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61. Hollywood Bowl - Los Angeles Philharmonic
The composer then arranged for the public premiere to be given by the foremost American violinist of the day, albert spalding (of the rubberball manufacturing
http://www.hollywoodbowl.com/about/piece_detail.cfm?id=429&back=/tix/performance

62. Welcome To Rho Tau!
Gregg Smith. Conductor. John Philip Sousa. Composer and Band Director. Leo Sowerby. Composer. albert spalding. violinist. William Steinberg. Conductor.
http://www.acs.appstate.edu/~pma/famsin.html
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Julian "Cannonball" Adderly Jazz Saxophonist and Band Leader Samuel Adler Composer and Conductor Pasquale Amato Baritone Leroy Anderson Composer Maurice Andre Trumpet Samuel Barber Composer William "Count" Basie Jazz Pianist and Band Leader Harold E. Bauer Pianist Robert Russell Bennet Composer E. Power Biggs Organist David Bispham Bass-Baritone Les Brown Band Leader Charles Wakefield Cadman Composer John Cage Composer Cleofonte Campanini Conductor Andrew Carnegie Philanthropist John Alden Carpenter Industrialist and Composer Enrico Caruso Tenor Eugene Conley Tenor Fredrick S. Converse

63. American Music: Making America More Musical Through The Phonograph, 1900-1930 -
learnedly about them but we are afraid we will never properly appreciate them for instance whenever we hear Mr. spalding violinist albert spalding, it makes
http://www.findarticles.com/cf_dls/m2298/4_16/55849951/p6/article.jhtml?term=

64. Sherry Kloss Plays Forgotten Gems Music By Sergey Rachmaninov, Victor Herbert, C
Victor Herbert, Claude Debussy, Jeno Hubay, Fritz Kreisler, albert spalding, Joseph Achron Like several great violinistteachers from the Heifetz class, Sherry
http://www.memoryhit.com/hitmusic/input_mode=music&input_item=B000003BON

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by: Sergey Rachmaninov Victor Herbert Claude Debussy Jeno Hubay ... Tor Aulin
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Sherry Kloss Plays Forgotten Gems Music Sergey Rachmaninov, Victor Herbert, Claude Debussy, Jeno Hubay, Fritz Kreisler, Albert Spalding, Joseph Achron, Cecil Burleigh, Alfredo d' Ambrosio, Tor Aulin
Average Rating: 5.00
Rating: -
Rating: 5 - Wonderful Collection - Well Worth the Price This is a wonderful collection of the sort of little pieces that used to form the latter part of many violinists' recitals in the early part of the 20th century. They aren't often heard today, and that's a shame. This is a great collection for anyone who loves violin music and likes to hear the violin smile (although it contains a few teary pieces as well). My personal favorite piece on this CD is Jeno Hubay's Zephyr (although I loved many of the others also) and I felt that hearing this one piece was worth the price of the CD. Sherry Kloss does well to express the feeling in each of these little pieces. They aren't all played in the same style she brings out the individual character of each one. Ayke Agus does a fantastic job of accompanying Ms. Kloss at the piano, no doubt due to her familiarity with the pieces. The two of them play as one.

65. Jose Sanchez-Penzo: The Way Famous String Instruments Went - Players
Potter, Tully Brahm s understudy violinist Marie Soldat-Roeger122. spalding, albert American b 15.08.1888 Chicago d 26.05.1953 New York, V, -, 1732, Strad., A.
http://www.jose-sanchez-penzo.net/stPl_S-U.html
Players: (S-U)
(Player section of The Way Famous String Instruments Went
Salerno-Sonnenberg, Nadja
American/Italian
b ..
V General Kyd Strad., A. Remarks: Sammons, Albert
English
b 23.02.1886 London
d 24.08.1957 London
V Guadagnini V Strad., A. V Goffriller V ex Sammons Strad., A. Remarks: Sarasate, Pablo de
Spanish
b 10.03.1844 Pamplona
d 20.09.1908 Biarritz V Boissier Strad., A. V David Guarn. d. G. V ex Sarasate Strad., A. V ex Sarasate Strad., A. Remarks: The Boissier was a gift from the Queen Isabella. He bequeathed his favourite instrument, the ex Sarasate , to the Paris Conservatoire. p 692; Teachers:
  • Sáez, M. R. - Madrid
  • Rodríguez, Manuel - Madrid
  • Alard, Delphin - Paris Conservatoire
Dedicated works:
  • Bruch, Max:Concerto for Viol. and Orch. No. 2
  • Bruch, Max:Schottische Phantasie
  • Dvorak, Antonin:Mazurek, op. 49
  • Joachim, Joseph:Variationen for Violin and Orchestra
  • Laló, Edouard:Symphnie Espagnole
  • Laló, Edouard:Violin Concerto in f minor
  • Saint-Saëns, Camille:Violin Concerto No. 1 A Major, op. 20
  • Saint-Saëns, Camille:Violin Concerto No. 2 C Major, op. 58
  • Saint-Saëns, Camille:Violin Concerto No. 3 h minor, op. 61

