HMS 33


The Huddersfield Music Society, HMS 33

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HUDDERSFIELD MUSIC SOCIETY Brochure 33rd Season's programmes 1950 - 1951 colorchecker Xx-rite .................................................... ww MSCCPPCC0613 Xx.rite աա

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The Huddersfield Music Club IMPORTANT NOTICE Subscribers are particularly requested to note that the Recitals for the 1950/51 Season are being given in the HUDDERSFIELD TOWN HALL (Area Section). Attention is also drawn to the JUNIOR SUBSCRIPTION TICKET which is being introduced for the first time. (950-63 WEDNESDAY EVENINGS at 7-30 President - A. L. Woodhead, Esq., M.A., J.P. Active Vice-President - J. Stancliffe Ellis, Esq. Honorary Vice-Presidents : Dr. Ralph Dr. Ralph Vaughan Williams O.M. Dame Myra Hess D.B.E. Benjamin Britten on S. H. CROWTHER TOE. GLENDINNING Miss Z. E. HULL P. L. MICHELSON F. RowCLIFFE MISS A. SHAW E. C. SHAW MRS. H. AINLEY MRS. ARNOLD MRS. BRANSOM MRS. S. H. CROWTHER MISS K. EVANS Mon MRS. E. FENNER D MRS. E. GLENDINNING Committee MRS. A. E. HULL, 48, New North Road. Tel. 1094 Hon. Secretaries STANLEY G. WATSON, 342, New HEY Rd., Tel. 1706 Hon. Treasurer-F. W. GADSBY, 222, Almondbury Bank. Tel. 2763. Ladies' Committee Chairman-MRS. P. SYKES MRS. D. HIRST MRS. A. E. HORSFALL MRS. A. E. HULL MISS Z. E. HULL I. SILVERWOOD MRS. I. SILVERWOOD E. D. SPENCER MRS. P. SYKES J. TROLLER MRS. S. G. WATSON MRS. G. G. JARMAIN MRS. A. W. KAYE MRS. LIVINGSTONE MRS. J. LEE MRS. MES. N. E. PARK MRS. M. M. SAYER MRS. I. SILVERWOOD MRS. E. D. SPENCER MISS TOWNSEND MISS E. WHITWAM p.m. Hon. Secretary-Miss A. SHAW Hon. Treasurer-MRS. S. G. WATSON THE CLUB IS OPEN TO EVERYONE Important Please see back page IB .J.P.

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The Huddersfield Music Club IMPORTANT NOTICE Subscribers are particularly requested to note that the Recitals for the 1950/51 Season are being given in the HUDDERSFIELD TOWN HALL (Area Section). Attention is also drawn to the JUNIOR SUBSCRIPTION TICKET which is being introduced for the first time. (9.50-63 Town00 VIW on WEDNESDAY EVENINGS at President A. L. Woodhead, Esq., M.A., J.P. Active Vice-President J. Stancliffe Ellis, Esq. Honorary Vice-Presidents : Dr. Ralph Vaughan Williams O.M. Dame Myra Hess D.B.E. Dr. Rai Benjamin Britten - S. H. CROWTHER E. GLENDINNING Miss Z. E. HULL P. L. MICHELSON F. RowCLIFFE MISS A. SHAW E. C. SHAW MRS. H. AINLEY MRS. ARNOLD MRS. BRANSOM MRS. S. H. CROWTHER MISS K. EVANS MRS. E. FENNER MRS. E. GLENDINNING MRS. D. HIRST MRS. A. E. HORSFALL - MRS. A. E. HULL MISS Z. E. HULL 7-30 p.m. Committee Hon. Secretaries MRS. A. E. HULL, 48, New North Road. Tel. 1094 STANLEY G. WATSON, 342, New HEY Rd., Tel. 1706 Hon. Treasurer-F. W. GADSBY, 222, Almondbury Bank. Tel. 2763. Ladies' Committee Chairman-MRS. P. SYKES I. SILVERWOOD MRS. I. SILVERWOOD E. D. SPENCER MRS. P. SYKES J. TROLLER MRS. S. G. WATSON MRS. G. G. JARMAIN MRS. A. W. KAYE MRS. LIVINGSTONE MRS. J. LEE MRS. E. PARK MRS. M. M. SAYER MRS. I. SILVERWOOD MRS. E. D. SPENCER MISS TOWNSEND Miss E. WHITWAM Hon. Secretary-Miss A. SHAW Hon. Treasurer-MRS. S. G. WATSON THE CLUB IS OPEN TO EVERYONE Important- Please see back page

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The Huddersfield Music Club (Founded in 1918 by Dr. Eaglefield Hull) In association with the Arts Council of Great Britain Presents A SERIES OF SIX CONCERTS for the Thirty-third Season 1950-51 odse) to be given in the on TOWN HALL, HUDDERSFIELD (entrance in Corporation Street.) WEDNESDAY EVENINGS at 7-30 p.m. President A. L. Woodhead, Esq., M.A., J.P. Active Vice-President J. Stancliffe Ellis, Esq. Honorary Vice-Presidents : Dr. Ralph Vaughan Williams O.M. Dame Myra Hess D.B.E. Benjamin Britten S. H. CROWTHER E. GLENDINNING Miss Z. E. HULL P. L. MICHELSON F. ROWCLIFFE MISS A. SHAW E. C. SHAW ww MRS. H. AINLEY MRS. ARNOLD Committee MRS. A. E. HULL, 48, New North Road. Tel. 1094 Hon. Secretaries STANLEY G. WATSON, 342, New HEY Rd., Tel. 1706 Hon. Treasurer-F. W. GADSBY, 222, Almondbury Bank. Tel. 2763. Ladies' Committee Chairman-MRS. P. SYKES MRS. BRANSOM MRS. S. H. CROWTHER MISS K. EVANS MRS. E. FENNER MRS. E. GLENDINNING MRS. D. HIRST MRS. A. E. HORSFALL MRS. A. E. HULL Miss Z. E. HULL I. SILVERWOOD MRS. I. SILVERWOOD E. D. SPENCER MRS. P. SYKES J. TROLLER MRS. S. G. WATSON MRS. G. G. JARMAIN MRS. A. W. KAYE MBS. LIVINGSTONE MRS. J. LEE MRS. E. PARK MRS. M. M. SAYER MRS. I. SILVERWOOD MRS. E. D. SPENCER MISS TOWNSEND Miss E. WHITWAM Hon. Secretary-MISS A. SHAW shu Hon. Treasurer-MRS. S. G. WATSON THE CLUB IS OPEN TO EVERYONE Important - Please see back page

