Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 March 1951 — Page 20
| SHE ha New Granz AIP’ Discs ps in Jazz
Master Keeps Pring ‘Em Out By. DONNA MIKELS
ON AMECHE invented the pie and Norman Grane in-
Of Travels
Volume Translated
By French Professor
By HENRY BUTLER Times Staff Writer
BLOOMINGTON, Mar. 10-~When the Indiana University Press brings out its first title Mar, 23, an important new publishing venture will be under way. Even more, the IU Press will fill a long-felt need, since no great university seems complete without its own publishing
otlet,
God Wrought?” - Bernard Perry,
man his screen interpretation,
| director of 3: has become to the public
“Mr. Jazz” through the| first title “Travels in America, meflium of the phonograph rec-| 1816-1817,” by Edouard de or Montule, translated and edited
by Prof, Bdward D. Beeber of the IU French department. Though the title may seem a bit forbidding, Mr. Perry explained to me In his office in newly opened Heighway House, a frame building hortheast of IU Auditorium, that the book has considerable regional interest. Montule, of whom very little 8 Known apart from the lel ters in this book, visited two Indiana points, New Albany
As far as I know, Grang doesn't play any musical instrument, not even a comb, ¢ : But the Grangz-supervised “Jazz at the Philharmonic” series are pop classics. . And clirrently, while other record companies Aare satisfying jazz-fans by reissuing ge from the past, Mr. G. and hisgiMercury Record associates new artists or providing new musical vehicles for the, gontemporaries,
| | | | |
” ” » New Harmony, In 18186. G THERE BD. batch . of ap letters are full of sharp“Supervised recordings In| i104 observations of Indiana dgrcury Record's latest blue-
and neighboring states in what now seems an Incredibly re- | mote era.
pol release, featuring the nu-| 8 of his “Jazz at the Philhar-| nic" concert group ops in the release in m
. ” ” THE MONTULE book is a good sample of the kind of
y books
rgon disse thing Mr, Perry wants the TU Canadian Press ‘to bring out. It's both intro- scholarly and sufficiently popu-
d in Indian- lar to be called a “trade” book.
in last! In publishirig terms, that | “JATP" means a book the public will | ohcert teAamat buy, and not just librarians. | die And Mr, Perry speaks with " with a knowledge acquired from long that's experience in New York pubming lishing houses like Norton, m classis Dutton, Vanguard and A.A. mpin’ With : yn, 8 Lvl sid” Flip Phillips - Of course, the 1U Press will : others in the release in-| handle scholarly wogks studies clgde a fine Flip PHlllips- solo ‘on| by specialists and things that “IIream a Little Dreani” and| only researchers, commonly
read, -All university presses have to tackle a certain percentage of books interesting mainly to scholars, But Mr, Perry is aiming to issue works of general interest, with especlal = emphasis om regional studies. Following the Montule volume, the IU Press will publish on Apr. 15 “Poet of the People: An Evaluation of James Whitcomb Riléy,” by James T. Farrell, Horace Gregory and
p Be,” with the tenor sax man
Hank Jones on piano. ~ ” ~ I SAME Messrs. Brown, Righ and Jones under the tag Ray Brpwn Trio on “Song of the Volga Boptman” and “Blue Lou.” Their “"JATP” cohort Leater Young bléws long and lusty tenor sax on hree Little Words” and “Nee- ”
a for Two” and “Hallaluh”
Indianapolis novelist Jeannette
by. the Buddy Powell trio fea-| Covert Nolan. Powell at plano and the ; = % ublquitous Mr. Brown and Mr. MR. PERRY introduced me h on the drum-bass assembly| to Dr. Seeber—tall, bronzed
, And it's drummer man Ric in, turning up in the company of iCharlie Parker, Dizzle Gillesand ‘Thelonius Monk in the Parker-fronted group on “Melanhply Baby” and “Bloomdido.” » n » NOT GRANZ-SUPERVISED still top-drawer nfusic Americapa is the Lu Watters-Yerba Bipna jazz band number “Royal Gayden Blues.” if your taste runs to less concefitrated forms of pop music, hefe’s a rundown on some other pgent releases, e other single I like this wepk isn’t In this series but Id bef it's the first of a series by a singing star, Billy Daniels H§ first Mercury disc couples “I
and quietly humorous gent— who explained how he hit upon Edouard de Montule, “I was nosing through the stacks in the University of Michigan library, and just happened accidentaly to find the first and only edition of _Montule's Travels, which came out in Paris in 1821. I looked through it, and saw there were a couple of references to Indiana. So that was that,” Dr, Seeber said. He wrote up the Indiana references for the Indiana
articles, the first in 1941, tha second In 1048. Now the whole section of Montule's Travels dealing with North America and the Caribbean will become available to general readers. Dr. Seeber, who resembles the Hollywood {ideal rather than the average campus real type of college professor, was born in Rochester, N, Y., in 1804. In 1927, he got his BA at Oberlin, where he met his wife, the former Miss Combes of Cleveland, who then was studying music. They were married in 1928.
