Suite for viola and piano played by Bernard Shore (viola)
Gerald Moore (piano)
Mary Scrutton , Lecturer in Philosophy at Reading University, reviews Whately Carington 's book ' Mind, Matter, and Meaning'
General editor, Gerald Abraham
53-The Orchestral Concerto
A section of the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra
(Leader, David McCallum ) John Wills (harpsichord)
Conducted by Walter Goehr
Introduced by Alec Robertson
Talk by Humphry House
Margaret Field-Hyde (soprano)
Ernest Lush (accompanist)
Wigmore Ensemble: Geoffrey Gilbert (flute)
Maurice Clare (violin)
Frederick Riddle (viola)
William Pleeth (cello)
Marie Korchinska (harp)
Pascal String Quartet:
Jacques Dumont (violin)
Maurice Crut (violin)
Leon Pascal (viola) Robert Salles (cello)
String Quartet, Op. 45 Songs:
Amoureux separjs
A un jeune gentilhomme Sarabande
Nuit d'automne
Réponse d'une épouse sage Coeur en péril
Serenade. Op. 30
(The first and last items are recorded. The string quartet was previously broadcast on November 19)
Talk by W. A. C. H. Dobson
This year the Chinese are celebrating the 2,500th anniversary of Confucius' birth. Mr. Dobson, who is Lecturer in Chinese to Oxford University, talks about the importance of Confucius to the China of today.
A selection from ' Pippa Passes'
Music by Norman Fulton
Production by Frank Hauser
Lamentations of Jeremiah sung by the South London Bach Society
Conductor, Paul Steinitz
by R. H. Ward
This talk is an attempt to describe the process, both psychological and religious, by which the contemporary intellectual's vague despair is transmuted into imaginative consciousness.
(piano)
Minuet (Suite No. 1); Air (Overture.
Air. and Jig) (Purcell, ed. Hess)
Nocturne No. 4, in A (John Field) Five Bagatelles (Howard Ferguson ) on gramophone records
by R. H. Ward
(Continued)