1
!N THE WOR L D~OFMUSIC "" AND M U SIC1A NS That Mysterious "Jazz" lieutenant Europe's Descrihes the Origin of the Tcrm .-His Adventures in France.Negro Music Pleases the Frcnch People . The Personuel of the Band By Grenville Vernon Just what is "jazz"? Most of us know it when we hear it, but few of us know its derivation, its reason, or the manner in which the veritable '.jazz" is, produccd, for there are "jazzes" which are not veritable. "Jazz" ia, of course, negro; somchow or other all musical originality in Ameriea scems to be negro. The negro musieally is always a worshipper of rhythm; often he is a rhythomaniac, «nd "jazz" arizes from his rhythmic fervor, combined with a peculiar lik- ing for strange sounds. This at least is the opinion of Lieutcnant James Reese Europe, late of the Machinc Gun Battalion of the old 15th Regiment. Lieutcnant Europe has just rcturned from more than a year's service ln France, which he passed partly in the trenches and partly in the direction of the band hc had organized for his regiment, a band which had a stupen- dous succcss in France and which is having eo,ually as great success at home. "I belicve that the term 'jazz,'" said Lieutcnant Europe, "originated with a band of four picccs which was found about fiftecn years ago in New Orleans, and which was known as 'Razz's Band.' Thi3 band was of trulv extraordinary composition. It consisted of a bary- ?one horn, a trombone, a cornet, and tn instrument made out of the chlna- berry trec. This instrument is some¬ thing Iike a clarinet, and is made by the Southern negroes themselves. Strange to say, it can be used only while the sap is in the wood, and after, t few weeks' use has to be thrown away. It produces a bcautiful sound and is worthy of inclusion in any band or orchestra. I myself intend to em- ploy it soon in my band. The four mnsicions of Razz's Band had no idea at all of what they were playing; they improviscd as they went along, but such was their innate sense of rhythm that they produced something which was very taking. From the small cafes of New Orleans they graduated to the St. Charles Hotel, and after a time to the Winter Garden in New York, where they appeared, however, only a few days, the indi- vidual musicians being grabbed up by Tarious orchestras in the city. Some- how in the passage of time Razz's JBand got changed into 'Jazz's Band,' and frora this corruption arose the .term 'jazz.' i "The negro loves anything that is peculiar in music, and this 'jazzing' ap¬ peals to him strongly. It, is accom- plished in several ways. With the brass instruments we put in mutes and make a whirling motion with the tongue, at the same time blowing full pressure. With wind instruments we pincb. the mouthpiece and blow hard. This produces the peculiar sound which you all know. To us it is not aiacordant a3 we play the music as .it ia written, only that we accent itrongly in thia manner the notes which originally would be without ac¬ cent, It Is natural for us to do this; it is, indeed, a racial musical t-bar- aeteristic. I have to call a daily re- hearsal of my band to prevent the rausiciar.s from adding to their music awre than I wi3h them to. Whenever aoaaible they all embroider their parts .ia order to prodace new, peculiar lounds. Some of the8e effects are ex- eellent and some are not, and I have to be contlnually on the lookout to eat out the resulta of my muaiciana' orlginality. "Thia jazz music made a tremendoua Mnsation in France. I recall one In- tident in particular. From last Feb- mary to last August I had been ln «he trenches, in command of my ma- ebine gun sqaad. I harl been through tbe terriflc gcneral attack in Gham- pagne when Gencra! Gouraud an- aihilated tho encmy by his stratagem and finally put an end to their hopea of vietory, and I had been through many a amallcr engajremont. I can t«H you that muaic was one of the things furthest from my mind when one day, just before the Allied con¬ ferencc in Paris on August 18, Col¬ onel Hayward came to me and said: "'Lieutenant Europe, I want you to go back to your band and give a single concert in Paris.' "I protested, telling him that T hadn't led the band since Fcbruary, but he insisted. Well, I went back to my band, and with it I went to Paris. What was to be our only concert was in the Theatre des Champs Elyaees. Before we had playcd two numbers the audience went wild. We had conquered Paris. General Bliss and French high officers who had heard us insisted that we should stay in Paris, and there we stayed for eight wecks. Every- where wo gave a concert it was a riot, but the supreme moment came in the Tuileries Gardens when we £ave a con- cert in conjunction with the greatest bands in the world.the British Grena- diers' Band, the Band Gardo Re- publicaine, and the Royal Italian Band. My band, of course, could r.ot com- paro with any of these, yet tho crowd, and it was such a crowd as I never saw anywhere else in tne world, de- scrted them for us. We playcd to BO,-- 000 people at least, and had we wished it we might be playing yet. "After the concert was over the lead- er of the Band of the Garde Repub- licaine came over and asked me for the score of one of the jazz composi- tions we had played. He said hc wanted his band to play it. I gave it to him and the next day he aguin came to see me. He explained that he couldn't seem to get the effects I got. and asked me to go to a rehearsal. 1 went with him. The great band played the composition superbly.but he was right: the jass effects were missing. I took an instrument and showed him how it could be done, and he told me that his own musicians felt sure that my band had used spe¬ cial instruments. Indeed, some of them, afterward attend ing one of my re- hearsals, did not believe what I had said until after they had examined the instruments used by my men. "I have come back from France more firmly convinced than ever that negroes should write negro music. We have our own racial feeling and if we try to copy whites we will make bad copies. I noticed that the Morocco negro bands played music which had an affinity to ours. One piece, 'In Zanzibar,' I took for my band, and though white audiences seem to find it too discordant, I found it most sym- pathetic. We won France by playing music which was ours and not a pale imitation of others, and if wo are to develop in America we must develop along our own lines. Our musicians do their best work when using negro material. Will Marion Cook, William Tires, even Harry Burleigh and Col- eridge-Taylor are not truly themselves in the music which expresses their race. Mr. Tires, for instance, 'writes charming waltzes, but the best of these have in them negro influences. The music of our race springs from the soil, and this is true to-day with no other race, except possibly the Rus- sians, and it ia because of this that 1 and all my musicians have come to love Ruasian music. Indeed, as far as I air, conccrncd, it ia the only music jI care for outside of negro." Tho lieutenant then gpoke of the manner in which he formed his band. "When war broke out, I enlistod as a private in Colonel Hayward'a regi- ment, and I had just passed my offker's examination when the colonel asked me to form a band. I told him that it would be impossibie, as the negro muBiciana of New York wero paid too well to have them give up their jobs to go to war. Howevcr, Colonel Hay¬ ward raised $10,000 and told me to get the musicians wherevcr I could pet them. The reed players T got in Porto Rico, the Tcst from all over the country. I had only one New York negro in the band my solo cornctist. These are the men who now composc the band and they are all fightcrs as well as musicians, for all have scen service in the trenches." Programmes SUNDAY j Carnegie Hall, 3 p. m. last concert l"t the ecason by the Philharmonic So- .< Ciety: ' 3»»phony No. G, In C Mlnor, Op. «7. Beethoven .Tone Poem, "The lal* of ihe D*ad"- Kachmaninoff Cooetrto in G Minor for violin and t wheatra .Bruch L, Rildy Brown .Oterture. "1812" ,.Taehaikowaky I Aeolian Hall, 3 p. m., piano recital *»7 oerge Prokofieff: r*k»t Sonata, F Minor Un one part).... . Prokoflcff Thr«* <i*votU*- V afcarp Mlnor. D Major, ',_" Minor.Prokoneff I** Gr»ndn*oth*r»" Talea.Prokofieff ijofau .ProkonVIT PMaH Kstankiue. gcrlabine rktartt trotn an KahlMtion--Prome- ', "*4*, BylU,, it»l!*t <]« Pou»t»na flfcnn i leuro ri/i'i.*; Vieux Chateau, Umog-ea . Mou»»orx»ky "¦taewe .ProkoftpfT \ Prinecus Theatre, 8:30 p. m., aong :'«ital by Mmo. Ruano Bogualav (Mra. Kiwardo Martin;; ,tL £: ' *¦/ J'*r"'wu»,.Plerre Alln M«J? H""* '. <l*-\\r pSSSi**,'. -Ai;;-Tte .8i'wu | Mlppod.orne, «:lf, p. .,. ,.njp rrd,a, Mm*. (iaili-cjureij .P#rjrol*»« of the Week Sliophcrd, Thy Dcmcanor Vary .Brown Bombre for*t, from "Wiliiarn Tell". Koanini Carnivale di Venezla .Bwdl.-t I .it lettro .Aubert Viank*'» SonK .StuUmnn Oh, In My Drearnn .Liuit Carc*Wa» (in Spaniah) . .Chapi Vtmationn .Mozort-IUhn Mr. Berengucr and Mr. Samuclu Batolie; Chanaon do tambourin*ur: BolUt l-annieren. Paatourelles of the 18th century. Arranjjwi by Wcckcrlin Mad secne from "Lucia" (with flut*J ... Doni/.ctti City College, 4 p. m., organ recital by Samuel A. Italdwin: Concert ovcrture in E flat.. Falkes g^«W Mrditation.Guilmant Preludo and Fiiaue tn A minor. Bac.h Minnet frorn "U D*vin du Vlllajre". |io.,,,au Will o' th* Wi»r> . Nevln rf W.i!'1, 5°"*.MaetWIl A Dewrt^d Inrm .MacDowell I<> a Wuter J.tly .MacDowell Honata, the Ninety-fourth I'ealm... Ueubke Brooklyn Academy of Music, 8 p. m., concert by the Irish Muslcal and Dra- matic Club: Hhe U Far From Ihe lAmi.Monre Th<s Meetlmr of tho Water*.Moor* Th* Old Plaid Bhawl.Kahy Thi? !rl»h Kmficrarit .Parkrr John Flnrifiraii, tcnor. St. Patrick'tt Cuthedral Piano foh>, Irhth M«le<:tloni arranged by P«rey <»raln«<;r. Miaa Kathlrcn Nar«ll» 'I Weai'a Awakp.,.Thomas Day O Natlw Mualr air 700 yeara oid, ar- ranjf'd by Charl** MrCarthy. Molly Malone.,-Old Dublln Htreet Ballet Ume. MarU NarcUc, Tfi«» l<o»»r'» Cum*.Traulitlrtnal (urrent Attractions^o/a Wani Opera Season ifHsJlfe 1 If All the Younfr Maidens.I.ohr When Irish Eycs Are Smilim? On the Road to Ballynuro Miaa Cora Tracy, contralto The Harp That Once Through Tara'a Hall .Moore Beiieve Me if All Those Endcaring Young Charms.Moore I Hc-ai- You Calling Me.Ma'rshall Miss Anna Gray, harpist. Molly Bawn.Lover The Bard of Armagh.Hughet The Next Market Day.Hughea The Snowy Breasteii Pearl.De Vere John Finnegan, tenor Believe Me if All Those Endcaring Young Charms .Moore Father O'Flynn Has Sorrow Thy Voung Days Shaded.. .Moore Sweet Peggy O'Neili.Redding Herbcrt Waterous, basso The Harp That Onci? Through Tara'a *la!l .Moore The Pretty Girl Milking Her Cow, tflifford Pagc 1 he. Kerry Dance.Molloy Miss Lily Meagher. 