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B Wednesday, October 18th, 1950 13. d sier at bob First Concert with HOWARD FERGUSON B A great violin player, prior to his American cour Sonata in E flat K 481. Sonata Sonata in G Op. 96 QuaWorks by Bloch and Bartok Wednesday, November 8th, 1950 Yfrah Neaman (Mozart) (Ravel) (Beethoven) Second Concert Aleksandr Helmann Re-engagement following his great success Bach Fantasy and Double Fugue in A minor Mozart Sonata in C major, K. 330 Brahms Sonata in F minor, Op. 5 Works by Fartein Valen, Olivier Messiaen and Chopin Wednesday, November 29th, 1950 Third Concert The Barylli String Quartet First appearance of this Viennese Quartet Serenade Quartet (Haydn) Quartet (Bliss) Quartet in A flat Op. 105 (Dvorak)

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с Wednesday, January 24th, 1951 D Quintette de l'Atelier First appearance of this celebrated Piano Quintette from Paris (Franck) (Florent Schmitt) (Dvorak) Quintet in F Minor À tour d'anches Fourth Concert Quintet in A Op. 81 Wednesday, February 14th, 1951 Toccata and Fugue orale Sonata in A Op. 101 L'oiseau de feu Gina Bachauer First appearance of the brilliant Greek pianist. Fifth Concert (Bach-Tausig) (Mozart) (Beethoven) (Stravinsky) and works by Chopin Wednesday, March 7th, 1951 Sixth Concert Frederick Fuller First appearance of the eminent English Baritone. Songs by: Peri, Vivaldi, Scarlatti, Monteverdi, Rosa, Wolf, Warlock, V. Williams, Delius, Stanford and Seven Popular Songs of Spain (de Falla).

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THE CLUB IS OPEN TO EVERYONE Subscriptions and Tickets. Two types of Season tickets will be issued this year. (1) the normal (full) subscription of 30/- and (2) a JUNIOR SUBSCRIPTION of 15/- for the whole season This latter type of ticket will be available to ANYONE under 21 years of age; and it will, of course, be understood that a Junior Subscription may not, under any circumstances, be used by an adult. Season tickets (of both types) may be obtained from the Hon. Secretaries, or from Messrs. J. Wood & Sons, Ltd., 67, New Street; Messrs. Whitfield's Ltd., Ramsden Street or Messrs. Kenneth Levell Ltd., Market Street. 1001 If you were a subscriber last season . . . Ticket(s) for the coming season are enclosed herewith; and it is requested that the appropriate subscription be forwarded to the Hon. Treasurer (Mr. F. W. Gadsby of 222, Almondbury Bank, Huddersfield) before the date of the First Concert. Cheques should be made payable to "The Hudders- field Music Club". In the event of any of the tickets not being required this year, they should be returned to Mrs. Hull not later than October 7th, after which date it will be assumed that they will be retained and paid for. onbow If you were not a subscriber last season, will you please write as early as possible to either of the Hon. Secretaries stating the number and type of season tickets required. Subscribers are recommended 7-15 p.m. oldotá occupy their seats not later than sluqo'l

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THE HUDDERSFIELD MUSIC CLUB A. L. WOODHEAD, Esq., M.A., J.P. President (In association with the ARTS COUNCIL OF GREAT BRITAIN) TOWN HALL WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 18th, 1950 AT 7-30 P.M. YFRAH NEAMAN and HOWARD FERGUSON PROGRAMME PRICE SIXPENCE

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PROGRAMME The analytical notes in this programme are the copyright of the Huddersfield Music Club. I Sonata in E flat major (k.481) Allegro molto Adagio Allegretto (First performance at these Concerts) Mozart wrote sonatas for piano and violin throughout his whole career. Dr. Adbert remarks that "they appealed to him far more than piano sonatas, and, taking them all together, he used them more as a vehicle for his deep intimate feelings; one may therefore consider the violin sonata as occupying the same place in his work as the piano sonata in that of Beethoven." The earlier examples were, in fact, really sonatas for piano with a violin obbligato; Mozart's true piano and violin sonatas date from 1778. Three large-scale sonatas-B flat, E flat and A-written between 1784-87 represent the crown of his achievement. Sonata Mozart (1756-1791) The Sonata in E flat (1785) dates from the Viennese period, at a time when many of Mozart's works were written with some particular virtuoso in mind. Though nothing is known of the occasion of its composition, this sonata has a powerful virtuoso element. The brief first movement, with its combination of the loveable and masculine strength, is typical of Mozart. The slow movement is one of Mozart's most profoundly inspired adagios; a rondo in form, it is particularly remarkable for its "labyrinthine modulations, whose climax comes in an enharmonic change that bares the depths of the soul." finale, six variations on a simple, pleasant theme, is a virtuoso piece; Einstein considers that Mozart never came so close to Beethoven as in this movement. The II Allegretto Moderato (Blues) Perpetuum mobile Ravel (1875-1937) (Last performed in 1927 by Jelly d'Aranyi and Myra Hess) Ravel's only sonata for piano and violin is dated 1923-27. It is dedicated to Hélène Jourdin-Morhange, a brilliant violinist whose career was cut short by a hand injury. Ravel used her knowledge of the instrument to explore all the resources of the violin. The work is, indeed, extremely difficult, calling for a perfect ensemble between the players. Ravel considered the violin and piano to be essentially incompatible instru- ments; in place of attempting to blend them, here he seeks rather to emphasise their contrasting qualities. The first movement is in a very free sonata form. The second movement is entitled "Blues"; as well as its broken rhythms, its dissonances are made more acute by writing the piano part in A flat and the violin part in G. Ravel believed that jazz was one of the most important contributions of modern times to music and that it was a form of art as significant as Spanish dances, Hungarian rhapsodies or Russian folk-songs. It was a matter of astonishment to him that so few American composers had, at that time, availed themselves of it. In it he felt two characteristics-underlying pathos and arrogant will- to-power. The last movement is largely made up of material from the preceding movements. Here the technical difficulties are particularly formidable, especially as the general effect must be one of "unlaboured lightness." Interval of ten minutes

