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APRIL PENDARVIS (Contralto)
THE HENRY BRONKHURST TRIO :
Julius ROSTALL (Violin) ; EDWARD ROBINSON
(Violoncello) ; HENRY BRONKHURST
(Pianoforte)
SCHUMANN once, with characteristic enthusiasm, wrote of this Trio by Schubert :
' One glance at it, and this poor world of ours appears fresh and bright.'
It is the first of Schubert's two Piano Trios
(which were written in close succession), and is in four separate Movements.
FIRST MOVEMENT (Moderately quick). Schubert sets out at once with a splendid, exulting tune, played by Violin and Violoncello in octaves. Presently Piano takes up the tune, accompanied by a soft, repeated chord in the Violin, and a few low plucked notes in the Violoncello. Then all three get busy with fragments of it.
After a while the music quietens down,
Violoncello pauses on a high note, then, starting with that note, begins the tender second main tune.
A third tune is used to round off this section ; then a long development section follows, in which the two main tunes are beautifully varied and combined. Finally, the first section is repeated with only slight alterations.
SECOND MOVEMENT. (At a steady pace).
It is noticeable in this Movement that the Violoncello is almost continually playing in its highly poetic upper range.
THIRD MOVEMENT, SCHERZO (Fast). The
Italian word ' scherzo,' as we know, means a joke, but it is here, as frequently, used as the title of a piece which is, in general, very lively and full of good spirits.
FOURTH MOVEMENT, RONDO (Quick and lively). This Rondo is a long Movement, and is, in reality, rather complicated. But in effect it is very light and rather frivolous. The main tune is a gay one, started by Violin in its higher range, and carried on by the Piano, the Violoncello merely murmuring occasional assent. But though this is the main tune, which continually returns, the greater part of the Movement is made out of a second tune which appears very early. This tune has two distinct sections—a rather pompous emphatic phrase, played by all three instruments, and a more irresponsible phrase in a jerky rhythm, played first by Violin. 4.30 APRIL PENDARVIS Selected Songs
(Continued in column 3.)

Hughes Macklin (Tenor)
Orrea Pernel (Violin)
The Wireless Military Band
Conducted by B. Walton O'Donnell
Anton Rubinstein (1829-94) was not content with the fame of a great pianist that was his. He himself wrote music, not aa a mere side-line of a great executant, but on a vast scale, with the loftiest of ideas and ideals.
His Opera The Demon, produced in St. Petersburg in 1875, reached London in 1881, when Rubinstein was giving some of his famous historical pianoforte recitals here. The plot concerns the efforts of a demon, an elemental spirit, to win a princess. The music owes some of its attractiveness to its Eastern idiom and colouring.

9.0 Weather Forecast, Second General News Bulletin

9.15 Mr. Richard Hughes: A Travel Talk
As a poet, Mr. Hughes is well known to all lovers of literature, but to listeners in particular he is remembered as one of the first, if not the very first, of authors to write a play specifically for the Radio. The combination of Mr. Hughes' travelling experiences and his literary ability should make a Talk of unusual interest.

2LO London

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This data is drawn from the Radio Times magazine between 1923 and 2009. It shows what was scheduled to be broadcast, meaning it was subject to change and may not be accurate. More