CARNEGIE HALL PROGRAM 5
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• 1872-1944 Seventy-Two Years of Musical Progress
CARNEGIE HALL PROGRAMSEASON 1944-1945
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Patrick Walsh, Fire Commissioner.
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Sunday Evening, October 29th, at 8:30 o’clock
S. HUROK presents ef/ '‘i/ic/ot PReco'itlina
BACH — Double Concerto in D minor. Menuhin and Enesco with Orch. under Monteux.DM 932........................Price $2.62
ARTUR RUBINSTEINALL CHOPIN PROGRAM
I.1. Polonaise, Op. 44, F sharp minor2. Fantaisie—Impromptu3. Four Etudes (Op. 10, Op. 20)4. Sonata, Op. 58, B minor
Allegro maestoso Scherzo
Largo—Cantabile Finale
INTERMISSION
Program Continued on Second Page Following
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CARNEGIE HALL PROGRAM 7
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PROGRAM CONTINUED
II.5. Scherzo, B minor, Op. 20
6. Two Mazurkas
7. Ballade, G minor, Op. 23
8. Polonaise, Op. 53, A flat
Steinway Piano
•
Exclusive Management-.Hurok Artists, Inc., 711 Fifth Ave., N. Y. C.
Booking Direction-.National Concert & Artists Corp.
Program Continued on Second Page Following
ROBERT CASADESUSEight Etudes for the Piano
Complete, 1.25
Gscm^Established 1861
MU 2-8100
MYRA KINGSLEYDistinguished American Astrologer
is now specializing her practice in Postwar Rehabilitation cases and Vocational Guidance.
By Appointment
201 East 71 st St., N. Y. 21 RE 7-0921
BACH — Double Concerto in D minor. Menuhin and Enesco with Orch. under Monteux.DM 932.........................Price $2.62
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CARNEGIE HALL PROGRAM 9
CARNEGIE HALL. OCTOBER 30, of 8:30 P. M.
BRONISLAW
HUBERMANAssisted by BORIS ROUBAKINE at the Steinway
BACH. BEETHOVEN. BRAHMS. SCHUBERT
Mgt. W. COLSTON LEIGH Tickets at Box Office
BEFORE OR AFTER THE CONCERT
It's
5chRAFFT’S220 West 57th Street
Near Broadway
All Sundays
PROGRAM CONTINUED
CHESTERFIELD CIGARETTES On sale in Buffet and Ladies’ Rooms off of Parquet and First Tier Boxes
I have no intention df analyzing tonight’s program; the music of Chopin requires no explanatory notes. I wrote these few words of introduction to the concert for purely sentimental reasons.
Chopin disliked tying literary strings to his art. Unlike Debussy, who relished extravagant, often picturesque titles for his compositions, the Polish master preferred to call his piano pieces soberly Preludes, Etudes, Scherzi, Impromptus, etc. Yet, in spite of these vague and sometimes contradictory descriptions (like “Scherzo”, meaning “joke” in Italian), his works never fail to convey to the listener the dominating source of their inspiration—Chopin’s passionate devotion to his native Poland and his grief over the tragic outcome of the revolution of 1830 which made him an exile for life. His great genius proved to be the chief power in stimulating the courage of his countrymen in their continuous fight for freedom.
Now, almost a hundred years after his death, we Poles are living again in a time of desperate struggle for survival and Chopin’s own town, Warsaw, has been utterly destroyed. For this reason his immortal music appeals to us today more strongly than ever!
Tonight’s program stresses the heroic rather than the lyrical character of his works—showing that Chopin, in spite of his physical weakness, possessed a soul of titanic stature. The Polonaise in F sharp minor which opens the concert is a tragic and defiant expression of his despair and anger, a mood broken for a moment by the eerie beauty of the middle section, the Mazurka, a daydream of a peaceful and happy Poland. Liszt heard in this Polonaise the sound of “muffled cannons”.
Continuing the program with the great Sonata in B minor, Op. 58. the Ballade in G minor, the dynamic Scherzo with its original theme of a Polish Christmas carol, the Etudes and Mazurkas, it seems fitting to close this concert with the Polonaise in A flat, Op. 53, Chopin’s proud and triumphant outcry of everlasting hope in victory.
(Signed) Artur Rubinstein.
1842—OUR 102nd YEAR—1944Known the World over as Manufacturers of Accurate, Distinctive Eye glasses and Spectacles.
Let us fill your Oculist's Prescription. Latest Style Frames at Reasonable Prices.
