SUNtAi, SEPTEMEt 28, 1947 Westminster Choir To Sing Here in First Postwar Tour THE MICHIGAN DAILY VAt't I I tm jw -M IIW N- Westminster Choir, a distin- guished concert group of 40 voices will appear here Nov. 24 in Hill Auditorium during its first trans- continental tour since the war. The choir is famed for its rich choral music. Its repertoire in- cludes the works of contemporary Musician Is Member of Big Bassoon Clan The Cincinnati Symphony Or- chestra boasts a representative of "Thie World's Largest Bassoon Family," as part of its personnel. Leo Reines, who takes turns on the basoon and contra-bassoon in the orchestra, has four brothers and three nephews who are also bassoonists. Each of them is serv- ing, or has served with the great- est orchestras in the country. The father, Morris Reines, was for many years with Walter Dam- rosch in the New York Symphony Orchestra. 'A brother, Philip, is bassoonist with the New York Philharmonic. Another brother, Abe, who was formerly bassoonist with the Cleveland Symphony Or- chestra, has been the bassoonist in the Symphony Orchestra of the National Broadcasting Company. Not only the bassoonist, but other members of this orchestra have interesting stories. Many of them play on instruments of great value. Otto Brasch, violist, has a Tes- tore viola, made in 1745, that for- merly was owned by the late Eu- gene Ysaye, the great Belgian virtuoso. Fritz Bruch owns a very un- usual 'cello. The back and sides of the instrument were made by Stradivarius and the front by Jean Baptist Guadanini, another famous violin maker. Bruch con- cludes that the two valuable in- struments must have been dam- aged and the 'front of one and the back of the other reassembled. The instrument at one time be- longed to Hausmann, 'cellist of the famous Joachim Quartet of the era of Brahms and Wagner. The viola of Herman Goehlich, assistant principal of the viola section, was made in 1715 by the Venetian violin maker, Franciscus Gobetti. It is known as the "Ti- tian Viola" because of its rich coloring. , composers, spirituals, Indian and American folk songs, the master- pieces of Bach, Beethoven and Brahms, as well as the traditional beauty of church music. Volunteer Choir Frst organized to serve as the volunteer choir of the Westmin- ster Presbyterian Church of Day- ton, 0., the group has retained its original name although it is no longer a church choir but the professional touring unit of West- minster Choir College. The college, which is located in Princeton, N. J., is a non-sectar- ian musical college founded by Dr. John Finley Williamson, who is also founder and conductor of the choir. In contrast to the present high- ly trained personnel of the group, chosen annually from the student body of the college, the members of the first choir were business men and women and housewives who devoted their leisure hours to singing under the direction of Dr. Williamson, then minister of music at the Westminster Church. Fame Grows As the fame of this group's choraltsinging spread it was called upon to sing at an increasing number of meetings and gather- ings, and in 1921 undertook its first tour. To provide training that would meet his high stand- ards, Dr. Williamson founded the Westminster Choir College. Believed to be the only school of its kind in the world, its stu- dents have come from all reli- gions, and every part of the Unit- ed States. Admittance is based solely on qualifications of voice, musicianship and physical stam- ina. National Tours Since its initial tour, the West- minster Choir has sung through- out the United States and Can- ada and made two European tours that have included England, Scot- land, France, Austria, Norway, Jugoslavia, Czechoslovakia, Hun- gary and Russia. In the past six years the choir has made 86 orchestral appear- ances with major symphony or- chestras including the Philadel- phia Orchestra, New York Phil- harmonic, NBC Symphony and the Rochester Philharmonic. Motion pictures have contribut- ed in popularizing the work of the choir. At the request of Walt Disney the group participated in the filming of "Fantasia." BOSTON SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA--Under Serge Koussevitzky, the orchestra will present a concert Dec. 8, as part of the Sixty-Ninth Annual Choral Union Series.. MYRA HESS CONCERT: English Pianist Will Present Program Here in January Acknowledged as one of the foremost pianists of the day, Myra Hess will appear in concert here Jan. 10. The English pianist has won recognition by the depth of her interpretations rather than by her In 1936 her services to music in England and abroad were recog- nized by the late King George V, who made her Commander of the Order of the British Empire, a distinction never before awarded an instrumentalist. Miss Hess made her American debut in New York in 1922. Her tours became an annual event un- til they were interrupted by the war. She considers it "a joy to play to American audiences. So many people on both sides of the Atlan- tic think that the bulk of the concert-going public only likes so- called popular music and that suc- cess can only be won by playing programs which make a quick ap- peal, but my experience is en- tirely to the contrary," she said. People Want Classics Miss Hess feels that the great music classics are most appreciat- ed and enjoyed everywhere. "It is we artists who train the public, they trust us and we owe it to them to respect that trust. "I love America, the breadth of the country, geographically and in its infinite variety of people. Everywhere I