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Word: concerted (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1930-1939
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Usage:

Bankers. Like Ford and General Motors, whose Sunday evening concerts also will continue, a group of bankers last week spotted symphonic music as a suitably expensive and respectable vehicle for institutional advertising. Heartened by a Columbia survey in which 23% of one program's listeners said they detested "ultramoder. -" music, and 19% cried out against jazz, the bankers' group hired the Philadelphia Symphony Orchestra, on a.three-year contract. Starting in November, the orchestra will serenade the U. S. public in a weekly concert under sponsorship of Manhattan's Chase National Bank, Chicago's First National. With...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business: Free Show | 8/31/1936 | See Source »

...unimaginative rich, was there. So were Steelman Myron Taylor, Music Patron Harry Harkness Flagler, Mrs. Woolworth Donahue, Secretary of Labor Frances Perhins, Singers Ganna Walska and Feodor Chaliapin. Long before the season opened, 11,316 U. S. visitors had made hotel reservations, bought $200,000 worth of concert and opera tickets. Last week with the Salzburg season half over, hawkers were doing a thriving business in cushions for the hard Festspielhaus seats, trade at the Cafe Bazar was rivaled only by that at a tearoom just opened by Count Ludwig Salm, and thousands of Auslander from everywhere were strolling Salzburg...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Music: Salzburg's Season | 8/24/1936 | See Source »

...Reed Kilpatrick, president of Madison Square Garden. The WPA's Federal Music Project, which has some 16,000 musicians on its rolls, wished to weld 210 members of three New York City WPA orchestras and a WPA symphonic band of 75 into a single unit for one big concert. Colonel Kilpatrick, who last spring offered $1,000 for the best suggestion to make his Garden pay during the summer, wondered if popular concerts might not be the answer. Although the WPA evening barely half-filled the house at 25? to $1.65 he considered the experiment promising...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Music: 1812, with Guns | 8/10/1936 | See Source »

Neither was the WPA concert a disappointment to the man who did much of the six weeks' work of organizing it, who whipped the 285 players together after they had been rehearsed in sections. Conductor Erno ("Ernie") Rapée not only led the biggest symphonic orchestra ever assembled in Madison Square Garden through the 1812 and a Strauss waltz, but also performed the feat of arranging for it a trio Tchaikovsky originally wrote for piano, violin and cello...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Music: 1812, with Guns | 8/10/1936 | See Source »

...cutting Ravinia's 37 acres into lots, at $10,000 an acre, when a delegation of 25 young Chicago business and professional men went to her with what they convinced her was a feasible plan for summer music. She agreed to let them have her Park for concerts by the Chicago Symphony, provided they would permit her to pass upon the list of conductors. With Banker Willoughby George Walling as chairman, the group quickly raised $30,000 in guarantees. Since the Chicago Symphony was also scheduled for free concerts in Grant Park, sponsored by the City and the local...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Music: Ravinia Revival | 7/13/1936 | See Source »

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