U MUSIC SUPPLEMENT *d 6 Swr a I uit mUsic SUPPLEMENT ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, MARCH 19, 1950 FOUR PAGES T-op Talent Combined In 57th May Festih al - 'U' Choral Union! BoastsTradition By DAVIS CRIPPEN You may not notice it, but there's a "tremendous tradition" behind one of the groups performing in this year's May Festival. At least that's a property Chorale Union Associate Conductor Lester McCoy claims for his group-and he has facts to back up his statement. * * * * MORE THAN 15,000 alumni of the Union are spread through all parts of the globe. "You can hardly go into an English speaking center of the World, without finding at least one former Chorale Union member," he declared. Another part of this tradition is the way son follows the footsteps of father and daughter follows those of mother in be- coming Union members. And also granddaughters follow grandmothers: "Just this year two different women among our new members said that their grand- mothers told them to be sure and get in Choral Union, because they'd been in it and had such a good time," McCoy recalled. THE GROUP and its tradition began in a modest way in the fall of 1879-15 years before the first May Festival-when some 3%1 or 40 faculty and townspeople banded together to. perform "The Messiah." Since then the group has grown to its current size of 300 voices. Soon after- its start, students began taking part and they now comprise, McCoy estimated, roughly 60 per cent of the group's membership. Though the chorus only performs the "Messiah" twice each Christmas it appears in the spring festival, keeping the group's tradi- tion untarnished .in an all year effort. * * * * REHEARSALS ARE HELD throughout the school year on Tuesday nights-the night which has been ever since its start 71 years ago, the Union's regular rehearsal time. Then, in addition, there's the specific problem of preparing for the May Festival. "Mister Johnson (Thor Johnson, conductor of the Cincinnati Orchestra who leads the Union in its festival concerts) and I are continually on the lookout for new works," McCoy explained. The two get together, he went on, right after one festival is over and choose the works which will be sung in the next one. * * * * THIS IS DONE so that the University Musical Society will have the chance to get the best possible soloists before they are grabbed for other engagements. "This booking is a complicated businses." Then during th winter McCoy makes a few trips to Cincinnati to confer with Johnson on the works to be performed. That way Johnson doesn't have to "rip anything out" when he arrives for the final rehearsals, McCoy pointed out. ' As May approaches extra rehearsals are added to the Union's schedule, six of them with the 55 piece orchestra maintained by the University Musical Society. May Festival Programs May 45,6,7,1950 "WE MUST HAVE professional polish, or the while of the Philadelphia Orchestra to come with us," McCoy said. When the orchestra does arrive, the Union] rehearsals with it before the performances. ist wouldn't be worth out here and perform holds a series of four CHARLES A. SINK Sink Sends Mess age On Festival Charles A. Sink, director of the University Musical Society, sends May Festival greetings with the following message. "The May Festival is not an isolated event, but represents the culmination of twenty-six major concerts provided by the Univer- sity Musical Society. These are divided into the Choral Union Series, the Extra Concert Series, the "Messiah" Christmas con- certs, the Chamber Music Festival, and the May Festival itself. "Symphonic, choral, chamber music, and solo compositions both vocal and instrumental are in- cluded in a well balanced series of presentations of classical, ro- mantic, and modern literature; and employs the artistic services of distinguished artists and or- ganizations of recognized standing. "This Festival, as will be ob- served by reference to the six programs, will provide an ex- ceptionally rich diet of worthy presentations. The opportunity of attending these concerts in the renovated auditorium addsf much to enjoyment and conven- ience. The foresight of the Board of Regents in providing these attractive resources which serve as artistic stimulants to both audience and performers is to be commended. "The Board of Directors of the Society is grateful to the Regents, to the other officers and the fac- ulty and students of the Univer- sity, as well as to the general pub- lic for their continuous support and patronage. Through the yearsj because of this the Board has been stimulated to greater efforts, to the end that the legend