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Show THE DESERET NEWS, SATURDAY; MAY 16, 1936. WPA Artists To Exhibit Work At Union Building At The Galleries In The Major Key , - f'- - - t . , W To scan infs Going Raises Question As Whether He Will Ever Be Replaced (By NEW - WHAT exemplified by the Utah WPA exhibit opening at the Union Building, University of Utah, tomorrow afternoon and ontinuing for two weeks and two Sundays thereafter. - Added enjoyment and significance will be shed upon the afternoon by a concert to be given by of the New York Philharmonic Symphony Orches--' tra, has retired and gone back to bis home in Milan, Italy, the question arises as to whether he will ever be replaced. For 11 years, Toscanini, one of the very few men who have be come almost legendary and fabulous in bis lifetime,' has waved the conductors stick before the New York Philharmonic Symphony group, always to the acclaim of thousands. It may be, that like Caruso, his place in the musical world will remain unfilled. Even at bis final performance, a farewell concert in New York, broadcast nation, wide, crowds Jammed sidewalks outside Carnegie Half end cheered and cheered? inside the hell the elite of testers society honored him for the man of music he is, HROUGHOUT life, and the Toscanini struggled hard for the position he attained in the musical world, money was no lure-to-artistic ability. A if stressing that fact In-h-ie final 1 -- rJ7 -- eanlnl Volunteered to exchange the the conductors stick. It was In 1908 that Toscanini was brought to the United States by the Metropolitan Opera House to direct the music there. He was a hit Even then he surprised the music world with his knowledge of the most complicated opera in the wdrlA " '' ting ' JK;) Dwestiag at his tawed Salt Lake Teacher Leaves-Fo- ft-- Study" fn Ketirivrts " -- Instru-mentalis- u well-know- La-bat- - Concert At Provo The regular weekly broadcast of the Tabernacle Choir over CBS through station KSL will be given from the Tabernacle, Sunday morning 8.30. Those wishing to attend are instructed to be at the Bureau of Inform tin at 8.15 am. The prgram, to be given under the direction of J. Spencer Cons-walwith Frank W. Asper as organist, will be: WM WltpMMd k Os fciom l, J)Alia. Inr ! ffv lte-W- O TruM Prsgm f a 6 tattoos CM.... Ita.. Jfea!C triam .. ...e....Xfcursoos tifta.eww.vww listr A Tontnta flo fUalofe Ys Tebernseta CMr Cornwall. Ctmdneiag J. Frank W. Aoprr. Ortamst Cwl Mta Ifsr v -- Cnw Xistaw ta Fiswh W. Aftf 9beroi sot Foros Is N taint..., BB to 6 taista. ...... AndMtte IVtat Ml Marotve Itotim f" lr - Cribton Voa Cog to . BtlnaM The 38th Infantry Band will give first concert of the current Sunday evening at 7 pm. at Fort Douglas under the direction of Leopold A. Yost, warrant offlo-er- . United States army. For a number of months, according to Mr. Yost, the bend has been preparing for ft season of summer concerts la order to increase the excellence of 1(8 playing. of the garrison, their Member friends and tha public, are invited to stand the concert. The pro' gram: s. m. em M hwiot Uite Lao tteiMU teiMIe lrm Tutetel...,. ttoiouta. Matt Set-- iMVnr: Set. Lmw- aaer Ti: be oas, rtc mi; Set. ' ft see-eo- n 1K wxw lit HOr RUI Oamtas Our; ... Vai'a Talas frsaa tbs Vawaaa -' WaeSsSlraaw TW giaaSW XaaOeaa StWvl ... -- S' ate"... Xterv Mas a XteS rim sue SesasM Mteaataaat !" T. Umm In tta Botoat, TatMt wt uninnrt , V " ' t:' f - - hj 1 - '' Xn J wj t "''"v ' ubtv, ... " t tra. - Recital By Artist Students Announced Flat Wtaor eO Vt V tome H. AltavrB Con Fawe Mm taw mi Oretatai Lndscape watercolor by Paul Smith, to be exhibited with WPA show at Union Building Sunday. Under the auspices of th8 Dub Federal of Music Clubs. William of Peterson, associate - musle. Univenwy of professor Utah, and chairman of modern musk of the . Utah Federation, will present a in k progroup of gram Of piano music next Frulav evening at 8.15 oclock at the First Congregational Church, at First ' Smith and Fourth East. The entire list of recital numbers is selected from, compositions of modem corn- artist-studen- BY GAIL MARTIN First Concert Of Season On Sunday arnssa uljT - Infantry Bands . Front-denr- ..9 TkimkovBf Tram JMu Mtuauf Cmesrx .... etewrslr (ilKfe to tatrwa StrthoraW Mr. Mrslra StevteMs Dsm A N oil painting by