SYMPHONY HALL, BOSTON HUNTINGTON AND MASSACHUSETTS AVENUES

Telephone, Commonwealth 1492

SIXTY-SECOND SEASON, 1942-1943

CONCERT BULLETIN of the

Boston Symphony Orchestra

SERGE KOUSSEVITZKY, Conductor

Richard Burgin, Associate Conductoi

with historical and descriptive notes by

John N. Burk

COPYRIGHT, 1943, BY BOSTON SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA, Inc.

The TRUSTEES of the BOSTON SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA, Inc.

Jerome D. Greene . yresident

Henry B. Sawyer . Vice-President

Henry B. Cabot . Treasurer Philip R. Allen M. A. De Wolfe Howe

John Nicholas Brown Roger I. Lee Reginald C. Foster Richard C. Paine Alvan T. Fuller William Phillips N. Penrose Hallowell Bentley W. Warren

G. E. Judd, Manager C. W. SPALDING, Assistant Manager

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[ IO30 ] ^- SYMPHONIANA r

In the First Balcony Gallery may be seen a collection of fifty-six photographs by members of the Camera Associates

of the Boston City Club. This is a small 4 < group of businessmen who are not pro- v / fessional photographers but who take pictures as a hobby. This exhibit was arranged by Mr. Hermann C. Lythgoe, a Boston Symphony subscriber. For many years, the late John H. Garo was the critic; since his death, the well- known painter, Karl Nordstrom of Ips- wich, has acted in the same capacity. The makers and the titles of the prints are as follows:

A. B. EDWARDS The Mall Sagamore Bridge Fenway Bridge Light Through Gloom Sunset at Hamilton Storm's End Hawthorne Inn January Thaw Woodland Path FRANK R. HEUSTIS Westport, Mass. DOUBLE TAKE

J. E. KELLNER Storm Brewing A. photogenic dress of Autumn fine rayon sheer for Sum- Birch Reflections mer Sundays and lunch- Birches eon. As winsome in its Betsy pastels. ..pink, blue, beige, Along the Back Road Quaker Brook aqua, white... as its polka GEORGE H. KELLEY, JR. dotted group in shocking, Chaplain G. Desmond aqua, beige, gray or green. Chaplain G. Desmond Misses' Sizes, 29.90 Our Critic—Karl Nordstrom HERMANN C. LYTHGOE The Back Yard Prinney Whitecaps Horse and Buggy Days Silhouette Thorobreds Fox River Castle Rock

[ 1031 ] Cody Stampede m We\\e$\eyfao Vollendam F. F. PEASE Faith Amie Devotion A Rehearsal One of the Vanities Chief Off the No Name Key The Critic aWay*, Mac W. H. PHOENIX Cardigan MAJOR P. A. RACICOT Brimstone Corner GEORGE F. SLADE Rainy Mist Meadow Brook Springtime On the Dunes Rushing Water Lights and Shadows Winter Pool Winter Brook Hiawatha and Minnehaha The Old Homestead 5utt£ The House by the Side of the Road Moonlight on Wingaershaek Country Church Primping Up Gloucester

BEETHOVEN'S NINTH a«ej5«fi«§ SYMPHONY Wovnivi,., The following quotation is taken from J. W. N. Sullivan's book, "Beethoven, His Spiritual Development":

"To compare the ninth symphony with the fifth is to realize how greatly this man had grown in spiritual stature. That early, almost boyish idea of fate has become a much profounder con- ception in this first movement. Fate is no longer personified as some sort of powerful enemy that sufficient courage can defy, even if hopelessly. It is now a truly universal destiny, too complete to evoke any thought of resistance. The brooding mystery from which the theme emerges is, like the primeval darkness that preceded creation, something that conditions the human world, but which is not part of it. And this extra-human power, as presented to us here, has nothing benevolent about it, necessary as it may be for the moulding of the human soul. As the answer to this fate 3fl> ^oyl/fon 5%eet theme Beethoven gives us no more than submission and resignation. But even

r 1032 ] -

resignation is overborne and crushed by this implacable destiny, and towards the end of this terrible movement, in the passage for strings that begins on the 513th bar, we are left with nothing but utter despair and pain through which the great fate theme sweeps to its final assertion. After this experience we know, with Beethoven, exactly what to expect, and in the Scherzo we have once more that unconquerable uprising of blind energy that was the very core of the man. This Scherzo is as head- long a movement as the fugue of the Hammerclavier sonata, but there is a fierce joyousness in it quite absent from that work. It is, indeed, part of an organic structure that reaches out to a quite different culmination, although that culmination is not the personal vic- tory of the early works. The Adagio alone would, one thinks, be a sufficiently great culmination. That state of what we can only call serenity based, not on any turning away from suffering, but on its acceptance, is sufficient justification, surely, for the experience portrayed in the first movement. So great a degree of understanding, in which nothing is PERFECT RING ignored, is worth, it would seem, what- THE PERFECT GIRL ever price has been paid for it. But FOR THE there is a state beyond, a condition of world is more almost superhuman ecstasy, as Beetho- sift in the No ring you ven had already revealed to us in the important than the last movement of the last pianoforte P going to gitl youre ; sonata. The Adagio of the ninth sym- g?ve the you 11 nnd phony remains purely human and per- Lrrv. At Shreves masterpieces sonal and Beethoven was, at this time, Tcollection of reaching after something that craftsmen out should designed by inspired transcend what is called the human. He sentiments express your was, at this time, exploring a new re- to not come gion of consciousness. In the late piano- perfectly. Why them over in forte sonatas we get more than glimpses Sown and look of a new state of being as revealed in SofourthreeprivatetoomS a music utterly unlike other music. Certmeud any have three In the late quartets he was to reveal to We to serve you. us even more unambiguously this new Gemologists flanked by region. In the ninth symphony, however, Diamond solitaire he diamonds, sei could not, for some reason, order two baguette Other sol- this new experience on the scale re- ^Platinum $475. quired. It that up. may be Beethoven was itaires from $55 taxi moving about in worlds not realized. (Prices include He had, in the late pianoforte sonatas and in the Mass, given us glimpses of this new kind of awareness. He had Shreve probably said all that COMPANY he could, at the CRUMP & LOW moment, say. So he turned from his JSTMlUiXtD 1800 personal and solitary adventure as a AT ARLINGTON ST. forerunner of the human race to be a BOYLSTON partaker in the joy and aspirations of WEEKDAYS his OPEN fellows. This is the last occasion 5-45 P.M. 9.45 A.M. TO on which Beethoven addresses his fel- FROM low-men as one of them. Henceforth he voyaged 'in strange seas of thought, alone.'"

[ 1033 ] Old Colony Trust Company ONE FEDERAL STREET, BOSTON

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[ 1034 ] SIXTY-SECOND SEASON . NINETEEN HUNDRED FORTY-TWO AND FORTY-THREE

Twenty-third Programme

THURSDAY AFTERNOON, April 22, at 2:30 o'clock

SATURDAY EVENING, April 24, at 8:15 o'clock

Handel Concerto for Organ and Orchestra No. 10, in D minor Adagio — Allegro — Allegro moderato

Schubert "Unfinished" Symphony, in B minor

I. Allegro moderato II. Andante con moto

Wagner Prelude to "Parsifal" INTERMISSION

Jacobi "Ode" for Orchestra (First performance in Boston)

Ravel Introduction and Allegro for Harp and Orchestra

Rimsky-Korsakov "The Russian Easter," Overture on Themes of the Russian Church, Op. 36

soloists E. POWER BIGGS BERNARD ZIGHERA Organ Harp

BALDWIN PIANO

Symphony Hall is organized for your protection in case of a blackout. The auditorium and the corridors will remain lighted. You are requested to keep your seats. Above all, keep calm.

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[ 1036 ] CONCERTO FOR ORGAN AND ORCHESTRA in D minor, No. 10 (Op. 7, No. 4) By George Frideric Handel

Born at Halle, February 23, 1685; died at London, April 14, 1759

This concerto is the fourth in a set of six which were published as Op. 7 in the year 1740 (since another set of six had previously appeared, as Op. 4, in 1738, this concerto became the tenth in order of publication).

The Concerto has been performed at these concerts October 10, 1900 (Wallace Goodrich), and February 20, 1925 (Nadia Boulanger). It was performed at a Berkshire Festival concert, August 8, 1941 (E. Power Biggs). tttriting his organ concertos in score, Handel left much to the dis- V\ cretion of the performer. In this concerto, for example, there are places where the words "ad libitum" are written into the solo part. Between the second and the final Allegro there was merely the direction, "organo ad libitum/' whereby the player, unaccompanied, was left to improvise a slow movement after his own fancy. Max Seiffert, whose edition is used in this performance, has supplied in notation at this point a brief adagio in the form of an air to be played without the orchestra.* The editor has filled in the figured bass and likewise

* In the edition by Guilmant, of 18'88, a transcription for organ of the air from Handel's Concerto Grosso, No. 12, is introduced.

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[ 1037 ] supplied ornamental passages, which were expected according to the custom of the period. Handel, with one exception, did not write pedal parts into his organ concertos, for the evident reason that the English theatres in which he usually played them did not possess pedal organs. The single exception, the Seventh Concerto, which Handel wrote for a pedal organ in Germany, proves the rule. Had he had pedal organs at his disposal, he would surely have supplied a pedal part as Seiffert has done. To the string orchestra Handel had added two oboes and two

bassoons, the first doubling the violin parts, the second doubling the 'cello parts. Handel was accustomed to introduce an organ concerto as an entr'acte in a performance of an oratorio. The extempore element was part of the occasion, as indicated by the composer's failure to provide, in this case, a slow movement in notation.* Romain Rolland, in his life of Handel, gives this vivid word picture of the organ concertos: "Deep shadows, brilliant light, powerful and joyous contrasts — they are all planned for monumental effect. The

* Dr. Hugo Leichtentritt, author of Handel's fullest biograhy, points out that the announce- ments of the first performance of "The Messiah," in Dublin, April 13, 1742, mentioned that "several concertos on the organ" would be played. Handel might well have played this one, published two years before.

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[ 1039 ] orchestra as a rule is composed of two oboes, two violins, viola, and basses (violoncellos, bassoons, and cembalo), sometimes two Mutes, double-basses, a harp. In the tenth concerto, there are two violoncellos and two bassoons. In the long concerto in F major, there are two horns. The concertos are in three or four movements, which customarily are connected, two by two. They generally begin with a Pomposo or a Staccato in the manner of a French overture; an Allegro of the same style follows. To end, an Allegro moderato or an animated Andante, sometimes a dance. The Adagio for a middle movement is often lacking; here an improvisation took place."

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[ 1040 ] The Permanent Charity Fund and Boston Symphony Orchestra

Gifts may be made to the Permanent Charity Fund, either by will or in your lifetime, with the request that the income be paid to the Boston Symphony

Orchestra. The gifts so made will be held perpetually in trust by this Company as Trustee and the income will be paid to the Orchestra as long as the need exists. Thereafter the income will be used for some other worthy purpose of your choice; or failing that, one selected by the Committee which annually distributes the income of the Fund.

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[ IO41 ] E. POWER BIGGS

Power Biggs was born at Westcliff, England, and educated at E. Hurstpierpoint College, Sussex. He studied for a career in electrical engineering, but after two years abandoned this profession for music, winning a scholarship at the Royal Academy of Music in London, where he studied with Sir Henry Wood and others. He graduated in 1929 with the highest awards in organ, harmony and counterpoint, and piano. He appeared as an organist and came in the following year to this country, when he made two concert tours. He now lives in Cambridge, where he has given notable series of recitals on the baroque organ in the Germanic Museum of Harvard University. He has given

similar series at Columbia University in New York and is now giving weekly broadcast recitals upon the Harvard organ under the aus- pices of Mrs. Elizabeth Sprague Coolidge. Mr. Biggs has appeared as soloist with the Chicago and Cincinnati Orchestras. With the Boston Symphony Orchestra he played the Concerto of Leo Sowerby on April 22, 1938.

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[ 1043 1 SYMPHONY IN B MINOR, "UNFINISHED" By Franz Schubert

Born at Lichtenthal, near Vienna, January 31, 1797; died at Vienna, November 19, 1828

This Symphony, sometimes listed as No. 8, was composed in 1822, and first performed thirty-eight years after the composer's death. It was conducted by Herbeck at a concert of the Gesellschaft der Musikfreunde in Vienna, December

•7. 1865. The most recent performance at the Friday and Saturday series of the Boston Symphony Orchestra was on April 12, 1940. The orchestration follows: two flutes, two oboes, two clarinets, two bassoons, two horns, two trumpets, three trombones, timpani, and strings. r-p»HE world, discovering some forty-three years post facto a "master-

* piece," which, for all its qualities, is but half a symphony, has in- dulged in much conjecture. Did Schubert break off after the second movement on account of sudden failure of inspiration, or because he was careless of the work and did not realize the degree of lyric rapture which he had captured in those two movements? Or perhaps it was because he realized after a listless attempt at a third movement that what he had written was no typical symphonic opening movement and

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[ 1045 1 contrasting slow movement, calling for the relief of a lively close, but rather the rounding out of a particular mood into its full-moulded ex- pression — a thing of beauty and completeness in itself. The Schubert that wrote the "Unfinished" Symphony was in no condition of obedi- ence to precept. He found his own law of balance by the inner need of his subject. Professor Tovey finds the theme projected for the scherzo "magnificent," but is distrustful of what the finale might have been, for Schubert's existing finales, with the possible exception of three, he considers entirely unworthy of such a premise. There are others who can imagine no scherzo and finale whatever as properly be- longing to the symphony in the state in which Schubert seems de- liberately to have left it. However, these futile speculations may be left to those who have tried to uncover in Schubert's uneventful life some unexpected source of inspiration for the symphony. Was Schubert under the spell of a visit to his idol, Beethoven, which he may (or may not) have made in that very year? Or was there some secret love affair? These questions may remain with the romancers, literary and dra- matic, who, with little historical data to embarrass them, have been able to give their imagination the fullest play.

The bare facts of Schubert's "Unfinished" Symphony are soon told. He wrote it for the Music Society of Gratz in 1822, in acknowledg-

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I IO47 1 merit for having been voted an honorary member of the Society. He gave the manuscript to Anselm Huttenbrenner, the director of the

Society and, so far as records show, neither spoke nor thought about it again. Anselm who, like his brother Joseph, had done much to pro- mote a recognition of Schubert, and attempted (unsuccessfully) to pro- duce his friend's latest opera "Alfonso and Estrella" at Gratz in this year, seems to have done nothing at all about the symphony. It lay stuffed away and unregarded among his papers for many years, whence it might well have been lost and never known to the world. In 1865, in his old age, and thirty-seven years after Schubert's death, he de- livered it to Johann Herbeck for performance by the "Friends of Music

Society" in Vienna, December 17, 1865. "The autograph manuscript, now in the possession of the Gesell- schaft der Musikfreunde, Vienna," wrote Sir George Grove in 1907, "is on oblong paper, freely but very neatly written, with great grace in the writing, and with but rare corrections. The first page is dated 'Vienna, October 30, 1822.' This was no doubt the day on which Schubert began to write, and judging from the dates marked on his other symphonies, the two movements probably occupied him no more than a week or ten days to put on paper. For the Scherzo he made considerable sketches, which are also preserved in the library of the

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Schubert composed symphonies fluently from his schooldays until the age of twenty-one, when (in 1818) he wrote his Sixth. Like those which preceded it, the Sixth was on the whole complacent and conven- tional in pattern. Like the Fifth, it was designed for the none too illus- trious Amateur Society of Vienna, of which the composer was a mem- ber. In the ten years that remained of his life he wrote two symphonies in full scoring, so far as is known.* They were this Symphony in B minor, of 1822, and the great C major Symphony which he wrote a few months before his death. Both works were posthumous. Posterity has persisted in wondering what mystery of sudden growth enabled Schubert to pour the full measure of his genius for the first time into the orchestra, shaping the form in which he had always been rather too docile to earlier models into a vehicle for lyrical flight and poignant speech entirely his own. As Grove wrote: "The gap be- tween the work of 1818 and the work of 1822 —between the ages of twenty and twenty-four — is both wide and deep."

* The symphony in E (of 1821) was found in skeleton form and orchestrated for per- formance by Felix Weingartner in the season past. The apocryphal "Gastein" symphony remains a legend, for no trace of it has been found.

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[ 1051 ] Kreissle von Helborn, writing

the first considerable biography of Schubert in 1865, studying his • BE DISCRIMINATING subject carefully and consulting the acquaintances of the composer then surviving, got wind of "a symphony in B minor, in a half- UNEXCELLED finished state" through Joseph Hiittenbrenner, Anselm's brother. WHISKEY "The fragment," reported Kreissle, "in the possession of An-

selm Hiittenbrenner, of Gratz, is

said, the first movement particu- larly, to be of great beauty. If this

be so, Schubert's intimate friend would do well to emancipate the

still unknown work of the master he so highly honors, and intro- duce the symphony to Schubert's admirers." A worthy suggestion! As a mat- ter of fact, Joseph had done some- thing about introducing the sym- phony. He had written in i860, five years before Kreissle's book, to Johann Herbeck, then conduc- tor of the Gesellchaft der Musik- freunde concerts in Vienna, informing him that his brother had a "treasure in Schubert's B minor Symphony, which we put on a level with the great sym- phony in C, his instrumental swan song, and any one of the symphonies by Beethoven." Her- beck did not act on this advice for five years, perhaps because he INCORPORATED did not wish to be compelled to BALTIMORE, MARYLAND play one of Anselm's overtures, ESTABL ISH E D 18 8 5 which might have been an obliga- THE STRAIGHT WHISKIES IN THIS tion firmly tied to the Schubert PRODUCT ARE 6 YEARS OR MORE OLD manuscript. Or perhaps he mis- trusted this sudden enthusiasm of the Huttenbrenners, bursting

[ 1052 1 forth after a silence of some thirty years, during which the sheets had lain yellowing and unnoticed in Anselm's cabinet. It is only too evident the brothers had thought of it as merely one of count- less Schubert manuscripts. As the other posthumous symphony, the C major, the "swan song" unearthed by Schumann in 1839, published in 1850, began at last to dawn upon the general musical consciousness, the Hiittenbrenners may have pulled out their old relic and won- dered whether by some rare stroke of luck it might prove another such as the C major symphony. A reduction for piano duet was brought forth and shown to "the initiated" among their friends. But Anselm Huttenbrenner, an unsuccessful and embittered composer, who had retired into solitude with his own unplayed manuscript, was plainly "difficult." At length, in 1865, Herbeck had occasion to stop at Gratz, where he sought Anselm, then an old man, eking out his last years in seclu- sion in a little one-story cottage at Ober-Andritz. Herbeck made his approach cautiously, for the aged Anselm had grown eccentric, and having been so close with his Schubert manuscript in the past, might prove balky. Herbeck sat down in a neighboring inn where, he learned, Anselm was in the habit of taking his breakfast. Anselm put in his expected appearance. Herbeck accosted him and after some casual conversation remarked: "I am here to ask your permission to

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[ 1053 ] produce one of your works in Vienna." The word "Vienna" had an electric effect upon the old man who, having finished his meal, took Herbeck home with him. The workroom was stuffed with yellow and dusty papers, all in confusion. Anselm showed his own manuscripts, and finally Herbeck chose one of the ten overtures for performance. " "It is my purpose," he said, to bring forward three contemporaries, Schubert, Hiittenbrenner, and Lachner, in one concert before the Viennese public. It would naturally be very appropriate to represent Schubert by a new work." "Oh, I have still a lot of things by Schubert," answered the old man; and he pulled a mass of papers out of an old- fashioned chest. Herbeck immediately saw on the cover of a manu- script "Symphonie in H moll," in Schubert's handwriting. Herbeck

looked the symphony over. "This would do. Will you let me have ii

copied immediately at my cost?" "There is no hurry," answered

Anselm, "take it with you." The symphony was accordingly performed by Herbeck at a Gesell- schaft concert in Vienna, December 17, 1865. The programme duly v opened with an overture ("new") , of Hiittenbrenner. The symphon was published in 1867, and made its way rapidly to fame.

