and Weather Forecast
Part 1
STRAVINSKY
Serenade in A played by VALERIE TRYON (piano)
Second broadcast
String Quartet in B flat major,
Op. 133 (Grosse Fuge) played by the SMETANA STRING QUARTET Jiri Novak (violin)
Lubomir Kostecky (violin) Milan Skampa (viola) Antonin Kohout (cello)
Second broadcast
Beethoven's own piano version:
9.4 a.m.
Symphony of Psalms
TORONTO FESTIVAL SINGERS
CBC SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
Conducted by THE COMPOSER on a gramophone record
A Stereophonic broadcast
and Weather Forecast
Part 2
BEETHOVEN
Grosse Fuge, Op. 134, for two pianos played by RONALD SMITH and MAURICE COLE
Second broadcast
Furtwangler's arrangement for string orchestra: Sunday at 1.24*
Ballet: Agon
Los ANGELES Festival ORCHESTRA Conducted by THE COMPOSER on a gramophone record
0 Stereophonic broadcast
Symphony No. 9, In D minor
(Choral)
Kyoko ITO (soprano)
HIROKO KIMURA (contralto) AKIHKO Isuii (tenor)
YOSMINOBU KURIBAYASHI (baritone)
Tokyo PHILHARMONIC CHORUS
NIKIKAI CHORUS
TOKYO BROADCASTING CHORUS
KUNITACHI MUSIC COLLEGE CHORAL GROUP
N.H.K. SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA Conducted by HIROYUKI IWAKI
Recording made available by courtesy of Japanese Radio
Introduced by JOHN LADE Building a Library:
Mozart's Don Giovanni by ALAN JEFFERSON
Recent chamber music and songs: by JOAN CHISSELL
Introduced by Humphrey Lyttelton.
Introduced by JOHN DUNN
Directed by Geoff Dobson
Timings may be altered by events
12.30 Your Afternoon Forecast direct from the London Weather Centre followed by SPORTS PARADE
Introduced by Liam NOLAN
GOLF
1.45 : 2.50 : 3.48 : 4.43*
The Senior Service Tournament
Reports on the final-day's play by TOM SCOTT
From Gosforth Park. Newcastle
RACING
2.35 The Blue Seal Stakes
For two-year-old fillies, run over six furlongs
3.15 The Red Deer Stakes
A handicap for three-year-olds and upwards, run over one mile and a balf
3.50 The Queen Elizabeth II Stakes
For three-year-olds and upwards. run over one mile
Commentary by PETER BROMLEY with summaries by ROGER MORTIMER
From Ascot Heath
4.55 Racing Results
4.5 ASSOCIATION FOOTBALL
Commentary by BRIAN MOORE and MAURICE EDELSTON during the second half of one of today's English League matches
4.45 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
BBC NORTHERN ORCHESTRA
Leader, Reginald Stead
Conducted by Carlos Chavez
An investigation of China's grievances against the Soviet Union by GEOFFREY STERN
Lecturer in International Relations, London School of Economics
The quarrel between China and Russia is ostensibly about ideology, but manifestly about power. and China's memory of three centuries of humiliation at the hands of the Russians adds to its intensity. Geoffrey Stern traces the extent of this humiliation and discusses some of its implications for present developments in the Sino-Soviet dispute.
Oct. 5: News out of China
Part 2
by F. W. Willetts
Scrap
' In the long run it doesn'make any difference whether you die now or later.'
The Passing
' These little mishaps. They're sent to try us. You're in a strange place. There's fog. You get lost. Of course you get lost.'
Produced by BENNETT MAXWELL Gretchen Franklin is in ' Spring and Port Wine ' at the Apollo Theatre. London
Second broadcast
Roberto Gerhard born September 25, 1896
Dmitri Shostakovich born September 25, 1906
Promoted by the Macnaghten Concerts in association with the BBC Third Programme
From the Commonwealth Institute, London
Margaret Price (soprano) James Lockhart (piano)
Yfrah Neaman (violin)
Susan Bradshaw (piano)
Parrenin String Quartet Jacques Parrenin (violin)
Marcel Charpentier (violin) Denes Marton (viola)
Pierre Penassou (cello)
Part 1
Reflections on Philip Rieff 's
The Triumph of the Therapeutic by JOHN WREN-LEWIS
Philip Rieff , Professor of Sociology at the University of Pennsylvania. is editor of the Collected Works of Siegmund Freud and a professed Freudian. He believes that modern culture is committed to the therapeutic effort, to well-being for its own sake, after the failure of demand-systems like Communism and Christianity. John Wren-Lewis thinks Rieff goes some way beyond Freud-but still not far enough.
Part 2
James Lockhart broadcasts by permission of 'he Gen. Administrator. Royal Opera House Covent Garden
tAtalkby|
PeterHenry*
Konstantin Paustovsky , the doyen of Soviet literature, is regarded in his native Russia as a link with the nineteenth-century classics, and as perhaps the greatest living : literary craftsman.
Mr. Henry introduces his own translations of excerpts from Paustovsky's works
Reader, GARY WATSON
Cello Sonata
FLORENCE HOOTON (cello) and WILFRID PARRY (piano) on a gramophone record