Programme Index

Discover 11,128,835 listings and 279,903 playable programmes from the BBC

0 A programme of recently released records
Overture: My Homeland. Dvorak
LONDON SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA Conducted by ISTVAN KERTESZ
9.5.5* Hoist
Song: TMs have I done for my true love
Terzetto for flute, oboe, and viola
Song: A welcome sons
PURCELL SINGERS
Richard ADENEY (flute) PETER GRAEME (oboe)
EDWARD SELWYN (oboe) CECIL ARONOWITZ (viola) Conductor. IMOGEN HOLST
10.13* Symphony No. 2, in D major
Sibelius HALLE ORCHESTRA Conducted by SIR JOHN BARBIROLLl

Contributors

Conducted By:
Istvan Kertesz
Flute:
Richard Adeney
Oboe:
Peter Graeme
Oboe:
Edward Selwyn
Viola:
Cecil Aronowitz
Conductor:
Imogen Holst
Unknown:
Sibelius Halle
Conducted By:
Sir John Barbirolll

ⓢ by Glazunov Polonaise (Ballet Scenes)
NORDMARK SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA Conducted by HEINRICH STEINER
2.35* Birthday Offering...arr. Iruino
ROYAL PHILHARMONIC ORCHESTRA Conducted by ROBERT IRVING gramophone records

Contributors

Unknown:
Glazunov Polonaise
Conducted By:
Heinrich Steiner
Conducted By:
Robert Irving

Andante and Variations in B flat major
VLADIMIR ASHKENAZY and MALCOLM FRAGER (two pianos) BARRY TUCKWELL (horn)
Amaryllis FLEMING (cello) TERENCE WEIL (cello)
4.59* Six Goethe Songs
Der Sanger (Ballade des Harfners) Wer nie sein Brot mit Tranen ass Wer sich der Einsamkeit erxibt An die Tiiren will ich schleichen Die Wandelnde Glocke Lied des Turmers
HERMANN PREY (baritone) KARL ENGEL (piano)
5.22* Piano Quintet in E flat major
BUDAPEST STRING Quartet with RUDOLF SERKIN (piano) gramophone records
Second of six fortnightly programmes each including a piano quintet

Contributors

Unknown:
Vladimir Ashkenazy
Unknown:
Malcolm Frager
Horn:
Barry Tuckwell
Cello:
Amaryllis Fleming
Cello:
Terence Weil
Piano:
Karl Engel
Piano:
Rudolf Serkin

A series of twenty lessons for listeners with a basic knowledge of Spanish
Lesson 5
Introduced by JACINTA CASTILLEJO with the help of PABLO SOTO
Script by Maria Victoria Alvarez and Anthony Watson
Produced by George Walton Scott
First broadcast on November 4,1965
Repeated: Friday, 7.4 p.m.
A booklet is available

Contributors

Introduced By:
Jacinta Castillejo
Script By:
Maria Victoria Alvarez
Script By:
Anthony Watson
Produced By:
George Walton Scott

5 : Intellectual Life
Introduced by RICHARD Hiscocks.
Professor of International Relations at Sussex University
Germany has great traditions of scholarship and culture. But how is West German education, including the vast civic universities. responding to the demands of an extending technological society? The cultural tradition especially in music and the theatre suffered from wartime destruction. Recovery has been great, but has concern with material problems caused creative activity to suffer?
Produced by Chris Cuthbertson

Contributors

Introduced By:
Richard Hiscocks.
Produced By:
Chris Cuthbertson

talks to David Sylvester
One of a group of conversations - some new, some previously broadcast - with eight American artists and two composers.
Jim Dine, like Claes Oldenburg, the subject of last week's programme, is one of America's leading pop artists. On grounds of obscenity the police last year seized a number of his paintings from an exhibition of his work in London.
(Second broadcast)
Roy Lichtenstein: April 24

Contributors

Interviewee:
Jim Dine
Interviewer:
David Sylvester

1: Africa and Indonesia by THE REV. DR. A. M. JONES illustrated by field recordings
Produced by Douglas Cleverdon
This month in Nairobi an international conference East Africa and the Orient: Historical Problems of the Pre-colonial Era, sponsored by Harvard University Center for International Affairs and the British institute of History and Archaeology in East Africa. has been discussing the interrelation of tie cultures of Africa and Indonesia.
In this and a succeeding programme Dr. Jones considers the musical evidence afforded by the African and Indonesian xylophones and other instruments.

Contributors

Unknown:
Rev. Dr. A. M. Jones
Produced By:
Douglas Cleverdon

The first of two talks
The Economic Web by Theodore Barker, Professor of Economic and Social History in the University of Kent at Canterbury

The period 1650-1750 is the run-in to the Industrial Revolution proper. We are accustomed to think of it largely in terms of the development of the provinces. But during this period London attained a phenomenal uniqueness in size, both absolutely and relatively, among the great cities of Europe. Professor Barker suggests that London perhaps played a far greater role in starting to roll the snowball of economic revolution than we normally realise. In this talk he looks at some of the evidence in the field of economics.

Contributors

Speaker:
Theodore Barker

by John Milton abridged for radio by R. D. SMITH
Book 2
Reader, Michael Redgrave
Satan debates with his angels now fallen into hell whether another battle is to be hazarded for the recovery of heaven: some advise it. others dissuade.
Second broadcast
Book 3: April 24 followed by an interlude at 10.50

Contributors

Unknown:
John Milton
Unknown:
R. D. Smith
Reader:
Michael Redgrave

Network Three

Appears in

About this data

This data is drawn from the Radio Times magazine between 1923 and 2009. It shows what was scheduled to be broadcast, meaning it was subject to change and may not be accurate. More