Programme Index

Discover 11,128,835 listings and 278,128 playable programmes from the BBC

BRAHMS' PIANO WORKS
Played by HOWARD JoNES
Ballad in G Minor (Op. 118, No. 3)
Intermezzo in E Flat Minor (Op. 118, No. 6)
Intermezzo in C (Op. 119, No. 3) fTIHE Ballad is one of the set of six pieces that make up Op. 118, written in 1893, the composer's sixtieth year. It is short, crisp and vigorous, with a sweet lyrical interlude in the middle. A momentary reminiscence of this gentler strain forms its happy end.
The minor-key Intermezzo is a stirring, dramatic piece, full of vivid life and, perhaps it may be felt, a sense of conflict.
The other, the major-key Intermezzo, is marked
'graceful and jocose.' Its happy little tune gobs singing along beneath an overhanging arch of light foliage.

Contributors

Played By:
Howard Jones

THE argument in favour of democratic government insists that all citizens have an equal interest in what the state does, and that the state will not be successful in knowing what to do except by knowing what is happening to its members. This it can only do when the opinions of its members are freely offered and fully guide the activities of those who rule. This only occurs when those who rule are freely chosen by those who are to be governed by them. If, therefore, the object of social organization is response to human demands, that system which organizes the widest basis of consent to the rules made seems the most satisfactory. But there must accompany the acceptance of this thesis the institutions which our experience of history suggests as necessary to its fulfilment. With the development of this argument and its implications, Professor Laski will conclude his series of talks.

TOM CLARE at the Piano
EVA FLOYER in a potpourri of Songs
NATALIE MOYER , in excerpts from ' Little Things
That Happen,' by Jefferson Farjeon
The LONDON FLUTE QUARTET
TOM KINNIBURGH and THE WIRELESS CHORUS
In Plantation Songs
ETHEL IRVING in 'THE PRIEST'S ROOM' *
By HERBERT SWEARS

Contributors

Unknown:
Tom Clare
Unknown:
Natalie Moyer
Unknown:
Jefferson Farjeon
Unknown:
Ethel Irving

THE WIRELESS SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA.
(Leader, S. KNEALE KELLEY )
Conducted by GEORG SCHNEEVOIGT
SIGRID SCHNEEVOIGT (Pianoforte)
TONIGHT'S conductor, Georg Schnee -
JL voigt, is already quite well known to us, as he is to audiences in almost every city of Europe that has an orchestra or opera house.
Ho was born in Finland in 1872, and studied first at Helsingfors, and then in Sondershausen, Leipzig. Dresden, Brussels and Vienna. He taught in the Conservatoire at Helsingfore, was principal cellist in the Philharmonic Orchestra, and conducted the Finnish opera there. He succeeded Weingartner in the direction at Munich. Other posts as conductor were hold at Riga (1912), Helsingfors (the City Orchestra) and Potrograd. For ten years he was chief conductor of the Concert Society in Stockholm, and in 1918 he founded the Philharmonic Orchestra in Christiania (now Oslo). From 1924 to 1926 he was general Musical Director at Dusseldorf, and last year he conducted the famous Los Angeles Orchestra. In the summer months ho conducts the concerts at Sehoveningon, Holland.

Contributors

Leader:
S. Kneale Kelley
Conducted By:
Georg Schneevoigt
Pianoforte:
Sigrid Schneevoigt
Conductor:
Georg Schnee

An Eye-Witness Account by 'IXION'
S.B. from Liverpool
THE most important road race for motor-cycles held in Great Britain is undoubtedly the Senior Tourist Trophy, which was run tcday over the famous course in the Isle of Man. It is a race of thrills and spills, adventure and excitement, and the great crowds that gather at such spots as the Ramsay Hairpin Corner and Ballig Bridge never have reason to feel dissatisfied with their day's sport. Moreover, it is a valuable opportunity for British manufacturers to show what their machines and riders can do in competition with the pick of their rivals from abroad. The race will be described tonight by ' Ixion,' of The Motor Cycle, one of the best known authorities on motor-cycle racing, who will just have returned to Liverpool from the Isle of Man after seeing the race.

2LO London and 5XX Daventry

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