Talk by the Earl of Lytton
Bernhard SSnnerstedt (baritone)
John Wills (piano)
Med en Primula veris (Paulsen) Et Haab (Paulsen) En Svane (Ibsen)
Stambogsrim (Ibsen) Gruss (Heine)
Dereinst. Gedanke mein (von Geibel) Zur Rosenzeit (Goethe)
Til mm Dreng (Otto Benzon ) Lys Nat (Otto Benzon )
Vaer hilset, I Damer (H. Drachmann )
A conversation on cricket between Fred Hoyle and R. A. Lyttleton
Besides considering the Nature of the Universe, as he recently did in his Third
Programme lectures, Fred Hoyle watches cricket. So does his colleague at Cambridge, R. A. Lytdeton. In this conversation they discuss the match between Yorkshire and Lancashire, at which they were both spectators last weekend.
Seven ' Spanish ' Sonatas
L. 14, 376. 23. 429. 426. 457, 294 Introduced and played by Lucille Wallace (harpsichord)
(The introductory talk is recorded) First of four recitals of sonatas by Scarlatti.
by Professor Gordon Manley
In his second talk Professor Manley comments on the magnitude of the changes in cfimate that are taking p!ace in comparison with earlier changes such as those that produced the Ice Ages.
by W. R. Rodgers
When Lilacs Last in the Door-yard Bloom'd
A Requiem : For those we love on the poem by Walt Whitman
Eugenia Zareska (mezzo-soprano)
Jean Claverie (baritone)
Chorus of Radiodiffusion Franchise
Orchestre National,
Conducted by Manuel Rosenthal
From Paris.
Illustrated talk by Ernest Berk on the use of drums and tam tarns in Eastern and Western music
Quartet in A minor, Op. 41 No. 1 played by the Konzerthaus Quartet:
Anton Kamper (violin)
Karl Maria Titze (violin)
Erich Weis (viola)
Franz Kvarda (cello)
Landscape and the Picturesque Talk by Christopher Hussey