Programme Index

Discover 11,128,835 listings and 281,987 playable programmes from the BBC

Relayed from Birmingham
THE BIRMINGHAM STUDIO ORCHESTRA
Conducted by JOSEPHLEWIS

Overture, ' Russian and Ludmilla ' - Glinka
Selection, ' The Pirates of Penzance ' - Sullivan
3.23 FOSTER RICHARDSON (Baritone) and Orchestra Aria, ' Hear me, ye winds and waves' ('Scipio') - Handel
ORCHESTRA Suite, ' Children's Games ' - Bizet
3.40 WILLIBALD RICHTER (Pianoforte) Benediction de Dieu dans la Solitude - Liszt
ORCHESTRA ' Three Bavarian Dances - Elgar

SCHUBERT'S PIANOFORTE SONATAS played by JAMES CHING
No. 2 Grosse (Great) Sonata in A (1st and 2nd
Movements)
THIS is the second of three Sonatas designated
' Great Sonatas.' The one in B Flat played at the beginning of the week in this series was the third.
The first movement of this is, indeed, cast in an imposing mould, but though worked out at some length, it is all so happily melodious that none would wish it shorter. It begins with a subject in which the keynote persists at the top of the harmony for five bars, and the repetition of one note is an important feature of the whole movement, forming part of the second main theme also.
The second movement begins quietly and s imply with a happy little song melody, that is sot forth very much after the manner of one of Schubert's songs, to form the first section of the movement.

Froissart's Chronicles, Chapter 146—The Surrender of Calais. Chapter 384—Wat Tyler 's
Death at Smithfield
THIS evening's reading is takon from the Chronicle of the famous mediaeval historian: of the Hundred Years War between England : and France. It is from the pages of Froissart that the most vivid, and simultaneously the most accurate, pictures can- be obtained of the period. when Chivalry was a real code regulating normal life, and not merely the background of novels; and war followed an etiquette as strict as that of the modern hunting field. The surrender of Calais to Edward III , with the rescue of the six condemned burghers from execution by the inter. vention of Queen Philippa, is one of the most dramatic scenes in English history. The descrip* tion of Wat Tyler's death at the hands of Walworth, the Lord Mayor of London, which ended the Peasants' Revolt in the reign of Richard II, is another admirable piece of historical writing; An interesting incident of the rising was the burning of Savoy Palace, then the property of the Duke of Lancaster, by the rebels.

A British Composer's Programme
THE WIRELESS Chorus
Chorus Master, STANFORD ROBINSON
THE WIRELESS ORCHESTRA
Conducted by JOHN ANSELL 8.20 CHORUS
Songs8 44 CHORUS
Songs

March, ' Henry VIII' - Sullivan
Overture, ' Richard III ' - German
8.0 CHORUS - Songs
8.7 ORCHESTRA Suite, ' Minnehaha ' Laughing Water ; The Pursuit : Love Song; The Home-coming. - Coleridge Taylor
8.27 ORCHESTRA Selection, ' Reminiscences of the Savoy - Sullivan,arr.Moore
English Dances - Quilter
8.50 ORCHESTRA Suite, ' Summer Days' - Eric Coates

Travelling, even in these days, has a certain element of adventure clinging to it still. One's senses are a shade sharpened; one notices things more, and they are apt to impress one or amuse one more. That is probably why one seems to meet such extra ordinary people on stations and in trains. For the people one meets travelling do seem rather extraordinary - though not many of us have had such strange encounters as those that Captain d'Egville will describe tonight.

Contributors

Speaker:
Captain A.H. d'Egville

5XX Daventry

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