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ALICE LILLEY (Soprano)
ASHMOOR BURCH (Baritone)
EXACTLY what Debussy meant when he called this Suite Bergamasque is not quite clear. The word really means, as readers of the Midsummer Night's Dream know, a dance, and it takes its name from Bergamo. Such dances, sometimes with words, appear in old sixteenth -century collections, and violoncellists know it from the one which Piatti wrote for his instrument. He was himself a native of Bergamo.
Debussy's Suite has no more to do with the old dances than a certain old-fashioned flavour which is, of course, blended with his own dainty and delicate freshness. There are four movements-Prelude, Minuet, Moonlight, and Passepied.

REGINALD KING and his ORCHESTRA Suite, 'Bergamasque ' - Debussy
3.45 ALICE LILLEY The Message of the Sea - Marjorit Slaughter
O Happy Childhood - Corse
Damon - Max Stange
3.54 ASHMOOR BURCH Song of the Rover - Alexandre Georges
Slow, Horses, Slow - Jalowicz
Old Mrs. Jarvis - Leslie Woodgate
4.2 ORCHESTRA Say it with Song - Henderson, arr. King
Prayer and Temple Dance - Grieg
4.18 ALICE LILLEY Down in the Woods - Valentine Henry
All in the morning early - Needham
The Sun God - William James
4.25 ASHMOOR BURCH Angelus at sea - J. St. A. Johnson
I Travel the Road - Pat Thayer
4.32 ORCHESTRA Praying for Rain - Eckersley, arr. King
Musical Snuff Box - Liadov
Malaguena (Spanish Dance) - Moszkovski

MARRIOTT EDGAR (Comedian)
NANCY LovAT (In Light Ballads)
FLORENCE MARKS (Irish Entertainer)
STAINLESS STEPHEN (Comedian) ERNEST JONES (And his Banjo)
ALEC MCGILL and GWEN VAUGHAN
(The Cheerful Chatterers)
ATHOL TIER, assisted by FRANK DENTON and NORA SAVAGE, in a Sketch, ' SUPPER'
JACK PAYNE AND THE B.B.C. DANCE ORCHESTRA
And a relay from
THE PALLADIUM

CONCERT of THE NCRTH LONDON
DISTRICT of THE MANCHESTER
UNITY of ODDFELLOWS
THE WIRELESS MILITARY BAND
Conducted by B. WALTON
O'DONNELL
Relayed from THE QUEEN'S HALL (Sole Lessees, Messrs. Chappell and Co. Ltd.)
ANDRÉ Messager , who died in the spring of this year, at the good old age of seventy-six, was for long a familiar figure in the London musical world, apart from the successful productions here of some of his best light operas. The first of these, La Bearnaise, enjoyed a long run at the Prince of Wales Theatre with Miss Florence St. John and Miss Marie Tempest in the principal parts. Some years later he achieved a still more important sucoess with La Basoche, which was given in an English version at d'Oyly Carte's Royal English Opera House. In later years we remember his Little Michus and Veronique, and his ballet The Two Pigeons is often heard as orchestral music.
IVOR VINTOR
The Diminutive Comedian
GOD SAVE THE KING

2LO London

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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