
SANDERS THEATRE . CAMBRIDGE HARVARD UNIVERSITY Thursday Evening, December 18, at 8.00 PRSGRHttttE St*"® mmpi 6 *5 m Just as you enjoy the exquisite interpre- tations of the Boston Symphony Orchestra at their concert, you can enjoy them when- ever you wish on the Victrola. It is one of the great triumphs of record- ing that enables you to heat so large an organization in your home, and it is sig- nificant that so famous an orchestra as the Boston Symphony makes Victor Records. The absolute faithfulness of these Victor Records when played on the Victrola parallels the actual performance of this great orchestra itself. Any Victor dealer will gladly play any of the Boston Symphony Orchestra records for you. Victrolas $25.00 to $950. CAMDEN, N. J. "HIS MASTER'S VOICE"' SANDERS THEATRE . CAMBRIDGE HARVARD UNIVERSITY INCORPORATED Thirty-ninth Season, 1919-1920 PIERRE MONTEUX, Conductor WITH HISTORICAL AND DESCRIPTIVE NOTES BY PHILIP HALE THURSDAY EVENING, DECEMBER 18 AT 8.00 COPYRIGHT, 1919, BY BOSTON SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA, INCORPORATED W. H. BRENNAN, Manager G. E. JUDD, Assistant Manager ' — w A name that is spoken with the full pride of ownership—that carries with it the deep satis- faction of possessing the ultimate expression of man's handiwork in Musical Art. A name that is cherished as a Family Tradition that keeps afresh for the next generation the associations and fond remembrances which cluster around the home piano. Supreme achievement of patience, skill and ex- perience, founded on inborn Ideals of Artistry. s p h Catalogue and prices on application Sold on convenient payments Old pianos taken in exchange Inspection invited w^ 107-109 East 14th Street New York Subway Express Stations at the Door REPRESENTED BY THE FOREMOST DEALERS EVERYWHERE Thirty-ninth Season, 1919-1920 PIERRE MONTEUX, Conductor Violins. Fradkin, F. Roth, O. Rissland, K. Mahn, F. Concert-master. Hoffman, J. Bak, A. Gerardi, A. Theodorowicz. J. Ribarsch, A. Sauvlet, H. Di Natale, J. Henkle.R. Traupe, W Goldstein, H, Ringwall, R. Farwell, E. Thillois, F. Goldstein, S. Pinfield, C. Fiedler, A Fiedler, B. Kurth, R. Gunderson, R. Diamond, S. Deane, C. Bryant, M. Leveen, P. Langley, A. Kurkdjie, N. Blackman, A. Violas. Denayer, F. Berlin, V. Van Veen, H. Kay, W. Grover, H. Wittmann, F. Van Wynbergen, C. Shirley, P. Blumenau, W. Salis, J. Violoncellos. Bedetti, J. Miquelle, G. Nagel, R. Belinski, M. Warnke, J. Schroeder, A. Keller, J. Barth, C. Fabrizio, E. Stockbridge, C. Basses. Kunze, M. Jaeger, A. Ludwig, O. Agnesy, K. Gerhardt, G. Seydel, T. Schurig, R. Frankel, I. Flutes. Oboes. Clarinets. Bassoons. Laurent, G. Longy, G. Sand, A. Laus, A. Brooke, A. Lenom, C. Mimart, P. Mueller, E. DeMailly, C. Stanislaus, H. Forlani, N. Piller, B. Piccolo. English Horns. Bass Clarinet. Contra-Bassoon. Battles, A. Mueller, F. Vannini, A. Fuhrmann, M. Speyer, L. Horns. Horns. Trumpets. Trombones. Wendler, G. Van Den Berg, C. Heim, G. Adam, E. Lorbeer, H. Versney, C. Mann, J. Sordillo, F. Hain, F. Hess, M. Mager, G. Mausebach, A. Gebhardt, W. Folk, G. Kloepfel, L. Kenfield, L. Tuba. Harps. Tympani. Percussion. Mattersteig, P. Holy, A. Neumann, S. Ludwig, C. Burkhardt, H. Cella, T. Gardner, C. Zahn, F. Organ. Librarian. Snow, A. Rogers, L. J. THINK of hearing the world's greatest pianists— not once in a lifetime, but whenever you are in the mood! This is possible if you own 9%£>AMPlCO „ in the Ornstein, Godowsky , Levitzki, Rachmaninoff —and many more play the masterpieces of music just as you heard them on the con- cert stage. The reproduction is perfect. And there is a wealth of lighter music, includ- ing the latest dance numbers, to choose from. Come in and hear the Ampico in the Chickering Piano today. Established 1823 Warerooms 169 Tremont Street SANDERS THEATRE .... CAMBRIDGE HARVARD UNIVERSITY Thirty-ninth Season, 1919-1920 PIERRE MONTEUX, Conductor THIRD CONCERT THURSDAY EVENING, DECEMBER 18 AT 8.00 PROGRAMME Tschaikowsky . Symphony No. 6, "Pathetic" B minor, Op. 74 I. Adagio; Allegro non troppo. II. Allegro con grazia. III. Allegro molto vivace. IV. Finale; Adagio lamentoso. Boyle . Concerto in D minor for Pianforte and Orchestra (First time at these Concerts) I. Moderato. II. Tranquillo ma non troppo lento. III. Allegro energico ma non troppo vivace. Wagner . Prelude and Love-Death from "Tristan and Isolde" SOLOIST