66. Lorin Maazel - The Official Website For The Music Director Of The New York Philh
Among its owners was the American violinist albert spalding, who played the instrument for the world premiere of Samuel Barber s Violin Concerto with Eugene
http://www.maestromaazel.com/stradivarius.html
Andrea Bocelli and Maestro Lorin Maazel's Sentimento Interviews with Colleagues From the Music Director's Diary... ... Chateauville Foundation
created by e-businesscreations.com and I mpression PR

67. March 26 Deaths In History - BrainyHistory
in Algeria at 41 March 26, 1994 Jan Bor, Dutch violinist/painter, dies at de Hartmann, composer, dies at 70 March 26, 1953 albert spalding, composer, dies at
http://www.brainyhistory.com/daysdeath/death_march_26.html
BrainyAtlas BrainyDictionary BrainyEncyclopedia BrainyGeography BrainyHistory BrainyQuote BrainyZip History Home
March 26 Deaths in History March 26, 1996 (Elizabeth Cissie) Charlton, football matriarch, dies at 83
March 26, 1996
David Packard, electronic engineer/businessman, dies at 83
March 26, 1996
Edmund S Muskie, vice President candidate/(Gov-D-Maine), dies at 81
March 26, 1996
Thomas Wakefield, writer, dies at 60
March 26, 1995
Rapper-E (Eazy Eric Wright), dies at 31
March 26, 1994
Constantine Koukouchkine, Russ diplomat. murdered in Algeria at 41
March 26, 1994
Jan Bor, Dutch violinist/painter, dies at 83
March 26, 1993
Luis Falco, US choreographer (Fame, Angel Heart), dies at 50
March 26, 1993
Roy Riegels, U of Calif football player who ran wrong way, dies at 84
March 26, 1991
Frans Dohmen, union leader (Netherlands Catholic Mine Workers), dies at 81 March 26, 1990 March 26, 1990 Roy "Halston" Frowick, fashion designer, dies of AIDs at 68 March 26, 1987 Walter Abel, actor (Suspicion), dies at 88 March 26, 1986 March 26, 1983 Anthony F Blunt, British art historian/spy for USSR, dies at 75 March 26, 1982

68. Edward MacDowell
lessons at eight with Juan Buitrago, a Columbian emigré living with the MacDowells (later the teacher of the American violinist, albert spalding), and took
http://www.eroica.com/phoenix/jdt148-emd.html

Back to the

Phoenix Records
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... Edward MacDowell WORKS FOR PIANO performed by Alan Mandel (2-CD set)

Alan Mandel, piano Edward MacDowell
After marrying Marian Nevins, MacDowell settled for about three years (1885-1888) in Wiesbaden where the couple received among other musical friends, George Templeton Strong, Jr., George Whitefield Chadwick, Arthur Foote, and most importantly, Benjamin Johnson Lang, one of the arbiters of musical taste in Boston. Lang subsequently convinced MacDowell to move to the Boston area to pursue his career as a composer, performer, and teacher. He made his American debut in Boston as composer-pianist at a Kneisel Quartet concert at Chickering Hall, November 19,1888 playing three movements from his First Modern Suite and assisting in Goldmark's Piano Quintet in B-flat. On Lang's recommendation, Wilhelm Gericke invited MacDowell to play Ids new Second Piano Concerto, Op. 23, with the Boston Symphony Orchestra in the spring of 1889, but he actually played the work with an orchestra under Theodore Thomas in New York, s Chickering Hall on March 5, 1889, a month before the Boston concerto April 12, The conductor Frank van der Stucken invited MacDowell to play the concerto in a concert of American music at the Paris Exposition Universelle on July 12. From that inaugural year of 1888 to 1896, when he left Boston to accept an appointment as Columbia University's first professor of music, MacDowell's successes as a virtuoso and composer continued unabated. It was during this period that most of the major works on which his reputation as a composer rests were created: Hamlet and Ophelia, Op. 22; Lancelot and Elaine, Op. 25; Six Love Songs, Op. 40; First Orchestral Suite, Op. 42;Sonata tragica, Op.45; Eight Songs, Op. 47; The Indian Suite (Second Orchestral Suite), Op. 48; Sonata eroica, Op, 50; and Woodland Sketches, Op. 51.

