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9 September 2021
9 September 2021 12:01 AM Uuno Klami (1900-1961) Serenades joyeuses Finnish Radio Symphony Orchestra, Jussi Jalas (conductor) FIYLE 12:07 AM Johann Gottlieb Graun (c.1702-1771) Sinfonia in B flat major, GraunWV A:XII:27 Kore Orchestra, Andrea Buccarella (harpsichord) PLPR 12:17 AM Claude Debussy (1862-1918) Violin Sonata in G minor Janine Jansen (violin), David Kuijken (piano) GBBBC 12:31 AM Peter Ilyich Tchaikovsky (1840-1893) Slavonic March in B flat minor 'March Slave' BBC Philharmonic, Rumon Gamba (conductor) GBBBC 12:41 AM Maria Antonia Walpurgis (1724-1780) Sinfonia from "Talestri, Regina delle Amazzoni" - Dramma per musica Batzdorfer Hofkapelle, Tobias Schade (director) DEWDR 12:48 AM Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756-1791) Sonata for piano (K.281) in B flat major Ingo Dannhorn (piano) AUABC 01:00 AM Luigi Boccherini (1743-1805) Quintet for guitar and strings in D major, G448 Zagreb Guitar Quartet, Varazdin Chamber Orchestra HRHRT 01:19 AM Carl Nielsen (1865-1931) Symphony No.3 (Op.27) "Sinfonia espansiva" Janne Berglund (soprano), Johannes Weisse (baritone), Stavanger Symphony Orchestra, Niklas Willen (conductor) NONRK 02:01 AM Claude Debussy (1862-1918) Estampes, L.100 Kira Frolu (piano) ROROR 02:14 AM Fryderyk Chopin (1810-1849) Etude in C minor Op.10'12 'Revolutionary' Kira Frolu (piano) ROROR 02:17 AM Fryderyk Chopin (1810-1849) Etude in E major, Op.10'3 Kira Frolu (piano) ROROR 02:20 AM Fryderyk Chopin (1810-1849) Etude in C minor Op.25'12 Kira Frolu (piano) ROROR 02:23 AM Constantin Silvestri (1913-1969) Chants nostalgiques, -
094-Au91431 1956 31
BRAHMS: Viola Sonatas, Op. 120 A These are the "clarinet" sonatas, so called because Brahms composed them for a clarinetist friend. They Paul Doktor, violist. Nadia Reisenberg, A were published alternately for the viola, however, and the rich, mellow tones of this instrument are perfectly pianist A suited to them. Doktor's superb musicianship weaves a mood all its own, but Miss Reisenberg's sensitive Westminster WN- or SWN-18114 12" pianism is complementary in the extreme. The sound is unusually lifelike. RP GINASTERA: Quartet No. 1 B-B Ginastera's slow movement has a certain atmospheric beauty; its mingling of impressionism and jungle LAJHTA: Quartet No. 7, Op. 49 A-A evocations recalls early Villa-Lobos. His fast movements, however, are built on rhythmic ostinati that become Paganini Quartet B-B tiresome. La¡hta is a kind of Hungarian Virgil Thomson. His language is diatonic, spiced with dissonance and Decca DL-9823 12" Magyar tunes. His Opus 49 is attractive but inconsequential. Earnest performances. AS LECLAIR: 6 Violin Sonatas • Leclair's music does not stray far from the idiom of his time (when polyphony was "old fashioned" but George Alès, violinist; Isabelle Nef, harp- • melodic writing had not yet found its strength). These sonatas are thoroughly violinistic, and if the listener sichordist • can occasionally predict the next passage of sequential modulation there are compensating moments of London L'Oiseau -Lyre OL-50087 8 2-12" lovely invention. Playing is vigorous, musical, sometimes rough in tone. SF PROKOFIEV: Violin Sonata, op. 94 A-B The transcribed flute sonata of Prokofiev has enjoyed a succession of variously KAREN KHACHATURIAN: Violin A-A superb performances on LP. -
Donald N. Ferguson, Musician-Scholar and the Elements of Musical Expression
