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Years
1909 | 1910 | 1911 | 1912 | 1913 | 1914 | 1915 | 1916 | 1917 | 1918 | 1919 | 1920 | 1921 | 1922 | 1923 | 1924 | 1925 | 1926 | 1927 | 1928 | 1929 | 1930 | 1931 | 1932 | 1933 | 1934 | 1935 | 1936 | 1937 | 1939 | 1940
The original impetus for this work came about when I was looking for information about Stokowski performances. I was trying to find out the number of times did he conducted Schumann. Searching through Hunt's book I realized that it would be a lot easier to access this information if it were on the Net. Using the Net all the researcher would have to do is to enter the specific name and hit the search button.
Much of what I have produced here is based on the work of John Hunt. His concert register, published in 1996, attempted to list every single concert Stokowski conducted from 1909 to 1975. His work, in turn, was largely based on a series of the concerts published in Toccata, the journal of the Leopold Stokowski Society. Both were missing most of the concert information from the 1933-41 seasons. Frederick Fellers later supplied the information for these seasons in a supplement published by the Leopold Stokowski Society. I have pulled together information from all three sources in preparing this list. The Leopold Stokowski Society has been responsible for many, many valuable releases of recordings Stokowski made in Philadelphia. You can find information about them in the Discography.
Information about the Leopold Stokowski Society can be found at: www.stokowskisociety.net
Mr. Hunt's work does contain a few errors, which is natural given the scope of his work. In fact I am sure there are some in here as well. I have made corrections as best I can. On 28-29 November 1913 Arbor is mentioned as the composer whose music is performed by Grimson following the regular concert. Oliver Daniel's biography has a list of first performances by Stokowski. On that date a premiere is listed by the composer Arbos and I assume a typo was made here and corrected it. Both Mr. Hunt and Oliver Daniel list a 15 January 1915 US premiere by Stokowski of the Paderewski Symphony. In fact the symphony was given a world and US premiere in 1909 by Max Fiedler in Boston. Omitted from both Hunt and Daniel's book is the world premiere of Henry Lang's Symphony #1 by Stokowski in 1914.
One of the rewards I got from all this work was noticing interesting details about Stokowski's programming. In 1936 he took the Philadelphia Orchestra on a tour around and across the US. While going through the South, Georgia, Louisiana and Alabama, he included William Grant Still's Afro-American Symphony. It is hard for us to remember (and in some cases impossible) that at this time in our history this was not only an unpopular political statement, it was also possibly dangerous. Schéhérazade is arguably Stokowski's favorite piece given that he performed it 35 times between 1910 and 1935 including one ballet performance. I find the oddest that he programmed Bruckner only twice, the 4th and then 7th Symphonies.
Each season is preceded by a commentary. I will first provide general information about the season and then list premieres. Where possible I provide information about the composers but there are many who no longer well known, if they are known at all. Sources I have consulted include: Gramophone's "Grove" on line, Classical Music Composer index, and Google. Towards the end of this project my friend Ed Johnson recommended I get Oscar Thompson's Cyclopedia of Music and Musicians to help find more information. This tome was very helpful. It is about the size of Webster's Unabridged Dictionary. The copy I have is the 1964 edition and so in some cases there is only the date of birth. Finally, some years ago Brian Plumb published a listing of the Philadelphia concerts in the Leopold Stokowski Society's journal Toccata. Ed Johnson sent them to me and they were also invaluable in this effort. Frequently the program listed by Mr. Hunt is followed by the comment, "Vocal items… " These were not actually after the concert but integrated in it. Since Mr. Hunt did not indicate where I have followed his format and listed them at the end.
This list includes the period from his first concert in 1909 through the Philadelphia years. I hope to eventually publish the register from 1941 through his last public concert in 1975. There are, however, glaring gaps and missing information. To give you and idea here are a few things I hope to find out. In Philadelphia Stokowski performed with Kate Smith but there is no mention of this in Hunt's book or Oliver Daniels'. Concert information of the AAYO tours in South America is nonexistent and that for the US tour the following year is spotty. Further, it has been pointed out to me that the list in Mr. Hunt's book includes information about broadcasts with the NBCSO but not from programs that were not broadcast. If any of you can provide information regarding these please contact me.
