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RADIO BROADCASTS

TO-NIGHT’S PROGRAMMES NEW ZEALAND STATIONS IYA, AUCKLAND.

5.0: Children’s hour, conducted by Aunt Dorothea. • 6.0: Dinner music.

7.0: News and reports. 8.0: Concert programme. “Scrapbook for 1914.” (A radio scrapbook with “1914” as its title. This makes no pretence to being a history book. It is just a medley of memories, some of which will amuse, some will surprise, some will be found strangely moving. 9.0? Weather report and station notices.

9.5: Talk, Capt. G. A. HumplireyDavies, “£30,000,000 of Chinese Beauty-” , , 9.20: Recorded band programme ot music originally composed for brass bands and written by British composers. (All the performing bands are contest winners). The programme introduces Mr Wilson Ewart, the noted W est- Australian baritone.

Wingate’s Temperance Band, “Honour and Glory” tone poem. 9.26: Foden’s Motor Works Band, “The Severn” suite.

9.32: Wilson Ewart (Australian baritone), (a) “Sea Fever” ; (b) “Five and 'Twenty Sailormen. ’ 9.37 : 'The Regimental Band of 55th Battalion (N.S.W. Rifles), two tone poems: (a) “Life’s Divine”; (b) “Ooriolanus.” 9.49: Wilson Ewart (Australian baritone), (a) “Cargoes” ; (b) “Nightfall at Sea.” 9.51: Foden’s Motor Works Band, (a) “Prometheus Unbound’' ; (h) “The Cossack” march. 10.2: Dance music. 11.0: Close down.

2YA, WELLINGTON,

5.0: Children’s hour, conducted by Big Brother Jack.

6.0: Dinner music. 7.0: News and reports. 7.40: Talk: Wireliana, “Tourist Resorts.”

8.0: Cliimes. Popular programme. Recording: Jay Wilbur and his band, “Happiness Ahead” film selection.

8.5: A further incident in the lives of the Japanese houseboy and his employer, “Going to the Dogs.” 8.20: Music at Your Fireside, introducing, “Oh! Ziane”; “Traumerei” ; “Peggv O’Neil.” 8.30‘: “What’ll We De Now?” a comedy sketch by the overseas comedians, Fred Bluett and Frank Perrin. 8.47: Recording: the Salon Orchestra, (a) “Snappy Weather”; (b) “Vanilla Blossoms.”

8.50: Talk, Mr N. H. Vivian, “We Three Tour with Father.” 9.0: Weather' report pnd station notices. 9.5: A recital by the English novelty pianist, Raie da. Costa.. Recordings: “Four Aces” suite; “Moods”; “Toylaml Holiday.” 9.23: Recordings: a recital by John Morel, baritone. “Eleanore”; “.Simon the Cellarer” (Trad.); “Dodo and Me Gn.staii Todas” (from “Songs of the Pyrenees”; “The Song of the Rose”; “When the House is Asleep.” 9.40: Recordings: a recital by the Orinanely Orchestra. Modern Conceptions of Russian Melodies” ; “Gipsy Rondo” xylophone solo with orchestra); “Ivloszkowskiana,”; “Poeme,” violin solo with orchestra; Spanish Rhapsody. 10.0: Music, mirth and melody. 11.0: Close down.

3YA. CHRISTCHURCH

5.0: Children’s hour, conducted by Mother Hubbard, with, at 5.45 p.m., a special feature: ‘‘Richard the Lion Heart.” 6.0: Dinner music. 7.0: News and reports. 7.35: Review Of the “Journal of Agriculture.” 8.0: Chimes.

Recordings: International Novelty Quartet, “Dwarfs’ Patrol.” 5.4: Harry Tate and Company (comedy sketch), “Motoring.” 8.12: Vienna Sclirammel Quartet, “Firefly's Appointment.” 8.15: W. P. Lipscombe and Company (dramatic sketch), “Down the Vale.”

8.20: Forty minutes of unusual musical comedy in song and story. 9.0: Weather report and station notices.

9.5: Talk, Mr A. A. M. Grundy. “Adventures on a Foreign Yachting Cruise.”

9.20 : Dance music, including another interlude with the Coconut Grove Ambassadors. 11.0: Close down. 4YA, DUNEDIN.

5.0: Children’s hour, conducted by Rig Brother Bill. 6.0: Dinner music. 7.0: News and reports.

7.30: Book talk 8.0': Chimes.

Concert by the Symphony Orchestra of Paris and the Orchestra of the Opera Comique, soloists, Mr Claude ChettlebUrgli (bass), Miss Nellie WilIfams (piano), Yehudi Menuhin (vio lin).

Yehudi Menuhin and the Paris Symphony Orchestra, conducted by Pierre Monteux, Concerto in D Major (Mozart). 8.26: Mr Claude Chettleburgh. bass, “The Two Grenadiers”; “I Will Not Grieve” ; “When the King Went Forth to War.”

8.38: Orchestra of the Opera Comique, Paris, conducted by G. Cloez. “The Golliwogs Cake Walk.” 8.41: “The Causes of War,” a talk delivered by R. Money, Kyrle, M.A., Ph.lL, and one of a series specially recorded by the British Broadcasting Corporation. 9.0: Weather report and station notices.

9.5: Symphony Orchestra of Paris, conducted by the composer, “The Fire Bird.” 9.37: Miss Nellie Williams (piano), Etude, Op. 25, No. 7; Etude, Op. 25, No. 9; Nocturne Op. 48 (Chopin). 9.49: Orchestra of the Opera Comique, Paris, conducted by Gustav Cloez, “Prince Igor Dances.’,’ 9.53: “Marche Heroiqjue.” 10.0: Music, mirth and melody. 11.0: Close down.

AUSTRALIAN STATIONS. 2FC, Sydney. 10.0: A national programme: “Boris Godounoff.” Opera in four acts and eight scenes. Libretto from

dramatic scones of Pushkin. Music by Moussorgsky. Part 11. Time: 1598-1605. Place: Russia. The A.B.C. (Sydney) Symphony Orchestra. Performance under the artistic direction and conducted by Maurice de Abrava•nel. Organiser: Curt Prerauer. Deputy conductor and chorus master: Joseph Post. 11.25: The A.B.C. Revue Company present “The Nawab’s Necklace.” Being the one hundredth and second case of “Clipper and Brown.” The dumbest detective ever devised. Book and lvrics by Jack Macleod. Music by Fred Whaite. Assisted by the Wireless Chorus and the New Theatre Orchestra, under the direction of Fred Wliaite.

2BL, SYDNEY. 10.0: Programme by National Military Band (conducted by Stephen Yorke), in association with Margaret Grimshaw. soprano, and Walter Kingsley, baritone. Band: March, “Lorraine”; overture, “The W anderer’s Goal.” Soprano: “Gipsy Love Song”; “Ah! Sweet Mystery of Life.”

10.30: “Man Through the Ages.” Written and presented by James J. Donnelly. “William, King of Prussia, Becomes Ruler of the New German Empire” (1871 A.D.).

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/HAWST19351107.2.128

Bibliographic details

Hawera Star, Volume LIV, 7 November 1935, Page 9

Word Count
860

RADIO BROADCASTS Hawera Star, Volume LIV, 7 November 1935, Page 9

RADIO BROADCASTS Hawera Star, Volume LIV, 7 November 1935, Page 9

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