Word: davisone
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...clock. The concert, which will be concluded about 10 o'clock, will be followed by dancing. This will be the only opportunity members of the University will have to hear the clubs, which have had a highly successful year. The Glee Club under the tutelage of Dr. A. T. Davison '06 has had an especially brilliant season, winning the recent intercollegiate contest in Carnegie Hall, New York City, in competition with six other universities. The concert given Sunday afternoon with the Boston Symphony Orchestra was additional proof of the ability of the club, which sang with this organization...
...Lowell Institute lecture. "The History of Choral Music." VI. "The 19th Century Composers." Dr. A. T. Davison '06. Huntington Hall, Boylston street, Boston...
Yesterday afternoon, at a concert for the benefit of the pension fund of the Boston Symphony Orchestra, a Chorus composed of about 200 Radcliffe and University students, trained by Dr. A. T. Davison" 06, of the Divison of Music, performed a motet by Bach and the "Song of Fate" by Brahms, accompanied by the orchestra. Dr. Davison conducted the motet and Dr. Muck the "Song of Fate...
...success of the chorus and the quality of its performances constitute another item in the rapidly increasing achievements of Dr. Davison in proving false the prevalent notion that the American college student is too light-minded a creature to undertake anything worth while in intellectual or artistic fields, and too irresponsible to finish a good task begun. The singing of the chorus yesterday was more than a serious attempt honestly accomplished; one may judge it by mature artistic standards...
...Davison should feel, as the individual members of his chorus should feel, the greatest satisfaction at the success of this courageous undertaking. Still more praise is due to Dr. Davison for the planning and execution of the details of training so large a body of students in work of so serious a character. But by far the greatest, worthiest and most dashing effect of the task and its achievement must be that of inevitably broadening and intensifying musical interest and understanding in the minds of the participants themselves. And this undoubtedly means more to Dr. Davison than everything else...