Third day
Bassoon Concerto in B flat major
(K. 191)
GWYDION BROOKE with the ROYAL PHILHARMONIC ORCHESTRA
Conducted by SIR THOMAS BEECHAM on a gramophone record
and Weather Forecast
Ives and Gershwin
String Quartet No. 1 (1896) (A
Revival Service) (lues)
Kohon STRING QUARTET of NEW YORK UNIVERSITY Harold Kohon (violin)
Raymond Kunicki (violin) Bernard Zaslav (viola) Aaron Shapinski (cello)
9.25* Swimmers; He is There!
(Ives)
HELEN BOATWRIGHT (soprano) JOHN KIRKPATRICK (piano) on gramophone records
9.30* Rhapsody in Blue, for piano
(Gershwin) played by THE COMPOSER on a piano roll recording
Overture: A Midsummer Night's
Dream (Mendelssohn)
LONDON SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA Conducted by RAFAEL FRÜHBECK DE BURGOS
9.56* Ah! non credea mirarti
(Finale, Act 2: La Sonnambula) (Bellmi)
JOAN SUTHERLAND (soprano) Nicola MONTI (tenor)
FERNANDO CORENA (bass) and the FLORENCE FESTIVAL CHORUS AND ORCHESTRA
Conducted by RICHARD BONYNGE
10.7* Piano Concerto in E flat major (Ireland)
Colin HORSLEY with the ROYAL PHILHARMONIC ORCHESTRA
Conducted by BASIL CAMERON
10.34* Symphony No. 3, in G minor
(Roussel)
PARIS CONSERVATOIRE ORCHESTRA Conducted by ANDRE CLUYTENS
ALAN FEN-TAYLOR (harpsichord)
PRO ARTE STRING TRIO Kenneth Sillito (violin) Cecil Aronowitz (viola) Tercnce Weil (cello)
PETER WALLFISCH (piano)
CITY OF BIRMINGHAM SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA Leader, Felix Kok
Conducted by HAROLD GRAY
Part 1
and Weather Forecast
NEVILLE GARDEN looks at some non-broadcast musical events taking place in London and the South-East during the coming weekend
Part 2
Given before an invited audience at the College of Advanced Technology. Gosta Green. Birmingham
The second of seven weekly programmes of excerpts from the second biennial festival given at the Bavarian Radio Station in Munich
This week:
BAVARIAN RADIO Orchestra Conducted by MlLJENKO PROHASKA and GREHE KOI.BE play contributions by Yugoslav and Danish Radio
MILIVOJ SURBEK (piano)
Recordings made available by courtesy of Bavarian Radio
Overture: Colas Breugnon
(Kabalevsky)
SCOTTISH NATIONAL ORCHESTRA
Conducted by ALEXANDER GIBSON
2.35* Ballet Suite: Gayaneh
(Khachaturyan)
LENINGRAD PHILHARMONIC ORCHESTRA Conducted by GENNADI ROZHDESTVENSKY on gramophone records
This programme is being broadcast experimentally on the Zenith-G.E. pilot tone stereophonic system from the VHF transmitters at Wrotham and Dover, Kent. To hear the programme in stereophony a special receiver, or an adapter for use with an existing receiver, is necessary. Listeners with normal VHF receivers will hear the programme monophonically as usual.
by BRIAN RUNNETT
Jean Langlais: Triptych
Melody ; Trio; Final
From the Whitworth Hall, Manchester University
Brahms
A German Requiem
ILSE WOLF (soprano)
JOHN CAMERON (baritone)
THE AMBROSIAN SINGERS
ROYAL PHILHARMONIC ORCHESTRA Leader, Raymond Cohen
Conducted by SIR ADRIAN BOULT
The fifth of twenty-four programmes
String Quartet in F major played by the CARMIRELL! QUARTET
Pina Carmirelli (violin)
Montserrat Cervera (violin) Luigi Sagrati (viola)
Arturo Bonucci (cello) on a gramophone record
(piano)
50-80 w.p.m.
Compiled by JOYCE HARBISON
80-100 w.p.m.: Wednesday, 6.30 p.m.
A booklet is available
Lesson 17
Introduced by SABINE MICHAEL and DIETER GEISSLER , with HEIDI TREUTLER , OTTO DIAMANT
Written and produced by Edith R. Baer
First broadcast on June 15, 1965
Repeated next Saturday at 10.45 a.m. (Home Service)
A booklet is available
A series of seven talks on the scope of sociological studies and the contribution they can make to our understanding of contemporary society, illustrated by examples from recent research.
5: The sociology of morals by RONALD FLETCHER Professor of Sociology University of York
Produced by Rosemary Jellis
Le Chandelier
A comedy by Alfred de Musset
Translated and adapted for broadcasting by PETER MEYER with Susannah York
Joss Ackland
Willoughby Goddard and Gordon Gardner
Andre's clerks:
The action takes place in Andre's house and garden in a small French provincial town in the middle of the nineteenth century.
Pianist, VIOLA TUNNARD
Produced by CHARLES LEFEAUX
Third broadcast
George Hadjinikos (piano)
BBC Symphony Orchestra Leader, Hugh Maguire
Conductor, Antal Dorati
Part 1
Overture Concertante; Largo Sinfonico; Promenade Marche (Suite No. 2)
First performance in this country
Nine programmes on continuity and change in modern society 5: The case of the wholesale moderniser by R. P. Dore
Professor of Sociology (Far East) London School of Economics
The majority of the world's innovators have not been inventors but imitators-of models of ' the modern ' usually taken from other more advanced countries. But how can a nation, while admitting backwardness, preserve its self-respect? A country's traditions are preserved as an assertion of individualism in the face of innovation. Professor Dore uses nineteenth-century Japan to illustrate his argument and draws conclusions for present-day Britain.
W. D. Reddaway on Continuity and Change in Economics: February 9
These talks are being printed in ' The Listener '
Part 2
Piano Concerto No. 2
First performance in this country
Given before an invited audience in BBC Studio 1. Maida Vale, London. Requests for tickets for future concerts may be sent to [address removed]enclosing a stamped addressed envelope.
George Hadjinikos writes on Skalkottas in ' The Listener' (published January 27)
in Modern Performances of Eighteenth-Century Music
† HORACE FITZPATRICK was for some time a horn player with the Vienna State Opera Orchestra and has also mastered the valveless instrument. This programme, based on a paper read at the Royal Musical Association, includes excerpts from a Mozart concerto played by the speaker on a valveless instrument and on a modern horn
The pianist is WILFRID PARRY
Toccata and Fugue in D minor
(Dorian)
10.54* Fugue in G major (S.577)
LIONEL ROGG
Organ of the Grossmlinster, Zurich on gramophone records