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Sonata in G major Op. 96 III Beethoven (1770-1827) Allegro moderato Adagio espressivo Scherzo. Trio Poco allegretto (First performance at these Concerts) This is the last of Beethoven's ten sonatas for violin and piano. It was written in 1812 for the violinist Pierre Rode, who was visiting Vienna at that time; and was dedicated (like the great B flat trio) to the Archduke Rudolph. A gap of nine years separates it from its predecessor. All the violin and piano sonatas are virtuoso works and were intended to form brilliant concert pieces. This sonata, while still retaining that character, has in it much of the depth and subtlety of Beethoven's later chamber works. It has been called "the most imaginative and the most musically perfect" of these ten sonatas. d'Indy says that it "arouses most strongly in the minds of those gifted with understanding, the charm of the Austrian countryside. It is another Pastoral symphony." He feels in the first movement its "gentle calm." The sublime second movement is one of the most beautiful things in music. A quaint scherzo, a "peasant festivity," interrupts it; the trio resembles a "valse noble." The last movement is founded upon a popular Viennese song. In it, there is a return of the lovely adagio. The work ends gaily with a sparkling little coda. Rumanian Dances Ningun Bloch (b. 1880) Bloch was born in Geneva, where Dalcroze was his first teacher; he later studied under Ysaye and Ivan Knorr. In 1917 he first settled in America and became an American citizen. "From the first he instinctively expressed himself in a peculiarly Jewish idiom such as no composer of his race had previously articulated with anything like the same instinctive power and inevitability. It was reserved for him to find a modern musical idiom that conveys something akin to the poetry and passion, the turbulent sorrow and noble exaltation of Judaism as it is transmitted by the Old Testament" (Grove). Bartok (1881-1945) He took an Arts course in London YFRAH NEAMAN, a British artist, was born in 1923, he started to learn the violin at the age of 6. At 9 he entered the Paris Conservatoire, gaining the Premier Prix at 14. He has studied under Fesch, Thibaud and Rostal. University and during the war, worked in a war factory. His career really started in London where he played 15 times at the National Gallery concerts. He has played much in France and England. Later tours include South Africa, Holland and two visits to America. Neaman's third American tour commences in November at the Carnegie Hall (New York) with the New York Philharmonic Orchestra. HOWARD FERGUSON was born in Belfast in 1908. He studied both piano and violin from a very early age. Harold Samuel heard him play at the Belfast Musical Competitions in 1921, and awarded him the prize. On his suggestion, Ferguson went to London to study. He won the Open Scholarship for composition at the R.C.M. He continued his studies with Samuel and became a close friend. Ferguson has written orchestral and chamber works as well as an important sonata for piano. He also helped Dame Myra Hess with the organization of the National Gallery concerts. He has been Neaman's regular partner in sonata recitals for the last six years.

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The Huddersfield Music Club Town Hall. November 8th, 1950. ALEKSANDR HELMANN Fantasy and Double Fugue in A minor Sonata in C major K. 330 Sonata in F minor Op. 5 Two Preludes Gavotte and Musette Impromptu in A flat Berceuse Op. 57 Scherzo in B minor Wednesday Evenings at 7-30 p.m. November 29th, 1950 January 24th, 1951 February 14th, 1951 March 7th, 1951 Bach Mozart Brahms Olivier Messiaen Fartein Valen Chopin Barylli String Quartet. Quintette de l'Atelier. Gina Bachauer, Piano recital. Frederick Fuller, Song recital. Tickets 6/6 and 3/6 (under 21) from the Hon. Secretaries, Woods, Levells, Whitfields and at the door. The Halifax Philharmonic Club Lecture Hall of the Halifax Literary and Philosophical Society, Harrison Road. Friday, December 8th, at 7-30 p.m. NINA MILKINA (Piano Recital). The Programme will include Sonatas by Scarlatti, Haydn and Beethoven; Mozart's Fantasia in C minor (K. 475) and works by Debussy and Scriabin. Single tickets 6/- from Mr. H. Lord, 17, Albert Gardens, Pellon, Halifax. The Huddersfield Thespians St. Patrick's Hall, November 20th to November 25th at 7-15 p.m. THE GLASS MENAGERIE A play by TENNESSEE WILLIAMS. Tickets 3/- and 1/6 from Messrs. J. Wood & Sons, 67, New Street.

