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Show Guest Pianist Scheduled For the third concert sub- Symphony scription series. Maestro Mau-rc- e Abravanel has selected three familiar and beloved works which, in time, span a period of 137 years. The concert is Saturday at 8:30 p.m. in the Salt Lake rV s 7 XX ' 4K ;x The second and major work of the evening will be the Beethoven Piano Concerto No 4 in G Major in further observ- birthday celebration. This work was written in 1806, one of the most fantastically productive years in the composers life. As near as can be determined, the Concerto was performed only twice during Beethoven's lifetime and on both occasions world-wid- e Eugene Istomin International Celebrity New Orleans Jazz Band Dated at U. the composer himself was loist. Some of tne giant creators real New Orleans music will concertlze in Kingsbury Hall Tuesday at 8 p.m. The Preser v a tion Hall Jazz Band, every create i Miss Pierce 40 kind the music they helped originate more years ago along the Puccini's opera "Girl University Sponsored The performance is being sponsored by the student-facult- y Artists and Speakers Committee at the University of Utah. New Orleans jazz was born the parades, funerals, saloons and dance halls of the c'd French Quarter. After a few years, it was replaced by some cf its strawhat imitators but has been revivied in recent years by real jazz buffs who have seen it as a pure American art form. . so- Philadelphia Same Program With Istomin as soloist, Maestro Abravanel and the Orchestra will give the same program in the Chase Fme Arts Center in Logan on Friday at 8 p.m. Jazz Allan and Sandra Jaffe put Preservation Hall into such e condition that the jazzmen could play there in a St. Peter Street atmosphere that is consistent with the style of the music. The hall itself dates back to the early old-tim- U. of U. Choir ITOCs. Concert S.L. Native Wins Set Sunday Prize for Paper O. Wayne Coon, a 1966 grad- uate of the The University of Utah Chamber Choir and advanced student instrumentalists will present a concert of chamber works Sunday at 3 p.m. in the Music Hall on the U. of U. campus. Beethoven Sonata of Uriversity Utah, is the winner of the $250 first prize in the 1969 Nathan Burkao Memorial Competition at Columbia University School of Law. His paper was entitled "Some Problems With Musical Public Domain Materials Under ; United States Copyright Law as Illustrated Mainly by The Recent Folk Song Revival. He fe the son of Mr. and Mrs. Owen F. Coon, 4606 Holly in., Salt Lake City. Violinist Richard Kay and pianist Tricia Thomas will perform Beethoven's "Sonata 24 in F Major, Opus ('Spring') to open the con- cert. Chamber Choir The Fruia, a Yugoslavian troupe 45 dancers, drummers, acrobats and singers, will perform at Utah State University Nov. 11 at 8 p.m. in the Chase Fine Arts Center. Fruia will offer a program dances from of songs an Yugoslavia's six republics and from other areas throughout Eastern Europe. of Honored Thespians Plan BYU F. will The final number is the "Sextet for Woodwinds and Piano, by Francis Poulenc. Musicians are Sally Peterson, Rothenberg, piano: Alan flute; Jon Eu'-h- , oboe; Frank Musgrave, clarinet ; Douglas Peterson, French horn, and Roger Hicks, bassoon. CNJiSTENSFN. Donald Gramm Bass-Barito- x fAI ? WITH THE eery Burnett for Four 1 1 A.M. HALL-DE- 8.30 TICKET OFFICE - 8:30 p.m. P.M. i MURRAY 5200 SOUTH STATE 1412 WASHINGTON BLVD. OGDEN PUT A ile YOUR TUMMY MAURICE ABRAVANEL MUSICAL DIRECTOR (i CONDUCTOR EUGENE ISTOMIN Duiicious Triple Decker The extraordinary American Pianist" -- MT. HERALD TRIBUNE Deeburger Classical Symphony PROkOFIEFF BEETHOVEN Piano Concerto No. 4 in G major BARTOK Concerto for Orchestra Tickets at 55 Watt Firzt or at ZCMI Seuth-328-5- 49c 626 Egftm JilewB writ ito to Mletst wrth tto Utah Symphony ta Upa at (to diet Fiat Arb Center on Nov. 7 and ta Ogdoa at flat Wetor Fuw Arts Coaler oa Noe. 1C Two Ground SH&QN am! GARMIKEL f .Wife".. m Beet