4th August
The Lutheran and Eastern orthodix Churches celebrate this as the Feast Day of Moses and Aaron. A prompt to give the Gielen recording of St Arnold's opera a play.
Also on This Date: the traditional end of the Western Roman Empire, as barbarian Odoacer deposes Emperor Romulus Augustus, and proclaims himself King of Italy (476); Irish noblemen defeated in the Nine Years' War and their followers leave their homeland for Mainland Europe in the Flight of the Earls (1607); St Paul's Cathedral is destroyed in the most destructive day of the Great Fire of London (1666); 10-year-old Irish-American Barney Flaherty is hired by the New York Sun and becomes the world's first newspaper delivery boy (1833); the first armed conflict of the First Opium War, the Battle of Kowloon begins as British ships open fire on Chinese junks maintaining an embargo on food supplies (1839); worn out after 30 years fighting the US Army, Apache leader Geronimo surrenders to General Nelson "Long Nose" Mills (1886); the Kodak camera company is founded by George Eastman (1888 - on the same day, Eastman receives a patent for his roll film camera); Beatrix Potter sends an illustrated letter to 5-year-old Noel Moore, who has been poorly - it is the first version of the Peter Rabbit story (1893); William J Murphy becomes the first RAF pilot to be killed in action in WW2 as he takes part in the first RAF bombing raid on German Navy ships (1939 - his colleagues Larry Slattery and GF Booth are also shot down, but survive and become the first British Prisoners-of-War, and the longest PoWs of the War); British troops liberate Antwerp (1944); following a civil rights benefit concert in Peekskill City in New York State given by, among others, Paul Robeson & Pete Seeger, US Veteran groups form a gauntlet along the roads leading from the venue, throwing rocks and insults at the audience as they try to make their way home (1949); the racist Governor of Arkansas orders the National Guard to prevent black students from entering Little Rock Central High School, defying a US Supreme Court ruling (1957); the Forth Road Bridge is opened to traffic (1964); Mark Spitz becomes the first competitor to win seven gold medals at a single Olympic Games (1972); Israel and Egypt sign the Sinai Interim Agreement in Geneva, reolving that future conflicts between the two countries "shall not be resolved by military force but by peaceful means" (1975); the first of the Monday Demonstrations, weekly peaceful protests for greater democracy, is held in Leipzig (1989); after 2-and-a-half years development, 25-year-old PhD students Larry Page & Sergey Brin incorporate their company, Google (1998 - the company is based in the garage of one of their friends); Chris Tarrant hosts the first broadcast of Who Wants to Be a Millionaire? (1998).
Birthdays Today include: Constantijn Huygens (1596); François-René de Chateaubriand (1768); Bruckner (1824); Darius Milhaud (1892); Antonin Artaud (1896); Mary Renault (1905); Ivan Illich (1926); Jacqueline Hewitt (1958); Beyoncé (1981).
Final Days for: Robert Dudley (1588); John Ogilby (1676); César-François Cassini de Thury (1784); Edvard Grieg (1907); Charles Péguy (1914 - shot in the head whilst on active service in the French army, aged 41); Albert Schweitzer (1964); E. F. Schumacher (1977); Georges Simenon (1989); Joan Clarke (1996); Vlado Perlemuter (2002); Steve Irwin & Astrid Varnay (2006); Ian Parrott (2012); Joan Rivers (2014).
... and the Radio 3 Schedules for the morning of Monday, 4th September, 1989 were:
Morning Concert: Prokofiev "Classical" Symph; Schubert 12 German Dances; Schubert/Webern 6 German Dances; Bruch "Swedish Serenade"; Haydn Symph #104.
Composer of the Week: Rimsky-Korsakoff (Dance of the Tumblers; In the Silence of the Night; Symph #1).
Sacred & Profane: Debussy Danse sacree et danse profane; George Lloyd Symph #10; Debussy En Blanc et Noir; Stravinsky Le Sacre du Printemps ( & psalms & canticles by Clarke, Howells, & Britten).
Ulster Orchestra conducted by Simon Joly (Warren Seaside Sketches; Britten 4 French Songs [with Janis Kelly, soprano]; Panufnik Sinfonia Rustica).