Finally, I must make sure I offer special thanks to the renowned Stokowski expert Edward Johnson for pointing out errors and inconsistencies that I have changed.
1909: This was Stokowski's conducting premiere. Olga Samaroff, helped organize Stokowski's first two concerts. She was a gifted pianist and soloist in the first concert. Influential people from Cincinnati attended, probably at her invitation. They were looking for a new conductor to help improve the quality of their symphony. They found one.
Paris: 12 May 1909
Colonne Orchestra
Tchaikovsky: "March" from Symphony #6 "Pathétique"
Tchaikovsky: Piano Concerto #1 (Olga Samaroff, piano)
Ippolitov-Ivanov: Caucasian Sketches
London: 18 May 1909
New Symphony Orchestra
Beethoven: Coriolan Overture
Lalo: Symphonie Espagnole
Saint-Saens: Violin Concerto #3 (Francis MacMillen, violin)
Ippolitov-Ivanov: Caucasian Sketches
Stokowski's first season as a music director was indicative of his future. Most interesting is the list of what are now considered to be famous soloists who played with him and the Cincinnati Orchestra: Busoni and Kreisler are two of the names that stick out. The others may be less known today, but in their time they drew an audience. Stokowski's repertoire is impressive for so young a conductor including: Wagner, Tchaikovsky, Rimsky-Korsakov, Liszt, Brahms, Beethoven, and Haydn. It is also interesting that Stokowski took the Cincinnati Orchestra on a tour of Ohio. Imagine getting an entire orchestra on a train, riding from Dayton to Cleveland overnight and then giving a concert that day. I think Mark Twain said it best, "It is hard to make railroading pleasant in any country. It is too tedious." While Dayton and Cleveland probably had good-sized concert halls, may of the places the orchestra went to, like Connersville (which I cannot find on any Ohio map) had only small "opera houses" that seated 200-400 people. They would host traveling Minstrel groups, lecturers and the occasional traveling orchestra. He made sure that "contemporary" composers were programmed. Of course Rachmaninoff would be considered a "modern" composer for the time and another was Tor Aulin (1866-1914), Swedish violinist, composer and conductor. (10-11 December) The soloist in his concerto was Maud Powell, and American born woman violinist. While on tour in Columbus, Ohio the soloist in the Tchaikovsky Piano Concerto is Maria Carrena, another woman. I am not sure if these soloists were previously engaged or Stokowski was already making a statement about women in classical music. If so, it may be that his wife had a lot to do with it. So, Stokowski starts his career championing contemporary composers. In January he gives the US premiere of Glière's Symphonic Poem, Sirenen the first of over 200 premieres he conducted.
Cincinnati: 26-27 November 1909
Cincinnati Orchestra
All of his concerts the first three seasons were with the Cincinnati Orchestra.
Mozart: Zauberflote Overture
Beethoven: Symphony #5
Weber: Freischutz Overture
Wagner: Siegfried Idyll
Wagner: Ride of the Valkyries
Ohio Northern University: 30 November 1909
Handel: Messiah
St. Mary's: 1 December 1909 (Afternoon)
Handel: Messiah
Piqua: 1 December 1909 (Evening)
Handel: Messiah
Oberlin: 2-3 December 1909
Handel: Messiah
Cincinnati: 10-11 December 1909
Ippolitov-Ivanov: Caucasian Sketches
Tor Aulin: Violin Concerto #3 (Maud Powell, violin)
Tchaikovsky: Symphonie #6 "Pathétique"
Cincinnati: 17-18 December 1909
Brahms: Symphony #3
Mendelssohn: Hebrides Overture
Smetana: The Moldau
Vocal items by Beethoven and Brahms w/ Koerner
Cincinnati: 7-8 January 1910
Cincinnati Orchestra
All of his concerts the first three seasons were with the Cincinnati Orchestra.
R. Strauss: Tod und Verklarung
Liszt: Les Preludes
Items with vocal declamation by Schubert, Schumann and Schillings w. Wullner
Cincinnati: 21-22 January 1910
Schubert: Symphony #9 "The Great"
Rachmaninoff: Piano Concerto #2 (Sergei Rachmaninoff, piano)
Wagner: Fliegende Hollander Overture
Note: Rachmaninoff's debut with Stokowski.