'Cello, Fantasia on Irish Aira The Coulin The Valley Lay Smiling Before Me Savourneen Deelish O'Donnell Al.oo HanB Kronold, 'cellist. The Minstrel Boy. Moore Ireland, My Sireland.Victur Herbert Three sellected Irish folksongs. Vernon Stiles, tenor Soldiers of Erin; Star Spangled Banner, The Irish Musical Cltib Chorui Princess Theatre, 8:15, song recital by Berta Reviere: Rossirrnolct ilu Bois Joli. ..SLxteenth Centuri Rendl'l Sereno al Ciglio. Hahdci M'Ha Preas Alla Sun Kegna.Paradies Rossignols Atnoureuscs.Rarneau Jeanne d'Arc .Tschaikowsky Mignoncttc . Weckerlin Aprea un Rove.Gabrh 1 'aurc D Une Prison . llalm Kri Sourdine. Hnhn Eros . cirieg Lo, Ilere the Gentle T.ark.Rishop Heart Throbu .Bendel Song Ia So Old. .A. R. Wachtmeister Berceu.se .Fannie Dilliou . »Vnow.Giwtave lerrari I Plueked a Quill from Cupid'a Wfng, .Hadley MONDAY Aeolian Hall, 8:15 p. m, Recital by Harold Bauer and Jacques Thibaud of sonntas for piano and violfti by Doethoven: Snnaln in A mnjor. Op. 12, Sonata ln F major, Op, 24. Sonata In A major, Op. 47 (Kreutaer). TUESDAY Aeolian Hall, .1 p. m. Piano recital by Harry Cumpson: I'leimle, Op. ic..Gllera Sonata QiiufI unn Fantasia, Op, 27, "°- I .Hrethoven 1'reludo, Chorale and Fugue.Franck Theme and Variatlons, Op. 19, No. Ii. Tuchniltriwaky Melodie in E major.HarhmaiilnofT In Autumn Sponiih (,'aprice... .Mosckowaki Camegie Hull. 8:15 p. m., violin re¬ cital by Elias Breeskln: Sonata No. 1, Adagio-Fuga 'unsccom- nanied) .Raeh I.nrgo . Friedman-Bach Varintion.i on a Theme by Corelli. Tartini-Kreialer Symphonlc Knpagnole .I.alo Notturno.Chopin-Wllhelmj Rondo .Schubert-Friedherg Chorun of Derviihea.Bcethoven-Auer Vlennene .Godowaky Witehes' Sabbath (first time).Goldmark Polonaise Brillante . Wieniuwaki Jonef Adler at the piano WEDNE8DAY City Collcge, 4 p. m., organ recital by Samuel A. Baldwin: Overture, "Occatiional Oratorio". .Handrl Chorale Prelude (JesU, My Gulde) Hn.h Concert, Prelude and Fuguc....Faulkaa !n Spiinglimr .Chaffin In the Morning.Grleg Ase'a Deatb.Grleg Kamennoi Ontrow .Rul)ln»teln Syrnpbony No. 6.Widor Aeolian Hall, fl p. m. Recital by the Pressellc sisters of music for two planos: Varlationa (sur un theme de Reelhovrn). Holnt-Saens Marehe Orientale .Bcethnveli l.ti Coquptte. he Revcur. Polichlnelle (sllhouottea). Arennky Sehwio. Op. 87 .Salnt-Haena Cnnnrto Pathetitiuo .Unit Valce Parar/hraite .Chopln.Sehuett En Blanr et Nolr, No. 1.Debustiy Khapaodle EapMgnole .Albenlr. Comrnodore Hotel, Orand Bnllroom, 8:30, flrat Pcrahlng Square mualcal: Pnlonafw. A major.Ohoptn Noeturne (Love Dream).Xiazt Spinning i-:on>i .Mcntlelssohn Arthur Rubinsteln l.e Nil (with 'cello obbligatb).Lerous Miss Garden Air . .1. Ba.-h Minuel .Handel Turkish March.Gosseo-Klman Mischa Elmnn Aria, O tu the in si-no ugli angeli ifrom "La Forza del Peatino").Verdi Mr. Caruso Trlana :. Albeniz Le Plua gre lente (valae).Dehussy March Militaire . .Schubdrt-Taussig Arthur Rubinsteln Les Hcrceaut.Faurc [ion Soir.Debusay Ariette._ Debusay Miss Garden Noeturne . Chopin G'yp'sy Airs..^aranatf Miseha 'Biman Arin, Ah, Dispar, vision.Massenel Mr. Caruso THURSDA-Y Aeolian Ilall, 3 p. m. Piano recita by Edward Morris: Toccata and Fugue in D minor. Bnch-Tausif Dance in G major; Dance in C major. Bcethover Impromptu, Op. 36; Noeturne, Op. 9, No. 1 Ktmle in pctaves, Op. 25, No. 10: Waltz (poathumous No. 21 Ballad, Op. 23 .Cliopit Sonata, Op, 31, No. .'!.Bcethover "Fil'ths" ia fragmenti, American Huuibr- esque Novelett* .Fellx Deyi Notturoo, No. :'. .I.isz' The Krlking .Sehubert'Diszt FRIDAY Aeolian Hali, 3 p. m., song recital bj Rachel Martin Harris: Stizzoao, mio Stlzzoso. (1710-1736) Pergolesi Drh jiiu u me non v'ascondete, (1640-1703) Bononcini Pnstoralc, Seventeenth aentury, arrnnged by Perihou As when the dovc laments her lovo, (1648-176$) Handel Since I am onci> more alone. .Tschailiowskj Song of Provence. ..Schumanr Mother Love.Orieji Partlng .Brahmi A Broken Heart.DvoraV The Snowdrnp.firetchnninofT Chant d'Extl.Vida Comment vetix lu.LuekBton> Choneon Sarraalne, from "Lc Cavallef Jenn" .Jonrirref Sclze Ani>.Cuvllliei rMves BleiiH . Drhuoi Chanson de Soozzonc. from "Ar.i*nnio," Bflint-SttDm Gonieoratiori .Mtinnfn In Summer Fields.lufi'rey Ilnrri Thou Art th" Night Wiml.Gau At 8:lo p. in., sonata recita! bv Michel Penha, vibloncollist, and Au gllata Tollefnen, pianist: Op. I02, No. 1. Bcethover Op. 09.llilihnii Op. 62.I,i"o Orneteli SATURDAY Aeolian Ilall, 2:30 p. m., pinno re- citnl by Ossip Gabrilowitsch: I'hnntanln in 0 major, Op. 17. .Schun.ani Etudoa, Op. 10, Op. 25.Chopli Sonata in O rninor .Brhumam Noeturne in II major, Op. 9 Valae in A flat major: Kcherzo In B mlnor, Op. 20 .Chopir Harolrf Bauer, Pianist, Aeolian Ilall, Monday Rosat Poiiselle . {n la. fbrjs.de l Destino* r~ ~.~.~ "The Problem of the Reissue We Have Always With Us" "The problem of the reissue, Iike. the poor, we have always with us," saya Myron Selznick, preaident of the Selznick Picturca Corporation. "i would n- t go so :';.;¦ aa Y\ illiam S. Hart," adds Mr. Selznick, "who is quoted in an interview in a magazine aa saying, 'If the law doesn't put a stop to this practice of selling old product as new, a gun will.' "It is interesting to note, however, that the film player is the only person whose earlier efforts, improperly han- dled, are out of hia control. A painter can destroy a picture he has paintod and a writer can refuse to permit re- printing of his books, as Rudyard Kip- ling did with 'Letters of Marque.' But the film once made i? a permanent piece of property of the producer, for good or ill." Ralph Kellard to Leave The Speakies for the Movies lUlph Kellard, former Pathe star, is returning to the screen, having been signed by B. A. Rolfe to play the feat- ured role in a new m\ reel special picture, as yet unnamed. This picture will mark Mr. Kellnrd's reappearance on the screen after an absence of a year and a half, during which time he returned to the speaking .stage to cre- ate the leading roles in "Eyes of Youth," "Nancy Lee" and "Over Here," and "A Stitch in Time" at the Fulton Theatre, and a return to "Eyes of Youth" during its recent engagement at the Manhattan Opera House. A New C.risp Idea For Bryant Washburn Donald Grisp, director of Bryant Vv'ashburn in I'aramount's "Tlie Vil- lage Gut-Up," has an idea which is strictly original. The situation in the picture is this: Washburn, who appears as a young clerk, has an appointment with the board of directors of a large corpora- AMUSEMENTS METROPOLITAN OPERA Mon. at 8:15. Doublo Bill: L'Oracola. Konton: Altli'iun. ficottl, Iildu.-. Paallacid. Mu/,lo; aruao, Clialmera, VVerrenrath. Coiul., MoranzunL Wcd. nl 8:15 Butlrrfly. Kurrir, Kornla: Lazaro, Bcottl, Haria, D'AtigMo Cond., Moraiutonl , TIium. Mat. nl 2 ($11,. $bT. Vrnil FeitlvifTl Act I. Tronatorii; A'-ts :! ajid il, l-oi/a 0>l Om- tlno; Act 8, AlUa. Rapiiold, I'onwllo, Miwlo; cariuw. Marlltiolii. Whltelilll, Ciiallner.% ,Mar- rtoni'H, Cond'ia, Moranzunl nnd Papl. j 1'hiin. pt s ia, Btirhor of BeVlUa. UnrtfcntoVi Mai't- fc il: ll«.'i(Pii. l). Uiet, Uolhlor, Malaleala. d I'npl. Irl, ».. 8 Tflpto lilll Li'9«nil. Tunpln Oanmr. ftlianiWli, r,:,.¦;,-, Kciton, llrinlMi; AIUiouhc, Itiiifaloti, Clialmera. iVii-.d Moranzont. hat. «.. :. aainion Ot Dallln. MM/.i-imnrr. Cnniso. (.» ¦[.¦¦..I, Mardonei, Helaa, Cuml., Monioui ttat. al k 175c in S'.' Than. Farrar, Ifoward: AUImuao, WhUahtll Anantaii, t'ornl,, Moiitoux, TO-NIGHT Ptu!f|I«rdM Concerl 8.30 MarRuerite Namara PrleM frow HOo "I l i,' Boprano F.NT.HF. ORCHEHTRA HlpolitO UzafO COND., ROTHMEYPR' r T,,..r IfAJtDMAN I'lANO l'l-i-;i> MRN& .,ohI liniinl nf Season.JASCUA NMATH NOW AT TlOX OFKICE. Arollnn llnll. WmI, Afl., Apr. 5. at ». e.. rinno Becltal by Reae end Charlotto PRESSELLE S#at» »> Ilot frfti-r (Maaon & Ilamlii Pltnil Veoltan Ilall, Thura, Afl.. Apr. 3. nl S Edwarb MORRiS l-iin.) Hecltal Maaon A- llamlln s-im Now. Arolian Ilall, FrL. Aft.. Apr. i, at i. .-.iilf) Now.Song Hecltal by ftnrhel M0RT0N-HARRIS PHILHARMONIC .IOSEP NTBANHKY Coadtlrtor fl.OHlNO COM'ERT OF TIIK SKASON Cemeirlfi Ilall. Thia Aftcrnoon nt 3. 8oioi.t EDDY BROWN v,»,1» IVelhoven. Flflh pijmplion.r RarhmanlnnlT, "Th« I»le of Ihe llend" TclialWovHlty, n-irrlnrc- "181JJ" Tlckets et Box Otflce, K<U:c F. I.'lfels. Mffr. AEOMAN IIAIX, Hat. Etk., Aj>r. I:r.nt fl.lfl Salzedo mf Ensembie .,"blr" VERA JANACOPOLOS :-»,... T>ir r»th»Hn«» A. Ilnminnn r,l tv lltVi «:t tion, v ho are to consider purchasing his plan. He is terribly afraid of the coming ordeal. As he walks down tho hall toward the directors' room his etiurage oozes. He starts out bravely enough, but fccls smaller and smaller, so that ho is ready to run when he reaches the door. The picture will show just how he really felt as he tapped oa the portal he appears about two inches high, with a giant door towering above. Virs. Drew Collects Hatpins for Soldiers Convalescent soldiers in the United States ai'iny base hospital at Camp Dix, N". J., have a real champion in Mrs. Sidney Drew, who is collecting hatpins for them. Hrroes with cramped or partially paralyzed tingers, or only part of their fingers.