I THE MICI IGAN DAILY 'nthusiastic Response Given 1941 Ten-Concert Choral Series Sij4 Predicts Every Concert Will Be Sellout Heavy Advance Demand For Tickets Reported; Moore To Open series (Continued from Page 1) ginski, and the Chicago, under Fred- prick Stock, will be heard Sunday afternoons. The Boston Symphony under Serge Koussevitzky and the Minneapolis Orchestra, conducted by Dimitri Mitropoulos, will provide mu- §ic for two of the ten concerts. Grace Moore To Open Grace Moore, Dixie's contribution to the musical world, will make her Ann Arbor debut on Oct. 22. ' Her appearance will open the series. Emanuel Feuermann, violoncellist, v~l be featured in the second con- cert Oct. 30. This celebrated artis has' appeared under the batons of Toscanini, Artur Nikisch, Fritz Busch, PIerre Monteux, Bruno Walter and 'elix Weingartner. Artur Rodzinski and the Cleveland Orchestra will appear here for the thirai concert Nov. 9. Its programs range through symphonic master- pieces of all periods and it services are continually sought by major mu- sic centers throughout the count7y. A joint recital by Giovanni Marti- nqlli, tenor, and Ezio Pinza, bass, is sdheduled for Nov. 18. Both artists are well-known in Ann Arbor. Mar- tinelli has been apearing at fre- quent intervals during the past quar- ter of a century, while Pinza has been heard several times in recent years Chicago Orchestra To Appear The Chicago Symphony Orchestra, under the baton of Frederick.Stock, Will be heard Sunday afternoon, Nov. -b. This orchestra, founded by The- Wdore Thomas in 1891, is the third oldest 'in the country.. Under Fred- erick Stock it has continuously ranked among the relatively few top- notch orchestras of the period. .Serge Koussevitzky and the Boston Symphony Orchestra will make their annual journey to Hill Auditorium on Dec. 10. Immediately following Christmas Vacation, Robert Casede-" sus, renowned French pianist, will appear Jan. 10 in a concert. On Feb. 3, Dimitri Mitropoulos and the Minneapolis 'Symphony Orches- tra will present the eighth concert. ° oseph Szigeti, famous Hungarian violin virtuoso, will appear at Hill Auditorium Feb. 19. The Choral Union Series will con- clude March 3 with a concert by Vronsky-Babin, popular duo-piano team now in their third season. Cellist Termed 'Finest Artist' Feuermann Made Debut With Vienna Orchestra Emanuel Feuermann, who will ap- pear in the Sixty Third Annual Chor- al Union Concert Series on Oct. 30 in Hill Audtorium, has been pro- lwunced by leading musical authori- ties to be one of the foremost of liv- Sng musicians. Feuermann, the greatest cellist now on the concert stage, has been pmaying publicly since he was 11 years old. At present he' is an American citizen, but he was born into a family of gifted musicians in Austria. He made his debut at eleen with the Vienna Symphony Orchestra un- der Feliz Weingartner.. At sixteen he became professor at the Conserv- atory of Music in, Cologne and later headed the cello department of the fapous Berlin Hgchschule for Musik. Feuermann made his American de- but in X934 as guest soloist witch the New York Philharmonic Symphony Orchestra under Bruno Walter. This appearance, together with his ensu- ing recitals, created a tremendous stir, critics pronouncing him "one of the greatest living virtuosos" and placing him on a par with the inim- itable Casals. Cady Founded Society- Choral Union Is Result Ann Arbor and the University owe much to Calvin B. Cady. He came to the city for the first time in 1879, coincident with the founding of the Choral Union and the University Musical Society. Under him the chorus grew from a small group of singers to a sizable body which presented important choral programs from time to time. He served until 1888. Gradually greater musical interest developed and the size of the chorus increased until better prepared pro- grams were offered. Finally import- ant soloists and musical groups from Famous Conductors Will Appear Here French Pianist Is Conductor's Soloist Choice Robert Casadesus, renowned French Pianists Yronsky, s Babin Are Famed For Taste Accord Russian-born pianists Vitya Vron- sky and Victor Babin can attribute' Martinelli Is Recital Artist As Well As Operatic Star The greatest tenor of the Metro- politan Opera, Giovanni Martinelli, is one of the best loved as well as the most distinguished of that as- semblage--but he is also a recita] artist. The great demand for his operatic appearances curtails Martinelli's con- cert activities, but his gifts are by zio means confined to opera, hip 1 voice adapting itself with ease to the concert repertoire, pianist, has not been called "as com- their success as a duo-piano team plete a musician as he is a pianist" to their perfect accord in tastes and SERGE KOUSSEVITZKY * * * IMVITI I VTOPOULOS for nothing. Virtuoso, technician, composer, this artist was born of a famous French musical family, won highest honors at the Paris Conservatory and, after a triumphant series of European tours, made his American debut in 1935. Toscanini immediately invited him to play with his orchestra the fol- lowing season.I With repeated visits to this coun- try, Robert Casedesus has done the seemingly impossible-each season improving on his own mature and brilliant musicianship. He is inevit- ably the conductor's choice for solo- ist