and Weather forecast
gramophone records
and Weather forecast
gramophone records
and Weather forecast
Schumann Two part songs: fm Walde; Gute Nacht BREMEN CAMERATA VOCALE
Directed by KLAUS BLUM
9.8* Spanisches Liederspiel , Op. 74
MARGIT LASZLO (soprano) JOSZEF RETI (tenor)
ZSOLT BENDE (baritone)
HUNGARIAN RADIO CHORUS ISTVAN ANTAL (piano)
Directed by ZOLTAN VASARHELYI
9.33* Overture: Manfred
BERLIN PHILHARMONIC ORCHESTRA Conducted by RAFAEL KUBELIK
0 gramophone records
Manfred Symphony
LONDON SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
Conducted by IGOR MARKEVITCH
0 gramophone record
Clive Lythgoe (piano) In his second programme
CLIVE LYTHGOE plays
*The Innocent Ear
Another in the series of programmes in which the composer ot one work will be announced after its performance
11.44* A Piano Sonata
JEAN POUGNET (violin)
HERBERT DOWNES (viola)
HAMISH MILNE (piano)
ANTON KUERTI (piano)
BOURNEMOUTH SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA Leader, Gerald Jarvis Conducted by HERBERT MENGES
Part 1
and Weather forecast
STEPHEN DODGSON looks at some non-broadcast musical events taking place in the West, Wales, Scotland, and Northern Ireland over the next fortnight
Part 2
Given before an Invited audience in the Guildhall. Southampton
Leader, James Hutcheon
Conductor, GILBERT VINTER
played by THE METROPOLE ORCHESTRA
Conducted by DOLF VAN DER LINDEN
0 Recordings made available by courtesy of Netherlands Radio Union
Percy Grainger (1882-1961) whose music is introduced by RONALD STEVENSON
Piano
The gum-suckers' March
Love walked in (Gershwin, arr. Grainger) Songs
Dedication: Shallow Brown ; A song of autumn Piano
Passacaglia: Green bushes (arr. Stevenson)
Hill Song No. 2, for wind ensemble Over the hills and far away: children's march for band
My Robin is to the greenwood gone, for orchestra
Gramophone records Piano
Arrival platform Humlet: Spoon river Men's Chorus
Dollar and a half a day: Hunting-song of the Seeonee pack: Red dog; Anchor song Piano
Now, O now. I needs must part
(Dowland, arr. Grainger)
RONALD STEVENSON (piano)
BENJAMIN LUXON (baritone) DAVID WILLISON (piano)
EASTMAN WIND ENSEMBLE
Conducted by FREDERICK FENNELL
THE GOLDMAN BAND
Conducted by R F. GOLDMAN
EASTMAN-ROCHESTER POPS Orchestra
Conducted by FREDERICK FENNELL
MEN'S VOICES OF THE
BBC Northern SINGERS
Conducted by STEPHEN WILKINSON
by MINDRU KATZ (piano)
Bach Fantasia in C minor (S.906) Concerto in the Italian Style
4.30* Beethoven
Sonata in D minor. Op. 31 No.
4.54*
Brahms Rhapsody in G minor. Op. 79 No.
Intermezzo in B flat minor. Op
117 No. f
Rhapsody in E flat. Op 119 No.
Zephyre
A pastoral in one act with music by Rameau in a new edition by George Malcolm
Chorus of nymphs and zephyrs Thames Chamber Choir Director, Louis Halsey
Roger Pugh (harpsichord continuo)
Keith Harvey (cello continuo)
English Chamber Orchestra Leader, Emanuel Hurwitz
Conducted by George Malcolm
Presented by the Music Programme in association with the Aldeburgh Festival
From the Jubilee Hall, Aldeburgh
A series of six programmes
6: The Village, by George Crabbe
Script and narration by Peter PORTER
†Poem read by BASIL JONES
The last of the main, series of eighteen programmes for adults taking the G.C.E. O-level examinations in English Language and Literature
Radio tutor, DAVID GRUGEON
Scriptwriter, Emmeline Garnett Produced by Peggy Bacon
Rptd.: Sat. 11.35 a.m. (Home)
Details of the correspondence course can bo obtained from The National Extension College. Shaftesbury Road. Cambridge
I: Unions at Work
Introduced by GEOFFREY STUTTARD Extra-Mural Tutor,
University of London
Opinions about Trade Unions are often based more on myth and misinformation than on fact. This first programme of a series of seven looks, without comment, at the actual working of Trade Unions. A shop steward and a trade union General Secretary talk about what happens in their day-to-day jobs.
Produced by Chris Cuthbertson Monday's broadcast
Partita in D minor played by ORREA PERNEL (violin) From the Church of St. George the Martyr. Queen Square, London
An investigation by Tony Aspler into the literary and artistic underground movement in London; including the voices of William Burroughs, Jim Haynes, Charles Marowitz, Miles, John Hopkins, Tom McGrath and others
Anarchy in the City
A revolution is happening in our midst - a revolution without leaders, without a manifesto, without confrontations. Activists throw flowers, not grenades: their philosophy is love and permissiveness. They are the Underground. The movement in London is a loose-knit army of like-minded young people whose grass roots are CND with a throw-back to Dadaism. They embrace the novels of William Burroughs and the pop songs of The Beatles. American beat poets such as Allen Ginsberg are their heroes and the Provos in Amsterdam their comrades-in-arms. They are the impatient generation who want freedom to take drugs, to stay up all night, to enjoy themselves now. The Underground is deliberately constructing its own society, trying to draw together all avant-garde activity and social anarchism in the city. The centre is Holborn where the movement's newspaper is published.
The Angry Young Men - a decade before - became emasculated as they grew fat from Establishment presses. The Underground, mindful of this, is setting up its own institutions - publishers, theatres, clubs. Its sympathisers are legion - young people who find points of contact with the movement without accepting its total canvas. Psychedelic light-shows, wild clothes fashions, LSD, underground films, 'acid-rock' songs, street happenings - these are all manifestations of Underground activity. How important is this new movement artistically and sociologically? Is London really becoming the 'hipster capital of the world?' And just how powerful a pressure group can the movement become to bring about the changes it demands in society?
(Tony Aspler)
Clarinet Sonata
ANDRÉ BOUTARD (clarinet) JACQUES FÉVRIER (piano) gramophone record
by Rhys Adrian with Alec McCowen and Anna Cropper
' What am I supposed to do? ... If I approach you ... What will happen? ... And if I approach you.... What are you expecting? ... I might do all the wrong things ... '
Cast in order of speaking:
Other parts played by members of the BBC Drama Repertory Company Produced by RONALD MASON
To be repeated on July 4
Subbulakshmi (soprano) with RADHA VISWANATHAN (soprano) VIJAYA RAJENDRAN (tambura) V. V. SUBRAMANIAM (violin) T. K. MURTHY (mridangam) T. H. VINAYAKRAM (ghatam) Bhogindra Sayinam
(Raga Kuntalavarall)
Ksinamai (Raga Mukhari) Narayana Divyanamam
(Raga Mohanam)
Bhaja Govindam
(String of Ragas)