-spend hours making brads out' of wallpaper and ;;ay colored mugazinc covers. They wind the paper on the pins, then roll it into beads, which they dip into shellac or varniah for glossing. Necklaces of these beads sell for good money, which the soldiers welcome while waiting for payday. To secure a large number of these long hatpins, Mrs. Drew makes a plea to all women who reud this story to hunt up their old hatpins or buy some. Packages of pins will be forwarded if readers will ^end them to Mrs. Sidney Drew, 220 West Forty-second Street, Xew York City. Many husbands will, no doubt, en- courage their wives to send their hat¬ pins to Mrs. Drew, which cooperation will greatly aid the soldiers' efforts to earn "pin money." AMUSEMENTS THE- NEW SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA EDGAr'vARESe!' Conductor CARNEGIE HALL EVGS.--APRIL 11, 25--MAY 9 MATS.--APRIL 12, 26--N3AY 10 ; ia on Tli Icet.i three -\ enii gs or three "'. '."" ¦. 1.' ller boxes (six ueats), Joit. 1": pper tier boxen (nlx seatsl ?4S 50 Parquol seats, $6 80; irei In le, $4 96 Baleony rront, $3.30: Balconv, J2.4S; Siimle Tlcketa, boxes. $3 30, $2 7 oihi rs, $2.20. *1 66, $1.10, 83f '1" ese ps-l, .-v |n, ,,ie -.vai lax. Subm rlpt lonp should b< malled io THI-: NKW SYMPHONY OliCTlESTRA. S. S MACMILIjEN. Manager 20 W. 42d SI 'Phone Murray ltlii 3426. Mason & Uamlin Piunos Um VACATION ASSOCIATION'S C.ALA COMCEKT METROPOLITAN °.£ X,;.^'., rhiladeiphia Orchestra r-*°i»''i Rt"kow«w Iia Oruid Paaquo nuase," Itlmaky-Koraakoff; Symphony Palh.iue." TacliaJkowaky; Al, for '¦!' .."'.. !" vloll"»' ItaclunaiilnoflT. IFlrat Time 5ERGEI RACHMANINOFF I'lai litnanln iff. niiirnr. GERALDINE FARRAR "Warlttw jlii Koaos.' l',.r,;. .-,..,,, .,..¦ ',\""at .¦¦ »UI' Jardlnloi " ciiamlnade '. i'Oii IjIimi Mwaelip i.:, i| u 5«?ei., Kuraakoff "Greetliig." Orlca A Uwnri " '. '1,n'>¦¦¦'¦ '.¦ !'". l»lo," Ruchmaiiiaiiff: 'The "'"','"" Ulrch- ""'" Hnowrirup." Orotchortnolt ,. ";''¦'". " "' «« '. al Vaeatli n AaaocialJon, ."'¦ ln >'¦¦. MKrM.v Rulluiaii'a md oil a AkmicIm and Motropolitan Opera Uouao War Tax Extimpted on Tickets HIPP00R0ME T0-KIGHT If. GALU-CURCI i. .! iimb" f of aeota atlll avallable e. op. na hi ii ion i,, ..... CJenoral and 81 on nle |. t,..' |, ., ;n ..':. hnn, ;, Wp.ni er .'. \> v McHwei y, AEOLIAN HflLL, ;: APRIL 6 RAFAELO Seats |1 i.i:i $2 al Box Olflee. Managcment Motropolitan Mualcal linrraii CnrneRl^ h.||. U>d. F.ve.. .\,,rll Olh SCHOLA CANTORIM KT1RT BCIirxi LEU, Conductor roi reil iVorlta of Vlctoria & .Moriilea (ICttater H'eels Moale of OWI Spain) Thre* (hunsons of < luiide DebnhHv Biriferette* of Old France A i'lunderti Unale from » New l.ilur^v of RACHMANINOFF (Flrat performanci outslde of Russla) Soloiwt: Merle Aleoeli, (nnlrnlto. Si-ata $': to boc, on Balo ». no.t OfJlea. AKOI.I.AN HAI.I., THIS AI-TKitNdON at S THIltO PIANOFOKTK KKt rr.\|__sMt«»K PROKOFIEFF Mpnierit. flamael ,K- Jonea StAtnway Plani). CARKEOliS HAI J. T<l.NSr.HT AT »:I8 Concert for the Bi m Qi of Deslroyed Church Properties, lialian Froni Sololats.AM5S8ANDRO noi.ci, Tenor ALYS lARKKYNl;. Sonrano; MKI.ri.lO I.A/Z\RI. Baaao; VKVATKUA, 'Celllat: MARV MF.l.l.IMISeprnno i.llliniii RPA lio.Nl. at I'lnno. .ioiin FRFsrm. i,actur«r PRICEfi 60o TO Jt AT BOX OPFItTB. PUINTF.«i8 THF.ATRF. TO-XIOHT AT R18 BERTA REVIERE SOPRANO j Vrt Anlnnln .i«-,it Tnr <si.inTrBT.p|..^ Hillie Burke. in "Good Gracious Annabelle," is the principal attraction at the .v'*rand Theatre. The picture is baaed oh the celebrated play of the same name written by Clare Kummer. Miss Burke's supportinrr cast incljides Herbcrt Rawlinson, Gilbert Douglas. Crauford Kent, Frank Losec, Leslic Caaey, Gordon l»ane, Delle Duncan, Olga Downs, Thomas Braidon and Billie Wilson. Hircctor Plunkett has arranged an excellent surrounding bill, consisting of a travcl-scenic showing El Kantara, Algiers, a new picture of the interesting "Analysia of Motion" seriea cntitled "Turns and Twists," "Polar Bears," a zoologicul feature by Raymond L. Ditmars; a new comedy and the Topical Review. Redferene Hollinshcad, a new so- prano; Ralph II. Brigham and Herbert Sisson, organists, will appear cn the musical programme. The Bymphony orchestra will play Liszt's "Rhapsodie Xo. 2." Carl Edouarde will conduct. Ilupo Riesenfeld annpunces the showing of Mr. Chaplin's ncw classic comedy entitled "His Pre- historic Past" as a feature of the Rivoli programme for this week. The dramatic picture is Mar- guerite Clark's "Three Mrn and a Girl," the screen version of Edward Childs ("arapontcr's "The Three Bears." The overture is Otto Ni'colai's "Merry Wives of Windsor." Em- manuel List, basso, will sinrr Pirisuti's "Bedouin Love Song," and Gladys Rice will be heard in n solo. The Rivoli Pictorial will prescnt an Interesting array of news pictures with scenic in- tcrludes. Miss Clark made "Three Men and a Girl" under the direction of Muryhall Neilan. Mr. Carpenter's story was done into a scenario by Ere Unsell. "The Three Bears" was produced with considerable sueces.s for the stage, opening for a lonn- run at the Empire Theatre in October, 1917. The story givea Miss Clark the r61e of Sylvia Weston, n s.prightly girl. who resents her proposed marriage to an old and despised man. She run? away from him at the altar and takes refuge in a country house owned by lier father. There she encrounters the "three bears," said bearr. being three gentlemen seeking solitude to evade fickle womankind. A love plot results, with gently humorous incidents. Miss Clark is supportcd by Richard Barthelmers and Percy Marmont. Charles Ray, in "The Sheriff's Son,' is the dramatic feature of the Rialto'n programme this week. Harold Lloyd in "Just Dropped In," the RLalto 3daga- zinc. with its ncws pictures, a.aA a scenic pictorial complete the film. pro¬ gramme. The overture ia Liszt's "Les Pr»- ludes." The second orchestral number is "La Paloma," the Mexican national air, played with a trampet solo by Jo- seph Lubalin and with Frank Cork and Frank Wolf on their ncw celebrated "marimbaphone" sometirnes flippantly mentioned as a "cordwuod band.. Mar- tin Brefal and Ectoardo Albano will sing a duet from *'T.a Farzs del Des- tino" and Annie Rosner will sing *ri est Doux." from "Horodiade." by 3fas- senct. "The SherifTs Scn" is from the story by William McLeod Raine. It was directed by Yictor L. Shertzinger. Seer.a Owen appears opposrte Mr. Ray. Othcrs in the cast are John \\ Lock- ney, Clyde Benson and U:nar John- i-tone. "Raggedy Ann," with Priscilla Deati aa the Btar, will be presented at the Broadway Theatre th The picture deal with an international eon- fidencc man ar.d a notorious feminine "jewel snatcher," cntwined with a low story out of the crdinary. The plot is presented in such a nianncr a.s to forbi-I the most convcntional critic from caH- ing it conventtonal. The feature will be angmented by the asual procraninu-. ol' rnubic and news pictures. Alice Braxly in n.-r latcst triumph, "The World *n T,fv<. In," will b*> the big feature of the eominp; -o-r-ek at Eoew's Xew York Theatre and Raaf, where it .will be shown on Monday. The daxly attractions for the balance of the week will be F! ;rvn.;e. Keed in "Her Code of Konar," on Tuesday: Olive Thomas in Taton."" on Wednes- day; Frank Keenan in "Tbe Silvor Girl," on Trrurrday: En.,1 Bennett in "Partrtcrs "i'b,-«-" s_nd Pejr-y tfytand ia --The Rebeiliaua Brid* ,*. on Friday; Lonise Ifuff irr 'Tbe- Little Intrader" on Stitarday and Mar Ailiaon in "The Island of Intrigue" on Sunday. [rish Piay Remains a$ Lexinston for Sccond Week Owing to the success of Bernard Daiy's production of the roma.ntic Irush drama, "Sweet tonisfalieii," his en¬ gagement at the Lexinsta.n Theatre Fifty-first Street and Lcit'ngton Ave¬ nue ba<^ been cxtended for a «econd week, beginning- to-murruw. AMUSEMENTS AMUSEMENTS METROPOLITAN OPERA HOUSE~rutSDkY.AFt.i*.AT*-a CAPT. EDDIE JAMK.S B. POND Pre<^nt.« Ity arrariBement with Cha*. L. Wajrner V #& !>.&' ®m ma tsm. M r/' Conunanier 94th A.-ro Pnrsoii Scjuadror £ '^^a^.~, Autnor of "Fiehttins the Fljing Cf.xire." l5^~J AMERICA'S greatest ace VS>i *?- »% it: n»« »*" 1'vat atory of aahrentats in \ ^ J "THE ARENA OF THE SKY" V t]U "lu^»'«i Blidea and motkm pietoe. of E;,-.' ,r, \ _V DR. HENRY va. DYKE, Pre&mg. Vuaplees American rund for Preacb v/o-unjW Tiekets :,n, ,. $,..,., (n ,ew a, j5) . hn ..... ..'..,,.. ,... , CARNEGIE HALL, thtjrsday evel, APRIL 3 AT r-^n" tt of U. M. S. "-.IMUCnvr of /rebrurce THE RAID ON ZEEBRUGGE t i;..x oi Kxclu .c. The last < hanci to h< ar thia reroarkab] Boxes $30 and $18. Seata l to 69c iplun tan. ., *-K acaea or ma.n.a<rer. Ratabltahed 187-8 by Major .1. 1: Pond. M''Ml- AT CARNEGIE HALL, FRIDAY EVE., APRIL 4th, zl B2Q STRAIGHT FRQM THE PARIS COKFEREMCE iajor-General tn. Maurice R. C. tt. <i., C. II. Will Lecture on"The League of Hations" FIRST EXPRESSION ON VITAL QlIESTfON OF THE HOUR BY GREAT MiLITARY AUTHGRITY N«afH $£.80 io 60c ii 1 Hi,i Otllee or M lim'.'i meiil f.cneral MatirtreV. Ameriran Toor is 0,.Jrr fh. Rxcluajty* Muutujcrmrxit of LEE KEEDICK, 437 Fifth Ave., Manager World'. Mo.t Cefebrated Lecftir«r. Aeolian Ilali. Tuc«. Aft., Aprll 1, at S. -1IARRV- GREATEST CO\CERT ever given in New York PERSHING SQjARE WUSICALE Mgt, I.ouiloii Charlton. U «*«»<». 2 |fa«t», Aeolian llnll. -attirdnj Afl.. April S, 11:30 "iULCl V^lf||f|( GASilowTfscHlrH-^^^- GARDENjCARUSO «l*-» t. al S;S0 Tlrkets GO, Mgl, Loudoi ¦-'eliijtr.ann-t hopin T'rrt*. & I(«m Ia Piano MIM IIA ARTHPR ' ii' m n ELMANIRUBINSTEIN HIPPODROMl', ias-i,i>. SUNDAT MAT Al'llll, i'-, AT 3 1' M ONLY JOINT KKC1TAI. TBI8 HKASON OF , "' ^ <l ai- r e.rt J3. n.,M $sn ,.. ali the ofnoa .f ti», nu.nu«wa«,t. r. ae joh..»J. UB1 Broadwav. T, i. ni,.... .,'- T"""**«"¦ aml AIMA GI^UCK T..1.1 ZIMBALIST Tlctteta ;t,r to fa.OO. Mn»l Orttira ta \an Hucj ':»-. Saeletj, r.:il W. ua <m. April Bi at SilS LEVISON rtl< AN I'lAMHT onea BRt iona/ riane PrincnsH Thentre, Tnrs, Aft . Aprll a n( S PIANO RECITAL < AROI.YN WILLARD atct v»i".*,-i a r«««« pt»i...,. «,,.. .\e,t:!..,, BaU, Thui KKI ITAJL ROSE SOT7TK Mgt. lUft.s. J«1 BroadwaJ. Tel^na'coT B^g?1 I rametrlc ,u. ^^ >><% AorlT i7«j"l»! JBreeskiJN .. to 5:. Man Pantal Uanr. Kmni.h a Bach. leotina Ualt, Tbnr.. \ti., AprlT^oTlkri WI-.U. a|i«j Moiitrn rrrurh I'mnu,

