Desmond Dupré (cittern)
London Consort of Viols:
Harry Danks (treble viol)
Stanley Wootton (treble viol)
Sylvia Putterill (tenor viol)
Henry Revell (base viol)
Robert Donington (bass viol)
by Olivier Messiaen
Yvonne Loriod (piano)
Ginette Martenot
(ondes Martenot)
London Symphony Orchestra
(Leader, Thomas Matthews )
Conducted by Walter Goehr
Part 1
Introduction; Chant d'amour; Turangalila; Chant d'amour; Joie du sang des étoiles
Talk by Renford Bambrough
Fellow of St. John's College, Cambridge
' It seems to me regrettable,' says the speaker, ' 'that so few of rhosc Who read Greek philosophy have any direct experience of what it feels lake to be worried by a live philosophical problem.' From this viewpoint he reconsiders the ' Cambridge approach ' to the study of ancient philosophy, with reference to the la<e Professor F. M. Cornford's posthumous book Principium Sapientiae and to rhe recent inaugural lecture by W. K. C. Guthrie, Laurence Professor of Ancient
Philosophy at Cambridge.
Part 2
Jardin du sommeil d'amour; Turangalila; Developpement de l'amour; Turangalila; Final
Another performance: tomorrow at 8.55 ' Mystic or madman? Simpleton or saint? Musical genius or musical impostor .. ? ' In this issue Ernest Bradbury writes about Messiaen and Turangalila Symphonie.
by Jean Anouilh
English version by Denis Canaan
Adapted for broadcasting and produced by Wilfrid Grantham
Kinderscenen, Op. 15
Etudes Symphoniques, Op. 13 played by Phyllis Sellick (piano)
A monthly review of cultural and political trends in the U.S.S.R.
The Medical Services by Margaret Miller