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...real Andre Previn, who has since recovered his stolen wallet, cites this story to illustrate his impact on music audiences since he became principal conductor of the London Symphony Orchestra four years ago. Previn is England's newest cottage industry, a musician in constant permutation-conductor-composer, composer-pianist, pianist-conductor-producing music in such unremitting abundance on television, recordings and in the concert halls that one expects any day to find him busking with mouth organ for the queues at the Palladium...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Music: Most Happy Man | 9/4/1972 | See Source »

...Telephone Co. installed a total of 12,500 phones for press and delegates at the two conventions. The company made some money, but less than it would have by installing the same number of phones in private homes or offices. Southern Bell had to lay 423 million feet of conductor cable and set up 20 extra switchboards, all at its own expense...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: ENTERPRISE: Political Non-Payoff | 9/4/1972 | See Source »

...Conductor Gerald Moshell and all personnel of the orchestra are to be commended for their strong musical integrity. None of the music presented Thursday evening was, in the traditional sense, fun to play or conduct, as are the massive 19th century war-horses usually undertaken by transient orchestras comprised of widely diverse individual talents. Equally commendable is the fact that there was only one ringer in the group (as it happened, the Summer School just didn't attract a tuba player this year). And while the quality of performance was often less than ideal (although it was never distressingly...

Author: By Stephen E. Hefling, | Title: Cantabrigia Orchestra | 8/22/1972 | See Source »

...evening) and colleague Winifred Ramsey; likewise, the trombones were often exceptional. But, as throughout the program, I felt that things could have been much more exciting. As is so often the case, with a bit more attention to dynamics, rhythm and clarity on the part of both players and conductor, what was overall a commendable concert might have been outstanding...

Author: By Stephen E. Hefling, | Title: Cantabrigia Orchestra | 8/22/1972 | See Source »

Those familiar with Friedrich's background might have expected the unusual: an honored member of the East German Communist Party, he is deputy to the unorthodox Walter Felsenstein at the famed Komische Oper in East Berlin. Yet nobody seemed prepared for what appeared when Conductor Erich Leinsdorf lowered his baton for the overture. Tenor Hugh Beresford wandered over a barren wooden platform; instead of a balletic orgy, there was a huge human brain populated with frightening, dim figures miming psychiatric problems ranging from infantilism to sadomasochism. Venus arrived looking like a Reeperbahn stripper...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Music: Left-Wing Wagner | 8/14/1972 | See Source »

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