THE WORLD~OFMUSIC AND M That (urrent Opera …keithp.music.arizona.edu/MUS231/Tribune_03_30_1919.pdfand finally put an end to their hopea of vietory, and I had been through many a

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Page 1: THE WORLD~OFMUSIC AND M That (urrent Opera …keithp.music.arizona.edu/MUS231/Tribune_03_30_1919.pdfand finally put an end to their hopea of vietory, and I had been through many a

!N THE WORLD~OFMUSIC ""

AND MUSIC1ANSThat Mysterious "Jazz"

lieutenant Europe's Descrihes the Origin of the Tcrm.-His Adventures in France.Negro Music Pleasesthe Frcnch People . The Personuel of the Band

By Grenville VernonJust what is "jazz"? Most of us

know it when we hear it, but few ofus know its derivation, its reason, or

the manner in which the veritable'.jazz" is, produccd, for there are

"jazzes" which are not veritable."Jazz" ia, of course, negro; somchowor other all musical originality inAmeriea scems to be negro. The negromusieally is always a worshipper ofrhythm; often he is a rhythomaniac,«nd "jazz" arizes from his rhythmicfervor, combined with a peculiar lik-ing for strange sounds. This at leastis the opinion of Lieutcnant JamesReese Europe, late of the Machinc GunBattalion of the old 15th Regiment.Lieutcnant Europe has just rcturnedfrom more than a year's service lnFrance, which he passed partly in thetrenches and partly in the directionof the band hc had organized for hisregiment, a band which had a stupen-dous succcss in France and which ishaving eo,ually as great success athome.

