Thank you for correcting the text in this article. Your corrections improve Papers Past searches for everyone. See the latest corrections.

This article contains searchable text which was automatically generated and may contain errors. Join the community and correct any errors you spot to help us improve Papers Past.

Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image

WIRELESS BROADCAST

TO-DAY’S PROGRAMMES 2YB, New Plymouth. 7.30 p.m.: News and sports session. Talk on “Surf Life-saving” by Mr. H. S. Weston. 8.0 to 9.0 p.m.: Recordings. 9.0 to 9.30: Relay community singing from East End pavilion. 9.30 to 10.0 p.m.: Recordings. IYA, Auckland. 7.0, Breakfast session; 8.30, close down; 10.0, devotional service, conducted by Mr. David Penman; 10.15, selected recordings; 11.30 (approx.), relay from Alexandra Park of description of Auckland Trotting Club’s meet; 4.30, special weather report for farmers and sports results; 5.0, children’s hour, conducted by Uncle Bob; 6.0, dinner music. 7.0: News and reports. 8.0: Chamber music programme. This programme will be interrupted at intervals, to broadcast descriptions of the national swimming championship events. Recorded presentation by the Brass Band Chamber Music Union of Beethoven’s “Quintet,” Op. 16. 8.27: Ruth Scott (soprano), “The Marriage of Roses”; “A Feast of Lanterns”; “Mignonette”; “Serenade.” 8.37: Sergei Rachmaninoff (piano) and Fritz Kreisler (violin), “Duo for Piano and Violin in A Major,” Op. 162: First movement, Allegro Moderate; Second movement, Scherzo; Third movement, Andantino; Fourth movement, Allegro Vivace. 9.0: Weather report and station notices. 9.2: Reserved. 9.20 to 11.0: Dance music. 2YA, Wellington. 7.0 to 8.30, Breakfast session; 10.0, selected recordings; 10.30, devotional service; 12.0, lunch music; 2.0, classical hour; 3.0 and 4.0, sports results. Light musical programme; 3.30 and 4.30, pecial weather forecast for farmers; 5.0, children’s hour; 6.0, dinner music. 7.0: News and reports. 7.30: Talk: Our Gardening Expert, “For the Home Gardener.” 8.0: Forty minutes with Tschaikowsky. Philadelphia Symphony Orchestra, “Marche Slave.” 8.10: Lawrence Tibbet, baritone, “To the Forest.” 8.14: London Symphony Orchestra, “Francesca da Rimini.” 8.30: Royal Choral Society, “Legend” (Christ in His Garden). 8.33: Roy Henderson, baritone, “None But the Weary Heart.” 8.36: The Halle Orchestra, conducted by Sir Hamilton Harty, “Cossack Dance” from “Mazeppa.” 8.40: Talk: Dr. Guy H. Scholefield, 0.8. E., “World Affairs.” 9.0: Weather report and station notices. 9.2: New Mayfair Orchestra, “Love Tales.” A selection of celebrated love songs with vocal refrain. 9.12: Jack Buchanan and Elsie Randolph with Carroll Gibbons and John W. Green at the piano, accompanied by their boy friends (duet with orchestra accompaniment), vocal gems from “Mr. Whittington.” 9.20: Harry Robbins, xylophone with novelty instrumental quartet, “Kitten on the Keys”; “Twelfth Street Rag.” 9.26: Lucienne Boyer (soprano), “I Dreamed of Loving You”; “Star of Love.” '■ 9.32: Harry Davidson, organ, “Show Boat” selection. 9.38: Jimmy O’Dea and Harry O’Donovan (humorous sketch), “The Copper and the Lad”; “Evicting Mrs. Mulligan.” 9.44: Mario Lorenzi (harp), “Glow Worm Idyll” 9.47: Stuart Robertson, bass-baritone, “The Fiddler.” 9.50: Patricia Rossborough (piano), “Foxtrot Medley” No. 3. Introducing, “Chicago”; “Fancy our Meeting”; “My Heart Stood Still”; “I Want to be Happy.” 9.53: Edith Lorand, and her Viennese Orchestra, “Gipsy Love” overture; “Vivat Hungaria.” 10.0: Music, mirth and melody. 10.30 to 11.0: Dance programme. 3YA, Christchurch. 7.0: News and reports. 