and Weather forecast
gramophone records
and Weather forecast
with JANET BAKER (mezzo-soprano) gramophone records
and Weather forecast
Les Six gramophone records
0 Recently released records
JOHN SHIRLEY-QUIRK (baritone)
MARTIN ISEPP (piano)
YOSSEF ZIVONI (violin)
EUGENE DE CANCK (piano)
BBC NORTHERN
SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA Led by James Davis
Conductor, GEORGE HURST
Part 1
and Weather forecast
NEVILLE GARDEN looks at some non-broadcast musical events taking place in London and the South-East during the coming weekend
Part 2: Schubert
Symphony No. 9, in C major
Given before an invited audience in Beverley Minster
Leader, David Adams
Conductor, TERENCE LOVETT
gramophone records
The sevtnth in a weekly series of programmes each including a symphony by a British composer
PNINA SALZMAN (piano)
ROYAL PHILHARMONIC ORCHESTRA
- Led by Jürgen Hess
Conducted by MOSHE ATZMON and FRANCIS CHAGRIN
Part 1
in which the music mostly has to do with America
DAVID ASTOR (tenor)
WILFRID PARRY (piano)
THEA KING (clarinet) PETER CARTER (violin) SALLY MAYS (piano)
Third broadcast
Part 2 conducted by Moshe Atzmon
Symphony No. 1, by Berkeley: June 5
HEATHER HARPER (soprano)
HELEN WATSS (contralto) ROBERT TEAR (tenor)
JOHN SHIRLEY-QUIRK (baritone' GEOFFREY PARSONS (piano)
Shorthand Dictation Practice Book 4 accompanies this series
Twenty lessons for listeners with a basic knowledge of Spanish
Lesson 10
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 December 9. 1965
Six programmes about the problems and rewards of getting to know people with a different cultural background-Cor 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
4: Two hundred and fifty people on an island
An account of the current Interdisciplinary study of the health and welfare of the community on Tristan da Cunha. This study could develop into an important experiment on the effects of social and economic change
Principal speaker: HAROLD LEWIS Division of Human Physiology National Institute for Medical Research
Introduced by LORD RITCHIE-CALDER , C.B.E.
Produced by Rosemary Jellis
An opera in three acts
Words and music by Michael Tippett
From the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden
Hunters, wedding guests. serving women
COVENT GARDEN OPERA CHORUS
Cnorus-Master, Douglas Robinson
COVENT GARDEN ORCHESTRA Leader, Charles Taylor
Conductor. JOHN PRITCHARD
Act 1
f An argument in two parts by TERENCE HAWKES
1: Stamp Out Live Theatre
Mr. Hawkes condemns what he sees as the vested interest of the intellectual community in preserving the theatre in a state of perpetually dying. He recommends that it should be allowed to die in peace and make room for ' another kind of theatre which would inevitably take its place.'
Part 2 at 9.5*
Act 2
tAn argument in two parts by TERENCE HAWKES
2: Drama in Camera
Mr. Hawkes argues that the real drama currently available to our society is in the panoramic, cross-class art of television. He suggests that an event such as the 1966 World Cup coverage ' provided millions of people of all kinds and levels of intelligence with their first really memorable experiences 'hat could be called theatrical.'
Act 3
2: Camden by HUGH TREVOR-ROPER
Regius Professor of Modern History in the University of Oxford
Headmaster of Westminster, Clarenceux King of Arms, William Camden was the most famous English scholar of his day. His Annals of Queen Elizabeth was written as a result of many different pressures, some of these vciy unfavourable to scholarly detachment. But it is a great work of history. It is independent of all the pressures which created it. It made no concessions to anyone. Camden saw the glories of the Elizabethan age not merely in politics but in the total activity of English society.
Second broadcast
Today's overseas commodity and financial news. London Stock Market closing report.