Boston Symphony Orchestra Concert Programs, Season 52,1932-1933, Trip
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Musical Landmarks in New York
MUSICAL LANDMARKS IN NEW YORK By CESAR SAERCHINGER HE great war has stopped, or at least interrupted, the annual exodus of American music students and pilgrims to the shrines T of the muse. What years of agitation on the part of America- first boosters—agitation to keep our students at home and to earn recognition for our great cities as real centers of musical culture—have not succeeded in doing, this world catastrophe has brought about at a stroke, giving an extreme illustration of the proverb concerning the ill wind. Thus New York, for in- stance, has become a great musical center—one might even say the musical center of the world—for a majority of the world's greatest artists and teachers. Even a goodly proportion of its most eminent composers are gathered within its confines. Amer- ica as a whole has correspondingly advanced in rank among musical nations. Never before has native art received such serious attention. Our opera houses produce works by Americans as a matter of course; our concert artists find it popular to in- clude American compositions on their programs; our publishing houses publish new works by Americans as well as by foreigners who before the war would not have thought of choosing an Amer- ican publisher. In a word, America has taken the lead in mu- sical activity. What, then, is lacking? That we are going to retain this supremacy now that peace has come is not likely. But may we not look forward at least to taking our place beside the other great nations of the world, instead of relapsing into the status of a colony paying tribute to the mother country? Can not New York and Boston and Chicago become capitals in the empire of art instead of mere outposts? I am afraid that many of our students and musicians, for four years compelled to "make the best of it" in New York, are already looking eastward, preparing to set sail for Europe, in search of knowledge, inspiration and— atmosphere. -
Jaime Nunó After the Mexican National Anthem 105 Was His Notice in Dwight's Journal of Music, Xxiil/21(January9
Jaime Nunó after the Mexican National Anthem ENCYCLOPEDJAS ANO OTHER reference works have up to now shabbily neglected Jaime Nunó-especially after his composing of the Mexican national anthem premiered September 15, 1854. In Música y músicos de Latinoamérica (México: Editorial Atlante, S.A., 1947), II, 690, Otto Mayor-Serra compressed his whole career into a scant 33 words but even so got his place of death wrong. Diccionario de la música Labor despite being edited by Nunó's fellow Catalonians Joaquín Pena and Higinio Anglés (Barcelona: Editorial Labor, 1954), did no more than baldly copy Mayer-Serra. Diccionario enciclopédico U. T.E.H.A. (México: Unión Tipográfica Editorial Hispano Americana), VII, 1121, dismissed Nunó with a curt article, giving no details whatsoever conceming his lengthy and illustrious career in the United States. Grove 's Dictionary of Music and Musicians American Supplement. edited by Waldo Selden Pratt and Charles N. Boyd (New York: Macmillan, 1920), 313, covered Nunó's life at better length (224 words) but again gave the wrong place for Nunó's death. Also, the American Supplement failed to mention his visit to Mexico in 1901 (he left Buffalo September 9, returned November 21, 1901). This one sentence summed up the last tour decades of Nunó's lite: "After 1870 (recte 1869J, he lived at Buffalo, teaching, singing and conducting various societies, serving as organist at dif ferent churches there and in Rochester, and composing about 50 church-works." Frederick H. Martens's article in the Dictionary oj American Biography (New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1934), XIII, 594-595, cited 1878 through 1882 as the years during which Nunó was organist and choirmaster of St. -
122 a Century of Grand Opera in Philadelphia. Music Is As Old As The
