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DEBUSSY AND HUMPERDINCK

... DEBUSSY AND HUMPERDINCK. Debussy is now name attract the public, though perhaps curiosity has still something do with this. Those, however, who went to the Leeds Grand Theatre on Saturday afternoon expecting to be mildly scandalised by unauthorised p ...

DEBUSSY

... DEBUSSY 'SCHOENBERG, VERKLABTE , NACHT,-^- Minneapolis Orchestra, Conduclo Orrhaniy. (H.M.V., D 82439-42, 245.). 'DEBUSSY, IBERIA —Paris BoctttCde{ ...

Debussy

... Debussy After Scarlatti, the most brilliant exponent ot the 18th century technique, and Chopin, who discovered the soul of the piano, rt was fitting that should proceed to Debussy, who has done more than any since Chopin enlarge and refresh piano music ...

DEBUSSY

... DEBUSSY SONGS, etc. Pomn Circumstance March. No. IV. in TICJKET> a, Theatre Hoyai Hfl' and at. and ' ' v * * It* sate I.'4iOW t'i'c' : .. v ...

DEBUSSY

... DEBUSSY MUSIC THAT SHOCKED PARIS PROFESSORS By Dr. HERBERT THOMPSON -Claude Debussy: Ills Life and Works.? By ion Vallas; translated front the French by Malre and Grace O'Brien. (Oxford University Press. 215.) Debussy died In Faris In 1918, when city ...

Beethoven and Debussy

... Beethoven and Debussy. Beethoven's Op. 95, hovering between his early and late periods, is a work of sterner fibre, somewhat gloomy by comparison. Here one admired the firmness and pre- cision with which the players attecked the strongly-marked phrases ...

Published: Thursday 27 October 1932
Newspaper: Yorkshire Evening Post
County: Yorkshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 1500 | Page: 8 | Tags: none

Berlioz and Debussy

... Berlioz and Debussy A Hosslnl Overture ( La Gazza Ladra ) provided neat and decorously merry curtain-raiser to the concert, which the work of the strings deserved special mention. The brass, uncomfortably out of tune overture and symphony, atoned handsomely ...

Debussy's Charm

... Debussy's Charm Three pieces Debussy were entirely charming without reservation; and however well a player succeed bringing off his monumental Items that astonish, she does better compassing the charm of more intimate music. For all that, there was a ...

DEBUSSY'S OPINIONS

... DEBUSSY'S OPINIONS. Debussy, like Berlioz before him, was professional critic, and, like most composers who turn critics, introduced a strong personal flavour into his criticisms. They are less interesting this account, perhaps indeed more so, and they ...

DEBUSSY'S MUSIC

... strictly classical composers; and said that early contemporaries of Debussy were still expressing their ideas in the ready-made mould ot the sonata and sym- phony. procedure Which Debussy was too or na to tollow. _ Being treed, theretore, trom the neces- ...

Published: Tuesday 27 January 1931
Newspaper: Yorkshire Evening Post
County: Yorkshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 248 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

DEBUSSY'S MUSIC

... DEBUSSY'S MUSIC A Leeds Lecture by Mr. Edward Now that the tlma 1* well past when the impressionistic music of Claud# Debussy considered sensational and fit subject for controversy, wo have perhaps settled down into the other extreme, accepting Debussy'a ...

Published: Monday 15 February 1937
Newspaper: Yorkshire Evening Post
County: Yorkshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 236 | Page: 10 | Tags: none