Irving T. Pratt entitled "The Victim of wa recently exInhumanity hibited in the window of the Marjorie Bowes; Edith Bell; Jean Moneon; Oenone Slack; Shirley Standard Furniture Company. Johnson; Edith Pershon and Jean to Mr. Pratt, tljp picture Preece; some )ea w ago Mrs. Amy Blackhurat. soprano; ' inaa exhibited in- England. It galleries will assist with vocal numbers. was originally four feet by five feety depicting the Central ' . to full figure.. During the war, it W was damaged severely phile m storage, and the artist consequently had to cut the painting to bust size. It wae painted in Ireland while Mr. Pratt waa lhtbmgsn-other portrait at the Irish branch of the Royal Academy. - --V Mr. Pratt was the scenic artist , for the old Salt Theater, lor which he painted the lorest of Arden drop curtain. The artist has just completed three large landsae aneis, about I twenty feet bv thirty led each. In the Balt Lake 'Temple. A few scars y ego he waa sent by the First of the Church to St Georg Temple to paint several new pic- t sure there. An example of his work mar be soon in the Deseret - Mortuary, deptcung Jerusalem and Cm the Ascension of Christ. Mr. Pratt was a student at tha South Kensington College, London, England, and also a pupil lor several years in The Studio, London. He was a member of the Herefordshire Art Society. - ' ; l, m "Br v - ' . - --- - t Vr - - Over 100 paintings will bs ex- hiblted including a numlier of wster-tolor- s bv Paul Smith, E. J. Bird. Joseph A, F. Everett, WJiiaiia J. Paikinxon, Torlief Rnaphus and Maurice Brooks are exhibiting w The manual program ar ranged hy Mr. Beales, is: Barter ( Srrillr XoMik Oranun s V or Viol,. sod Ort&ntr ' ( ) choiy of the first movement; the hushed intimacy of the seconds the Art, the dash and regal ceremony of the third; and tne jollity oif the fourth eO moods are sung with patrician eloquence. There k fluency of nuance, facility of technique, and more important atiU, the intellectual grasp and the emotional depth that hchubert's music demands, if hk message k to be authoritatively expressed. to spend Iota ANYONE, desiringin heaven without the necessity of shuffling off this mortal coil. Should at once secure for himself the newly released recording of the Schubert Quintet In C Major ctmo 183 performed by the Pro Arte and the cellist. Anthony quartet RCA-Vict- Play one side bt the first record and it become immediately to play all of the ten. this album of record k like a novel by Joseph Conrad. Once start it. and you cannot put it down. On movement grow out of the othr a easily and coherently as a brooklet flows within its banks. Compact, sturdily yet 'delicately knit, the Schubert Quintet in C, Major is illuminated by those flashing flights of melody, character!-tiof the beloved Vienna master: Nor k the spirit and execution of the interpretation lesa distinguish-- . ed than quality of tha musk. The Pro Arte Quartet play the quintet as if dominated by an thought. the are improving, not reeding, the ' musk, Tbe restraint and sweet mek ' 1 Monday Tschalkowaky Concerto la B flat Major for piano and orrhastra will be played by the Brigham Young Symphony Orchestra Monday night at 8 p.m. in College Hall at Provo, with Mias Elds Neve as soloist and Professor Leroy j. Robertson, conducting- - " Miss Neves has studied with Dean Gerritt de Jong. Jr-- , and with Professor Elmer E. Nelson for the last five years. She was accompanist at the Pleasant Grovs high school. Since entering Brigham Young University, she has served in the same capacity. The program for Monday night will be: aScasnW WwM SisXuj .. Tim Term L totota Alhrrt School of Musk and Art symphony archsstia under the direction of Frank W- - Asper, will give the last program of the season Monday night at 8:15 pm. at the Assembly HaU. Selections from Brahma, Grieg Chabrkr and Mendelssohn will be played. The public k invltod to attend by Tracy Y. Cannon, director of tha McCune School of Muaic and Art. The program; - Mrs. Joy A Slack will present a group of Piano pupils Monday at p.m., in the Waterloo ,Wsrd Chapel. 