SUNDAY, OCTOBER 2,'1955 THE MICHIGAN DAILY p SUNDAY. OCTOBER 2, 1955 THE MICHIGAN DAILY I Singer Adds New Twist To Success When the young soprano, Teresa Stich-Randall, returns to her na- tive United States in the spring of 1956, she will be appearing in important engagements as an art- ist celebrated for her artistic con- quests in Europe. For, with this reverse twist to the success of a young American singer, Miss Stitch-Randall is one of the leading sopranos of the Vienna State Opera, a star about whom one Viennese music critic recently wrote, "her voice is for us one of the most beautiful and most promising of today." Although she first studied in the U.S. and after her professional de- but achieved a number of out- standing successes, she went to Europe, where during the past sev- eral years she had been in constant demand in concert, opera, radio and leading music festivals. Born in Connecticut Born in West Hartford, Con- necticut, Miss Stitch-Randall is a graduate of the Hartford School of Music, where she was a scholarship student for six years. Her success as a performing art- ist began at the early age of 15 when she sang the title role of "Aida." Then in New York she performed the role of Gertrude Stein in the world premiere of the Virgil Thomson-Stein opera, "The Mother of Us All." She also created the title role in the American premiere of Er- nest Bloch's "Macbeth" and of Mehul's "Stratonice." She sang for several seasons with the New Lyric Stage touring opera com- pany and with some of the coun- try's leading orchestras,, among them the NBC Symphony under the baton of Toscanini. First Prize at Lausanne In 1951 the gifted young soprano was awarded, by unanimous deci- sion of the judges, first prize in the "Concours International for Opera Singers" in Lausanne, Switzerland. That same season she emerged one of the winners of the "Geneve Concours" in Geneva. She sang concert and radio engagements in Switzerland and Italy, but it was in Austria that she had he biggest European triumph. That was at the Salzburg Fes- tival in 1952, where she was the "artistic event of a Mozart mati- nee" under the baton of the fam- ous Prof. Paumgartner. Because of that last success Miss Sticn-Randall . was immediately engaged by the Vienna State Opera, where she has been one of its stars, performing as Gilda, Pamina, Constanza, Mimi, Antonia, Sophie, Micaela and Manon. PHENOMENAL MEMORY: Gieseking Needs No Practice Cleveland Symphony Gains Heights Under Szell's Baton in a day and country where the use of the superlative is common- place, the practice of referring toE a musical entertainer without thet use of an adjective before hisl name is unheard of. There are many concert pianistsl who are spoken of as great. In the case of Walter Gieseking, however, there is along respected back- ground which has indisputably earned him the reputation of be- ing one of the world's top ranking pianists. Not long after leaving his native city of Lyons at the age of 16, Gieseking's formal musical train- ing ended, with the advent of the First. World War, where many musician's have barely begun. Living in Germany with his par- ents, he studied at the Hanover Conservatory for only five years. While a student there, he perform- ed the entire 32 sonatas of Beet- hoven at six concerts. Never Practices Following that early and short period of training, Gieseking has never since found it necessary to' devote long hours to practicing scales, chordshor arpeggios. His unique musical talent and amazing power of mental applica- tion have enabled him to commit to memory millions of musical notes - the full scores of 24 con- certos for orchestra, several hun- dred sonatas and 1000 shorter piano pieces. As a matter of fact, he ex- plains with a laugh that he never practices when he is on a concert tour because, he says, "I have to rest my fingers. Concerts and practice would be too much." After a compulsory two year stint of duty in the German army in World War I, during which period he was assigned to play several instruments in dance and symphony orchestras, Gieseking was compelled to earn money. He taught piano and out of that experience evolved theories of training which, in cooperation with his former conservatory instructor, Karl Leimer, became known as the Leimer-Gieseking Method. Soon afterwards, the Franco- German launched himself on the cionados was such that his Car- negie Hall recital was sold out one day after the box office opened. During the interim years, Giese- king had other successful tours in the U.S. and throughout the world. Since World War II alone he has performed in Japan, Australia, South America, Singapore, the West Indies, Turkey, France, Italy, Germany, Portugal, Great Britain, Scandinavia, Belgium, Holland and Switzerland. When he returned to tour the United States after a 16 year absence, his concerts were sell- outs in almost every city in which he appeared. He received the wildest critical and popular acclaim from coast to coast. "Genius, of course, is the only word for Gieseking," wrote Albert Goldberg in the Los Angeles Times. Review Exerpts And reflecting sentiments ex-. pressed elsewhere, the Boston Herald's Rudolph Elie wrote: " . . .so elevated is his art, so noble and communicating the es- sence of his aesthetic, it almost seems a mundane insolence to mention his technique at all. "For the art of Walter Gieseking is the achievement of that musical nirvana in which technique, like the consummate technical mastery of a Picasso or a Dylan Thomas in the materials of their expression, is a secondary phenomenon. "Here was a supreme musical artist at work in music, and