Dayton: 28 January 1910
Sibelius: Symphony #1
Beethoven: Violin Concerto (Fritz Kreisler, violin)
Beethoven: Leonore Overture #3
31 January ???
Cincinnati: 4-5 February 1910
Sibelius: Symphony #1
Beethoven: Violin Concerto (Fritz Kreisler, violin)
Beethoven: Leonore Overture #3
Cincinnati: 11 February 1910
Weber: Freischutz Overture
Wagner: Lohengrin Act 3 Prelude
Grieg: Peer Gynt Suite
Ippolitov-Ivanov: Caucasian Sketches, excerpt
Also included piano solo music of Rubinstein, Chopin and Mendelssohn played by Maude Allen
Cincinnati: 18-19 February 1910
Bach: Suite #3
Haydn: Symphony #100
Liszt: Piano Concerto #1 (Ferruccio Busoni, piano)
Rimsky-Korsakov: Schéhérazade
Cincinnati: 23 February 1910
Gluck-Mottl: Ballet Suite
Brahms: Violin Concerto (Hugo Heerman, violin)
Beethoven: Symphony #3 "Eroica"
Cincinnati: 4-5 March 1910
Gluck-Mottl: Ballet Suite
Brahms: Violin Concerto (Hugo Heerman, violin)
Beethoven: Symphony #3 "Eroica"
Muncie: 7 March 1910
Bizet: L'Arlesienne Suite #1
Debussy: Nuages et fetes (Nocturnes)
MacDowell: Indian Suite
Program also included vocal items.
St. Mary's: 8 March 1910
Bizet: L'Arlesienne Suite #1
Debussy: Nuages et fetes (Nocturnes)
MacDowell: Indian Suite
Program also included vocal items.
Cleveland: 9 March 1910
Soloist: Marcella Sembrich in vocal items.
Bizet: L'Arlesienne Suite #1
Debussy: Nuages et fetes (Nocturnes)
MacDowell: Indian Suite
Program also included vocal items.
Wooster: 10 March 1910
Bizet: L'Arlesienne Suite #1
Debussy: Nuages et fetes (Nocturnes)
MacDowell: Indian Suite
Program also included vocal items.
Akron: 11 March 1910
Bizet: L'Arlesienne Suite #1
Debussy: Nuages et fetes (Nocturnes)
MacDowell: Indian Suite
Program also included vocal items.
Findlay: 12 March 1910
Bizet: L'Arlesienne Suite #1
Debussy: Nuages et fetes (Nocturnes)
MacDowell: Indian Suite
Program also included vocal items.
Cincinnati: 18-19 March 1910
Soloist: Louise Kirkby-Lunn in vocal items.
Bizet: L'Arlesienne Suite #1
Debussy: Nuages et fetes (Nocturnes)
MacDowell: Indian Suite
Program also included vocal items.
Columbus: 28 March 1910
Wagner: Lohengrin Prelude
Tchaikovsky: Piano Concerto #1 (Maria Carreno, piano)
Sibelius: Swan of Tuonela
Tchaikovsky: Symphony #5
Dayton: 29 March 1910
Wagner: Lohengrin Prelude
Tchaikovsky: Piano Concerto #1 (Maria Carreno, piano)
Sibelius: Swan of Tuonela
Tchaikovsky: Symphony #5
Cincinnati: 1-2 April 1910
Wagner: Lohengrin Prelude
Tchaikovsky: Piano Concerto #1 (Maria Carreno, piano)
Sibelius: Swan of Tuonela
Tchaikovsky: Symphony #5
Cincinnati: 10 May 1910
Gluck-Mottl: Ballet Suite
Wagner: Parsifal Prelude
Wagner: Lohengrin Act 3 Prelude
Tchaikovsky: Symphony #6 "Pathétique"
Connersville: 11-12 May 1910
Gluck-Mottl: Ballet Suite
Wagner: Parsifal Prelude
Wagner: Lohengrin Act 3 Prelude
Tchaikovsky: Symphony #6 "Pathétique"
The second season included even more contemporary composers. For some reason Mr. Hunt does not list soloists this season. It may be that they were first chair players of the orchestra. I will do what I can to find out, but if any reader can help, please let me know. Notice, also that the orchestra did not tour Ohio this season. Composers performed this season include several little known today. Hans Huber (1852-1921) was a Swiss composer. (See January) Leone Sinigaglia (1868-1944) was born and died in Turin. He used Piedmontese folk music in his compositions. Giovani Sgambati (1841-1914) was born in Rome and died there. (See February) Bohlmann (1865-1926) was from Germany and at the time of this performance was a professor at the Cincinnati Conservatory of music. So, Stokowski is promoting not only contemporary music, but local as well. Finally, this season the orchestra performed Elgar's "Dream of Gerontius" under the composer's baton. The fact that the composer, then famous, chose to go to Cincinnati is an indication of how respected Stokowski and his orchestra was already. Stokowski concludes the season with two choral works, Beethoven's 9th and Verdi's Requiem.