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THE HUDDERSFIELD MUSIC CLUB A. L. WOODHEAD, Esq., M.A., J.P. (In association with the ARTS COUNCIL OF GREAT BRITAIN) President TOWN HALL WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 8th, 1950 AT 7-30 P.M. ALEKSANDR HELMANN Piano Recital PROGRAMME PRICE SIXPENCE

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PROGRAMME The analytical notes in this programme are the copyright of the Huddersfield Music Club. I Fantasia and Double Fugue in A minor (First performance at these Concerts). Spitta considers that this work is "so pure and mature in style that it may well have been written in the beginning of the Leipzig period" (1723). Schweitzer calls it one of "the grandest things in piano literature.' The Fantasia is a piece of imitation in strict style. The Fugue itself is in three distinct portions. The main subject is largely founded upon the tonic (A minor) chord. The middle portion introduces a new and greatly contrasted theme, based upon a descending chromatic scale; this subject is, in turn, fully worked out. The third section returns to the original theme, but the subject of the middle section is interwoven with it. Bach used this threefold kind of fugue several times; it is highly effective and musical, and very well adapted to the style of the clavier. Sonata in C major (k. 330) Mozart (1756-1791) Allegro moderato Andante cantabile Allegretto Sonata in F minor Op. 5 Bach (1685-1750) (First performance at these Concerts). In 1778 Mozart spent the summer in Paris, accompanied by his mother. It was one of the darkest periods of his life. He was separated from Aloysia Weber; he had little success in Paris, which he hated and which was then interested only in the struggle for supremacy between Gluck and Piccinni. In Paris, too, his mother fell ill and died. During this period Mozart wrote five piano sonatas. At least one of them-the Sonata in A minor-reflects his sombre feelings, but the Sonata in C major, though as great a masterpiece, is lighter in mood. Einstein calls it a "masterpiece in which every note 'belongs' one of the most loveable works Mozart ever wrote. In it the shadows of the Andante give place to an unclouded purity; a particularly delightful feature is the way the second part of the Finale begins with a simple little song". II Allegro maestoso Andante espressivo Scherzo. Allegro energico Intermezzo. Brahms (1833-1897) Andante molto (Retrospect) Finale. Allegro moderato ma rubato (Last performed in 1945 by Franz Osborn) This Sonata belongs to the earliest period of Brahms's work; the 1st, 3rd and 5th move- ments were written in 1853, the 2nd and 4th at an earlier date. Brahms had previously written two other piano sonatas, and the third (Op. 5) was his final composition in this form for piano solo. The later piano pieces-Ballades, Rhapsodies, Intermezzi and Capricci- are all shorter pieces in a less restricted form, which Brahms seems to have preferred in order to express his most intimate thoughts. The three Sonatas (Schumann called them veiled symphonies), the B major Trio and the first piano Concerto were all written before Brahms's twenty-sixth year. Seldom has so wonderful and assured a beginning been made by any master.

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The F minor Sonata has been called one of Brahms's "boldest, richest and most passionate works for the piano." The first movement is full of indomitable energy, with its opening bars "beaten out of steel with cyclopean hands," its impatient second subject and its broadly majestic climax; yet the whole is constructed with intense concentration. The Andante- that lovely moon-lit nocturne-has as its motto a quotation from a love-song by Sternau : Der Abend dämmert, das Mondlicht scheint, Da sind zwei Herzen in Liebe vereint Und halten sich selig umfangen. (Twilight deepens, the moon shines, two hearts by love united, are joined in silent ecstasy). The Scherzo, with its smooth Trio, is followed by a disconsolate Intermezzo (Retrospect), which, coloured like an orchestral piece, repeats in modified and sorrowful form the theme of the Andante. The Finale, a free Rondo, fights its way, through con- trasting moods, to a triumphant end-a joyful triumph which only the youthful Brahms I could have conceived. Préludes Interval of ten minutes III Oliver Messiaen (b. 1908) i. Chant d'extase dans un paysage triste (Song of rapture in a sad country). ii. Les sons impalpables du rêve (The evanescent sounds of a dream). Messiaen, organist of the Sainte-Trinité in Paris and professor of harmony at the Con- servatoire, was born at Avignon, the son of the poetess Cécile Sauvage. He is a subject of great argument in musical circles. He is a curious mixture of mystic and scientist and whether his music appeals to one or not, it is undeniably work of compelling interest. Gavotte and Musette (Gavotte da capo) Op. 24 Fartein Valen (b. 1887) Valen was born in Stavanger. He first studied languages at Oslo University; he later entered the Conservatoire and completed his studies under Reger in Berlin. He now receives a Norwegian government grant for composition. has written orchestral works, quartets, choral works, songs and piano pieces. IV Impromptu in A flat major Op. 29 (1838) Berceuse Op. 57 (1845) Scherzo in B minor Op. 20 (1835) Chopin (1810-1849) Helmann is one of the few pianists who have, in maturity, fulfilled the early promise shown as a child prodigy. Born in Russia in 1912, he had already given many concerts in Europe when his family settled in the United States in 1923. He left the concert platform for some years, returning to make a brilliant debut in New York in 1931. From 1934-39 Helmann's concert activities in Europe won him recognition as one of the most outstanding pianists of his day. During the war he gave many recitals for the Allied Forces. Helmann's repertoire is unusually wide and includes many forgotten or un- published compositions of the 17th and 18th centuries. A composer himself, he usually includes in his programme some outstanding contemporary work. Helmann now lives in England.

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The Huddersfield Music Club Town Hall. November 29th, 1950. THE BARYLLI STRING Quartet in G, Op. 18, No. 2 Quartet No. in B flat Quartet in A flat, Op. 105 January 24th, 1951 February 14th, 1951 March 7th, 1951 Wednesday Evenings at 7-30 p.m. QUARTET Beethoven. Bliss. Dvorak. Quintette de l'Atelier. Gina Bachauer, Piano recital. Frederick Fuller, Song recital. Tickets 6/6 and 3/6 (under 21) from the Hon. Secretaries, Woods, Levells, Whitfields and at the door. The Halifax Philharmonic Club Lecture Hall of the Halifax Literary and Philosophical Society, Harrison Road. Friday, December 8th, at 7-30 p.m. NINA MILKINA (Piano Recital). The Programme will include Sonatas by Scarlatti, Haydn and Beethoven; Mozart's Fantasia in C minor (K. 475) and works by Debussy and Scriabin. Single tickets 6/- from Mr. H. Lord, 17, Albert Gardens, Pellon, Halifax. The Huddersfield Thespians St. Patrick's Hall, November 20th to November 25th at 7-15 p.m. THE GLASS MENAGERIE A play by TENNESSEE WILLIAMS. Tickets 3/- and 1/6 from Messrs. J. Wood & Sons, 67, New Street.