69. "Handel"_Concerto_By_Henri_Casadesus
Also contained on this disc is the Sinfonia Concertate in E by WA Mozart, Primrose is joined by violinist albert spalding, conductor Fritz Stiedry, and the the
http://www.geocities.com/Vienna/2107/viola/casadesu.html
"Handel" Concerto by Henri Casadesus
Henri Gustave Casadesus, 1879 to 1947 , was a gifted violist. He was also very interested in rare instruments and found a society in Paris that gave performances on such instrtuments up until the beginning of the second world war. Some of Casadesus' instruments are still in the collection of the Boston Symphony. Becoming something of a "musical diplomat", Casadesus traveled the United States performing in various quartets and orchestras, often with his brothers. One of the things the Casadesus brothers became famous for was debuting 'rediscovered' works of 18th Century composers such as Mozart, C.P.E. Bach, and Handel. At the time, these works were taken at face value, but stylistic analyzation since has revealed that these works were not what they seemed. In fact, during the last few years, evidence has come to light that the Casadesus brothers wrote these pieces themselves! It is worth mentioning that the Casadesus family has never denied these allegations. At any rate, the concerto is a solid, delightful work, displaying the the skills of the preformer well. While it seems unlikely that a concerto would have been written by Handel for such an obscure instrument (in his time!!) as the viola, the work never-th-eless is deeply rooted in the late Baroque/Early Classical style. That is: rigid structure, piano to forte dynamics, and the three movement form. The work was well-recived when it was debuted, though it has dropped from the spotlight in recent times. Its fortunes rallied, however, when the Suzuki method books selected this concerto to complete their Viola Method Book 8 and have since made a recording to bundle with the book.

70. Strings
( 826) $20. Menuhin, Yehudi The Compleat violinist. Summit. 1986. The art of playing ex tempore upon a ground ( 485) $75. spalding, albert Rise to Follow.
http://members.aol.com/mussleuth/strings.htm
Strings
Books Abele and Niederheitmann: . Longwood. 1977. Edition: Reprint of 1952 edition. Condition: VG. "Illustrated and described from many sources; together with a list of Italian and Tyrolese Violin Makers" Alton, Robert: Violin and 'Cello Building and Repairing . Cassell. 1946. Condition: VG, dj. (#1059) Auer, Leopold: Violin Playing as I Teach It . Stokes. 1930. Edition: 10th. Condition: VG. (#409) Brandt, Nat: Con Brio: Four Russians Called the Budapest String Quartet . Oxford. 1993. Condition: VG, dj. (#1024) Broadhouse, John: The Violin: How to Make It . W. Reeves. ca. 1910. Condition: VG. With 47 illustrations and folding plates, plus list of sale prices of old violins Bull, Inez: Ole Bull Returns to Pennsylvania . Exposition. 1961. Edition: 1st. Condition: G/g. (#1918) Chapin, Victor: The Violin and Its Masters . Lippincott. 1969. Edition: 1st. Condition: VG/g. (#1828) Corredor, J. Ma.: Conversations with Casals . Dutton. 1956. Condition: G (some pen markings). (#1294) Ginsburg, Dr. Lev: Tartini: His Life and Times . Paganiniana. 1981. Condition: VG. (#1574) Grimson, S.B. and Cecil Forsyth:

71. Thurmond Knight,Maker Of Violins, Violas And 'Cellos
the violin to Kathleen, seated, while Thurmond and violinist Drusilla Macy of performance from Boston University where she was the albert spalding Scholar and
http://www.violinviolacello.com/MovieStar.htm

