(Daventry only)
JULIUS ROSTALL (Violin)
HENRY BRONKHURST (Pianoforte)
By GEORGE RYAN , Organist and Director of the Choir, St. Mary Bolton's, South Kensington, relayed from St. Mary-le-Bow
(Leader, A. MANTOVANI ), from the Hotel Metropole
THE SYBIL EATON QUARTET
SYBIL EATON (1st Violin) ; MAVIS BACCA (2nd Violin) ; RAYMOND JEREMY (Viola); ALLEN FORD
(Violoncello)
Vocalist, FRANK HASTWELL
(Baritone)
My Programme
By NANCY ECKERSLEY
From the Prince of Wales Play-house, Lewisham
BRAHMS’ VIOLIN and PIANO SONATAS
Played by WILLIAM PRIMROSE (Violin) and VICTOR HELY-HUTCHINSON (Pianoforte)
Sonata in D Minor (Op. 108), Third and Fourth
Movements
THE Third Movement is a little triumph of imaginative charm. It has delicate sentiment, is wistful and ' fey.'
The Last Movement is bold and full of nervous energy.
WE live in a big world about which, at our peril, we have to find our way. And we find our way in so far as the mechanisms of society make increasingly possible, for an increasing number of people, a response to their desires. Every part of our social system—its religions, its way of holding property, its method of government-is an attempt to this end. Since it is Government that ultimately controls all the mechanisms, it is fundamentally important in social theory to understand its nature. These are the points that Professor Laski will make in his third talk.
Personally conducted by JACK PAYNE
between
Sir ERNEST BENN and Mr. JAMES MAXTON , M.P.
' Riches and Poverty-Are They Necessary?’
N° more interesting spokesmen of two contrasted social theories could be found to debate this vital subject than Sir Ernest Benn , the publisher, author of ' The Confessions of a Capitalist,' and the leading spirit of the Individualist Bookshop, and Mr James Maxton , the chairman of the Independent Labour Party. and the most prominent of the group of Clydeside Socialists who came into Parliament in 1922. They have, in addition, met on more than one occasion in platform debates, and they are therefore all the better fitted to undertake the difficult task of debating before the microphone.
WILLIAM PRIMROSE (Violin)
THE WIRELESS CHORUS (Chorus-
Master, STANFORD ROBINSON)
THE WIRELESS ORCHESTRA
(Leader, S. KNEALE KELLEY ) Conducted by the Composer
ORCHESTRA
Suite, ' Famous Beauties '
PERCY FLETCHER , well known for many years as Conductor at His Majesty's Theatre, is largely a self-taught musician. He is best known, perhaps, for his incidental music to spectacular plays, such as Cairo, produced at His Majesty's.
He has written four Orchestral
Suites and a good many popular Choral pieces, besides some Pianoforte and Chamber Music.
He is one of the few composers of today who have written large-scale works for the Brass Band. His Epic Symphony was written as the test-piece for the chief competition at the annual Brass Band Festival at the Crystal Palace.
His Suite Famous Beauties, contains three pieces, thus entitled : (1) A Vision of Aphrodite ; (2) In the Palace of Old Versailles; (3) At the Court of Cleopatra.
CHORUS (Female Voices)
Softly sink in slumbers golden
(unaccompanied)
Bees
0 May, thou art a merry time
(unaccompanied)
WILLIAM PRIMROSE and Orchestra Poem and Arabesque
CHORUS (Female Voices)
Who liveth so merry (16th Century
Ballet)
The Cloud
The Galway Piper (Irish Folk
Tune)
ORCHESTRA
Intermezzo, ' Eyes of Dream '
March, The Crown of Chivalry '
NORMAN Long
(A Smile, a Song, and a Piano)
FLORENCE MARKS
(Irish Songs and Stories)
ROBERT MACLACHLAN
In some of Leslie Stuart 's Songs
THE B.B.C. DANCE ORCHESTRA
Personally conducted by JACK PAYNE
:
MARIUS B. WINTFER'S DANCE BAKD from the Hotel Cecil