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THE HUDDERSFIELD MUSIC CLUB A. L. WOODHEAD, Esq., M.A., J.P. (In association with the ARTS COUNCIL OF GREAT BRITAIN) President TOWN HALL WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 29th, 1950 AT 7-30 P.M. THE BARYLLI STRING QUARTET WALTER BARYLLI (Violin) ALFONS GRUENBERG (Viola) WOLFGANG PODUSCHKA (Violin) WILHELM WINKLER (Cello) PROGRAMME PRICE SIXPENCE

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PROGRAMME The analytical notes in this programme are the copyright of the Huddersfield Music Club. I Quartet in G major Op. 18. No. 2 Allegro Adagio cantabile Scherzo. Allegro Allegro molto quasi presto (Last performed in 1933 by the Lener String Quartet). The six quartets of Op. 18, published in two sets in 1800-1 and dedicated to Prince Lobkowitz, mark, according to Vincent d'Indy, the line of demarcation between Beethoven's first period (Imitation) and his second (Externalization-the artist, freeing himself from "the leading strings of past generations," walks alone and, breaking all bounds, comes to complete self-expression in his art). Previous to Op. 18 Beethoven had written some nineteen chamber works for various combinations, but this was his first work in one of the most difficult and subtle forms of musical composition-the string quartet. A lapse of five years followed before the appearance of the quartets Op. 59. The quartets Op. 18 were not written in the numbered order. Many listeners find this second quartet the most pleasing of the set; Tovey calls it "the gentlest of the early comedies." At one time it was known as the "Compliments Quartet" because "its delicious opening theme was supposed to resemble some courtly person making a bow at the outset of a conversation." This conversation notion is emphasised by the insistance upon two-bar phrases. The beautiful ending to the first movement-a foreshadowing of the later Beethoven-with its rising sweep falling to the lower register, should be noted. The graver Adagio, with its spritely Allegro derived from a codetta figure, has beautiful passages of figuration for the violin. The gay Scherzo is one of the happiest that Beethoven ever wrote. The Finale, opened by the cello, continues the mood of jollity; the F natural before the coda, brings a hint af the introspective Beethoven. Quartet No. 1 in B flat Beethoven (1770-1827) II Arthur Bliss (b. 1891) Andante maestoso-Allegro con brio Allegretto grazioso Sostenuto Vivace (First performance at these Concerts). Sir Arthur Bliss was born in London. He was educated at Rugby and Cambridge. He entered the R.C.M. in 1913, studying under Stanford, Vaughan Williams and Holst. He served through the 1914-18 war. He became professor of composition at the R.C.M.

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for a short time, but with the exception of his appointment as Musical Director at the B.B.C. 1941-45, he has devoted himself entirely to composition. He has written several ballets, incidental music for films, choral and orchestral works, including a symphony, a piano concerto, a viola sonata, chamber music for various combinations, songs, song cycles and piano pieces. An early string quartet was performed while Bliss was on active service, but he withdrew it and the work to be performed tonight now stands as his first string quartet. This quartet was written for the American patron of music, Mrs. Elizabeth Sprague Coolidge and was first performed at the University of California, Berkeley, in 1941 by the Pro Arte String Quartet. The first movement is in alternating sections of slow and fast tempi. The second movement is in dance rhythm; its main time being 6/8 plus 2/8. The third movement is slow and lyrical; the finale is brilliant and sparkling in character. The music, well stocked with themes, is not too difficult to follow; the writing is extremely contrapuntal. Interval of ten minutes Quartet in A flat Op, 105 III Dvorak (1841-1904) Adagio ma non troppo-Allegro appassionato Molto vivace Lento e molto cantabile Allegro non tanto (First performance at these concerts). Dvorak and Smetana were together the creators of the school of modern Czech music. Professor Sourek writes of Dvorak: "He was one of those great creative artists who live, feel and think in music. Music was his life-blood, his whole inner existence; and only in music could he fully express himself. Thus he created spontaneously, without profound and systematic reflection. He was at his best in absolute music, unburdened by any programme and, above all, in chamber music. This branch yielded some of the finest blossoms of his art, flowering in beauty and characteristic fragrance. In absolute music Dvorak's fancy broke out in fresh melodic ideas, in wonderfully coloured harmony and elemental rhythms." Dvorak wrote in all thirty chamber music works, including thirteen string quartets (five early quartets remain unpublished). This quartet Op. 105 is the last (Op. 106 was written earlier) and is dated 1895. It opens with a slow introduction in A flat minor, a complete contrast to the idyllic and sunny main movement which follows. The move- ment is in regular sonata form. The Scherzo is one of Dvorak's finest. The first and last sections are in a lively dance style derived from the Furiant (a Czech dance in 3/4 time with a characteristic effect of cross-rhythms); the middle section founded upon a gracious melody, later develops into a two-part canon for the violins. The romantic slow movement, beginning with a melody of folk-song character, becomes richer and warmer, and is interrupted by an agitated middle section. The return is delightfully decorated with violin figuration. The finale is "an expression of pure joy" rising, after a wealth of expressive detail, to a final climax of rapture.

