Programme Index

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from Tyndale Baptist Church, Bristol

Order of Service
Hymn, Immortal, Invisible God (B.C.H. 29, S.P. 535)
Thanksgiving and Confession
Chant, Isaiah IV
Scripture Reading, Romans VII, 28-39
Intercessions
Hymn, Dear Lord and Father of mankind (B.C.H. 382, S.P. 481)
Address by the Rev. F.C. Bryan
Hymn, Through all the changing scenes of life (B.C.H. 374. S.P. 677)
Blessing

(Daventry)

Contributors

Speaker:
Rev. F.C. Bryan
Organist:
Walter Maker

0 Tabernacl, Eglwys y Bedyddwyr,
Colwyn Bay
(A Religious Service in Welsh from Tabernacle Baptist Church, Colwyn
Bay)
Trefn y
Gwasanaeth Emyn 741, Caffed f'enaid heddiw lonydd (Ton, Ynys Owen )
Darllen, Salm xxxiv
Emyn 367, Rhoist imi lawer arwydd
(Ton, Kilmarey)
Gweddi Emyn 640, Tyred, Ysbryd Glan
Sancteiddiol (Ton, Argoed)
Pregeth gan y Parch, J. S. JONES
Emyn 867, Llawn o ofid, llawn o wae
(Ton, Atonement)
Gweddi
Cyfeilyddion, H. R. DAVIES a MATI
WILLIAMS
Arweinydd, LLEWELYN T. JONES
Yr Emynau a'r Tonau o'r
Llawlyfr Moliant

Contributors

Unknown:
Gwasanaeth Emyn
Unknown:
Ynys Owen
Unknown:
Gweddi Emyn
Unknown:
Ysbryd Glan
Unknown:
J. S. Jones
Unknown:
H. R. Davies
Unknown:
Llewelyn T. Jones
Unknown:
Yr Emynau
Unknown:
Llawlyfr Moliant

From Haydn's The Creation
Peter Dawson (bass-baritone) : Rolling in foaming billows
Helene Ludolph (soprano): With verdure clad
The Royal Choral Society, with The London Philharmonic Orchestra, conducted by Malcolm Sargent : Achieved is the glorious work
From Handel's Messiah
Orchestra conducted by Sir Thomas Beecham, Bart. : Overture
The Philharmonic Choir and Orchestra, conducted by Kennedy Scott : For unto us a child is born
Marian Anderson (contralto) : He was despised and rejected
Arthur Fear (baritone) : The trumpet shall sound
From Mendelssohn's St. Paul
Muriel Brunskill (contralto) : Recit. and Aria. But the Lord is mindful of His own
Keith Falkner (baritone): God, have mercy upon me
The BBC Chorus, conducted by Leslie Woodgate, with Berkeley Mason at the Organ: O great is the depth

Contributors

Bass-Baritone:
Peter Dawson
Soprano:
Helene Ludolph
Unknown:
Malcolm Sargent
Conducted By:
Sir Thomas Beecham
Conducted By:
Kennedy Scott
Contralto:
Marian Anderson
Baritone:
Arthur Fear
Contralto:
Muriel Brunskill
Baritone:
Keith Falkner
Conducted By:
Leslie Woodgate
Unknown:
Berkeley Mason

ESTHER COLEMAN (contralto)
THE REGINALD PAUL
PIANOFORTE QUARTET:
George Stratton (violin) ; Watson Forbes (viola); John Moore (violoncello) ; Reginald Paul (pianoforte)
Josef Suk is one of the leading Czech composers and, since its foundation in 1892, has played the violin in the Bohemian String Quartet. Born in 1874, he studied piano, violin, and composition at the Prague Conservatoire, his professor of composition being Dvorak, whose daughter he married. Suk himself has a composition class at the Conservatoire, of which he is also Director.
The Pianoforte Quartet in A dates from 1860 when Brahms was twenty-seven years of age. It is a very beautiful work, less serious in character than its companion quartet in G minor. Brahms's admiration for Mendelssohn is well known, and it is interesting to note that there is a curious melodic similarity between the first tune of the Scherzo of the A major Quartet and that of the Scherzo of Mendelssohn's Piano Trio in D minor. Possibly, Brahms intended it to be a graceful compliment.

Contributors

Contralto:
Esther Coleman
Violin:
George Stratton
Violin:
Watson Forbes
Viola:
John Moore
Cello:
Reginald Paul
Unknown:
Josef Suk

'If the French had landed in Bantry Bay in 1796'
Maurice Healy

In 1796, Ireland being full of discontent, the French Republic sent an expedition to Bantry Bay under General Hoche to assist the disaffected and set up an Irish Republic that would have been allied with France. The expedition was not intercepted by the British fleet and, although dispersed by the weather, almost all the ships arrived in Bantry Bay. There they stayed without landing the troops for two whole weeks, waiting for Hoche's ship. As it did not appear, the expedition returned to Brest having accomplished nothing.

Contributors

Unknown:
Maurice Healy

An appeal on behalf of THE CHILDREN'S
HEART HOME, LANCING by HELEN SIMPSON
The Children's Heart Home began its work at Lancing in 1927 and was at first used for children who needed ordinary convalescent treatment. In 1930 twenty beds were reserved for children with rheumatic heart disease from the Rheumatic Clinic at the Hospital for Sick Children, Great Ormond Street. The results were so successful that this side of the work was considerably developed ; in six years over a thousand children have passed through the home and there are now seventy beds available.
Contributions will be gratefully acknowledged, and should be addressed to [address removed]

Contributors

Unknown:
Helen Simpson
Unknown:
Miss Helen Simpson

from the Grand Hotel, Eastbourne
Leslie Jeffries and his orchestra are one of the most popular combinations on the air. Although only thirty-eight years of age, Mr. Jeffries has had nearly a quarter of a century of active life in his profession. He has played in many parts of the world, including New York where, at the age of fifteen, he conducted an orchestra of thirty musicians.
Although Mr. Jeffries is a serious musician at heart he realises that his job is not to educate, but to entertain, and therefore he must carefully study the varied tastes of his public. He has found by experience that well written and well played music of a light and tuneful character is what is mostly demanded and enjoyed.

Contributors

Unknown:
Leslie Jeffries

Of all American writers, Henry James was the least American. If one can fix any label to him at all, it is that of ' good European '. He loved all European culture and that of England in particular. It was appropriate that the year before his death (in 1916) he became a naturalised Englishman. It has been said of him that he interpreted Europe to America. His novels are full of Americans who instead of boasting of ' God's own Country ' are home-sick for Europe, and the ' little schoolmarm ' who is the heroine of Four Meetings is yet another of them. What happened to her in Europe, listeners must discover for themselves.

Contributors

Unknown:
Henry James

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