Alexander Henderson (bass)
The Basil Lam Sonata Ensemble:
Patrick Hailing (violin) Marjorie Lavers (violin)
Terence Weil (cello)
Basil Lam (harpsichord)
Talk by S. Moos
Mr. Moos, Lecturer in Economics in the Durham Colleges, was for some years a member of the research staff of the Oxford Institute of Statistics. In this talk he considers the merits of Gandhi's economic theories.
Illustrated talk by John Stevens
Fellow of Magdalene College, Cambridge
Three programmes of early Tudor court music, arranged by Dr. Stevena, are to be broadcast in the Third Programme, beginning tomorrow at 8.40.
Denis Matthews (piano)
BBC Symphony Orchestra
(Leader, Paul Beard )
Conductor, Sir Malcolm Sargent
From the Royal Albert Hall, London
Pant 1
Talk by David Green
Some rime ago David Green spoke about the garden at Melbourne Hall in Derby-shire. For his second example of the formal garden he revisits the chateaux of the Loire. At Villandry he invest gates the sixteenth-century garden re-created by the late Dr Carvallo, who held that the well-ordered life of a great house could best be lived by keeping to the strict regimen of levels. and terraces imposed by Du Cerceau , the sixteenth-century garden architect
Part 2
by Honor Tracy
Produced by Douglas Cleverdon and
Mattiwilda Dobbs (soprano) Ernest Lush (accompanist)
El mirar de la maja; El tra la la y el pirateado; Amor y odio; La maja dolorosa; El majo discreto; El majo timido: Elegia e-terna; La maja y el ruisenor; Danza No. 5, Andaluza
2-Understanding between Race* Talk by the Rev. Michael Scott
Quartet In one movement. Op. 14 played by the Winterthur String Quartet on gramophone records