A talk on German reaction by Terence Prittie
Manchester Guardian correspondent in Germany
(The recorded broadcast of March 12)
Second of two talks
by Ventsislav Yankoff
Its Dancers and Music
First of two illustrated talks by John Coast and Supianti Coast
The Indonesian word for an orchestra is gamelan, but in Bali it is usually called a gong. Mr. and Mrs. Coast describe a typical village gong with its merallophones, reyong, cymbaJs, and drums, and show how new compositions for it are built up by using traditional tunes.
by Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra
The translation by Charles Jarvis adapted in six parts by Paul Ferris Part 5: Wherein are related the adventures of the puppet player and tihe enchanted ba.rk; together w.tlh an account of Don Quixote's meeting with the Duke and Duchess, and of the remarkable method prescribed to Don Quixote for the disenchanting of the lady Dulcinea.
The Storyteller: Norman Shelley with Douglas Blackwell
Music composed by Manuel Lazareno and conducted by Maurice Miles Production by Peter Duval Smith and Douglas Cleverdon
A survey of Spanish music prepared by Roberto Gerhard and Lionel Salter
21—Chamber Music and Songs of the Twentieth Century
Antonio Brosa (violin)
Kathleen Long (piano)
Adrienne Cole (soprano)
Lionel Salter
(piano and harpsichord)
The Virtuoso Chamber Ensemble:
Edward Walker (flute)
Roger Lord (oboe)
Sidney Fell (clarinet) Lionel Bentley (violin) Willem de Mont (cello)
Talk by Michael Grant
Last year Michael Grant, Professor of Humanity at Edinburgh University, paid a visit to Ethiopia. He speaks of the country's ancient cultural and religious traditions, many of which still persist, and describes how the landscape of Ethiopia has isolated its peoples and enabled the past to endure into the present.
Dixit Dominus
(Psalm 109) (Vulgate)
Rosanna Giancota (soprano) Luciana Piovesan (soprano)
Maria Amadini (contralto) Emilio Cristinelli (tenor)
Giuliano Ferrein (bass)
Chorus and Chamber Orchestra of the Scuola Veneziana
Conducted by Angelo Ephrikiaa on gramophone records
Talk by the Rev. Victor White , o.p.
In the second of three talks to mark the centenary of the birth of the author of The Golden Bough Father White considers in particular Sir James Frazer 's contribution ro the study of comparative religion.
(The recorded broadcast of Jan. 17)