of the Society, 'Ars Longa Vita Brevis' may be reflected in all of their ac- tivities." -Charles A. Sink, President es11 Notice SEASON TICKETS for the May Festival are still available and may be purchased at the ticket office in Burton Memor- ial Tower until March 27. At that time, remaining tic- kets will be broken up and sold for the individual concerts, according to Charles A. Sink, director of the University Mu- sical Society. CONCERTS WILL begin on time. Eveningsat 8:30 and af- ternoons at 2:30 p.m. DOORS WILL BE closed dur- ing the numbers. THE OFFICIAL PROGRAM books containing analyses will be on sale in the lobby before each concert. THURSDAY, MAY 4, 8:30 Eugene Ormandy, Conductor Soloist: Ljuba Welitch, Soprano Overture and Allegro from "La Sultane".......... Couperin-Milhaud "Or sai shi r'onore" from "Don Giovanni" ................ Mozart "Voi Che sapete" from "Marriage of Figaro"............ Mozart Ljuba Welitch Symphony No. 7 in C major, ,x Op. 105......................Sibelius Closing Scene from "Salome".......Strauss Miss Welitch Symphonic Poem, "Death and Transfiguration"................Strauss * * * FRIDAY, MAY 5, 8:30 Thor Johnson, Conductor University Choral Union Soloists : Norma Heyde, Soprano Blance Thebom, Messo-soprano Harold Haugh, Tenor Mack Harrell, Baritone William Primrose, Viola Alexander Hilsberg, Violin William Kincaid, Flute James Wolfe, Piano "Brandenburg" Concerto No. 5 for Piano, Violin, Flute and Strings .... Bach "Don Quichotte a Dulcinee".......... Ravel Mack Harrell Concerto for Viola and Orchestra .... Bartok William Primrose "Magnificat" in D major..............Bach Choral Union and Solists Alice Lungershausen, Harpsichord Mary McCall Stubbins, Organ * * * SATURDAY, MAY 6, 2:30 Alexander Hilsberg and Marguerite Hood, Conductors Festival Youth Chorus Soloist: Jan Peerce, Tenor Overture to "Benvenuto Cellini" ...... Berlioz "The Walrus and the Carpenter" .... Fletcher Youth Chorus Concerto in D major, Op. 77, for Violin and Orchestra ... Nathan Milstein ..Brahms * *' * SUNDAY, MAY 7, 8:30 Eugene Ormandy, Conductor Soloist: Marian Anderson, Contralto "Classical" Symphony in D major, Op. 25..................... Prokofieff Kindertotenlieder ...............Mahler Nun will die Sonnso hell aufgeh'n Nun seh' ich wohl Wenn dein Mutterlein tritt herein Oft denk' ich, sie sind nur ausgegangen! In diesem Wetter, in diesem Braus Two Hispanic Pieces ............ McDonald Jeanne d'arc au Bucher..............Liszt Marian Anderson Symphonic Poem, "The Pines of Rome" .......... Respighi 'SALOME' SENSATION: Welitch To Make Local Debut "No, oh, Dio" from Alceste". ....:...Handel Love Has Eyes..... . .... ... ....Bishop "Enjoy the Sweet Elysian Grove" from "Alceste" .................. Handel Tomb Scene from "Lucia di Lammermoor"..............Donizetti "O Paradiso" from "L'africana" .. Meyerbeer Mr. Peerce Symphony No. 2................Schubert SATURDAY, MAY 6, 8:30 Eugene Ormandy, Conductor Soloist: William Kapell, Pianist Preludeto "Khovantchina" .... Moussorgsky Concerto No. 3 in D minor, Op 30 for Piano and Orchestra .... Rachmaninoff William Kapell Symphony No. 5 in E minor, Op. 64 .................... Tchaikovsky * * * SUNDAY, MAY 7, 2:30 Thor Johnson, Conductor University Choral Union Soloist: Nathan Milstein, Violinist "Schicksalslied" (song of Destiny), Op. 54........................Brahms "The Cycle," Symphony No. 4 for Chorus and Orchestra .. Peter Mennin Choral Union 1* * * THREE OF THE soloists, Ljuba Welitch, Blanche Thebom, and William Primrose, will be heard in Ann Arbor for the first time. Miss Welitch, glamorous Met- ropolitan Opera star, will be heard at the opening concert, Thursday, May 4. She will sing two Mozart Arias, and the clos- ing scene from Strauss "Sa- lome," the role in which she made musical news throughout the country. Blanche Thebom, mezzo-sopra- no, will be heard in the Bach "Magnificat," which she will sing with the Choral Union, under the baton of Thor Johnson. * * * WILLIAM PRIMROSE, one of the world's most outstanding violaE players, will play the Bartok Viola Concerto, written especially for Mr. Primrose by the composer. Other distinguished artists will include Marian Anderson, con- tralto; Jan Peerce, tenor; Mack Harrell, baritone; - Nathan Mil- stein, violinist; Norma Heyde, soprano; Harold Haugh, tenor; Alexander Hilsberg, violinist; William Kincaid, flutist; William Kapell, oianist, and James Wolfe, pianist. The Philadelphia Orchestra will participate in all six concerts of the Festival. Eugene Ormandy will conduct three performances; Thor Johnson (conductor of the Cincinnati Orchestra) will conduct two