Cincinnati: 26-27 November 1910
Beethoven: Symphony #7
Wagner: Tristan und Isolde: Prelude & Liebestod
Weber: Oberon Overture
Vocal items by Saint-Saens and Wagner
Cincinnati: 9-10 December 1910
Schumann: Symphony #2
Goldmark: Violin Concerto
Liszt: Tasso
Smetana: Bartered Bride Overture
Cincinnati: 16-17 December 1910
Strauss Program
Don Juan
Salome (Dance of the Seven Veils)
Feursnot (Love Scene)
Tod und Verklarung
Cincinnati: 6-7 January 1911
Cincinnati Orchestra
All of his concerts the first three seasons were with the Cincinnati Orchestra.
Glinka: Russlan and Ludmila Overture
Rachmaninoff: Isle of the Dead
Rubinstein: Piano Concerto in D
Tchaikovsky: Symphony #4
Cincinnati: 15 January 1911
Elgar: Pomp & Circumstance March #1
Weber: Aria from Der Freischutz
Tchaikovsky: Casse noisette Suite
Saint-Saens: Danse Macabre
Wagner: Tannhauser Overture
Cincinnati: 20-21 January 1911
Schubert: Rosamunde Overture
Beethoven: Symphony #8
Tchaikovsky: Violin Concerto
Dukas: Sorcerer's Apprentice
Cincinnati: 29 January 1911
Dvorak: Carnival Overture
Sibelius: Valse Triste
Chopin: Piano Concerto #1
Grieg: Peer Gynt Suite
Huber: Serenata
Liszt: Hungarian Rhapsody (#?)
Wagner: Kaisermarsch
Cincinnati: 3-4 February 1911
Sgambati: Symphony in D
Sinigaglia: Le baruffe chiozotte Overture
Rossini: Barber of Seville Overture
Vocal items by Puccini and Verdi
Cincinnati: 12 February 1911
Nicolai: Die lustigen Weiber Overture
Longfellow: King Robert of Sicily
Weber: Invitation to the Dance
Mendelssohn: Midsummer Night's Dream
Wagner: Ride of the Valkyries
Cincinnati: 17-18 February 1911
Beethoven: Coriolan Overture
Mozart: Symphony #40
Bohlmann: Lyric Tone Poem
Scharwenka: Piano Concerto in F
Wagner: Meistersinger Overture
Cincinnati: 26 February 1911
Meyerbeer: Coronation March
German: 3 Dances from Henry VIII
Saint-Saens: Bacchanale
Wagner: Lohengrin Prelude
Vocal items by Mozart and Bizet
Cincinnati: 3-4 March 1911
Schubert: Symphony #8 "Unfinished"
Ippolitov-Ivanov: Caucasian Sketches
Tchaikovsky: Symphony #6 "Pathétique"
Cincinnati: 12 March 1911
Auber: Fra Diavolo Overture
Vieuxtemps: Ballade et Polonaise
Bizet: L'Arlsienne Suite
Mozart: Nozze di Figaro Overture
Brahms: 2 Hungarian Dances
Herbert: American Fantasy
Cincinnati: 17-18 March 1911
Wagner: Faust Overture
Dvorak: Cello Concerto
Brahms: Symphony #1
Cincinnati: 31 March - 1 April 1911
Dvorak: Symphony #9 "From the New World"
Beethoven: Piano Concerto #5
Tchaikovsky: 1812 Overture
Cincinnati: 19 April 1911
Soloists: Sheffield Philharmonic Choir
Beethoven: Symphony #9 "Choral"
Cincinnati: 20 April 1911
Soloists: Sheffield Philharmonic Choir
Verdi: Requiem
1911-1912: The final Cincinnati season included the US premiere of Elgar's Second Symphony. He also performed music of Stanford and Sullivan. You will also notice that on several occasions Stokowski conducted excerpts from symphonies and concertos rather than complete works. Seems odd to me. For some reason Mr. Hunt did not include the names of soloists. Little known composers: The first concert of the season featured Gustav Strube (1867-1953) German born but moved to America at age 23 and died there. First violinist with the Boston Symphony Orchestra in 1900 and organized the Baltimore Symphony in 1916. Louis Saar (1868-1937) born in Holland, like Strube he moved to America and made his home there. He was head of the College of Music at the University of Cincinnati from 1906-1917. Hometown boy. Armas Jarnefelt (1869-1958) was a Finnish composer. See February. Paul Umlauft (1853-1934) was a German composer. See April.
