and Weather Forecast
Overture: Prometheus (Beethoven)
Conducted by OTTO KLEMPERER
8.10* Symphonic Variations for piano and orchestra iFranck) with JOHN OGDON (piano)
Conducted by Sir JOHN BARBIROLLI
8.26* Pictures from an Exhibition (Mussorgsky, orch. Ravel)
Conducted by LORIN MAAZEL on gramophone records
and Weather Forecast
Cantata No. 4: Christ lag in Todesbanden
HELMUT KREBS (tenor)
DIETRICH FISCHER-DIESKAU (baritone) with the FRANKFURT STATE MUSIC SCHOOL CHOIR and the GÖTTINGEN BACH FESTIVAL ORCHESTRA
Conducted by FRITZ LEHMANN
9.29* Cantata No. 49: Ich geh' und suche mit Verlangen
AGNES GIEBEL (soprano)
JAKOB STAMPFLI (bass) with the WESTPHALIAN SINGERS and ORCHESTRA Conducted by WILHELM EHMANN on gramophone records
Next week's programme includes the motet : Komm, Jesu, komm, and the Cantata No. 46
with ISAAC STERN (violin)
Overture: Fidelio (Beethoven)
CONCERTGEBOUW ORCHESTRA Conducted by WOLFGANG SAWALLISCH
10.7* Violin Concerto (Hindemith)
ISAAC STERN with the NEW YORK PHILHARMONIC ORCHESTRA Conducted by LEONARD BERNSTEIN
10.38* Symphonic poem: Tapiola (Sibelius)
BERLIN PHILHARMONIC ORCHESTRA
Conducted by HERBERT VON KARAJAN
Recently released records
Music from opera and ballet with the BBC CONCERT ORCHESTRA Leader, Arthur Leavins
Conducted by JOHN LANCHBERY and RAE WOODLAND (.soprano)
ROWLAND JONES (tenor)
The JOHN MCCARTHY SINGERS
Introduced by ANDREW GEMMILL
Produced by Alan Abbott
The programme includes excerpts from: John Lanchbery broadcasts by permission of the General Administrator, Royal Opera House Covent Garden
Introduced by Humphrey Lyttelton
Introduced by JOHN HOBDAY
Directed by NEIL DURDEN-SMITH
Timings may be altered by events
12.30 SPORTS PARADE
Introduced by LIAM NOLAN
Weather Forecast at 12.55
1.0 What Makes a Footballer?
MAURICE EDELSTON investigates, with recordings of famous players past and present
Produced by David Allan
Previously broadcast in the BBC
World Service
*
1.30 Listeners' Letters
† BRIAN JOHNSTON and ARTHUR
WRIGLEY answer points raised by listeners during the past cricket season
GOLF
1.50: 3.50
Dunlop Masters Tournament Reports by TOM SCOTT
From Portmarnock Golf Club County Dublin, Eire
Broadcast by arrangement with Radio Eireann
MOTOR RACING
1.55: Formula 3
3.10: 3.40: 4.15*
The International Gold Cup for Formula 2 cars
Commentary by ROBIN RICHARDS and ERIC TOBIIT
From Oulton Park. Cheshire
RACING
2.55 The Imperial Stakes
A race for two-year-olds only over six furlongs
*
3.25 The Florizel Handicap
A race for three-year-olds and upwards over two miles
Commentary by PETER BROMLEY with summaries by ROGER MORTIMER
From Kempton Park
4.50* Racing Results
*
ASSOCIATION FOOTBALL
3.55: 4.20
An English League match
Commentary by ALAN CLARKE and MAURICE EDELSTON during the second half, followed by football results as they come in direct from the BBC Sports Room
*
5.0 SPORTS REPORT
Introduced by LIAM NOLAN
Produced by ANGUS MACKAY
Classified Football Results at 5.0 and 5.50 p.m.
Barbara Elsy (soprano)
Susan Longfield (soprano) Grayston Burgess (counter-tenor)
Ian Partridge (tenor)
Geoffrey Shaw (baritone) Christopher Keyte (bass)
Renaissance English music
Nine broadcasts about the theory, problems, practice, and future of Aid and development
9: Economists are not Kings
If Aid is not primarily an economic problem, which intellectual techniques should be used? How will these affect the pace at which technology can be transferred?
EVERETT E. HAGEN
Professor of Economics, Massachusetts
Institute of Technology and R. P. DORE
Professor of Sociology with special reference to the Far East, University of London talk with ANDREW SHONFIELD who also sums up the series
Series produced by Anthony Moncrieff
Second broadcast
A portrait of the Plague in seventeenth-century London and especially of the Great Visitation in 1665 Written and compiled by TERENCE TILLER from contemporary and other sources
Nashe's poem
In Time of Pestilence set to music by ELIZABETH POSTON sung by a section of the AMBROSIAN SINGERS accompanied by PETER HALLING and BERNARD RICHARDS (cellos)
Narrator, HUGH BURDEN
Others taking part: Betty Hardy. Caroline Leigh , Isabel Rennie , Rosalind Shanks , Mary Wimbush , John Bryning , Michael Collins , William Eedle , Deryck Guyler , Victor Platt , Derek Prentice. Harold Reese , Rouer Snowdon , Geoffrey Wincott
Produced by TERENCE TILLER
Second broadcast
Jiri Travnicek (violin) Adolf Sykora (violin) Jiri Kratochvil (viola) Karel Krafka (cello)
Part 1
Two talks by PETER DRONKE
Lecturer in Medieval Literature in the University of Cambridge 1: Abelard
Dr. Dronke describes and illustrates Abelard's Plauctus Virginum Israel, a dramatic lyric on the death of Jephtha's daughter.
Marbod, Alan of Lille, Hildegarde of Bingen: September 26
Part 2
Two talks by JOHN LEVY
1: Confucian, Buddhist, and Court music
Chinese culture first came to Korea in the third century A.D. and even today there are many survivals of Chinese music and musical instruments from the Tang and Sung dynasties. But there is also a characteristic Korean music. John Levy introduces examples of both.
Social and folk music: Sept. 27
Sonata in D minor, Op. 4 No. MAXENCE LARRIEU (flute) JACQUES CHAMBON (oboe) BERNARD FONTENY (cello)
ANNE-MARIE BECKENSTEINER (harpsichord) on a gramophone record