"I belicve that the term 'jazz,'" saidLieutcnant Europe, "originated with a

band of four picccs which was foundabout fiftecn years ago in New Orleans,and which was known as 'Razz's Band.'Thi3 band was of trulv extraordinarycomposition. It consisted of a bary-?one horn, a trombone, a cornet, andtn instrument made out of the chlna-berry trec. This instrument is some¬

thing Iike a clarinet, and is made bythe Southern negroes themselves.Strange to say, it can be used onlywhile the sap is in the wood, and after,t few weeks' use has to be thrownaway. It produces a bcautiful soundand is worthy of inclusion in any bandor orchestra. I myself intend to em-

ploy it soon in my band. The fourmnsicions of Razz's Band had no ideaat all of what they were playing; theyimproviscd as they went along, butsuch was their innate sense ofrhythm that they produced somethingwhich was very taking. From thesmall cafes of New Orleans theygraduated to the St. Charles Hotel,and after a time to the Winter Gardenin New York, where they appeared,however, only a few days, the indi-vidual musicians being grabbed up byTarious orchestras in the city. Some-how in the passage of time Razz'sJBand got changed into 'Jazz's Band,'and frora this corruption arose the.term 'jazz.'i "The negro loves anything that ispeculiar in music, and this 'jazzing' ap¬peals to him strongly. It, is accom-

plished in several ways. With thebrass instruments we put in mutesand make a whirling motion with thetongue, at the same time blowing fullpressure. With wind instruments we

pincb. the mouthpiece and blow hard.This produces the peculiar soundwhich you all know. To us it is notaiacordant a3 we play the music as

.it ia written, only that we accent

itrongly in thia manner the noteswhich originally would be without ac¬

cent, It Is natural for us to do this;it is, indeed, a racial musical t-bar-aeteristic. I have to call a daily re-

hearsal of my band to prevent therausiciar.s from adding to their musicawre than I wi3h them to. Wheneveraoaaible they all embroider their parts.ia order to prodace new, peculiarlounds. Some of the8e effects are ex-

eellent and some are not, and I haveto be contlnually on the lookout toeat out the resulta of my muaiciana'orlginality."Thia jazz music made a tremendoua

Mnsation in France. I recall one In-tident in particular. From last Feb-mary to last August I had been ln«he trenches, in command of my ma-

ebine gun sqaad. I harl been throughtbe terriflc gcneral attack in Gham-pagne when Gencra! Gouraud an-

aihilated tho encmy by his stratagemand finally put an end to their hopeaof vietory, and I had been throughmany a amallcr engajremont. I cant«H you that muaic was one of thethings furthest from my mind when

one day, just before the Allied con¬ferencc in Paris on August 18, Col¬onel Hayward came to me and said:

"'Lieutenant Europe, I want you togo back to your band and give a singleconcert in Paris.'

"I protested, telling him that Thadn't led the band since Fcbruary,but he insisted. Well, I went back tomy band, and with it I went to Paris.What was to be our only concert wasin the Theatre des Champs Elyaees.Before we had playcd two numbers theaudience went wild. We had conqueredParis. General Bliss and French highofficers who had heard us insistedthat we should stay in Paris, and therewe stayed for eight wecks. Every-where wo gave a concert it was a riot,but the supreme moment came in theTuileries Gardens when we £ave a con-cert in conjunction with the greatestbands in the world.the British Grena-diers' Band, the Band Gardo Re-publicaine, and the Royal Italian Band.My band, of course, could r.ot com-

paro with any of these, yet tho crowd,and it was such a crowd as I neversaw anywhere else in tne world, de-scrted them for us. We playcd to BO,--000 people at least, and had we wishedit we might be playing yet.

"After the concert was over the lead-er of the Band of the Garde Repub-licaine came over and asked me forthe score of one of the jazz composi-tions we had played. He said hcwanted his band to play it. I gaveit to him and the next day he aguincame to see me. He explained thathe couldn't seem to get the effects Igot. and asked me to go to a rehearsal.1 went with him. The great bandplayed the composition superbly.buthe was right: the jass effects were

missing. I took an instrument andshowed him how it could be done, andhe told me that his own musiciansfelt sure that my band had used spe¬cial instruments. Indeed, some of them,afterward attend ing one of my re-

hearsals, did not believe what I hadsaid until after they had examined theinstruments used by my men.

"I have come back from Francemore firmly convinced than ever thatnegroes should write negro music. Wehave our own racial feeling and if we

try to copy whites we will make badcopies. I noticed that the Morocconegro bands played music which hadan affinity to ours. One piece, 'InZanzibar,' I took for my band, andthough white audiences seem to findit too discordant, I found it most sym-pathetic. We won France by playingmusic which was ours and not a paleimitation of others, and if wo are todevelop in America we must developalong our own lines. Our musiciansdo their best work when using negromaterial. Will Marion Cook, WilliamTires, even Harry Burleigh and Col-eridge-Taylor are not truly themselvesin the music which expresses theirrace. Mr. Tires, for instance, 'writescharming waltzes, but the best of thesehave in them negro influences. Themusic of our race springs from thesoil, and this is true to-day with noother race, except possibly the Rus-sians, and it ia because of this that 1and all my musicians have come tolove Ruasian music. Indeed, as far asI air, conccrncd, it ia the only music

jI care for outside of negro."Tho lieutenant then gpoke of the

manner in which he formed his band."When war broke out, I enlistod as

a private in Colonel Hayward'a regi-ment, and I had just passed my offker'sexamination when the colonel askedme to form a band. I told him that itwould be impossibie, as the negromuBiciana of New York wero paid toowell to have them give up their jobsto go to war. Howevcr, Colonel Hay¬ward raised $10,000 and told me toget the musicians wherevcr I couldpet them. The reed players T got inPorto Rico, the Tcst from all overthe country. I had only one NewYork negro in the band my solocornctist. These are the men whonow composc the band and they areall fightcrs as well as musicians, forall have scen service in the trenches."

ProgrammesSUNDAY

j Carnegie Hall, 3 p. m. last concertl"t the ecason by the Philharmonic So-.< Ciety:' 3»»phony No. G, In C Mlnor, Op. «7.

Beethoven.Tone Poem, "The lal* of ihe D*ad"-

KachmaninoffCooetrto in G Minor for violin and

t wheatra .BruchL, Rildy Brown

.Oterture. "1812" ,.TaehaikowakyI Aeolian Hall, 3 p. m., piano recital*»7 oerge Prokofieff:r*k»t Sonata, F Minor Un one part)....

. ProkoflcffThr«* <i*votU*- V afcarp Mlnor. D Major,',_" Minor.ProkoneffI** Gr»ndn*oth*r»" Talea.Prokofieffijofau .ProkonVITPMaH Kstankiue. gcrlabinerktartt trotn an KahlMtion--Prome-

', "*4*, BylU,, it»l!*t <]« Pou»t»na flfcnni leuro ri/i'i.*; Vieux Chateau, Umog-ea. Mou»»orx»ky"¦taewe .ProkoftpfT

\ Prinecus Theatre, 8:30 p. m., aong:'«ital by Mmo. Ruano Bogualav (Mra.Kiwardo Martin;;

,tL £: ' *¦/ J'*r"'wu»,.Plerre Alln

M«J? H""* '. <l*-\\r

pSSSi**,'.-Ai;;-Tte.8i'wu| Mlppod.orne, «:lf, p. .,. ,.njp rrd,a,Mm*. (iaili-cjureij

.P#rjrol*»«

of the WeekSliophcrd, Thy Dcmcanor Vary .BrownBombre for*t, from "Wiliiarn Tell". KoaniniCarnivale di Venezla .Bwdl.-tI .it lettro .AubertViank*'» SonK .StuUmnnOh, In My Drearnn .LiuitCarc*Wa» (in Spaniah) . .ChapiVtmationn .Mozort-IUhn

Mr. Berengucr and Mr. SamucluBatolie; Chanaon do tambourin*ur: BolUtl-annieren. Paatourelles of the 18th century.