Cincinnati: 17-18 November 1911
Brahms: Symphony #1
Strube: Puck, Comedy Overture
Wagner: Tannhauser Overture
Vocal items by Weber and Wagner
Cincinnati: 24-25 November 1911
Elgar: Symphony #2
Strauss: Dance of the 7 Veils
Strauss: Serenade for Winds
Strauss: Don Juan
Cincinnati: 8-9 December 1911
Tchaikovsky Program
Roméo & Juliet
Piano Concerto #1
Symphony #5
Cincinnati: 22-23 December 1911
Brahms: Academic Overture
Bruch: Violin Concerto
Schumann: Symphony #4
Cincinnati: 5-6 January 1912
Franck: Symphony
Debussy: Prelude to the Afternoon of a Faun
Saint-Saens: Piano Concerto #2
Berlioz: Damnation of Faust
Cincinnati: 19-20 January 1912
Beethoven: Symphony #2
Weber: Euryanthe Overture
Wagner: Entry of the Gods (Rheingold)
Cincinnati: 28 January 1912
Wagner: Meistersinger Overture
Mozart: Aria from Don Giovanni
Schubert: Andante from Symphony #9 "The Great"
Delibes: Sylvia Suite
J. Strauss: Blue Danube Waltz
Cincinnati: 2-3 February 1912
Sibelius: Symphony #2
Glazunov: Violin Concerto
Tchaikovsky: Marche slave
Cincinnati: 11 February 1912
Mendelssohn: Ruy Blas Overture
Saar: Gonoliera & Chanson d'amor
Liszt: Piano Concerto #2
Mozart: Minuet (Symphony #39)
Chopin: Nocturne and Polonaise
Wagner: Entry of the Guests
Cincinnati: 16-17 February 1912
Haydn: Symphony #104
Beethoven: Piano Concerto #1
Borodin: Steppes of Central Asia
Jarnefelt: Praeludium
Strauss: Till Eulenspiegel
Cincinnati: 25 February 1912
Wagner: Flying Dutchman Overture
Bruch: Violin Concerto #2 (First movement)
Tchaikovsky: Capriccio Italien
Mendelssohn: Adagio (Symphony #3)
Chabrier: Espana
Cincinnati: 1-2 March 1912
Beethoven: Egmont Overture
Mendelssohn: Symphony #3
Paganini: Violin Concerto #1
Liszt: Mephisto Waltz
Cincinnati: 10 March 1912
Mozart: Zauberflote Overture
Bizet: Carmen Suite #1
Beethoven: Andante (Symphony #1)
Handel: Aria from Acis and Galatea
Boccherini: Minuet
Michiels: Stryian Dance
Cincinnati: 15-16 March 1912
Stanford: Irish Symphony
Suite by English composers
Elgar: Enigma Variations
Sullivan: Di Ballo Overture
Cincinnati: 24 March 1912
Wagner: Rienzi Overture
Sarasate: Zigeunerweisen
Offenbach: Tales of Joseph Hoffman excerpts
Ponchielli: Dance of the Hours
Haydn: Finale (Symphony #103)
Mendelssohn: Violin Concerto (movements 2-3)
Brahms: 2 Hungarian Dances
Rossini: William Tell Overture
Cincinnati: 29-30 March 1912
Brahms: Symphony #2
Schumann: Piano Concerto
Wagner: Wotan's Farewell (Walkure)
Cincinnati: 7 April 1912
Tchaikovsky: Finale (Symphony #5)
Handel: Largo (Serse)
Bizet: Carmen Suite #2
Wunderle: Swedish Paraphrase
Umlauft: Mein Vaterland
Thomas: Mignon Overture
Vocal items by Mozart, Sullivan and Donizetti
Cincinnati: 12-13 April 1912
Goldmark: Sakuntala Overture
Wagner: Meistersinger excerpts
Beethoven: Symphony #5
