Programme Index

Discover 11,128,835 listings and 278,128 playable programmes from the BBC

Mozart and Schubert
THE AMSTERDAM Duo Nap de Klijn (violin)
Rudolf Jansen (piano)
JAMES GALWAY (flute)
The TUNNELL STRING TRIO John Tunnell (violin) Brian Hawkins (viola) Charles Tunnell (cello)

Contributors

Piano:
Rudolf Jansen
Violin:
John Tunnell
Viola:
Brian Hawkins
Cello:
Charles Tunnell

Part I
BOSTON SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
Conducted by SERGE KOUSSEVITZKY with WILLIAM PRIMROSE (viola)
Berlioz
Hungarian March (The Damnation of Faust)
Recorded in 1936 32.20* Symphony: Harold in Italy
Recorded in 1944 gramophone records

Contributors

Conducted By:
Serge Koussevitzky
Viola:
William Primrose

RADIO Orchestra OF
NETHERLANDS RADIO UNION Conducted by HENK SPRUIT
ROGER BOURDIN AND HIS ORCHESTRA
Recordings made available by cour. tesy of Netherlands Radio Union aod French Radio

Contributors

Conducted By:
Henk Spruit
Conducted By:
Roger Bourdin

Opera in two acts
Music by Rossini
Libretto by EUGÈNE Scribe and CHARLES GASPARD DELESTRE-POIRSON
Sung in French
Gramophone records
Cast in order of singing:
GLYNDEBOURNE FESTIVAL CHORUS and Orchestra
Conducted by VITTORIO Gui
The action takes place in Touralne. at the time of the Crusades.
Act 1
The grounds of the Countess Adele's castle
5.0* Act 2
A room in the castle

Contributors

Unknown:
Charles Gaspard
Conducted By:
Vittorio Gui

The fourteenth of the main series of eighteen programmes for adults taking the G.C.E. O-Level examinations in English Language and Literature, planned in association with a National Extension College correspondence course
Radio Tutor, David Grugeon
Scriptwriter, Emmeline Garnett
Produced by Peggy Bacon
First broadcast June 2. 1866
Repeated: Saturday, 11.35 a.m. (Home)
Details of the correspondence course can be obtained from The National Extension College, Shaftesbury Road, Cambridge

Contributors

Unknown:
David Grugeon
Scriptwriter:
Emmeline Garnett
Produced By:
Peggy Bacon

Six programmes about the problems and rewards of getting to know people with a different cultural background-for those who go to work in the developing countries and for those at home who want to know more about our fellow citizens in this one world.
1: Valuing Die differences by Lord Ritchie-Calder, C.B.E. and some of the young volunteers who have served overseas
Produced by Rosemary Jellis
Monday's broadcast
See page 25

Contributors

Produced By:
Rosemary Jellis

2: University Accountability in Britain
The Public Accounts Committee has proposed that university expenditure should be scrutinised by the Comptroller and Auditor General and that it should no longer remain the sole major exception to the normal requirements of Parliament. Would such scrutiny, as some Vice-Chancellors suggested, be an interference with academic freedom? Would it undermine the authority of the University Grants Committee? Would it damage the morale of university staff?
These questions are discussed by: CHARLES CARTER Vice-Chancellor of Lancaster University
SIR ROBERT AITKEN Vice-chancellor of Birmingham University and .SIR EDWARD BOYLE , M.P. See page 26

Contributors

Unknown:
Charles Carter
Unknown:
Sir Robert Aitken
Unknown:
Sir Edward Boyle

Ninth of fifteen fortnightly programmes following Mozart's development through his chamber music
Trio in E flat major, for clarinet, viola, and piano (K.498)
20.22* String Quintet in G minor (K.516)
THEA KING (clarinet) PETER SCHIDLOF (viola) ERNEST LUSH (piano)
AMADEUS STRING QUARTET Norbert Brainin (violin) Siegmund Nissel (violin) Peter Schidlof (viola) Martin Lovett (cello) with Cecil Aronowitz (viola)
Third broadcast of the Trio: second broadcast of the Quintet
Violin Sonata in E flat (K.481); String Quintet in C major (K 515): May 19 followed by an interlude at 10.55

Contributors

Violin:
Norbert Brainin
Viola:
Peter Schidlof
Cello:
Martin Lovett
Viola:
Cecil Aronowitz

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