OSCHETTO and his ORCHESTRA
From the May Fair Hotel
WYNNE AJELLO (
Sopranoj PERCY UNDERWOOD (Baritone)
THE WIRELESS ORCHESTRA
(Conducted by S. KNEALE KELLEY )
Played by ALEX TAYLOR
Relayed from Davis' Theatre,
Crbydon
S.B. from- Cardiff
'IN A WELSH VILLAGE'
A Programme of Welsh Storie3.
Songs and Dances
THE MOUNTAIN ASH GIRLS' CHOIR
THE MOUTH ORGAN TRIO
AUNTY BBONWEN
RHIANNON JONES (Harpist)
; WEATHER FORE
CAST, FIRST GENERAL NEWS Bulletin ; Announcements and Sports Bulletin
MODERN PIANOFORTE SONATAS
Played by STEFAN ASKENASE
THE football season begins, or appears to begin,' earlier every year. By the end of August nowadays the turnstiles on the League grounds have begun to click again, and the crowds coming home from cricket matches mingle with the crowds setting off for the football grounds. Mr. Allison's talk this evening on the prospects for the Soccer season comes, therefore, none too soon.
by ALBERT SAMMONS (Violin)
ONE of the members of the Russian school of composers who could look back with pride to the inspiring teaching of Rimsky-Korsakov, at the St. Petersburg Conservatoire, Arensky was for a time a Professor at Moscow. In 1892. his first opera made a successful appearance there; like so many of the popular Russian operas, it is on a national subject—A Dream of the Volga. Other operas, ballets, and cantatas followed it, and he is known also as a distinguished composer for the Church. He composed also symphonic and other orchestral music, of which the Variations on a Tchaikovsky Theme are best known in this country, and a good deal of chamber music, notably the two pianoforte trios, of which the first especially is frequently played. More than his contemporaries, he may be said to have carried on Tchaikovsky's tradition, though without so rich a share of poetic ideas, and without Tchaikovsky's gift of dramatic force. His mastery of orchestral resources, too, was less facile, and less versatile than Tchaikovsky's, but he had at command a fund of pleasing melody, and many of his pieces arc no doubt destined to enjoy a lasting popularity.
CYRIL SCOTT is one of these versatile people who win distinction in more than one field. He is a composer, a poet. and an author of note on philosophic subjects. Born in Cheshire in 1879, he was a student at Frankfurt, where more than one other young Englishman who has since stepped into the front rank of composers, was with him. At the end of his student career he lived for a time in Liverpool, teaching and playing, and his first important orchestral piece, the Heroic Suite, was played there as well as at Manchester with Richter conducting. Soon afterwards his Pelleas and Melisande was given in Frankfurt. Other works of his have figured at Sir Henry Wood 's concerts and elsewhere ; Sir Thomas Beecham has interested himself in more than one of them, and as far afield as Vienna his music has been played. Best known by his songs and smaller pieces. lie deserves a more important position than his native country accords him for his bigger and more serious works. We are given too few opportunities of hearing them. In some ways less definitely temporaries, his music is in even way original, and modern without any of the more startling dissonant effects in which the present-day composer inclines to express himself.
Relayed from the Queen's Hall (Sole Lessees, Messrs. Chapped and- Co., Ltd.)
35th Season
RISPAH GOODACRE (Contralto)
FRANK TITTERTON (Tenor)
VICTOR SCHIOLER (Pianoforte)
SIR HENRY WOOD and his
SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
Leader, CHARLES WOODHOUSE
WEATHER FORECAST, SECOND GENERAL NEWS Bulletin; Local Announcements; (Daventry only) Shipping Forecast and Fat Stock Prices
A Rustic Revue
Written., composed and produced by ERNEST LONGSTAFFE
Cast :
Tommy HANDLEY
JEAN ALLISTONE
FOSTER RICHARDSON
ALMA VANE
STANLEY VILVEN
The REVUE CHORUS and Orchestra
Conducted by ERNEST LONGSTAFFE
THE ROMANY BAND, from THE EMPRESS RooMi,
ROYAL PALACE HOTEL