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The Huddersfield Music Club Town Hall. Wednesday Evenings at 7-30 p.m. January 24th, 1951 QUINTETTE DE L'ATELIER (with Piano) Quintet in F minor A tour d'Anches Quintet in A Op. 81 Franck. Florent Schmitt. Dvorak. February 14th Gina Bachauer, Piano Recital. March 7th Frederick Fuller, Song Recital. Tickets 6/6 and 3/6 (under 21) from the Hon. Secretaries, Woods, Levells, Whitfields and at the door. The Halifax Philharmonic Club Lecture Hall of the Halifax Literary and Philosophical Society, Harrison Road. Friday, December 8th, at 7-30 p.m. NINA MILKINA (Piano Recital) Friday, January 19th, at 7-30 p.m. QUINTETTE DE L'ATELIER Works by Schumann, Brahms and Fauré. Single tickets 6/- from Mr. H. Lord, 17, Albert Gardens, Pellon, Halifax. The Huddersfield Thespians St. Patrick's Hall, January 22nd to January 29th, at 7-15 p.m. PHOENIX TOO FREQUENT (by Christopher Fry) STILL LIFE (by Noel Coward) Tickets 3/- and 1/6 from Messrs. J. Wood & Sons, 67, New Street

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THE HUDDERSFIELD MUSIC CLUB A. L. WOODHEAD, Esq., M.A., J.P. (In association with the ARTS COUNCIL OF GREAT BRITAIN) President TOWN HALL WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 24th, 1951 AT 7-30 P.M. QUINTETTE DE L'ATELIER EMILE PASSANI (Piano) ANDRÉ PROFFIT (Violin) JACQUES DEJEAN (Violin) PIERRE LADHUIE (Viola) JEAN RECULARD (Cello) PROGRAMME PRICE SIXPENCE

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PROGRAMME The analytical notes in this programme are the copyright of the Huddersfield Music Club. I Quintet in A major Op. 81 Allegro ma non tanto Dumka Andante con moto Scherzo (Furiant): Molto Vivace Finale Allegro Dvorak (1841-1904) (First performance at these Concerts). Professor Sourek has described the quintet in these words: "It is an absolute revelation of the personality of Dvorak, a man apparently locked within himself, moving only in the sphere of divine beauty, now plunged in gloomy meditation, his vision lost in eternity, now smiling brightly, bubbling over with happiness and breaking forth in outbursts of the frankest joy. Such a spirit was Dvorak, and thus he appears in this quintet-one of the freshest and most characteristic creations of his genius." This is Dvorak's only piano quintet (excluding an early unpublished work), though his chamber music includes two piano quartets. The quintet was written in 1887, five years before Dvorak's stay in America. The first movement opens with the main subject, dreamy and melancholy, in the cello; this works up to an outbreak of joy. The second subject (viola) is again pensive; it, too, turns gradually to warmth and passion. These two moods are contrasted throughout, ending with a spirited coda. The same alternation of mood is found in the second movement. It is entitled "Dumka"-a Slav word, found in popular literature, indicating a passionate, emotional type, which Dvorak introduced into musical terminology to denote a movement in slow tempo of a rather melancholy character. For the third movement (Scherzo) Dvorak adapted the Bohemian dance "Furiant." Dvorak somewhat changed the character of the dance, quickening the tempo and increasing the abandon. The work concludes with a stirring finale, very rhythmical and using contrapuntal devices. Later a Fugato is introduced; after a climax, the quintet comes to a brilliant and joyous ending. II Piano Quartet A tour d'Anches Op. 97 A courre Sur un rytme prévu Nocturne Sarabande Quasimodo Florent Schmitt (b. 1870) (First performance at these Concerts). Florent Schmitt studied at the Paris Conservatoire where he later became a pupil of Fauré. Schmitt "has a strong bias toward the severer forms of composition, due partly to his studies, and partly to his thorough intimacy with the works of the great masters, especially Bach and the 19th century Russians, which developed a strong sense of poly- phony, rich harmony and vigorous rhythm" (P. O. Ferroud). In his book "Music, Class- ical, Romantic and Modern" Dr. Hull remarks that "the work of Schmitt stands midway between that of Ravel and Honegger. He is more earnest but less brilliant, warmer in harmonic colour and less of an impressionist than Ravel. Schmitt is undoubtedly one of the chief contemporary French composers, and it is strange that his music is not more widely known." Schmitt has written numerous piano pieces, songs, symphonic works

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and music for the theatre (including La Tragédie de Salomé, a "mute drama," first danced by Loie Fuller and a French pioneer of the type of ballet made famous by Diaghilev). He has written a large number of chamber works, which many critics consider to be his finest achievements. This quartet was originally written for piano, oboe, clarinet and bassoon, but when Schmitt heard the first performance, he rearranged the work and entrusted its first performance in the new form to the Quintette de l'Atelier. He decided, however, not to change its title ("Round the reed instruments"). One feels that the movements of this quartet owe much to the Suite; the rhythmic feeling and the grace of the dance is everywhere present. The stately Sarabande has interesting contrapuntal writing; while the lively Quasimodo sparkles with carnival gaiety. Quintet in F minor Interval of ten minutes III César Franck (1822-1890) Molto moderato quasi lento: Allegro Lento con molto sentimento Allegro non troppo ma con fuoco (Last performed in 1928 by Lucy Pierce and the Catterall String Quartet). Though Franck was born at Liége, he became French at the age of 12 by the naturalization of his father, and throughout his life he was French in heart and mind. Franck's earliest chamber music were four piano trios (1840-2). He wrote no more in that form till the quintet (1878-9). The long gap between was largely the result of the conditions of his life. The trios were written during Franck's career as a soloist and travelling virtuoso. In 1860 he was appointed organist of Sainte-Clotilde and all his activities as a composer were then concentrated upon organ and church music. In 1872 the Société Nationale de Musique was founded to encourage a national school of chamber and symphonic music, and Franck was one of the earliest to throw himself with enthusiasm into the new spirit. In the early trios Franck was already feeling his way towards the principle of cyclic composition (works in which unity is achieved by the use of a theme which recurs in the different movements, thus linking them closely together). In the quintet this principle was fully used. The work opens with a dramatic introduction which sets the mood of "troubled questioning." The principal theme (Allegro) is derived from the opening scale passage. The "cyclic theme" is suggested in various keys, then definitely, as the second subject, in A flat. A coda brings the movement to a more tranquil ending. The Lento movement, too, has a sombre colouring. Its principal theme (violin) is new but the "cyclic theme" is used as a contrasting middle subject. The last movement, in sonata form, opens with an introduction founded upon fragments of the main theme, which finally is heard on the strings in octaves. A regular second subject follows. Both are developed and the "cyclic theme," now augmented and rhymically altered, does not appear until the final section. It has been objected that this quintet suffers from lack of sufficiently contrasted move- ments, but no doubt the composer's intention was to depict the slow and gradual rise from gloom and questionings to the vigour and brilliance of the finale. LE QUINTETTE DE L'ATELIER was founded in 1940 by Emile Passani, and received its name from the Théâtre de l'Atelier where its first concerts were given. The Quintette soon occupied an important place in French musical circles and now ranks throughout the world among the leading chamber music organizations.

