Word: straussed
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...virtuosity. Their programmatic short-comings beyond doubt result from what they think the public wants. But their obligation to present what is best in music is greater than to catering to public taste. Are they not bound to play now and then Don Quixote, thought by many to be Strauss's masterpiece, as well as Don Juan and Till Eulenspiegel? If Don Quixote is too pastoral, too serene, for this restless generation, are they not bound to educate the people to it? In short, is it not the musician's task to present what is great in music as well...
George E. Hobbs, Research Fellow in Neurology, M.D., University of Toronto '33; Charles C. Roby, Research Fellow in Obstetrics, Ph.D. University of Chicago '40; Oliver H. Strauss, Research Fellow in Phamacology, M.D. Columbia '40; Effren C. Del Pozo, Research Fellow in Physiology, M.D. National University of Mexico '36; Harold I. Harvey, Research Fellow in Psychiatry, M.D. Duke University...
...happens that the Club is going to sing works by three German and one Austrian composer, Bach, Brahms, Mendelssolm, and J. Strauss. Any inquiry in proper quarters would have disclosed this fact...
Last week Broadcast Music Inc., a new music organization set up by National Association of Broadcasters to crack ASCAP's tune monopoly (TIME, Sept. 25), had 52 arrangers at work. Gleaning the public domain, B. M. I. picked up 150 most popular pieces (Dixie, Home, Sweet Home, Strauss waltzes, etc.), began turning out new arrangements of them which may be used free by anyone who buys the sheet music. B. M. I. orchestrations, "cross-cued" so that they could be played by a group of any size, were offered to the trade as better suited to modern microphone technique...
Debussy: Iberia (Piero Coppola and Paris Conservatory Orchestra; Victor: five sides) and Strauss: Death and Tranfiguration (Albert Coates and London Symphony Orchestra; Victor: six sides...