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WINIFRED DAVIS (Mezzo-Soprano)
Dale SmTH (Baritone)
The VICTOR OLOF SEXTET

SEXTET Ave Maria - Bach-Gounod
Overture, ' Alceste ' - Gluck
4.0 DALE SMITH The Song of Momus to Mars - Boyce
Lovo me or not - Arne
Pack clouds away - Handel
4.8 SEXTET Berceuse from The Unknown Warrior ' - Victor Hely-Hutchinson
Menuet (' Barenice 'j - Handel
Allegro - Fiocco, arr. O'Neill
4.20 WINIFRED DAVIES Yasrnin - Tom Dobson
Pleading : - Elgar
It was a Lover and his Lass - Coates
4.28 SEXTET Lyric Suite Shepherd's Boy ; Norwegian Rustic March ; Nocturne ; March of the Dwarfs - Grieg
4.45 DALE SMITH Dance to your Daddy - arr. Cecil Sharp
Deirdre's Farewell - arr. M. Kennedy-Fraser
.The Crone's Creel - arr. M. Kennedy-Fraser
Duncan Gray - arr. Owen Mase
4.52 SEXTET Dreams - Wagner
Minuet - Pitgnani, arr. Kreisler
55 WINIFRED Davis The Willow - Goring Thomas
Trees - Rasbach
Falling Blossoms - Yvonne Sawyer
5.12 SEXTET Benedictu3 - Mackenzie
Marche Militaire - Schubert
Pomp and Circumstance, March No. 1 - .Elgar

'Ein Feste Burg' - 'A Stronghold Sure'
Relayed from the Guildhall School of Music
Bella Baillie (Soprano)
Doris Owens (Contralto)
Parry Jones (Tenor)
Keith Faulkner (Bass)
Francis W. Sutton (Organ)
The Wireless Chorus
The Wireless Orchestra
(Conducted by Stanford Robinson)

Contributors

Soprano:
Bella Baillie
Contralto:
Doris Owens
Tenor:
Parry Jones
Bass:
Keith Faulkner
Organ:
Francis W. Sutton
Singers:
The Wireless Chorus
Musicians:
The Wireless Orchestra
Conductor:
Stanford Robinson

Appeal on behalf of the Royal Albert Orphanage by the Rt. Hon. EARL JELLICOE, G.C.B.,
G.C.V.O., O.M.
THE Orphanage for which Earl Jellicoe will appeal tonight was founded as a memorial to the Prince Consort sixty years ago. It now has accommodation for 140 necessitous boys who have lost one parent or both, and it provides them with a home, educates them, and trains them in some trade. Subscribers have the right of nominating candidates.
Contributions should be sent to [address removed]

The hall is dimmed, and from the distance sounds are heard of a band approaching and of troops singing on the march. Battalions march up through the hall as to the front line. Accompanied by the bands, the audience will sing the following war songs :—
Are We Downhearted?
Take Me Back to Dear Old Blighty
Pack Up Your Troubles
Keep the Home Fires Burning
The Long, Long Trail Tipperary.
In an interval in the singing of the war songs a company of the London Scottish with their pipers march through the hall. On the last notes of ' Tipperary ' and as the end of the column disappears, the Massed Bands of the Brigade of Guards play ' Land of Hope and Glory,' and all join in the song.

The Choirs enter the darkened hall preceded by the Cross. The Choirs will be in three parties, the first headed by the Cross and the banner of St. George, in red cassocks and white cottas. The second will be headed by the banner of St. Andrew followed by the Choir in black cassocks and white surplices, and the third headed by the banner of St. Patrick with the choir in purple cassocks and white cottas. Then will come the Chaplain to the Bishop of London carrying the crozier in front of the Bishop. The procession moves slowly towards the organ singing 'Lead, Kindly Light,' assemble in crescent formation under the organ enclosed by the bandsmen of the Brigade of Guards in scarlet.

2LO London

Appears in

About this data

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