Next Appearance this Season CARNEGIE HALL
Sun. Eve., Dec. 10 Special Request Program
7 East 48th St., New York, N. Y.Volunteer 5-1680
Branch Store. 633 Park Ave., Plainfield, N. J.Lorgnettes Oxfords & Speclettes Opera Glasses Binoculars
Subscription Series of Four Jazz Concerts
EDDIE CONDON5:30—SATURDAY AFTERNOONS
November 4 — December 2 — January 20 and CHRISTMAS DAY, December 25
Presenting 50 of the Greatest Hot Musicians of Our Time
Tickets on Sale at Box Office
MINA HORNESCHOOL OF VOICE CULTURECONCERT—RADIO—OPERA
LANGUAGES205 W. 57th St. CO 5-3563
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RACHMANINOFF—Concerto No. 4 in G minor. Rachmaninoff & Phila. Orch. Ormandy, Cond. DM 972........................ Price $4.72
LIBERTY MUSIC SHOPS ”5 X2
CARNEGIE HALL PROGRAM II
CARNEGIE HALL Tuesday Evening, October 31, at 8:30
NEW YORK PHILHARMONIC-SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA (88 Members)
BRUNO WAITERConductor
JARMILA NOVOTNASoloist
Tickets: $1.20 to $4.20
Auspices: AMERICAN FRIENDS OF CZECHOSLOVAKIA
THE PHILHARMONIC-SYMPHONY SOCIETY OF NEW YORK
1842 — Consolidated 1928 — 1878 1944 — One Hundred Third Season — 1945 COMING CONCERTS AT CARNEGIE HALL
Under the Direction of
PIERRE MONTEUXGuest Conductor
Thursday Evening, November 2, at 8:45Friday Afternoon, November 3, at 2:30
BEETHOVEN........................................ Overture to “Leonore", No. 3BRAHMS..................................Symphony in F major, No. 3, Op. 90DEBUSSY............................................................. Images pour OrchestraRESPIGHI.................................... Symphonic Poem, "Pines of Rome”
Saturday Evening, November 4, at 8:45Sunday Afternoon, November 5, at 3:00
Assisting ArtistLEON FLEISHER, Pianist
BEETHOVEN............. ....................Overture, "Prometheus”, Op. 43BRAHMS...................... Piano Concerto in D minor, No. 1, Op. 15
Leon FleisherWILLIAM GRANT STILL. . .Symphonic Poem, “Old California”
{First time in New York}DEBUSSY....................................Two Nocturnes: "Nuages”—“Fetes”STRAUSS...........................................Tone Poem, “Don Juan”, Op. 20
ARTHUR JUDSON, Manager
BRUNO ZIRATO, Associate Manager
ALEXANDER SCHNEIDER, Violin RALPH KIRKPATRICK, Harpsichord
A Cycle of 6 BACH and 9 MOZART Sonatas
KAUFMANN AUDITORIUM. Y.M.H.A. Lexington Ave. at 92nd St.
Three Wednesday Evenings, Nov. 1st, 8th, 15th, at 8:40 P. M.
Subscription: Members, $2.40-$3.60; Non-Members, $3.60-$4.80
Single Adm.: Members, $1.20-$ 1-50; Non-Members, $1.50-$1.80
(Prices include tax)
RECORDSThis month Victor releases Sergei Rach
maninoff’s own version of his last major opus, the Concerto No. 4 in G Minor. Written in 1936 at his chateau near Paris, and originally performed the next year, the Concerto was withdrawn from the repertory for nearly a decade. After revising it extensively, the gloomy genius first played it in Carnegie Hall on Armistice Day, 1941, with Eugene Ormandy and the Philadelphia Orchestra. The last important composition by a commanding figure among the romantic Russians, in Rachmaninoff’s own definitive performance with the Philadelphia Orchestra, it is a must for the music-minded. The keyboard performance is characterized by the majestic sweep and nobility of style which made Rachmaninoff one of the great concert pianists of this generation.
Another definitive performance in a Red Seal album is Howard Hanson’s Symphony No. 1 in E Minor (Nordic), conducted by the composer with the Eastman-Rochester Symphony Orchestra. Hanson is the winner of this year’s Pulitzer Prize for distinguished musical composition.
Ever since his first appearance in Carnegie Hall with Fritz Busch and the New York Symphony in 1927, Yehudi Menuhin has been a familiar figure in “the house that music built”. His teacher, Georges Enesco, is not exactly unknown here either, having appeared variously as composer, conductor and violinist. The famous team have joined up in a superlatively sympathetic performance of the Bach Double Concerto in D Minor for Victor. Pierre Monteux conducts the orchestra.
RED SEAL SINGLES
A native North Carolinian, Norman Cordon understands by instinct the Negro songs which arose from the yearnings of a troubled people in the South; in fact, his singing of spirituals won him his first audition with the Chicago Opera Company. His version of the classic prisoner’s plea, “Water Boy”, and the plaintive “Go Down, Moses”, are first-rate recordings.
Metropolitan Opera stars Elisabeth Reth- berg and Ezio Pinza make a joint appearance on Red Seal with “Bei mannern, welche liebe fuhlen” from Mozart’s masterpiece, “The Magic Flute”. On the reverse side, Mr. Pinza sings the humorously ironic “Se voul ballare” from “The Marriage of Figaro”.
Refres/imenfs are served in the Art Gallery
RACHMANINOFF—Concerto No.4 in G minor. Rachmaninoff &Phila. Orch. Ormandy, Cond.
972........................priCe $4.72
LIBERTY MUSIC SHOPS 15? S2S1SSS iJ!: