View schedule at a glance
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00:00–01:30After battling mental illness, ex-Fleetwood Mac frontman Peter Green is recording again. (R)
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01:30–02:30The story of one of the biggest-selling bands of all time, told in the band's own words. (R)
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02:30–03:005/8. Andy Hamilton, Reginald D Hunter and Martha Kearney decide if experts' theories are valid. (R)
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03:00–05:30How children of the British Memorial School helped liberate Europe from the Nazis. (R)
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19:00–19:30The latest news, exploring the day's events from a global perspective.
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19:30–20:0010/12. It is June, and the team need to give the sheep a good wash in a local stream. (R)
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20:00–21:001/4. Rosie Newman, who shot some of the most important colour documentary footage of the 1930s. (R)
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21:00–22:00How Spain is exhuming bodies from mass graves, the legacy of Franco's dictatorship.
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22:00–22:556/18. Traditions of the family and friends who visit the graves of Americans killed in combat.
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22:55–23:551/4. Simon Russell Beale visits Notre Dame and finds the key to the development of polyphony. (R)
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23:55–00:552/4. Simon Russell Beale explores Renaissance Rome and the music of the enigmatic Palestrina. (R)
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00:55–01:553/4. Thomas Tallis and William Byrd were important composers in England's musical Renaissance. (R)
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01:55–02:554/4. How Martin Luther had a profound effect on the development of sacred music. (R)
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02:55–03:55How Spain is exhuming bodies from mass graves, the legacy of Franco's dictatorship. (R)