GEORGE F. BOYLE STEINWAY PIANO USED. There will be an intermission of ten minutes after the symphony 5 "The Best in Travel." For 40 years our business has been to please Americans of the finest type who are satisfied with nothing less than the best. The standard we have set for the Raymond-Whitcornb Tours and the Raymond-Whitcomb Cruises is so high that they are universally recognized as in a class apart, beyond competition. Six luxurious Cruises in January, February, March and April by splendid specially chartered steamships to Cuba, Jamaica, Panama, Central America and Nassau-Bahamas. Fascinating shore excur- sions. First Cruise sails Jan. 3. Wonderful tours twice a week in January, February and March, including the famons resort hotels of Southern California and extensive automobiling everywhere. Delightful tours to St. Augustine, Palm Beach, Miami and Havana. Frequent departures January to March. 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Send for Booklet Desired RAYMOND & WHITCOMB CO. 17 TEMPLE PLACE Telephone Beach 6964 BOSTON ; Symphony No. 6, in B minor, "Pathetic," Op. 75. Peter Tschaikowsky (Born at Votkinsk, in the government of Viatka, Russia, May 7, 1840; died at Petrograd, November 6, 1893.) This symphony was performed for the first time at Petrograd on October 28, 1893. The morning after Modest found Peter at the tea-table with the score of the symphony in his hand. He regretted that, inasmuch as he had to send it that day to the publisher, he had not yet given it a title. He wished something more than "No. 6," and did not like "Programme Symphony." "What does Programme Symphony mean when I will give it no programme?" Modest suggested "Tragic," but Peter said that would not do. "I left the room before he had come to a decision. Suddenly I thought, 'Pathetic' I went back to the room,—I remember it as though it were yesterday,—and I said the word to Peter. 'Splendid, Modi, bravo, "Patheti&\f and he wrote in my presence the title that will forever remain." * * * Each hearer has his own thoughts when he is "reminded by the instruments." To some this symphony is as the life of man. The story is to them of man's illusions, desires, loves, struggles, victories, and end. In the first movement they find with the despair of old age and the dread of death the recollection of early years with the transports and illusions of love, the remembrance of youth and all that is contained in that word. The second movement might bear as a motto the words of the Third Kalandar in the "Thousand Nights and a Night": "And we sat down to drink, and some sang songs and others played the lute and psaltery and recorders and others instruments, and the bowl went merrily round. Hereupon such gladness possessed me that I forgot the sorrows of the world one and all, and said: 'This is indeed life. O sad that 'tis fleeting !' " The trio is as the sound of the clock that in Poe's wild tale compelled even the musicians of the orchestra to pause momentarily in their performance, to hearken to the sound ; "and thus the waltzers perforce ceased their evolutions and there was a brief disconcert of the whole gay company; and, while the chimes of the clock yet rang, it was observed that the giddiest grew pale, and the more aged and sedate passed their hands over their brows as if in confused revery or meditation." In this trio Death beats the drum. With Tschaikowsky, here, as in the "Manfred" symphony, the drum is the most tragic of instruments. The persistent drum-beat in this trio is poignant in despair not un- touched with irony. Man says : "Come now, I'll be gay" ; and he 7 STEINWAY & SONS STEINERT JEWETT WOODBURY STEINWAY PIANOLA WEBER PIANOLA STECK PIANOLA WHEELOCK PIANOLA STROUD PIANOLA Most Complete Stock of Records in New England STEINERT HALL, 162 BOYLSTON STREET BOSTON tries to sing and to dance, and to forget. His very gayety is labored, forced, constrained, in an unnatural rhythm. And then the drum is heard, and there is wailing, there is angry protest, there is the conviction that the struggle against Fate is vain. Again there is the deliberate effort to be gay, but the drum once heard beats in the ears forever. The third movement—the march-scherzo—is the excuse, the pre- text, for the final lamentation. The man triumphs, he knows all that there is in earthly fame.
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