07:00
10 August 2005
With Penny Gore.
From 7.00am
Nielsen: Helios - overture, Op 17
Swedish RSO
Esa-Pekka Salonen
Séverac: Musicians and gleaners (Memories of a Pilgrimage to Fon-Romeu)
Jordi Maső (piano)
Berwald: Reminiscences of the Norwegian mountains (Erinnerung an die norwegischen Alpen) - tone poem
Danish National SO
Thomas Dausgaard (conductor)
Holst: Hammersmith prelude and scherzo, Op 52, vers. for military band
European Winds
Geoffrey Brand (conductor)
Liszt: Aux cyprčs de la Villa d'Este II
Stephen Hough (piano)
From 8.30am
Dvorak: Quartet-movement for strings, B120, in F
Panocha Quartet
Mozart: Sonata for piano, K457, in Cm
Ronald Brautigam (fortepiano)
Copland: Appalachian spring - ballet for 13 instruments (original version, 1943-4)
The Saint Paul CO
Hugh Wolff (conductor)
10:00
10 August 2005
With Jonathan Swain.
Gade: Echoes of Ossian, Op 1
Danish National Radio SO/King Frederik IX of Denmark
Bizet: 'Je vais danser en votre honneur...Non! Tu ne m'aimes pas!' (Carmen, Act II)
Carmen ...... Grace Bumbry (soprano)
Don José ...... Jon Vickers (tenor)
Orchestre du Théâtre National de Opéra
Rafael Frühbeck de Burgos (conductor)
Rawsthorne: Theme and Variations
Peter Sheppard Skćrved, Christine Sohn (violin)
Mendelssohn: Symphony No 3 in Am, Op 56 'Scottish'
Orchestra of the Eighteenth Century
Frans Brüggen (director)
Szymanowski: Notturno e Tarantella, Op 28
Ida Haendel (violin)
Adela Kotowska (piano)
Wagner: 'Ein Schwert verheiss mir der Vater... Winterstürme wichen dem Wonnemond' (Die Walküre, Act I)
Siegmund ...... Jon Vickers (tenor)
Sieglinde ...... Gré Brouwenstein (soprano)
London Symphony Orchestra
Erich Leinsdorf (conductor)
12:00
Ernst von Dohnányi (1877-1960)
Part Three
'Musical life in Budapest may be summed up in just one word - Dohnányi. As pianist, as conductor and in chamber music, he is indefatigably working for his country's art'. So wrote Bela Bartók of Dohnányi, who single-handedly kept concert life in the capital going during some of Hungary's darkest years of the 20th Century. Donald Macleod looks at the works Dohnányi wrote during those inter-war years, including his Sextet and the symphonic Ruralia Hungarica, both subtly imbued with evocations of his native land.
Concert Etudes, Op 28, Nos 2, 5 & 6
Markus Pawlik (piano)
Pastorale on a Hungarian Christmas Song, Op 18
Martin Roscoe (piano)
Sextet - 3rd & 4th mvts
Endymion Ensemble
Ruralia Hungarica
BBC Philharmonic Orchestra
Matthias Bamert (conductor)
13:00
St Magnus Festival 2005
10 August 2005
Linda Ormiston introduces a concert given in Stromness Town Hall as part of Orkney's midsummer festival. Making their long-awaited debut at the festival were the Hebrides Ensemble.
John Bevan-Baker: Duo for oboe and cello
Britten: Phantasy quartet, Op 2
Nigel Osborne: Balkan Dances and Laments
Mozart: Oboe quartet in F, K370
Douglas Boyd (oboe)
Alexander Janiczek (violin)
Catherine Marwood (viola)
William Conway (cello)
Alexander Taylor (piano)
Tom Seligman (conductor)
14:00
Prom 25
The second half of the live Proms Concert features Rameau's Dardanus and Handel's Water Music suite.
16:00
10 August 2005
The Three Choirs Festival from Worcester Cathedral, featuring the combined Cathedral Choirs of Worcester, Hereford and Gloucester.
Introit: Christus factus est (Bruckner)
Responses: Tomkins
Psalms: 23, 24 (Tomkins, Thalben Ball)
First Reading: 2 Kings 4 vv18-37
Canticles for 5 Voices (Tallis)
Second Reading: Luke 20 vv27-40
Anthem: Loquebantur variis linguis (Tallis)
Hymn: How Shall I Sing that Majesty (Third Mode)
Organ Voluntary: Fantasia and Fugue in C m, BWV 562 (Bach)
Worcester, Hereford and Gloucester Cathedral Choirs
Adrian Lucas (director)
Christopher Allsop (organist)
17:00
10 August 2005
Sean Rafferty presents a selection of music and keeps us up to date with what's happening in the arts world. Email: in.tune@bbc.co.uk
19:30
Prom 36 Part Two
From the Royal Albert Hall, presented by Christopher Cook.
The Korean composer Unsuk Chin gained worldwide recognition last year when she won the prestigious Grawemeyer Award. Her song cycle features words from Lewis Carroll's Alice in Wonderland. Also on the menu, the overture to Weber's magical masterpiece and Bruckner's epic 6th Symphony.
Weber: Der Freischütz - overture
Unsuk Chin: Snags & Snarls (Suite from Alice in Wonderland)
Bruckner: Symphony No 6 in A
Christiane Oelze (soprano)
Deutsches Symphonie-Orchester Berlin
Kent Nagano (conductor)
20:10
The Adverb
Poet Paul Farley continues the series of literary performances, recorded in front of a live audience at Cadogan Hall, based on the Proms themes, in which leading writers choose their favourite writings about the sea or fairytales. Plus, a chance to hear specially commissioned original writing about fairytales and the sea.
20:30
Prom 36 Part Two
From the Royal Albert Hall, presented by Christopher Cook.
The Korean composer Unsuk Chin gained worldwide recognition last year when she won the prestigious Grawemeyer Award. Her song cycle features words from Lewis Carroll's Alice in Wonderland. Also on the menu, the overture to Weber's magical masterpiece and Bruckner's epic 6th Symphony.
Weber: Der Freischütz - overture
Unsuk Chin: Snags & Snarls (Suite from Alice in Wonderland)
Bruckner: Symphony No 6 in A
Christiane Oelze (soprano)
Deutsches Symphonie-Orchester Berlin
Kent Nagano (conductor)
21:45
10 August 2005 Nile Lands Part Two
The Nile is the world's longest river, the lifeblood of one of the first great civilisations and the route that brought Europeans into the heart of Africa. Over four programmes, Zeinab Badawi visits the countries through which the Nile flows to explore how the river has shaped their different cultural identities and helped to form perceptions of Africa in the Western imagination.
2/4. Uganda
For centuries, the source of the White Nile was a mystery. The ancients thought it rose in the heart of Africa and there was talk of the Mountains of the Moon. Even as late as the first half of the 19th Century, no-one was sure. It was a British explorer, John Hanning Speke, who claimed to have settled the issue in 1862 when he saw a huge river leaving the then unnamed Lake Victoria in Uganda. Zeinab considers what led to this claim and what Ugandans made of the discovery.
22:30
10 August 2005
Ceremonial music from Indonesia's Batak musicians, William Byrd, the Blind Boys of Alabama and Amjad Ali Khan. With Verity Sharp.
00:00
The Court of Louis XIV
Part Four
Life at Versailles was a constant round of entertainment and extravagance and on special occasions, Louis' courtiers could look forward to his Grand Divertissements. Presented by Donald Macleod.
Philidor: La Marche Royal
La Simphonie du Marais
Hugo Reyne (director)
Lully: Psyché; Prélude pour les trompettes; Chantons les plaisirs charmants
Les Arts Florissants
William Christie (director)
Lully: Le Divertissement Royal; Danse de Neptune; Les suivants de Neptune; Symphonie des Plaisirs; Prélude des Trompettes; Les Hommes et Femmes armés
Le Concert des Nations
Jordi Savall (director)
Desmarest: Te Deum de Paris
Le Concert Spirituel
Hervé Niquet (director)
01:00
10 August 2005
10 August 2005
With Louise Fryer.
1.00am
To mark the 50th anniversary of the death of Enescu, recordings of his orchestral and chamber works from the archives of Romanian radio.
