Word: schoenberger
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Freshman winners were: 135--Bob Schoenberg (Wigglesworth West), 146--Nat Wyner (Matthews South), 155--Harry Manoogian (Weld North), 165--Buddy Ingoldsby (Hotworthy), 175--Joe Couseiman (Wigglesworth West), Unlimited--Joe Rose (Wiggiesworth West...
...freshman division will be: 125--Ron Laing (Holworthy) vs. Bob Schoenberg (Wigglesworth West); 145--Norman Wyner (Matthews South) vs. Bud Helfant (Straus North); 155--Harry Manoogian (Weld North) vs. Steve Goodman (Weld North); 165--Buddy Ingolds by (Holworthy) vs. George Swanson (Straus North); 175--Dick Alemian Massachusetts) vs. Joe Conzelman (Wigglesworth West); Unlimited--Joe Ross (Thayer North) vs. Charlie Wood (Wigglesworth West...
Since then, the juilliard has won more & more friends. The next year they revived the neglected quartets of Arnold Schoenberg. Dimitri Mitropoulos, conductor of the New York Philharmonic-Symphony, impulsively pronounced them "the greatest quartet in the world." The. Juilliard itself is a bit cooler about its own quality. But last week, after a series of ten Mozart quartets in Manhattan, the quartet was warming toward itself. They were mildly criticized for bringing a thought too much of their own 20th Century exuberance to Mozart's 18th Century brand. But as Violinist Robert Mann put it: "We think...
...musicians try to schedule at least one Los Angeles "first" for every concert. This sometimes leads them into fairly deep musical waters (e.g., unfamiliar works by Arnold Schoenberg, Paul Hindemith, Anton von Webern). They do not give a hoot for the critics. The Roof's printed programs run a back-page column of critical comments, listed under two headings, "Figs" and "Thistles." Sample thistles on the back page last week: "Dull Roof Concert Dredges Up Bores" (Los Angeles Times); "Within the seven minutes it takes to perform, [a quartet by Webern] is spare, economical, terse and austere, and seven...
...Wells (later Sadler's Wells Ballet) Company as musical director. In later years he became a conductor for the BBC, and a prolific record maker. In Music Ho! (subtitled "A Study of Music in Decline") he took a gloomy view of most modern music, blasted Stravinsky, Hindemith and Schoenberg and derided "musical snobs" who failed to realize that Duke Ellington wrote "the most distinguished popular music since Johann Strauss...