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The Huddersfield Music Club Town Hall. February 4th, 1951 GINA BACHAUER Piano Recital Toccata and Fugue Pastorale Wednesday Evenings at 7-30 p.m. Sonata in A. Op. 101 Nocturne 3 Studies Barcarolle L'Oiseau de feu Bach-Tausig Mozart Beethoven Chopin Stravinsky March 7th Frederick Fuller, Song Recital. Tickets 6/6 and 3/6 (under 21) from the Hon. Secretaries, Woods, Levells, Whitfields and at the door. The Halifax Philharmonic Club Lecture Hall of the Halifax Literary and Philosophical Society, Harrison Road. Friday, March 2nd at 7-30 p.m. THE MARTIN STRING QUARTET Quartet in A (K.464) Quartet in E flat Op. 51 Quartet in E minor Op. 59 No. 2 Single tickets 6/- from Mr. H. Lord, 17, Albert Gardens, Pellon, Halifax. Mozart Dvorak Beethoven The Huddersfield Thespians St. Patrick's Hall, January 22nd to January 29th, at 7-15 p.m. PHOENIX TOO FREQUENT (by Christopher Fry) STILL LIFE (by Noel Coward) Tickets 3/- and 1/6 from Messrs. J. Wood & Sons, 67, New Street.

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THE HUDDERSFIELD MUSIC CLUB A. L. WOODHEAD, Esq., M.A., J.P. (In association with the ARTS COUNCIL OF GREAT BRITAIN) President TOWN HALL WEDNESDAY, FEBUARY 14th, 1951 AT 7-30 P.M. GINA BACHAUER (Piano Recital) PROGRAMME PRICE SIXPENCE

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PROGRAMME The analytical notes in this programme are the copyright of the Huddersfield Music Club. I Toccata and Fugue in D minor Bach-Tausig Carl Tausig died from typhoid fever at the age of 29 in 1871-in this short life he managed to acquire a phenomenal technique, to be Liszt's favourite pupil and to play from memory almost the whole of the classical repertory. He was particularly fond of executing the most difficult passages without apparent effort. His many arrangements demand an equal technique. Pastorale Sonata in A major Op. 101 II Allegro ma non troppo Vivace alla Marcia Mozart (1756-1791) Beethoven (1770-1827) Adagio, ma non troppo, con affeto Allegro resoluto (Last performed in 1948 by Iso Elinson). Quite apart from the music itself, one has only to note the exact and careful directions in his native language which Beethoven himself put into the score of this Sonata (I Etwas lebhaft, und mit der innigsten Empfindung, II Lebhaft. Marschmässig, III Langsam und Sehnsuchtsvoll, IV Geschwind, doch nicht zu sehr, und mit Entschlossenheit) to realize the vast difference between that which Schubert wished to express in a "sonata" and the depth of emotion and meaning which Beethoven, at an even earlier date, poured into the same mould. The Sonata Op. 101, dates from 1816 and is the first of a group of five sonatas which form the culminating point of Beethoven's piano music. Before 1816, the eight symphonies, the operas, and the chamber music up to Op. 95 had been completed; between that year and 1821, Beethoven wrote no major works except these last piano sonatas, bringing to them all the experience of his art and life-a life which by that time was overshadowed and saddened by his rapidly approaching deafness, ill health and by his family troubles and cares to such an extent that his mind had begun to turn with longing to the thought of death. His contemporaries tried to belittle these later, and to them bizarre and incom- prehensible works, with the plea that they were the compositions of a man who could no longer hear what he had written. Actually, Beethoven played this Sonata Op. 101 in 1822 to a group of friends and confessed afterwards that he could not hear physically one note of what he had played. Beethoven had long since discarded the formal sonata plan. In the Sonata Op. 27, No. 1 he had already written what he himself called a Fantasia-Sonata, and that sonata may well be compared with Op. 101 (the word fantasia now dropped as the intention was too obvious) to realize how similar they are and yet how vastly his work had increased in scope, power and depth. In his search to express the almost inexpressible, Beethoven's style becomes increasingly polyphonic, the movements more continuous and more closely knit together, the range of the parts so widely spaced, the music so spiritual in its thought, that these later works give, as it were, "the deliberate expression of something exalted, floating above the earth and having no root in the world of matter." The last five sonatas are all fantasia-sonatas, great concert sonatas, in one form or another.

