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ONE of the most vexing problems of the modem business girl, whose mid-day meal is apt to be scanty and hurried, is how best to fare for food in the evenings and mornings. Miss Helen Tress , who is giving this talk, is lecturer on Domestic Science at King's College, London.

Contributors

Unknown:
Miss Helen Tress

S.B. from Newcastle.
THE poetry of today is easily classified into two distinct schools; they may usefully be termed the ' emotional' and the ' intellectual' schools. The appeal of the former is naturally the wider; but poetry of the cerebral type finds an unexpectedly wide following. Of the emotional school one of the founders may be said to be Masefield, with whom, particularly, Prof. Crofts will deal in the last talk of his series. Masefield began with such ' realist' poems as 'The Widow in the Bye Street' and 'The Everlasting Mercy': his output latterly has been almost entirely religious or classical in theme; but whether of the first period or tho last, Masefield's poetry has the power to catch the ear of the majority without pandering.

by Sir C.Hubert H. PARRY
(1848-1918)
JOHN ARMSTRONG (Tenor) KEITH FALKNER (Baritone) THE WIRELESS SYMPHONY
ORCHESTRA
(Conducted by STANFORD
ROBINSON)
ONE of the things which has kept a good deal of the late
Sir Hubert Parry 's music from winning the place in our affections to which it is richly entitled, was the self-denying rule which he laid down during his regime at the Royal College that no work of his own was to be performed there. In that way he missed opportunities of winning adherents such as few composers would have been modest enough to pass by, and to this day his music is comparatively little known to the concert-goer, though when chances are offered of hearing it, it makes its effect very surely, though almost always by the simplest means. It inclines, more than most modern music, to a rather strict shapeliness in design, but is, none the less, rich in beauty of an eminently sand and wholesome order. It has breadth and bigness, too, as well as a sturdy sense of humour ; if its qualities had to be summed up in one word, ' English.'jwould probably be the most satisfactory description.
CHORUS and ORCHESTRA
Blest pair of Sirens (At a solemn music) Ode by Milton
ORCHESTRA
Symphonic Variations
KEITH FALKNER
Songs (with Pianoforte accompaniment)
JOHN ARMSTRONG , KEITH FALKNER , Chorus and Orchestra
The Pied Piper of Hamelin ..(Robert Browning )

Contributors

Unknown:
Sir C.Hubert H. Parry
Baritone:
Keith Falkner
Unknown:
Sir Hubert Parry
Unknown:
Keith Falkner
Unknown:
John Armstrong
Unknown:
Keith Falkner
Unknown:
Robert Browning

2LO London and 5XX Daventry

Appears in

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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