122 A Century of Grand Opera in Philadelphia. A CENTURY OF GRAND OPERA IN PHILADELPHIA. A Historical Summary read before the Historical Society of Pennsylvania, Monday Evening, January 12, 1920. BY JOHN CURTIS. Music is as old as the world itself; the Drama dates from before the Christian era. Combined in the form of Grand Opera as we know it today they delighted the Florentines in the sixteenth century, when Peri gave "Dafne" to the world, although the ancient Greeks listened to great choruses as incidents of their comedies and tragedies. Started by Peri, opera gradually found its way to France, Germany, and through Europe. It was the last form of entertainment to cross the At- lantic to the new world, and while some works of the great old-time composers were heard in New York, Charleston and New Orleans in the eighteenth century, Philadelphia did not experience the pleasure until 1818 was drawing to a close, and so this city rounded out its first century of Grand Opera a little more than a year ago. But it was a century full of interest and incident. In those hundred years Philadelphia heard 276 different Grand Operas. Thirty of these were first heard in America on a Philadelphia stage, and fourteen had their first presentation on any stage in this city. There were times when half a dozen travelling companies bid for our patronage each season; now we have one. One year Mr. Hinrichs gave us seven solid months of opera, with seven performances weekly; now we are permitted to attend sixteen performances a year, unless some wandering organization cares to take a chance with us. -
Ópera Y Política En El México Decimonónico: El Caso De Amilcare Roncari*
Secuencia (2017), 97, enero-abril, 140-169 ISSN: 0186-0348, ISSN electrónico: 2395-8464 DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.18234/secuencia.v0i97.1450 Ópera y política en el México decimonónico: El caso de Amilcare Roncari* Opera and Politics in 19th-Century Mexico: The Case of Amilcare Roncari Luis de Pablo Hammeken Universidad Autónoma Metropolitana-Unidad Cuajimalpa, México [email protected] Resumen: El artículo analiza la historia de Amilcare Roncari, un empresario de origen italiano que organizó varias temporadas de ópera en la ciudad de México y que, al comienzo de la guerra de Reforma, fue aprehendido y lle- vado a la cárcel acusado de haber defraudado a los abonados. El caso ilustra las intrincadas redes de apoyos recíprocos y conflictos frecuentes que, en el México del siglo xix, se tejían entre los empresarios y artistas de la ópera, por un lado, y las autoridades políticas, por el otro. Se argumenta que los gober- nantes sabían que la ópera era un símbolo poderoso de civilización y progreso y, por lo tanto, la empleaban con frecuencia como fuente de legitimidad; a cambio, los empresarios recibían grandes apoyos, financieros, jurídicos y sim- bólicos de parte de las instituciones políticas, tanto locales como nacionales. Palabras clave: ópera; guerra de Reforma; México; empresarios; Amilcare Roncari. * Este artículo se basa en la investigación que realicé para mi tesis doctoral. Pablo (2014). 140 Secuencia, ISSN 0186-0348, núm. 97 | enero-abril de 2017 | pp. 140-169 Secuencia, ISSN 0186-0348, núm. 97, enero-abril de 2017, pp. 140-169 141 Abstract: The article analyzes the story of Amilcare Roncari, an Italian entre- preneur who organized several opera seasons in Mexico City and was arrested and taken to jail for defrauding subscribers at the beginning of the Reform War. -
Casts for the Verdi Premieres in the US (1847-1976)
Verdi Forum Number 2 Article 5 12-1-1976 Casts for the Verdi Premieres in the U.S. (1847-1976) (Part 1) Martin Chusid New York University Follow this and additional works at: http://scholarship.richmond.edu/vf Part of the Musicology Commons, and the Music Performance Commons Recommended Citation Chusid, Martin (1976) "Casts for the Verdi Premieres in the U.S. (1847-1976)" (Part 1), AIVS Newsletter: No. 2, Article 5 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by UR Scholarship Repository. It has been accepted for inclusion in Verdi Forum by an authorized administrator of UR Scholarship Repository. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Casts for the Verdi Premieres in the U.S. (1847-1976) (Part 1) Keywords Giuseppe Verdi, opera, United States This article is available in Verdi Forum: http://scholarship.richmond.edu/vf/vol1/iss2/5 Casts for the Verdi Premieres in the U.S. (1847-1976), Part 1 by Martin Chusid 1. March 3, 1847, I lombardi alla prima tioni (London, 1862). See also U.S. pre croclata (Mi~, 1843). New York, Palmo's mieres of Due Foscari, Attila, Macbeth and Opera House fn. 6 6 Salvatore Patti2 (Arvino) conducted w.p. Aida (Cairo, 1871). See Giuseppe Federico de! Bosco Beneventano 3 also U.S. premieres in note S. Max Maret (Pagano) zek, Crochets and Quavers (l8SS), claims Boulard (Viclinda) that Arditi was Bottesini's assistant. Clotilda Barili (Giselda) The most popular of all Verdi's early operas A. Sanquirico3 (Pirro) in the U.S. (1847-1976) Benetti Riese (Prior) 3. -
