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Sir Henry Wood and his Symphony Orchestra
Ethel Osborne (Soprano)
Harry Brindle (Bass) Isolde Menges (Violin)
Relayed from the Queen's Hall, London
Part I
The Overture begins with a slow Introduction, in which Beethoven repeats an effect he had made in his First Symphony a year before - choosing a discord, not belonging to the key of the Movement, as the very first chord of the piece.
Immediately after the loud opening bars we hear a grave, tender melody, which does not continue long, for the first, main tune of the Overture proper breaks in impetuously. The second main tune soon follows, and there is a romantic episode soon afterwards...
The Composer develops and recapitulates this material, and ends the work with a lively Coda.
THE five Drum notes which open the First Movement form a motif of which, as the music unfolds itself, considerable use is made. The Woodwind has both first and second main tunes; while the second is being given out (it begins with a lofty, rising phrase) the Strings reiterate the opening Drum rhythm. Before the Soloist enters and the game is fully afoot, yet a third Tune, in Strings and Woodwind, is heard-a loud one, rising boldly up the scale.
The Second Movement is a lovely example of Variation form, in which a tender, noble melody is heard in different forms, as if the Solo Violin were meditating upon and lovingly caressing it. This Movement goes directly, without a break, into the Finale, a gay Rondo.
This, one of the most exhilarating of all the nine Symphonies, is in four Movements.
First Movement. A slow Introduction procedes the lively Movement, whose first main tune is heard on Strings and answered by Woodwind.
The second main tune is a rustic little phrase starting in Bassoon, then in Oboe, then, high up in the Flute, which prolongs the tune.
This leads into other tunes - first a boisterous one, then a quiet conversational one in Wood-wind.
Second Movement. This is in strict 'Sonata' form. It opens with a sustained, song-like first main tune in Strings.
Third Movement. A gay Minuet (with the usual 'Trio' as contrast in the middle) needs no special description.
Fourth Movement. A glorious bit of the happiest Beethoven, this, woven out of the usual two main tunes (the first going off at once, and second entering, after an orchestral climax and a dying down of the excitement, quietly and expressively.)

Contributors

Musicians:
Sir Henry Wood and his Symphony Orchestra
Soprano:
Ethel Osborne
Bass:
Harry Brindle
Violin:
Isolde Menges

5GB Daventry (Experimental)

Appears in

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