” SUBSEQUENTLY, he won his MA d
k
Patti Page to shame on “Get Those Old Records.” It's on
. . » JWMBIA -— Rosemary ney dogs proud by “Beauti- " backed by a
egree at the Univer. ' ment. B side HY ”
dy Day-"Bllle Holliday rites by Billie Holliday” on -playing disc-tunes ‘Time Of My Hands” “Laughing At eo,” “It's & Sin to Tell a Lie,” ng Brother Swing,” “LoveLove,” “Without Your Love,” Il Me More,” “Mandy Is Two.” | We say more? i here are songs more suited to! voice but still there's no such thing as a bad Al Hibbler vocal, tofwit his “Build That Rallroad”| with the Ellington orchestra { he Ravens have a nice pair-| “Midnight Blues” and “You b 3 ew to Drop & Heart to | A
, is tHAT wonderful Edith Piaf lez-vous Francais and English h on “Autumn Leaves” ked by “My Lost Melody.” here must be an “A” side and a $B" side to this dise but darned If ¥ can figure out which fs the 1 he@ter of the two superlative Er. rok Garner piano sides “Poor But- | terfly and “How High The Moon.” rank Sinatra and Rosemary | Clgoney blend well on “Cherry Pids Ought to Be You” and “Love. Mdans Love,” both from “Out of This Werld.” es Brown's “Classics in Rhythm" is. just what the title says. The long-playing eighttuge disc includes such items as “Shaughter on 10th Ave.” “Peter Ista Wolf” and “Prelude for ipors 1” | Iso & new Jimmy Dorsey! single, “By Heck" and of
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Here 135 Years Ag Shy ere 135 Years Ago I. Shr a Jo | SUCH A muste in pouring, forth on Stal umbia’s ‘records that the . C has to spin for hours on end to get through.thém all. What ur OUL Of tha speAKAE 8 nest, SWRIGing..dhaugh, ar the. following new] y(1, 3144. " “NOEARE: BONE KLEINE NAONTMUSIK (berwnade in |, The frst WASH Major), plus : . n-loving Fugue in C Minor,” po a ay, fon. Sohduetat by hat master Rivert 1 Council of phony No. 33 In b Kurtz, ; Gann a town, Bur] are all accomodated som{gHablY Thess are. giit rtotm.| His wife, It's mq on the two 12-inch ides of . ar pe Hal Departmen record ML-54370. The orchestra an enchanting ballet scores. $ heat fluence pi is the Vienna Philharmonic von-| 114 the S of music Wa Rakyat BEd on te © mystery ducted by Herbert Von | the last Martens Concert at the round out thing. and a good job they have dons on/ U'0 the Eo thas . Anyway, i [three of Mozart's most urat other week, record. names. Al ling orchestral compositions, - Wega) 3 1b ui of Hiting Ineiody SONGS runs it. W CONCERTO NO. 8 in D Minor, oti! TRASHY S10UL UKE Clatliwith cham phone num : b i» hor gstrimmmin Ty plano, "» rw [xg a PA lg log ed Witold recon, 3 and the Philharmonic Orchestra HANDEL: SONATAS FOR body, you | conducted by Paul Kietzki, on the| V1 AND FIGURED BASS, folk up. two 12-inch sides of LP pl by Alexander Schneider, But the | This is one of the two most v and Ralph Rirkpatrick, accompanying reported to ular plano concertos written ! iy with Frank Miller, | Irish ng novel as tt the first half of the present cen-| °° ols. I, IL and III, on| Miss ing theme: tury (the other being the tes 104meh 1p records, Lp No.