Patties. Tangy Melted Cheese. Crisp Lettuce. Pickles and Our Own Lip Smackio Special Dressing DILIVE-IF2- S AU STARTS 1 PERFORmCES !U WED. NOV. 19 4 NIGHTS thru 3 MATINEES a . SUN. NOV. 23 Minm-ietJ- '. t M. I M. a. 1M m. F3V. 14 FOI., SaaOar . SALT PALACE - ItM k k4l . M. SALT PALACE Stl F SEATS. $5 00. $5 00. $4 00. $3 50 or 8m Of'iro(Ml Wl Ortarr mth S Spec! OownfAwn M M r ts f I "ti ir 4 f AROUND TOWN Vat OMnnwv'd SamfKJ np ! Sa Dsantnom Pi suopd by Simon KAYFJX PRESENTATION Altec bou'td system Sights & Sounds of the 70s at PrfvO with skating champions, Of" 4 comedy galore, end magnificent Gartunutl Multi-vis- ion uH uliuaii 4 riRis t bimw (THEOCOCOUFLE) f C& - : i O a . . . $1.59 under HALF PRICE Visit our novelty wet bar Children 12 . ri It y $1.39 & 4 3 2s0 SEARS Stores Tooele & Granger MiCKIE'S MUSIC (10 a.H a.der) Brigham City Vi PRICE - 363-552- MONTGOMERY WARD SIATS RISIRViD YOUTHS tit 363-765- Groups TICKETS ON SALE AU ZCMI & 45 All T'cke's HILL AIR FORCE BASE a p.m. WED. ai THURS. 5.1. -- 2 p.m. San. -- p m. i 5- - 145 SOUTH STATE t! , - - 3390 SO. STATE STREET 250 WEST NORTH TEMPLE 1270 EASE 21st SOUTH il f fji Hirtifi f r X FIVE CONVENIENT LOCATIONS A V 1 4 TICKETS TC2AY! n - CHEDDAR STEAK UTAH SYMPHONY yrrfntn.-fr- n Aved the disappointment T of performances tm O C? , A P" & f 4 evening Performances Dec. 26. 27. 29, 30 4 Matinees Dec. 27. 29,30,31 2.00 P.M. the Salt Lake Library. The recitals are tree to the public. Choice of Chicken Noodle Soup or Salad, Mashed Potatoes, Buttered Green Beans, Hot Harman House-RollChoice of Beverc ye. 'Til Closing S.L. TA8ERNACIE X 26-3- 1 C. at month Public SAT. NOV. 8 RESERVED UTAH SYMPHONY KINGSBURY mwe "Fugue The studio, with instruction for all ages from three years and up, presents recitals 'Free Coke or Coffee v at Maurice Abravanel, Director i; V odnesday. FOR INFORMATION SELL-OU- ' Tuthill's include State & Tcp Sirloin Now York . . . . 3 Works x ' the 1 T first student chamber of the yeor will be Monday at 8:15 pm. in the Madsen Recital Hall, Hams Fme Arts Center at Brigham Young Universi'y. The Fourth North Street Whipped potatoes .'happen: 1 Lucy H. Baugh, veteran music teacher and director of the Intermountain Music and Art Stud.o, has moved to a downtown location, opening recital & Main 9 Froth garden vegetable Cell and butter' ifun , I Music Teacher Moves Studio BYU Plans Recital FRIED CHICKEN Vi Starting TOMORROW Presents - plays. LIMITED ENGAGEMENT to tor Artistic J al BALLET WllMI s? Obte Award winner Roscoe Lee Browne and Anthony Zerbe, who appeared at BYU two years ago, have taken words from the printed page and brought them alive through their craft as actors in an evening of poems, and fragments of songs, Tie picees wnae no with more together introduction than the strum of a guitar or the shift of a light. The poems range from the love lyrics of Mil. ay to the casua'. humorous phrases of Ferlinghetti; they speak of the beauty, the pain, the yearning and the tenderness of all men. possibilities. Complitt Sunday Dinners Featuring Today the university and the recipient of a Shubert Fellowship in playwriting. The play, directed by Ralph E. Margetts, is the story of an immigrant family which lives in a western mining community at the turn of the century. The play deals with a strike against the mine and how it affects the lives of the immigrants, and especially the lives of one family. "Walk Into The Wind will run through Saturday with performance time at 8 p.m. Season tickets are available for all Babcock productions through the play's run. HWEST r. - Universitys Pardoe Drama Theater Wednesday at 8.15 p.m. 45th So. LOGAN Served University of Utahs Pioneer Memorial Theatres Babcock Theatre season opens Tuesday with the production of a new play, "Walk Into The Wind, by Karen Malouf, a graduate student at vy 0 Show- Two guest actors wiU present "Behind the Broken in Brigham Words Young Siuth Temple The . I d J7 Brasses ; Ernst Tochs Sonata for Piano, Four Hands; Haydns Trio in G Major; J. II. Schem's Suite from "A Mu.