Arranjjwi by WcckcrlinMad secne from "Lucia" (with

flut*J ... Doni/.ctti

City College, 4 p. m., organ recitalby Samuel A. Italdwin:Concert ovcrture in E flat.. Falkesg^«W Mrditation.GuilmantPreludo and Fiiaue tn A minor. Bac.hMinnet frorn "U D*vin du Vlllajre". |io.,,,auWill o' th* Wi»r> . NevlnT° rf W.i!'1, 5°"*.MaetWIlA Dewrt^d Inrm .MacDowellI<> a Wuter J.tly .MacDowellHonata, the Ninety-fourth I'ealm... Ueubke

Brooklyn Academy of Music, 8 p. m.,concert by the Irish Muslcal and Dra-matic Club:Hhe U Far From Ihe lAmi.MonreTh<s Meetlmr of tho Water*.Moor*Th* Old Plaid Bhawl.KahyThi? !rl»h Kmficrarit .ParkrrJohn Flnrifiraii, tcnor. St. Patrick'tt

CuthedralPiano foh>, Irhth M«le<:tloni arranged by

P«rey <»raln«<;r.Miaa Kathlrcn Nar«ll»

'I h» Weai'a Awakp.,.Thomas DayO Natlw Mualr air 700 yeara oid, ar-

ranjf'd by Charl** MrCarthy.Molly Malone.,-Old Dublln Htreet Ballet

Ume. MarU NarcUc,Tfi«» l<o»»r'» Cum*.Traulitlrtnal

(urrent Attractions^o/a WaniOpera Season ifHsJlfe1

If All the Younfr Maidens.I.ohrWhen Irish Eycs Are Smilim?On the Road to Ballynuro

Miaa Cora Tracy, contraltoThe Harp That Once Through Tara'a

Hall .MooreBeiieve Me if All Those Endcaring YoungCharms.MooreI Hc-ai- You Calling Me.Ma'rshall

Miss Anna Gray, harpist.Molly Bawn.LoverThe Bard of Armagh.HughetThe Next Market Day.HugheaThe Snowy Breasteii Pearl.De Vere

John Finnegan, tenorBelieve Me if All Those Endcaring YoungCharms .Moore

Father O'FlynnHas Sorrow Thy Voung Days Shaded.. .MooreSweet Peggy O'Neili.Redding

Herbcrt Waterous, bassoThe Harp That Onci? Through Tara'a*la!l .Moore

The Pretty Girl Milking Her Cow,tflifford Pagc1 he. Kerry Dance.Molloy

Miss Lily Meagher.'Cello, Fantasia on Irish AiraThe CoulinThe Valley Lay Smiling Before MeSavourneen DeelishO'Donnell Al.oo

HanB Kronold, 'cellist.The Minstrel Boy. MooreIreland, My Sireland.Victur HerbertThree sellected Irish folksongs.

Vernon Stiles, tenorSoldiers of Erin; Star Spangled Banner,The Irish Musical Cltib Chorui

Princess Theatre, 8:15, song recitalby Berta Reviere:Rossirrnolct ilu Bois Joli. ..SLxteenth CenturiRendl'l Sereno al Ciglio. HahdciM'Ha Preas Alla Sun Kegna.ParadiesRossignols Atnoureuscs.RarneauJeanne d'Arc .TschaikowskyMignoncttc . WeckerlinAprea un Rove.Gabrh 1 'aurcD Une Prison . llalmKri Sourdine. HnhnEros . ciriegLo, Ilere the Gentle T.ark.RishopHeart Throbu .BendelSong Ia So Old. .A. R. WachtmeisterBerceu.se .Fannie Dilliou. »Vnow.Giwtave lerrariI Plueked a Quill from Cupid'a Wfng, .Hadley

MONDAYAeolian Hall, 8:15 p. m, Recital byHarold Bauer and Jacques Thibaud of

sonntas for piano and violfti byDoethoven:Snnaln in A mnjor. Op. 12,Sonata ln F major, Op, 24.Sonata In A major, Op. 47 (Kreutaer).

TUESDAYAeolian Hall, .1 p. m. Piano recital

by Harry Cumpson:I'leimle, Op. ic..GlleraSonata QiiufI unn Fantasia, Op, 27,

"°- I .Hrethoven1'reludo, Chorale and Fugue.FranckTheme and Variatlons, Op. 19, No. Ii.

TuchniltriwakyMelodie in E major.HarhmaiilnofTIn Autumn Sponiih (,'aprice... .MosckowakiCamegie Hull. 8:15 p. m., violin re¬

cital by Elias Breeskln:Sonata No. 1, Adagio-Fuga 'unsccom-

nanied) .RaehI.nrgo . Friedman-BachVarintion.i on a Theme by Corelli.

Tartini-KreialerSymphonlc Knpagnole .I.aloNotturno.Chopin-WllhelmjRondo .Schubert-FriedhergChorun of Derviihea.Bcethoven-AuerVlennene .GodowakyWitehes' Sabbath (first time).GoldmarkPolonaise Brillante . Wieniuwaki

Jonef Adler at the piano

WEDNE8DAYCity Collcge, 4 p. m., organ recital

by Samuel A. Baldwin:Overture, "Occatiional Oratorio". .HandrlChorale Prelude (JesU, My Gulde) Hn.hConcert, Prelude and Fuguc....Faulkaa!n Spiinglimr .ChaffinIn the Morning.GrlegAse'a Deatb.GrlegKamennoi Ontrow .Rul)ln»telnSyrnpbony No. 6.WidorAeolian Hall, fl p. m. Recital by the

Pressellc sisters of music for twoplanos:Varlationa (sur un theme de Reelhovrn).

Holnt-SaensMarehe Orientale .Bcethnvelil.ti Coquptte. he Revcur. Polichlnelle(sllhouottea). ArennkySehwio. Op. 87 .Salnt-Haena

Cnnnrto Pathetitiuo .UnitValce Parar/hraite .Chopln.SehuettEn Blanr et Nolr, No. 1.DebustiyKhapaodle EapMgnole .Albenlr.

Comrnodore Hotel, Orand Bnllroom,8:30, flrat Pcrahlng Square mualcal:Pnlonafw. A major.Ohoptn

Noeturne (Love Dream).XiaztSpinning i-:on>i .Mcntlelssohn

Arthur Rubinstelnl.e Nil (with 'cello obbligatb).Lerous

Miss GardenAir . .1. Ba.-hMinuel .HandelTurkish March.Gosseo-Klman

Mischa ElmnnAria, O tu the in si-no ugli angeli

ifrom "La Forza del Peatino").VerdiMr. Caruso

Trlana :. AlbenizLe Plua gre lente (valae).DehussyMarch Militaire . .Schubdrt-Taussig

Arthur RubinstelnLes Hcrceaut.Faurc[ion Soir.DebusayAriette._ Debusay

Miss GardenNoeturne . ChopinG'yp'sy Airs..^aranatf

Miseha 'BimanArin, Ah, Dispar, vision.Massenel

Mr. Caruso

THURSDA-YAeolian Ilall, 3 p. m. Piano recita

by Edward Morris:Toccata and Fugue in D minor. Bnch-TausifDance in G major; Dance in C major.

BcethoverImpromptu, Op. 36; Noeturne, Op. 9,

No. 1 Ktmle in pctaves, Op. 25, No.10: Waltz (poathumous No. 21Ballad, Op. 23 .Cliopit

Sonata, Op, 31, No. .'!.Bcethover"Fil'ths" ia fragmenti, American Huuibr-esque Novelett* .Fellx Deyi

Notturoo, No. :'. .I.isz'The Krlking .Sehubert'Diszt

FRIDAYAeolian Hali, 3 p. m., song recital bj

Rachel Martin Harris:Stizzoao, mio Stlzzoso. (1710-1736) PergolesiDrh jiiu u me non v'ascondete,

(1640-1703) BononciniPnstoralc,Seventeenth aentury, arrnnged by Perihou

As when the dovc laments her lovo,(1648-176$) HandelSince I am onci> more alone. .TschailiowskjSong of Provence. ..SchumanrMother Love.OriejiPartlng .BrahmiA Broken Heart.DvoraVThe Snowdrnp.firetchnninofTChant d'Extl.VidaComment vetix lu.LuekBton>Choneon Sarraalne, from "Lc Cavallef

Jenn" .JonrirrefSclze Ani>.CuvlllieirMves BleiiH . DrhuoiChanson de Soozzonc. from "Ar.i*nnio,"

Bflint-SttDmGonieoratiori .MtinnfnIn Summer Fields.lufi'rey IlnrriThou Art th" Night Wiml.GauAt 8:lo p. in., sonata recita! bv

Michel Penha, vibloncollist, and Augllata Tollefnen, pianist:Op. I02, No. 1. Bcethover

Op. 09.llilihniiOp. 62.I,i"o Orneteli

SATURDAYAeolian Ilall, 2:30 p. m., pinno re-

citnl by Ossip Gabrilowitsch:I'hnntanln in 0 major, Op. 17. .Schun.aniEtudoa, Op. 10, Op. 25.ChopliSonata in O rninor .BrhumamNoeturne in II major, Op. 9 Valae inA flat major: Kcherzo In B mlnor,Op.20 .Chopir

Harolrf Bauer, Pianist, AeolianIlall, Monday

Rosat Poiiselle . {nla. fbrjs.del Destino*r~ ~.~.~

"The Problem of the ReissueWe Have Always With Us"

"The problem of the reissue, Iike.the poor, we have always with us,"saya Myron Selznick, preaident of theSelznick Picturca Corporation.

"i would n- t go so :';.;¦ aa Y\ illiamS. Hart," adds Mr. Selznick, "who isquoted in an interview in a magazineaa saying, 'If the law doesn't put a

stop to this practice of selling oldproduct as new, a gun will.'

"It is interesting to note, however,that the film player is the only personwhose earlier efforts, improperly han-dled, are out of hia control. A paintercan destroy a picture he has paintodand a writer can refuse to permit re-

printing of his books, as Rudyard Kip-ling did with 'Letters of Marque.' Butthe film once made i? a permanentpiece of property of the producer, forgood or ill."