Minnesota Musicians of the Cultured Generation Donald N. Ferguson, Musician-Scholar and the Elements of Musical Expression 1) Early Years 3 2) First Years in Minneapolis 13 3) A Leader among Music Teachers 17 4) The Quest Begins in Earnest 21 5) The Quest Deepens 26 6) Sudden Illumination 28 7) Fruits of a Sabbatical Year 33 8) The Bach Society 38 9) Retirement 45 10) List of works 48 11) Footnotes 53 As a supplement to this text, Dr. Laudon"s article "The Elements ofExpression in Music, A Psychological View" can be consulted in The International Review ofthe Aesthetics and Sociology ofMusic, IRASM 37 (2006) 2, 123-133 Robert Tallant Laudon Professor Emeritus of Musicology University of Minnesota 924 - 18th Ave. SE Minneapolis, Minnesota (612) 331-2710 [email protected] 2003 Donald N. Ferguson Ferguson around the time ofhis London residence A charcoal sketch by an unknown artists in possession ofthe Ferguson family Donald N. j:;crQusonc.. Ferguson around 1950 Courtesy of University ofMinnesota Archives Photo by the photographer and Curator ofPhotos, Museum of Modem Art New York City Donald N. Ferguson Donald N. Ferguson, Musician-Scholar and the Elements ofMusical Expression Sometime in the late 1940s, after the war, the Bureau of Concerts and Lectures began a unique series which brought a series of master pianists of the world to the University of Minnesota-each of these, a specialist: Rubenstein for Chopin, Arrau for Beethoven, and Tureck for Bach among others. While Rosalyn Tureck was in town, she gave a master class in the auditorium of Scott Hall. -
Lister); an American Folk Rhapsody Deutschmeister Kapelle/JULIUS HERRMANN; Band of the Welsh Guards/Cap
Guild GmbH Guild -Light Catalogue Bärenholzstrasse 8, 8537 Nussbaumen, Switzerland Tel: +41 52 742 85 00 - e-mail: [email protected] CD-No. Title Track/Composer Artists GLCD 5101 An Introduction Gateway To The West (Farnon); Going For A Ride (Torch); With A Song In My Heart QUEEN'S HALL LIGHT ORCHESTRA/ROBERT FARNON; SIDNEY TORCH AND (Rodgers, Hart); Heykens' Serenade (Heykens, arr. Goodwin); Martinique (Warren); HIS ORCHESTRA; ANDRE KOSTELANETZ & HIS ORCHESTRA; RON GOODWIN Skyscraper Fantasy (Phillips); Dance Of The Spanish Onion (Rose); Out Of This & HIS ORCHESTRA; RAY MARTIN & HIS ORCHESTRA; CHARLES WILLIAMS & World - theme from the film (Arlen, Mercer); Paris To Piccadilly (Busby, Hurran); HIS CONCERT ORCHESTRA; DAVID ROSE & HIS ORCHESTRA; MANTOVANI & Festive Days (Ancliffe); Ha'penny Breeze - theme from the film (Green); Tropical HIS ORCHESTRA; L'ORCHESTRE DEVEREAUX/GEORGES DEVEREAUX; (Gould); Puffin' Billy (White); First Rhapsody (Melachrino); Fantasie Impromptu in C LONDON PROMENADE ORCHESTRA/ WALTER COLLINS; PHILIP GREEN & HIS Sharp Minor (Chopin, arr. Farnon); London Bridge March (Coates); Mock Turtles ORCHESTRA; MORTON GOULD & HIS ORCHESTRA; DANISH STATE RADIO (Morley); To A Wild Rose (MacDowell, arr. Peter Yorke); Plink, Plank, Plunk! ORCHESTRA/HUBERT CLIFFORD; MELACHRINO ORCHESTRA/GEORGE (Anderson); Jamaican Rhumba (Benjamin, arr. Percy Faith); Vision in Velvet MELACHRINO; KINGSWAY SO/CAMARATA; NEW LIGHT SYMPHONY (Duncan); Grand Canyon (van der Linden); Dancing Princess (Hart, Layman, arr. ORCHESTRA/JOSEPH LEWIS; QUEEN'S HALL LIGHT ORCHESTRA/ROBERT Young); Dainty Lady (Peter); Bandstand ('Frescoes' Suite) (Haydn Wood) FARNON; PETER YORKE & HIS CONCERT ORCHESTRA; LEROY ANDERSON & HIS 'POPS' CONCERT ORCHESTRA; PERCY FAITH & HIS ORCHESTRA; NEW CONCERT ORCHESTRA/JACK LEON; DOLF VAN DER LINDEN & HIS METROPOLE ORCHESTRA; FRANK CHACKSFIELD & HIS ORCHESTRA; REGINALD KING & HIS LIGHT ORCHESTRA; NEW CONCERT ORCHESTRA/SERGE KRISH GLCD 5102 1940's Music In The Air (Lloyd, arr. -