Music (Opportunities for Research in the Watkinson Library)
Trinity College Trinity College Digital Repository Watkinson Library (Rare books & Special Watkinson Publications Collections) 2016 American Periodicals: Music (Opportunities for Research in the Watkinson Library) Leonard Banco Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalrepository.trincoll.edu/exhibitions Part of the Musicology Commons Recommended Citation Banco, Leonard, "American Periodicals: Music (Opportunities for Research in the Watkinson Library)" (2016). Watkinson Publications. 22. https://digitalrepository.trincoll.edu/exhibitions/22 Opportunities for Research in the Watkinson Library • • • • American Perioclicals: USIC Series Introduction A traditional focus of collecting in the Watkinson since we opened on August 28, 1866, has been American periodicals, and we have quite a good representation of them from the late 18th to the early 20th centuries. However, in terms of "discoverability" (to use the current term), it is not enough to represent each of the 600-plus titles in the online catalog. We hope that our students, faculty, and other researchers will appreciate this series ofannotated guides to our periodicals, broken down into basic themes (politics, music, science and medicine, children, education, women, etc.), MUSIC all of which have been compiled by Watkinson Trustee and Introduction volunteer Dr. Leonard Banco. We extend our deep thanks to Len for the hundreds of hours he has devoted to this project The library holds a relatively small but significant since the spring of 2014. His breadth of knowledge about the collection of19 periodicals focusing on music that period and inquisitive nature has made it possible for us to reflects the breadth ofmusical life in 19th-century promote a unique resource through this work, which has America as it transitioned from an agrarian to an already been of great use to visiting scholars and Trinity industrial society. -
Musical Women and Identity-Building in Early Independent Mexico (1821-1854)
Musical Women and Identity-Building in Early Independent Mexico (1821-1854) Yael Bitrán Goren Thesis submitted for the degree of PhD Music Department, Royal Holloway, University of London 2012 1 Declaration of Authorship I, Yael Bitrán Goren, hereby declare that this thesis and the work presented in it is entirely my own. Where I have consulted the work of others, this is always clearly stated. Signed: ______________________ Date: 13 April 2012 Abstract This thesis investigates music in Mexico City, with an emphasis on women's relationship to Romanticism, education, consumption, domestic music-making and public performance. During the first decades after independence in 1821, Mexicans began the process of constructing an identity, which musically speaking meant an expansion of the secular musical world. Such construction involved the development of internal activity alongside a conditional receptivity to external influence in the form of the visits of Italian opera companies such as those of Manuel García and Max Maretzek, and travelling virtuosi such as pianist virtuoso Henri Herz, who brought new repertoire and performance practices to Mexican theatres and homes. As consumers and as musicians, women were at the centre of such developments. In Mexico, both European music and that of local musicians was disseminated by means of ladies’ journals and imported and locally-printed sheet music by foreign and Mexican composers, in order to supply a growing home market for amateurs. Abundant surviving repertoire for the home, the widespread availability of musical instruction as revealed through advertisements, and witness accounts of soirées and concerts in the theatre reveal a budding musical world that has hitherto been overlooked and which occurred during a period generally deemed of little importance in Mexican musical history. -