concerts; and Alexander Hils- berg, Associate Conductor of the Philadelphia Orchestra and Mar- guerite Hood who conducts the Festival Youth Chorus, will par- ticipate in one program. THE SECOND half of the pro- gram on Thursday night, will be dedicated to the memory of Rich-. ard Strauss, who died last fall; while the major portion of the Fri- day night concert will be made up of compositons by Johann Se- bastian Bach in commemoration of his 200th anniversary. The Saturday night program will be all Russian - including works by Moussergsky, Rach- maninoff and Tschaikowsky. Several symphonies will be heard - Sibelius No. 7, Schu- bert No. 2, Tschaikowsky No. 5, and the Prokofieff "Classical" Symphony; and four concertos - Bartok Concerto for Viola and Orchestra; Rachmaninoff's No. 3; Brahms' Violin Concerto and the Bach "Brandenburg" No. 5. * * * THE UNIVERSITY Choral Un- ion of 300 voices will perform Bach's "Magnificat" Friday eve- ning and at the Sunday afternoon concert will sing Brahms' Song of Destiny and a contemporary chor- al work by Peter Mennin entitled "The Cycle." Numerous other operatic arias are programmed, as well as or- chestral works - Ormandy bring- ing the Festival to a close on Sun- day with a performance of Res- pighi's "Pines of Rome." Musical Society's Annual Program Stars 13 Soloists Philadelphia Symphony Orchestra, Two Choruses Included in Schedule With a host of repeat favorites and three new soloists, the Uni- versity Musical Society will present the 57th performance of its world famous May Festival on May 4, 5, 6, and 7 in Hill Auditorium. Climaxing the Ann Arbor musical season, the Festival will in- clude 13 soloists, 2 choral groups, 4 conductors and the Philadelphia Orchestra. * * * PRIESTESS OF SONG: Marian Anderson Sings At Final Festival Concert Appearing for the second time in two years at Ann Arbor, con- tralto Marian Anderson will sing with Eugene Ormandy and the Philadelphia Orchestra in the last May Festival concert at 8:30 p.m., Sunday at Hill Auditorium. Climaxing a season of 26 con- certs this year, Miss Anderson has appeared in more than 750 con- certs before some 4,000,000 listen- ers in nearly 300 cities. She has sung eight times in Ann Arbor. ** * MISS ANDERSON made her de- but in 1926 with the New York Philharmonic in Lewisohn Stadi- um, but it wasn't until 1935 when she returned from a successful European tour that she won the heart of America, who called her the "priestess of song."s Last summer marked her first overseas tour since the war, in which she performed to sold-out t. houses in eight countries. On her return to this country she won a citation as radio's fore- most woman singer for the sixth consecutive year in the Musical America poll of 600 editors in the United States and Canada. Amongimany citations and hon- ors from countries all over the world, she has received three Hon- orary Doctorates of Music and is represented in a mural in the Department of Interior in Wash- ington commemorating her Easter Sunday concert in 1939 before 75,- 000 at the Lincoln Memorial. MISS ANDERSON'S first sing- ing was in a church choir in her Red-haired Ljuba Welitch, the new sensation of the Metropolitan Opera, will be the featured soloist at the first of the May Festival concerts. Miss Welitch, whose name in her native Bulgarian means "great love" is making her first U.S. tour after her triumphal debut last year in Strauss' "Salome" at the Metropolitan. THE LATEST "Lady of the Sev- en Veils" has had a hard but re- warding climb to the heights of her profession. Pushed by an am- bitious sister, she left her family farm at an early age to study both violin and voice. After two years at the state university in Sofia she abandon- ed the violin to concentrate on voice training. Three more years of hard study prepared her to make her debut at the Graz Opera House as Nedda in "Pag- liacci." From there she went on to cap- tivate audiences in the leading capitals of Europe. She was sing- ing at Covent Garden when she caught the eye of Edward John- son, Metropolitan Opera general manager. She so impressed him that he immediately contracted her for the New York company. * * * COMBINING true artistry with a primma-donna-like tempera- ment, Miss Welitch has been a source of delight to critics and other divas alike. "It is many moons since any MARIAN ANDERSON or doing countless other services here and abroad, Miss Anderson enjoys her farm in Connecticut, where neighbors dubbed her "The denim belle of Fairfield County" for working in her garden in home-made dungarees. Miss Anderson finds time to re- cord wherever she's been with a miniature candid