AUSTIN V. COLUMBIA GRAPHOPHONE CO
AUSTIN v. COLUMBIA GRAPHOPHONE CO. – ALLEGED MUSICAL COPYRIGHT INFRINGEMENT. The report below is taken from The Stage, 5th, 12th 19th and 26th July 1923, with obvious mistakes tacitly corrected. Click for other reports: - a fuller report in The Times - a shorter report in Musical Opinion - a summary of the legal implications in The Solicitor’s Journal - a personal memoir in a biography of Frederick Austin by his grandson, Martin Lee-Browne You can hear relevant recordings by clicking on the links found at bottom of this page. In the Chancery Division, on Tuesday, before Mr. Justice Astbury, an action was heard in which Mr. Frederic Austin, the composer, proceeded against the Columbia Graphophone Co. to restrain an alleged infringement of his copyright in the music of the opera “Polly,” and the passing off of defendant’s gramophone records, entitled “Selections From ‘Polly’” as being the records of the plaintiff’s work. Damages were also claimed. The defendants denied infringement, and denied the passing off. Mr. Luxmoore, K.C., and Mr. McGillivray were for the plaintiff; and Sir Duncan Kerly, K.C., and Mr. Henn Collins represented the defendants. Mr. Luxmoore said under the Copyright Act, when gramophone records had once been made of plaintiff’s music anyone else could make records, provided they had done from plaintiff’s music, upon a royalty being paid; but if it was necessary to make a score for the reproduction, the making of the score was an infringement of the plaintiff’s copyright. The most valuable right with regard to gramophone records that plaintiff had was his right to first production. -
The Delius Society Journal Autumn 1999, Number 126
Delius Journal 126.qxd 15-Nov-99 17:44 Page 1 The Delius Society Journal Autumn 1999, Number 126 The Delius Society (Registered Charity No. 298662) Full Membership and Institutions £15 per year (£20 from 1 April 2000) UK students: £10 (unchanged after 1 April 2000) USA and Canada US$31 per year (US$38 from 1 April 2000) Africa, Australasia and Far East £18 per year (£23 from 1 April 2000) President Felix Aprahamian Vice Presidents Roland Gibson MSc, PhD (Founder Member) Lionel Carley BA, PhD Meredith Davies CBE Sir Andrew Davis CBE Vernon Handley MA, FRCM, D Univ (Surrey) Richard Hickox FRCO (CHM) Rodney Meadows Robert Threlfall Chairman Lyndon Jenkins Treasurer and Membership Secretary Derek Cox Mercers, 6 Mount Pleasant, Blockley, Glos GL56 9BU Tel: (01386) 700175 Secretary Anthony Lindsey 1 The Pound, Aldwick Village, West Sussex PO21 3SR Tel: (01243) 824964 Delius Journal 126.qxd 15-Nov-99 17:44 Page 2 Editor Roger Buckley 57A Wimpole Street, London W1M 7DF (Mail should be marked ‘The Delius Society’) Tel: (0171) 935 4241 Fax: (0171) 935 5429 email: [email protected] Assistant Editor Jane Armour-Chélu 17 Forest Close, Shawbirch, Telford, Shropshire TF5 0LA Tel: (01952) 408726 email: [email protected] Website: http://www.delius.org.uk email: [email protected] ISSN-0306-0373 Delius Journal 126.qxd 15-Nov-99 17:44 Page 3 CONTENTS Chairman’s Message........................................................................................... 5 Editorial............................................................................................................... -
