and Weather Forecast
Overture: L'ltaliana in Algerl
(Rossini)
PHILIARMONIA ORCHESTRA
Conducted by CARLO MARIA GIULINI
7.12* Oboe Concertino in C major
(Bellini)
RENATO ZANFINI
VIRTUOSI DlROMA
Conducted by RENATO FASANO
7.20* Andante favori in F major
(Beethoven)
WILHELM KEMPFF (piano)
7.29* Four duets (Beethoven)
VICTORIA de Los ANGELES (soprano)
DIETRICH FISCHER. DIESKAU (baritone)
GERALD MOORE (piano) EDUARD DROLC (violin) IRMGARD POPPEN (cello)
7.19* Overture: Ballet No. 2. in G major (Rosamunde) (Schubert)
PHILHARMONIA ORCHESTRA
Conducted by PAUL KLETZKl on gramophone records
and Weather Forecast
Leader. Joseph Segal
† Conductor, RUDOLF Schwarz
MICHAEL CHAPMAN (bassoon)
and Weather Forecast
Stravinsky
Symphonies of wind instruments
SUISSE ROMANDE ORCHESTRA
Conducted by ERNEST ANSERMET
9.14* Symphony in three movements
SUISSE ROMANDE ORCHESTRA
Conducted by ERNEST ANSERMET
9.37* Ragtime for eleven instruments
TONI Koves (cimbatom)
COLUMBIA CHAMBER ORCHESTRA Conducted by THE COMPOSER on gramophone records
with KIRSTEN FLAGSTAD (soprano)
Overture: A Midsummer Night's
Dream (Mendelssohn)
Conducted by RAFAELFRÜHBECK DE BURGOS
9..57* Five songs (Sibelius)
In the evening
Was it a dream? Autumn evening
The diamond in the March snow Spring flies fast
(sung in Swedish)
Conducted by OIVIN FJELDSTAD
20.21* Symphony No. 4. in D minor
(Schumann)
Conducted by JOSEF KRIPS
A stereophonic broadcast: see p. 2
Jeannette Sinclair (soprano)
In her last programme
Jeannette SINCLAIR with PAUL HAMBURGER (piano) sings
JAMES ATKINS (bass-baritone) Paul HAMBURGER (piano)
PENELOPE LYNEX (cello) PETER CROSER (piano)
†LONDON STRING QUARTET
Carl Pini (violin)
John Tunnell (violin)
Keith Cummings (viola) Douglas Cameron (cello)
DENIS MATTHEWS (piano)
BBC WELSH ORCHESTRA Led by Garfield Phillips
Conducted by HARRY NEWSTONE
Part 1
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The fifth of six programmes In which FRANK DUNCAN reads from the composer's autobiography
Selected and introduced by Donald James
Part 2
Given before an invited audience at the Assembly Rooms. City Hall. Cardiff
Orchestral music by Wolf-Ferrari, Catalani and Zandonai on gramophone records
Heinrich Schutz
Three motets
Die mit Tranen Saen
Ich weiss, dass mein Erloser lebt
Selig sind die Toten
3.20* The Passion of Our Lord, according to St. Matthew sung by PETER PEARS (tenor)
CHRISTOPHER KEYTE (baritone) and the HEINRICH SCHUTZ CHORALE
Conductor, ROGER NORRINGTON
From the Parish Church, Terrington St. Clement, Norfolk
TATRAI QUARTET
Vilmos Tatrai (violin) Mihaly Szucs (violin) Gyorgy Konrad (viola) Ede Banda (cello) with JOAN DICKSON (cello)
Recorded at Hovingham Hall on June 12
by Gillian WEIR
From the Church of NOtre Dame de France. Leicester Square. London
Second broadcast
Five talks on contemporary habits in speech and writing
4: Idiom, Character, and Tradition by GILBERT PHELPS
Second broadcast
A series of ten programmes for listeners who want to know more about the language and life of German-speaking countries
Programme 7
Das Radio in Deutschland
Die Bayreuther Festspiele
Ein Auszug aus Wagners Oper
Die Meistersinger
Introduced by SABINE MICHAEL and DIETER GEISSLER
Written and produced by Edith R. Baer
The Flea by John Donne
Script and narration by PETER PORTER
Poem read by BASIL JONES
† Second broadcast
A series of twelve programmes
2: The available land and its potential use by PROFESSOR
SIR DUDLEY STAMP, C.B.Z.
Produced by Rosemary JeUis
Second broadcast
1. booklet is available
Michael Roll (piano)
Jeanne Loriod
(ondes martenot)
Arlette Sibon
(ondes martenot)
BBC Men's Chorus
BBC Symphony Orchestra Leader, Hugh Maguire Conducted by Sir Malcolm Sargent and Frederik Prausnitz
From the Royal Albert Hall , London
Part 1 conducted by Sir Malcolm Sargent
Beethoven
Overture: Egmont
7.44' Piano Concerto No. 2, in B flat major
8.14' Symphony No. 5, in C minor
A series of eight broadcasts
7: Progress at the United Nations
A talk by H. G. NICHOLAS
Fellow of New College, Oxford Have there been long-term benefits for world peace arising out of the Suez crisis? Mr. Nicholas explains how the events of 1956 provoked a period of forced growth at the United Nations, by acting as the stimulus to the expansion of the power of the Secretary-General and to the idea of a United Nations Peace Force-which has played a vital role in subsequent periods of crisis.
Introduced by PETER CALVOCORESSI
This talk Is being printed In The Listener ' of August 11.
August 2: Final discussion-International Judgment
Part 2 conducted by Frederik Prausnitz
Varese
Ecuatorial first performance in this country
9.2S* Deserts
from Idylls of the King by Alfred, Lord Tennyson
Read by DEREK HART with an introduction by PATRIC DICKINSON
Produced by Joe Burroughs
rehearses and conducts
Bach's Brandenburg Concerto
No. 2, in F major
MARLBORO Festival Orchestra on gramophone records
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