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Word: handels (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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Featuring Handel's Solomon Choruses, the program will include works by Thompson, Schuman, Sullivan, and a collection of football songs. Ethel P. Bernard of Radcliffe will assist Fine, who is directing in place of the vacationing Professor G. Wallace Woodworth...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Harvard - Radcliffe to Present Yard Concert | 8/29/1944 | See Source »

...second concert concert will feature works by Sullivan, Schuman, and Handel. Miss Ethel P. Bernard will assist Mr. Fine in this combined concert by the Harvard Glee Club-Radcliffe Choral Society...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Glee Club Schedules Initial Yard Concert on Wednesday | 8/18/1944 | See Source »

...America has published White and Black Lists of church music. Considering not the music's quality nor the composer's piety, but only the music's appropriateness to the atmosphere and technical requirements of the liturgy, the Black List includes all the religious music of Handel, Mozart, Schubert, Rossini, Weber and Verdi, most of Haydn's and Beethoven's. Blacklisted also are such treacly items as At Dawning, I Love You Truly, Good Night Sweet Jesus and the Bach-Gounod Ave Maria. The great Johann Sebastian Bach, though he was a Lutheran...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Music: Choiring Celt | 7/24/1944 | See Source »

...Heifetz of the guitar is a stooped, bespectacled, mop-haired Spaniard named Andrés Segovia, who has, almost singlehanded, raised the guitar to the status of a concert instrument. A graduate of Spain's Granada Musical Institute, Segovia plays intricate Bach fugues and Handel gavottes with an agility and subtlety that has astounded critics. Segovia never deigns to play flamenco music...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Music: Spanish Strummers | 6/26/1944 | See Source »

...hrer: "Our walls may crumble but our hearts stay firm." Tiredly, Propagandist Joseph Goebbels eulogized: "Even the greatest leaders of history will be faced with occasional setbacks." Discreetly the radio did not play the Horst Wessel Song or the refrain: Today Germany, tomorrow the world!; instead, it broadcast a Handel Concerto Grosso, Beethoven's Eroica...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Foreign News: It Might Be His Last . . . | 5/1/1944 | See Source »

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