Download PDF Booklet
T HE COMPLETE volume 2 S ONGBOOK M ARK STONE M ARK STONE S TEPHEN BAS TRELPOHEW N BARLOW THE COMPLETE SONGBOOK volume 2 ROGER QUILTER (1877-1953) FIVE JACOBEAN LYRICS Op.28 1 i The jealous lover (John Wilmot, Earl of Rochester) 2’34 2 ii Why so pale and wan? (Sir John Suckling) 1’05 3 iii I dare not ask a kiss (Robert Herrick) 1’17 4 iv To Althea, from prison (Richard Lovelace) 2’04 5 v The constant lover (Sir John Suckling) 1’56 TWO SONGS , 1903 (Roger Quilter) 6 i Come back! 1’36 7 ii A secret 1’08 8 FAIRY LULLABY (Roger Quilter) 2’43 THREE SONGS OF WILLIAM BLAKE Op.20 (William Blake) 9 i Dream valley 2’27 10 ii The wild flower’s song 2’14 11 iii Daybreak 1’59 12 ISLAND OF DREAMS (Roger Quilter) 3’14 13 AT CLOSE OF DAY (Laurence Binyon) 2’39 14 THE ANSWER (Laurence Binyon) 1’52 FIVE ENGLISH LOVE LYRICS Op.24 15 i There be none of beauty’s daughters (George Gordon Lord Byron) 2’10 16 ii Morning song (Thomas Heywood) 2’07 17 iii Go, lovely rose (Edmund Waller) 3’11 18 iv O, the month of May (Thomas Dekker) 1’55 19 v The time of roses (Thomas Hood) 2’03 20 MY HEART ADORNED WITH THEE (Roger Quilter) 1’47 THHREEREE S SONGSONGS F FOROR B BARITONEARITONE O ORR T TENORENOR OOp.18p.18 NNo.1-3o.1-3 2211 ii TToo wwineine aandnd bbeautyeauty ((JohnJohn WWilmot,ilmot, EEarlarl ooff RRochester)ochester) 11’49’49 2222 iiii WWherehere bbee yyouou ggoing?oing? ((JohnJohn KKeats)eats) 11’34’34 2233 iiiiii TThehe jjocundocund ddanceance ((WilliamWilliam BBlake)lake) 11’55’55 2244 APPRILRIL L LOVEOVE ((RogerRoger QQuilter)uilter) 11’60’60 -
The Rita Williams Popular Song Collection a Handlist
The Rita Williams Popular Song Collection A Handlist A wide-ranging collection of c. 4000 individual popular songs, dating from the 1920s to the 1970s and including songs from films and musicals. Originally the personal collection of the singer Rita Williams, with later additions, it includes songs in various European languages and some in Afrikaans. Rita Williams sang with the Billy Cotton Club, among other groups, and made numerous recordings in the 1940s and 1950s. The songs are arranged alphabetically by title. The Rita Williams Popular Song Collection is a closed access collection. Please ask at the enquiry desk if you would like to use it. Please note that all items are reference only and in most cases it is necessary to obtain permission from the relevant copyright holder before they can be photocopied. Box Title Artist/ Singer/ Popularized by... Lyricist Composer/ Artist Language Publisher Date No. of copies Afrikaans, Czech, French, Italian, Swedish Songs Dans met my Various Afrikaans Carstens- De Waal 1954-57 1 Afrikaans, Czech, French, Italian, Swedish Songs Careless Love Hart Van Steen Afrikaans Dee Jay 1963 1 Afrikaans, Czech, French, Italian, Swedish Songs Ruiter In Die Nag Anton De Waal Afrikaans Impala 1963 1 Afrikaans, Czech, French, Italian, Swedish Songs Van Geluk Tot Verdriet Gideon Alberts/ Anton De Waal Afrikaans Impala 1970 1 Afrikaans, Czech, French, Italian, Swedish Songs Wye, Wye Vlaktes Martin Vorster/ Anton De Waal Afrikaans Impala 1970 1 Afrikaans, Czech, French, Italian, Swedish Songs My Skemer Rapsodie Duffy -
Beecham: the Delius Repertoire - Part Three by Stephen Lloyd 13
