and Weather forecast
A weekly programme of recent records
and Weather forecast
Played by the Amadeus String Quartet: Norbert Brainin (violin) Siegmund Nissel (violin) Peter Schidlof (viola) Martin Lovett (cello)
Quartet in B flat major (K.4S8)
The fourth in a series of ten weekly programmes
(Third broadcast)
A request programme of gramophone records
A weekly review edited by Anna Instone and Julian Herbage
Introduced by JULIAN HERBAGB
Record Review
Contributed by STEPHEN DODGSON
TREVOR HARVEY and ANDREW PORTER
JANET BAKER (mezzo-soprano)
BBC SYMPHONY Orchestra Leader. Hugh Maguire
Conducted by Sir ADRIAN BOULT
Waoner
Overture: Die Meistersinger
12.12' Five Wesendonk Songs
Der Engel: Stehe still
Im Tre'bhaus; Schmerzen: TrSume
12.35* Vaughan Williams
Symphony No. 5
ITALIAN STRING TRIO Franco Gulli (violin)
Bruno Giuranna (viola) Giacinto Caramia (cello)
Trio in G major. Op. 9 No. 1
1.40' Trio in D major, Op. 9 No. 2
2.3' Trio in C minor. Op. 9 No. 3 i A concert promoted by the BBC
Music Programme and the City Music Society at the Goldsmiths' Hall on Monday. November 28. 1966
0 Music by Monteverdi
Text by Tasso
Sung in Italian gramophone records
Claude Frank (piano)
London Mozart Players Leader, Robert Masters
Conductor, Harry Blech
Part 1
ANTONY HOPKINS discusses a work or theme of current interest
Repeated: Tuesday. 4.52 p.m.
Next Sunday's programme wiU be at 3.25 p.m.
Part 2
0 BORODIN STRING QUARTET
Rostislav Dubinsky (violin)
Jaroslav Alexandrov (violin) Dmitri Shebalin (viola)
Valentin Berlinsky (cello)
Second broadcast
Four talks by MICHAEL PODRO
2: Perception t'. Recognition
Theories of art since the eighteenth century have questioned the importance of subject-matter in painting, and made various claims for art as revealing a distinctive use of our mind and perception
In the second talk of this series,
Michael Podro , Head of the Department of Art History at Camberwell School of Art and Crafts, considers two contemporary theories, one stemming from Goethe and the other from Schopenhauer, which are characteristic of writing on art through to the twentieth-century manifestoes.
Next talk: May 30
ⓢ Symphony No. played by the BERLIN PHILHARMONIC ORCHESTRA Conducted by THE COMPOSER gramophone record
The second of five programmes Henze's Symphony No. 3: June 1
A series of five programmes
4:William Morris(1834-1895)
The Defence of Guenevere Chosen and introduced by DAVID DAVIS
Reader,
MARY WIMBUSH
Produced by David Davis
'King Arthur's Tomb' from ' The Defence of Guenevere. and other Poems ' (1858): June 8
Goldberg Variations played by JAMES FRISKIN (piano)
by Dr Sydney Brenner, Medical Research Council, Laboratory of Molecular Biology, Cambridge
A series of nine talks in which scientists of various disciplines talk about concepts crucial to their field of study.
Biologists ask two questions about living organisms - how do they work, and how do they evolve? The first question can be answered in detail, by finding out what every gene does, and when. What passes from one generation to the next in a living organism is not the organism itself, but a description of it encoded at the molecular level in genes. Every now and then this description becomes altered. Since evolution depends on such chance events, the second question can only be answered in outline.
"The Quantum in Chemistry", by Professor John Murrell : May 28
by Valeriy Tarsis
His autobiographical novel translated by Katya Brown and arranged by H. B. Fortuin with Inmates of Ward 7:
Produced by H. B. FORTUIN
Third broadcast
by FRANK HARRISON
The second of two illustrated talks in which Frank Harrison introduces music from the Eton Choirbook, which he has edited. The illustrations are sung by the SCHOLA POLYPTHONICA, director HENRY WASHINGTON , and include Fayrfax's Resale Magnificat, Horwood's Gaude flore virginale. Wylkynson's Apostles' Creed, and music by Cornyshe
Second broadcast followed by an interlude at 10.55