Ralph Kellard to LeaveThe Speakies for the Movies

lUlph Kellard, former Pathe star,is returning to the screen, having beensigned by B. A. Rolfe to play the feat-ured role in a new m\ reel specialpicture, as yet unnamed. This picturewill mark Mr. Kellnrd's reappearanceon the screen after an absence of a

year and a half, during which time hereturned to the speaking .stage to cre-ate the leading roles in "Eyes ofYouth," "Nancy Lee" and "Over Here,"and "A Stitch in Time" at the FultonTheatre, and a return to "Eyes ofYouth" during its recent engagementat the Manhattan Opera House.

A New C.risp IdeaFor Bryant Washburn

Donald Grisp, director of BryantVv'ashburn in I'aramount's "Tlie Vil-lage Gut-Up," has an idea which isstrictly original.The situation in the picture is this:

Washburn, who appears as a youngclerk, has an appointment with theboard of directors of a large corpora-

AMUSEMENTS

METROPOLITAN OPERAMon. at 8:15. Doublo Bill: L'Oracola. Konton:

Altli'iun. ficottl, Iildu.-. Paallacid. Mu/,lo; aruao,Clialmera, VVerrenrath. Coiul., MoranzunL

Wcd. nl 8:15 Butlrrfly. Kurrir, Kornla: Lazaro,Bcottl, Haria, D'AtigMo Cond., Moraiutonl ,

TIium. Mat. nl 2 ($11,. $bT. Vrnil FeitlvifTlAct I. Tronatorii; A'-ts :! ajid il, l-oi/a 0>l Om-tlno; Act 8, AlUa. Rapiiold, I'onwllo, Miwlo;cariuw. Marlltiolii. Whltelilll, Ciiallner.% ,Mar-rtoni'H, Cond'ia, Moranzunl nnd Papl.j1'hiin. pt s ia, Btirhor of BeVlUa. UnrtfcntoVi Mai't-

fc il: ll«.'i(Pii. l). Uiet, Uolhlor, Malaleala. d I'npl.Irl, ».. 8 Tflpto lilll Li'9«nil. Tunpln Oanmr.

ftlianiWli, r,:,.¦;,-, Kciton, llrinlMi; AIUiouhc,Itiiifaloti, Clialmera. iVii-.d Moranzont.

hat. «.. :. aainion Ot Dallln. MM/.i-imnrr. Cnniso.(.» ¦[.¦¦..I, Mardonei, Helaa, Cuml., Monioui

ttat. al k 175c in S'.' Than. Farrar, Ifoward:AUImuao, WhUahtll Anantaii, t'ornl,, Moiitoux,

TO-NIGHT Ptu!f|I«rdMConcerl a» 8.30 MarRuerite NamaraPrleM frow HOo "I l i,' BopranoF.NT.HF. ORCHEHTRA HlpolitO UzafOCOND., ROTHMEYPR' r

T,,..rIfAJtDMAN I'lANO l'l-i-;i>

MRN&.,ohI liniinl nf Season.JASCUA

NMATH NOW AT TlOX OFKICE.

Arollnn llnll. WmI, Afl., Apr. 5. at ».e.. rinno Becltal by Reae end Charlotto

PRESSELLES#at» »> Ilot frfti-r (Maaon & Ilamlii Pltnil

Veoltan Ilall, Thura, Afl.. Apr. 3. nl S

Edwarb MORRiSl-iin.) Hecltal Maaon A- llamlln s-im Now.

Arolian Ilall, FrL. Aft.. Apr. i, at i..-.iilf) Now.Song Hecltal by ftnrhel

M0RT0N-HARRIS

PHILHARMONIC.IOSEP NTBANHKY Coadtlrtorfl.OHlNO COM'ERT OF TIIK SKASON

Cemeirlfi Ilall. Thia Aftcrnoon nt 3.8oioi.t EDDY BROWN v,»,1»

IVelhoven. Flflh pijmplion.rRarhmanlnnlT, "Th« I»le of Ihe llend"

TclialWovHlty, n-irrlnrc- "181JJ"Tlckets et Box Otflce, K<U:c F. I.'lfels. Mffr.AEOMAN IIAIX, Hat. Etk., Aj>r. I:r.nt fl.lfl

Salzedo mf Ensembie.,"blr" VERA JANACOPOLOS :-»,...T>ir r»th»Hn«» A. Ilnminnn r,l tv lltVi «:t

tion, v ho are to consider purchasinghis plan. He is terribly afraid of thecoming ordeal. As he walks down thohall toward the directors' room hisetiurage oozes. He starts out bravelyenough, but fccls smaller and smaller,so that ho is ready to run when hereaches the door.The picture will show just how he

really felt as he tapped oa the portalhe appears about two inches high, witha giant door towering above.

Virs. Drew CollectsHatpins for Soldiers

Convalescent soldiers in the UnitedStates ai'iny base hospital at Camp Dix,N". J., have a real champion in Mrs.Sidney Drew, who is collecting hatpinsfor them.

Hrroes with cramped or partiallyparalyzed tingers, or only part of theirfingers.-spend hours making brads out'of wallpaper and ;;ay colored mugazinccovers. They wind the paper on thepins, then roll it into beads, whichthey dip into shellac or varniah forglossing. Necklaces of these beadssell for good money, which the soldierswelcome while waiting for payday.To secure a large number of these

long hatpins, Mrs. Drew makes a pleato all women who reud this story tohunt up their old hatpins or buy some.

Packages of pins will be forwarded ifreaders will ^end them to Mrs. SidneyDrew, 220 West Forty-second Street,Xew York City.Many husbands will, no doubt, en-

courage their wives to send their hat¬pins to Mrs. Drew, which cooperationwill greatly aid the soldiers' efforts toearn "pin money."

AMUSEMENTS

THE-

NEW SYMPHONYORCHESTRA

EDGAr'vARESe!' ConductorCARNEGIE HALL

EVGS.--APRIL 11, 25--MAY 9MATS.--APRIL 12, 26--N3AY 10

; ia on Tli Icet.i three -\ enii gs or three"'. '."" ¦. 1.' ller boxes (six ueats),Joit. 1": pper tier boxen (nlx seatsl ?4S 50Parquol seats, $6 80; irei In le, $4 96Baleony rront, $3.30: Balconv, J2.4S; SiimleTlcketa, boxes. $3 30, $2 7 oihi rs, $2.20.*1 66, $1.10, 83f '1" ese ps-l, .-v |n, ,,ie -.vailax. Subm rlpt lonp should b< malled ioTHI-: NKW SYMPHONY OliCTlESTRA.

S. S MACMILIjEN. Manager20 W. 42d SI 'Phone Murray ltlii 3426.Mason & Uamlin Piunos Um

VACATION ASSOCIATION'S C.ALA COMCEKTMETROPOLITAN °.£ X,;.^'.,rhiladeiphia Orchestra r-*°i»''i Rt"kow«w

Iia Oruid Paaquo nuase," Itlmaky-Koraakoff;Symphony Palh.iue." TacliaJkowaky; Al, for'¦!' .."'.. !" vloll"»' ItaclunaiilnoflT. IFlrat Time

5ERGEI RACHMANINOFFI'lai

litnanln iff. niiirnr.

GERALDINE FARRAR"Warlttw jlii Koaos.' l',.r,;. .-,..,,, .,..¦ .¦

',\""at .¦¦ »UI' Jardlnloi " ciiamlnade'. i'Oii IjIimi Mwaelip i.:, i| u

5«?ei., Kuraakoff "Greetliig." Orlca A Uwnri "

'. '1,n'>¦¦¦'¦ '.¦ !'". l»lo," Ruchmaiiiaiiff: 'The"'"','"" Ulrch- ""'" Hnowrirup." Orotchortnolt,. ";''¦'". '¦ " "' «« '. al Vaeatli n AaaocialJon, 3»."'¦ ln >'¦¦. MKrM.v Rulluiaii'a mdoil a AkmicIm and Motropolitan Opera UouaoWar Tax Extimpted on Tickets

HIPP00R0ME T0-KIGHT If.GALU-CURCI

i. .! iimb" f of aeota atlll avallable'¦ e. op. na hi ii ion i,, ..... CJenoraland 81 on nle |. t,..' |, ., ;n..':. hnn, ;, Wp.ni er .'. \> v McHwei y,

AEOLIAN HflLL, ;: APRIL 6

RAFAELOSeats |1 i.i:i $2 al Box Olflee.Managcment Motropolitan Mualcal linrraii

CnrneRl^ h.||. U>d. F.ve.. .\,,rll Olh

SCHOLA CANTORIMKT1RT BCIirxi LEU, Conductor

roi reil iVorlta of Vlctoria & .Moriilea(ICttater H'eels Moale of OWI Spain)Thre* (hunsons of < luiide DebnhHvBiriferette* of Old France A i'lundertiUnale from » New l.ilur^v ofRACHMANINOFF

(Flrat performanci outslde of Russla)Soloiwt: Merle Aleoeli, (nnlrnlto.Si-ata $': to boc, on Balo ». no.t OfJlea.

AKOI.I.AN HAI.I., THIS AI-TKitNdON at STHIltO PIANOFOKTK KKt rr.\|__sMt«»K

PROKOFIEFFMpnierit. flamael ,K- Jonea StAtnway Plani).CARKEOliS HAI J. T<l.NSr.HT AT »:I8

Concert for the Bi m Qi ofDeslroyed Church Properties, lialian FroniSololats.AM5S8ANDRO noi.ci, Tenor

ALYS lARKKYNl;. Sonrano; MKI.ri.lOI.A/Z\RI. Baaao; VKVATKUA, 'Celllat:MARV MF.l.l.IMISeprnno i.llliniii RPAlio.Nl. at I'lnno. .ioiin FRFsrm. i,actur«rPRICEfi 60o TO Jt AT BOX OPFItTB.PUINTF.«i8 THF.ATRF. TO-XIOHT AT R18

BERTA REVIERESOPRANO j

Vrt Anlnnln .i«-,it Tnr <si.inTrBT.p|..^

Hillie Burke. in "Good GraciousAnnabelle," is the principal attractionat the .v'*rand Theatre. The picture isbaaed oh the celebrated play of thesame name written by Clare Kummer.

