News and market trends
Thursday's 7.50 talk
The morning magazine
Introduced by JACK DE MANIO
Food news from LOUISE DAVIES followed by an interlude
A Pilgrimage for Passion Week
A series of talks recorded in Jerusalem by CANON HUGH MONTEFIORE
5: To Calvary
tSecond hearing of the broadcast at 7.40
Or The Lure of Hatton Garden ROBERT DONALDSON talks about
' the garden ' past and present
by ERNEST MORET
Part 2
Lune froide et sans aureole
Le ciel est très bas
La mouette
Interlude: Dans la chambre close, la nuit
II pleut des pétales de fleurs La Iettre
Sur le lac enchanté du silence sung by LILY KETTLEWELL (mezzo-soprano) with ERNEST LUSH (piano) first broadcast performance
Haydn Gramophone records of movements from the symphonies and a duet from The Creation
New Every Morning, page 102 0 God of truth, whose living word (BBC H.B. 359)
Canticle 10
St. Luke 22, vv. 39-53
What sorrow sore (BBC H.B. 96)
DANNY LEVAN AND HIS QUINTET
and his
LATIN-AMERICAN Music
A short version of Bernard$haw's play with Vanessa Redgrave adapted and introduced by LANCE SIEVEKING
Produced by SUNDAY WILSHIN Broadcast on March 11, 1962, in the BBC General Overseas Service
Memories of days past and occasions great and small Introduced by ROBERT GUNNELL
Radio correspondence column in which listeners add their comments to some of the views expressed in 'Any Questions? ' Thursday's broadcast in the Light Programme
Forecast for land areas. Detailed forecast for the South-East
GALE PEDRICK selects highlights from the many broadcasts on BBC sound and television during the past seven days Introduced by JOHN ELLISON
SVIATOSLAV RICHTER (piano)
GALINA VISHNEVSKAYA (soprano) with ALEXANDER DEDYUKHIN (piano) and MSTISLAV ROSTROPOVICH (piano) on gramophone records
Some literary points of view from the BBC Sound Archives
Introduced by STEVE RACE Produced by JOHN POWELL
From the BBC Sound Archives
Play Gypsy
DEBEN BHATTACHAITYA who has recorded music in many countries during the last ten years introduces some of the songs and dances he has collected from the gypsies of Hungary, Persia, and Spain, and considers the wandering tribes of India from which all gypsies are considered to have come Produced by DENYS GUEROULT
PAULINE TINSLEY (soprano)
BBC WELSH ORCHESTRA
Leader, Philip Whiteway Conductor, RAE JENKINS
A dialogue story written by JOHN D. STEWART
Fishing for Trout Introduced by CICELY MATHEWS
by ANTHONY HOPE
The Amazing Adventure of an English Gentleman dramatised in three parts by HOWARD AGG with Alan Wheatley
Olive Gregg and Norman Shelley
3: In the Castle
Produced by GRAHAM GAULD
Forecast for land areas. Detailed forecast for the South-East
Introduced by Harvey TORBETT
With ALAN WRANGLES talking about the whiting
A programme of Continental melodies
R. F. Rattray, Vice-chairman of the R.S.P.C.A. takes issue with W. R. Wooldridge
Scientific Director of the Animal Health Trust and Cyril Mills of the circus.
Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra
Prokofiev Symphony No 1
Reger Variations & Fugue on a Theme of Beethoven
Dvorak Symphony No 9
A selection of wit, music, and humour
Introduced by BASIL BOOTHROYD of Punch
Musical interludes on gramophone records chosen by Robert Irwin Produced by JOHN BRIDGES
The News
Background to the News People in the News
Valse mignonne Finnish Rhythms
Karelian dance
Minuet in B minor Uneasy conscience West Finnish dance
Evening whispers The sea played by WILFRID PARRY (piano)
followed by an interlude
Mine Own Executioner by NIGEL BALCHIN adapted for radio by Naomi Lewis read by GABRIEL WOOLF Fifth of fifteen instalments
Bach
Partita No. 1, in B flat major:
Prelude; Allemande: Corrente; Sarabande; Minuets I and II; Gigue
Prelude and Fugue in G sharp minor (The Well-tempered Clavier, Book 2) played by ALAN FEN-TAYLOR (harpsichord) First of seven programmes including all the keyboard Partitas
Partita No. 2 in C minor played by Maurice Cole: April 19