Adelina Patti and Clara Louise Kellogg in the Chicago Tribune, 1860-1876
DOCUMENTING DIVAS: ADELINA PATTI AND CLARA LOUISE KELLOGG IN THE CHICAGO TRIBUNE, 1860-1876 Kathryn Jancaus A Thesis Submitted to the Graduate College of Bowling Green State University in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of MASTER OF MUSIC December 2020 Committee: Eftychia Papanikolaou, Advisor Ryan Ebright © 2020 Kathryn Jancaus All Rights Reserved iii ABSTRACT Eftychia Papanikolaou, Advisor When Swedish soprano Jenny Lind (1820-1887) came to the United States in 1850, the ecstatic craze surrounding her arrival belied a larger trend which was taking root among the American press and public: a fascination with the lives of celebrity opera singers. One of the Lind enthusiasts was a college student named George P. Upton (1834-1919), who later became the music critic for the Chicago Tribune. In his work over the following decades, Upton continued to take a vivid interest in the lives, careers, and personalities of prima donnas, writing about them with an intensely personal style that was common in newspapers of his time. As journalists for the Tribune provided news about opera stars to their readers in Chicago, they not only shaped the public images of these singers but also promoted the appreciation of classical music as a cause for civic pride in their relatively young city. In this study I examine how George P. Upton and other journalists published in the Chicago Tribune wrote about two star sopranos of the mid to late nineteenth century: Adelina Patti (1843-1919) and Clara Louise Kellogg (1842-1916). I bring together newspaper articles from the years 1860 through 1876 and use secondary literature to place the critics’ approach in context. -
Bulletin No. 16 April, 1948
Library of The Harvard Musical Association Bulletin No. 16 April, 1948 Library Committee CHARLES R. NUTTER CYRUS W. DURGIN WALDO S. KENDALL GEORGE B. WESTON ALEXANDER W. WILLIAMS Director of the Library and Library and Custodian of the Marsh Room Marsh Room Marsh Room CHARLES R. NUTTER MURIEL FRENCH FLORENCE C. ALLEN To the Members of the Association: Your attention is called to an article in this issue by Hugo Leichtentritt. * * * * The first 14 bulletins issued by the Library, 12 of which narrate the history of this Association now in its 111th year, have been considerably revised and bound in book form. Here and there the text has received additions, a few mis‐statements and typographical errors corrected. A volume stands on the shelves for circulation or for reference. * * * * At the present moment it is the intention of the writer, in this bulletin and in succeeding bulletins if and when written, to narrate in connection with each concert season certain details not included in Bulletin No. 5, for the purpose of record. Also included will be, as heretofore, articles informing or entertaining if the latter can be dug up, and very likely references to other musical events not closely allied to this Association. For instance, the World’s Peace Jubilee and International Musical Festival, held in Boston June 17‐22, 1872, which far excelled the National Jubilee of 1869, itself a tremendous undertaking, was too astonishing in conception and too stupendous in execution to be completely ignored. As a matter of fact, en passant, the story of music in Boston from 1850 to these later years is not only of general interest but is a striking revelation of the changed musical taste of the public, the recognizable contrast in the personnel of audiences following the rise of the proletariat, the significant difference in what is offered on all programmes, all and more subject to influences which change life’s customs and habits from decade to decade but which appear to be more sweeping in the art of music. -
When Campanini and Maurel Stirred New York
