11.0 11.30 (London only)
Experimental Television Transmission by the Baird Process
Norman Chapple (Violin)
Stanley Chapple (Pianoforte)
Played by LEONARD H. Wabneb
Relayed from St. Botolph's, Bishopsgate
By CHRISTOPHER STONE
MARIE THOMSON (Soprano)
CUTHBERT REAVELY (Baritone)
JOYCE KADISH (Pianoforte)
JACK PAYNE and his B.B.C. DANCE
ORCHESTRA
MOSCHETTO and his ORCHESTRA
From THE MAY FAIR HOTEL
FIFTH DAY OF REQUEST WEEK
'The Sandcastle'
A Play written for the Microphone by L. DU GARDE PEACH, with music by V. HELY-HUTCHINSON played by, the GERSHOM PARKINGTON QUINTET
; WEATHER FORECAST,
FIRST GENERAL NEWS BULLETIN
BRAHMS' SONGS
Sung by SUMNER AUSTIN (Baritone)
ARUNDEL ESDAILE : 'Library Work'
ALICE VAUGHAN (Contralto) SYDNEY NORTHCOTE (Tenor)
THE VICTOR OLOF SEXTET
MACDOWELL, the first of the American national composers to claim the world's interest in his music, had a very happy gift of infusing pictur. esqueness into even such short pieces as these. The listener feels that each of them illustrates its own idea with real vividness. The series consists of eight in all, and MacDowell has prefaced each of them with a little quotation which makes its purport clear. In front of No. I, a short piece which is to awaken the picture of a wide expanse of open sea, stands a phrase from Weber's opera Oberon—' Ocean, thou mighty monster.'
No. 2 is founded on this verse :—
' An errant princess of the North,
A virgin snowy white,
Sails adown the summer seas
To realms of burning light '— and No. 3 is inspired by a thought of the Pilgrim Fathers as they made their voyage to the New World.
No. 4, ' Starlight,' is prefaced thus:
' The stars are but the cherubs
That sing about the throne
Of grey old Ocean's spouse, Fair Moon's pale majesty '— and the fifth piece, called simply ' Song,' has its meaning amplified :—
A merry song, a chorus bravo, And yet a sigh, regret '
For roses sweet, in woodland lanes-Ah, love can ne'er forget ! '
No. 7, ' Nautilus' is described as ' A fairy sai. and a fairy boat,' and listeners will surely feel that the music does indeed present just such a picture.
ALMOST every country in the world which has a real history and tradition of its own, has a treasured heritage of its own tunes. These are, for the most part, either songs, of which the melodies are nearly always far older than the words, or dance tunes. Sometimes the two overlap, words having been written to tunes which came into being for national dances, but whichever they be, they arc usually strongly character. istic of the races to which they belong, as are the dances themselves. Many of these, of course, have long ago lost their merely local or patriotic meaning, and have become part of the whole world's music, and some have made their way into classical music, as part of its formal design.
Except for the Minuet, however, all the dances in this programme have preserved their own racial features; and each is a good example of the way in which composers have seized on their characteristics.
WEATHER FORECAST, SECOND GENERAL News BULLETIN; Local News; (Daventry only) Shipping Forecast and Fat Stock Prices
Vi and JOAN (Humour and Rhythm)
SANDY ROWAN (Comedian)
STUART Ross and JOE SARGENT (In Syncopated
Harmony)
ANGELA MAUDE (Comedienne)
JACK PADBURY and his Cosmo CLUB Six and A Variety Item from fHE PALLADIUM
JACK HYLTON and his BAND,
Relayed from the KIT-CAT RESTAURANT