Programme Index

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BBC Symphony Orchestra
Leader, Paul Beard Conducted by Sir Malcolm Sargent Norman Del Mar
From the Royal Albert Hall. London conducted by Sir Malcolm Sargent conducted by Norman Del Mar conducted by Sir Malcolm Sargent
See page 45

Contributors

Leader:
Paul Beard
Conducted By:
Sir Malcolm Sargent
Conducted By:
Norman Del Mar
Conducted By:
Sir Malcolm Sargent
Conducted By:
Norman Del Mar
Conducted By:
Sir Malcolm Sargent

John Whitworth (counter-tenor)
Gerald English (tenor) John Shirley-Quirk (bass-baritone)
London Cantata Ensemble Ilse Wolf (soprano)
Jurgen Hess. Ruth Fourmy (violin) Desmond Dupre (viola da gamba) Anthony Milner (harpsichord) Elizabethan Singers
Conductor, Louis Halsey Purcell
Anthem: Remember not. Lord. our offences
Tr o-Sonata in E minor
Duet: See where she sits
Monteverdi
Three Madrigals
Ecco mormorar l'onde
Occhi un tempo mia vita Io mi son giovinetta
Ballo- Movete al mio bel suon
(Canti Guerrieri)
Recorded from a public concert given at the Victoria and Albert Museum on March 4
Gerald English and John Shirley-Quirk broadcast by permission of Glyndebourne Festival Opera

Contributors

Unknown:
John Whitworth
Bass-Baritone:
John Shirley-Quirk
Soprano:
Jurgen Hess.
Violin:
Ruth Fourmy
Viola:
Desmond Dupre
Harpsichord:
Anthony Milner
Conductor:
Louis Halsey
Conductor:
Albert Museum
Conductor:
John Shirley-Quirk

Three talks by S. C. Leslie 2: Anglo-Saxon Attitudes and Continental Rules
Mr. Leslie's general theme is that the economic logic of modern large-scale industry is replacing full-scale competition by private and public planning; and that this trend will become increasingly evident in the European Economic Community.
In this talk Mr. Leslie looks at the place of competition in Britain and America. He then discusses the competitive provisions of the Rome Treaty and concludes that they are more likely to foster monopoly than to check it

Contributors

Unknown:
S. C. Leslie

Third Programme

Appears in

About this data

This data is drawn from the Radio Times magazine between 1923 and 2009. It shows what was scheduled to be broadcast, meaning it was subject to change and may not be accurate. More