Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 June 1952 — Page 20
PAGE 2 Record Review—
14 Heavy Records Reducedto2Light Ones
NEWEST long-playing (all 33'4-rpm) record releases = in the Columbia Masterworks series include Verdi's grands opera “Il Trovatore” complete. Met basso Cesare Siepi in z an excerpt from Rachmaninoff's opera “The Miserly Knight,” Chopin Waltzes by Dinu moomoo | Lipatti, soprano Dorothy Dow in| SHtvSion in the concerto de} the record premiere of Arnold ‘PE $8 very madern music. Schoenberg's “Erwartung” two BEETHOVEN OVERTURES Milhaud piano works played bY are performed by The PhiladelZadel Skolovsky, and two Bee- phia Orchestra under the baton = thoven overtures by Ormandy and of Eugene Ormandy in the new- = the Philadelphia Orchestra. Quite est Columbia AAL release, No.'= a varied assortment of interesting 15. They are his two famous commusic, old and new, | positions, the “Coriolan Overhn» ture” and the “Egmont OverIL TROVATORE, by Verdi, is ture,” that mont any musie-lover = one of the most familiar and|Will recognize almost as soon as = melodious of all grand operas, the music starts. Bon. Ci "4
source of those great ular] The “Coriolan Overture” the sow sr Chorus | Posed in 1807, was inspired by 'S
the “Anvil 1 favorites, th nv Collins’ tragedy based on the S
“Misere” and “Home to Our] " | same plot as Shakespeare's “Cori-| = Mountains.” Columbia now makes olanus.” The “Egmont Overture” =
available on two 12-inch long- ; is the introduction to the inciplaying discs in a handsome box sontal music Beethoven composed |= album its complete recording|, . (1ethe's tragedy in 1810. ~ made some years ago by artists gp... wor 1s performed without! of the world-famous La Scala introduction on one side of a tenopera company in Milan, Italy, inch LP record. H.W.M. The original issue was on 14)
78-rpm discs, heavy and hard to| a, store and handle, All of this = Concern now on two thin vinylite discs,| containing nearly two hours of] music. The distinguished La Scala cast and chorus and the ac- 0 anufacture * companying Milan Symphony orchestra are under the direction of
one of the world's greatest opera . conductors, Lorenzo Moiajoi PW [ic fie
(Bet SL-120.) ” » ” | CESARE SIEPI, young basso! who is one of Rudolph Bing's re-| cent “finds” at the Met, has made his Columbia Masterworks solo debut in a recording of the com-| plete second act from Rachman-| inoff’'s opera, “The Miserly Knight” He is accompanied by The Little Orchestra Society con-| ducted by Thomas Scherman, and it is all on one side of 12-inch record MIL-4526. On the other side the orchestra plays the verypopular “Variations on a Theme by Tchaikovsky” by Arensky. 8 8 5 3 The story of “The Miserly Knight,” which is- the second of| § Rachmaninoff’s: three operas, is concerned with an elderly nphle-| man .whose, consuming passion . for money brings about his down-| ¢ : i fall. In the second act, which - takes place in the cellar of the) A. W: S. Herrington nobleman’s house, the miser sings Marmon-Herrington Co, Inc.| a long monologue, gloating over 1511 Ww, Washington St. is emhis gold and extolling its Power. parking on ith 22d year with busiSiepl was heard in the same role nays at highest level in the comearlier this year when The Little naps peacetime history. Orchestra Society presented the wfarking anniversary of the first United States performance company formed in 1931, Mar-| of this dramatic Rachmaninoff mon-Herrington will put on the work, and the critics sald he sang market a new line of heavy-duty “in very grand style indeed.” {trucks known as the “800” series, | : uu {A. W. 8. Herrington, chairman of CHOPIN WALTZES, all four- the board, announced. teen of them, .are ° brilliantly] Founded by the late Walter C. played on one new 12-inch Colum- |Marmon and Arthur W. Herringbia Masterworks LP record by|ton, the firm has grown from a Dinu Lipuatti, one of the most small custom builder of multipleexceptionally gifted young pian- drive vehicles to the world's larg{sts of recent years. Instead of est commercial producer of allplaying them in chronological wheel-drive trucks and a leading order, he arranged them in a se- manufacturer of transit vehicles. quence providing the greatest] In 1935 the company exploded possible contrasts and building up (the theory vehicle production had to a thrilling climax. He begins to be slow and costly. Introduced with Waltz No. 4 in F Major and| Was a method for remanufacturconcludes with Waltz No. 2. . [D8 standard Ford models to allLipatti was acclaimed as one of Wheel-drive. Commercially pracEurope's most brilliant pianists, tical, these vehicles proved suited but was never heard in America.|t0 & Wide range of applications. His plans for an American con- Marmon-Herrington added trolcert tour were cancelled because !®Y coaches to its line in 1948 and of an illness that proved fatal [fOr Years later expanded transit He was only 33 years old when|®dUlPment to embrace motor
he died in 1950. coaches, ” »
» a ———————————— SCHOENBERG'S “BR W A R- Didn't Learn Much TUNG” is a modern monodrama/ Aviation Week reports it has whose title means “Expectation.” been told Russians, or Czechs, It had its American premiere last thoroughly disassembled the ¥-84 Nov. 15th when it was presented that landed by mistake at Prague by Dimitri Mitropoulos and the Airport before returning it. Air New York Philharmonic-Sym-| Force people say they didn't do a phony Orchestra as a concert- Very good job of putting it tomemorial to Arnold Schoenberg, gether again. i who died a year ago. Texas-born a, i —— soprano Dorothy Dow sang the only role. Five days later, Mr. Mitropoulos, Miss Dow and the} Cecil's orchestra made the premiere re-| cording which is now being re-§ , Jeased by Columbia. | Tomorrow's Fashions Today" Schoenberg wrote his half-hour music drama for solo Soprano) and orchestra in 1908, composing] S strange tone combinations in a! ummer mere two weeks. He himself con-| = ceived the macabre plot which de- J 2 pict the emotions Re a. woman, Dresses who one night goes into a forest to rendezvous with her lover and} OPEN FRIDAY TIL 8
suddenly stumbles over his dead Cecil g
body. ” ” w FREE PARKING GALORE
HuunOuuInann
MILHAUD PIANO WORKS are performed on a new Columbia Masterworks release, M1-4528, by the young Canadian-American planist, Zadel Skolovsky. There are two compositions, a dance! suite and a piano concerto, The composer himself conducts The Orchestra National de la Radio-!
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