Word: concertized
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...excerpt from the Yale News that appeared on the editorial page of the CRIMSON on April 25th, urging the desirability, from a musical point of view, of the holding of a joint choral concert by the Glee Clubs of Yale and Harvard, make this a fitting occasion to announce the tentative plans that have been made for just such a concert as the writer of the article proposes...
...October 28th last the Harvard Glee Club extended to the Yale Glee Club an invitation to participate in the third concert of the Harvard Glee Club's annual Symphony Hall series for 1927-1928. The management of the Yale Glee Club accepted this invitation on November 8th. Since that time no definite plans have been made. It is enough to state that the concert will take place in April, 1928, and that both organizations will participate in joint numbers as well as in groups selected from their own programmes. Philip E. Lawrence '27, Manager of the Harvard Glee Club...
...Keiser '27 will give a pianoforte recital tomorrow night at 8.15 o'clock in the Paine Concert Hall in the Harvard Music Building. This is the only concert to be given by Keiser here this spring and his program will be made up of seven pieces...
...universities. There are now approximately two hundred and fifty of these organizations which give excellent performances and provide keen competition for each other on the annual Chistmas and Easter trips which they all undertake. The older clubs have maintained their prestige only by striving for continual improvements in their concerts and by making their appeal to the general concert-going public in addition to the college alumni of the larger cities. Their programs have been expanded beyond the limits of the conventional group of college gloes and made to include classical numbers much more difficult and finished in the realms...
Having so much in common both in tradition and in modern tendency, it in unfortunate that the Yale and Harvard clubs do not come into contact except in the informal joint concert in the fall on the evening of the Yale-Harvard football game. Given at this time, the importance of the concert as a noteworthy attraction is somewhat overshadowed by other social activities, and the program is composed entirely of old glees and popular songs which are fitted for such an occasion. Since this does not provide an opportunity for a presentation of the best work of both clubs...