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TUNE days by the river-how many English exiles have found in retrospect that their memories of 'the English countryside were most completely embodied in them ? Mr. Eric Parker will describe the living things and the growing things that you may see or hear along an English river-bank in June ; trout and otter and mayfly, willow-herb, comfrey and meadowsweet.

BACH SONATAS FOR FLUTE
AND PIANOFORTE
Played by JOSEPH SLATER (Flute) and GORDON BRYAN
(Pianoforte)
Fourth Sonata, in C
THE last three sonatas are more simply constructed than the first three. Those were of the Concerto type. These resemble more the Suite, with its four or more Movements, and its broad contrasts of quick and slow pieces, of quite simple build (mostly in two portions, both using much the same material).

There is less richness of treatment, less flowering of the Flute part, in these last Sonatas, though they have plenty of character, and the melodic lines are attractively bold and clear.
The C major Sonata begins with a Movement that, after a sedate Introduction, goes on to a very brief, capering Presto, and ends with a few slow bars, that lead into the running Second Movement, in the stylo of the agile Courante, one of the dance Movements that we know in the Suites.
Fourteen bars of very expressive slow music lead to a couple of Minuets, after the second of which, the first is repeated.

FOR thousands of years man has gradually been fashioning the world of Nature to his own liking, and in the last century lie has made great strides. Now he extirpates whole races of animals (as he has done to the bison and is doing to the whale), razes forests, drains swamps and makes lakes, until the face of Nature is being changed beyond recognition. Side by side with these vast and obvious changes go many as far-reaching. but less obvious, and it is with these, and with their reaction upon man himself, that Professor Tattersall will deal in his series of talks.

THE WIRELESS CHORUS and SMALL ORCHESTRA
Conducted by STANFORD Robinson

9.0 WEATHER FORECAST, SECOND GENERAL NEWS BULLETIN

9.15 Mr. VERNON BARTLETT: 'The Way of the World'

9.30 Local Announcements. (Daventry only) Shipping Forecast

Orchestra Overture, ' Theodora ' - Handel
7.52 FEMALE Voices, Two Horns and Harp Four Songs (Op. 17) 1. I hear a Harp; 2. Come away, death; 3. Greetings ; 4. Song from Ossian's Fingal - Brahms
8.7 BETTY Humby (Pianoforte) Rondo in A Minor (No. 20) - Mozart
8.15 FEMALE VOICES, Strings and Harp Five Songs of Innocence 1. Piping down the 3. Infant Joy; 4. Spring; 5. The Little Boy Lost Valleys; 2. The Lamb; - Hely-Hutchinson
8.21 ORCHESTRA Divertimento No. 15 in B Flat for Strings and two Horns Allegroâ??Theme and Variations-Minuet-Andante-Allegro molto - Mozart
8.31 FEMALE VOICES and Harp Choral Hymns from the Rig Veda (3rd Group) 1. Hymn to the Dawn; 2. Hymn to the Waters ; 3. Hymn to Vena ; 4. Hymn of the Travellers - Holst
8.48 â??BETTY Humby (Pianoforte) Two Scottish DancesThe Drummer; The Braes o'Mar - Tobias Matthay
The Cuckoo - Daquin
8.52 UNACCOMPANIED SONGS The Hawthorn Tree ((Folk Song) - arr. Gerrard Williams
Finnish Lullaby - Palmgren, arr. Maurice Jacobson
There was a Pig (Folk Song) - arr. Percy Grainger
ORCHESTRA Mock Morris for String Orchestra - Percy Grainger

5XX Daventry

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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