March 9, 1918 MUSICAL AMERICA 11 who had no idea whatsoever of .how to accompany the voice. In one town I r.e member calling to account the flute When Campanini and Maurel Stirred New York; player, who became highly offended and Il eft r ight then and there, and it took all of Signor de Vivo's savoir faire to "Touring the Provinces" With a Noted Troupe'" make him return. He happened to be the only flute-player in that town. I succeeded in getting them to accompany most of the pieces fairly well, after hours Max Strakosch I n t r o d u c e s of rehearsing. However, in one instance "Aida" at Academy of Music the local orchestra insisted on playing the "Shadow Song" from "Dinorah" in in the Eventful Season of '73- strict waltz-time and, of course, this w,as in horrible conflict with Mme. de Mur , 7 4-Adventures on the Road ska's tempo and interpretation. To avoid further trouble, I decided to 'do with Carreno, Sauret and without the orchestra for that number at Other Artists-The "Hun least. Of the other members of this company garian Nightingale's" Strange I have little to add. Carreno and Sauret played somewhat better than when they Retinue-Precarious Days for were with the Patti-Mario troupe. Signor Braga, for many years well the Traveling Company known in Paris, was a master of his Reminiscences of a Dis instrument, with a good singing tone. Altogether a fine ar.tist, but a very bois tinguished Musician. -
Fourteenth Rehearsal and Concert
SYMPHONY HALL, BOSTON HUNTINGTON (S- MASSACHUSETTS AVENUES _ , . Ticket Office, 1492 Telephones I I ^"*^^d ^i ^^^o { Administration Offices, 3200 } TWENTY-SEVENTH SEASON, 1907-1908 DR. KARL MUCK, Conductor Fourteenth Rehearsal and Concert WITH HISTORICAL AND DESCRIP- TIVE NOTES BY PHILIP HALE FRIDAY AFTERNOON, FEBRUARY 7 f^i AT 2.30 O'CLOCK SATURDAY EVENING, FEBRUARY 8 AT 8.00 O'CLOCK PUBLISHED BY C. A. ELLIS, MANAGER 1045 : piAi^a Used and Indorsed by Reisenauer, Neitzel, Burmeister, Gabrilowitsch, Nordica, Campanari, Bispham, and many other noted artists, will be used by TERESA CARRENO during her tour of the United States this season. The Everett piano has been played recently under the baton of the following famous conductors Theodore Thomas Franz Kneisel Dr. Karl Muck Fritz Scheel "Walter Damrosch Frank Damrosch Frederick Stock F. Van Der Stucken Wassily Safonoff Emil Oberhoffer Wilhelm Gericke Emil Paur Felix Weingartner REPRESENTED BY a L SCHIRMER & COMPANY, 38 Huntington Avenue, Boston, Mass. 1046 Boston Symphony Orchestra PERSONNEL orijtcik^rtng iStatu Bears a name which has become known to purchasers as representing the highest possible value produced in the piano industry. It has been associated with all that is highest and best in piano making since 1823. Its name is the hall mark of piano worth and is a guarantee to the purchaser that in the instrument bearing it, is incorporated the highest artistic value possible. CHICKERING & SONS PIANOFORTE MAKERS Established 1823 791 TREMONT STREET Cor. NORTHAMPTON ST. Near Mass. Ave. BOSTON TWENTY-SEVENTH SEASON, NINETEEN HUNDRED SEVEN anrf EIGHT e Fourteenth Rehearsal and Concert* FRIDAY AFTERNOON, FEBRUARY 7, at 2.30. -
Boston Symphony Orchestra Concert Programs, Season 31,1911-1912, Trip
ACADEMY OF MUSIC . BROOKLYN Thirty-first Season, 19JJ-W2 MAX FIEDLER, Conductor Jlrngramm? of % FIRST CONCERT WITH HISTORICAL AND DESCRIP- TIVE NOTES BY PHILIP HALE FRIDAY EVENING, NOVEMBER 10 AT 8.J5 COPYRIGHT, 1911, BY C. A. ELLIS PUBLISHED BY C. A. ELLIS, MANAGER <2«K Qfti £ngi6s* MIGNONETTE GRAND In Fancy $J QQ Mahogany, 5 feet 2 inches Where others ha<ve failed to build a Small and Perfect Grand Piano meeting with present-day requirements, the House of Knabe, after years of research and experiment, has succeeded in producing The World's Best Grand Piano as attested by many of the World's best musicians, grand opera artists, stars, composers, etc. The Knabe Mignonette Grand is indispensable where space is limited— desirable in the highest degree where an abundance of space exists. Wm. KNABE & Co. 5th Avenue and 39th Street - - NEW YORK CITY Established 1837 Boston Symphony Orchestra PERSONNEL Thirty-first Season, 1911-1912 MAX FIEDLER, Conductor Violins. Witek, A., Roth, 0. Hoffmann, J. Theodorowicz, J. Concert-master. Kuntz, D. Krafft, F. W. Mahn, F. Noack, S. Strube, G. Rissland, K. Ribarsch, A. Traupe, W. Eichheim, H. Bak, A. Mullaly, J. Goldstein, H. Barleben, K. Akeroyd, J. Fiedler, B. Berger, H. Fiumara, P. Currier, F. Marble, E. Eichler, J. Tischer-Zeitz, H Kurth, R. Fabrizio, C. Goldstein, S. Werner, H. Griinberg, M. Violas. Ferir, E. Spoor, S. Pauer, 0. H. Kolster, A. VanWynbergen, C. Gietzen, A. Hoyer, H. Kluge, M. Forster, E. Kautzenbach, W. Violoncellos. Schroeder, A. Keller, J. Barth, C. Belinski, M Warnke, J. Warnke, H. Nagel, R.