As can be seen, some guest conducting in Stokowski's homeland preceded the first Philadelphia season. This portion of Mr. Hunt's register is primarily based on the work of Brian Plumb, Archivist of the Leopold Stokowski Society. They published the list in serial form in their journal, Toccata. The first Philadelphia season had many more concerts and much more music than the last two in Cincinnati. According to Hunt the season also included concerts in Akron, Cleveland, Columbus, Toledo, Atlantic City, Camden, Detroit, Germanstown, Kensington and Wilmington but he doesn't provide detail regarding dates or contents. This season also features Thaddeus Rich, who performed numerous times as soloist. He was concertmaster of the Philadelphia Orchestra. One of the highlights of this first season is Stokowski's performance in February of a work by a woman composer, Celeste Heckscher (1860-1928) who was a Philadelphia native. This season Stokowski also includes a concert where the "new music" is almost entirely from local composers. No doubt he realized the necessity of getting allies in the beginning. (See below for details) Hermann Sandby (1881-1966) was a Danish cellist and composed an opera from which the prelude was played: December. Giuseppe Martucci (1856-1909) was an Italian pianist and composer: January. Antonio Bazzini (1818-1897) was an Italian violinist and composer: March. William Townsend a Scottish pianist who lived from 1847-1925: Also March. Jaques-Dalcroze (1865-1950) was a Swiss composer and student of Bruckner. He developed a method of "Gymnastique rhythmique" intended "to create by the help of rhythm a rapid and regular current of communication between brain and body and to make feeling for rhythm a physical experience." April. Also in April is the 'Philadelphia Composers Concert' (my appellation) Camille Zeckwer (1875-1924) was an American composer from the Philadelphia area. He studied composition with Dvorak when he was in New York. Henry Albert Lang (1854-1930) was another composer who lived in Philadelphia at the time. Wassili Leps (1870-1943) an American composer, he taught in Philadelphia at the time. Henry Philip Goepp (1864-1936) was an American composer who also taught in Philadelphia. Premieres: November sees the US premiere of Sir Henry Walford Davies' Parthenia Suite. Davies (1869-1941) is fairly well known. He was an English composer who started teaching at the RCM in 1895. Stokowski studied counterpoint with him.
London: 22 May 1912
London Symphony Orchestra
Wagner: Meistersinger Overture
Brahms: Symphony #1
Debussy: Prelude to the Afternoon of a Faun
Glazunov: Violin Concerto (Efrem Zimbalist, violin)
Tchaikovsky: March Slav
London: 14 June 1912
New Symphony Orchestra
Wagner Program
Tannhauser Overture
Ride of the Valkyries
Excerpts from Tristan & Gotterdammerung w. Lillian Nordica, soprano
Philadelphia: 11-12 October 1912
Philadelphia Orchestra
Beethoven: Leonore #3 Overture
Brahms: Symphony #1
Ippolitov-Ivanov: Caucasian Sketches
Wagner: Tannhauser Overture
Philadelphia: 18-19 October 1912
Philadelphia Orchestra
Weber: Frieschutz Overture
Beethoven: Symphony #5
Strauss: Don Juan
Vocal items by Wagner sung by Ernestine Schumann-Heink, contralto
Philadelphia: 25-26 October 1912
Philadelphia Orchestra
Tchaikovsky Program
Symphony #5
Roméo and Juliet
Marche slave
Philadelphia: 1-2 November 1912
Philadelphia Orchestra
Schumann: Symphony #4
Bruch: Violin Concerto (Louis Persinger, violin)
Davies: Parthenia Suite
Elgar: Pomp and Circumstance March
Philadelphia: 8-9 November 1912
Philadelphia Orchestra
Sibelius: Symphony #2
Bizet: L'Arlesienne Suite #1
Liszt: Les Preludes
Philadelphia: 15-16 November 1912
Philadelphia Orchestra
Beethoven: Coriolan Overture