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[ 1055 ] PRELUDE TO "PARSIFAL" By Richard Wagner

Born at Leipzig, May 22, 1813; died at Venice, February 13, 1883

The libretto for "Parsifal" was completed in 1877, the first draft of the score in the spring of 1879, and the full orchestration in January 1882. The first perform- ance was at Bayreuth, July 26, 1882, but the Prelude was finished in December 1878, and performed on Christmas Day at the Villa Wahnfried, Wagner's house at Bayreuth, the composer conducting members of the orchestra from Meiningen. The Prelude was last performed in this series April 18, 1941. The following orchestra is required: three flutes, three oboes and English horn, three clarinets and bass clarinet, three bassoons and contra-bassoon, four horns, three trumpets, three trombones and tuba, timpani, and strings. The prelude is the preparation to enter the sacred boundaries of Montsalvat, upon a mountain of medieval Spain, where a group of Knights are sworn to the keeping of the Holy Grail. Wagner, draft- ing an explanation of the prelude for a performance before King

Ludwig II of Bavaria at Munich in 1880, gave it a triple heading:

"Love — Faith: Hope?" The theme of "Love" is the mystic music of the Eucharist, repeated over extended arpeggios. It is linked with the liturgic "Dresden Amen," a cadence of ascending sixths. The theme of Faith appears as a stately and sonorous asseveration from the brass choirs. The development of the motive of the Eucharist gives poignant

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[ 1057 ] intimation of the agony of Amfortas. The mood is unresolved; it was with special intent that the composer wrote a question mark after the title "Hope." He thus clarified his meaning:

"First theme: Love. Take my body, take my blood, in token of our love. "Second theme: Faith — promise of Redemption through Faith. Strong and firm does Faith reveal itself, elevated and resolute even in suffering. In answer to the renewed promise, the voice of Faith sounds softly from the distant heights — as though borne on the wings of the snow-white dove — slowly descending, embracing with ever-increasing breadth and fulness the heart of man, filling the world and the whole of nature with mightiest force, then, as though stilled to rest, glancing upward again toward the light of heaven. "Then once more from the awe of solitude arises the lament of lov- ing compassion, the agony, the holy sweat of the Mount of Olives, the divine suffering of Golgotha;, the body blanches, the blood streams forth and glows now in the chalice with the heavenly glow of blessing, pouring forth on all that lives and languishes the gracious gift of Redemption through Love. For him we are prepared, for Amfortas, the sinful guardian of the shrine, who, with fearful rue for sin gnawing at his heart, must prostrate himself before the chastisement of the vision of the Grail." "Shall there be redemption from the devouring torments of the soul? Once again we hear the promise, and — we hope!"

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[ 1059 1 "ODE" By Frederick Jacobi

Born in San Francisco, California, May 4, 1891

Composed in 1941, this "Ode" had its first performance by the Symphony

Orchestra of San Francisco, Pierre Monteux, conductor, February 12 last. It is scored for two flutes and piccolo, two oboes and English horn, three clarinets and bass clarinet, two bassoons and contra-bassoon, four horns, three trumpets, three trombones and tuba, timpani, celesta, glockenspiel, cymbals, triangle, tam-tam, bass drum, chimes, harp and strings. The "Ode" was inspired, according to Alfred Frankenstein, the programme annotator of the San Francisco Orchestra, "by a passage in the Hebrew Morning Sabbath Service." The opening of the prayer is as follows:

"O Lord, open thou my lips, and my mouth shall declare thy praise. "Blessed art Thou, O Lord our God, and God of our fathers, God of Abraham, God of Isaac and God of Jacob, the great, mighty and revered God, the most high God, who bestowest loving kindnesses and possessest all things; who remembereth the pious deeds of the patri- archs, and in love wilt bring a redeemer to their children's children for thv name's sake."

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c 1061 ] The closing line of the prayer is "Thou hast sanctified us by thy commandments and brought us near unto thy service, O our King, and called us by thy great and holy name."

Mr. Jacobi remarks: "It has been a constant source of amazement to me how perpetually stirring these ancient words remain. But not only that: the sequence of thoughts, the following-up of mood to mood is such that, if one feels them and mirrors them, in the order in which they come, a musical piece seems actually to take place under their guidance, a musical form seems to be the inevitable result. Perhaps this is only imagination on my part, but I have found it on several occasions to be the case."

Other music by this composer has had Biblical origins. There is his

Piano Quintet, "Hagiographa"'; also a Sabbath Evening Service for cantor and a capella chorus, and a set of organ pieces for use in the synagogue. Mr. Jacobi is now composing an opera. "The Prodigal Son," "based on four early American prints which show this Biblical story in early American costume and setting, about 1820." He has also com- pleted a song cycle, "From the Prophet Nehemiah." His orchestral suite "Indian Dances," which was performed at these concerts on

November 9, 1928, like his String Quartet on Indian Themes, is the

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[ 1063 ] result of his study of the music of Pueblo Indians in Arizona and . He has also composed for orchestra a symphony, "Two Assyrian Prayers," "The Pied Piper," and a violoncello, a piano, and a violin concerto; also various pieces for chamber combinations.

Frederick Jacobi studied in New York with Paolo Gallico, , and , and subsequently at the Berlin Hoch- schule with Paul Juon. From 1913 to 1917 he was assistant conductor at the House. Since 1936 he has been teacher of composition at the Juilliard Graduate School. In an article about this composer contributed to Modern Music (March-April, 1937), David Diamond sums up his music in this paragraph: "A detailed analysis of Jacobi's work shows, as the most important feature of his creative tendencies, that he possesses a puissant melodic style. He is a melodist whose structures have a variety of tonal features and a freshness and directness of utterance. These characteristics are enhanced by an inflection of the medieval modes in a freer and more beautifully grouped relationship of whole tones and half tones within the melodic line itself. His superb instinct for a melody of extended and well balanced musical ideas is governed by the principle of 'restate- ment after a contrasting phrase' as well as a subtle use of the 'expansion' in broadening or anticipating the high point within a line. The fluency of his melodies may be due to the naturalness with which notes are distributed, and out of which rise fixed tonal centers codifying the essential phraseology."

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[ 1065 ] INTRODUCTION AND ALLEGRO FOR HARP With Accompaniment of Strings, Flute and Clarinet By Maurice Ravel

Born at Ciboure, Basses-Pyrenees, March 7, 1875; died at Paris, December 28, 1937

Ravel wrote this piece in 1906 for Mile. Micheline Kahn, by whom it was first performed at a concert of the Cercle Musical in Paris on February 22, 1907. The dedication is to M. Albert Blondel, the head of the piano (and harp) firm of Erard in Paris. The first performance in the United States was at a concert of the Longy Club in Boston, February 8, 1910, when the harpist was Heinrich Schueker. It was per- formed at the Boston Symphony concerts on December 24, 1931, when Mr. Zighera was the soloist.

*"""" his work is of chamber proportions and has been performed as a

septet, but it is closer to a harp concerto in which the composer finely exploits every possibility of the modern chromatic harp, while with characteristic sublety, he implicates the instrument with the musical development. There is an elaborate cadenza. The short Introduction opens with a melody in thirds by the flute and clarinet which is later to appear as a second subject in the Allegro proper. The harp provides an undercurrent of arpeggios, and when the Allegro begins it sets forth the theme unaccompanied, the other

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[ 1066 ] instruments presently joining. Scott Goddard, who describes this work

in Cobbett's Cyclopedia of Chamber Music, writes: "It is a fine piece of delicate writing, worthy of a pupil of Faure. Immediately before the harp cadenza the two chief themes appear simultaneously, com- bined with great skill and ease. The vivid harp writing gives the work a feeling of brightness and gayety."

BERNARD ZIGHERA

Bernard Zighera was born in Paris, April 1, 1904, of a Roumanian father and a Polish mother. At the Paris Conservatory he studied harp with Marcel Tournier and piano with Santiago Riero and . He took the highest honors for both instruments. He also studied chamber music with Camille Chevillard and Lucien Capet. He was a member of the Paris Conservatory Orchestra, appearing frequently as soloist. He came to this country to join the Boston Symphony Orchestra as harpist in 1926. Mr. Zighera has also often appeared as piano soloist. In 1936 he founded the Zighera Chamber Orchestra, with which he has presented a notable series of music for chamber orchestra each season.

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[ 1068 ] [ 1069 ] To the —

Friends of the Boston Symphony Orchestra

I have been asked by the Trustees to express

their gratitude to the members of our Society for

their loyal support of the Orchestra this season.

Without such support, continuation of the

Orchestra would be impossible. The list of these

Friends as of April 17, 1943, is bound into this

programme book as a permanent record.

The sole and earnest purpose of the Society of

Friends of the Orchestra is to provide the best in

orchestral music to the greatest possible number,

and all who care to join in furthering this object

are invited to enroll as members. There is no min-

imum membership fee and cheques made out to

Boston Symphony Orchestra and forwarded to

Symphony Hall, Boston, constitute enrollment

without further formality.

Jerome D. Greene, President Boston Symphony Orchestra

[ 1070 ] oApril 17, 1943 Friends of the Boston Symphony Orchestra

List of Members for the Season of 1942-1943

Boston (^Members

Miss Elizabeth F. Abbe Mrs. Charles Almy Mrs. William B. Baker

Mr. Edwin I. Abbot Miss Helen J. Almy Dr. Franklin G. Balch Mrs. John Moseley Abbot Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. John T. Balch Miss Harriette F. Abbott John H. Alschuler Professor and Mr. and Mrs. James D. Abbott Mrs. Hobart Ames Mrs. Edward Ballantine Dr. John A. Abbott Mrs. John S. Ames Mrs. Hugh Bancroft Mr. and Mrs. A. Howard Abell Lady Ames Miss Mary E. Bancroft Mrs. Pennell N. Aborn Mrs. Robert R. Ames Mr. Richard Bancroft Ackroyd Brothers, Ltd. Mrs. Stephen B. Ames Miss Edith Bangs Mr. Timothy Adamowski Mrs. William H. Ames Miss Mary R. Bangs Mr. and Mrs. A. A. Adams, Jr. Mrs. Charles B. Amory Mrs. George W. Barber Miss Clara A. Adams Mr. Roger Amory Mr. Payson T. Barber Miss Eleanor D. Adams Mrs. C. S. Anderson Miss Phyllis F. Barker Miss Elizabeth O. Adams Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Walter S. Barker Miss Hannah M. Adams Rae D. Anderson Mr. Charles L. Barlow Mr. John Adams Mrs. Charles F. Angell, Jr. Mr. R. S. Barlow Miss Katharine B. Adams Miss Edna K. Anthony Mrs. James H. Barnard Mis& Kathryn Adams Miss Margaret Anthony Mr. and Mrs. Miss Nella B. Adams Mr. B. Earle Appleton William Lambert Barnard Mrs. William G. Adams Mrs. James R. Armington Mrs. Charles B. Barnes Mr. and Mrs. Wilman E. Adams Mrs. Harold Greene Arnold Mr. Frank E. Barnes Mrs. Winthrop C. Adams Mr. Nelson T. Ash Mrs. Joel M. Barnes Mr. Edward I. Addison Mr. Joseph N. Ashton Mr. and Mrs. H. Atherton Mr. Solomon Agoos . Mrs. Edward Howard J. Barnet Mrs. Leonard D. Ahl Mrs. Edwin F. Atkins Mr. John S. Barnet

Mr. Emil Ahlborn Mrs. Richard A. Atkins Mr. S. J. Barnet Dr. Mr. J. B. Aikman Miss Caroline P. Atkinson J. Dellinger Barney Mr. William E. Albers Mr. Edward Atkinson Miss Katharine E. Barr

Mrs. Horatio Alden Mrs. J. H. Atkinson Miss Doris Barrett Mrs. Stephen P. Alden Miss Margaret H. Aubin Mrs. William A. Barron Mrs. Nelson W. Aldrich Mrs. Charles F. Ayer Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Talbot Aldrich Mrs. Frederick Ayer William A. Barron, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. James B. Ayer Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Barrow William T. Aldrich Mrs. W. P. F. Ayer Miss Betty A. Bartlett Mr. John Forsyth Alexander Mr. Charles L. Ayling Miss Elizabeth M. P. Bartlett Mrs. Peter P. Alexander Miss Grace E. Bartlett Miss Martha A. Alford Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Henry Bartlett Miss Louisa R. Alger Courtlandt W. Babcock Mrs. Matthew Bartlett Miss Annie E. Allen Mrs. R. W. Babson Mrs. Nelson S. Bartlett Mrs. Arthur M. Allen Mrs. Louis Fabian Bachrach Miss Dorothy Bartol Mrs. Arthur W. Allen Mrs. Carl K. Bacon Mrs. E. F. W. Bartol Miss Bertha W. Allen Mr. Charles E. Bacon Mrs. John W. Bartol Mrs. Edward E. Allen Miss Denise Bacon Dr. Alice H. Bassett Mrs. Edwin L. Allen Mr. Paul V. Bacon Miss Mary E. Batchelder Miss Eleanor W. Allen Dr. and Mrs. Mrs. Oric Bates

Mrs. J. Murray Allen George S. C. Badger Mrs. Roy Elliott Bates "A Friend" Mrs. Samuel L. Baer Mr. and Mrs. Jesse B. Baxter Miss Mary N. Allen Miss Alice H. Bailey Miss Katherine E. Baxter Miss Mary T. Allen Mrs. Edward A. Bailey Miss Katharine F. Baxter Mrs. Philip K. Allen Mrs. James A. Bailey Mrs. Edward B. Bayley Mr. and Mrs. Philip R. Allen Mrs. Charles E. Baker Mrs. Boylston A. Beal

Mrs. Robert J. Allen Mrs. Dudley M. Baker Mr. and Mrs. Thomas P. Beal Mrs. Thomas E. Allen Mrs. Hamilton W. Baker Mrs. Ruth D. Beals

Miss Una L. Allen Mrs. Ralph J. Baker Mrs. Harry C. Beaman Miss Martha Allis Mrs. Roland M. Baker Mrs. Horace L. Bearse

[ 1071 ] FRIENDS OF THE BOSTON SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA (continued) Mr. and Mrs. Bancroft Beatley Miss Elizabeth Blaney Mr. John G. Brooks, 2nd Miss Winifred M. Beck Miss Clara Blattner Mr. Lawrence G. Brooks

Mrs. G. W. Becker Mr. and Mrs. Alan J. Blau Mr. Stanley Br6oks Mrs. Harry W. Becker Mr. Allen D. Bliss Mrs. W. G. Brooks Mr. and Mrs. Jean Bedetti Mr. Henry M. Bliss Miss Edith B. Brown Miss Leslie Beebe Mr. Henry W. Bliss Mrs. Edwin P. Brown Miss Sylenda Beebe Mrs. John H. Blodgett Miss Ethel F. Brown Miss Barbara Beetle Miss Ellen F. Blood Mr. George R. Brown Mr. Sidney A. Beggs Mrs. William H. Blood, Jr. Mrs. G. Winthrop Brown Miss Gertrude C. Belcher Mrs. Hermann L. Blumgart Mrs. H. W. Brown Mrs. Robert E. Belknap Mrs. Edwin A. Boardman Miss Ida F. Brown Mrs. Arthur W. Bell Mrs. Emile L. Boas Mr. and Mrs. LaRue Brown Mrs. Jaffray de Hauteville Bell Miss Helen S. Bodwell Mrs. Theodore E. Brown Miss Dorothy Bradford Belt Miss Catherine M. Bolster Miss Norvelle W. Browne. Mr. and Mrs. E. D. Bement Mrs. Gardner T. Bolster Mrs. Charles F. Bruno Mrs. A. Farwell Bemis Mrs. Stanley M. Bolster Miss Elizabeth B. Bryant Mr. Alan C. Bemis Mr. Vincent V. R. Booth Mrs. Walter S. Bucklin Mrs. H. H. Bemis Mrs. C. Christian Born Miss Alice E. E. Buff Mr. John R. Bemis Mrs. A. D. Bosson Mr. James Buffington, Jr. Miss Nellie M. Bemis Mrs. Campbell Bosson Miss Ellen T. Bullard Miss Frances Z. T. Benner Mrs. John T. Bottomley Mr. John C. Bullard Mrs. Frank W. Benson Mile. Nadia Boulanger Mrs. W. N. Bullard Miss Sylvia P. Benson Mr. Philip W. Bourne Mr. John Bunker Robert M. Bent Co., Inc. Miss Jessie Bourneuf Mr. and Mrs. Miss Barbara Bentley Mrs. Frederick P. Bowden William B. Burbank Miss Eleanor Berg Mrs. Herbert L. Bowden Mrs. E. W. Burdett

Mrs. Maurice J. Bernstein Mrs. Margaret J. Bowen Mrs. Starr A. Burdick Professor and Mrs. Mrs. John Bowler Mr. R. Burdon-Muller C. Harold Berry Mr. Edward L. Bowles Mrs. George Sargent Burgess

Miss Clara Berwick-Walker Mr. Charles Boyden Mrs. E. J. Burke Mrs. Edward H. Best Miss Mary L. Boyden Miss Martha J. Burke Mrs. William H. Best Mrs. Gamaliel Bradford Miss M. F. Burleigh

Mr. and Mrs. Henry Beston Mrs. Frederick J. Bradlee Mrs. Archie C. Burnett Mrs. Henry L. Beveridge Mrs. Henry G. Bradlee Miss Helen C. Burnham Miss Elizabeth Biddlecome Miss Mary E. Bradlee Mrs. John A. Burnham Mrs. R. A. Bidwell Mrs. Thomas S. Bradlee Miss Mary C. Burnham Miss Eleanor Bigelow Miss Edith R. Bradley Miss Nina H. Burnham Miss Gladys M. Bigelow Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. W. A. Burnham

Mrs. Henry B. Bigelow J. Gardner Bradley Mr. Allston Burr Miss Mary C. Bigelow Mrs. Ralph Bradley Mrs. Heman M. Burr Mrs. Carroll M. Bill Mrs. E. D. Brandegee Mr. I. Tucker Burr Miss Bernice L. Billings Miss Mary E. Bransfield Miss Elizabeth Burrage Mrs. Christopher L. Billman Mrs. Harry B. Braude Miss Elsie A. Burrage Miss E. V. Binney Mrs. Jessie F. Brayton Mr. and Mrs. George D. Burrage Miss Anna Child Bird Mrs. A. Francis Breed Mrs. Ethel M. Burton Mr. and Mrs. Dr. William B. Breed Mr. Harry E. Burton Charles Sumner Bird Miss Barbara Bremer Mrs. George A. Bushee

In Memory of Francis W. Bird Mrs. J. Lewis Bremer Miss Marion E. Buswell Mrs. Francis W. Bird Miss Sarah F. Bremer Miss Bernice F. Butler Mrs. R. W. Bird Mr. Harry D. Brenner Mrs. Stedman Buttrick, Jr. Mrs. Paul H. Birdsall Mrs. Charles Brewer Mrs. Henry G. Byng Mrs. Howard M. Biscoe, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Maurice B. Biscoe George W. W. Brewster Mr. Robert P. Cable Mrs. Harold A. Bishop Mrs. Henry H. Brewster Miss Amy W. Cabot

Mr. John Bishop Mrs. J. F. F. Brewster Mrs. Arthur T. Cabot Miss Mildred E. Bixby Miss Elizabeth C. Bridge Mrs. Chilton R. Cabot Ensign L. M. Black Mrs. Edward C. Briggs Mrs. Edward C. Cabot Mrs. Benjamin S. Blake Mrs. Walter B. Briggs, Jr. Mr. George E. Cabot Miss Dorothy T. Blake Mrs. Dwight S. Brigham Mrs. Harry D. Cabot Mrs. Francis Blake Mrs. F. Gorham Brigham Mrs. Henry B. Cabot, Sr. Miss Maude D. Blake Mr. and Mrs. Virgil O. Brink Mr. and Mrs. Henry B. Cabot Mrs. David N. Blakely Dr. M. Leopold Brodney Mrs. Sewall Cabot Mrs. Archibald Blanchard Mrs. Arthur B. Brooks Mr. Stephen P. Cabot Mrs. I. H. Blanchard Mrs. Arthur H. Brooks Mr. and Mrs. Thomas D. Cabot

