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THE WIRELESS SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
Conducted by BASIL CAMERON

RUSSLAN AND LUDMILLA is a strange Opera of Dukes and Knights, Poets, Dwarfs, and Fairies, and a gigantic head which, when it blows, creates storms. The Overture is an effective piece of bright, quick music. There are two chief tunes, which are first stated, then developed (in a contrapuntal way that shows the effects of the teaching of Dehn, Glinka's master, (who was a great Bach student), and then restated.

MR. DUNHILL has arranged a number of Handel's short pieces (mostly movements in dance styles) into a Suite. The titles of the various pieces are Prelude and Pastorale, Rigaudon (originally a Provencal dance for a single pair of partners, having a leaping step in it), Sarabande (for long the chief slow dance of the old Suites), Garotte, Minuet and Gigue.

WE know Dvorak best, perhaps, by his Fifth Symphony, From the New World. His Fourth (in G) is a shorter work, lasting little more than half an hour - a light-hearted and straightforward affair.
It was written in the winter of 1889-90, when the composer was forty-eight.
It is in four Movements. In the vigorous opening Movement listeners who remember the once popular tune of 'Private Tommy Atkins' will notice a theme very much like its opening phrase.
The other three Movements are a slow one, then a graceful dance-like piece, and finally a Movement in the style of the lively Slavonic Dances that lovers of Dvorak know well.

BORODIN (1834-1887) Doctor of Medicine and Professor of Chemistry, became one of the leading nationalist composers in nineteenth-century Russia. He wrote this 'Sketch' in 1880. A 'programme' is printed on the title-page of the score. Freely translated, it is as follows:-
'In the silence of the sandy steppes of Central Asia ring the first notes of a peaceful Russian song. One hears, too, the melancholy strains of songs of the Orient ; one hears the tramp of horses and camels as they come. A caravan, escorted by. Russian soldiers, crosses the vast desert, fearlessly pursuing its long journey, trusting wholly in its Russian warrior guard.
'Ceaselessly the caravan advances. The Russian songs and the native songs mingle in one harmony ; their strains are long heard over the desert, and at last are lost in the distance.'
Borodin aims at suggesting the great spaces of the plains by high, held notes which continue almost unbroken throughout.
The Russian song is heard at the opening on a Clarinet, answered by a Horn. A few momenta later the Cor Anglais (Contralto Oboe) plays the Oriental song.

Contributors

Conducted By:
Basil Cameron
Unknown:
Tommy Atkins

An Appeal on behalf of the Prince of Wales's General Hospital, by Lord
GLENCONNER, Chairman of the Hospital
THROUGHOUT the area of the North.
East Middlesex suburbs, Essex and Herts, the people look for treatment to the Prince of Wales's General Hospital, with its 200 beds ; whilst the fact that a majority of its patients find their work and livelihood in the City and inner London gives it a strong claim for the support of the general public.
Contributions should be addressed to [address removed]

2LO London and 5XX Daventry

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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