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April 26, 1923 - Image 5

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1923-04-26

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THE MIC2HIGAN DAILY

Ift-

:. ..

Il[yturn ofJes" S
cork;s of Gustav Horst,
g9lsh' composer, wh~ich
mo~d at the 1923 May
Hymn of Jesus" de-
ce in the attention of
s here as well as
country. The Amer!-'
of this notable work
the concert Thur.s-day
?, and will be conduct-
oser who. is making a
'oss the Atlantic for
The Chicago Symphony
University Choral'
Moore and Mrs. George
be heard in the work.
e the first "initial per-
the University Choral
's to its credit the
er'e of Eigar's "Carac-
andler the baton of Dr.

Briish co pos r l L SI A]V'IF!r' Weuhler as 'Venus. "Lohengrin" 'tremendous role is world-famous.I
ischedJuled for 7 :30 o'clock Tuiesday Alexander Kipnis as King .Mark, Tyco-
To Appear Rere;U scI h v night with Robert H-utt in tli title dore Lattermann as Kurwenal and!
M 17SICIA N rle. Maric Lorenz-lioellischer as Ottille Metzger as Brangaene coin-
ElIsa, Alexander k phis as the King, plete the list of the principals.
r'>Latternmann as 'rtr aiiiund. ed at C' innell Bros.. Music house in
jiTw l~vecc the mo timportant opera The Festival will close wig,, the Detroit and a large number' have al-
.o:rsinGe4a",cooprain:wth: ready been received from Ann Arbar
....s'\iDas JDeutsches Opernhaus" of, Berlin ,yJ iLi eidns Te;rcsar 11o$
i .solde" at 1:15 o'cloc. On this oc bfr the matinees and $1 to $5 for the
... .have contribute- the singers who casion, Ilsoile will be sung by' Elsa evening performances,.
::::.::" . ." '.,'.,11Doe he omany o teaner-A lseii, a "Swedish soprano who is IftachkdintomltJi
ianOpea Fstial hic opns tseverywhere beinghalds one o h
D~etroit engagement Sunday afternoon ;;reat draniatic sopranos of this gen-
in Orchestra hall with a perfornumuce eratlon. Tristan will be sung by Hemn-me"elso thn fryo toid
or: lumperdiiiek's fairy opera 11, ii rich Knote whosie portrayal of this you ovar.--Adv.
slunrd Gretel1." Most of the priclI
:..: :. ::> .:. pal artists were unfamiliar to Ameni-."w
'~can patrons of music until the" pres-1p
ent season when the brilliant succes-,
ses of these singers at the ManhattanN e d 4 tiOp r ho s in ew Y rk on h m
natonl pomnene.Send for catalog describing over 400 courses in History, English' .
'"I-faenisel ufl( ree"1il egie Mathematics, Chemistry, Zoology, Modern Languages, Economics,
'1,:, 5Getl.wl e ie Philosophy, Sociology, etc., given by correspondence. inquire
o'lc1udy feno how credits earned may be applied on present college program.,
with the following cart: Peter, lien-I
no Ziegler; Gertrude, Ottille Metzger;
=Hacunsel, Lotte Appel; Gretel, Editha+i tiq t I IlL
Fleiscber; the witch, Paul Schwarz;I HOM9 STUDY DEPT. ChICAGO. ILLINOIS a.. . -
thoVO ~sandmnan, Marcella.RoslrRih-- -^
ard Wagner's "Die Meistersinger"
Gustave Holst, director of Morley! which has not been heard in thisi part
Mlusical "college, London. and one of of the country in many years, is billed;j
the most distinguished of British corn- for 7;:15 o'clock Sunday evening with.I
posers, will arrive ini Ann Arbor shoirt-a brilliant cast including Fn~iedenric 1
y 'to direct the American premiere of S o~ sHn aca .Zdra
his elaborate choral work, "The hlyn 'Beckn-:esser, Robert M-utt as WValtbcr=
o2 .ltiu" which will e gve at the, and Alexander Kipni.s as Pogne?. .l.
Thur sday eveivir concert In the May 7 udr.T'or oeck
Festival series. y r,.o 5 nerIur orc~
prom-se a s'uperb performance.
WXagner's "Tantuhuenser" will be
heards at 7:30 o'clo(A Monday evening
Ads ith H einrich Knote as Tannhaeu- A m ndP autMl
~edt1e "'ant, Ads aFe s Allthmad ho oateBars-Ml
-ser, x idrc Sclinrr as Wolfram,
~ ?Mta Sineeyeras Eisaeth nd C oco ae B ars -
i #_

After Every

W.hat we hai
eaten and how it
"agreeing with ui
makes all tU
.., difference in C
world.