[ 1072 ] FRIENDS OF THE BOSTON SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA (continued) William C. Conant Mr. Walter M. Cabot Mr. and Mrs. A. D. Chesterton Mrs. Louise Condit Mr. Robert G. Caldwell Miss Helen T. Chickering Miss Miss Margaret Conklin Mr. Edward E. Call Miss Ruth L. S. Child William P. Conklin, Jr. Miss W. O. Callwell Mrs. Roberta Wiley Childs Mrs. Mrs. Mrs. Richard M. Cameron Mr. and Mrs. John Chipman Mr. and Charles Connick Macfie Campbell Mr. A. Percival Chittenden J. Dr. C. Connor Mr. Courtney G. Campbell Mrs. K. Schuyler Choate Miss Amy L. B. Connor Mrs. Wallace M. Campbell Mrs. Frank S. Christian Miss Lucy Miss Elizabeth A. Connors Dr. and Mrs. Bradford Cannon Miss Elizabeth C. Church Bertram Conrad Miss Edith R. Canterbury Mr. and Mrs. Elliott B. Church Mrs. Sidney S. Conrad Miss Elizabeth M. Carleton Mrs. James E. Church Mrs. Frederick S. Cgnverse Mrs. Philip G. Carleton Dr. and Mrs. Mrs. Converse Mr. Hugh A. Carney Edward D. Churchill Miss Luna B. Converse Miss Florence L. Carpenter Dr. Frank S. Churchill Mr. Parker Roger Converse Miss Cornelia P. Carr Mr. and Mrs. Mr. W. S. Cook, Mrs. Houghton Carr William H. Claflin, Jr. Mrs. C. Jr. Mrs. Earl F. Cook Mrs. John P. Carr Mrs. Dudley Clapp Mr. and Mr. and Mrs. Stanley E. Cook Miss Ellen S. Carroll Mr. Philip F. Clapp Warren Foster Cook Mr. Hans L. Carstensen Mrs. B. Preston Clark Mrs. Cooke Mrs. Albert P. Carter Miss Ethel Damon Clark Mrs. John W. S. Coolidge Miss Dorothy Carter Mr. G. Dudley Clark Mrs. Elizabeth J. Coolidge Mrs. Hubert Lazell Carter Miss Margaret Clark Miss Ellen W. Mr. and Mrs. Morris Carter Mrs. Henry Cannon Clark Miss Elsie W. Coolidge Coolidge, Miss Nellie M. Carter Mr. Homer Metcalf Clark Mrs. John T. Jr. L. Coolidge Miss Nina Carter Mr. and Mrs. Paul F. Clark Mrs. Julian Mr. and Mrs. Lt. Comdr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Coolidge Richard B. Carter Philip M. Clark T. Jefferson Coolidge Mrs. Roscoe A. Carter Miss Elizabeth Clarke Miss Theresa R. Mr. Robert W. Carton Mr. C. Comstock Clayton Mrs. Robert M. Cooms Miss Louisa W. Case Mr. Burton A. Cleaves Mr. Harry D. Cooper Mrs. Paul DeWitt Casky Mrs. James H. Cleaves Miss Jessie P. Cooper Oliver Mrs. Charles Caverly Mrs. Charles P. Clifford Dr. and Mrs. Cope S. Irving Copen Mrs. Alfred Cavileer Mrs. Walter B. Clifford Dr. and Mrs. Cordingley Company Mr. Alfred Cavileer, Jr. Mrs. Alice S. Clough Mrs. Harold^ Corey Mr. Robert P. Cavileer Mrs. George H. A. Clowes, Jr. D^ Miss Doris H. Chadwick Miss Caroline S. Cobb Miss Linda E. Corey Mrs. Cornish Professor and Mrs. Mr. Charles K. Cobb Mr. and John J. Mr. and Mrs. Z. Chafee, Jr. Mrs. Ernest Cobb Mr. and Mrs. MTss Lydia B. Cobb Charles E. Cotting Henry G. Chamberlain Miss Madeline W. Cobb Mr. Francis A. Countway Mrs. John A. Cousens Miss Marcia K. Chamberlain Mr. J. D. Cobine Miss Mary Chamberlain Miss Louise Coburn Miss Katharine M. Cowen Mrs. George P. Champlin Mr. Russell Codman, Jr. Mr. Guy W. Cox Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Russell S. Codman Mr. Robert Sayre Cox, Jr. H. Daland Chandler Mrs. Jefferson W. Coe Mrs. Frank Cragin Mrs. John Chandler Mr. Willard G. Cogswell Mr. Edward M. Crane Mrs. Henry M. Channing Mr. and Mrs. Eli A. Cohen Mrs. Charles Cranford Cohen Miss Lucy C. Crehore Mrs. E. B. Chapin Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Mr. and Mrs. Mr. Edward S. Chapin Miss Lucia Coit Miss Mabel H. Chapin Miss Florence Colby Gordon K. Creighton Mrs. Earle P. Charlton Miss Alice R. Cole Mrs. Bartow Crocker Mrs. Bigelow Crocker Mrs. Arthur I. Charron Mr. Arthur T. Cole Crocker, Miss Alice P. Chase Miss Ruby H. Cole Mrs. C. Thomas 3rd Mr. Douglas Crocker Mrs. Frederick Chase Mrs. Charles Collens Mrs. Edgar Crocker Mrs. Frederic H. Chase Mrs. George W. Collier Mrs. Frank W. Crocker Miss Helen B. Chase Miss Alice W. Collins Chase Mrs. George H. Crocker Mrs. Henry M. Collins and Rowbotham, Inc Mrs. John P. Chase Mrs. George U. Crocker Mrs. James D. Colt Mrs. F. Mrs. Philip P. Chase Mr. and J. Crocker Mrs. Arthur C. Comey Miss Ruth P. Chase Mrs. John Crocker Miss Ada L. Comstock Miss Alice Cheever Mr. and Mrs. Miss Grace W. Conant Lyneham Crocker Mrs. David Cheever, Jr. Conant Dr. David Cheever Dr. and Mrs. James B. Miss Muriel Crocker Miss Helen Cheever Mrs. Ralph Waldo Conant Miss Alice P. Cromack

C 1073 ] FRIENDS OF THE BOSTON SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA (continued) Mrs. Arthur P. Crosby Mrs. Justin Dart Mrs. Cutler B. Downer Mrs. S. V. R. Crosby Mrs. George H. Davenport Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. W. A. Crosby Miss Mary D. Davenport Jerome I. H. Downes

Mr. Sterling R. Crowe Mrs. Edward Kirk Davis Dr. J. D. Downing Mrs. Francis B. Crowninshield Miss Evelyn Davis Mrs. William B. H. Dowse Mrs.. Thomas St. Clair Cuddy Miss Isabel W. Davis Mrs. F. E. Doyle Miss Gertrude Cumings Mrs. Livingston Davis Mrs. Eben S. Draper Mr. and Mrs. Miss Lucy Davis Miss Louisa L. Dresel Charles K. Cummings Dr. and Mrs. M. Davis Mrs. Jesse A. Drew Miss Margaret Cummings Miss Mary G. Davis Miss Wynnette L. Drew Miss N. Florence Cummings Miss Mary H. Davis Mr. Carl Dreyfus Miss Isabel Cummins Miss Charlotte P. Davison In Memory of Mrs. Alan Cunningham Mr. and Mrs. R. H. Davison Mrs. Carl Dreyfus

Miss Mary Cunningham Mr. William Porter Davisson Mrs. Edwin J. Dreyfus Mrs. Stanley Cunningham Miss Amy Davol Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Guy W. Currier Mrs. Charles W. Davol Sydney Dreyfus Mrs. Alfred Curtis Miss Mary B. Davoll Mr. Arthur Drinkwater Mrs. Edith Roelker Curtis Mrs. Frank A. Day Mrs. William R. Driver Miss Frances G. Curtis Mrs. Frank A. Day, Jr. Mrs. Sydney Drooker Mrs. Greeley S. Curtis Ensign Gordon M. Day Miss Geraldine F. Droppers Miss Harriot S. Curtis Miss Virginia Day Rev. Frank E. Duddy Mrs. Louis Curtis Miss Bertha Dean Mrs. Rufus B. Dunbar Miss Margaret Curtis Miss Hazel Dean Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. James Dean Charles B. Duncklee Richard Cary Curtis Mrs. George L. DeBlois Miss Helen L. Duncklee Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Ernest E. Decker Mr. B. C. Dunn, Jr. Frederic H. Curtiss Miss Constance DeCormis Mr. William Dunn Miss Fanny E. Cushing Mr. R. M. DeCormis Miss Alice M. Dunne Mrs. George M. Cushing Mrs. Thadeus C. DeFriez Mr. and Mrs. Miss Susan T. Cushing Mrs. Frank S. Deland William W. Dunnell, Jr. Mrs. W. E. Cushing Miss Alice L. Delano Mrs. W. A. Dupee, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Daniel A. deMenocal Mr. J. Frank Durell Norman Cushman Miss Emily G. Denny Miss Josephine Durell Mrs. Robert Cushman Mrs. Philp Y. DeNormandie Miss Stella Durell Miss A. Ann Cutler Dr. and Mrs. Miss Catharine H. Dwight Miss Elisabeth A. Cutler Robert L. DeNormandie Miss Laura M. Dwight

Mr. and Mrs. Mr. Frederic J. DeVeau Miss Margaret Dwight G. Ripley Cutler Mrs. Bradley Dewey Dr. Richard W. Dwight Mrs. N. P. Cutler Mrs. Franklin Dexter, Jr. Mrs. Charles L. Dyer Col. Robert Cutler Mrs. Hiram Dexter, Jr. Mrs. Edward L. Cutter Mrs. Lewis Dexter Miss Mabel T. Eager Mrs. John Cutter Mrs. Robert L. Dexter The Misses Louise S. and Mrs. Albert C. Dieffenbach Mabel L. Earle In Memory of C. S. D. Miss Margaret Dieter Mrs. Melville Eastham Mrs. George B. Dabney Mr. George P. Dike Mr. John Eastman, Jr. Mrs. John P. Dabney Mr. and Mrs. Miss Blanche E. Eaton Miss Susanna R. Dabney Norman S. Dillingham Mrs. Henry C. Eaton Mr. John N. Dalton Miss Lena M. Dillon Mrs. John M. Eaton Mrs. Marshall B. Dalton Miss Ruth M. Dillon Mr. Philip Eaton Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. William H. Dimick Mrs. Randolph L. Eddy Reginald A. Daly Dr. and Mrs. Mr. L. U. Edgehill Miss Dorothy Dalzell John H. Dingle Dr. George H. Edgell Mr. Mr. J. Linfield Damon Mrs. Edwin S. Dodge and Mrs. Mrs. Gorham Dana Mr. and Mrs. Robert G. Dodge George W. Edman Mr. Herman Dana Mrs. Malcolm Donald Mrs. W. D. Edmonds Miss Kate N. Dana Mrs. Edward Calvin Donnelly Miss Betty Edwards Miss Sylvia P. Dana Mr. Paul V. Donovan Mr. David F. Edwards Mr. and Mrs. Edward Dane Mrs. Frances C. Dooly Mrs. David F. Edwards Mrs. Ernest B. Dane Miss Lillian Dorion Miss Esther P. Edwards Mrs. John Dane Miss Rhea M. Doucette Miss Mary N. Edwards Mrs. William H. Danforth Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Neilson Edwards Miss Jennie P. Daniell Charles H. Douglass Mrs. Henry Ehrlich Miss Mabel Daniels Miss Elizabeth P. Douglass Mr. Kendrick R. Eilar Mrs. Richard E. Danielson Mrs. Dana F. Dow Mrs. Lee Einstein

[ 1074 ] FRIENDS OF THE BOSTON SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA (continued)

Mrs. Philip Eiseman Mrs. S. Prescott Fay Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Sidney A. Eiseman Mr. Thomas Fenno Reginald C. Foster Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Eisler Mrs. Frank M. Ferrin Mrs. Leonard Fowle Mr. Rudolph Elie, Jr. Mrs. Ronald M. Ferry Ensign and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Eliot In Memory of Johanna Fiedler M. Bernard Fox Mr. Samuel A. Eliot Mrs. E. Olsen Field Miss Edith M. Fox Mrs. Lewis A. Elliott Mr. Franklin G. Field Mr. Felix Fox Miss Harriett M. Ellis Hon. and Mrs. Fred T. Field Mr. Isidor Fox Miss Louise Ellis Mrs. Horace F. Field Mr. Walter S. Fox, Jr. Mrs. Moses Ellis Mrs. W. W. Field Mrs. Corabelle G. Francis Mrs. William V. Elliss Mr. and Mrs. Irving G. Fine Mrs. G. Tappan Francis Mr. Eben H. Ellison, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. Nathan H. Fink Mrs. J. Dwight Francis Mr. and Mrs. Mr. E. Philip Finn Mrs. W. H. Francis Eben H. Ellison Miss Kathryn Claire Finn Miss Lina H. Frankenstein Miss Florence G. Elms Mr. John G. Finneran Mr. James B. Fraser Miss Helen T. Elms Miss Hazel A. Firth Mrs. Gertrude M. Frazier Col. and Mrs. Mr. John L. Firth Mrs. George Edward French Alcott Farrar Elwell Mr. Louis Fischbein Miss Helen C. French Miss Augusta C. Ely Miss Elsa Fischer Mrs. Hollis French Miss Elizabeth B. Ely Miss Margaret A. Fish Miss Katharine French Mrs. Mary Learned Ely Miss Edith S. Fisher Miss Madeleine S. French Miss Edith W. Emerson Miss Frances B. Fisher Miss Ruth H. French Mrs. Frederick L. Emerson Mrs. Richard T. Fisher Mrs. Gertrude T. Fretz Miss Mabel E. Emerson Mrs. Samuel L. Fisher In Memory of Mr. H. Wendell Endicott B. Fiske Harry A. Friedland Mrs. J. Parker Mrs. Henry Endicott Mr. Wyman P. Fiske Mr. and Mrs. Major Albert G. Engelbach Mr. Edward Fitch Israel Friedlander Miss Constance L. English Miss Ada M. Fitts Miss Elsie T. Friedman Mrs. Walter C. English Mr. Dudley Fitts Miss Sophie M. Friedman Mrs. L. Joseph Eno Hon. and Mrs. Mrs. Harry F. Friedman Mrs. H. A. Erhard John F. Fitzgerald Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Roger Ernst Mrs. Stephen S. Fitzgerald Nathan H. Friedman Miss Ellen B. Esau Mrs. C. G. Flake Miss Kate Friskin Dr. and Mrs. Mrs. S. A. Fleischer Mrs. Roger A. Frissora Gustavus J. Esselen Mr. Arthur W. Fleming Mr. Donald McKay Frost Miss Edith M. Esterbrook Mrs. Arthur W. Fletcher Mrs. Edward J. Frost Mrs. Augustus Hemenway Miss Caroline R. Fletcher Miss Evelyn P. Frost Eustis Mrs. F. Richmond Fletcher Mrs. George Frost Mrs. David J. Evans Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Harold L. Frost Mrs. William P. Everts Frederick C. Fletcher Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Miss Marjorie Flickinger Horace W. Frost Alexander B. Ewing Mrs. Charles H. Flood Miss Jennie C. Frost Miss Marjorie C. Fogg Mr. Francis E. Frothingham Harris Fahnestock, Mrs. Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Foley Mrs - Joseph R. Frothingham J. Mrs Mrs. Murry N. Fairbank Miss G. Shirley Foote - Langdon Frothingham Mrs Louis Frothingham Mrs. H. G. Fairfield Mr. and Mrs. George L. Foote A Mrs. Sidney Farber In Mem°ry of Mrs. Mrs. George J. Foran Mr. Jarvis Farley Fr° thmSham Mrs. Allan Forbes 2 Mrs. Farley m« fT* J. W. Mr. and Mrs. Allyn B. Forbes Mr. Albert Farnsworth TzTu^lLe M. Fuess J. Mr. Edward W. Forbes Miss E. Mabel Farquharson Hon. and Mrs. Alvan T. Fuller Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Donald Farrington Miss Marjorie Fuller F. Murray Forbes, Jr. Mrs. George E. Farrington Major and Mrs. Mrs. H. W. Forbes Mrs. Lorenzo Fassett Marshall N. Fulton J. Mrs. Malcolm Forbes Mrs. James M. Faulkner J. Miss Laura Furness Mr. John Faulkner Mrs. Ralph E. Forbes Mrs. Waldo E. Forbes "A Grateful Shut-in" Miss Dorothy Faxon Mrs. Homer Gage Mr. Henry Mr. William S. Forbes M. Faxon Mrs. Elbridge Cleghorn Gale Dr. and Mrs. Miss Jessie W. Ford Miss Laura E. Gallagher Mrs. Arthur A. Forness Nathaniel W. Faxon Mrs. Percival Gallagher Mrs. Charles H. Mr. A. D. Fay W. Foster Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Dudley B. Fay Mrs. Hatherly Foster, Jr. William W. Gallagher Mrs. Joseph S. Fay Mr. John G. Foster Mrs. William Albert Gallup Mrs. Richard D. Fay Miss Marjorie Foster Dr. and Mrs. James L. Gamble

[ 1075 ] FRIENDS OF THE BOSTON SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA (continued) Mr. R. H. Ives Gammell Mr. Charles M. Goldman Mrs. E. A. Grozier Mrs. Charles W. Gammons Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Leopold Gruener Mrs. Everett W. Gammons P. Kervin Goldman Mr. Courtenay Guild Mrs. Guy P. Gannett Mrs. Sumner Goldman Mrs. S. E. Guild Mrs. William W. Gannett Mrs. Joel E. Goldthwaite Mrs. John T. Gyger Mr. and Mrs. Seth T. Gano Mrs. W. N. Goodnow Mrs. Harry Ganz Miss Helen Goodrich Miss Margaret Hackett Dr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Norton Ganz Wallace Goodrich Albert Haertlein Mrs. Robert Hallowell Mrs. Joseph H. Goodspeed Mr. and Mrs. Gardiner Mr. and Mrs. Theodore C. Haffenreffer Mrs. William Tudor Gardiner Harry M. Goodwin Mr. David S. Hagen Mr. and Mrs. Miss Sarah S. Goodwin "Philip Hale" Charles S. Gardner Mrs. A. L. Gordon (from Mrs. Philip Hale) Mr. and Mrs. Mr. Ellis Gordon Mrs. Richard K. Hale G. Peabody Gardner, Jr. Mrs. Esther Gordon Mrs. Richard W. Hale Gardner J. Mrs. Marjorie H. Mrs. C. Lane Goss Mrs. E. L. C. Hales Miss Mary A. Gardner Miss Augusta H. Gottfried Miss Adelaide Haley Rev. William E. Gardner Miss Cornelia Gould Miss Anna Hall Miss Annette Garel Miss Eleanore P. Gould Mr. and Mrs. Frederick G. Hall Miss Eleanor Garfield Mrs. Florence Speare Gould Mrs. G. Abeel Hall Garfield Mr. and Mrs. James Mrs. Lucy V. Gould Mrs. George A. Hall Dr. and Mrs. W. T. Garfield Mrs. E. S. Goulston, Jr. Mrs. H. S. Hall Miss Louise Garland Dr. and Mrs. Mr. John L. Hall Garrison Mr. David L. G. Philip Grabfield Mr. John W. Hall L. Garrison, Mrs. William Jr. Miss Isabella Grandin Mrs. L. A. Hall Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur E. Grannis Miss Minna B. Hall Walter W. Gaskill Mrs. Elizabeth H. Grant Mr. and Mrs. Reuben Hall Miss Clara Edith Gay Mrs. Margaret Grant Mr. Richard W. Hall Mr. Heinrich Gebhard Mr. and Mrs. Louis C. Graton Mrs. E. S. Hallet Mrs. * Mr. and Mrs. Edward C. Graves Miss Charlotte B. Hallowell Leslie N. Gebhard Mrs. C. Chauncey Gray Miss Emily Hallowell A. Gerould Miss Theodora Dr. M. Geneva Gray Mrs. Frank W. Hallowell Miss Ruth V. Gevalt Miss Marjorie Gray Mrs. John W. Hallowell Mrs. L. D. Gibbs Mr. Reginald Gray Mr. and Mrs. Gibson Mr. George C. Mrs. Thomas H. Gray, N. Penrose Hallowell Gibson Jr. Mrs. Kirkland H. Miss Emma Grebe Mr. and Mrs. Parker Hamilton Giduz Mrs. Fred J. Miss Dorothv Bradford Green Mrs. Robert T. Hamlin Gifford Mrs. Carleton S. Miss Helen Lincoln Green Mrs. Edward C. Hammond Gifford Miss Rosamond Dr. and Mrs. Robert M. Green Miss Elizabeth M. Hammond Miss Jeannette Giguere Mr. Robert Ware Green Hon. and Mrs. Miss Clara C. Gilbert Mr. David H. Greenberg Franklin T. Hammond Gilbert Miss Helen C. Miss Alma L. Greene Mrs. H. W. Hammond Gilbert Mrs. Helen R. Mrs. C. Nichols Greene Mrs. George Hannauer Miss Louise Giles Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Lawrence H. Hansel Mr. John R. Gilman Henry Copley Greene Mr. Donald F. Harding Miss Louise Gilman Mrs. I. Lloyd Greene Mrs. Edgar Harding Miss Margaret E. Gilman Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Edward Harding L. Gilmore Mrs. George Jerome D. Greene Mr. Eraor H. Harding Mrs. Edwin Ginn, Sr. Mr. John Gardner Greene Mrs. H. R. Hardwick S. Ginsberg Mrs. Joseph Mrs. Chester N. Greenough Miss Blanche E. Hardy Mr. William M. Ginsburg Mrs. Henry V. Greenough Miss Mary Caroline Hardy H. Gleason Mr. Edward Mrs. Robert B. Greenough Mrs. Henry I. Harriman Hollis T. Gleason Mrs. Mr. F. A. Gregg Mrs. Henry W. Harris Miss Marie R. Gleeson Miss Agnes Gregory Professor and Mrs. Ticket Company Globe Mrs. Edward W. Grew Robert S. Harris of New England Mr. Henry S. Grew Mrs. Norman Harrower Mrs. H. Nelson Glover Miss Josephine Griffith Mr. C. D. Hart Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Paul Gring Mrs. Orrin C. Hart William H. Glover Mr. Merrill Griswold Mrs. Arthur W. Hartt Miss Susan Godoy Miss Elizabeth C. Grobbin Mr. G. W. B. Hartwell Mrs. Asa Eldridge Goddard Mr. Casper M. Grosberg Miss Mary A. Hartwell Miss Ruth Goddard Mrs. Julius Grossman Miss Maude A. Hartwell Miss Margaret Golding Mr. Charles S. Grover Mrs. Morton C. Hartzell

