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gramophone records
gramophone records
and Weather forecast
Tallis, Byrd, and Gibbons DELLER CONSORT VIOLS OF THE
SCHOLA CANTORUM BASILIENSIS
Gibbons
Anthem: Almighty and everlasting
God
Fantasia in three parts
9.10* Anthem: This is the record of John
In Nomine in five parts
Anthem: 0 Lord, increase my faith Fantasia in three parts
9.27* Madrigal: What is our life Fantasia in four parts The Cries of London gramophone record
A recording of the fourth of eight weekly public recitals promoted by the Music Programme on Mondays at 5.45 p.m. in April and May
Luba Baricova (mezzo-soprano) Ivo Zidek (tenor)
Jan Hus Tichy (piano) with the BBC WOMEN'S CHORUS
by LESLIE PAUL
From Bangor Cathedral
Mendelssohn Chamber Music series continued
CAROL SANSOM (cello)
AEOLIAN STRING Quartet with THEA KING (clarinet)
SYDNEY HUMPHREYS (violin) MARGARET MAJOR (viola)
BBC WF.LSH ORCHESTRA Leader, Colin Staveley
Conductor. JOHN CAREWE
Part 1
and Weather forecast
CHRISTOPHER GRIER looks at some non - broadcast musical events taking place in the North during the next seven days
Part 2
Given before an Invited audience in the Concert Hall. Broadcasting House. Llandaff
LONDON STUDIO STRINGS
Leader, Reginald Leopold
Conducted by KENNETH MONTGOMERY
A gramophone record of excerpts from Lehar's operetta, with WALDE-MAR KMENTT and HILDE GUEDEN , Orchestra and Chorus of the VIENNA VOLKSOPER, conducted by MAX SCHÖNHERR
Conducted by ISTVAN KERTESZ :
PHILIP JONES (oboe)
ALASDAIR GRAHAM (piano)
Amict STRING QUARTET Lionel Be.ntley (violin) Colin Staveley (violin)
Christopher Wellington (viola) Peter Hailing (cello) with John Gray (double-bass)
Part 1
ANTONY HOPKINS discusses a work or theme of current interest
Sunday's broadcast
Part 2
A concert given in St. Pancras
Town Hall, as part of the 1966 St. Pancras Festival
Next Tuesday: Another Youth and Music Chamber Concert, given by Marlene Fleet (piano), Maureen MoreUe (mezzo-soprano), Georgina Dobrie (clarinet), and the London String Quartet
BAND OF THE GRENADIER GUARDS Conducted by CAPT. RODNEY B. BASHFORD Director of Music
Second broadcast
80-100 w.p.m.
For those who want to keep up or improve their speeds in any shorthand system
Shorthand Dictation Practice Book 4 accompanies this series
100-120 w.p.m.: Friday, 6.30 p.m.
A series of twenty programmes intended for listeners who already have some knowledge of French. An imaginary roving reporter. Gilles Leroy , records his impressions of the different places he visits each week
Programme 18: Ronchamp— la chapelle de Le Corbusier
Introduced by KATIA Ellis with the help of EMILE HARVEN
Script by Odile Castro and Elsie Ferguson
Produced by Elsie Ferguson
Language consultant, Paul Couster
First broadcast on June 27. 1966
Repeated: Sat., 10.45 a.m. (Home)
A booklet Is available
A series ot twelve programmes on Florentine art and architecture
3: The Gates of Paradise
Speaker: BRIAN ROBB Senior Tutor,
Royal College of Art, London
Produced by George Walton Scott
A booklet Is available
the novel by William Trevor adapted for radio by Pauline Spender
with Cecil Parker, Barbara Couper, Denys Blakelock and Bryan Pringle
A group of sad, elderly gentlemen are members of the same Old Boys' Association. Mr. Jaraby, obsessed by the idea that he and no one else must be the new president of the Association, campaigns desperately to this end. His wife is not encouraging.
Cast in order of speaking:
with Wilfred Babbage, Stephen Jack, Carol Marsh and Middleton Woods
Produced by R. D. SMITH
Danton's Death
An opera in two parts by Gottfried von Einem
Libretto by THE COMPOSER and BORIS BLACHER freely adapted from Georg Buchner Sung in German
Cast in order of smiling:
CHORUS OF NORTH GERMAN RADIO Chorus-Master, Max Thurn
SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA OF NORTH GERMAN RADIO
Conducted by LEOPOLD LUDWIG
Recording made available by courtesy of North German Radio
The action takes place in Paris In 1794.
PART 1: Scenes 1, 2, and 3
Towards a theology of the imagination by JACK MOLE
Lecturer in Divinity at the Northumberland College of Education
' The choice may not be simply between the numinist on the high road and the humanist on the low. There is an area in between: "the profane "-and it's there that I want to build up a theology for a post-god world, a theology not of metaphysics this time but of imagination.'
PART 2: Scenes 4, 5, and 6
A group of three talks by MARK GIROUARD
Architectural historian, who has studied relations between the arts during the period 1730-1760.
How did Rococo, which had started in France as a style of ornament, reach England? Once here. how was it adapted by English designers and architects?
1: The Slaughter Coffee House Set
From the seventeen - thirties, Slaughter's Coffee House in St. Martin's Lane, London, became the meeting place of a group of artists, writers, and actors gathered round Hogarth, who between them pioneered the Rococo style in England.
Second broadcast
Vauxhall Gardens and the Anti-Palladians: May 5