and Weather Forecast
Overture: Oberon (Weber)
Conducted by EUGEN JOCHUM
8.13* Piano Concerto No. 25. In C major (K.503) (Mozart)
KARL ENGEL (piano)
Conducted by FELIX PROHASKA
8.45* Night Ride and Sunrise
(Sibelius)
Conducted by EUGEN JOCHUM on gramophone records
and Weather Forecast
Cantata No. 169: Gott soil allein mein Herze haben
LoTTE WOLF-MATTHAUS (contralto) with the CHAMBER ORCHESTRA AND CHOIR OF THE CHKISTLSKIRCHE, MAINZ
Directed by DIETHARD HELLMANN
9.30* Cantata No. 214: Tonet, ihr Pauken! Erschallet, TrompeteD
INGEBORG REICHELT (soprano) Emmy LISKEN (contralto) GEORG JELDF. N (tenor) EDUARD WOLLITZ (bass) with the BARMEN GEMARKE SINGERS and CHAMBER ORCHESTRA
Directed by HELMUT KAHLHOFER
on gramophone records
Concertante in B flat major
(Haydn)
WERNER NEUHAUS (violin) HANS PLÜMACHER (cello) HELMUT HUCKE (oboe)
WERNER MAHUSCHAT (bassoon) and the Consortium MUSICUM Conducted by FRITZ LEHAN
10.22* Eternal Father (Holst)
10.26* To Saint Cecilia (Dello
Joio)
COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY CHAPEL CHOIR with BRASS AND PERCUSSION ENSEMBLE Conducted by SEARLE WRIGHT
10.41* Suite No. 2: Bacchus and Ariadne (Roussel)
CHICAGO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA Conducted by JEAN MARTlNON
Recently released records
MAX ROSTAL (violin)
BEROMUNSTER RADIO ORCHESTRA Conducted by ERICH SCHMID
Recording made available by courtesy of the Swiss Radio
Introduced by Humphrey Lyttelton
Introduced by JOHN HOBDAY
Directed by JOHN FENTON
Timings may be altered by events
12.30* SPORTS PARADE
Introduced by LIAM NOLAN
Weather Forecast at 12.55
POWER BOAT RACING
12.57: 2.45*
Fifth 'Daily Express' International Offshore Powerboat Race
DAVID MUDD reports from Torquay on the Race. which started from Cowes this morning
CRICKET
1.0: 1.40: 2.50: 3.15: 3.40: 4.0: 4.45
Gillette Cup Final
Surrey v. Yorkshire
Commentary by JOHN Arlott and ROBERT HUDSON
From Lord's
T. N. Pearce 's XI v.
South African Touring Team
Commentary by NORMAN CUDDEFORD
From Scarborough
CYCLING
1.30: 3.55
The 1965 World Championships
KENNETH PRAGNELL and DAVID SAUNDERS report from San Sebas tian on the Women's and Men's Amateur Road Races
Broadcast by arrangement with Spanish Radio
*
GOLF
1.35: 3.50: 4.40
The ' News of the World Matchplay Championship
Reports by TOM SCOTT on the final day
From Walton Heath Golf Club
RACING 3.0 The W. D. and H. 0. Wills
Stakes
A handicap race for three-year-olds and upwards over sjx furlongs
Commentary by MICHAEL SETH -SMITH
From Redcar
3.25 The Crockford Handicap
A race for three-year-olds only. over two miles
Commentary by PETER BROMLEY
From Sandown Park
4.55 Racing Results
4.15 ASSOCIATION
FOOTBALL
Commentary by BRIAN MOORE during the second half of one of today's English League matches
*
ATHLETICS
4.45 East Germany v. England
Commentaries by REX ALSTON , with summaries and reports by HAROLD ABRAHAMS
From the Jahn Stadium, East Berlin
Broadcast by arrangement with the East German Broadcasting Service
*
5.0 SPORTS REPORT
Introduced by LIAM NOLAN
Produced by ANGUS MACKAY
Classified Football Results at
5.0 and 5.50 p.m.
Violin Concerto
EDUARD MELKUS (violin)
AUSTRIAN RADIO ORCHESTRA
Conducted by WINFRIED ZILLIG
First broadcast In this country
Recording made available by courtesy of Austrian Radio
Dr. Egon Wellesz , C.B.E.. who will he eighty in October, was born in Vienna. He studied with Schoenberg but his early works were powerfully influenced by the music of Mahler. The Violin Concerto was written in 1961 at the end of an astonishingly productive period in his seventies of which the Fifth Symphony marks a beginning. Writing of this music in The Listener Wilfrid Mellers has said: ' Wellesz has no further need of nostalgia. Tradition and revolution are in tense equilibrium.'
Nine broadcasts about the theory, problems, practice, and future of Aid and development.
5: The Changing Role of International Institutions
ANDREW SHONFIELD asks
JOHN DUNCAN MILLER
European Representative of the World Bank about the ways in which the largest and most important International Institution in this field has changed its Aid policies and practices in the 1960s
Series produced by Anthony Moncrieff t Second broadcast
ROBERT TEAR (tenor) t DESMOND DUPRE (lute)
Tenor and lute:
Belle Qui m'avés blesse - Guedron
Fortune laisse moy la vye - anon.
Vivray-je toujours en soucy; Secourts moy - Claudin de Sermisu
Cesses mes yeulx; Je suis ayme de la plus belle - Crecquillon
Lute:Branle de Malta - anon.
Lute:Branle Honneur - anon.
Lute:Courante - Jacques de Belleville
Volte - anon.
Tenor and lute:J'ayme une fille de vilage - Vincent
Tenor and lute:Puisqu'il fault desormais . - Guedron
Tenor and lute:Rosette pour un peu d'absence anon. -
Tenor and lute:Douce beaute anon. -
Tenor and lute:La rousee du Joly mois de may - Planson
by Jasper Ridley
A personal portrait of ' Bloody Mary ' as she appears in the letters, anecdotes, and reminiscences of the men of her time, among them the chronicler Richard Grafton , the French Ambassador Noailles, the Venetian Ambassador Michiel, and Spanish visitors to the court.
Produced by NESTA PAIN t Second broadcast
played by the tHEUTLING STRING Quartet
Werner Heutling (violin)
Oswald Gattermann (violin) Erich Bolscheid (viola) Konrad Haesler (cello)
The Church in the Empire by W.H.C. FREND
Fellow of Gonville and Calus College, Cambridge
The Christianity of the Empire was not only a religion in the modern sense but the sum of many movements in the Empire. Mr. Frend discusses this aspect of the history of the Church. t Third of four talks
ELIZABETHAN SINGERS t Conductor. Louis HALSEY
Soprano, Barbara Elsy
t ALAN TYSON has recently completed a thematic catalogue of Clementi's work. In this illustrated talk he discusses Clementi's musical personality and draws attention to interesting features of his keyboard style followed by an interlude at 10.55