Sister Drayton: 'Making a Good Start'
Sister Drayton, Sister-in-Charge of the Out-Patients' Department of the Children's Hospital, Great Ormond Street, London, is giving a series of talks during the next five weeks under the general heading of 'The New Baby,' inaugurated last week by Dr. Cyril Burt. The care of the child is a specialist job nowadays, as every modern mother will agree, demanding accurate and scientific knowledge of such subjects as a baby's food, clothes and habit-training, all of which will be dealt with by Sister Drayton in subsequent talks. Her opening talk deals with the all-important subject of the earliest days.
Directed by HARRY FRYER
From THE SHEPHERD'S BUSH PAVILION
' Tracing History Backwards '—IV
Mr. R. BELOE : ' The Growth of a Town '
2.25 Interval
2.30 Speech Training
Mr. A. LLOYD-JAMES : ' King's English—IV,
The Sound of the Letter L*
2.50 Interval
From WESTMINSTER ABBEY
German Dialogue
Dr. ERNST DEISSMANN and Fraulein
CLÄRE VON BOTH: Rundfunkprobe '
Directed by HENRY HALL
Directed by FRANK CANTELL
(From Midland Regional)
BACH'S SONATAS
Played by MARJORIE HAYWARD (Violin) and O'CONNOR MORRIS (Pianoforte)
Sonata in C Minor, No. 4
Siciliauo ; Allegro ; Adagio ; Allegro
Mr. OTTO SIEPMANN
Notices of Service Reunions
General Notices connected with Government and other Public Services
Mr. J. L. HAMMOND : ' British Influence Abroad '
THE prestige of Great Britain never stood higher than in the middle decades of the nineteenth century. Firmly established as the leading power in industry and commerce, she saw other nations all over the world seeking to model their political and industrial systems on her pattern. With the year 1870, however, there came a definite change, a reversion to a state of economic warfare among the nations. In this talk Mr. Hammond explains why and how this change came about, and its effect on the nations concerned.
The English Ensemble: Marjorie Hayward (violin); Rebecca Clarke (viola) ; May Mukle (violoncello) ; Kathleen Long (pianoforte)
All the members of the English Ensemble are Englishwomen, all are mostly English trained, and all are gifted.
Marjorie Hayward studied at the Royal Academy of Music for six years before she went on to Å evÄÃk, the man of colossal reputation who trained Kubelik, Marie Hall, and dozens of other world-famous violinists. Miss Hayward excels in chamber music, of which she has had much experience, and she is also a soloist of distinction, as listeners have frequently had cause to acknowledge. Rebecca Clarke, the viola of the combination, is also a composer. Her compositions, mostly of chamber music, have had considerable success. A viola sonata, written in 1919, just failed to win the Coolidge Prize in America by a casting vote, and later she had the same experience with a trio. May Mukle, the violoncellist, is well known in England when she is not engaged in touring and giving recitals in all corners of the world.
These three have long been associated in chamber music, formerly with Myra Hess, and latterly with Kathleen Long, as pianist. Miss Long is a professor on the teaching staff of the Royal College of Music, where she was herself trained. At her recitals, many of which she has given abroad, she plays for preference modern French and English piano music, provided she can also include something by him whom she thinks the greatest of all composers—Mozart.
To speak of a work of a living composer as having been composed nearly sixty years ago, and as showing the then almost contemporary, and certainly prevailing, influences of Mendelssohn and Schumann, is to realize how near we still are to an era we are apt to refer to as not only past, but somewhat remote. Sir Alexander Mackenzie was twenty-seven when he wrote this, his first and only pianoforte quartet. It is true that both Mendelssohn and Schumann were dead, Mendelssohn in the year of Mackenzie's birth, and Schumann seven years later, but their influence, particularly Mendelssohn's, remained strong and almost unassailable for nearly half a century after their death, and it is only natural that a young man writing in the early seventies should have been unable quite to escape it. One happy circumstance arose out of writing this quartet. The famous conductor, Hans von Bülow, a great and powerfully influential man in his time, saw the proof sheets of Mackenzie's work at the publishers, greatly liked the look of it, asked where he could meet the composer, and took the trouble to seek him out.
WEATHER FORECAST, SECOND GENERAL NEWS
BULLETIN \
Presented by BERTRAM FRYER
Conducted by the Rev. W. H. ELLIOTT
Relayed from ST. MICHAEL'S CHESTER SQUARE
THE B.B.C. DANCE ORCHESTRA, directed by HENRY HALL