Gervase de Peyer (clarinet)
Cyril Preedy (piano)
Talk by Ellen Hellmann , D.Phil.
2-Cavafy and Seferis
Poems read in the Greek by Elsa Verghis and in English by Jill Balcon
Translations by Ian Scott-Kilvert
(died June 1656)
Second of three programmes devised by Margaret Field-Hyde Ballett: See, see the shepherd's queen Madrigal: 0 let me live for my true love; 0 let me die for my true love
Harpsichord:
Lady Folliot's Galliard; Lady Strafford's Pavan and Galliard; Worcester brawls; Miserere
Ballett: Phyllis, now cease to move me Madrigal: Too much I once lamented
(Continued in next column)
Ballett: Adieu, ye city-prisoning towers
The Golden Age Singers:
Margaret Field-Hyde
Elizabeth Osborn , John Whitworth
René Soames, Gordon Clinton
Director, Margaret Field-Hyde
Thurston Dart (harpsichord)
by Jerzy Pietrkiewicz
An imaginary set of letters describing the independent Polish writer's uncomfortable position between propaganda and counter-propaganda.
Readers:
A programme of music to be heard at this year's Aldeburgh Festival
Francis Poulenc (piano)
Aldeburgh Festival Orchestra
(Leader, Olive Zorian)
Conductor, Paul Sacher
Part 1
Nicholas Mansergh , Smuts Professor of the History of the British Commonwealth in the University of Cambridge, makes the publication of two books the occasion for a consideration of some of the influences that have moulded the history of Latin America.
Part 2
Some nautical airs and graces with the Aeolian Players Produced by Pat Dixon
(The recorded broadcast of December 26 in the Light Programme)
Pictures at an Exhibition played by Eugene Malinin (piano) on gramophone records
The enfant terrible of Music
Talk by Professor E. M. Butler