Maker of Violins, Violas and Cellos
Movie Star: "Bethany Violin!" MOVIE STAR! One of Thurmond's violins, Bethany stars prominently in the 1999 video "Covered Bridges of New England," produced by Fritz Wetherbee for PBS. As the program opens, viewers are told Thurmond made the violin using wood from the Cornish-Windsor Covered Bridge. What follows is a beautiful serenade on Bethany , played by violinist Victoria Kehler of Concord, NH. Victoria teaches violin and viola at the Concord Community Music School in New Hampshire. The Bethany violin, named in honor of Thurmond's wife, Bethany Greeley Knight, was commissioned in 1990 by Leo Maslan, of Cornish, NH, as an anniversary gift for his wife Kathleen. The violin was presented in 1990 as a surprise gift after an unsuspecting Kathleen was treated to a concert on the Bethany violin by Drusilla Macy, staged at an intimate dinner at a Hartland, Vermont restaurant. Kathleen graciously loaned Bethany to Victoria for the "Covered Bridges" production. Here Leo is presenting the violin to Kathleen, seated, while Thurmond and violinist Drusilla Macy of Barre, Vermont look on.

72. NodeWorks - Stringed: Bowed Strings: Violin: Violinists
The concert violinist s official website. Booking and repertory information; biography and sound samples. thumbnail, 20. spalding, albert Biography of the
http://music.dir.nodeworks.com/Instruments/Stringed/Bowed_Strings/Violin/Violini
in entire NodeWorks Directory in Arts in Music in Instruments in Stringed in Bowed Strings in Violin in ++ Violinists in Classical in Country Folk Fiddle Top Arts Music Instruments ... Violin Violinists Angelis, Kim Includes concert schedule and biographical information. Berger, Sabrina A. Performs on a five-string electric violin. Biography, pictures, recordings, performances, and contact information. Connie's Violin Page Extensive listings compiled by Connie Sunday. Hewitt Jones, Simon Young British violinst's homepage - news, concert listings and biography, plus musical links and comment. Jazz Strings A directory of players and their locations, listed by style. Korsakova, Natasha Biography, repertoire, concerts, recordings, and photo gallery. Markov, Albert - Violinist, Composer, Conductor, Teacher Biography, concert schedule, reviews, photographs, recordings, and contact information. Markov, Alexander

73. NYTweb
featured prominent musicians of the day, including the soprano Anna Case, the baritone Thomas Chalmers, and the violinist albert spalding, performing next to a
http://silvertone.princeton.edu/~nick/nytimes.html
Old Recordings Make a New Mix
New York Times, Sunday, September 8, 2002
by Thomas Staudter
There are enough musical instruments in Nicholas Brooke's small apartment to equip a sizablealbeit motleyorchestra. But the 33-year-old composer is mostly preoccupied these days with recorded music, specifically a 1915 Victrola, one of the first phonographs manufactured. In fact, Mr. Brooke is using the phonograph as an instrument, incorporating snippets of recordings into his work. An interest in recorded music and its relationship to live performance has led Mr. Brooke, recent recipient of a John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation Fellowship award, to embark on a project based on the Edison tone tests, a series of marketing events that were held in the 1910's and early 1920's to promote Edison's diamond disc phonographs. In the tests, blindfolded listeners compared the singing and playing of musicians on a stage to the phonographic reproduction of similar performances. In "Tone Test," Mr. Brooke plans to outfit some musicians with small speakers; others will hold boomboxes as they alternately perform and broadcast the music from several linked compositions that he is writing. Two narrators will interact with the musicians and with an original Diamond Disc phonograph. "I intend my tone test piece to be a cultural commentary on how sound technologies affect how we hear music," Mr. Brooke said. "We usually think of music as a purely sonic phenomenon, yet much of what's interesting to me is the tension between what you see and hear, and whether what you hear and see is faked or not."

74. Music, Correspondence
with other musicians. Notable is a long series of personal letters from violinist albert spalding. Mohr includes autograph notes
http://www.siue.edu/~tdickma/music_correspondence.html
Music, Correspondence
The library holds several collections of letters to, from, and about musicians. In most cases these were assembled as autograph collections, but some represent the personal files of the musicans themselves (cf. Benoist).
Tollefsen
- the extensive Tollefsen autograph collection contains more than 3500 samples of the writing of composers, including Haydn, Brahms, Beethoven, Mozart, etc. Many or most of the samples given are complete letters or notes.
Benoist
- the Benoist collection is primarily composed of the correspondence of Andre Benoist and his son A.S. Benoist with other musicians. Notable is a long series of personal letters from violinist Albert Spalding.
Mohr
- includes autograph notes and letters of hundreds of contemporary European composers.
Stimson
- one letter from Arthur Foote. SIUE LIS Lovejoy Library http://www.siue.edu/~tdickma
Library and Information Services
Southern Illinois University Edwardsville

