TONIGHT: Howard Goodall’s Story of Music (BBC Two, 9pm) Even if you don’t know him by name, there’s a good chance you’ve encountered several of Howard Goodall’s works – he’s the composer behind the theme tunes for QI, The Vicar of Dibley, Red Dwarf and many more besides. But not content with just making music, he’s also turned presenter to share his passion with the rest of us. This series tracing the history and origins of music is in its third week now, and sees the host focus on an exciting period in classical compositions. He looks at works produced between 1750 and 1850, when composers went from being servants of the upper classes to freelancers, and the likes of Haydn, Mozart, Beethoven, Schubert, Mendelssohn, Schumann and Chopin created masterpieces which still live on today.

TOMORROW: The British Academy Film Awards (BBC One, 9pm) The Oscars may be more in your face, but when it comes to understated glamour with a classy edge, the British Academy Film Awards – or Baftas, to you and us – win hands down. Stephen Fry hosts this year’s event from London’s Royal Opera House in Covent Garden. Lincoln leads the way with 10 nominations, closely followed by Les Misérables and Life of Pi with nine each. Don’t bet against the likes of Skyfall (eight nods), Argo (seven) or Anna Karenina (six) doing well either. The only man who knows for sure that he’s getting an award is director Alan Parker, the latest recipient of a Bafta Fellowship.

MONDAY: Black Mirror (Channel 4, 10pm) Unlike some critics who are good at berating projects, but couldn’t pen a screenplay to save their lives, Charlie Brooker excels at both. He proved that with Dead Set, the mash-up of Big Brother and 28 Days Later, and the disturbing Black Mirror.Episode one also attracted more than 300 complaints , so there may be more tutting as this series kicks off. Martha and Ash move to a remote cottage. He’s obsessed with social media, so when Ash dies, a new service capable of using his digital footprint as a basis for further communication gives Martha a chance to continue their relationship. Problems arise when Ash is recreated in physical form.

WEDNESDAY: From the Heart (ITV, 9pm) It’s the most romantic week of the year and the card shops are making a killing on all manner of cutesy gimmicks, while men up and down the country try to score Brownie points with various tried-and-tested gestures. But strip away all the hullabaloo of Valentine’s Day, and the leading lights at ITV are keen to get us thinking about something much more important this week and focus on the benefits of organ donation. Dermot O’Leary hosts this one-off special raising awareness of the NHS Organ Donor Register.

THURSDAY: Hugh’s Fish Fight: Save Our Seas (Channel 4, 9pm) Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall is back for a new series, but what’s that got to do with the price of fish? Well, funnily enough, quite a bit actually, and a lot more besides. The chef’s made no secret of the fact he wants to do his bit to save our seas – his petitions have been drumming up support for the last couple of years – but now his plan is stepping up a gear. In this first instalment of the series that follows his progress, Hugh heads to the Philippines and investigates how local fishermen dynamite fish.