and Weather Forecast
March in D major (K.249) (Mojart)
ROYAL PIULHARMONIC ORCHESTRA
Conducted by SIR THOMAS BEECHAM
7.8* Clarinet Concerto No. 2, in E flat major (Weber)
GERVASE DE PEYER (clarinet)
LONDON SYMPHONY Orchestra
Conducted by COLIN DAVIS
7.30* Symphony No. 84. In E flat major (Haydn)
ENGLISH CHAMBER ORCHESTRA
Conducted by COLIN DAVIS on gramophone records
and Weather Forecast
A request programme of gramophone records
JENA SYMPHONY
(Jeremias Friedrich Witt )
SAXON STATE ORCHESTRA
Conducted by FRANZ KONWITSCHNY
8.32* Introduction and Allegro appassionato, in G major, for piano and orchestra (Schumann)
SVIATOSLAV RICHTER WARSAW PHILHARMONIC ORCHESTRA
Conducted by STANISLAV WlSLOCKl
8.48* Overture di Ballo (Sullivan)
BBC SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
Conducted by SIR MALCOLM SARGENT
and Weather Forecast
Alessandro and Domenico Scarlatti
Sonatas (Domenico ScarlattO
E minor (L.374) E major (L.21) D minor (L.266) D major (L.484) D minor (L.207)
LUCIANO SGRIZZI (harpsichord)
9.16* Cantata: Infirmata vulnerata
(Alessandro Scartatti )
DIETRICH FISCHER-DIESKAU (baritone) AURELE NICOLET (flute) HELMUT HELLER (violin)
EDITH PICHT-AXENFELD (harpsichord) IRMGARD POPPEN (cello)
9.30* Sonatas (Domenico Scarlatti )
G major (L.85)
F major (L.385) . F minor (L.189)
E flat major (L.115) E flat major (L.220)
LUCIANO SGRIZZI (harpsichord) on gramophone records
Recorded at the 1965 Cheltenham Festival
BBC NORTHERN SINGERS
Conductor, STEPHEN WILKINSON
ENDRE WOLF (violin)
BBC NORTHERN ORHCESTRA Leader, Reginald Stead
Conducted by MEREDITH DAVIES
String Quartet No. 2. in A major
(Arriaga)
11.22* Prelude No. 1: Prelude
No. 3; Study No. 1 (Villa-Loboj)
11.34* Quintette en forme de choros (ViUa-Lobos)
11.46* String Quartet No. 2, In
D major (Borodin)
SPANISH NATIONAL RADIO QUARTET José Fernandez (violin) Rafael Perianez (violin) Antonio Arias (viola) Carlos Baena (cello)
NARCISO YEPES (guitar)
NEW YORK WOODWIND QUINTET Samuel Baron (flute) Jerome Roth (oboe)
David Glazer (clarinet) John Barrows (horn)
Bernard Garfield (bassoon)
BORODIN QUARTET
Rostislav Dubinsky (violin) Jaroslav Alexandrov (violin) Dmitry Shebalin (viola)
Valentin Berlinsky (cello) on gramophone records
BOURNEMOUTH SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA Leader. Gerald Jarvis
Conducted by EDGAR COSMA
Part 1
and Weather Forecast
STEPHEN DODGSON looks at some non-broadcast musical events taking place in the Midlands and East Anglia between now and the end of September
Part 2 Given before an invited audience
In the Winter Gardens, Bournemouth
Leader, David Adams
Conductor, TERENCE LOVETT
With HILDE GUEDEN on gramophone records
This week tthe Australian composer
Don Banks talks to WILLIAM MANN about his work and introduces a programme of his music, which includes
Second study, for cello and piano
SIEGFRIED PALM (cello)
MARGARET KITCHIN (piano)
First movement from his Trio. for horn. violin, and piano
BARRY TUCKWELL (horn)
BRENTON LANGBEIN (Violin) MAUREEN JONES (piano) on a gramophone record
Three Episodes
DOUGLAS WHITTAKER (flute) with TOE COMPOSER at the piano
Last words: last of three programmes of music from late in composers' lives
' I have an habitual feeling of my real life having passed. and that I am leading a posthumous existence (Keats's 'ast letter)
MALCOLM BINNS (piano)
PHILIP JONES BRASS ENSEMBLE Philip Jones (trumpet)
Roy Copestake (trumpet) Arthur Wilson (trombone) Ray Brown (trombone)
Raymond Premru (trombone) John Wilson (tenor tuba) with NORMAN KNIGHT (flute)
AMICI STRING QUARTET Lionel Bentley (violin) Colin Staveley (violin)
Christopher Wellington (viola) Peter Halling (cello)
Second broadcast
sung by PETER PEARS (tenor) with Viola TUNNARD (piano)
The best of present-day Jazz on records
Introduced by CHARLES Fox
80-100 w.p.m.
Compiled by JOYCE HARBISON
90-130 w.p.m.; Saturday; 10.30 a.m. (Home)
A booklet Is available
Lesson 38:
A la plage
Introduced by KATIA ELLIS with the help of Louis Bloncourt
Written and produced by Elsie Ferguson
Language consultant, Paul Couster
First broadcast June 28. 1965
Repeated: Sat., 11.10 a.m. (Home)
A booklet and records are available
Studies in Form
A second hearing of the six introductory programmes
2: All this fuss about keus (0 by ROGER NORTH
Produced by Peter Dudd
Sacrae lectiones ex prophets
Job (The lamentations of Job) sung by the Choir OF NEW COLLEGE, OXFORD Conductor, DAVID LUMSDEN
From New College, Oxford
Second broadcast
Second of two talks by J. R. POLE
Fellow of Churchill College and Reader in American History and Government in the University of Cambridge
One of the most interesting aspects of the interaction between events and ideas in the growth of democratic revolution is the role played by men who were not democrats in any ordinary sense, and even by men who were frankly despotic. Just how democratic was democratic revolution in its beginnings? And how did these somewhat incongruous beginnings give rise to a genuine sense that men ' en masse ' could seize hold of their destinies in a new way?
USTAD IMRAT KHAN (surbahar)
PANDIT SHAMTA PRASAD (tabla)
Surbahar solo:
Raga Bageshwart (Long after sunset raga)
8.55* Tabla solo: Tal Rupak
A discussion between members of an invited audience, including
ROBERT CONQUEST, KEVIN CROSSLEY -HOLLAND, A. E. DYSON , JOHN GROSS. FREDERICK GRUBB , EDWARD LUCIE-SMITH, CHRISTOPHER Ricks , and GEORGE WIGHTMAN with PHILIP HOBSBAUM in the chair
The discussion will arise from a reading of these poems:
Thistles by Ted Hughes
The Stronghold by Peter Redgrove Moss by Jon Silkin
Blackberry-Picking by Seamus Heaney Grass by Ken Smith
Breakwaters by Ted Walker
The poems are read by HARVEY HALL but not all of them will necessarily be heard while the programme is on the air
1882-1937
Piano recital by John Ogdon
Variations on a Polish folk theme, Op. 10 (1904)
10.24* Sonata No. 3, Op. 38
(1917)
10.40* Métopes, Op. 29 (Three
Poems) (1915)
L'ile des Sirènes: Calypso; Nausicaa
First in a series of ten programmes of his music followed by an interlude at 10.55