MISS IDA SAMUEL, J.P., Chairman of the Stepney Juvenile Advisory Committee, will contribute two talks in which advice will be given as to choosing the future work of boys and girls. In this talk Miss Samuel will deal with the employment problem of girls leaving school at fourteen.
ELLINORA HOGGARTH (Soprano) BERTRAM NEWSTEAD (Baritone)
CHARLES CURNOCK (Violin)
By Mr. CHRISTOPHER STONE
2.0 2.25 (Daventry only) Experimental Transmission of Still Pictures by the Fultograph Process
From Westminster Abbey
KENNEDY MCKENNA (Tenor) THE SALVATION ARMY BAND
' Grobblepumphs,' by R. de Rohan , with Monkeys and Alligators supplied by V. HELY-HUTCHINSON.
There will also be a Mortimer Batten Story,
' From Out of the Drifts '
SCHUMANN
WALDSZENEN (FOREST SCENES), PAPILLONS (BUTTERFLIES) AND
INTERMEZZI
Played by WILLIBALD RICHTER (Pianoforte)
Davidsbiindler, Op. 6, No.
12-18
IN his last talk but one
Dr. Hart explains the three kinds of aeroplane stability: directional, lateral, and longitudinal, and shows how these three tendencies are helped by keel surface, dihedral angle, and by fitting.
by SINCLAIR LOGAN (Baritone)
QINCLAIR LOGAN'S programme offers an interesting comparison between English song-composing of the present day and the sixteenth century. Except for his last song, the programme is modern, and all the composers, save George Butterworth , who was killed in tho Great War, are still on the active list, and some are still practicaHy at the outset of their careers. It may seem invidious to single out one composer for mention, but the fact that Butterworth is no longer here to speak for himself is ample excuse for a word in praise of his wistful setting of Housman's poem. Listeners will remember that he set the whole cycle of poems comprised under the name of ' A Shropshire Lad,' and furnished it with a little
; epilogue for orchestra which is often played as a separate piece. It is, indeed, probably the best-known of the fresh and vividly English music which he left, and bids fair to have an abiding place in our affections.
There is not a great deal known about our early English composer Thomas Morley , but of his studies with William Byrd it is recorded that ' the said Morley became not only excellent in musiek, as well in tho theoretical as practical part, but also well seen in the Mathematicks, in which Byrde was excellent.' He became a Bachelor of Music of Oxford in 1588, and wag probably organist of St. Paul's Cathedral soon afterwards. In 1592 he became a Gentleman of the Chapel Royal, and in Rolls of Assessments of the last years of the sixteenth century his name appears on one occasion side by side with William Shakespeare 's, both citizens having their goods valued at the same amount.
Morley composed a number of songs for the Shakespeare plays, and is best remembered as a writer of vocal music, canzonets, madrigals, ballets, and other pieces for several voices. He must have been among the foremost musicians of his day, and soon after his death earned the eulogy, ' He who did shine as the Sun in the Firmament of our Art, and did first give light to our understanding with his Praecepts.'
The Cherry Tree Janet - Hamilton
When I was one and twenty - Butterworth
Say, Lad, have you things to do ? - Moeran
To Sine in Winter - Dorothy Hoivell
Dream Song - Victor Hely-Hutchinson
Charming Chloe - German
My Lovply Celia - George Munro
Now is the Month of Maying - Thomas Morley
Relayed from the People's Palace, Mile End Road
MEGAN Thomas (Soprano)
POUISHNOFF (Solo Pianoforte)
The B.B.C. Symphony Orchestra
Leader, S. KNEALE KELLEY
Conducted by Sir LANDON RONALD and PERCY PITT
Part II