go, in places large and small, I find a nucleus of culture that knows and loves the great classics. The spontaneity of the audiences and their freshness of outlook is of the greatest in- spiration to a performer" The first program of the Boston' Symphony Orchestra, dated Octo- ber 22, 1881, is still preserved by the orchestra. Included in the program were works by Beetho- ven, Gluck, Haydn, Schubert, Bruch and Weber. Soloist at the concert was Annie Louise Cary. Society Backs Building Fund Hill Auditorium, where all the concerts will be presented, was constructed from funds be- queathed to the University by the late Arthur Hill. Ignace Jan Paderewski pro- nounced it "the finest music hall in the world." For many years it was so regarded. At the present time, however, the auditorium can no longer ade- quately serve its original purpose. The University Musical Society is asking that "other public-spirited citizens . . . would . . . like to pro- vide funds for a new auditorium, equipped in all respects to meet present-day needs." Backgrounds Of Orchestral 'Homes' Vary Symphony orchestras appearing in Ann Arbor in the Choral Union and Extra Concert series have as their "homes" many interesting and unique buildings. The Minneapolis Symphony Or- chestra is located on the campus of the University of Minnesota in the Northrop Memorial Audito- rium. From the modern orchestra' shell, the orchestra plays to an audience largely composed of Uni versity of Minnesota students who receive special rates because of the proximity of the orchestra. The Boston Symphony's famed Orchestra Hall had a counterpart in the former home of the Min- neapolis Symphony which was patterned on the same lines.The orchestra performed there for 25 years until they moved to their permanent home on the Minne- sota campus. Other interesting "homes" in- clude the Chicago Symphony's Orchestra Hall, erected by popular subscription to which over 8,500 persons contributed, Cincinnati's Music Hall which houses complex recording machinery and a large record library as well as the or- chestra, and the Cleveland Or- chestra's Severance Hall, dedi- cated in 1931. Set Svanholm, Swedish tenor of the Metropolitan Opera Company will make his first Ann Arbor ap- pearance at 8:30 p.m. Nov. 14 at Hill Auditorium. He made his American debut as Lohengrin with the San Francisco Opera in Sept., 1946 and his Met-I ropolitan Opera debut as Siegfried? later in the same year. Although already widely known as a Wagnerian tenor. SvanholmI has also sung in Verdi's "Aida" and "Othello" and "Pagliacci," "Trovatore" and "Carmen." Educated at Sweden's Royal Conservatory, Svanholm sang with the Royal Opera, taught at the Conservatory and was choir director of a church near the opera house. Concert Tours He has sung in many European cities including an appearance in Vienna with the noted Bruno Walter and a concert at the Wag- ner shrine at Bayreuth. In the United States, Svanholm has appeared with orchestras and in concerts in Los Angeles and Dallas, and was heard in joint concerts with Regina Resnik, of the Metropolitan, in Havana, Cuba. Favorite Role Although not superstitious, Svanholm likes "Lohengrin" in which he made his American de- but and makes a practice of eating an apple after every performance. He consumed a dozen apples in Metropolitan dressing rooms after four Tristans, three Siegfrieds, two Aidas, one Meistersinger, one Walkure and one Parsifal. His concert here will mark the fourth in the 1947-48 Choral Un- ion concert series. WAGNERIAN EXPERT: Swedish Tenor Will Appear Here in Choral Union Series SET SVANHOLM I . f NEEDED-A LARGER AUDITORIUM MYRA HESS superb technique alone. Her pure musicianship, expressed through a personality which charms her au- diences by its selflessness, exem- plifies true art. Debuit With Beecham Miss Hess was born in England and made her debut at an or- chestra concert with Sir Thomas Beecham. The debut aroused such enthusiasm that she was at once engaged by the leading orchestras. Since her debut, her career has been a succession of triumphs. was iconstructed HILL A U D I T OR I U M from funds be- queathed to the University by the late Arthur Hill, a loyal and generous son of Michigan, more than thirty-five yearsago. Ignace Jan Paderewski pro- nounced it "the finest music hall in the world." For a long time it was so regarded. With the passage of years, however, the auditorium has long since lost this distinction. With the growth of the University and the widespread advance in musical culture and appre- ciation, it no longer adequately serves its original purpose. The University Musical Society hopes, and be- lieves, that there are other public-spirited citizens who would like to provide funds for a NEW AUDITOR- IUM, equipped in all respects to meet present-day needs. Such a building with increased capacity would make possible the presentation of musical programs of greater magnitude, including grand opera in its best tradition. It would serve as an outstanding edu- cational and cultural factor, and would also bring to the University many alumni, interested friends, and the public in general who are desirous of hearing the best programs under favorable conditions. .J ARS LONGA VITA BREVIS I - I Second Annual' I Sn li XT IA SE I Eii 1947-48 'il I 4 I Patrice Munsel, Soprano October 18 Alexander Brailowsky, Pianist March 10 * !, George Szell, Conductor The Cleveland Orchestra - November 9 I I- PATRICE MUNSEL, Soprano October 18 0 0 0 0 $ 0 0 0 0 CLEVELAND ORCHESTRA, George Szell, Conductor - .November 9 \ .: II II I t: ' I ,,I