[ 1076 ] FRIENDS OF THE BOSTON SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA (continued)

Harvard Glee Club Mrs. Ruth S. High Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Bertha M. Harvey Miss Dorothy E. Hildreth Francis G. Howard Mrs. Carroll S. Harvey Mrs. Stanley B. Hildreth Mr. Stanley R. Howard Mr. Ralph C. Harvey Miss Grace G. Hiler Mrs. Arthur R. Howe Mrs. John H. Harwood Mrs. Adams S. Hill Mr. Forest W. Howe Dr. Reed Harwood Mr. and Mrs. Arthur D. Hill Mr. James C. Howe Mrs. Sydney Harwood Mr. Donald M. Hill Mr. M. A. DeWolfe Howe Mrs. Charles H. Haskins Professor Edward B. Hill Mrs. Parkman D. Howe, Jr. Mrs. Francis H. Hastings Miss Emeline Hill Mrs. Ernest Howes Mrs. Kenneth B. Hastings Mrs. George Q. Hill Mrs. Henry S. Howes Miss Margaret Hastings Mrs. George E. Hills Mrs. Osborne Howes Miss Theodora M. Hastings Mrs. Hugh S. Hince Mrs. Edward M. Howland Mr. Albert M. Hatch Mr. Freeman Hinckley Mrs. Weston Howland Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. E. Sturgis Hinds Mr. Alexander E. Hoyle Norman L. Hatch Miss Katharine Hitchcock Mr. Charles B. Hoyt Dr. R. A. Hatch Mrs. Charles R. Hoag Dr. Eliot Hubbard, Jr. Mrs. Ralph E. Hatch Mrs. George Hoague Mrs. H. Hubbard Mrs. Alvan B. Hathaway Mrs. Samuel Hoar Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Miss Florence E. Hatheway J. C. Hubbard, Jr. Miss Alison Haughton Richard B. Hobart Mrs. J. C. Hubbard Mrs. M. Graeme Haughton Mr. Beecher Hobbs Miss Mary Hubbard Mrs. Richard Pratt Hawkins Mrs. Franklin Warren Hobbs Mr. Ralph K. Hubbard Mrs. Leslie D. Hawkridge Miss Genevra Hobbs Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Hudnut

Mrs. Alfred J. Hawks Mrs. Marland C. Hobbs Miss Amy M. Hughes Mrs. George Hawley Mr. and Mrs. Walter L. Hobbs Miss Elinor L. Hughes Miss Miss V. Pauline Hayden Dorothy M. Hobson Mrs. Hector J. Hughes Mrs. Miss Christine Hayes George Henry Hobson Mrs. Eugene J. V. Huiginn Miss Muriel S. Haynes Mrs. H. D. Hodgkinson Mrs. Charles F. Hulburd Mrs. W. Haynes-Smith Miss Edith C. Holbrook Mrs. Chester B. Humphrey Mrs. Carle R. Hayward Miss Mary S. Holbrook Miss Ida Hunneman Mr. Fred P. Hayward Miss Myra C. Holbrook Mrs. Arnold W. Hunnewell Mrs. W. E. Hayward Mrs. Walter H. Holbrook Miss Elizabeth Hunnewell Mrs. T. Pierrepont Hazard Mrs. Arthur J. Holden Mr. Francis Welles Hunnewell Mr. and Mrs. Harold L. Hazen Mrs. Wilfred H. Holland Miss Jane P. Hunnewell Mrs. Isabel H. Healey Miss Alice Marion Holmes Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Charles S. Heard Mr. and Mrs. Livingston Hunt, Jr. Mrs. Hamilton Heard Edward J. Holmes Mrs. D. T. Huntington Mrs. Hector Holmes Mr. and Mrs. M. Mrs. E. J. B. Huntoon William R. Hedge Miss Laura P. Holmes Miss M. R. Huntzbuchler Miss E. Louise Holt Miss Alicia Henderson Hefler Miss Emily J. Hurd Miss Katharine A. Homans Mr. William C. Heilman Mrs. G. Newell Hurd Miss Marian Homans Mrs. Arthur W. Heintzelman J. Mrs. William R. Hurd Mrs. William P. Homans Mr. Enos E. Held Mrs. B. S. Hurlbut Mrs. Joseph W. Homer Mrs. Harriet Mr. Frank O. Hurter Miss Adele Hooper Sterling Hemenway Mr. Arthur H. Huse Miss Mary F. Hooper Mrs. Alexander Henderson Mrs. J. H. Hutchins Mrs. Wilford L. Hooper Mr. R. G. Henderson Miss Alice Hutchinson Mrs. Blanche Hope Miss Laura Henry Miss Eleanora Hutchinson Miss Florence Hope Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Maynard Hutchinson Andrew H. Hepburn Mr. and Mrs. Charles Hopkinson Mrs. Carl Herget Mrs. Frank K. Idell Mrs. Henry Hornblower Mrs. Joseph M. Herman Mr. Edward Ingraham Mr. and Mrs. Miss Ada H. Hersey Miss Laura Innis Ralph Hornblower Mrs. Christian A. Herter Mr. Norman Izenstatt Mr. and Mrs. M. P. Horwood Dr. and Mrs. Arthur T. Hertig Miss Phoebe Lee Hosmer Mr. Bernard C. Heyl Mrs. Edwin E. Jack Mrs. William C. Hotchkin Mrs. Chester D. Heywood Dr. Frederick L. Jack Mr. Clement S. Dr. and Mrs. F. H. Higgins Houghton Miss Annie H. Jackson Mrs. George K. Higgins Mrs. Clement S. Houghton Mrs. Henry B. Jackson Mrs. John W. Higgins Miss Mabel E. Houghton In Memory of Mr. Richard R. Higgins Miss Mabel J. Houlahan Dr. Henry Jackson Mrs. Charles Higginson Mrs. Julius F. Hovestad Mrs. James Jackson, Jr. Mr. F. L. Higginson Mrs. Charles F. Hovey Mr. and Mrs. James Jackson Mrs. F. L. Higginson, Sr. Mr. Jack G. Hovey Mr. Robert A. Jackson

[ 1077 ] FRIENDS OF THE BOSTON SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA (continued)

Mr. Thomas Jackson Mr. and Mrs. George E. Judd Mr. J. F. Kofron, Jr. Miss Esther Jacobs Mr. Robert H. Just In Memory of Mrs. Frederick W. Jacobs Annie Liebman Kopf

Miss May Jacobs Mrs. Carl J. Kaffenburgh Dr. Serge Koussevitzky Mr. and Mrs. Eldon R. James Mrs. Benjamin A. Kaiser Mrs. F. W. Kranth

Mrs. William James Hon. and Mrs. J. J. Kaplan Mr. H. T. Kroto Miss Helen M. Jameson Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Kaplan Dr. G. Douglas Krumbhaar Mr. Edward B. Jamieson Mrs. J. Rudolf Katz Miss Anna W. Kuhn Mrs. J. B. Jamieson, Jr. Mrs. Maurice Kaubler Mr. Daniel Kuntz Dr. and Mrs. In Memory of Miss Elizabeth D. Kurtb Charles A. Janeway Mitchell B. Kaufman Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Rodney R. Jarvis In Memory of George A. Kuyper Mrs. Charles S. Jeffrey Carl F. Kaufmann Miss Alice C. Jenckes Mrs. Carl F. Kaufmann Mrs. Edward LaCroix Mrs. Marcien Jenckes Mrs. Paul Keaney Mrs. Morris F. LaCroix Mrs. Frank Jenkins Miss Ida C. Keay Mrs. Alexander H. Ladd Mrs. A. S. Jenney Mrs. John L. Keedy Mrs. William E. Ladd Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Laurence M. Keeler Miss Alice Lamothe Charles S. Jenney Mr. and Mrs. Miss Alice Lamprey Mrs. Edwin C. Jenney Joseph H. Keenan Miss Winnetta Lamson Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. H. Nelson Keene Mrs. Arthur W. Lane E. Morton Jennings, Jr. Mr. E. M. Keese Mrs. F. E. Lane Miss Caroline G. Jewell Mrs. Harold C. Keith Mrs. Gardiner M. Lane Lane Mrs. Pliny Jewell, Jr. Mrs. J. L. Keith Miss Katharine W. Mr. and Mrs. T. E. Jewell Miss S. Emma Keith The Misses Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Carl Tilden Keller Mabel and Florence Lane Ruthven Lang T. Edson Jewell, Jr. Rev. and Mrs. Miss Margaret In Memory of Howard Howard P. Kellett In Memory of Alfred G. Langley Clifton Jewett, M. D. Mrs. John J. Kelley In Memory of Mrs. Shaun Kelly Mrs. Chester W. Lasell Mrs. James R. Jewett Mr. Ralph Keltie Miss Elizabeth Lasell Mrs. Herman Johanson Miss Florence C. Kempf Mrs. George D. Latimer Mrs. R. P. Johns Mr. Henry P. Kendall Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Lieutenant and Mrs. Norbert Rene Lauga Arthur S. Johnson John H. Kendall Mr. and Mrs. Professor Edith C. Johnson Mr. Francis R. Kenney Henry A. Laughlin Miss Edith Morse Johnson Mrs. Edward L. Kent Mrs. Charles E. Lauriat, Jr. Mrs. F. M. Johnson Mrs. Everett E. Kent Mr. George B. Lauriat Miss Florence E. Johnson Mrs. Ira Rich Kent Mr. Nathaniel Lauriat Miss Harriet E. Johnson Mrs. H. Kerr-Blackmer Mr. Richard B. Lawrance Miss Ida B. Johnson Mrs. F. S. Kershaw Dr. and Mrs. Mrs. L. H. H. Johnson, Sr. Mrs. Kenneth D. Ketchum Charles H. Lawrence Mrs. Peer P. Johnson Miss Margaret W. Kettell Mr. and Mrs. Mr. Philip C. Johnson Mr. and Mrs. I. S. Kibrick James Lawrence, Jr. Miss Winifred H. Johnstone Miss Mary E. Kidder Mrs. John S. Lawrence Mrs. Arthur M. Jones Mrs. W. E. Kimball Miss Mary B. Lawrence Miss Charlotte Jones Dr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Cheney C. Jones Arthur R. Kimpton Arthur A. Lawson Mrs. Durham Jones Mrs. P. B. Kincaid Mrs. Herbert Lawton Mrs. F. E. Jones Mrs. Charles A. King Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Howard Vallance Jones Mrs. Gilbert King Stanley H. Lawton Mr. and Mrs. Mr. Howard V. Jones, Jr. Mrs. Ellie M. Leake Miss Kathrine Jones Henry Parsons King Dr. Paul B. LeBaron Mrs. Miss Margaret H. Jones William F. King Mr. Paul Lebenbaum, Jr. Mr. W. St. Clair Jones Mrs. Sam Kingsdale Mrs. Arthur Lee Mrs. William E. Jones Mrs. William Abbot Kinsman Mrs. George Lee Miss Mary R. Joslin Mr. Edward Holmes Kittredge Mr. and Mrs. Halfdan Lee Miss Blanche E. Josselyn Mr. Robert V. Kleinschmidt Miss Helene G. Lee Mr. The Misses Alice and and Mrs. Harry J. Klotz Mrs. John C. Lee Mr. Minnie Belle Joy C. E. Kneuertz Mrs. Joseph Lee, Sr. Miss Doris Mrs. C. Frederick Joy, Jr. Knight Mrs. Richard Henry Lee Mrs. John H. Joy Mr. George Knight Dr. and Mrs. Roger I. Lee Mrs. A. Florence Joyce Mrs. Henry F. Knight Miss Sylvia Lee Miss Gladys T. Joyce Mr. Frank J. Koelsch Dr. Henry Lefavour

[ 1078 ] FRIENDS OF THE BOSTON SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA (continued) Mr. William A. Lefavour Miss Lucy E. Low Miss Anna R. Maxwell Mr. H. Lehner Mrs. Frederick E. Lowell Mr. E. Leon May Miss Elizabeth Carter Leland Miss Lucy Lowell Mrs. Maude A. May Mrs. William G. Lennox Miss Barbara Quint Lublin Mr. Lawrence S. Mayo Mr. John G. Leschen Mr. and Mrs. Stephen B. Luce Mrs. Lawrence Mayo Mrs. Bernard S. Leslie Mrs. Lea S. Lugner Miss Lina A. Mayo Mrs. Harry Levi Mrs. John A. Lunn Mrs. Frederick S. Mead

Mrs. Benjamin Levin Mrs. George P. Lunt Dr. and Mrs. J. Howard Means Mrs. Colman Levin Mrs. Ruben L. Lurie Miss Jane S. Megrew Mr. and Mrs. Myer J. Levin Miss Alma Lutz Mrs. Joe Vincent Meigs Dr. and Mrs. Mrs. Arthur Lyman Mrs. George Melcher Samuel A. Levine Mrs. George Lyman, Sr. Mr. and Mrs. Mr. Frederick J. Leviseur Mrs. Harrison F. Lyman Metcalf W. Melcher Mrs. George Lewis Mrs. Henry Lyman Miss Louise L. Mellows Mr. and Mrs. George Lewis, Jr. Miss Blanche E. Lyon Miss Ethel Mendelov In Memory of Mrs. George Armstrong Lyon Merchants Wool Scouring Mrs. Herman E. Lewis Mr. James Henry Lyons Company Professor and Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. C. H. S. Merrill Mrs. Leo Rich Lewis Hermann C. Lythgoe Mrs. Roger B. Merriman Mrs. Harry Liebman Mr. A. Tillman Merritt Mr. Richard S. Light Miss Lilianna Macaluso Miss Miriam Merritt Mr. C. W. Lillie Mrs. Walter G. MacDonald Mr. Nestor Merritt Mr. and Mrs. Mr. Gordon P. MacDowell Mrs. George Putnam Metcalf Alexander Lincoln Mrs. John MacDuffie Mrs. Henry K. Metcalf Mr. John Lindquist Mr. Alden H. Maclntyre Mr. and Mrs. Mr. Ralph Lindsay Mrs. H. A. Mack Thomas N. Metcalf Mr. and Mrs. David B. Little Mrs. Edward M. Mackey. Mr. and Mrs. G. W. Metcalfe Mrs. David M. Little Mrs. Eldon Macleod Mrs. Charles Meyer Mr. and Mrs. Harry B. Little Miss Lizzie Lake MacNeil Mr. and Mrs. Alton L. Miller Mrs. Henry C. Little Mr. John R. Macomber Miss Mildred A. Miller Mrs. Philip Little Mrs. L. W. Macomber Miss Ruth P. Miller Miss Rachel G. Little Mr. and Mrs. E. I. MacPhie Mr. Sam Miller Mrs. T. E. Littlefield Mr. and Mrs. F. W. MacVeagh Mrs. Stanley R. Miller Mrs. Homer F. Livermore Mrs. H. S. Maffitt Mrs. W. L. Miller Mrs. Robert Livermore Mr. and Mrs. Georges Mager Mrs. Joseph K. Milliken Mr. and Mrs. Miss Elizabeth Maginnis Mrs. Charles F. Mills Charles S. Livingstone Mr. and Mrs. W. N. Magoun Mrs. Norman F. Milne Mrs. Charles B. Lloyd Miss Beatrice C. Maguire Dr. and Mrs. L. Locke Mrs. Frank Mrs. Emily M. Maguire LeRoy M. S. Miner Mrs. Dunbar Lockwood Miss Ruth S. Magurn Mrs. George R. Minot Mrs. H. deForest Lockwood Miss Alice A. Main Miss Grace W. Minus Miss Laura E. Lockwood Mrs. Thomas P. Mandell Miss Gladys O. Mitchell Dr. Halsey B. Loder Mr. Joseph F. Mann Mrs. John H. Mitchell Honorable Henry Cabot Mrs. Daniel E. Manson Mrs. Arthur G. Mitton Lodge, Jr. Miss Anna Theresa Marble Dr. and Mrs. W. Jason Mixter Mrs. George Wood Logan Mrs. G. D. Marcy Mrs. George H. Monks Percival H. Lombard Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Philip S. Marden Mr. Arthur E. Monroe Mrs. Percival H. Lombard, Jr. Dr. Herbert I. Margolis Mrs. Hugh Montgomery Mrs. Frank L. Locke Professor E. L. Mark Mrs. Clifford H. Moore Mr. Russell E. Longshore Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Edward C. Moore Mr. and Mrs. George A. Markell Miss Eva M. Moore M. Longyear, 3rd Mrs. Samuel Markell J. Mrs. F. J. Moore Mrs. Robert H. Loomis Miss Judith Marshall Miss Marguerite Moore Mrs. W. H. Lord Mrs. L. C. Marshall Mr. Murray S. Moore Miss Marjorie C. Lormg Mrs. Ford M. Martin Mr. and Mrs. Arthur W. Moors Miss Miriam Loring Mrs. Albert G. Mason Mr. John F. Moors Miss Mary B. Lothrop Mrs. Charles E. Mason Mr. Leonard Mordecai Mrs. W. S. H. Lothrop Mr. Charles E. Mason, Jr. Mr. Paul B. Morgan Mr. and Mrs. Frank E. Loud Miss Fanny P. Mason Professor and Mrs. Miss Agnes Love Miss H. Florence Mason Samuel Eliot Morison Mrs. Henry D. Love Miss Priscilla Mason Mrs. Charles R. Morris Mrs. Federick H. Lovejoy Mrs. Sydney R. Mason Mrs. Mary W. Morris Mr. Winslow H. Loveland Mrs. Philip R. Mather Mrs. Alva Morrison Mrs. Ernest Lovering Mrs. J. L. Mauran Mrs. Howard A. Morrison

[ 1079 1 FRIENDS OF THE BOSTON SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA (continued) Miss M. Esther Morrison Mrs. Robert O. Nason Mrs. Louis F. Paddison Mr. Alan R. Morse Mr. Joseph B. Nathan Mr. E. W. Paddock Mr. and Mrs. Miss Frances M. Nathanson Dr. Calvin G. Page Arthur H. Morse Mrs. James A. Neal Mrs. Louis E. Page Miss Constance Morse Mrs. R. T. Needham Miss Maude M. Page

