Short story written and read by Sean O'Faolain
Rosina Raisbeck (mezzo-soprano)
John Wills (accompanist)
Frederick Grinke (violin)
Kendall Taylor (piano)
Stephen Waters (clarinet)
William Pleeth ' (cello) Margaret Good (piano)
Sonata in D minor. Op. 108. for violin and piano
Songs:
An eine Aeolsharfe; Ihr wunderschonen Augenblicke; Der Jager; Liebestreu; Sandmannchen
Trio in A minor, Op. 114. for clarinet. cello, and piano
(The trio in recorded)
A valedictory poem for
W. J. Turner by Patric Dickinson
Produced by Robert Gittings
The poem has two themes: the celebration not of the actual life of the poet, but of the faculty of creative genius which he embodied. The second theme interwoven with this is the power of creative genius to save the world of the Atomic Era from self-destruction. The poem Is spoken by a man, a woman, and an unborn child, who symbolise the natural creative element of all humanity
Flore Wend (soprano)
Bruce Boyce (baritone)
Cyril Smith and Phyllis Sellick (two pianos)
(Continued in next column)
Geraint Jones (organ)
BBC Singers
The Boyd Neel Orchestra
(Leader, Maurice Clare )
Conducted by Nadia Boulanger
(Instrumentation by Roger Desormiere )
Talk by Humphry House based on the Diaries of William Hickey
(Continued)
' The Medieval View of the Constitution'
Talk by J. G. Edwards , D.Litt. , F.B.A., Director of the Institute of Historical Research. Professor of History in the University of London, and joint editor of the English Historical Review
John Francis (flute) Hans Geiger (violin) Bernard Davis (viola)
George Roth (cello)
Millicent Silver (harpsichord)
Talk on the Canary Islands by Geoffrey Grigson
Piano Sonata No. 7, Op. 38 played by Friedrich Gulda on gramophone records