and Weather Forecast
Symphony No. 6, In C major
(Schubert)
BERLIN PHILHARMONIC ORCHESTRA Conducted by LORIN MAAZEL
7.33* Cello Concerto in A major
(C. P. E. Bach )
PIERRE FOURNIER LUCERNE Festival Strings
Directed by RUDOLF BAUMGARTNER (violin) on gramophone records
and Weather Forecast
Overture: Masaniello (Auber)
PARIS CONSERVATOIRE ORCHESTRA Conducted by ALBERT WOLFF
8.13* Romance in F major, for violin and orchestra (Beethoven)
DAVID OISTRAKH
ROYAL PHILHARMONIC ORCHESTRA
Conducted by SIR EUGENE GOOSSENS
8.22* Introduction and Allegro
Appassionato in G major, for piano and orchestra (Schumann)
RUDOLF SERKIN PHILADELPHIA ORCHESTRA
Conducted by EUGENE ORMANDY
8.38* Suite: Der Rosenkavalier
(Strauss)
PHILHARMONIA ORCHESTRA Conducted by JOSEF KRIPS on gramophone records
and Weather Forecast
Ravel
Gaspard de la nuit
CHARLES ROSEN (piano)
9.25* Valses nobles et sentimentales
SUISSE ROMANDE ORCHESTRA
Conducted by ERNEST ANSERMET on gramophone records
HELEN WATTS (contralto)
ARTHUR GRUMIAUX (violin)
Violin Concerto in A minor (Bach)
10.0' Cantata: Tu fedel? Tu constante? (Handel)
Directed from the harpsichord by RAYMOND LEPPARD
10.19' Symphony No. 28. in C major (K.200) (Mozart)
Conducted by COLIN DAVIS on gramophone records
ⓢ Stereophonic broadcast: see p. 12
Alexander Young (tenor)
Each month a well-known artist is invited to introduce and perform a wide range of music
In his fourth programme
ALEXANDER YOUNG with Rex STEPHENS (piano), sings
RALPH HOLMES (violin)
BBC WELSH ORCHESTRA Leader, Colin Staveley
Conductor, JOHN CAREWE
Part 1: Mendelssohn
Overture: Ruy Bias
12.26* Violin Concerto in E minor
and Weather Forecast
NEVILLE GARDEN looks at some non-broadcast musical events taking place in the West. Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland during the coming week
Part 2
Before an invited audience at the Assembly Rooms. City Hall. Cardiff
Leader. James Hutcheon
Conductor, GILBERT VINTER
of the Vienna Volksoper with ERICH KUNZ (baritone) on gramophone records
HENRYK SZERYNG (violin) ARTUR RUBINSTEIN (piano)
Sonata in F major. Op. 24
(Spring) (Beethoven)
3.22* Sonata in D minor (Brahms) on gramophone records
Opera in three acts
Music by Verdi
Libretto by ANTONIO SOMMA after Scribe
Sung in Italian on records
CHORUS AND ORCHESTRA OF THE
ACCADEMIA DI SANtA CECILIA, ROME Conducted by GEORG SOLTI
Stereophonic broadcast: seep.12
byHERRICK BUNNEY
From St. Giles' Cathedral, Edinburgh
Second broadcast
Illustrated explanations of some standard musical terms
Major and Minor by ROGER NORTH
Second broadcast
Six studies by ARTHUR Mizener Professor of English at Cornell University
5: The Romantic Novel: Scott Fitzgerald
Scott Fitzgerald , who wrote about the glamorous rich of America in the 1920s, has been called the Laureate of the Jazz Age. Yet out of the material of such lives he made two great novels; one of these is his last and most moving book. Tender is the Night, written in the 1930s when his wife went incurably insane.
With readings by David BAUER
Produced by HOWARD SMITH
Second broadcast
A reading list can be obtained by sending a stamped, addressed foolscap envelope to The American Novel[address removed]
10: Field Studies Centres by CHARLES SINKER
Warden, Preston Montford Field Centre, Shropshire
Studies at Moor House
Field Station. Cumberland by PALMER NEWBOULD , Ph.D.. Department of Botany,
University College, London
Produced by Rosemary Jellis
Second broadcast
A booklet is available
The last short story of Fyodor Dostoevsky translated by S. KOTELIANSKY and J. MIDDLETON MURRY
Read by Oscar QUITAK
Produced by William Glen-Doepel
Third broadcast
1574-1638
First of two programmes of madrigals sung by the WILBYE CONSORT
Susan Longfield (soprano) Ursula Connors (soprano) Margaret Cable (contralto) Noreen Willett (contralto) Nigel Rogers (tenor) Geoffrey Shaw (bass)
Directed by PETER PEARS who also introduces the programme
All pleasure is of this condition
As fair as morn
Weep, weep, mine eyes
Sweet honey-sucking bees Happy, 0 happy he
Come, shepherd swains
Ye that do live in pleasures
Recollections of Lord Rutherford
An edited version of his address to the Royal Society
From 1921 Dr. Kapitza worked In Cambridge, especially with Rutherford in the Cavendish. He became director of the Royal Society Mond Laboratory, but when he went back to Russia in 1934 to collect a prize Stalin refused to let him out again. Earlier this year he made his first return visit to this country.
Sonata in D major (K.308)
9.42* Sonata in G major (K.379)
NORBERT BRAININ (violin)
LILI KRAUS (piano)
The second of two programmes on the songs the Maoris sing
A Touch of Genius
This programme traces the adaptation of their songs to European influence
Introduced by JAMES NcNEING who recorded some of the mustt in New Zealand in 1964 Produced by Francis Dillon
Sonata per archi (1957-58)
BAVARIAN RADIO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
Conducted by ERNEST BOUR
Recording made available by courtesy of Bavarian Radio followed by an interlude at 10.55