Miss J. G. Morse Miss M. Louise Neill John C. Paige and Company Mrs. James F. Morse Miss Katharine B. Neilson Miss Lillian M. Paige Mrs. Jeska Swartz Morse Miss Adeline C. M. Nelson Mrs. Francis W. Paine Mrs. Miss Leonice S. Morse Mrs. Harris J. Nelson Frank C. Paine Miss Lucy G. Morse Mr. Edward K. Newbegin The Rev. George L. Paine Miss Marjory Morse Mr. Arthur E. Newcomb, Jr. The Misses Jessie G. and Mr. and Mrs. Robert G. Morse Miss Lydia Doane Newcomb Elsie M. Paine Miss Rowena H. Morse Miss Alice B. Newell Mr. John B. Paine Dr. and Mrs. William I. Morse Mrs. James M. Newell Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Everett Morss Mrs. Lyman C. Newell Richard C. Paine Mrs. Henry A. Morss Mrs. Walter H. Newey Mrs. Robert Treat Paine Mr. Henry A. Morss, Jr. Mrs. A. Parker Newman Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Marcus Morton Miss Minette D. Newman Robert Treat Paine, 2nd Mrs. Russell Sturgis Miss Elizabeth L. Moseley Mrs. Samuel J. Newman Paine Mrs. Frederick S. Moseley Miss Alice' R. Newton Mrs. Stephen Paine Miss Helen C. Moseley Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Charles Palache Mrs. E. Preble Motley, Sr. Edwin M. Newton Mrs. Franklin H. Palmer Miss Glory S. Mott Mrs. A. B. Nichols Mrs. Roswell Parish, Jr. Mrs. Percival Mott Ensign Acosta Nichols, Jr. Mrs. John Edgar Park Mrs. M. I. Motte Mrs. Henry G. Nichols Mrs. Cortlandt Parker Mr. and Mrs. Miss M. M. Nichols Miss Edith Parker Jasper R. Moulton Mrs. William G. Nickerson Mrs. Philip S. Parker Mr. and Mrs. Penfield Mower Mrs. John T. Nightingale Mrs. Robert B. Parker Mr. and Mrs. James A. Moyer Bishop F. S. Noli Mrs. Robert B. Parker, Jr. Ensign Frederick W. Muller Miss C. Maud Norris Mrs. William Stanley Parker Mrs. George S. Mumford Miss Ruth E. Norris Mrs. John Parkinson Mrs. George S. Mumford, Jr. Mrs. Frederic O. North Mr. Robert Parkinson Mrs. John C. Munro Northwestern Leather Co. Mrs. Alice M. Parnell Mrs. James A. Munroe Miss Elizabeth G. Norton Mr. Maxfield Parrish Miss Margaret Munsterberg Lieutenant Gardner A. Norton Mrs. Brackett Parsons Mr. and Mrs. Max I. Mydans Dr. Stanley Brown Norton Mrs. Ernst M. Parsons Mr. Thomas F. McCarthy Miss Annie Endicott Nourse Mr. and Mrs. Talcott Parsons Mrs. Charles W. McConnel Dr. H. Allan Novack Mr. Claude E. Patch Mr. Stanley R. McCormick Miss Annie Anthony Noyes Mr. Isaac Patch Miss Grace S. McCreary Noyes-Gebhard Company Mr. Isaac Patch, Jr. Mrs. Lewis S. McCreary Mr. James B. Noyes Miss Alice R. Pattee Miss Alice McDowell Mr. Charles R. Nutter Mrs. W. N. Patten Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. James E. Patton Franklin Dr. J. McElwain Mrs. Francis J. Oakes, Jr. Eleanor Pavenstedt Mrs. Carrie A. McFarland Miss Ellen F. O'Connor Dr. Samuel G. Pavlo Mrs. Holden McGinley Miss Mary Elizabeth O'Connor Sgt. H. G. Payson Mrs. Gertrude N. McGinnis Mrs. H. M. B. Ogilby Mrs. Samuel C. Payson Mrs. Henry McGoodwin Miss Anastasia O'Keefe Miss Amelia Peabody Mrs. Allyn B. Mclntire Old Corner Book Store, Inc. Miss Anne P. Peabody Mrs. Alfred R. Mclntyre Mr. Otto Oldenberg Mrs. Endicott Peabody Mrs. J. Bowman McKennan Miss Carolyn Olmsted Miss Gertrude L. Peabody Miss Emily W. McKibbin Miss Margaret Olmsted Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Walter McKim Lieutenant Thomas G. O'Neil Robert E. Peabody Dr. Leland S. McKittrick Mr. Gordon Osborne Mrs. W. Rodman Peabody Miss Rebecca W. McLanathan Mrs. Ralph Osborne Miss Alice W. Pearse Miss Nathalie McLean Dr. and Mrs. Robert B. Osgood Miss L. Agnes H. Pearson Miss Nina P. McLellan Miss Mary Otis Miss Grace Peavey Mr. Walter A. McLennan Mrs. Mary Brooks Otis Mrs. Russell H. Peck Mr. Keith McLeod Dr. and Mrs. Dr. and Mrs. Mrs. Norman McLeod Richard H. Overholt Samuel A. W. Peck Mrs. Louise Miss G. McMichael Annie J. Pecker Miss Louise Packard Mr. Lieutenant J. S. McNayr and Mrs. Miss Ruey Packard Alexander I. Peckham Miss Priscilla Nash Miss Elsie F. Packer Miss Alice Foster Peirce

[ 1080 ] FRIENDS OF THE BOSTON SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA (continued)

In Memory of Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Murray A. Potter Mrs. Andrew F. Reed Benjamin Osgood Peirce Mrs. William H. Potter The Misses Emily S. and Miss Emily O. Peirce Mrs. George Eustis Potts Ida B. Reed

Mr. J. Gilbert Peirce Mrs. E. Burney Powell Miss Mabel S. Reed Miss Jessie L. O. Peirce Mrs. George H. Powers Miss Alice Reese Miss Katharine E. Peirce Miss Edith Pratt Mrs. Cornelius F. Regan Mr. and Mrs. Gino L. Perera Mr. F. S. Pratt, II Miss Margaret G. Reilly Miss Alice Sherburne Perkins Mrs. Frederick S. Pratt Miss Mary E. Reilly Rev. Palfrey Perkins Dr. Joseph H. Pratt Mrs. Susan W. Renfrew Mrs. Thomas Nelson Perkins Mrs. Louis Mortimer Pratt Mrs. Walter G. Resor Miss Elizabeth B. Perlmuter Mrs. W. Elliott Pratt, Jr. Mrs. Charles A. Rheault Mr. and Mrs. Miss Marenda E. Prentis Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Ribakoff Constantin A. Pertzoff Miss Minnie A. Prescott Miss Saidee F. Riccios Mrs. Arthur Perry Miss Alice A. Preston Mr. and Mrs. Albert W. Rice Mrs. Bliss Perry Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Arthur W. Rice Mrs. Carroll Perry Elwyn G. Preston Mr. Eugene F. Rice, Jr. Mr. Donald P. Perry "A Friend" Mr. Frederick Rice Mrs. Edward K. Perry Mr. Roger Preston Mr. and Mrs. Harold Rice

Mrs. Henry H. Perry Mrs. William M. Preston Mrs. J. P. Rice Dr. and Mrs. Lewis Perry Miss E. Z. Prichard Mrs. John C. Rice Professor Ralph Barton Perry Mrs. Edward W. Pride Miss Margaret M. Rice Mrs. Roger A. Perry Miss Annie E. Priest In Memory of Mrs. Everett W. Pervere Mr. Joseph K. Priest Dr. William Rice Mr. John E. Peterkin Mrs. Charles A. Proctor Mrs. James L. Richards Mrs. W. Y. Peters Miss Emily Dutton Proctor Dr. Lyman Richards Mr. Lester M. Peterson Mrs. George N. Proctor Mrs. Theodore W. Richards Mrs. Klaere Petschek Dr. and Mrs. Curtis Prout Mr. Charles O. Richardson Mrs. Franklin T. Pfaelzer Mrs. Henry B. Prout Mrs. John Richardson, Sr. Mrs. Mildred C. Phelps Mr. and Mrs. Lewis I. Prouty Mrs. John Richardson Miss Alice G. Phemister Mr. Ernest Pulsifer Mr. Nicholas Richardson Miss Grace Phemister Mr. George E. Pulsifer Miss Ruth K. Richardson Mrs. Merchant E. Philbrick Mr. C. Phillips Purdy Mr. W. K. Richardson Mrs. A. V. Phillips Mr. Robert Purington Mr. Carleton R. Richmond Mrs. John C. Phillips Miss Hazel M. Purmort Mrs. Charles F. Richmond Hon. and Mrs. William Phillips Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Putnam Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Leslie Pratt Phinney Miss Augusta N. Putnam Ralph S. Richmond Mrs. Walter G. Phippin Mrs. F. Delano Putnam Mr. W. Douglas Richmond Mr. and Mrs. In Memory of Judge Miss Mabel Louise Riley Dudley L. Pickman, Jr. F. Delano Putnam Mrs. R. Sanford Riley Miss Catharine W. Pierce Mrs. George Putnam Mrs. Mabelle B. Rimbach

Mrs. George W. Pierce Mrs. George J. Putnam Miss Betsy Rimmer Miss Louise Q. Pierce Miss Louisa H. Putnam Mrs. Charles P. Rimmer Miss M. Elma Pierce Mr. Alfred L. Ripley Miss Rosamond Pierce Mrs. Irving W. Rabinowitz Mrs. Philip F. Ripley Mrs. W. C. Pierce Mr. Norman S. Rabinovitz Miss Susan B. Ripley Mrs. Wilson H. Pierce Radcliffe Choral Society Miss Carolyn E. Rising Professor Walter H. Piston Miss Helen Ramsay Mr. and Mrs. Karl Rissland Miss Molly Pitcher Miss Bertha Ramseyer Miss Alice Marie Ritz Mrs. Harold A. Pitman Mrs. C. Theodore Ramseyer Mrs. Russell Robb, Sr. Mrs. George A. Plimpton Miss Elizabeth S. Ramseyer Mrs. William A. Robbins Mr. Victor Polatschek Professor and Mrs. Rev. Bruce Roberts Mr. Ralph Pollan Edward K. Rand Miss Ethel Dane Roberts Mrs. Charles C. Pond Mr. and Mrs. Miss Jane L. Roberts Mrs. Clarence S. Pond Harry Seaton Rand Mr. Norman H. Roberts Mr. Shepard Pond Mrs. William McNear Rand Mr. V. P. Roberts Miss Isabel Pope Miss Eleanor E. Randall Mr. and Mrs. Miss Alice F. Poor The Misses Rantoul A. Alexander Robey Mrs. A. Kingsley Porter Mrs. Neal Rantoul Mrs. Charles A. Robinson Mrs. Charles Allen Porter Mrs. Endicott Rantoul Mrs. Clement F. Robinson Mr. and Mrs. Quincy Porter Mrs. William G. Rantoul Mr. Dwight P. Robinson, Jr. Mrs. John R. Post Mrs. Theresa S. Ratshesky Mr. F. N. Robinson Mrs. Brooks Potter Mr. and Mrs. Miss Gertrude L. Robinson Mrs. John Briggs Potter Franklin F. Raymond Miss Jeannie D. Robinson Miss Marion S. Potter Miss Helen L. Redfern Mr. Robert S. Rockwell

[ 1081 ] FRIENDS OF THE BOSTON SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA (continued) Mr. James P. Roe Mr. and Mrs. Henry B. Sawyer Mrs. Eli Siegel Lieutenant A. L. Roehrig Mrs. Robert W. Sayles Miss Olive Simes Miss Bertha F. Rogers Mrs. Mary P. Sayward Mr. B. Simon Miss Dorothy Rogers Miss Elizabeth M. Scammon Mrs. Gifford K. Simonds Mrs. Edward H. Rogers Mr. and Mrs. George Scatchard Mrs. Charles Lewis Slattery Mrs. Horatio Rogers Mr. Paul Schaye Mr. William H. Slocum Mrs. Linda C. Rogers Mrs. Garret Schenck, Jr. Mrs. Winfield S. Slocum, Sr. Mrs. C. M. Rogerson Mr. Arthur P. Schier Mr. and Mrs. S. L. Slosberg Miss A. Rebecca Romkey Dr. and Mrs. J. W. Schirmer Mr. Walter C. Small Mrs. Caroline S. Ropes Mr. and Mrs. John G. Schmid Miss A. Marguerite Smith Mrs. James Hardy Ropes Miss Elizabeth Schneider Mrs. Charles Gaston Smith Mr. Hilliard Rosenberg Mrs. Sydney A. Schneider Mrs. Charles L. Smith Mrs. Eugene Rosenthal Miss Kathleen Schroeder Mr. Charles Lyman Smith Mrs. Louis Rosenthal Mr. Donald Scott Mrs. Clarence C. Smith Mrs. Philip Rosenthal Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Clifford Smith Ensign C. E. Roskirt Franklin W. Scott Miss Edith W. Smith Miss Lucy C. Ross Mr. and Mrs. Henry R. Scott Mr. and Mrs. Dr. and Mrs. R. A. Ross Miss Margaret W. Scott Frank C. Smith, Jr. Mr. Thorvald S. Ross Mrs. John Scrimshaw Mr. and Mrs. F. Morton Smith

Dr. J. G. Rothstein Mr. Carl Seaburg Mrs. George S. Smith Mr. Bernard J. Rothwell Miss Evelyn Sears Miss Ida C. Smith Mrs. E. S. Rousmaniere Mrs. Francis B. Sears Mrs. Joseph T. Smith Miss Mary S. Rousmaniere Mrs. Francis P. Sears Mr. Louis C. Smith Mrs. Charles F. Rowley Dr. John B. Sears Mrs. Morgan H. Smith Mr. Philip Rubenstein Mrs. Richard Sears Mrs. Russell T. Smith Mrs. Carl Rudnick Mrs. Albert Hobbs Seaver Mrs. Stanley W. Smith Mr. George L. Ruffin Miss Esther Isabel Seaver Mrs. Sumner Smith Mrs. John C. Runkle Mrs. Charles L. Seavey Mrs. Theodore L. Smith Mrs. Otis T. Russell Mr. Samuel M. Seegal Mr. W. Prescott Smith Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. B. M. Selekman Dr. and Mrs. Richard S. Russell Mr. and Mrs. H. P. Selya M. N. Smith-Petersen Mrs. William A. Russell Mrs. James W. Sever Mrs. H. Weir Smyth Mr. Harold A. Sewall Miss Florence D. Snelling Miss Mary L. Sabine Miss Louise Seymour Miss Gertrude Snow Mrs. Stephen W. Sabine Mr. Morris F. Shaffer Mr. Henry M. Sondheim Mr. George A. Sagendorph Mrs. H. B. Shaftoe Mr. and Mrs. Mr. Phil Saltman Misses Celia and Anne Shapiro Abraham M. Sonnabend Miss Elizabeth Saltonstall Miss Gloria Sharaff Professor and Mrs. Hon. and Mrs. Mrs. Morris Sharaff P. A. Sorokin Leverett Saltonstall Miss Alice Shattuck Mrs. Alvin F. Sortwell

Mr. Nathaniel Saltonstall Mrs. Edmund J. Shattuck Mrs. Augustus W. Soule Mr. and Mrs. Dr. and Mrs. Mrs. H. H. Soule Richard Saltonstall George C. Shattuck Miss Leonora N. Soule Mrs. Robert Saltonstall Miss Caroline N. Shaw Mrs. Philip L. Spalding Mrs. W. G. Saltonstall Miss Edith Sohier Shaw Mrs. William A. Spalding Mr. and Mrs. Mr. Louis Agassiz Shaw, II Mrs. Huntley Nowell Spaulding

H. LeBaron Sampson Miss Miriam Shaw Mrs. Wycliffe J. Spaulding Mrs. Robert de W. Sampson Mrs. Sohier Shaw Miss Rachel L. Spear

Mrs. Edward J. Samson Dr. and Mrs. Thomas B. Shaw Mrs. Lewis R. Speare Miss Alice E. Sanborn Mr. and Mrs. T. Mott Shaw Miss Dorothy Spelman Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Donna E. Shay Mrs. Henry M. Spelman Ashton R. Sanborn Miss Emily B. Shepard Mrs. Alice G. Spencer Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Henry B. Shepard Mrs. Guilford L. Spencer Harry C. Sanborn Miss Mary E. Shepard Mrs. Robert Spencer Mrs. R. E. Sanborn Mrs. T. H. Shepard Mrs. Theodore Spencer Miss Ruth D. Sanderson Mr. George Sherburn Mr. Wilford L. Spencer

Miss Dorothy J. Sanford Miss Dora B. Sherburne Mrs. Nathaniel H. Sperber Mr. and Mrs. "A Music Lover" Miss Edna G. Spitz Jesus M. Sanroma Miss Carrie E. Sherrill Mrs. Julian K. Sprague Mrs. Richard M. Sarber Mrs. John Shillito Mrs. Phineas W. Sprague Mr. Daniel Sargent Mrs. Benjamin D. Shreve Mrs. John C. Spring Mrs. Florence W. Saunders Miss Gertrude H. Shurtleff Miss Alice Stackpole Mrs. Frank M. Sawtell Miss Martha G. Sias Mrs. Markham W. Stackpole Mrs. F. D. Sawyer Mrs. John Sibley Mrs. Pierpont L. Stackpole

[ 1082 ] FRIENDS OF THE BOSTON SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA (continued) Miss Lena M. Stadtmiller Miss Geraldine Sweet Miss Annie R. Townsend Mrs. Arthur B. Stanley Mrs. Vernon B. Sweet Miss Elizabeth Townsend Miss Katharine Stanton Mrs. E. Kent Swift Professor and Mrs. Mrs. Creighton B. Stanwood Mr. and Mrs. Alfred M. Tozzer Mrs. Francis M. Stanwood George H. Swift Mrs. Lewis E. Tracy Mrs. Frederic A. Stanwood Mrs. John B. Swift, Jr. Miss Emma G. Treadwell Miss Alice K. Stearns Mrs. John B. Swift Mrs. George W. Treat Miss Anna Stearns Miss Lucile Swift Miss Miriam Trowbridge Miss Mildred B. Stearns Miss Lucy W. Swift Mrs. Dorothea Dean Tschol Mrs. Harry B. Stebbins Miss Henrietta H. Swope Mr. Benjamin M. Tucker Mrs. Roderick Stebbins Mrs. Edwin D. Tucker Miss Helen C. E. Steele Mr. and Mrs. Edward A. Taft Miss Nancy Tucker Miss Mabel A. E. Steele Mrs. Charles W. Taintor Mrs. Philip M. Tucker Mrs. Alexander Steinert Miss Mary Eloise Talbot Mr. Bayard Tuckerman, Jr. Miss Pearl M. Steinmetz Mrs. Nathan B. Talbot Mr. John A. Tuckerman Mrs. Preston T. Stephenson Mrs. Robert M. Tappan Mrs. L. S. Tuckerman Mrs. Berthold S. Stern Mrs. John F. Tarbell Miss Marion Tufts Mrs. Abbot Stevens Miss Abigail F. Taylor Miss Annie E. Tulis Mrs. Brooks Stevens, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Peter Turchon Mr. Ernest N. Stevens Charles H. Taylor, Jr. Miss Frances E. Turner Mrs. Frank H. Stevens, Jr. Mrs. James Wilson Taylor Mrs. William J. Turtle Miss Lena M. Stevens Mrs. Malcolm Taylor Mrs. George T. Tuttle Mr-. Moses T. Stevens Miss Margaret E. Taylor Mrs. Royal W. Tyler

