and music for clavichord
Alfred Deller (counter-tenor)
Desmond Dupre (lute)
Valda Aveling (clavichord)
Last of six programmes of lutenist songs. (Postponed from February 11)
Can a Scientist be a Christian?
A discussion by a number of philosophers and scientists who are members of the Church of England
(The recorded broadcast of March 19)
Harold Child (baritone)
Clifton Helliwell (accompanist)
The Kantrovitch Trio: Vera Kantrovitch (violin)
Lilly Phillips (cello)
Hilda Bor (piano)
Variations on Ich bin der Schneider
Kakadu, Op. 121a Songs:
Das Gcheimniss Der:Liebende ; Sehnsurht; An die Geliebte; Ich Hebe dich
Trio movement In B flat, Op. posth.
Trio in E flat, Op. 1 No. 1: April 5
Talk by Margaret Bottrall
It is three hundred years since the publication of ' A Priest to the Temple,' better known by its sub-title ' The Country Parson, his Character and Rule of Holy Life.' In this talk Margaret Bottrall discusses the personality that emerges from the book and the light that it throws both on the Anglican temper and tradition and on the seventeenth-century conception of the ideal 'country parson.'
APOLLO MUSAGETBS
A ballet in two scenes for string orchestra
8.38 app. SYMPHONY OF PSALMS for chorus and orchestra
London Philharmonic Choir
(Chorus-Master, Frederic Jackson )
BBC Symphony Orchestra
(Leader, Paul Beard)
Conducted by Basil Cameron
See Eric Walter White's article
Readings from ' The Temple ' and ' The Country Parson ' by Carleton Hobbs
Godfrey Kenton , Mary O'Farrell
To be repeated on April 8
(Concert continued)
OEDIPUS REX
An opera oratorio in two acts after Sophocles
Text by Jean Cocteau translated into Latin by J. Danlelou
Tenors and basses of the London Philharmonic Choir
(Chorus-Master, Frederic Jackson )
BBC Symphony Orchestra
(Leader, Paul Beard)
Conducted by Basil Cameron
General Principles
Last of three illustrated talks by William Glock
A sound picture devised and recorded by Ludwig Koch
Kreisleriana, Op. 16 played by Cortot (piano) on gramophone records
Godfrey Lienhardt , of the Institute of Social Anthropology in the University of Oxford, talks about Henri Frankfort 's book, published last year (The recorded broadcast of October 6)