The Lutheran and Eastern orthodix Churches celebrate this as the Feast Day of Moses and Aaron. A prompt to give the Gielen recording of St Arnold's opera a play.
Also on This Date: the traditional end of the Western Roman Empire, as barbarian Odoacer deposes Emperor Romulus Augustus, and proclaims himself King of Italy (476); Irish noblemen defeated in the Nine Years' War and their followers leave their homeland for Mainland Europe in the Flight of the Earls (1607); St Paul's Cathedral is destroyed in the most destructive day of the Great Fire of London (1666); 10-year-old Irish-American Barney Flaherty is hired by the New York Sun and becomes the world's first newspaper delivery boy (1833); the first armed conflict of the First Opium War, the Battle of Kowloon begins as British ships open fire on Chinese junks maintaining an embargo on food supplies (1839); worn out after 30 years fighting the US Army, Apache leader Geronimo surrenders to General Nelson "Long Nose" Mills (1886); the Kodak camera company is founded by George Eastman (1888 - on the same day, Eastman receives a patent for his roll film camera); Beatrix Potter sends an illustrated letter to 5-year-old Noel Moore, who has been poorly - it is the first version of the Peter Rabbit story (1893); William J Murphy becomes the first RAF pilot to be killed in action in WW2 as he takes part in the first RAF bombing raid on German Navy ships (1939 - his colleagues Larry Slattery and GF Booth are also shot down, but survive and become the first British Prisoners-of-War, and the longest PoWs of the War); British troops liberate Antwerp (1944); following a civil rights benefit concert in Peekskill City in New York State given by, among others, Paul Robeson & Pete Seeger, US Veteran groups form a gauntlet along the roads leading from the venue, throwing rocks and insults at the audience as they try to make their way home (1949); the racist Governor of Arkansas orders the National Guard to prevent black students from entering Little Rock Central High School, defying a US Supreme Court ruling (1957); the Forth Road Bridge is opened to traffic (1964); Mark Spitz becomes the first competitor to win seven gold medals at a single Olympic Games (1972); Israel and Egypt sign the Sinai Interim Agreement in Geneva, reolving that future conflicts between the two countries "shall not be resolved by military force but by peaceful means" (1975); the first of the Monday Demonstrations, weekly peaceful protests for greater democracy, is held in Leipzig (1989); after 2-and-a-half years development, 25-year-old PhD students Larry Page & Sergey Brin incorporate their company, Google (1998 - the company is based in the garage of one of their friends); Chris Tarrant hosts the first broadcast of Who Wants to Be a Millionaire? (1998).
Birthdays Today include: Constantijn Huygens (1596); François-René de Chateaubriand (1768); Bruckner (1824); Darius Milhaud (1892); Antonin Artaud (1896); Mary Renault (1905); Ivan Illich (1926); Jacqueline Hewitt (1958); Beyoncé (1981).
Final Days for: Robert Dudley (1588); John Ogilby (1676); César-François Cassini de Thury (1784); Edvard Grieg (1907); Charles Péguy (1914 - shot in the head whilst on active service in the French army, aged 41); Albert Schweitzer (1964); E. F. Schumacher (1977); Georges Simenon (1989); Joan Clarke (1996); Vlado Perlemuter (2002); Steve Irwin & Astrid Varnay (2006); Ian Parrott (2012); Joan Rivers (2014).
... and the Radio 3 Schedules for the morning of Monday, 4th September, 1989 were:
Morning Concert: Prokofiev "Classical" Symph; Schubert 12 German Dances; Schubert/Webern 6 German Dances; Bruch "Swedish Serenade"; Haydn Symph #104.
Composer of the Week: Rimsky-Korsakoff (Dance of the Tumblers; In the Silence of the Night; Symph #1).
Sacred & Profane: Debussy Danse sacree et danse profane; George Lloyd Symph #10; Debussy En Blanc et Noir; Stravinsky Le Sacre du Printemps ( & psalms & canticles by Clarke, Howells, & Britten).
Ulster Orchestra conducted by Simon Joly (Warren Seaside Sketches; Britten 4 French Songs [with Janis Kelly, soprano]; Panufnik Sinfonia Rustica).
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