Mrs. Raymond Stevens Miss Millicent J. Taylor In Memory of Mrs. Samuel W. Stevens Mrs. William O. Taylor William Bartlett Tyler Mrs. Robert H. Stevenson Mr. and Mrs. George S. Terry Mr. and Mrs. Frank H. Stewart Miss Elisabeth B. Thacher Mr. and Mrs. Adolph Ullman Mrs. H. H. Stickney Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Preston Upham Mr. Rufus Stickney Louis B. Thacher Mr. and Mrs. Irving Usen Mrs. Arthur H. Stiles Mr. Thomas C. Thacher Mr. Abbott Payson Usher Mr. Edward C. Stone Mrs. Edward Thaw Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Frederic M. Stone Mrs. Ezra R. Thayer Kenneth Shaw Usher Mrs. Galen L. Stone Mrs. Frank H. Thayer Mrs. Samuel Usher Miss Katharine H. Stone Mrs. Lucius E. Thayer Miss M. Lois Stone Miss Helen Thomas Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Malcolm B. Stone Miss Rebecca P. Thomas William A. Valkenier Mr. and Mrs. Myron K. Stone Mrs. Augustus P. Thompson Mr. Byron E. VanRaalte, Jr. Mr. Robert M. Stone Mr. F. C. Thompson Miss Miriam Van Waters Mr. S. Robert Stone Mr. and Mrs. Miss Bertha H. Vaughan Mr. David Stoneman Henry S. Thompson Mr. Wyman R. Vaughan Mrs. David Stoneman Mrs. R. H. Thompson Mrs. Leon Villmont Miss Elizabeth B. Storer Mrs. Elihu Thomson Miss Gladys M. Vincent Mrs. Florence B. Storer Miss Mary Q. Thorndike Baron Frary VonBlomberg Mrs. James J. Storrow, Sr. Mrs. Richard K. Thorndike Mrs. Norman Von Rosenvinge Mr. J. J. Storrow Mr. and Mrs. R. A. Thorndike Miss Charlotte L. Vose Mrs. Lewis C. Strang Miss Augusta Thornton Mrs. dishing Vose Mrs. Oliver Straus Mrs. Henry Thornton Mr. Jacob H. Strauss Miss Faith Thoron Mrs. Winthrop H. Wade Mrs. Leon Strauss Miss Alice A. Thorp Mrs. L. L. Wadsworth Mrs. Louis Strauss Miss Alice E. Thorp Mrs. William Wadsworth Mrs. Vcevold W. Strekalovsky Miss E. Katharine Tilton Mrs. C. L. Wakefield Miss Louise Stuart Miss Elizabeth Tilton Mrs. Charles Walcott Miss Evelyn R. Sturgis Miss Ruth F. Tinkham Hon. Robert Walcott Miss Lucy C. Sturgis Mrs. Albert N. Tipple Mrs. Robert Walcott Miss Mabel Sturgis Dr. R. S. Titus Miss Ruth N. Waldron Mr. S. Warren Sturgis Miss Mary B. Tobey Miss Alice S. Wales Mr. John M. Sullivan Mrs. Eveleth T. Todd Mrs. Quincy W. Wales Mrs. Faith T. Sulloway Mr. and Mrs. John M. Tomb Miss Esther Mayhew Walker Mrs. R. W. Sulloway Mrs. Charles F. Toppan Mrs. George B. Walker Mrs. Charles P. Sumner Dr. and Mrs. Coleman Tousey Miss Lucy Walker Mrs. Ralph D. Sutherland Mrs. Abner J. Tower Dr. Wallis D. Walker Mrs. Charles L. Swan, Jr. Miss Florence E. Tower Miss Florence E. Walkins Mrs. Arthur Sweeney Mrs. Russell B. Tower Mrs. George R. Wallace Miss Helen Bernice Sweeney Mrs. L. D. Towle Miss Sarah Walmsley

[ 1083 ] FRIENDS OF THE BOSTON SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA (continued) Mrs. W. Albert Walter Miss Elizabeth Rodman Weld Mr. Henry S. Williams Mrs. Walter F. Walters Mrs. A. W. Wellington Miss Hilda W. Williams Miss Alice Walton Mrs. Louis B. Wellington Dr. and Mrs. John T. Williams Miss Harriet E. Walworth Mr. and Mrs. Miss M. E. Williams Mr. and Mrs. Adolf Walz Raynor G. Wellington Miss Margaret C. Williams Mrs. Adeline R. Ward Miss Virginia Wellington Miss Marion Williams Mr. Melvin Nash Ward Mr. and Mrs. George B. Wells Mrs. Moses Williams Mrs. Sheldon E. Wardwell Mrs. Edgar A. Welti Mr. Moses Williams, Jr. Mr. Henry Ware Mrs. Edward T. Wendell Mrs. Ralph B. Williams Mrs. Guy Waring Mrs. G. V. Wendell Mrs. Richard C. Williams Mrs. W. Seaver Warland Mr. Mark P. Werman Mrs. W. E. Williams Mrs. Langdon Warner Miss Barbara West Miss Clara R. Williamson Mrs. Roger S. Warner Mrs. George S. West Miss Margaret Williamson Mrs. Arthur M. Warren Mr. John W. West Miss Ruth C. Willis Mrs. Bayard Warren Mrs. R. D. Weston Mr. and Mrs. Mr. Bentley W. Warren Miss Martha Wetherbee Donald B. Willson Mrs. George E. Warren Mrs. Lawrence H. Wetherell Mrs. Wesley P. Wilmot Miss Margaret Warren Miss Mary Wheatland Hon. Charles S. Wilson Miss Miriam E. Warren Miss Adaline E. Wheeler Miss Eleanor Wilson Mrs. Prescott Warren Mr. and Mrs. Miss Florence B. Windom Mr. Harry Warshaw Alexander Wheeler Mrs. Charles F. Wing Mr. Henry B. Washburn Mr. Clarence B. Wheeler Mr. Hobart W. Winkley Mr. David M. Watchmaker Miss Eunice Wheeler Mrs. K. Winsor Mrs. Joseph S. Waterman Mrs. Leonard Wheeler Mrs. Frederic Winthrop Mrs. B. G. Waters Miss Mary Wheeler Mr. Frederic Winthrop, Jr. Mr. Paul A. Dr. Waters and Mrs. Charles J. White Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Richard P. Waters Mrs. Eva W. White Nathaniel T. Winthrop Miss Agnes Watkins Mrs. Franklin K. White Mr. and Mrs. Maxwell D. Wit Mr. and Mrs. Miss Gertrude R. White Mrs. S. Burt Wolbach Charles Hadley Watkins Miss Grace G. White Mr. and Mrs. Oliver Wolcott Mrs. George H. Watson Mrs. Henry K. White Mr. and Mrs. Roger Wolcott Mr. Robert B. Watson Mr. Huntington K. White Miss Charlotte Wood Miss Sylvia H. Watson Miss Priscilla White Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Miss Thomas R. Watson Rebecca White Frederick E. Wood Mr. Mrs. and Mrs. Samuel P. White Dr. Nathaniel K. Wood Wallace N. Watson Mrs. Jasper Whiting Mr. Orrin G. Wood Miss Sarah Mrs. Florence L. L. Watters Whitman Mrs. William L. Woodbury Mrs. Walter F. Mrs. L. Watters Raymond Whitman The Misses Mary G. and Mr. Albert G. Watts Miss Helen R. Whitmore Emily F. Woodman Miss Gertrude H. Watts Mrs. Charles F. Whitney Mr. Clark E. Woodward Miss Grace C. Waymouth Miss Margaret Whitney Mr. G. Wallace Woodworth Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Kennard Woodworth Charles Alfred Weatherby Parker W. Whittemore Miss Sally Woodworth Mr. and Mrs. Edwin S. Mrs. Whittemore Webster Wyman Mrs. Edith Christiana Woolley Mrs. Mabel E. Webster Mrs. George R. Whitten Mrs. George L. Wrenn, 2nd Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Mr. Philip W. Wrenn Albert H. Wechsler Robinson S. Whitten Mrs. John G. Wright Mr. Charles F. Weden Mrs. P. Whitters J. Mrs. Walter P. Wright Mrs. Alonzo R. Weed Mrs. Joseph Wiggin Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. C. F. Weed Mrs. Morrill Wiggin Edgar N. Wrightington Miss Margaret Jarvis Weed Mrs. Frank Wigglesworth Miss Julia L. Wrightington Mrs. Arnold N. Mrs. William Weeks H. Wightman Mrs. John Wylie Mr. Edward A. Weeks, Jr. Mrs. Rufus L. Wilbor Miss Mary Weeks Mr. Chester Wilcox Miss Mary E. Yassin Mr. and Mrs. Robert S. Weeks Mr. Robert B. Wilcox Mr. Raymond A. Yeaton Mrs. Sinclair Weeks Mrs. Paul R. Wild Miss Harriet Yeomans Mrs. Alfred R. Weinberg Mrs. J. Alexander Wiley Miss Mabel M. Young Mr. and Mrs. Moses Weinman Mr. Warde Wilkins Mr. Thomas R. Young Mrs. Dr. and Mrs. Joseph Weinrebe J. Burke Wilkinson Mr. William H. Young Mr. and Mrs. Robert Weir Mr. Alexander W. Williams Mr. William L. Young Mr. and Mrs. E. Sohier Welch Mrs. Arthur Williams Miss Lucy M. Welch Miss Barbara Williams Mr. Samuel Zemurray Mrs. Bernard C. Weld Mrs. Gluyas Williams Mrs. Louis Ziegel Mrs. Charles G. Weld Mrs. H. D. H. Williams Mrs. P. R. Ziegler

[ 1084 ] oNon- resident (^Members

Mrs. William Ackerman — New York m Mrs. Emil L. Blun — New York Mr. and Mrs. E. G. Adams — Providence Mr. R. W. Bouslough — Illinois Mrs. Eugene Adams — New York Miss Caroline A. Bowen — Providence Mrs. Maximilian Agassiz — Providence Mr. and Mrs. William B. Bowers, 2nd — Mr. John G. Aldrich —Providence Bremerton, Washington Mr. Putnam C. Aldrich — Providence Mrs. Zorah W. Bowman — Ohio Mrs. Richard S. Aldrich — Providence Dr. Walter Willard Boyd — Mrs. Arthur M. Allen — Providence Washington, D. C. Miss Gertrude D. Allen — Lakeland, Florida Mrs. Robert N. Brace — Ridgefield, Conn. Miss Cora G. Amsden — Hartford Mrs. Arthur H. Bradley — Hartford Mr. Albert E. Angrier — Watertown, Conn. Mrs. Charles Bradley — Providence Anonymous — Providence Mr. David Bradley — Illinois Mr. H. L. Ansbacher — Providence Mrs. Alfred Brandeis — Kentucky Mr. and Mrs. Howard L. Anthony — Mrs. David A. Brayton — Providence Providence Mrs. Selma M. Breitenbach — New York Miss Jane L. Anthony — Providence Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin Brier — Miss Mary B. Anthony — Providence Providence Mr. and Mrs. George C. Arvedson — Miss Harriet M. Briggs — Providence Michigan Mrs. N. E. Brill - New York Mr. Percy Lee Atherton— New Jersey Mrs. Walter C. Bronson — Providence Mr. and Mrs. Curtis B. Brooks — Mrs. Donald S. Babcock — Providence Providence — Providence Mrs. Frederick Brooks — Mr. J. Deming Bacon New York Mrs. Cornelia M. Baekeland — New York Mr. Melvin S. Brooks — Texas

Mrs. Harvey A. Baker — Providence Miss Clara J. Brown — New York Mrs. Horace Forbes Baker — Pennsylvania Mr. and Mrs. John Nicholas Brown — Mrs. John H. Baker — New York Providence Mr. John W. Baker — Providence Mrs. Robert P. Brown — Providence Mrs. Walter S. Ball — Providence Mr. and Mrs. Robert P. Brown — Mrs. Edward L. Ballard — New York New Jersey Mr. and Mrs. Frederick A. Ballou — Mr. and Mrs. Sevellon Brown — Providence Providence Miss Esther Barlow — Providence Miss Virginia F. Browne — Hartford — Mr. Mr. J. S. Barr New York John D. Brans — Seattle, Washington Miss Lydia M. Barwood — New York Mr. Herbert S. Brussel — New York — — Mrs. J. M. Barzun New York Mrs. Charles W. Bubier, Sr. Mr. Emil J. Baumann — New York Providence Mr. Gerald F. Beal — New York Mrs. C. Warren Bubier — Providence Mrs. Robert Jenks Beede — Providence Mr. C. Warren Bubier — Providence Mrs. Frank Begrisch — New York Miss Madeleine Bubier — Providence Mr. Dana R. Bellows — Providence Miss Irma Bucks — Los Angeles. California Mr. Elliot S. Benedict — New York Mrs. Arthur D. Budd — West Hartford Mr. George W. Benedict — Providence Mrs. F. S. Buggie — Michigan Dr. and Mrs. Emanuel W. Benjamin — Dr. Temple Burling — Providence Providence Mr. G. Huntington Byles — Providence Miss Mildred Bent — New York Miss Florence Bentley — San Francisco Mrs. Samuel Hyde Cabot — Providence Miss Emilie Berger — Providence Mr. John Hutchins Cady — Providence Mrs. Henri L. Berger — Hartford Lieutenant and Mrs. David Ely Cain — Providence Mr. Henry J. Bernheim — New York Mr. Theodore F. Bernstein — New York Mr. George Calingaert — Michigan Miss Dorothy L. Betts — New York Mr. Ernest Calvin — Ohio Mr. Sam M. Betty — Alabama Mrs. George A. Campbell — New Jersey Miss Barbara C. Bilsborough — Maryland Mrs. Wallace Campbell — Providence Mrs. Arthur W. Bingham, Jr. — New York Mr. George H. Capron — Providence Miss Martha Biscoe — New York Mrs. James M. Carpenter — New York Mr. John B. Black — Providence Miss Florance Carr — New York Miss Margaret G. Blaine — New York Miss Bernadetta R. Carter — Providence Misses Ada and Janet Blinkhorn — Mrs. Fred S. Carver — New Jersey Providence Mrs. W. R. Castle — Washington, D. C. Miss Muriel F. Bliss — Providence Dr. and Mrs. Francis Chafee — Miss Susan Dwight Bliss — New York Providence

[ 1085 ] FRIENDS OF THE BOSTON SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA (Continued) Chaminade Club — Providence Dr. Sol W. Ginsburg — New York Mme. Avis B. Charbonnel — Providence Miss Emily Diman — Providence Mrs. P. W. Chase — Mexico Miss Abigail Camp Dimon — New York Lieut. F. Sargent Cheever — Mr. Raymon C. Dodd, Jr. — New Jersey Washington, D. C. "Mr. and Mrs. Charles Dreifus, Jr. — Mr. Howell Cheney — Hartford New York — Mr. Thomas Cheyne — New York , Miss Elsie J. Dresser West Hartford Chopin Club of Providence Mrs. Robert B. Dresser — Providence Mr. Roger T. Clapp — Providence Miss Grace F. Drewett — Providence Dr. and Mrs. B. Earl Clarke — Providence Miss Ethel DuBois — New York Mrs. Prescott O. Clarke — Providence Miss Marianne Durham — New Jersey Miss Sydney Clarke — Providence Mr. W. H. Durham — California Mrs. James B. Clemens — New York Mr. and Mrs. Herbert W. Dutch — Miss Adelaide M. Clymer — Philadelphia New Jersey Mrs. Henry E. Cobb — New York Mr. and Mrs. Edwin B. Coddington — Mrs. Edward R. Eberle — Providence West Hartford Miss Frances H. Eddy — New York Mrs. Tristram R. Coffin — Providence Mrs. Thomas A. Edison — New York In Memory of Winthrop Coffin — Florida Miss Harriet C. Edmonds — Providence Miss Dinah Cohen — New York Miss Edith W. Edwards — Providence Mrs. Frank Cohen — New York Mr. and Mrs. Gurney Edwards — Mrs. Alfred E. Cohn — New York Providence Mr. James C. Collins — Providence Mr. Joseph R. Egan — Michigan Miss Alice M. Comstock — Providence Mrs. Albert Eiseman — New York Miss Harriette A. Colton — New York Miss Sarah Elkins — New York Mr. Harold S. Cone — New York Dr. Edward S. Elliott — New York Mrs. G. Maurice Congdon — Providence Mr. and Mrs. Louis Elliott — New York Mr. William G. Congdon — Providence Mr. and Mrs. Lowell Emerson — Mrs. Ansel G. Cook — Hartford Providence Mrs. John S. Cooke — Providence Mr. Howard M. Ernst — New York Mrs. Francis R. Cooley — Hartford Miss Hildegarde Eustace — Texas Mrs. Algernon Coolidge — New York Mrs. Edmund C. Evans — Pennsylvania Mr. David T. Copenhafer, Jr. — Mrs. Henry Evans — New York Providence Miss Caroline S. Eveleth — Mr. Calvin H. Cornwell — New York Windsor Locks, Conn. Misses Marie and Kathryn Cox — Mrs. Walter G. Everett — Providence Manchester, Conn. Mr. Edgar E. Craddock — Providence Miss Elizabeth L. Fallon — Washington, D. C. Mrs. F. S. Crofts — New York Miss K. R. Faulkner — New York Mr. and Mrs. Frederick W. Crone — New Miss Priscilla Damon Fawcett — California York Mrs. W. Rodman Fay — New York Mr. G. Ferris Cronkhite — New York Mrs. Leonard C. Feathers — New York Mrs. Gammell Cross — Providence Mr. J. Robert Feeney — Pennsylvania Mr. and Mrs. Harry Parsons Cross — Mrs. Dana H. Ferrin — New York Providence Lieut, and Mrs. James M. Finch, Jr. — Miss Mary T. Cudahy — New York New Jersey Mrs. Joseph H. Cull — Providence Miss Louise M. Fish — Providence Miss Mabella L. Cullen — Providence Mr. and Mrs. Hume E. Flagler — Dr. and Mrs. Frank Anthony Cummings Providence — Providence Mr. Francis P. Fleming — Jacksonville, Miss Charlotte Cushman — New York Florida Miss Elizabeth Cushman — New York Misses Grace, Joan and Mary Fletcher — Providence Mrs. James G. Flynn — Texas Miss Mary Daboll — Providence Col. and Mrs. Oscar Foley — Florida Mrs. Murray S. Danforth — Providence Mr. Hans Forchheimer — New York Miss Mary E. Davidson — New York Mr. Sumner Ford — New York Mrs. J. V. Davison — New York Miss Helen Foster — New York Miss Helen Wendler Deane — Providence Miss Marie N. Foulkes — New York Mr. Jack Dempsey — Missouri Mr. and Mrs. Heywood Fox — New York Mr. W. W. Dempster — Providence Miss Helen I. Franck — New York Miss Fredrica Denison — Providence Mrs. Clarke F. Freeman — Providence Hon. Luigi De Pasquale — Providence Mrs. Hovey T. Freeman — Providence Miss Margaret deSchweinitz — New York Mr. Arthur L. Friedman — New York Mrs. Paul C. De Wolf — Providence Miss E. W. Frothingham — New York