April 1983, Number 79 The Delius Society Journal The DeliusDe/ius Society Journal + .---- April 1983, Number 79 The Delius Society Full Membership £8.00t8.00 per year Students £5.0095.00 Subscription to Libraries (Journal only) £6.00f,6.00 per year USA and Canada US $17.00 per year President Eric Fenby OBE, Hon DMus,D Mus,Hon DLitt,D Litt, Hon RAM Vice Presidents The Rt Hon Lord Boothby KBE, LLD Felix Aprahamian Hon RCO Roland Gibson M Sc, Ph D (Founder Member) Sir Charles Groves CBE Stanford Robinson OBE, ARCM (Hon), Hon CSM Meredith Davies MA, BMus,B Mus,FRCM, Hon RAM Norman Del Mar CBE, Hon DMusD Mus VemonVernon Handley MA, FRCM, D Univ (Surrey) ChairmanChairmart RBR B Meadows 5 Westbourne House, Mount Park Road, Harrow, Middlesex Treasurer Peter Lyons 160 Wishing Tree Road, S1.St. Leonards-on-Sea, East Sussex Secretary Miss Diane Eastwood 28 Emscote Street South, Bell Hall, Halifax, Yorkshire Tel: (0422) 5053750537 Membership Secretary Miss Estelle Palmley 22 Kingsbury Road, Colindale,Cotindale,London NW9 ORR Editor Stephen Lloyd 414l Marlborough Road, Luton, Bedfordshire LU3 lEFIEF Tel: Luton (0582)(0582\ 20075 2 CONTENTS Editorial...Editorial.. 3 Music Review ... 6 Jelka Delius: a talk by Eric Fenby 7 Beecham: The Delius Repertoire - Part Three by Stephen Lloyd 13 Gordon Clinton: a Midlands Branch meeting 20 Correspondence 22 Forthcoming Events 23 Acknowledgements The cover illustration is an early sketch of Delius by Edvard Munch reproduced by kind permission of the Curator of the Munch Museum, Oslo. The quotation from In a Summer GardenGuden on page 7 is in the arrangement by Philip Heseltine included in the volume of four piano transcriptions reviewed in this issue and appears with acknowledgement to Thames Publishing and the Delius Trust. -
Austins of America
Austin Families Genealogical Society Austin Families Register Volume 2 PAGES 321 TO 640 EDITED BY Michael Edward Austin, Sc.D. THE AUSTIN PRINT CONCORD, MASSACHUSETTS 2010 First Edition - October 1999 International Standard Book Number 0-9648804-0-7 Library of Congress Catalog Card Number 95-80763 Copyright © 1999 by THE AUSTIN PRINT All rights reserved. Published by THE AUSTIN PRINT of Concord, Massachusetts. No part of this work covered by the copyrights hereon may be reproduced or copied in any form without the written permission of the publisher. PREFACE This book is an indexed co mpilation of the newsletters published by the Austins of America Genealogical Society during its first ten y ears, during which tim e its membership expanded to m ake it the largest group of Austin family researchers in the United States. This is the first in a series of such volumes preserving Austin lines and heritage for posterity. It is gratefully dedicated to the authors appearing herein, and to all those members who by contributing their own research to the Austins of America library have made the articles herein more complete and accurate. We are indebted to Pauline Lucille Austin of Cedar Rapids, Iowa, to Sally Austin Day of Livonia, Michigan, and to the other Associate Editors listed herein for sharing their decades of basic Austin research with others. Special thanks to my beloved wife Patricia Biebuy ck Austin, who has been instrumental in organizing raw research notes and correspondence into coherent articles, for without her y ears of devotion and companionship this volume would not have been possible. -
Jimmy Mchugh Collection of Sheet Music Title
