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Word: musicianly (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1940-1949
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Usage:

Morris Bagby was one of the last links with Franz Liszt. Musician Bagby never learned from the master how to be a virtuoso pianist, but he played whist with Liszt, and like other pupils reverently snitched the hairs which drifted from Liszt's white mane to the collar of his morning coat. Morris Bagby heard Brahms play the piano, "as though he had ten thumbs." When Pianist Bagby returned to the U. S., he was invited by Julia Ward Howe to read a paper at Newport's Town and Country Club. Mrs. Howe's daughter advised...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: MUSIC: Music in the Morning | 3/10/1941 | See Source »

...Chicago Symphony romped through a piano concerto by Rudolph Ganz, Chicago musician. Its scherzo had themes whose notes correspond to numbers on Composer Ganz's 1940 and 1941 license tags...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Music: Silent Music | 3/3/1941 | See Source »

...tunes Bobby plays are the old ones, Muskrat Ramble, At the Jazz Band Bali, Sugar and the like, and if anybody knows how to make those old numbers really kick, it's Hackett. Furthermore, there's Brad Gowans (valve trombone), the one musician Bobby brought with him from New York. It's not the kind of smooth staff which generally achieves public acclaim, but then Tommy Dorsey never played hot. Take your choice. Finally, it's pleasant to learn that the Versailles will have its first Sunday evening jam session tomorrow. Bobby will M.C., and Pee Wee Russell...

Author: By Charles Miller, | Title: Swing | 3/1/1941 | See Source »

...opportunity given to Ben Webster and Billy Kyle, and of which opportunity they made the very best. Needless to say, Teagarden, Stewart, and Dave Tough are their magnificent selves, as you would expect, and as you've heard on pretty nearly everything they've done. However, a musician like Ben Webster, although his work ranks with that of Coleman Hawkins and Chu Berry, has never received half the recognition he deserves. Yet what he does on this session (for my money he's far and (away the star) should end all arguments as to his qualifications for the big league...

Author: By Charles Miller, | Title: SWING | 2/21/1941 | See Source »

...Soul, he remarked that even Hawkins would have to dig hard to keep up with that kind of jazz. Maybe I'm all wet. Maybe they'll be calling him "Miller's Folly," but I may as well go overboard completely and say that Roscoe McRae is the musician of the year, so why don't you do yourself a favor and go down to hear...

Author: By Charles Miller, | Title: SWING | 2/21/1941 | See Source »

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