"The H:ymn of Jesus" i5 a wvork for
two choruiseq, semi-clw'rus, orchestra,
. piano, and organ and, in keeping with'
Sthec modern tendency, requires about
'25 minutes for performance. 'The con-
elseness of 11he musical expression,
' thq absence of :;oloists, and the many
opportiiies for fine choral effects
are features which conuneud thems-
, s slves to' an audience in these days.
Moover, H1olst has elnnloyedl a new
idiom of choral writing. IHis studio,
in the miusic' and poetry of the East
andl hi., setting of texts unusual1181in
content and ihythmic structure, give.
him an authority and freedom from
hackneyed formulas in choral writ-
ing which is both 'distinctly refresh-j
-'ing andl perfectly in keeping with the
s'pirit of this work. o
The text, of "The Hymn o Jesus"
was trr nslatedl by H-oist from the
°apochdyphal "Acts of St. John". There
is, of course, 'a reminiscence' of the
meter of Greek poetry and of Oriental
mysticilrW both of which are mirror-
ed in the musical' setting. Perhaps
the outstanding effect is one of illn- ,
jsiveness, 'of "divine grace" and "the
jpassion of man that I go to endure."
iThere are toWering4 climaxes, con-
trastedl with. low-lying mnoods of pon-
dering "on' My mysteries;" there is
,F thec graceful dance 'of "thle Heavenly
a-Spheres" and the antiphonal respons-
',c of the 'two choirs so characteristicI
bf early Christian nmsic. Throughout
ithe work runs the melody of an oldl
.tregorian chant and the semi-chorus
Punctuates the text at intervals with
" Amens" of. an unearthly pallor.
~Strikingly original treatment of the
~responses of the muodern orchestra
~characterizes the accompaniment por-
stion of the score.
Hoist's '"I3ymn" has already had
:several, performances in England, the
4nost recent by th Royal Albert Choral
;sciet 'irncler -l( t r ~ectfn of Albert
"Coates, who is well known in America
as one pf' the most distinguished of
"guest ponductors".
The other choral wvork by H-olst to
'be presented is his setting of Walt
Whitman's poem "A Dirge for 'Two
Veterans" for male voices,. brass and
percussion instruments. Trhis num-
ber will engage the entire section of
hie Choral Union and the Glee club,
Tw-o orchestral suites, the Oriental
"Beni Mora" and the group of selec-
tions from the opera "The' Perfect
Pool" will exemplify Hoist's ,genius
in the field of orchestral writing
which has already been recognized in
this .country by the presentations of
his monumental symphony "The Plan-
ets". These ligter works will be hecard
on the Wednesday and Friday evening
programs respectively' and are offered
in pursuance of the traditional poli-
cy of giving at the May Festival the
significant novelties in all branches of
music.l'

i

In work or play, WRIGLE
givets the poise and steadim
that ,meany success.
It- not only helip digest
but allays thirst, keeping
mouth cool and moist,
throat muscles relaxed
pliant and the nerves at e,
WRIGLEYS is the best1
can bwe made and comes to;
wax=wrapped
and sealed to
f kceep it goo a

-4

'THEL
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Cop~'ripbted I9tU. p int's. rh.

F

COLLAR, ATTACHED

Read The- Daily

"Classified",

Columns

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TS

Laisand Gentleme

Complete Assortment of Plain Colors
Peach - Blue- White

AT LAST IT HAS

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Materials

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Oxford and English Cambric

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'DRAMA

THE BEVERAGE ,THAT
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D~odos Present Pliays
Dodos *presented three intcrocting
plays Wednesday night with varied-suc-
cess befo~re an appreciative audience.
Two of th.ein were highly amusing,
while the third 'was a somewhat stir-
ring melodrama.
Coming first was "The Hero", by
John Adams, of tho, rhetoric depart-
ment, anid Reran Lyon, '23E. This
was a mnost laughable burlesque.
Mrs. Alfred Fischer's "A Picture for
.--the Paper" was a mediocre mlelodra-
,_.nia, depending entirely for its suc-
cess upon the intensity of the emotion
it was able to stir within the specta-
tors.
"OdeuY' by NMiriam H1-. Roelofs,
which concluded the program, was an
*amusing farce.

t.
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