Early Years
Enescu, Georges (1881-1955): Romanian Poem, Op 1, (1897)
Romanian National Radio Chorus and Orchestra
Horia Andreescu (conductor)
Symphony No 1 in Dm (1895)
Romanian Radio Chamber Orchestra
Iosef Conta (conductor)
2.04am
Koehne, Graeme (b. 1956): To His Servant, Bach, God Grants a Final Glimpse: The Morning Star
Guitar Trek
Timothy Kain, Fiona Walsh, (treble guitar)
Richard Strasser (standard guitar)
Peter Constant (baritone guitar)
2.08am
Haydn, Joseph (1732-1809): Variations on the hymn 'Gott erhalte'
Andreas Staier (fortepiano)
2.16am
Beethoven, Ludwig van (1770-1827): Trio for strings in E flat, Op 3
Milan Tedla (violin)
Zdenek Husek (viola)
Frantisek Tannenberger (cello)
2.58am
Hummel, Johann Nepomuk (1778-1837): Rondo brillant for piano and orchestra in A, Op 56
Rudolf Macudzinski (piano)
Slovak Radio Symphony Orchestra
Ludovít Rajter (conductor)
3.19am
Brahms, Johannes (1833-1897): Serenade No 1 in D, Op 11
Kitchener-Waterloo Symphony Orchestra
Raffi Armenian (conductor)
4.06am
Frescobaldi, Girolamo (1583-1643): Toccata Quarta (Secondo Libro)
Stef Tuinstra (organ of St Maurizio, Milan)
4.11am
Huygens, Constantijn (1596-1687): Cognovi Domine, Quomodo dilexi, Erravi Domine - from Pathodia sacra (1647)
Anne Grimm (soprano)
Peter Kooij (bass)
Leo van Doeselaar (organ)
Mike Fentross (theorbo)
Mieneke van der Velden (viola da gamba)
4.21am
Mägi, Ester (b. 1922): Ballad Tuule Tuba (House of Wind, 1981)
Tallinna Tehnikaülikooli Akadeemiline Meeskoor (Academic Male Choir of Tallinn Technical University)
ERSO (Estonian State SO)
Arvo Volmer, Jüri Rent (conductor)
4.30am
Franck, César (1822-1890): Prelude, Fugue and Variation (transcribed for piano, originally for organ)
Robert Silverman (piano)
4.42am
Glazunov, Alexander Konstantinovich (1865-1936): Chant du menestrel, Op 71, (version for cello and orchestra)
Shauna Rolston (cello)
Calgary Philharmonic Orchestra
Mario Bernardi (conductor)
4.47am
Liszt, Franz (1811-1886): St Francis' Sermon to the Birds (1st of 2 Legends, S175)
Richard Raymond (piano)
5.00am
Avison, Charles (1709-1770), after Domenico Scarlatti: Concerto Grosso No 2 in G for strings and continuo
Tafelmusik Baroque Orchestra
Jeanne Lamon (director)
5.13am
Bach, Carl Philipp Emanuel (1714-1788): Sonata in Em, Wq 59, No 1
Geoffrey Lancaster (fortepiano)
5.22am
Cavalli, Francesco (1602-1676): Plainsong Antiphon and Magnificat
Concerto Palatino
5.41am
Villa-Lobos, Heitor (1887-1959): Guitar Prelude No 1 in Em
Norbert Kraft (guitar)
5.45am
Delius, Frederick (1862-1934): Irmelin - prelude
Symphony Nova Scotia
Georg Tintner (conductor)
5.51am
Tormis, Veljo (b. 1930): Kevadkillud (Spring Sketches)
Estonian Radio Choir
Toomas Kapten (conductor)
5.54am
Enescu, Georges (1881-1955)
2nd and 3rd movements, from Sonata No 3 in Am, Op 25
Patricia Kopatchinskaja (violin)
Mihaela Ursuleasa (piano)
6.12am
Ravel, Maurice (1875-1937): Piano Concerto in G
Dubravka Tomsic-Srebotnjak (piano)
RTV Slovenia Symphony Orchestra
Marko Munih (conductor)
6.36am
Kodály, Zoltán (1882-1967): Hary János - suite, Op 35a
Hungarian Radio Orchestra
Tamás Vásáry (conductor)