Programme Index

Discover 11,128,835 listings and 277,382 playable programmes from the BBC

by EDGAR T. COOK
Relayed from
Southwark Cathedral

Prelude and Fugue in E Flat (St. Ann) - Bach
Romanza - Haydn, arr. Best
HARRY BROWN Larghetto from Clarinet Quintet - Mozart
EDGAR T. COOK Three Preludes founded on Welsh Hymn Tunes 1, Bryn Calfaria; 2, Rhosymedre ; 3, Hyfrydol - Vaughan- Williams
The Woodland Shrine - Cecil Boulton
HARRY BROWN Andante from Clarinet Sonata in E Flat - Brahms
EDGAR T. COOK Sposalizio - Liszt, arr. Lemare
Marche d'Arianne - Guilmant

MR. LEARY is a successful emigrant who went out to Australia some years ago and is at present on several months' holiday in this country. Listeners will thus be given evidence at first hand on a question that, quite regardless of whether they have a personal and intimate interest in the subject, is of deepest import to all Englishmen. This talk is the first of a short series which will be continued at 7.25 p.m. on September 3 and 10. In addition, during the autumn months there will be a monthly talk on ' Migration,' under the auspices of the Overseas Settlement Department.

DUDLEY STUART WHITE (Baritone)
THE WIRELESS MILITARY BAND
Conducted by CHARLES LEGGETT
SIR FREDERIC COWEN never had any doubt, even from his earliest years that music and nothing but music was to be his career. At the age of eight, he produced an operetta with the title Garibaldi, to a libretto by a relative of equally tender years. Sir Frederic relates that the piece ran successfully for two nights in the home theatre. Since then, his busy life has been spent in conducting and composing, and much of his best-known work is eloquently descriptive of England and English ways.
All the Dances in this Suite are conceived in the olden style. The first is a stately dance which has nevertheless its moments of robust vigour, alternating with its dignified movement. The second is a swift-footed rustic dance, the tune tripping along for the most part merrily on the woodwinds; the third is a graceful dance, with something of the stately formality of No. 1, and the final number is a country dance, again with something of the rustic character which its name implies. It used to be supposed that the name owed its origin to the French 'contre-danse,' but it now seems to be clear that the name means exactly what it says, and that the dance was introduced into polite society from the farms and villages long before the French dance made its way over here.

March, ' Entry of the Gladiators ' - Fucik
Overture, Semiramide - Rossini
DUDLEY STUART WHITE The Slighted Swain; The Pretty Creature ; The Happy Lover (Old English) - arr. Lane Wilson
Roadways - Lohr
BAND Four Old English Dances Stately Dance; Rustic Dance; Graceful Dance ; Country Dance - Cowen

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