and has the rare record of five seasons as soloist with the New York Philharmonic Symphony. The Department of Commerce is seeking sources of essential oils for- merly imported from countries with- in the war area. temperament. It was as fellow-students in Ber- lin that the two met. With their marriage, they renounced their sep- arate carers to create a glowing art of their own. Vitya Vronsky followed the courses at the Conservatory in Kiev before she made her first concert tour as solo pianist at the age of fifteen. In Berlin she continued her studies un- -der such masters as Artur Schnabel, meanwhile concertizing in the prin- cipal European capitals. After the Russian Revolution, Ba- bin also went to Berlin to study piano under Artur Schnabel and composi- tion under Franz Schreker. It was then they combined their talents. Stocks of flour at producing and consuming centers in China are larg- er than usual, the Department of Commerce reports. SALES Civil War veteran Is Power Behind Serge Koussevitzhyi Minneapolis Orchestra Is I of the past in addition to the best Now In ,39th Season in modern works, both European and - It es domestic. As Middle West Asset Besides its classical interpretations, the Boston Symphony has done much' A wounded Civil War veteran to dispell the Puritan bluenose myth stands behind Dr. 'Serge Koussevitzky with its "pop" concerts. At a sev- at the baton of the Boston Symphony enty-five cent top, popular classics Orchestra. are presefited in Boston's Symphony Sixty-one years ago, two years af- Hall, transformed into a listen-and- ter the founding of the University dine night spiot. Musical Society, Major Henry Lee Middle West Asset Higginson brought together sixty dis- Contraisting in its background but tinguished musicians to give Boston not in quality of presentation, the a concert orchestra which has sinc Minneapolis Symphony Orchestra is become world-famous. 'Thwarted by beginning its thirty-ninth season as war injuries from becoming a per- a cultural asset to the Middle West. forming musician, Major Higginson Its Ann Arbor Choral Union engage- personally bore all expenses until the ment is only part of a comprehensive orchestra inaugurated its first series schedule which includes a long home of concerts on October 22, 1881. season in addition to extensive \na- History Of Advance tion-wide tours. The history of the Boston Sym- Under the leadership of himitri phony Orchestra has been one of con- Mitrcpoulos, the, Minneapolis Sym- tinual advance, both in its size and phony has been built up into one of the fame of its performers. Dr. Kous- Anerica's most important ensemble sevitzky, conductor for more than bodies. Mr. Mitropolous is also well- fifteen years, is the most recent of a known throughotu the nation, serv- number of great conductors dating ing as guest conductor with many back to Georg Hensche. leading orchestras including the New This earliest of America's sym- York Philharmonic-Symphony. phony orchestras excells its distin- Second Time Here gfished standing only by its versa- Although the Boston' Symphony tility. Dr. Koussevitzky's repertoire has been playing Choral Union en- includes the great master composers gagements for the past twelve years, F_ _ _ - - 1941 marks the second time that Mr. Mitropoulos's group has appeared Popular Ezio Pinza here. Its debut last year was so en- - . thusiastically received that its ileturn Combine-s Cha r is almost in the nature of a demand With Great VoicP enMr. Mitropoulos is not the first conductor of the Minneapolis Sym- Dynamic Ezio Panza is today at the phony, but he has easily been the peak of his art--one of the world's most instrumental irk raising it to its greatest and most popular singers. present position.fts contributions With a rich basso voice that is ap- to the culture of America have been propriately termed a "musician's such that equally-important contri- voice," Pinza has risen to unprece-, butions from private citizens have dented vocal heights. annually provided for its mainte- On the concert.stage, Pinza is the nance. rare artist who combines unusual personal charm and good looks with . Rabin Praised a truly great voice. With each suc-Vronsky, ceeding season, he inspires new su- For Piano Interpretation perlatives from the press and con- stantly soldout houses. Of Vronsky and Babin, famed duo- Born in Rome, he abandoned a piano team which appear in this career as civil engineer to study year's Choral Union Series, the New music, and enrolled at the Univer- York Times had this to say: sity of Bologna for vocal training. "In varying degrees other teams He sang three years at La Scala, have achieved notable results in their where he was leading basso under the collaboration, but none heard by this baton of Toscanini, before Gatti Cas- reviewer seems so perceptive of the azza signed him for the Metropolitan medium's possibilities as do Vronsky Opera Company. and Babin." - TYPEWRITER S are our Specialty RENTALS Call 3955-We Deliver Ball & Thrasher " 6verything for the Office" 20! SOUTH FOURTH AVENUE ATTENTION FRI- S HMEN!1 for your information! THE MICHIGANENSIAN offers you Your year at Michigan, in 450 pages; A record of everything on campus. An opportunity to save $1.50 by ordering your dopy right away. 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