Word: allegros
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...Wynn's new revue begins August 30. Sanders Theatre Concerts Boston Symphony Orchestra Second Programme, July 25 Under the direction of Bernard Zighera Toccata, Bouree, and GigaScarlatti-Casella Symphony No. 5 in B-flat major Shubert I. Allegro II. Andante con moto III. Menuetto: Allegro molto: Trio IV. Allegro vivace Pavane pour une Infante defunte Ravel Capriccio Ibert Suite No. 1 from "Pulcinella," Ballet (after Pergolesi) Stravinsky I. Sinfonia (Overture): Allegro moderate II. Serenata: Larghetto III. a. Scherzino b. Allegro c. Andantino IV. Tarantella V. Toccatta VI. Gavotta con due variazionl VII. Duetto VIII. a. Menuetto b. Finale Third Programme...
...Boston symphony orchestra. Described by its perpetrator as "having certain earmarks of the sonata form without being written in that form at all," his Concerto for violin and orchestra was a meaningless mass of dissonances which effectively disguised the technical ability of the soloist, Miss Ruth Posselt. The allegro molto seemed to lack any structural form and wandered aimlessly through a series of cacophonous variations on the first subject. The second movement, valse, combined an absurdly technical display by the soloist with a weak background on the strings. Several abrupt pauses in the final movement punctuated the variations...
...thing even E tu Destino could not explain-the sense of loss that brooded above Mount Allegro, the feeling of being strange and alien in a strangely alien land. At school the second generation were told that if they were born here they were American, but "then one day one of your new teachers looked at you brightly and said you were Italian because your last name was Amoroso and that too was puzzling." You talked it over with your father but he wasn't very helpful. "Your children will be Americani, but you, my son, are half...
...Mount Allegro gives no dogmatic answer to these questions, but itself is an emphatic, resounding affirmative. As for Fascism, that question was answered by Mangione's father, who listened to the boastings of a Mussolunitic, then snorted: "Eight million bayonets? Misca! Where has he got them? Stuck...
...Author. Rochester-born Jerre Mangione, 33, looks Sicilian enough to have posed for one of the statues in a Palermo piazza. Now special assistant to the U.S. Commissioner of Immigration, his first writing job was ghosting love letters for his Mount Allegro relatives in love with women who could not read Italian. Says he of his early reading: "I got most of it done in the seclusion of bathrooms and under beds because my relatives believed too much reading was bound to drive a person insane." He, working his way through Syracuse University, graduated in 1931, went on to magazine...