Haydn: Symphony #104
Rimsky-Korsakov: Schéhérazade
Vocal items by Mozart w- Marguerite Namara, soprano
Philadelphia: 20 November 1912
Philadelphia Orchestra
Nicolai: Die lustigen Weiber Overture
Liszt: Piano Concerto #1
Delibes: Sylvia Suite
Wagner: Rienzi Overture
Rossini: William Tell Overture
Vocal items by Bizet and Saint-Saens w. Rosenberg and Goldsmith
Philadelphia: 22-23 November 1912
Philadelphia Orchestra
Elgar: Symphony #1
Wagner: Rienzi Overture
Wagner: Lohengrin Prelude
Wagner: Kaisermarch
Philadelphia: 29-20 November 1912
Philadelphia Orchestra
Franck: Symphony
Beethoven: Piano Concerto #4 (Leopold Godowsky, piano)
Strube: Puck, Comedy Overture
Philadelphia: 4 December 1912
Philadelphia Orchestra
Auber: Fra Diavolo Overture
Paganini: Intro, theme & variations
Grieg: Peer Gynt Suite #1
Saint-Saens: Danse macabre
Chabrier: Espana
Vocal items by Verdi and Puccini w. Harwood, Baugher and Such
Philadelphia: 6-7 December 1912
Philadelphia Orchestra
Sanby: Vikings at Hegeland, Act 4 Prelude
Beethoven: Symphony #1
Strauss: Tod und Verklarung
Vocal items by Handel and Charpentier w. Hinkle
Philadelphia: 20-21 December 1912
Philadelphia Orchestra
Schubert: Symphony #9 "The Great"
Saint-Saens: Violin Concerto #3 (Mischa Elman, violin)
Berlioz: Damnation of Faust excerpts
Philadelphia: 27-26 December 1912
Philadelphia Orchestra
Wagner program
Meistersinger Overture & Act 3 Prelude
Tristan Liebesnacht
A Faust Overture
Siegfried Idyll
Flying Dutchman Overture
Philadelphia: 3-4 January 1913
Philadelphia Orchestra
Goldmark: Sakantula Overture
Chopin: Piano Concerto #1 (Rudolph Ganz, piano)
Mozart: Symphony #39
Rachmaninoff: Isle of the Dead
Philadelphia: 10-11 January 1913
Philadelphia Orchestra
Mendelssohn: Symphony #3
Lalo: Violin Concerto (Thaddeus Rich, violin)
Berlioz: Benvenuto Cellini Overture
Philadelphia: 15 January 1913
Sullivan: Di Ballo Overture
Weber: Konzerstuck
Tchaikovsky: Casse noisette Suite
Brahms: 2 Hungarian Dances
Saint-Saens: Adagio and Variations
Reinecke: Lento
Enesco: Presto
Ponchielli: La Gioconda Ballet Suite
Philadelphia: 17-18 January 1913
Beethoven: Egmont Overture
Bach: Suite #2
Martucci: Symphony #1
Dukas: Sorcerer's Apprentice
Philadelphia: 24-25 January 1913
Beethoven: Symphony #8
Loeffler: La vilanelle du diable
Brahms: Academic Festival Overture
Vocal items by Gluck, Marcello & Wolf w. Elena Gerhardt, soprano
Philadelphia: 29 January 1913
Mendelssohn: Midsummer Night's Dream Suite
Elgar: Salut d'amour
Boccherini: Minuet
Tchaikovsky: Rococo Variations
Michiels: Czardas
Vocal duets by Verdi w- Green, Lipschutz, and Herman Hermann Sandby
Philadelphia: 31 January, 1 February 1913
Mendelssohn: Hebrides Overture
Liszt: Tasso
Enesco: Symphony
Philadelphia: 7-8 February 1913
Brahms: Symphony #3
Tchaikovsky: Piano Concerto #2
Moszkowski: The Steppes
Springfield Mass. 18 February 1913
Wagner: Meistersinger Overture
Liszt: Tasso
Jaques-Dalcroze: L'oiseau bleu
Sibelius: Valse triste
Jarnefelt: Praeludium
Tchaikovsky: Marche slave
Arias, duets and songs by Verdi, Rossini, Wolf, Strauss & Mozart w- Sembrich & Gilly
Philadelphia: 21-22 February 1913
Weber: Euryanthe Overture
Schubert: Symphony #8 "Unfinished"
Glière: Les sirens
Jarnefelt: Praeludium
Sibelius: Valse triste
