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Show symphony bets Special Concert: ill Beethoven all-Beethoven -riwl'iah Symphony --"rJiiled for Satur- $ at 8 p.m. in the x Tabernacle under .in of Maurice 1. ... W' IrlOGRAM for this ::.p(ion concert will V : of three of 1 ' tn's most popular j Overture to "Eg-!:m "Eg-!:m Concerto No. 4 'nr. and Symphony :( minor. Soloist in concerto will be :'uitr Duehlmeier. ''j-ncing the special Maestro Abravanel ''A "Whenever it is J ' w like to program ' mens for all who 'v''tr reason are una- "tend our regular : m series concerts. st hen so many of concerts are sold mt the need for apon concerts." 1 WAVANEL noted : of Beethoven -s tie most beloved 'nic music. Dur-.'iih Dur-.'iih anniversary of birth in the season. Maestro and the Utah .'-f Performed all of STnphomes, the five ertos, the violin "the overtures - monumental -Siemnis." "l '""I ill open with ;;;el"Egmont," I ,'" tte of nine j. . missioned to be ' ; nna production :JH "Egmont." 7 - depicts the play's " the political and "'' 'aU88ies 0f "e Dutch for ' :. '"Holland, with of the ,ch PPle, as J ' lraB'c figure. MRS. Duehlmeier will join the orchestra for the Concerto No. 4 in G Major for Piano and Orchestra. Completed in 1806, the concerto marks a new approach toward that form by Beethoven. The piano enters alone and the enlargement of the opening theme is filled with typically Beethovian grandeur and drama. Susan Hunter Duehlmeier, a native Salt Laker, received her Bachelor and Master degrees at the University of Utah under Gladys Gladstone. She has completed all classes and recitals for a doctorate in music at Boston University under Leonard Shure. DURING THE 1975 season, she appeared as a soloist with the Boston Pops Orchestra, and she has performed with the Utah Symphony in one of the Salute to Youth concerts. Mrs. Duehlmeier is currently an adjunct assistant professor of piano at the University of Utah and is on the faculty of the Snowbird Summer Arts Institute. Beethoven's Symphony No. 5 in C Minor, one of the great musical epics of the 19th century, cen-tury, will conclude the evening's even-ing's performances. Building from a simple theme, which is one of the most familiar Beethoven ever wrote, the symphony attains an organic unity that sets this piece apart from his earlier symphonies. SPECIAL ticket rates will be in effect for this concert with reduced prices for senior citizens and students and a special family ticket. Tickets may be purchased at the Utah Symphony box office, 55 West First South, or at the ticket booth located outside the south gate of Temple Square one hour before the concert. |