Programme Index

Discover 11,128,835 listings and 278,041 playable programmes from the BBC

(tenor) with Frederick Stone (piano)

Five Songs (1944) Diaphenia (Henry Constable) Lay a garland on my hearse (John Fletcher) What thing is love? (George Peele) Weep you no more sad fountains (anon.) Now the lusty spring is seen (John Fletcher) - Geoffrey Bush (First broadcast performance)
Cantata: Boyhood's End (W. H. Hudson) - Tippett

Contributors

Piano:
Frederick Stone

Translated by Jonathan Griffin from ' La Course des Rois ' by Thierry Maulnier
Adapted for broadcasting by Cynthia Pughe and Val Gielgud
Produced by Val Gielgud

Contributors

Translated By:
Jonathan Griffin
Unknown:
Thierry Maulnier
Broadcasting By:
Cynthia Pughe
Broadcasting By:
Val Gielgud
Produced By:
Val Gielgud
The Architect:
Andrew Churchman
Milon:
Andrew Faulds
Agathocrates:
Malcolm Hayes
The Arcadian:
Olaf Olsen
Glaucos:
Hugh Manning
Myrtilos the King's charioteer:
Geoffrey Keen
Diotima:
Jenny Laird
Hippodamia, daughter to Oenomaos:
Edith Nicholls
Procles:
Anthony Jacobs
Oenomaos King of Ells:
Stephen Murray
Pelops:
Allan Cuthbertson

The Eighteen Choral Preludes—1
Komm. heiliger Geist (First version:
Fantasia)
Komm. heiliger Geist
Allein Gott in der HOh sei Ehr (First version)
Jesus Christus unser Heiland (First version) played by Harold, Darke (organ)
The chorales sung by the BBC Singers
Conductor, Leslie Woodgate
From St. Michael's. Cornhill
(First of a series of programmes during which Bach's Eighteen Great Choral Preludes will be broadcast)

Contributors

Unknown:
Allein Gott

In the last of three talks about writers on art of the generation between Ruskin and Roger Fry , the speaker is J. Brandon Jones
Lethaby, who was Principal of the Central School of Art and Crafts and Professor of Design at the Royal College of Art. wrote ' Form in Civilisation ' and various books on the history of architecture

Contributors

Unknown:
Roger Fry
Unknown:
J. Brandon Jones

Third Programme

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