-icBanquet; "Quartet in D." and William Schmidts "Variations on a Negro Folk Song. fj' 'W. Play by Student At Babcock Opens Tuesday present works by Mozart, Gibbons, Elgar, Fetler, Berger and Shaw Parker. Final Number Yugoslav Dance Set and Berg. They call Behind the Broken Words" a celebration of language, its beauties and the of will play in West BYU's de Jong Concert Hall Nov. 10 through Nov. 15. The opera is the story of the triumph of true love over the evils and violence of the Golden West. In accordance with the BYU policy, Opera Workshop's each major role has been double cast and the performers will alternate. Lynn Black-mu- n and Diane Murdock will portray Minnie, the Girl of the West Sheriff Jack Rar.ee will be played by Clayne Robison and Lowell Murdock. Walter Rudolph and Clinton Johnson play Ashby, the Wells Fargo Agent, and Evan Call and Terrance McCombs will alternate as Nick the Bartender. Puccinis opera is based on David Belascos famous play which ran for two years in New York at the turn of the century. Dr. Charles Metten said he will be directing the play in the style of the 1850s. Professor Charles Hensen is designing the set. Dr. Brandt Curtis is the artistic director and the orchestra will be conducted by Dr. Ralph Laycock. Symphony. Final work on the program is also the most recent: The "Bartok Concerto for Orchestra which was first performed just 25 years ago in Boston, under the baton of Since Koussevitzkv. Serge then it has become a genuine classic of symphonic literature, an acknowledged masterpiece with a secure and lasting place in the international concert repertoire. . e the rmonic, He has a repertory of 40 roles, from the classic Mozart operas to roles in the mere recent works of Stravinsky bass-barito- Golden Orchestra and the National Mississippi levees. Old-Tim- Opera Slate International Star Mr. Istomin, who as been an international musical celebrity since his performances at the first Pablo Casals Festival 15 years ago, last year celebrated the 25th anniversary of his debut by performing the "Third, "Fourth," and Beethoven concerti "Fifth with the New York Philha- member more ' than 60 years old, will re- y On BYU Appearing as soloist in the Beethoven concerto will be the distinguished American pianist, Eugene Istomin. This will be hts first appearance with the Utah Symphony. of with Puccini Work of the Bonn master's ance T Gramm, of the Metropolitan Opera Assn., will appear in recital Friday at 8:15 p m. in Kingsbury Hall. The concert will be the second in the current Civic Artists Series. Mr. Gramm's Metropolitan debut in January, 1964. firmly established him as a leading artist with that company, and he has been every season since. His credits also include engagement with the Chicago Lyric Opera, the Santa Fe Opei a, the Bo'on Opera and the New York City Opera. As soloist he is repeatedly such heard with major ensembles as the New York the PhiladelPhilharmonic, phia Orchestra, the Boston the Orchestra, Symphony Cleveland Orchestra, the San Francisco Symphony and the Montreal Symphony. Music-Uniersit- y Tabernacle. Ope-jpthe concert will be the "Classical Symphony by the Russian composer Prokof-ief- f which received its first performance in 1917. Piano Concerto 4 than Donald of the Utah Salt Lake Tribune. Sunday, November 2, 1963 ,m Win Mets Donald Gramm Scheduled at Kingsbury For Symphony Concert 19S9-7- 0 Th On the Cultural Scene EtiCVA7)CNS m hit'.1' I in Wf norsen pv kRAiti err imwi i f VptVpiL if I ItoHiwo I Clip ami Men te: ICI CAPADES, SAIT PALACE. 100 S. W. Ttmplt, Salt lake City, Utah 14101 each for in errognt of S odglt tickets it $ Enclt'ed it check mey ortltr end yetk tickets et $ Second cktico (day) CA11 eoch for (Hoy) (dote) -l- 8 iuDLi $ A A o. pofti i (time) CAT MORE ADDRESS j j 1 STATJ inctete tansU, 7201 5s. (dote) (time) - NAME WATERHOLS 3 255-S89- - ie!f-eidrs- 4 (tte!ept .ZIP . for prompt ticket ro'tirn. - r J ZjLJP |