Word: chloe
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...musician & poet, for the Detroit Symphony, waxing stronger each season. The verdict for the best orchestral demonstration of the season, however, remained unchanged, stayed with Sergei Koussevitsky and his Boston Symphony players for a gorgeous performance a fortnight ago of two Bach preludes and Ravel's Daphnis et Chloe...
Friday, December 28, the Boston Symphony Orchestra gave one of the most interesting concerts of its, season to date. The program included Bliss's Color Symphony, Ravel's Daphnis and Chloe, and a Boccherini 'Cello Concerto played by Mr. Casals, played with great refinement and breadth of bowing, and warm fulness of tone, tho' with none too accurate intonation, at times. Bliss's Symphony is not propaganda music, but it might well be. Through three movements, "Purple," "Blue," "Red," it is highly impressionistic. In the last, Mr. Bliss throws down the gauntlet to the theorists and with a magnificent fugue...
...Symphony Orchestra, in conjunction with Mr. Jean Bedetti, violoncelloist, will give the third concert of its annual winter series. The following program will be presented: 1. Symphony No. 3 in E-flat major "Eroica" Beethoven 2. Concerto in D major, for Violoncello, Haydn 3. Orchestra Fragments from "Daphnis et Chloe", Ballet in One Act, Ravel...
...season in Cambridge. With M. Plerre Monteux conducting, it will give Beethoven's Third Symphony, known as the "Eroica". Mr. Jean Bedetti, first 'cellist of the orchestra will give Haydn's Concerto in D Major. The concert will close with the suite from Ravel's Ballet, "Daphnis and Chloe...
discreditable, is uneasy, as the sonnets of the young (and even of the old) are wont to be; the Horatian verses to Chloe are imperfect, but promising,--"Therefore lift up your blushing gaze, and quit your all-sufficient mother." Mr. Auslander's sonnet, like all his work, shows talent and skill; but, hardened though we are to mixed novelties, we cannot accept as genuine his prayer for "the feathered thrill of birds." Mr. La Farge's "To My Goddess" exhibits feeling for the music of verse and contains pretty details. Unhappily the reviewer's copy omits the last line...