
France: J'ai vu le loup, le renard, le lièvre (I have seen the wolf, the fox, and the hare)
.Czechoslovakia : Tenkrate bude viktoria
(Then there will be victory)
England : Hares in the Mountains
Jewish : As ech wolt gehat (Cradle Song) Sweden : Uti vor Hage (Love Song from
Gotland)
Iceland : Litlu bornin leika sjer (Little children a-picking berries)
(' Hares in the Mountains ' arranged by Cecil Sharp ; other items by Ferdinand
Rauter)
and his Orchestra, with Beryl Davis , Len Camber , Derek Roy , Doreen Villiers , Johnnie Green , the Singing Sweethearts, Three Boys and a lyirl