from the moment he appeared until he left the stage for the last time no one could for a moment doubt it." There are many thousands of people who feel that it is not nec- essary to sing out Gieseking's praises hysterically, that it is enough to listen and to be thank- ful for the privilege of hearing him play. Now in his tenth season as mu- sical director and conductor of the Cleveland Orchestra, George Szell has brought the group to a new peak in its development, so that it now ranks, in the words of Olin Downes (New York Times), "high among the half-dozen lead- ing symphonic bodies of the na- tion." Since his appointment in 1946, Szell has increased the personnel until it now numbers 100 musi- cians. concert at Bad Kissingen when the regular conductor was indis- posed. In 1929 he went to Prague to become general musical director of the German Opera House and the Philharmonic concerts. At this period, in his career he be- gan to make appearances as guest conductor, leading most of the great orchestras of Europe and journeying to America for exten- sive engagements with the St. Louis Symphony Orchestra. After many successful guest ap- pearances in England, he was ap- pointed conductor of the Scot- tish Orchestra of Glasgow in 1937. These engagements were inter- rupted by the war. In 1938 and 1939 he made trips to Australia to conduct the Celebrity Concerts of the Australian Broadcasting Com- mission. Finding himself ma- rooned in New York at the out- break of the war, he determined to remain in this country. Szell made his New York debut March 1, 1941 as guest conductor of the NBC Symphony Orchestra at the invitation of Arturo Tos- canini. Engagements followed with the orchestras in Boston, New York, Philadelphia, Chicago, Los Ange- les, Detroit and Cleveland. He was a regular conductor at the Met from 1942 to 1946. During his years in Cleveland he has also made regular appear- ances as guest conductor of the New York Philharmonic and ap- 'peared frequently with the or- chestras in Boston, Chicago, Phil- adelphia, San Francisco and Washington. Szell has also conducted at the Salzburg Festival, and with the Concertgebouw Orchestra and the London Philharmonic. THE VIENNA Choir Boys, who are beginning their 458th season. Vienna Choir Group Started By Hapsburg Dynasty in 1498 WALTER GIESEKING ... Debussy interpreter The history of the Vienna Choir Boys dates back to 1498 when Em- peror Maximilian I ordered his Huebemeister, Hans Harrasser, to acquire and maintain singers for the court chapel in Vienna. A dozen boys were engaged and the choirmaster, in addition to di- recting their musical activities, was granted funds for their board and education. The court assumed its responsi- bility with minute seriousness. Imperial orders specified not only the quality but the amount of fish, meat and bread rationed to the boys, as well as the quantity and cut of their clothing. Tours in 17th Century As early as the first half of the 17th century, the Choir went on occasional concert tours. While public concerts were not then in vogue, the "Instructions to the Kgpellmeister" permitted perform- ances outside the chapel "if re- quested by reputable persons." In the early 18th century, the scope of the choir was broadened to include secular music. At that time Ignaz Umlauf, the choirmas- ter, received permission to have the boys appear not only in other churches but also the choruses of operas and other public halls. After the death of Maximilian, the Hapsburgs continued to subsi- dize the choir and it became one of the foremost groups in Europe. As boys, Josef Haydn and Franz Schubert were members their voices changed. until With the crumbling of the Haps- burg regime at the end of World War I, the choir faced extinction, averted by the devotion of Father Josef Schnitt, the choir's dean. In 1926 the choir initiated tours which took it throughout Europe. It was brought to the United States in 1932. Today the standards of the choir are firmly upheld by the finest supervision in Vienna. Be- fore enrollment is possible, the prospective choir boys must pass rigid examinations of their scho- lastic ability and musical talents. Boys from 8 to 15 Their ages range from eight to 15 and their number in Vienna is limited to 60. On tour, the choir presents a phalanx of more than 20. The school is divided into three choirs for touring purposes and each unit receives an opportun- ity to visit the numerous countries on the Choir's itineraries. In addition to sacred songs and folk music, the Choir performs costumed operas of all nations. Many remember with delight the boys playing romantically gowned maidens with towering pompa- dours in such works as Mozart's "Bastien and Bastienne" and Strauss' "On the Beautiful Blue Danube." beginning of his fabulous career. He gave a full series of concerts throughout Europe, which won him acclaim wherever he appeared. Then he decided upon an Ameri- can tour. His debut in this country was at Aeolian Hall in New York Febru- ary 22, 1926. There had been no fanfare, little advance publicity. But that made no difference, for his acceptance was instantaneous and sensational, his talent richly received. A quarter of a century later Gieseking returned to New York and the anticipation of music afi- GEORGE SZELL ... Conductor Szell is of Czech background, Hungarian birth and Viennese training. Born in Budapest June 7, 1897, he was taken to Vienna at the age of three. Szell gave his first public con- cert as an infant prodigy at 11 and first appeared as a conductor at 16, leading the Vienna Sym- phony Orchestra in a summer' ENmmNA CHOIR BOYS Sunday, January 15, 2:30 p.m.