75. CAMA Los Angeles Philharmonic - Program Notes - 24-APRIL-2004
timpani, strings, and solo violin First Los Angeles Philharmonic performance March 28, 1929, Georg Schnéevoigt conducting, with violinist albert spalding.
http://www.camasb.org/laphil2004.shtml

76. Alumni Reopens
and Nino Martini in an October recital; American violinist Alber spalding in include Jascha Heifetz; Fritz Kreisler; Dave Rubinoff; albert spalding; and Tossy
http://www.music.utk.edu/AlumniReopens copy.html
Alumni Auditorium reopens as performance venue Lily Pons Grace Moore Bette Davis
Barry Sullivan
Playbill Sergei Rachmaninov The curtain is set to rise again on the stage at Alumni Memorial Auditorium this Spring as the School of Music brings entertainment back to the newly renovated venue.
But world-class entertainment is nothing new to the sage boards of Alumni Auditorium. The story and history go back to the early part of the last century.
Originally built in 1933, the Memorial Chapel, as it was initially referred during its planning stages in 1920, was to be devoted to those who went from Tennessee to the service during the Great War and would contain about 2,000 people, be equipped with a fine pipe organ and have a stage whereon the student plays may be given and other exercises of the university held in proper fashion.
In 1926, with funds generated by a tobacco tax initiated by then Tennessee Gov.. Austin Peay and contributions from university alumni, the Alumni Memorial Auditorium came to fruition. It was formally dedicated to the university’s "war dead" during 1934 homecoming activities. A host of university activities soon found a home at Alumni with Commencement moving from Jefferson Hall, and Carnicus, the carnival/circus benefiting athletics and the YMCA, Torch Night and All Sing following.
In addition to these time-honored university traditions, November 1937 featured the "Tennessee Nightingale" Grace Moore returning to her native East Tennessee in her first concert under the auspices of The University of Tennessee The program, according to the papers of Ralph Frost housed in Hoskins Library, was sponsored by the Student-Faculty Entertainment Committee and was a tremendous success, both financially and culturally, with an attendance of 3,911. This resounding turnout by Knoxville and the university community more than indicated a strong desire of the public for other attractions of similar type.

77. Saint Louis Symphony
its first performance in Philadelphia on February 7, 1941; albert spalding performed the Fels had taken it upon himself to sponsor a young violinist from Odessa
http://www.slso.org/0304notes/10-10.htm
SAINT LOUIS SYMPHONY CONCERT NOTES
Peter Oundjian, conductor
Robert McDuffie, violin Dukas
The Sorcerer’s Apprentice Barber Concerto for Violin and Orchestra, Op. 14
I. Allegro
II. Andante
III. Presto in moto perpetuo
Robert McDuffie Intermission
Mussorgsky/ Orch. Ravel Pictures at an Exhibition
Promenade
I. Gnomus
II. The Old Castle III. Tuileries IV. Bydlo V. Ballet of the Chicks in their Shells VI. Samuel Goldenberg and Schmuyle VII. The Market at Limoges VIII. Catacombs – Cum mortuis in lingua mortua IX. Baba-Yaga The Hut on Hen’s Legs X. The Great Gate of Kiev Peter Oundjian is the Edna W. Sternberg Guest Conductor.

78. Walt Disney Concert Hall - Piece Detail
performance March 28, 1929, with soloist albert spalding, Georg Schnéevoigt his long time friend, the composer, conductor, virtuoso violinist, and dedicatee
http://wdch.laphil.com/about/piece_detail.cfm?id=96

79. ArkivMusic Chopin On Violin / Catherine Manoukian, Akira Eguchi
But overall, this wonderful violinist has perfectly captured the excitement and drama inherent in these transcriptionsby Notes Arranged albert spalding.
http://www.arkivmusic.com/classical/album.jsp?album_id=26877

80. ArkivMusic Schumann - Kinderszenen, Op. 15 No 7, Träumerei
Translate this page Renée Chemet, André Benoist, albert spalding, Artur Rubinstein Kochanski, William Murdoch, albert Sammons, Alexander The violinist - Massenet, Brahms, Et Al
http://www.arkivmusic.com/classical/listPage.jsp?&list_id=91&start_list=176

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