| young dance, sta: {composer's Second.) Rachmani- MICE br Yim) ’ eld vii with everyt noff composed it specifically for a chamber music gems by| from her Coming up tour of the United States in 1909, Handel are just as attractive to|country of Gadsby’s and it was first played by the the ear in their own peaceful,(has had a meteoric rise thro will start Mar. 13. The businéss with bowls NewYork Symphony under the soothing little way, as his large/a New York night club to Town!course opéns Mar. 15. ; : a big slice (baton of Walter Pamrosch. T¢ is Works in the flelds of aratorio,s ’ RE fiokum. a romantic, rich-textured work/ Opera and orchestral suite are Still late whose themes have intense ex-|impressive., All six of his violin ¥ ; oo. becue, the pressive power. concertos are included fn these | Now Choose from TWO down the ( BEETHOVEN: CONCERTO IN Shite vojumas 20 io a record, ) talk and n {D MAJOR for violin and orches- are great favorite con-| The enlo: DEBUT—Bernard Perry (left), director of the new Indiane (tra, recorded by Zino Francescat.|cert violinists as opening num-/ } $75 ZENITH $75 ganization University Press, and Prof. Edward D. Seeber of the IU French ti, violin, and The Philadelphia bers. i i je areas | department, discuss the first book to appear Mar. 23 with the [Orchestra under Fugene Ori DEBUSSY: CHILDREN'S ; - ve, ey IU imprint. Bp mandy, on the two 12-inch sides CORNER SUITE, and Schu-| HEARING AIDS any public 1, ima of LP No. ML-54371, This is the, mann's “Forest Scenes” (Op. 82), th The x - . aad loca | sity of Rochester in 1631, and | ? only violin concerto Beethoven|played by Robert Casadesus, successfel * : a wd Ph. D. at Johns Hopkins (Noted Arctic Explorer wrote, but it is a masterpiece of piano, on the two 12-inch sides of 3 time-tested choice | in 1934, His doctoral disserta- [Slated to Speak at IU noble proportions, depth of feel- LP No. MIL-4366. Two plano! ed Re *AND-=(2) the Brand Super Flying H tion was on the lively subject Te: ate Bertiea Ing and superb lyricism. It takes|suites of unusual grace and || © .- 8) oyal® with handy “Woery ‘of . “Anti-Slavery Opinion In | py OMINGTON, Mar. 10 |® Matured virtuoso such as Fran- beauty, performed with his cus DON'T BE FOOLED! i Swiech. You aaa WASHIN | France In the Second Half of : ’ . cescatt! is to give the warm, ex-|tomary perceptiveness and charm, No Heriog Ad cae be switch i f 10 a fresh emecgency palsy-walsy | the 18th ' Century.” All the Cmdr. Donald B. MacMillan, vet-ipressive performance heard on/by the great French-born pianist. a battery in the instrament, troopers wl | worth-while French literary [eran Arctic explorer, will appear|this record. The “Children’s Corner Suite” peal con devices if Try either wader our ‘ whole weel people In that half century of on the Indiana University series| ROSSINI - RESPIGHI: LA|is formed of six short movements, Toss permien. 