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Although the Sonata Op. 101, is divided into four movements, the divisions are lightly marked and linked together, so that the whole moves together to the climax of the last movement. "The effort to fight a way through dreams and fancies, spiritual, gay and sentimental by turns, to fully conscious creative activity-this forms the poetic 'argument' of the work" (Becker). The opening allegretto is like a tender, gently moving song; its parts flow like a string quartet. Beethoven himself described it as "visionary moods." The second movement, the co-called March, takes the place of the Scherzo. The word scherzo is only used once in these five sonatas; the boisterous Rhenish humour has gone, to be replaced with something much more subtle. The character of a March is only apparent in the rhythm; for the rest, it is an impressionistic piece, with the melody thrown in fragments from part to part. A canon forms the contrasting middle portion. The short adagio is full of the yearning (Sehnsucht) with which Beethoven directs that it should be performed; a short colaratura passage leads, not to the finale, but first to a repetition of the gentle opening theme. The finale itself, in sonata form, shows "rather courageous than joyful determination." The mood is broken by a reference, in augmentation, to the opening theme. Then "a brooding minor fugato begins in the bass and, mounting, weaves a shadowy dance about a single idea, which suddenly, with a gesture of elemental force, resumes its former aspect and leads to a jubilant close." Interval of ten minutes Nocturne in D flat major Three Studies Op. 25 in A flat, F minor and F major III Chopin (1810-1849) Chopin usually "preferred forms in which some sort of rhythmic and melodic type is prescribed at the outset-such as the Polonaise, Valse, Nocturne, etc.-he virtually set himself the task of saying the same sort of thing again and again; yet he appears truly inexhaustible. Each Prelude, Study, Scherzo, presents an aspect of the subject not pointed out before; each has a raison d'être of its own." (Dannreuther). L'Oiseau de Feu (The Fire-bird) Danse Infernale Berceuse Finale Stravinsky collaborated with Diaghilef and the Russian Ballet in a series of Ballets, of which the Fire Bird (1910), Petruska (1912), the Rite of Spring (1913), Les Noces (1917) and Apollo Musagetes are probably the best known. Stravinsky (1882- ) arr. Agosti Gina Bachauer was born in Athens and studied at the Athens Conservatoire under Waldemar Freeman, Rachmaninov's partner in two-piano recitals. She later studied in Paris under Cortot and with Rachmaninov himself. Since her first public performance in 1933, she has toured Italy, Yugoslavia, Austria and Egypt. During the war, she travelled all over the Middle East, playing to the Forces, and giving over six hundred concerts and recitals. Since the war she has played in many countries including Britain, Canada and the U.S.A.

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The Huddersfield Music Club Town Hall Wednesday Evenings 7-30 p.m. March 7th, 1951. FREDERICK FULLER Song Recital. Songs by Vivaldi, Scarlatti, Monteverdi, Warlock, Vaughan Williams and Delius. A group of songs by Hugo Wolf. Seven Popular Songs of Spain: De Falla. Tickets 6/6 and 3/6 (under 21) from the Hon. Secretaries, Woods, Levells, Whitfields and at the door. The Halifax Philharmonic Club Lecture Hall of the Halifax Literary and Philosophical Society, Harrison Road. Friday, March 2nd at 7-30 p.m. THE MARTIN STRING QUARTET Quartet in A (K.464) Mozart Quartet in E flat Op. 51 Dvorak Quartet in E minor Op. 59 No. 2 Beethoven Single tickets 6/- from Mr. H. Lord, 17, Albert Gardens, Pellon, Halifax. The Huddersfield Thespians St. Patrick's Hall February 26th to March 3rd, at 7-15 p.m. "BONAVENTURE" by Charlotte Hastings Tickets 3/- and 1/6 from Messrs. J. Wood & Sons, 67 New Street, Huddersfield.

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THE HUDDERSFIELD MUSIC CLUB A. L. WOODHEAD, Esq., M.A., J.P. (In association with the ARTS COUNCIL OF GREAT BRITAIN) President TOWN HALL WEDNESDAY, MARCH 7th, 1951 AT 7-30 P.M. FREDERICK FULLER (Song Recital) At the Piano: Daniel Kelly PROGRAMME PRICE SIXPENCE

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Gioite al canto mio Un certo non so che Se Florinda è fedele Lasciate mi morire Vado ben spesso PROGRAMME I II Harfenspieler (Three songs from Goethe's "Wilhelm Meister") (i) Wer sich der Einsamkeit ergibt An die Türen will ich schleichen (iii) Wer nie sein Brot mit Tränen ass Nun wandre Maria (Spanisches Liederbuch) Epiphanias (Goethe-Lieder) And wilt thou leave me thus The Water Mill Twilight Fancies The Bold, Unbiddable Child Jacopo Peri (1561-1633) Antonio Vivaldi (1675-1741) Alessandro Scarlatti (1660-1725) Claudio Monteverdi (1567-1643) Salvator Rosa (1615-1673) INTERVAL OF 10 MINUTES III Hugo Wolf (1860-1903) Hugo Wolf (1860-1903) Peter Warlock (1894-1930) Vaughan Williams (b. 1872) Frederick Delius (1862-1934) Stanford (1852-1924)

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Seven Popular Songs of Spain IV Paño Moruno Seguidilla Murciana Asturiana Jota Nana Canción Polo de Falla (1876-1946) FREDERICK FULLER was born in Lancashire of Irish parents. His musical studies were carried on in London, New York, Germany and France. As a preliminary to his career, he made a wide study of languages and literature, graduating with high honours at the University of Liverpool, and winning post-graduate scholar- ships to the Sorbonne, Harvard and University of Munich. He has lived in Switzerland, Italy, Canada, Brazil and the Argentine, gaining thereby a long and close acquaintance with the peoples of many lands and their music. He is first and foremost a concert singer and recitalist with a vast and varied repertoire. He has also lectured, under the auspices of the British Council, in South America on the subject of British music.

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The Huddersfield Music Club These concerts will be continued next season. The Hon. Secretaries would be pleased to receive any suggestions from members of the Club, and also any additional names and addresses to whom prospectuses may be sent in due course. The Halifax Philharmonic Society Details of next season's concerts will be sent on application to the Hon. Secretary: Mr. H. Lord, 17, Albert Gardens, Pellon, Halifax. The Huddersfield Thespians St. Patrick's Hall April 9th to April 14th at 7-15 p.m. "THE CIRCLE" by Somerset Maugham Tickets 3/- and 1/6 from Messrs. J. Wood & Sons, 67, New Street, Huddersfield