ETHEL COOPER (Soprano) ! FRANK PHILIP (Baritone)
and the B.B.C. DANCE ORCHESTRA
From the Piccadilly Hotel
Readings in Foreign Lang-' guages
' What the Onlooker Saw-IV, The Making of the Doomsday Book '
'Stories from Mythology and Folk-Lore
How a Rabbit caught the Sun
(An American-Indian Story)
3.15 (Daventry only) .East Coast
Fishing Bulletin
MARGARET MINOR (Contralto)
AUDRIE FORD (Violin)
DENISE LASSIMONNE (Pianoforte)
The Hidden City, and the finding thereof, as told to
Sir Walter Raleigh by the captain of his flagship, the Destiny—from ' The Path of the King '
(John Buchan )
CECIL DixoN will play Piano Solos, including
Petite Valse (Pouishnoff)
Hints on Cross-Country Running, and how to get the best out of it, by GEORGE Nicol
The Fortune Hunter and Songs of the Elfin
Pedlar, sung by REx PALMER
The face of England is still covered with those solid, spacious houses that our ancestors built themselves - too solid to fall down, but too spacious for their descendants to afford. This is the ago of the flat, and a floor space that in the Victorian age would have been thought hardly adequate for a drawing room, and into which the Elizabethans would not have squeezed a bedroom, now suffices for all the needs of many a family entitled to be styled well-to-do. Even if the sort of flat that was so amusingly pictured on the 'Both Sides of the Microphone' page last week is not yet universal, congestion is the rule, and compactness and economy of space are the chief essentials in modern furniture. In this series of talks Mrs. Menzies will describe various schemes for furnishing and also decorating a small flat at a very reasonable cost.
DOUGLAS, Head of Brownies, will tell a Pack Story
SCHUBERT'S PIANOFORTE SONATAS
Played by MARTHA BAIRD
in French, Spanish and English Songs
Relayed from The Arts Theatre Club
MARGOT HINNENBERG-LEFEBRE (Soprano)
LEON GOOSSENS (Oboe)
THE VIENNA STRING QUARTET
RUDOLPH KOUSCH (Violin), FELIX KHUNER
(Violin), EUGEN LEHNER (Viola), BENAR HEIFETZ
(Violoncello)
LEON GOOSSENS and THE VIENNA STRING
ARTHUR BLISS (born 1891), lately spent three years in California, during which he produced but few pieces. His output is not very great, and practically all his published compositions date from after the war. The Colour Symphony and the Conversations for String and Wind instruments (chamber music) are perhaps his best known works.
This Quintet, published in 1928, is dedicated to the notable American patron of Music, Mrs. Elizabeth Spraguo Coolidge, who inaugurated the Berkshire (Mass) Festivals of chamber music, and has given an annual prize of 1,000 dollars for a composition.
The Quintet is in three Movements. In the First, the engaging theme that opens the ball is much used, in one form or another-changed in pace, mood, and rhythm. Tho Second Movement (At a comfortable, not slow pace) has some bold sweeps of melody and striking figuration, and works up to a powerful emotional climax before its delicate, pastoral-piping end.
The Last Movement starts a lively, jigging tune, that runs an exhilarating course. In the middle the composer introduces a tune called ' Connelly's Jig,' which the bboe gives out whilst the Strings slightly support it. RUDOLF KOLISCH, EUGEN LEHNER and BENAR MARGOT HINNENBERG - LEFEBRE, LEON GOOSSENS, EUGEN LEHNER and BENAR HEIFETZ
(3) and (4) 'Litanei' and Entruckung,' Poems by Stefan George
(Soprano, MARGOT HINNEN
BERG-LEFEBRE)
THE WIRELESS MILITARY
BAND
Conducted by B. WALTON
O'DONNELL
ALFREDO and his BAND and the NEW PRINCES ORCHESTRA, from the New Princes Restaurant