Word: straussed
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...Obersteiger" by Zeller; Overture to "The Merry Wives of Windsor" by Nicolai; Valse Triste, by Sibelius; Peer Gynt, Suite, by Grieg; Ballet Suite by Gluck-Mottl; Ave Maria (Solo violin--J. Theodorowicz--Harp, Organ, and Strings); Ouverture Solennelle, "1812," by Tchaikovsky; Tales from the Vienna Woods, Waitz, by Strauss; "Tannhauser," Introduction and Song of the Evening Star (Violoncello solo: J. Langendoen) by Wagner; "Tannhauser," Entrance of the Guests into the Wartburg, by Strauss...
...Vagabond, it has been observed with depressing frequency, is a sentimentalist. He likes Strauss in music, Dickens in literature, Munchenbrau in drinks. From the sickly thought of divisionals and finals he turns to dream of the budding green things which on days like this defy the name of the Blue Hills; of dripping paddles moving on a quiet river: of everything which fortunate people have always done in May. He is even that worst of sentimentalists, one who loves a tradition for its own sake, and regrets its passing. New things may be best, but the old are consecrated...
...Strauss," Professor Hill, Music Building...
This year men will board in the Yard in Grays, Matthews, Strauss, Massachusetts, Mower, Hollis, Stoughton and Holworthy. Women will be accommodated in Wold, Thayer, and Wigglesworth. The Union will be used as a dining center...
...orchestras alone have given it 154 performances, the Fountains, 71 performances, Roman Festivals (third poem in the cycle) 45 performances. Royalties in such cases mount up. Respighi, Stravinsky and the later works of Richard Strauss are expensive to perform. The Philharmonic has to pay $40 each time it plays any one of the Roman poems. (For the privilege of Maria Egiziaca's première, the Philharmonic paid $500.) If the performance is broadcast, Columbia Broadcasting has to pay nearly as much again...