Miss Burke's supportinrr cast incljidesHerbcrt Rawlinson, Gilbert Douglas.Crauford Kent, Frank Losec, LeslicCaaey, Gordon l»ane, Delle Duncan,Olga Downs, Thomas Braidon andBillie Wilson. Hircctor Plunkett hasarranged an excellent surrounding bill,consisting of a travcl-scenic showingEl Kantara, Algiers, a new picture ofthe interesting "Analysia of Motion"seriea cntitled "Turns and Twists,""Polar Bears," a zoologicul feature byRaymond L. Ditmars; a new comedyand the Topical Review.

Redferene Hollinshcad, a new so-

prano; Ralph II. Brigham and HerbertSisson, organists, will appear cn themusical programme. The Bymphonyorchestra will play Liszt's "RhapsodieXo. 2." Carl Edouarde will conduct.

Ilupo Riesenfeld annpunces theshowing of Mr. Chaplin's ncwclassic comedy entitled "His Pre-historic Past" as a feature ofthe Rivoli programme for thisweek. The dramatic picture is Mar-guerite Clark's "Three Mrn and a

Girl," the screen version of EdwardChilds ("arapontcr's "The Three Bears."The overture is Otto Ni'colai's

"Merry Wives of Windsor." Em-manuel List, basso, will sinrr Pirisuti's"Bedouin Love Song," and Gladys Ricewill be heard in n solo. The RivoliPictorial will prescnt an Interestingarray of news pictures with scenic in-tcrludes.

Miss Clark made "Three Men and aGirl" under the direction of MuryhallNeilan. Mr. Carpenter's story wasdone into a scenario by Ere Unsell."The Three Bears" was produced withconsiderable sueces.s for the stage,opening for a lonn- run at the EmpireTheatre in October, 1917.The story givea Miss Clark the r61e

of Sylvia Weston, n s.prightly girl. whoresents her proposed marriage to anold and despised man. She run? awayfrom him at the altar and takes refugein a country house owned by lierfather. There she encrounters the"three bears," said bearr. being threegentlemen seeking solitude to evadefickle womankind. A love plot results,with gently humorous incidents.

Miss Clark is supportcd by RichardBarthelmers and Percy Marmont.

Charles Ray, in "The Sheriff's Son,'is the dramatic feature of the Rialto'n

programme this week. Harold Lloydin "Just Dropped In," the RLalto 3daga-zinc. with its ncws pictures, a.aA a

scenic pictorial complete the film. pro¬gramme.The overture ia Liszt's "Les Pr»-

ludes." The second orchestral numberis "La Paloma," the Mexican nationalair, played with a trampet solo by Jo-seph Lubalin and with Frank Cork andFrank Wolf on their ncw celebrated"marimbaphone" sometirnes flippantlymentioned as a "cordwuod band.. Mar-tin Brefal and Ectoardo Albano willsing a duet from *'T.a Farzs del Des-tino" and Annie Rosner will sing *riest Doux." from "Horodiade." by 3fas-senct."The SherifTs Scn" is from the

story by William McLeod Raine. Itwas directed by Yictor L. Shertzinger.Seer.a Owen appears opposrte Mr. Ray.Othcrs in the cast are John \\ Lock-ney, Clyde Benson and U:nar John-i-tone.

"Raggedy Ann," with Priscilla Deatiaa the Btar, will be presented at theBroadway Theatre th Thepicture deal with an international eon-fidencc man ar.d a notorious feminine"jewel snatcher," cntwined with a lowstory out of the crdinary. The plot ispresented in such a nianncr a.s to forbi-Ithe most convcntional critic from caH-ing it conventtonal.The feature will be angmented by

the asual procraninu-. ol' rnubic andnews pictures.

Alice Braxly in n.-r latcst triumph,"The World *n T,fv<. In," will b*> the bigfeature of the eominp; -o-r-ek at Eoew'sXew York Theatre and Raaf, where it

.will be shown on Monday.The daxly attractions for the balance

of the week will be F! ;rvn.;e. Keed in"Her Code of Konar," on Tuesday:Olive Thomas in Taton."" on Wednes-day; Frank Keenan in "Tbe SilvorGirl," on Trrurrday: En.,1 Bennett in"Partrtcrs "i'b,-«-" s_nd Pejr-y tfytandia --The Rebeiliaua Brid* ,*. on Friday;Lonise Ifuff irr 'Tbe- Little Intrader"on Stitarday and Mar Ailiaon in "TheIsland of Intrigue" on Sunday.

[rish Piay Remains a$

Lexinston for Sccond WeekOwing to the success of Bernard

Daiy's production of the roma.ntic Irushdrama, "Sweet tonisfalieii," his en¬

gagement at the Lexinsta.n TheatreFifty-first Street and Lcit'ngton Ave¬nue ba<^ been cxtended for a «econdweek, beginning- to-murruw.

AMUSEMENTS AMUSEMENTS

METROPOLITAN OPERA HOUSE~rutSDkY.AFt.i*.AT*-aCAPT. EDDIEJAMK.S B. POND Pre<^nt.«

Ity arrariBement with Cha*. L. Wajrner

V #& !>.&' ®m ma tsm.

M

r/' Conunanier 94th A.-ro Pnrsoii Scjuadror£ '^^a^.~, Autnor of "Fiehttins the Fljing Cf.xire."

l5^~J AMERICA'S greatest aceVS>i *?- »% it: n»« »*" 1'vat atory of aahrentats in

\ ^ J "THE ARENA OF THE SKY"V t]U "lu^»'«i b» Blidea and motkm pietoe. of E;,-.' ,r,\ _V DR. HENRY va. DYKE, Pre&mg.Vuaplees American rund for Preacb v/o-unjWTiekets :,n, ,. $,..,., (n ,ew a, j5) . hn ..... ..'..,,.. ,... ,

CARNEGIE HALL, thtjrsday evel, APRIL 3 AT r-^n"

ttof U. M. S. "-.IMUCnvr of /rebrurce

THE RAID ON ZEEBRUGGEt i;..x oi

Kxclu

.c.f»

The last < hanci to h< ar thia reroarkab]Boxes $30 and $18. Seata l to 69c iplun tan. ., *-K acaea or ma.n.a<rer.

Ratabltahed 187-8 by Major .1. 1: Pond. M''Ml-

AT CARNEGIE HALL, FRIDAY EVE., APRIL 4th, zl B2QSTRAIGHT FRQM THE PARIS COKFEREMCEiajor-General tn. Maurice

R. C. tt. <i., C. II.WillLecture on"The League of Hations"FIRST EXPRESSION ON VITAL QlIESTfON OF THE

HOUR BY GREAT MiLITARY AUTHGRITYN«afH $£.80 io 60cii 1 Hi,i Otllee

or M lim'.'i meiil f.cneral MatirtreV. Ameriran Toor is 0,.Jrr fh.Rxcluajty* Muutujcrmrxit of

LEE KEEDICK, 437 Fifth Ave., Manager World'. Mo.t Cefebrated Lecftir«r.Aeolian Ilali. Tuc«. Aft., Aprll 1, at S.

-1IARRV- GREATEST CO\CERTever given in New York

PERSHING SQjARE WUSICALEMgt, I.ouiloii Charlton. U «*«»<». 2 |fa«t», _¦

Aeolian llnll. -attirdnj Afl.. April S, 11:30 "iULCl V^lf||f|(

GASilowTfscHlrH-^^^-GARDENjCARUSO«l*-» t. al S;S0

Tlrkets GO,Mgl, Loudoi

¦-'eliijtr.ann-t hopin T'rrt*.& I(«m Ia Piano

MIM IIA ARTHPR' ii' m n

ELMANIRUBINSTEINHIPPODROMl', ias-i,i>. SUNDAT MATAl'llll, i'-, AT 3 1' M

ONLY JOINT KKC1TAI. TBI8 HKASON OF ,"' ^ <l ai- r e.rt J3. n.,M $sn ,..

ali the ofnoa .f ti», nu.nu«wa«,t. r. ae joh..»J.UB1 Broadwav. T, i. ni,.... .,'- T"""**«"¦amlAIMA GI^UCKT..1.1 ZIMBALIST

Tlctteta ;t,r to fa.OO. Mn»l Orttira ta\an Hucj ':»-. Saeletj, r.:il W. ua <m.

April Bi at SilS

LEVISONrtl< AN I'lAMHTonea BRt iona/ riane

PrincnsH Thentre, Tnrs, Aft . Aprll a n( SPIANO RECITAL < AROI.YN

WILLARDatct v»i".*,-i a r«««« pt»i...,. «,,..

.\e,t:!..,, BaU, ThuiKKI ITAJLROSE

SOT7TKMgt. lUft.s.

J«1 BroadwaJ. Tel^na'coT B^g?1I rametrlc ,u. ^^ >><% AorlT i7«j"l»!

JBreeskiJN.. to 5:. Man Pantal Uanr. Kmni.h a Bach.

leotina Ualt, Tbnr.. \ti., AprlT^oTlkriWI-.U. a|i«jMoiitrn rrrurh I'mnu,