1823 South 5th East Street. The following students win parNeeley.1 ticipate; Lenars Mary Jeanne Marrroft; James Richard Irene Bessie Olsen; McCauley: Ray Scare; Constance Baldwin; MarHampton; jorie Preece; Jennie Catherine Olsen: Leone' Garrstl; THE Tabernacle Sunday Broadcast Chortt c V. BYU Orchestra MoCune THI ' Ornvuts ,r ' .7iLG,ra Froemm exercises of the MrCune School of Music and Art will be held in the Hall Mondav, May 25, at 830 pm. Miss Thelma Caffail of the faculty will receive tha degree, bachelor of music, and will also give the valedictory. Ml Esther Evdaahin will also be presented with the degree, bachelor of music. And Mias Lillian Morrell will receive a diploma, ail having majored in piano study. - - NBC-WEA- To 0 to (Irrhottrn . The sixteenth annual -- nt Lh .ECEtVEJIOXQRrJ world-famou- . Lund, director Of theUtah-WPA--a- rt project, and Mr. Beales, director of the Utah WPA music project are both dolng a valuable work one that la doing much to make the public appreciate the value and music In everyday Ufa. Not, only will there be examples f oil and water-colo- r painting done bv the, 30 art! listed in the Utah WPA project, but there will be examples I sculpture, poster work and exhibits of anthropological life in Utah, done in cooperationi with the University of Utah an. thropo logical department The anthropological exhibits are b1" J?v Mue Carolina harry. School tculptrcv. Gordon Cope u pointing tht Vyclorftma and making th o McCUNE SCHOOL GRADUATES TO Summer r .depart from its usuarttutom of presenting a soloist from tha opera Uc or concert field and instead will draw upon the virtuosi of the PERSONAL, feud forced him For the purpose of studying General' Molars . Orchestra far Ms., voice to flee to Italy. - And under Arthur- Phillip- - and soloists. hook-uThe 6tation of be lured back. Finally, an Walter, Young of the network will offer to conduct the New York HalW broadcast the program. Carnegie The soloists will be heard with Philharmonic was accepted. So In N. T Hugh W. 70 . the s piece General Motors svrn-January of 1926 the DougalL Salt phony Orchestra, directed by Erno Lake vocal maestro, Toscanini, sailed for the Ha pee In a program of selections' Untied States with his wife and by Bach, Hayden, Beethoven, Richwill two daughter. AtCamegie Hall ard Strauss, Mozart, Debussy, A leave for the . benis and Tsrhafkow-skybe was a success. He has been a east Sunday. He General The Motors Symphony marvel man of music singe. Tos- to be expect Orchestra has within its personnel caninl has made, many, tqprs, a some of the most brilliant gone from seven to ten weeks. for example, taking the New York in America amt thts While pursuing concert will enable the listening group to Italy in 1930. his study, course public, for the first time, to hear Maestro Toscanini loves alb musk Mr. DougaU will' these artists hs' soloists. Among visit - Florence except Jaxx. Beethoven and Wagner the soloists hre the concert-maste- r Kimball? teacher of the orchestra, Miahel Puetro. . are his idols. As an artist, he k a at the Juilliard Institute, Rulon Y. both here and abroad despot, a man of hk own world. as a concert violinist; Bruno Robinson, head of the voice departHis temper k famous. Many k who k famed as an oboe virment of the Longy School of Musk, the time be has dropped the baton ' tuoso; the n trumpeter. Boston, and Irene Kelly Williams, in rehearsals, soured at the way Harry Giants; the eminent flutist, soprano with the Philadelphia OpJohn A mans and Bruno Jaenicke, his players made music. As a man whose fame as a French Horn era Company, all former pupils of like he k just any among friends, plover is international. the Salt Lake instructor. other world personage. To open the concert. Mr. Rapes Concert lovers refuse to believe has programmed a movement from there will be another man like Bach's Second Brandenburg Con Toscanini, a man who could comcerto. which will feature solos for mand with the baton in his right violin, flute, oboe and trumpet, hand and wheedle the tunes he with an accompaniment by desired with his left. V-"' string section. At the same time. Leopold Stok- ewskl. director of the Philadelphia symphony, rank among the great" His est of modern conductors. i ' . - I work In introducing new artists to Give I the musical world and- building up the Philadelphia symphony to a position of preeminence ranks him among the first rank. A aid Bedes. Thaoomblnatlon of visual end curd art le cure to be- happy one, end one that will bring its reward to .those attending In their fields, Judith Farnsworth of-a- rt HP HE General Motors Concede progrtra on Sunday night 4 ) !