Word: liszt
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...complete program is as follows: Quartet, op 18 No. 5, Betheven Liebestram, Liszt Waltz, op. 42, Chopin La Cathedrale Eugloutle, Pelrissy Sequidilla, Albeniz Mr. Gebhard Quartet, G minor, Faure Piano, violin, viola, and cello...
...course of a century and a half America has produced many eminent men of letters, but no musician who ranks with Beethoven, Liszt, or Debussy. The only American composer who has any claim to rank with the great masters of Europe, Edward MacDowell, has received the same reception in this country as several of our foremost literary men,--that of being criticised by unappreciative inferiors or of being ignored completely. It is, therefore, with interest that we read in an editorial in the New York Times that the Trustees of the American Academy in Rome have added musical composition...
...does a good telephone conversation. Joe Boganny and troupe prove the acme of slap-stick tumbling (yes, the dwarfs are there). William Horlick and Sarampa Sisters hold the crowd in at the last with a pleasing dance symphony, starring their own drop, a pair of crotales, and certain familiar Liszt music. Ben Linn, a sure-fire artist, Shubert Weekly News and Intermission complete a varied bill...
...Thursday evening, the Boston Symphony Orchestra, now in its forty-first year, gave a brilliant opening to the Cambridge series of concerts at Sanders Theatre. The program was as follows: Mendelssohn, Italian Symphony; Rimsky-Korsakow, "Sadko"; Liszt, Concerto in a major; Rabaud, Danees from "Marouf". Mr. Erwin Nyiregyhazi was the soloist...
...people in the audience Thursday night had ever heard of Mr. Nyiregyhazi before. Few will ever forget him. They did not know he was a Hungarian of only eighteen years of age. His playing of Liszt's pyrotechnic concerto was superb, and he surpassed both previous performances in Boston. His technique was flawless; his control of tone in the more sentimental passages was in excellent taste. Fortunately "Sadko" had sufficiently aroused a decidedly frigid audience to give him the warm applause he merited...