8.0: Concert programme. 9.20: Studio presentation of one-act dramatic play, “The Invisible Wound.” (Adapted from the story by Kavoly Kisfaludi). By Professor J. Shelley, Mrs. Valerie Kaslam and Mr. N. W. Harrison. 10.0 to 11.0: Dance music. 4YA, Dunedin. 7.0: News and reports. 8.0: Relay from 3YA, Christchurch of concert programme. 10.30 to .11.0: Dance music. 2FC, Sydney. 10.0, National programme from the New Tivoli Theatre, Sydney: The Royal Grand Opera Company (by courtesy of Sir Benjamin Fuller), complete preformance of grand opera; 12.30 (approx.), from the studio (Sydney), late official weather forecast and late news from the Sun. 2BL, Sydney. 10.0, Two-pianoforte recital by Lindley Evans and Frank Hutchens; 10.20, vocal recital by Stella Power, soprano: “Echo Song”; “Chanson Triste”; “Les Papillons”; “Sevillana”; 10.35, two-piano-forte recital by Lindley Evans and Frank Hutchens; 10.55, “Australia Looks on the World.” Talk by Professor A. H. Charteris; 11.10, programme by A.B.C. (Sydney) Concert Orchestra, conducted by E. J. Roberts. A.B.C. (Sydney) Wireless Chorus, conducted by Joseph Post, “Light Music by English Composers.” Orchestra, overture, “Irish Comedy.” Chorus, “Keltic Lament”; “West Hielan Boat Song.” Orchestra, “Children’s Suite.” Chorus, with orchestral accompaniment, “Song of the Grey Sea.” Orchestra, “Keltic Overture.” Three unaccompanied choruses, “How Beautiful This Night”; “On the Wold”; “Folly’s Song.” Orchestra, “Henry VHI. Suite”; “On the Volga,” for orchestra and male voices; “From a Japanese Screen.” First performance, “In a Lover’s Garden” suite. Chorus and orchestra, “For Empire and for King.” Daventry. 7.15 p.m., Big Ben. Nightmare series, “Serenade for Baboons.” A story by Noel Langley (South African dramatist). Told by the author; 7.30, New British dance tunes (gramophone recordings); 7.45, “Scrapbook for 1921” (electrical recording). Presented by Leslie Baily and Charles Brewer, “Gay Days After the War,” “The Lady of the Rose.” Shackleton’s last voyage. “A Bill of Divorcement.” Peace with Sinn Fein. The CoOptimists. Caruso Dies. R. 38. The 8.8. C. Theatre Orchestra, conducted by Kneale Kelley. Greenwich time signal at 8.15; 8.45, a pianoforte recital by Ernest Lush, “Rhapsody in F Sharp Minor”; “Hark, Hark, the Lark”; “Ungeduld” (Impatience); 9.0 to 9.15, the news. German Shortwave Broadcast. 8.45 p.m. (N.Z. time), DJB (19.74 m DJN (31.45 m Announcement (German, English). German folk song. Programme forecast (German, English). Letter box; 9.0, music and topical events; 9.25. news in English; 9.40, “Cosi fan tutte,” by W. A. Mozart. Selections from the opera. Performers: Gertrud Langguth, Margarethe Albrecht, Ria Kube, Kurt Ingo Rieger. Conductor: Werner Richter-Riechhelm; 10.50, news in German; 11.0, concert of light music; 12.0, news in English; 12.15, close down DJB, DJN (German, English).

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/TDN19350220.2.131

Bibliographic details

Taranaki Daily News, 20 February 1935, Page 14

Word Count
897

WIRELESS BROADCAST Taranaki Daily News, 20 February 1935, Page 14

WIRELESS BROADCAST Taranaki Daily News, 20 February 1935, Page 14

Help

Log in or create a Papers Past website account

Use your Papers Past website account to correct newspaper text.

By creating and using this account you agree to our terms of use.

Log in with RealMe®

If you’ve used a RealMe login somewhere else, you can use it here too. If you don’t already have a username and password, just click Log in and you can choose to create one.


Log in again to continue your work

Your session has expired.

Log in again with RealMe®


Alert