-- General Motors Orchestra Men 7b Be Soloists - n - appearance in this country (he still expects to conduct e few more concerts In Paris, Salzburg, Palestine end possibly Egypt) he requested that the receipts of some 123,000 be turned over to the orchestra, doormen, ushers end staff personnel, Toscanini was born of poor parents in Parma in 1867. He became a pupil at the Milan Conservatory of Musk. There, choosing the 'cello as his instrument, he soon made e name for himself. He joined the Seals orchestra as a cellist; . His baptism as e conductor came In South America when the leader quit.- - The youthful Tow .. ' how tor the WPA orchestra from 3.30 to C30 pm. under the direction of Beg-I- i! d grsy-halre- 4 the federal government is doing to toner art in Utah will Jeau Alim, International Illustrated News Writer) YORK, May 16. Now that Arturo Toscanini, 'J . , Utah WPA 'Art Project Show Opens At Union, Building Tomorrow W PA Orchestra To Play To , High-r- ? RJ3W turn to light from Aida (M303) and be convinced that Enrico is still the greatast of all tenors. There may have born greater owe to the last two centuries, but cer tainly a eooinsrieon of hk with those of today or thirty yi hack reveal no singer, who can; touch him in powrsr, in beauty quality, er poignancy of emotion. The aria Celeste Aida taken from one of Caruso's old recordings mad before the adenr af RCA-Vkto- " , ' sound reproduction had leached the height of development now prevailing and then superimposed on a new orrhestral aeeompeni-men- t by the Victor Symphony chestra throbs with that beauty and excitement only knows when I the great Enrico sang it. As the Fertile and glowing voice of Car UN soar with Irresistible surge from a deep baritone to ringing, trumpet-liktop note, on wants to toss hie cap in the air, turn handsprings or leap up and cheer ao great k the force of pent-u-p emotion. That urh e voice should ever have been Milled Is one af the supreme tragedies of'bfe.- TUtoraa Vlncitor, sung by Rosa FtmaeU with luscious ton and exquisite shading, to another bril- v liant achievement tn the art of recording. Abounding to round ed tons af ringing power and meiiow and floating. pianissimo, Mias Fmaclk'a singing reaches heights that other sopranos trill hot anon surpass. Bkabeth Rethberg with the Berlin But Opera orchestra con, ducted by Frit employs a lovely voice and lofty artistry in her Interpretation of Q Mia The lovely duet of Rhadames and Aida to the last aet are beautifully sung by Mias Ponaelk and Giovanni MartmeliL Duaollna Gian- -' ttini. an ensemble from the La Praia Opera, the La Seals Orchestra ton Boston Pops orchestra, and the La Seals collaborate to complete an albqm that should be in- of Minghini-Cattane- o poser, cluded in evary collection. x eome time, the hinterland been hearing of the genius of Marion Anderson, Negro ' contralto; In the recording of to tone spirituals City Called Hra-veand Heaven, Heaven." Lord. I Cant Stay A wav Mias Anderson demonstrates that not only ha the a phenomenal Take, but that she has something to say. The voice to a full, even, lovely' organ, and too style of her singing k impeccable. It I to be hoped that Salt Lake Otv will soon have a chance to beer this gifted concert artist. ClglL Italian tenor formerly of the Metropolitan Opera, gives a stirring interpretation of Pieu Signora by Straddle: a sparkling rendition of the Detwasv-RavrFetes bv Rosins and Josef mad a brilliant performance of "Pastourel-Tocifsiby Poulenc and DeBuasy "Study in by Horowitz form a splendid brace 'of piano recordings. POR i j Richard Condie, with Mr. Peterson at the piano, will sing a group of tenor solos. The pubik k invited. . . The program: Prtar Minor eoti EaetaMBincU n, Meryl Miattre'B ComcI Etude LmI Jjim Fteelefcttta Tie IVbGnoy . . Knisim Kreetar . . Lena Tfaurber tataN rbedral .. XMxaroy Ettata C tainrn Minor lUeteirJtootf ftrocif TV Whitt Fetcock - ; firifta Etata Willi It, low W)1iha Boyta Eojikwr O Mima Bom Witata M . A He mrg Otrl Lhe-Vin- ( Carntlfp AAa Meletw j, Eoetesriof! . ft .cut taftflrrEbeor d u lent! McDcni9 Qloroe Ma ltab frfud well-nig- h MncUnreit Hum Kiitahom ValdfMi tats Baron. I O'feaBIKYl V Xta Bikllatar Meyer Hrlmnnd |