Cal State LA Special Collections & Archives Jimmy McHugh Collection of Sheet Music Title: Jimmy McHugh Collection of Sheet Music Collection Number: 1989.001 Creator: Jimmy McHugh Music Inc Dates: 1894 - 1969 Extent: 8 linear ft. Repository: California State University, Los Angeles, John F. Kennedy Memorial Library, Special Collections and Archives Location: Special Collections & Archives, Palmer, 4th floor Room 4048 - A Provenance: Donated by Lucille Meyers. Processing Information: Processed by Jennifer McCrackan 2017 Arrangement: The collection is organized into three series: I. Musical and Movie Scores; II. Other Scores; III. Doucments; IV: LP Record. Copyright: Jimmy McHugh Musical Scores Collection is the physical property of California State University, Los Angeles, John F. Kennedy Memorial Library, Special Collections and Archives. Preferred Citation: Folder title, Series, Box number, Collection title, followed by Special Collections and Archives, John F. Kennedy Memorial Library, California State University, Los Angeles Historical/Biographical Note Jimmy Francis McHugh was born in Boston, Massachusetts on July 10th, 1893 and is hailed as one of the most popular Irish-American songwriters since Victor Herbert. His father was a plumber and his mother was an accomplished pianist. His career began when he was promoted from a office boy to a rehearsal pianist at the Boston Opera House. As his desire was to write and perform “popular” music, he left the job in 1917 to become a pianist and song plugger in Boston with the Irving Berlin publishing company. In 1921, he moved to New York after getting married and started working for Jack Mills Inc. where he published his first song, Emaline. -
Broadway Starts to Rock: Musical Theater Orchestrations and Character, 1968-1975 By
Broadway Starts to Rock: Musical Theater Orchestrations and Character, 1968-1975 By Elizabeth Sallinger M.M., Duquesne University, 2010 B.A., Pennsylvania State University, 2008 Submitted to the graduate degree program in Musicology and the Graduate Faculty of the University of Kansas in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy. Chair: Paul R. Laird Roberta Freund Schwartz Bryan Kip Haaheim Colin Roust Leslie Bennett Date Defended: 5 December 2016 ii The dissertation committee for Elizabeth Sallinger certifies that this is the approved version of the following dissertation: Broadway Starts to Rock: Musical Theater Orchestrations and Character, 1968-1975 Chair: Paul R. Laird Date Approved: 5 December 2016 iii Abstract In 1968, the sound of the Broadway pit was forever changed with the rock ensemble that accompanied Hair. The musical backdrop for the show was appropriate for the countercultural subject matter, taking into account the popular genres of the time that were connected with such figures, and marrying them to other musical styles to help support the individual characters. Though popular styles had long been part of Broadway scores, it took more than a decade for rock to become a major influence in the commercial theater. The associations an audience had with rock music outside of a theater affected perception of the plot and characters in new ways and allowed for shows to be marketed toward younger demographics, expanding the audience base. Other shows contemporary to Hair began to include rock music and approaches as well; composers and orchestrators incorporated instruments such as electric guitar, bass, and synthesizer, amplification in the pit, and backup singers as components of their scores.