Talk by Terence Prittie
Manchester Guardian correspondent in Germany
Symphonie Singulière played by Radiotjänst Symphony Orchestra
Conducted by Tor Mann
Illustrated talk by Donald Mitchell
In 1910, the year before he died, Mahler consulted Freud about certain personal problems. The speaker discusses the musical significance of the interview in the light of recent documentary discoveries.
A concert of music from his seventh and eighth books of madrigals
Altri canti d'Amor
Canzonetta: Chiome d'oro
Con che soavita
Perche t'en fuggi o Fillide? Lamento della Ninfa Ballo: Tirsi e Clori
The Deller Consort:
April Cantelo , Eileen McLoughlln
Alfred Deller
Wilfred Brown. Gerald English
Maurice Bevan
The Macgibbon String Quartet:
Margot Macgibbon , Lorraine du Val
Jean Stewart. Lilly Phillips
Robert Donington (viola da gamba)
Henry 'Revell (viola da gamba)
Ambrose Gauntlett (viola da gamba
Eugene Cruft (double-bass)
Desmond Dupre (lute)
Denis Vaughan (harpsichord)
Eric Gritton (harpsichord) Clifton Helliwell (organ)
Produced by Denis Stevens
(Pampinea's Tale on the Fifth Day)
Sixth of twelve stories from Boccaccio's Decameron in the anonymous translation of 1620 Produced by Rayner Heppenstall followed by an interlude at 8.25
between
The Very Rev. Paul Foster , o.P.
(Defendant) and The Rev. Columba Ryan , o.P.
(Objicient)
Moderator: The Very Rev.
Hilary Carpenter , o.P.
Thesis: 'The Church is the supreme arbiter of human affairs'
In the presence of the Aquinas Society in the Old Hall, Lincoln's Inn
The Four Seasons, Op. 8
La Primavera; L'Estate:
IVAutunno; L'Inverno played by Luigi Ferro (violin)
Guido Mozzato (violin)
Virtuosi di Roma Conductor, Renato Fasano
(The Virtuosi di Roma broadcast bjf arrangement with S. A. Gorlinsky, Ltd.) The first four of Vivaldi's twelve solo violin concertos, Op. 8, are musical pictures of the seasons. Each is prefaced by a sonnet (the lines of which are printed over the sections of the music) describing various flora, fauna, and climatic conditions which the music is intended to portray.
D. S. Savage considers the proposition that our cultural life is slowly dying.
Sonata in A flat, Op. 110
Sonata in C minor. Op. Ill played by Wilhelm Backhaus (piano) on gramophone records