[ 1086 ] FRIENDS OF THE BOSTON SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA (continued) Miss Edna B. Fry Washington D. C. The Henchel Club — Providence Miss Margaret A. Fuller Providence Miss Frances Henderson — New York Dr. H. W. Furniss — West Hartford Mr. Jacques Hermann — New York Mrs. R. V. High — New Jersey Mrs. George B. Gaastra — New Mexico Mrs. David B. Hill — New York Mr. Stanley S. Gairlock — Providence Miss Elizabeth D. Hill — New York Mrs. Howard S. Gans — New York Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Whiley Hilles — Mrs. B. Gardner — New York Hamden, Conn. Miss Laure Gauthier — New York Mr. Samuel M. Himmelblau — Hartford Mr. and Mrs. Leslie N. Gebhard — Mr. and Mrs. Frank L. Hinckley — Providence Providence Miss Katharine R. Geddes — Ohio Miss Joanne Hirsch — Pennsylvania Mrs. O. Gerdau — New York Mrs. Jesse Hirschman — New York Mrs. Arthur L. Gillett — Hartford Mr. Eliot P. Hirshberg — New York Mr. David M. Glassford — New York Mrs. Ira Wilson Hirshfield — New York Miss Evelyn Glidden — Detroit, Michigan Miss Louise B. Hobson — Providence Mrs. Otto Goepel — New York Miss Rose Marie Hoeber — New York Mr. Emanuel Goldman — New York Mrs. George F. Hodder — New York Mrs. Henry Goldman — New York Mrs. H. Hoermann — New Jersey Miss H. Goldman — Princeton, New Jersey Mr. Bernard Hoffman — California Mr. Mr. Arthur J. Goldsmith — New York Terence Holliday — New York Mr. I. Edwin Goldwasser — New York Mr. John Gilbert Hollman Miss Lillian Goman — New York Mrs. G. M. Hollstein — New York Miss Ann Goodman — New York Mr. Henry Homes — New York Mr. and Mrs. John D. Gordan — New York Mr. Alfred J. Hoose — West Virginia Mrs. Robert Sloane Gordon — New Jersey Miss Myra H. Hopson — Kent, Conn. Miss Susan D. Gordon — New York Miss Priscilla P. Horr — Providence Mr. and Mrs. Harry Hale Goss — Mr. Harry Horner — New York Providence Mr. Elmer E. Hubbard — Providence Mr. D. S. Gottesman — New York Mrs. B. J. Humphrey — New York Mrs. Ronald I. Grausman — New York Mrs. Karl Humphrey — Providence Miss Marjorie P. Grant — Providence Mrs. Doris Adams Hunn — Iowa Mr. Joseph Greenbaum — New York Miss Jessie H. Hunt — Providence Mr. Edward G. Greenberg — Tennessee Mrs. John C. Hunt — Washington, Conn. Miss Charlotte M. Greene — Providence Mrs. Harrison B. Huntoon — Providence Mrs. Joseph Warren Greene, Jr. — Mrs. Maxwell C. Huntoon — Providence Providence Mr. Clement C. Hyde — Hartford Miss Bertha C. Greenough — Providence Mrs. William Bates Greenough — Mr. Hans A. Illing — Utah Providence Mrs. Arthur Ingraham — Providence Mr. C. A. Grimes — Hamden, Conn. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Ingraham, Jr. — Miss Rosa Anne Grosvenor — Providence Providence Mr. and Mrs. William S. Innis — Mrs. George Hail — Providence Providence Mr. R. M. Hainer — Providence Mrs. Irving P. Irons — Providence Mrs. Harold W. Hale — New York Mrs. Morgan Hamilton — New York Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Jacobson — Miss Octavia P. Hamlin — Michigan Providence Mr. Frank R. Hancock — New York Mrs. George W. Jacoby — New York Mrs. F. M. G. Hardy — Reading, Conn. Mr. Halsted James — New York Mrs. A. G. Harkness — Providence Miss Margaret James — New York Mrs. — New York Mrs. Edward P. Jastram — Providence Miss Louise Harris — Providence Mr. Philip S. Jastram — Providence Mrs. Henry C. Hart — Providence Mrs. Pierre — New York Jay — Mrs. J. C. Hartwell — Providence Miss Betty Johnson New York Miss Gladys B. Hayden — New Jersey Mrs. Edward L. Johnson — Providence Mr. Sherman S. Hayden — New York Miss Loraine Johnson — Providence Mrs. Harold B. Hayden — New York Mrs. Flewellyn R. Johnston — New York Mrs. David S. Hays — New York Miss Dorothy E. Joline — New York Miss Dorothy M. Hazard — Providence Mrs. Harris Jonas — New York Mr. and Mrs. Clifford D. Heathcote — Miss Dorothy B. Jones — Providence Providence Mrs. Morris Joseloff — West Hartford Mrs. Irving Heidell — New York Mr. Sylvan L. Joseph — New York Mrs. E. S. Heller - New York Miss Hope L. Joslin — Providence Mrs. Marco F. Hellman — New York Mr. William M. Judd — New York

[ 1087 ] FRIENDS OF THE BOSTON SYM phony orchestra (continued) Mr. Leo B. Kagan — New York Mr. Harry Marshall — Providence Mr. Maxim Karolik — Providence Miss Margaret Marshall — Providence Mrs. H. M. Kaufmann — New York Miss Ruth H. Marshall — Providence Mrs. Leonard Kebler — New York Mr. and Mrs. Everett Martine — New York Mrs. George A. Keeney — New York Miss Mary L. Mason — Providence Mr. and Mrs. A. Livingston Kelley — Mr. Matt Matan — Pennsylvania Providence Mr. Julius Mathews— North Carolina Mr. and Mrs. Howard A. Kelley — Mrs. Frank W. Matteson — Providence Providence Mr. A. Wilfred May — New York Mrs. L. W. Kelly — North Carolina Mrs. Charles H. May — New York Mr. Ralph E. Kenyon — Providence Mrs. Edwin Mayer — New York Miss Jane Kerley — New York Mr. John G. Mayers — Providence Mrs. Willard A. Kiggins — New Jersey Lieut. Cmdr. David H. McAlpin — Mr. John W. Kirby, Jr. — New York Washington, D. C. Miss Elena H. Klasky — New York Dr. Charles A. McDonald — Providence Mr. Elmer Klavens — Baltimore, Maryland Miss Alice H. McEvoy — Providence Miss Edith Kneeland — York New Mrs. J. Weir McHugh — Alexandria, Vir- Miss Anita E. Knight — New York ginia Mr. Alfred A. Knopf — New York Miss Sarah G. McKenzie — Providence Miss Matilda F. Krebs — New York Mr. George Mead — West Hartford — J. Mr. J. Richard Kreiner Pennsylvania Mr. Richard I. Medley — New York Mr. and Mrs. Harry E. Kremser-Stoddard — Miss Hortense Mendel — New York California Mme. Marguerite J. Mendel — New York Mr. Ralph Mendel — New York Mr. Paul — Providence J. R. Ladd Mrs. Bruce Merriman — Providence Mrs. Henry S. Lanpher — Providence Mrs. Charles H. Merriman — Providence Miss Lucy Larchar — Providence Mrs. I. B. Merriman — Providence Mr. Robert Lawrence — New York Mrs. Edna A. Merson — New York Miss S. I. Lawson — York J. New Mr. and Mrs. George Pierce Metcalf — Mrs. Harold M. Lehman — New York Providence Miss Eugenia Geisen Leimer — New York — Mrs. Houghton P. Metcalf — Providence Miss Margaret Leinbach North Carolina Metropolitan Theatre — Providence Mr. Robert Lelong — New Jersey Lieutenant T. Leonard Mikules — California Miss Priscilla H. Leonard — Providence Mrs. R. D. Moftett — New York Mrs. Austin T. Levy — Providence Mr. Edward Montchyk — New Jersey Mrs. Richard Lewinsohn — Mr. and Mr. Heath Moore — Missouri New York Mr. Francis Morse — Ohio Miss Eleanor C. Lewis — New Jersey Mrs. M. M. Morse — New York Miss Aline Liebenthal — York New Mr. William H. Mortensen — Hartford Mr. R. Pat Lightfoot — Texas — Dr. Eli Moschcowitz — New York Mr. and Mrs. Royal Little Providence Mr. Paul Moulle — Providence Mr. Henry D. Lloyd — Providence Mrs. David P. Moulton — Providence Mrs. Herbert M. Lloyd — New Jersey Mrs. John S. Murdock — Providence Mr. David Loeb — Philadelphia J. Mr. and Mrs. F. S. Murphy — West Hartford Mr. Julius Loeb — New York Miss Linda Musser — Muscatine, Iowa Dr. and Mrs. W. T. Longcope — Baltimore Mr. Ronald S. Longley — Providence Mr. Walter W. Naumburg — New York Mr. Henry G. Lord — New York Mr. Ernest W. Neimeyer, Jr. — New York Miss Helen L. Loring — Providence — — Dr. Harold Neuhof New York Mr. and Mrs. George Y. Loveridge Lieut. John S. Newberry, Jr. — Michigan Providence Mrs. S. M. Nicholson — Providence Mr. M. Richardson Lyeth — New York Miss Barbara Nickerson — West Hartford J. — — Mr. and Mrs. John W. Nickerson Mr. Hugh F. MacColl Providence West Hartford Mr. Harry Mack — York New Mrs. K. H. Nightingale — Providence Mrs. Charles MacLalferty — California J. Mrs. K. H. Nightingale, — — J. Jr. Mrs. George B. H. Macomber Providence Providence Dr. Rudolph Nissim — New York Mr. and Mrs. Durward L. Maddocks — Mrs. Bradford Norman — Providence Providence Mrs. Charles W. North — Providence Mrs. Herbert L. Mahood — New Jersey Mr. W. E. Malley — New Haven Mrs. Francis J. Oakes, Jr. — New York Mrs. Chapin Marcus — New York Mrs. George H. Opadykc — West Hartford Mr. and Mrs. Frederick W. Marks, Jr. — Mrs. Theodore Obermeyer — New York New York Mr. Leo Marks — Providence Miss Emily S. Paddock — Providence

[ 1088 ] FRIENDS OF THE BOSTON SYMP hony orchestra (continued) Miss Bertha Pagenstecher — New York Miss Norma A. Rossi — San Francisco Mr. Arthur N. Peaslee — Providence Mr. Francis W. Roudebush — New York Miss Eleanor Peckham — Providence Mr. Sayward F. Rowell — New Jersey Mrs. Ethel A. S. Peckham — New York Mr. Thomas W. Russell — Hartford Mrs. Walter P. Peirce — Providence Mr. Warren L. Russell — New York Mrs. C. E. Perkins — New York Mrs. Byford Ryan — New York Miss Helen W. Perry — Providence Mrs. Clarence H. Philbrick — Providence Mrs. Aaron B. Salant — New York Mr. George F. Phillips — Providence Mr. Charles F. Samson — New York Mrs. Carl H. Pforzheimer — New York Mr. F. B. Sappington — Maryland Mrs. Max Pick — New York Mrs. F. R. Schepmoes — New York Dr. and Mrs. Wilfred Pickles — Mr. Jacob H. Scheuer — New York Providence Mr. Henry O. Schiff — New York Mr. and Mrs. Roderick Pirnie — Providence Mrs. Gustave Schirmer — New York Mr. and Mrs. Albert R. Plant — Mr. Adolf Schmid — New York Providence Mr. Arthur Schooley — Missouri Miss Grace L. Plimpton — Hartford — Miss L. J. Schoonmaker New York Miss Mary L. Plimpton — Hartford Mr. C. E. Schroeder — New York Miss Alice B. Plumb — New York Miss Edith Scoville — New York Mr. C. B. Podmaniezky — New York Mrs. Wallace M. Scudder — New Jersey Miss Isabel Pope — Mexico Mrs. Herman Schwarz — New York Mrs. Arnold Porter, Jr. — Providence Mr. Robert Schwarz — New York Mrs. Emery M. Porter — Providence Mr. P. J. Searles — Pennsylvania Mrs. Hobart Porter — New York Mr. Clifford Seasongood — New York Miss Marjorie Posselt — Florida Mrs. George Segal — New York Mr. Albert K. Potter — Providence Mr. Karl Seldon. Jr. — South Carolina Mrs. T. I. Hare Powel — Providence Mr. Gordon Sellon — So. Carolina Mrs. H. Irving Pratt, Jr. — New York Mr. Phillip Shapiro — Washington, D. C. Mr. Herbert F. Preston — Providence Dr. Ezra A. Sharp — Providence Miss H. Louise Price — New York Miss Ellen D. Sharpe — Providence Mr. Joseph M. Price — New York Mr. and Mrs. Henry Dexter Sharpe — Mrs. Benjamin Prince — New York Providence Mrs. William Procter — New York Mrs. Edgar W. Shaw — Providence Mr. Joseph B. Sheffield — New York Mr. Hedwig Raah — New York Mrs. Theodore Sheldon — Chicago, 111. Mrs. Albert E. Rand — Providence Mrs. Mabel B. Sheldon — New Orleans, La. Mr. and Mrs. Edson R. Rand — Mr. C. Russell Sherman — Plainville, Conn. Providence Mrs. A. Shiman — New York Miss Marion Ransier — Iowa Mrs. H. Bronson Shonk — Virginia The Misses Ray — New York Dr. and Mrs. E. Shorr — New York Mrs. Frederic B. Read — Providence Mr. Samuel I. Silverman — Providence Mr. and Mrs. Louis M. Ream — Mrs. Robert E. Simon — New York Providence Mr. Ben Sinel — Providence Mrs. Alice Regensheimer — Providence Mr. F. Louis Slade — New York Mr. Ed Rementer — Virginia Mr. and Mrs. Walter P. Slade — Mr. Myron B. Reynolds — Providence Providence Mr. Reginald R. Reynolds — Providence Mrs. Jennie M. Small — New York Rhode Island Federation of Music Clubs Mrs. Fred L. Smith — Providence — Providence Mr. George H. L. Smith — Ohio Miss Dorothy L. Rice — Providence Mrs. Henry Oliver Smith — New York Mrs. W. E. Rice — Michigan Miss Hope Smith — Providence Mr. Howard A. Richmond — Providence Mrs. William Smith — New York

Mr. Lawrence Richmond — New York Mrs. W. J. B. Smith — Providence Mrs. Maximilian Richter — New York Miss Marion E. Solodar — New York Miss Louise Rickard — New York Mrs. I. S. Solomon — New York Mr. Norman B. Robbins — Fort Worth, Mr. Joseph H. Spafford — New York Texas Miss Frieda S. Spatz — New York Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Robinson, Jr. — Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Speidel — Providence Providence Miss — — Josephine Robinson Indianapolis In Memory of Miss Alzada J. Sprague Miss Ruth Robinson — Providence Providence Mr. and Mrs. Roderick Pirnie — Providence Mr. and Mrs. George S. Squibb — Mr. Aaron H. Roitman — Providence Providence Mr. and Mrs. John Rogers, Jr. — New York Mrs. Harold E. Staples — Providence Mrs. W. Harris Roome — New York Miss Florence Stark — Washington, D. C.

[ 1089 ] FRIENDS OF THE BOSTON SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA (concluded) Mrs. C. Richard Steedman — Providence Mrs. Frederic A. Wallace — Providence — Mr. Porter Steele New Jersey Mr. Edwin J. Walter — New York Miss Fredericka Steiner — New York Miss Margaret L. Warden — Tennessee Miss Beatrice Stern — California Mr. Eugene Warren — New York Mrs. Edgar B. Stern — Louisiana Mrs. George B. Waterhouse — Providence Miss Rose C. Stern — New York Mr. Phillips R. Weatherbee — Providence Mrs. William Stanford Stevens — New York Mrs. George H. Webb — Providence Mrs. Samuel Stiefel — New York Dr. Joseph B. Webber — Providence Miss Anne W. Stockbridge — Providence Mrs. Arthur P. Weeden — Providence Miss Cora B. Stone — Providence Mr. Hans C. Weimar — Providence Mrs. Charles H. Street — New York Mr. Mark Weisberg — Providence Mrs. S. J. Stroheim — New York Mrs. H. K. W. Welch - Hartford Miss Ethel Strohmeyer — New York Mrs. H. L. Weller — Providence — Mrs. J. R. Strong — New Jersey Mr. and Mrs. John H. Wells Mrs. M. B. Kelly Stower — Providence Providence Mrs. Arthur P. Sumner — Providence Dr. John A. Wentworth — Hartford Mrs. F. A. West — Washington, D. C. Lieut. Frank M. Tack — New York Mrs. Thomas H. West, Jr. — Providence Miss Emma A. Taft — Providence Mrs. A. R. Wheeler — Providence Mr. J. D. Tamarkin — Providence Mrs. Leonard Wheeler, Jr. — Arlington, Mr. and Mrs. Harold B. Tanner — Virginia Providence The Mary C. Wheeler School — Mr. Adrian M. Taylor, — California Providence Jr. — Mr. and Mrs. John Taylor — New York Mrs. Gustave J. S. White Providence Miss Ruth F. Thomson — Providence Miss Harriett H. White — New York Mrs. John H. Thompson — Farmington, Miss Rosa White — New York Conn. Mrs. H. A. Whitmarsh — Providence Mrs. Charles F. Tillinghast — Providence Mrs. H. VanWyck Wickes — New York Mr. Stirling Tomkins — New York Mr. and Mrs. Arthur E. Wilks — Mr. Joseph H. Towle — Pennsylvania Providence Rev. John H. Treder — Pennsylvania Mr. Howard F. Williams — Providence Miss Ruth Tripp — Providence Dr. H. W. Williams — Providence Mr. Howard M. Trueblood — New York Mr. Raymond G. Williams — Providence

Mr. William J. Turner — Philadelphia Dr. Patty Gurd Willson — New York Dr. Rosemond Tuve — New London, Conn. Mr. and Mrs. Wilson G. Wing — Providence Miss Elsa S. Uhlig — New York Mrs. C. McR. Winslow — Providence Miss Ellen Winsor — Pennsylvania Mr. Roger Van Eps — New Jersey Mr. Thomas H. Witherby — Providence Mrs. T. W. Vaughan — Washington, D. C. Mr. Bernard M. Wochna — New Jersey Mrs. Richmond Viall — Providence Mrs. M. A. Wolf — Providence Mrs. Edwin C. Vogel — New York Mr. Cornelius A. Wood, Jr. — Virginia Mr. and Mrs. Whitney Vreeland — Oregon Mrs. Kenneth F. Wood — Providence

Mr. Ellis L. Yatman — Providence Mr. James H. Wainwright — New York Rev. E. J. Walenta — New York Miss Dorothy Zimmerman — California Mr. and Mrs. Ashbel T. Wall — Mrs. August Zinsser — Ridgefield, Connec- Providence ticut

The sole and earnest purpose of the Society of Friends of the Boston

Symphony Orchestra is to provide the best in orchestral music to the greatest possible number, and all who care to join in furthering this object are invited to enroll as Members. Enrollments for the current season will be gratefully accepted up to August 31, 1943, and may be made by check payable to Boston Symphony Orchestra and forwarded to the Treasurer at Symphony

Hall, Boston. There is no minimum enrollment fee.

[ 1090 ] Jfonor 7ty//

Among those who attend the concerts of the Boston Symphony Orchestra, the following are listed as having heard the Orchestra under each of its regular conductors from Sir George Henschel to Dr. Serge Koussevitzky. Since existing records are insufficient for a Full compilation, any whose names have been omitted are requested to send them to Reginald C. Foster, Chairman, Friends of the Boston Symphony Orchestra.

Miss Fanny M. Adams Miss Louisa H. Fries Mr. F. H. Nash Miss Katharine H. Andrews Mrs. L. A. Frothingham Mrs. Henry G. Nichols Mr. Joseph N. Ashton Mrs. Frederic O. North Miss Caroline P. Atkinson Mrs. Carleton S. Gifford Miss Elizabeth G. Norton Mrs. Edwin Ginn, Sr. Mr. Charles R. Nutter Miss Edith Bangs Mrs. Elizabeth Grant Miss Sybilla Orth Miss Emma Grebe Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. William Stanley Parker Miss Rose Grebe George W. Barber Mrs. Henry Parkman MiS. Edith Noyes Greene Mrs. John S. Bartlett Miss Alice Foster Peirce Mrs. John W. Bartol Mrs. Francis A. Pierce Mrs. H. S. Hall Mrs. G. W. Becker Mr. Fred Plummer Mr. John W. Hall Mrs. Alanson Bigelow Mrs. Charles C. Pond Mrs. Franklin T. Hammond Mrs. Warren D. Bigelow Miss Mary Otis Porter Miss Martha N. Hanson Mrs. Frances A. M. Bird Mrs. John R. Post Mr. Emor H. Harding Mr. Richard P. Borden Mrs. B. Potter Mrs. Sydney Harwood J. Mrs. George F. Bosworth Mrs. Murray A. Potter Mrs. M. G. Haughton Mrs. John T. Bottomley Mrs. Samuel L. Powers Mrs. Amalia Henderson Miss Sarah C. Bradlee Mrs. Benjamin Prince Mrs. Joseph M. Herman Mrs. Arthur H. Brooks Miss Adelaide W. Proctor Miss Grace G. Hiler Mrs. G. Winthrop Brown Mrs. F. Delano Putnam Miss Helen C. Burnbam Mrs. Charles Hopkinson Mrs. George J. Putnam Miss Mary C. Burnham Miss Leslie W. Hopkinson Miss Helen M. Ranney Mrs. Heman M. Burr Mrs. Elizabeth T. Hosmer Mrs. Andrew F. Reed Mr. and Mrs. Miss Ida Hunneman Mrs. H. Ricketson George D. Burrage Miss Emily Hurd James J. Mr. Miss Alice Hutchinson Bernard J. Rothwell Mr. George L. Ruffin Mr. George A. Chapman Mrs. Emory P. Russell Prof. H. E. Clifford Miss Mary V. Iasigi Miss Mrs. Charles Collens Mary Thompson Sawyer Dr. Edwin E. Mrs. Francis Augustus Mrs. George W. Collier Jack Seamans Frederick Miss Mrs. W. K. Corey Dr. L. Jack Emma M. Sibley Mrs. Mrs. W. S. Slocum, Sr. Mrs. Helen M. Craig Richard Hamlin Jones Mrs. Lewis R. Speare Mrs. R. M. Currier Miss Alice Stackpole Miss Frances G. Curtis Mrs. Edward L. Kent Mrs. Daniel Staniford Miss Susan T. dishing Mr. Henry C. Lahee Mr. F. O. Stanley Miss Miss Harriet S. Lane Rose Stewart Mrs. Frank A. Day Miss Mary B. Lothrop Miss Katharine H. Stone Mrs. Frances C. Dooly Miss Sarah Mrs. W. S. H. Lothrop D. Stover Mrs. Wm. B. H. Dowse Miss Lucy Lowell Mrs. Alvin F. Sortwell Miss Mary Strickland Dr. Mabel I. Emerson Miss Fannie P. Mason Miss Effie C. Sweetser Mr. Alexander Be Ewing Mrs. Norman McLeod Miss Alice P. Tapley Mr. Frederick L. Milliken Mrs. Ward Thoron Mrs. Dudley B. Fay Mrs. Edward C. Moore Miss Laura Tolman-Kilgore Mrs. Henry H. Fay Miss Helen Graham Moseley Mrs. Leverett S. Tuckerman Miss Lucy Adams Fiske Mrs. E. P. Motley Mrs. George Weatherby Mrs. Parker Fiske Miss Angelina K. Mudge Mrs. Margaretha H. Williamson Mrs. Arthur Foote Mrs. George S. Mumford Mrs. William A. Young

[ 1091 ] The WOOL TRADE of BOSTON

is appreciative of the magnificent contribution)®hich the Boston Symphony

Orchestra makes to the (Community

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[ 1092 ] v^hese Boston and Cambridge phono- graph record merchants hereby express their devotion to and respect for Boston's great Orchestra.

