Difference between revisions of "DD110130"
Martinwguy (talk | contribs) (→Transcript) |
Martinwguy (talk | contribs) |
||
Line 2: | Line 2: | ||
[[DD110130]] is a the bottom half of a newspaper clipping from the Radio Times of December 30, 1965 for the broadcast of [[An ABC in Sound]] on January 7th 1966 at 10:25pm.<ref>It must be "'''pm'''" because it is followed by the nightly closedown at 11:30.</ref> | [[DD110130]] is a the bottom half of a newspaper clipping from the Radio Times of December 30, 1965 for the broadcast of [[An ABC in Sound]] on January 7th 1966 at 10:25pm.<ref>It must be "'''pm'''" because it is followed by the nightly closedown at 11:30.</ref> | ||
+ | |||
+ | There is [[:File:clippings3.jpg|a high-definition scan of this]] in the [[Medialink library]]. | ||
The top half of the same page is [[DD110122]]. | The top half of the same page is [[DD110122]]. |
Latest revision as of 15:17, 12 June 2021
DD110130 is a the bottom half of a newspaper clipping from the Radio Times of December 30, 1965 for the broadcast of An ABC in Sound on January 7th 1966 at 10:25pm.[1]
There is a high-definition scan of this in the Medialink library.
The top half of the same page is DD110122.
Transcript
10.25 AN ABC IN SOUND
Poems by Bob Cobbing
orchestrated and spoken by the author himself
in a producion with the BBC Radiophonic Workshop
Introduced by George MacBeth
Since the success of Ernst Jandl's reading at the Albert Hall last June considerable interest has been aroused in attempts to develop an art of pure sound. Bob Cobbin's word combinations form an alphabet of effects whose impact has been varied and underlined in tonight's programme by the use of radiophonic techniques including speeding up and slowing down, multiple recording, echo, and feed-back.
References
- ↑ It must be "pm" because it is followed by the nightly closedown at 11:30.