Programme Index

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by W. J. Turner
Produced by Noel Iliff

Contributors

Unknown:
W. J. Turner
Produced By:
Noel Iliff
Man-about-town:
Laidman Browne
Old man:
Raf de la Torre
A woman:
Griselda Hervey
A man:
Williams Lloyd
First young man:
Alexander Dor6
Second young man:
Basil Bartlett
Muriel Raub:
Jill Balcon
Lord Belvoir:
Robert Flemyng
Ladv Raub:
Mabel Terry-Lewis
Sir Solomon Raub:
Alexander Sarner
Ladv Phaoron:
Olwen Brookes
Sir Philo Phaoron:
Ernest Thesiger
Mandarin:
Godfrey Kenton
First Chinaman:
Basil Jones
Second Chinaman:
Robert Farquharson
Nosegay:
Bertram Heyhoe
Clavelly:
Graham Doody
Captain Anthony:
Raf de la Torre

Pierre Fournier (cello)
BBC Chorus
(Chorus-Master, Leslie Woodgate )
BBC Symphony Orchestra
(Leader, Paul Beard )
Conductors, Sir Adrian Boult and Constant Lambert
Part 1
Summer's Last Will and Testament, for chorus and orchestra
Constant Lambert
(conducted by the composer)

Contributors

Cello:
Pierre Fournier
Chorus-Master:
Leslie Woodgate
Leader:
Paul Beard
Conductors:
Sir Adrian Boult

This Overture was inspired by a holiday spent in Italy in 1903, and was first performed at the Elgar Festival given at Covent Garden in the following year. The score is prefaced by some lines of Tennyson:
'...What hours were thine and mine.
In lands of palm and southern pine
In lands of palm, of orange blossom,
Of olive, aloe, and maize and vine.

The manuscript bears a further quotation from Byron's 'Childe Harold' in which Italy is apostrophised as 'the garden of the world.' Elgar himself said that the middle section of the Overture came to his mind as his thoughts turned to the glories of ancient Rome; in the music he 'endeavoured to paint the relentless and domineering onward force of the ancient day, and to give a sound-picture of the strife and wars, the "drums and tramplings" of a later time.'

Third Programme

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