BOSTON MUSIC GO. 116 Boylston Street BRIGGS & BRIGGS 1270 Mass. Ave., Harvard Sq., Cambridge

J. McKENNA 19 Brattle Street, Cambridge 1416 Beacon Street, Brookline MOSHER MUSIC CO. 181 Tremont Street PHONOGRAPH & RECORD SHOP 8 Milk Street M. STEINERT & SONS CO. 162 Boylston Street

[ 1093 ] OVERTURE, "BRIGHT HOLIDAY"* ("The Russian Easter"),

on Themes of the Obichod, Op. 36 By Nicholas Andrejevitch Rimsky-Korsakov

Born at Tikhvin, in the government of Novgorod, March 18, 1844; died at St. Petersburg, June 21, 1908

This Overture had its first performance at a Russian Symphony concert in St.

Petersburg, in the season 1888-1889, under the composer's direction. The score is dedicated "to the memory of Moussorgsky and Borodin," Rimsky-Korsakov's col- leagues who had died in 1881 and 1887, respectivelv.

The first performance by the Boston Symphony Orchestra was on October 23,

l 1897; tne ast ' April 10, 1936. The orchestration calls for three flutes and piccolo, two oboes, two clarinets, two bassoons, four horns, two trumpets, three trombones and tuba, timpani, Glocken- spiel, bass drum, triangle, cymbals, tam-tam, harp and strings. While laboring on the orchestration of "Prince Igor" in 1888, from the posthumous manuscripts of his friend Borodin, Rimsky-Korsakov paused to dream of two more congenial projects. When the summer came he carried his sketches to the country estate of a friend and brought them to completion. They were "an orches- tral composition on the subject of certain episodes from 'Schehera-

* A popular Russian title for Easter. GO BOSTON CAB We try at all times THE DELUXE WAY to carry everything listed in the Victor Too many accept public conven- ience as a matter of fact. Many, and Columbia catalogs. too, discriminate and accept only When some particularly wanted a Boston Cab. You, too, should

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[ 1095 ] zade,' " and "an Easter overture on themes of the Obichod" a cen- tury-old collection of canticles for the Orthodox Church. The two works, together with the "Spanish Capriccio," which he had written in the previous year, marked the culminating point in a certain phase of Rimsky-Korsakov's or- chestral style. They developed, in his own words, "a considerable degree of virtuosity and bright sonority without Wagner's influ- ence, within the limits oi the usual make-up of Glinka's or- chestra." Nothing (short of the music itself) can more aptly picture the Christian-pagan ritual of old Rus-

sia, the "Bright Holiday" as it was called, than the vivid para- graphs of the composer himself, from "My Musical Life":

"The rather lengthy slow intro- duction of the Easter Sunday overture, on the theme of 'Let God Arise,' alternating with the DUBONNET ecclesiastical theme 'An Angel fAt c*^t2^ ol£. ->.<2 <&**"**-*- c Waileth,' appeared to me, in its sparks your taste beginning, as it were, the ancient Isaiah's prophecy concerning the resurrection of Christ. The Say Dubonnet at your bar. Serve Dubonnet in gloomy colors of the Andante your home. Serve and say it these exciting lugubre seemed to depict the holy three ways: sepulchre that had shone with in- the * Dubonnet MERRY WIDOW. . . tangy, all-wine effable light at the moment of

cocktail. Half Dubonnet, half dry vermouth; resurrection — in the transition to the Allegro of the overture. The chill, serve with twist of lemon peel. beginning of the Allegro, 'Let * Dubonnet STRAIGHT. . . the aperitif of distinc- them also that hate Him flee be- tive clean taste. Serve well chilled, no ice. fore Him,' led to the holiday ir Dubonnet HIGHBALL. . . jiggei of Dubonnet mood of the Greek Orthodox with soda, juice of Vi lemon and ice ... a church service on Christ's matins; tangy long drink. the solemn trumpet voice of the archangel was replaced by a tonal Aperitif Wine, product of U.S.A.

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r 1097 ] reproduction of the joyous, al- most dance-like bell-tolling, alter- nating now with the sexton's the crest of quality*. ^} rapid reading, and now with the .fine* 1890 -dytY X&4 conventional chant of the priest's reading the glad tidings of the evangel. The obichod theme, 'Christ is arisen,' which forms a sort of subsidiary part of the over- ture, appears amid the trumpet- blasts and the bell-tolling, con- stituting also a triumphant coda. In this overture were thus com- bined reminiscences of the ancient prophecy, of the Gospel narrative and also a general picture of the Easter service, with its 'pagan merry-making.' The capering and CR£STA BLANCA leaping of the biblical King David before the ark, do they not give expression to a mood of the same order as the mood of the idol-worshiper's dance? Surely the Russian Orthodox obichod is in- strumental dance music of the church, is it not? And do not the waving beards of the priests and sextons clad in white vestments and surplices, and intoning 'Beau- tiful Easter' in the tempo of Allegro vivo, etc., transport the imagination to pagan times? And all these Easter loaves and twists

serve the best and the glowing tapers. . . . How far a cry from the philosophic and socialistic teaching of Christ! This • ••for little more!! legendary and heathen side of the For fifty years Cresta Blanca holiday, this transition from the gloomy and mysterious evening "bottle-ripe" California wines have of Passion Saturday to the un- been emblems of taste enjoyment. bridled pagan-religious merrymak- ing on the morn of Easter Sunday Pay but a little for more the is what I was eager to reproduce very finest. Ask for them by name. in my overture. Accordingly I requested Count Golyenishcheff- tune in! Schen ley's "Cresta Blanca Wine Kootoozoff to write a program in

Carnival" with Morion Gould' 6 Orchestra. verse — which he did for me. But See your local newspaper jor time and I was not satisfied with his poem, station each week. * make your dollars and wrote in prose my own pro- fight, buy war bonds and stamps! gram, which same is appended to

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[ 1099 ] Boston Symphony Orchestra

[Sixty-second Season, 1942-1943]

SERGE KOUSSEVITZKY, Conductor

Personnel

Violins

KURGIN, R. hLCUS, G. LAUGA, N, KRIPS, A. RESNIKOFF, V Concert-master r. tapley, KASSMAN, N. CHERKASSKY, P. LEIBOVICI, J.

THEODOROWICZ, J.

HANSEN, E. DICKSON, H. FEDOROVSKY, P. ZAZOFSKY, G. EISLER, D. PINFIELD, C. BEALE, M. SAUVLET, H. kNUDSON, C. ZUNG, M. LEVEEN, P. GORODETZKY, L. MAYER, P. DIAMOND, S. DEL SORDO, R. H1LLYER, R.

KPYANT, M. STONESTREET, L. messina, s. DUBBS, H.

MURRAY, J. ERKELENS, H. seiniger, s. TRAMPLER, W.

Violas

LEFRANC, J. FOUREL, G. VAN WYNBERGEN, C. GROVER, H.

CAUHAPE, J. ARTIERES, L. BERNARD, A. WERNER, H. LEHNER, E. KORNSAND, E. GERHARDT, S. HUMPHREY, G.

Violoncellos

BEDETT1, j. LANGENDOEN, J. DROEGHMANS, H. ZEISE, K. FABRIZIO, E. ZIGHERA, A. CHARDON, Y. ZIMBLER, J. MARJOLLET, L.

Basses

MOLEUX, G. L. JUHT, GREENBERG, H. GIRARD, H. BARWICKI, J. DUFRESNE, G. FRANKEL, I. PAGE, W. PROSE, P.

Flutes Oboes Clarinets Bassoons

LAURENT, G. GILLET, F. POLATSCHEK, V. ALLARD, R.

PAPPOUTSAKIS, J. DEVERGIE, J. VALERIO, m. PANENKA, e.

KAPLAN, P. LUKATSKY, J. CARDILLO, P. LAUS, A. PICCOLO English Horn Bass Clarinet Contra-Bassoon

MADSEN, G. SPEYER, L. MAZZEO, R. PILLER, B. Horns Horns Trumpets Trombones

VALKENIER, W. singer, j. MAGER, G. RAICHMAN, j. MACDONALD, W lannoye, m. LAFOSSE, M. HANSOTTE, L.

SINGER, J. shapiro, h. VOISIN, R. L. COFFEY, J. KEANEY, P. GEBHARDT, w. VOISIN, R. SMITH, V.

Tuba Harps Timpani Percussion

DAM, E. ZIGHERA, B. SZULC, R. sternburg, s. CAUGHEY, E. polster, m. WHITE, L. ARCIERI, E. Librarian

rogers, l. j.

[ 1 100 ] SYMPHONY HALL, BOSTON

Boston Symphony Orchestra

SERGE KOUSSEVITZKY, Conductor

PENSION FUNP CONCERT

SUNDAY, APRIL 25, 1943 AT 3:30 BEETHOVEN OVERTURE TO "LEONORE" NO. 3 NINTH SYMPHONY

with the assistance of the HARVARD GLEE CLUB

and the RADCLIFFE CHORAL SOCIETY (G. WALLACE WOODWORTH, Conductor)

Soloists ZINA LISICHKINA, Soprano ANNA KASKAS, Contralto KURT BAUM, Tenor JULIUS HUEHN, Bass

Tickets: $1.50, $2.00, $2.50, $3.00, $3.50, $4.00 (Plus Tax,

Address mail orders to Symphony Hall, Boston

[ 1101 ] the published score. Of course, in that program I did not explain my views and my conception of the 'Bright Holiday/ leaving it to tones to speak for me. Evidently these tones do, within certain limits, speak of my feelings and thoughts, for my overture raises doubts in the minds of some hearers, despite the considerable clarity of the music. In any event, in order to appreciate my overture, even ever so slightly, it is necessary that the hearer should have attended Easter morning service at least once, and, at that, not in a domestic chapel, but in a cathedral thronged with people from every walk of life, with several priests conducting the cathedral service — something that many intel- lectual Russian hearers, let alone hearers of other confessions, quite lack nowadays. As for myself, I had gained my impressions in my childhood passed near the Tikhvin monastery itself."

There is inscribed on the score a dedication "to the memory of

Moussorgsky and Borodin," composers to whom its oriental colorings would not have been strange. The following programme is published in the score:

And when the Sabbath was past, Mary Magdalene, and Mary the mother of James, and Salome, had bought sweet spices, that they might come and anoint him. And very early in the morning, the first day of the week, they came unto the sepulchre at the rising of the sun: And they said among themselves, Who shall roll us away the stone from the door of the sepulchre? (And when they looked, they saw that the stone was rolled away, for it was very great.) And entering into

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[ 1102 ] 166 AUDIENCES will read Boston Symphony Orchestra Programmes this Season

In the 1942-43 season the Boston Symphony Orchestra, Inc., will publish 96 Programme Bulletins, of which 36 are for concerts in cities outside Boston. In addition to the regular season there are over 70 Pop concerts.

The merchants who advertise their wares and services in this Bulletin make possible this programme with its excellent notes. All of them are firms whose integrity is a guarantee of their excellence — they deserve your support, as they believe the Boston Symphony Orchestra is worthy of their support. Readers of this programme are asked to mention the Boston Symphony Orchestra Concert Bulletin when purchasing from the firms whose ad- vertisements appear in it — either personally or through a note when bills are paid.

The list of advertisers is a noteworthy one:

Araby Rug Co. London Harness Co. The Arts and Crafts Maiden Form Brassieres Baldwin Piano Co. Makanna, Inc. Blake & Kendall Co. J. McKenna Boston Cab Co. Merchants Co-operative Bank Boston Consolidated Gas Co. Merchants National Bank Boston Edison Co. Meredith & Grew, Inc. Boston Insurance Company Mosher Music Co. Boston Music Co. Munro, Kincaid, Edgehill, Inc. Boston Safe Deposit & Trust Co. National Shawmut Bank R. M. Bradley & Co. New England Conservatory of Briggs & Briggs, Inc. Music Carry-On-Shop Northwestern Leather Co. Trust Chandler & Co. Old Colony Trust Co. Courtright House John C. Paige & Co. Cresta Blanca Wine Co. Paine Furniture Co. DeBlois & Maddison Patterson, Wylde & Windeler Draper Top Co. Phonograph & Record Shop Dubonnet Corp. S. S. Pierce Co. Durgin Park Restaurant RCA Victor Manufacturing Co. Geo. H. Ellis Co. Records & Goldsborough Emery & Conant Co., Inc. Aaron Richmond Employers' Group Romanes & Paterson Wm. S. Febiger Co. Arthur P. Schmidt Co. Fiduciary Trust Co. Shreve, Crump & Low First Federal Savings & Loan Ass'n W. V. Slocum, Inc. Filene's State Street Trust Co. Gebelein, Inc. R. H. Stearns Co. Gilchrist Company M. Steinert & Sons Miss Hardy's Workshop Sunshine Laundry Beecher Hobbs Record Shop Symphony Flower Shop C. Crawford Hollidge Thayer McNeil Chas. W. Homeyer & Co. Walker-Gordon Laboratories Hotel Gardner S. Waterman Sons C. F. Hovey Co. J. & Hunneman & Company Miss Westgate Hurwitch Bros. Westland Avenue Garage Jays, Inc. R. H. White Co. Jordan Marsh Co. T. D. Whitney Co.

[ 1103 ] the sepulchre, they saw a young man sitting on the right side, clothed in a long white garment; and they were affrighted. And he saith unto them, Be not affrighted;

ye seek Jesus of Nazareth, which was crucified: he is risen.—St. Mark xvi. And the joyful tidings were spread abroad all over the world, and they who hated Him fled before Him, vanishing like smoke. "Resurrexit," sing the choirs of Angels in heaven, to the sound of the Archangels' trumpets and the fluttering of the wings of the Seraphim. "Resurrexit!" sing the priests in the temples, in the midst of clouds of incense, by the light of innumerable candles to the chiming of triumphant bells.

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TODAY'S GREAT PIANO

EASTERN HEADQUARTERS: THE BALDWIN PIANO COMPANY 20 E. 54th Street. N. Y. C.

IN BOSTON: THE BALDWIN PIANO COMPANY 150 BOYLSTON STREET

BALDWIN ALSO BUILDS HAMILTON. ACROSONIC and HOWARD PIANOS

[ 1105 ] AK Aaron Richmond's CELEBRITY SERIES-'43'44 Outstanding Events, Season 1943-44 in SYMPHONY HALL JORDAN HALL BOSTON OPERA HOUSE 8 SELECTIVE EVENTS: $15, $12, $9, $6 (The government tax, $2.00, $1.60, $1.20 and 80 cents is based on single concert price.) The Choicest Seats at Substantial Savings •>- Performances Take Place Sunday Afternoons Unless Otherwise Indicated

Present subscribers may renew their seat locations before April 20 — $2.00 deposit holds subscription until September 7. SUBSCRIPTION BOOKS OPEN NOW 208 Pierce Bldg., Copley Square, Boston TEL. KEN. 6037

Choose 4 of the following KREISLER—Only Boston Concert (Oct. 24) CORNELIA OTIS SKINNER—Program of Original Character Sketches (Sat. and Sun. Afts., Oct. 30 and 31) CURTIS QUARTET—Noted String Ensemble (Nov. 14) Assisted by the pianist BORIS GOLDOVSKY VRONSKY & BABIN—Celebrated two-piano recitalists (Nov. 28) MARIAN ANDERSON— Only Boston Concert (Jan. 9) PONS—Leading Coloratura Soprano (Jan. 23) ITURBI—Brilliant Spanish pianist (Feb. 6) LEHMANN—Peerless lieder singer (Feb. 13) BUDAPEST QUARTET—"One of the most popular in the field of chamber music" (Feb. 20) HEIFETZ—Return by popular demand (March 5) Choose 4 of the following BALLET THEATRE—Greatest in Russian Ballet (Wed. Eve., Oct. 6) Three new productions JOHN CHARLES THOMAS—Noted Baritone in a program of "MY FAVORITE SONGS" (Nov. 2 5—Thanksgiving Night) JAN PEERCE—Star Tenor of the Metropolitan Opera (Dec. 12) RUDOLF SERKIN—One of the foremost piano virtuosi of our time (Jan. 16) RUTH POSSELT—Foremost Woman Violinist of the day (Jan. 30) KATHERINE DUNHAM—America's Great Negro Dancer and her company of 20 DANCERS AND MUSICIANS. (Fri. Eve., Jan. 14) CLAUDIO ARRAU—Noted South American Pianist in his first Boston recital since his brilliant solo successes with the Boston Symphony Orchestra (Feb. 27)

I 1106] SIXTY-SECOND SEASON . NINETEEN HUNDRED FORTY-TWO AND FORTY-THREE

Twenty-fourth Programme

FRIDAY AFTERNOON, April 30, at 2.30 o'clock

SATURDAY EVENING, May 1, at 8.15 o'clock

Liadov "From the Apocalypse" — Symphonic Picture, Op. 66

Brahms Symphony No. 4 in E minor, Op. 98

I. Allegro non troppo

II. Andante moderato

III. Allegro giocoso IV. Allegro energico e passionato

INTERMISSION

Shostakovitch Symphony No. 5, Op. 47

I. Moderato

II. Allegretto

III. Largo IV. Allegro non troppo

BALDWIN PIANO

This programme will end about 4:35 on Friday Afternoon, 10:20 o'clock on Saturday Evening

The works to be played at these concerts may be seen in the Allen A. Brown Music Collection of the Boston Public Library one week before the concert. A lecture on this programme will be given on Wednesday at 4:45 o'clock, in the Lecture Hall.

[ 1107 ] m MUSICAL INSTRUCTION MARY SHAW SWAIN PIANOFORTE TEACHER ACCOMPANIST AND COACH 10 MUSEUM ROAD HIGHLANDS 9419

Mrs. Charles Adams White TEACHER OF SINGING AND SPEECH

105 REVERE ST., BOSTON Tei. Capitol 6745

Albert Yves Bernard FRANK E. DOYLE First Prize, Parig National Conservatory 14 STEINERT HALL of Music SINGING Member Boston Symphony Orchestra INSTRUCTION IN Teacher (in Boston) of Polyna Stoska VIOLIN AND VIOLA Teacher of John Smallman SO Charlesgate East Ken. 3030

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