10-day Trial Money-Back Guarastes. with a Whi great ideas were opposed to |at 7:15 p.m. Monday, Mar. 19. |BOUTIQUE .FANTASQUE, on/ineluding those great favorites, : President | slavery, he found. With the tople “North—Far|one side of 12-inch LP No, ML-|“‘Serenade for the Doll” and CAPITOL HEARING AID CO. he'd still 1 | © Now he's working on a his- [North with MacMillan,” the 54367; and on the other side,|“Golliwog’s Cakewalk.” T hej . om AVTHOAISED AM airplane. tory of “spleen,” that curious (famed explorer will give a talk{Schumann - Glazounov’'s "“€arna-|“Forest Scenes” or “Waldscenen” | INDIANAPOLIS & IND. Biggest anatomical term which in the [illustrated with color films in the val”; both played by The Royal|is a suite consisting of nine short] Out Personnels 13th out Serving the Hard of Rearine was a buff | 48th Century was the stock [IU auditorium. Philharmonic Orchestra of Lon-'but highly dekcriptive pieces. { er ————————————————————LLSR of Mrs. Ms word for what we eall the || ———————————— - ———————— r— ” m—— lh up a Home |, “blues,” ."Spieen” spread. from wp o ¥ 2 : Ae RSS RE » ig Shad tee for.se | England to France; and raised pl ie ; v2 : » _ quite py no end of trouble, including nu- y . rustle merous suicides among the lt- | \1 4 A | Open Monday Until 9 P. M. ladies, son terary and artistic set, . of the so The Seebers reside at 506 . . Veep Ballantine Rd., Bloomington. 4 : ven Good Time fo Shop assorted ¢ They have three children: John, | e Z : wives “tury 21, now in the Army (“we don't | . : : EB Cold twr see much of him”); Elizabeth, : . ’ salmon an 18, and Gilbert, 11. Dr. Seeber * 3 served—the keeps in trim with the rugged of wonder hobby of hiking and mountain the lads in climbing (“I won't mention my “They'll ne daily game of bottle pool in the I tell them Faculty Club") © vowed a wm He and Mrs. Seeber have been s : x clamped a up most of the important peaks : a demi tass in Colorado, from Mt. Elbert : (14,431 ft, highest In the x a Rockies) on down. “Great stuff, a 3. to but you have to be in condi- 3 : be By ne tion,” he said. : ” : . 4 » ’. 5 ginny who ah HEY : : 5 liamentary Debater at West Point | The Cong Cadet Philip Sheridan, son of : wD Yer Col. and Mrs. Lawrence V, Sher- : Lady's Hon, (idan, Brendonwood, Indianapolis, * chairs and has been named to the debating minutes. [team at West Paint. He has been wil on a tour of Ohio and Kentucky : o_o Ovi [Colleges representing the Military : lie, cheat |Academy in collegiate debates, xX and got ro Advertisement, B oy de nn Would You Pay $1 danger,» 3 ’ v The Peer Yo Curb your there's an ABC Washer for every family . . . every budgef . . . every preference! wt HRITI golf while RT : S$ Al : : dinner par If s0 don't waste a minute bu s dowagers roger Koo BURT Yes ... ABC washers are a Better Buy . . . and are rapidly 2aVing thes {oped in the ida a, Knox Control know how ra EA 3 an of nr : “« ” 3 : Ha, Rhgimatium, Neurith, Sciatica. Neu: becoming a “hard to get” item. We urge you... if you need ralgia, Bursit nd Lumbag D rae °_y usually works With Great speed because It | Jimmie S {dissolves in the Intestines so that the inLouise |B A a va erat aiutele’ sag | a new washer, Better Buy ABC Now. FAR as jotnt in the 9. And as it fights (Pan | Symington cess ure actq whieh er muscles | vision does: aS oe BO Den with radio. 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