camera LJUBA WELITCH . ..to sing "Salome" * * * of us have thrilled to such a masterful combination of sing- ing and acting," sighed Gerald- ine Farrer. New York Tribune mujsic critic Virgil Thompson hailed her as "one of the few perfect singers who has come to the Met in recent years." But climbing the heights of op- eratic success has meant long, lonely hours of labor. "I'm a hard working woman. I don't have time even for hobbies, much less mar- riage," Miss Welitch explained. * * * THE PHILADELPHIA Orchestra under the baton of Eugene Or- mandy will back Miss Welitch's performances of selections from operas by Mozart and Strauss. In the same concert, the orchestra will also perform works by Sibelius, Couperin-Milhaud and another ef- fort by Strauss. The two Strauss works will form the second half of the con- cert and have been programmed together as a memorial to the Austrian composer who died last year. Miss Welitch will sing the final scene from "Salome," and the orchestra will perform the symphonic poem, "Death and Transfiguration." Strauss, born in Munich, Ger- many in 1864, before his death was acclaimed by critics as a mas- ter of the dramatic forms of op- era and ballet. * * * HE LIVED in a period of musi- cal romanticism, and like his con- temporaries, his symphonic poems and opera are noted as pieces of imaginative naturalism. "Salome," his first operatic success, was ac- claimed for its impressionism as well as its realism. Miss Welitch's conception of "Salome" brought her 25 curtain calls in her New York debut. Her recording of the opera's final scene has been acclaimed as one of the finest of the year by a weekly na- tional magazine. Keeping these facts in mind, it isn't any wonder that Ann Arbor concertgoers have already started licking their musical chops in an- ticipation of the opening concert of the May Festival. Old Favorites Will Conduct Hill Concerts Four Directors To Take Podium Four perennial favorites will once again conduct in this year's May Festival. Eugene Ormandy, director of the Philadelphia Orchestra, Alexand- er Hilsberg, associate director, Thor Johnson, conductor of the University Musical Society, and Marguerite Hood, director of the Youth Chorus will mount the Hill Auditorium podium. EUGENE ORMANDY Conductor Ormandy began his career as a violinist in Budapest where he entered the Royal Aca- demy at the ageof five. - Among his public appearances as a vio- linist was one before Emperor Franz Josef. * * *' HIS AMERICAN DEBUT was humble and unheralded - as a member of a New York movie palace orchestra. He soon progres- sed to concertmaster and substi- tuted as conductor of the orches- tra. In 1931 he was invited to head the Minneapolis Symphony, a post which he accepted and kept for five years, 'frequently ap- pearing as guest conductor of the Philadelphia Orchestra at the same time. In 1936 Ormandy was named to his present position as co-conduc- tor of the Philadlephia Orchestra. THOR JOHNSON Thor Johnson, conductor of the Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra will make his traditional return to Ann Arbor to conduct the Chor- al Union in two works: Bach's "Magnificat," and Peter Mennin's "The Cycle." UNIVERSITY alumni and con- ductor of the University Musical Society since 1940, Johnson or- ganized the Little Symphony and served as Choral Union conductor in 1938. He entered the University to work on a masters degree in 1934. Awarded a two-year scholar- ship for study abroad, he first served as a faculty member of the School of Music. After studying with Bruno Walter and Felix Weingartner in Europe he returned as assistant professor of music. Now completing his third season with the Cincinnati Symphony, Johnson returns each year to di- rect the Choral Union in the May Festival. w * * ALEXANDER HILSBERG Associate conductor of the Phil- adelphia group since 1945 Alex- ander Hilsberg was born in Noland and came to the States via the orient. He went to Siberia in 1917 to. teach at Tomsk after receiving his musical education at the Imperial Conservatory in St. Petersburg. At the same time he formed a string quartet which played for both oriental and Eur- onean audiences in China. TOUR GAINS EUROPEAN PLAUDITS: Philadelphia Orchestra Appears in All Concerts ---- The Philadelphia Orchestra, once praised as "the world's great- last year at the May Festival, the Philadelphia Orchestra went on a little speech, saying, "We have no encore material with us." High point of the tour was a command performance for SOLOISTS INCLUDED pianists Eileen Joyce and Jose Iturbi, and As the house lights were lowered Iturbi said: "Well, Gene, it's been