Programme Index

Discover 11,128,835 listings and 277,856 playable programmes from the BBC

Mr. A. LLOYD JAMES : 'What Speech really is '
DESPITE the fact that speech is the most familiar of all human experiences, the vehicle of human knowledge and the dividing line between man and beast, little is known about it because it is always taken for granted. In these days of mechanical reproduction and transmission of the voice by microphone, telephone, gramophone and talking film speech plays an increasingly important part in our lives. Mr. A. Lloyd James in this new series attacks some of the more obvious aspects of this universal problem.

Contributors

Unknown:
Mr. A. Lloyd James
Unknown:
Mr. A. Lloyd James

THE B.B.C. ORCHESTRA
(Section D)
(Led by LAURANCE TURNER)
Conducted by T. H. MORRISON

WHEN Liszt was in Paris in his early twenties, he heard Victor Hugo read his own poem 'Ce qu'on entend sur la Montagne,' and it so impressed him that the idea of rendering the subject of it in terms of music remained with him for years. He finally carried out his plan when he was in Weimar, and comparatively settled. Here he wrote his famous twelve symphonic poems, Victor Hugo's verses suggesting the first of them, and in so doing set his stamp very forcibly on the development of nearly all modern music. Scarcely a composer of all those, great and small, who followed after him but has composed works in the symphonic poem form. Of these, the examples with which Richard Strauss has enriched the orchestral repertory are among the finest and most successful. The methods of Strauss, however, differ from those of Liszt in an important respect. Strauss worked to a programme, practically to a scenario, and the literary incidents of his subject are reproduced more or less faithfully and in the same order in his music. This was not Liszt, the inventor's method, which has been well described by Ernest Newman: 'Instead of trying to tell us in music precisely what the poet has told us in verse, Liszt re-thinks in music what the poet has already said, and gives it out to us as something born of musical feeling itself.' For example, the subject of Les Preludes is taken from Lamartine's Meditations Poetiques, and is a commentary on life as a series of preludes to the unknown song of which death is the first dread note.

Contributors

Unknown:
Laurance Turner
Conducted By:
T. H. Morrison
Unknown:
When Liszt
Unknown:
Victor Hugo
Unknown:
Victor Hugo
Unknown:
Richard Strauss
Unknown:
Ernest Newman

National Programme Daventry

About National Programme

National Programme is a radio channel that started transmitting on the 9th March 1930 and ended on the 9th September 1939. It was replaced by BBC Home Service.

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