Wagner: Huldigungmarsch
Philadelphia: 26 February 1913
Thomas: Mignon Overture
German: 3 Dances from Henry VIII
Heckscher: 5 Dances from the Pyrenees
Saint-Saens: Bacchanale
Meyerbeer: Coronation March
Vocal items by Massenet & Leoncavallo w- Hood & Horner
Philadelphia: 28 February, 1 March 1913
Mozart: Zauberflote Overture
Mozart: Violin Concerto #3 (Eugène Ysaÿe, violin)
Elgar: Enigma Variations
Beethoven: Violin Concerto (same)
Philadelphia: 7-8 March 1913
Gluck-Mottl: Ballet Suite
Stanford: Symphony #3
Smetana: The Moldau
Debussy: Prelude to the Afternoon of a Faun
Dvorak: Carnival Overture
Philadelphia: 12 March 1913
Rossini: William Tell Overture
Bizet: Aria from Carmen
Brahms: 2 Hungarian Dances
Townsend: Serenade
Grieg: Peer Gynt Suite #1
Mendelssohn: Midsummer Night's Dream Suite
Mueller: Traume
Bazzini: Ronde des lutins (Thaddeus Rich, violin)
Wagner: Lohengrin Act 3 Prelude
Philadelphia: 14-15 March 1913
Schumann: Symphony #2
Dvorak: Cello Concerto (Herman Hermann Sandby, cello)
Strauss: Love Scene (Feuersnot)
Strauss: Dance of the Seven Veils
Philadelphia: 21-22 March 1913
Tchaikovsky: Symphony #6 "Pathétique"
Liszt: Piano Concerto #1 (Ernest Schelling, piano)
Rimsky-Korsakov: Russian Easter Overture
Philadelphia: 28-29 March 1913
Wagner Program
Entrance of the Gods (Rheingold)
Ride of the Walkure (Walkure)
Wotan's Farewell (Walkure)
Forrest Murmurs (Siegfried)
Rhine Journey, Funeral March & Closing Scene (Gotterdammerung)
Reading, PA: 2 April 1913
Van Den Beemt: Introduction and Scene
Zeckwer: Allegro: (Camille Zeckwer, piano)
Lang: The Isle of the Blest
Leps: Nirvana (Helen MacNamee-Bentz, soprano
Mueller: Atlantis
Bawden: Ballade (Clarence Bawden, piano)
Pfitzner: Scherzo
Gerstley: Spanish Dance
Goepp: Festal March
Philadelphia: 4-5 April 1913
Beethoven: Symphony #5
Arensky: Tchaikovsky Variations
Tchaikovsky: 1812 Overture
Vocal items by Gluck & Bruneau w. Jeanne Gerville-Reache, contralto
Philadelphia: 11-12 April 1913
Goldmark: Sakantula Overture
Beethoven: Symphony #5
Liszt: Les Preludes
Sibelius: Valse triste
Wagner: Meistersinger Overture
The second season included several additional concerts in various cities, but Hunt does not provide details. Notice the caliber of the soloists. In April Ignance Paderewski was the soloist in Beethoven's Piano Concerto #5. Paderewski (1860-1941) a Polish composer and pianist, was much better known then than now. Stokowski performed his symphony the following season. The symphony was completed in 1907 and "describes the tragic fate of the Polish nation". In 1918 he became the first Premier of the new Polish nation. I have considered that the ability to attract such musicians in Philadelphia might have had some influence on Stokowski's decision to leave Cincinnati. This was the first year Stokowski introduced a Concert for Youth (A Young People's Matinee this year). He realized that the future of classical music depended upon the cultivation of the young. He continues to use women musicians. Teresa Carreno (December) plays the piano in MacDowell's piano concerto. He was a student of hers. In April Catherine Goodson is the soloist in Grieg's Piano Concerto. Also that month Maud Powell plays the Mendelssohn Violin Concerto with Stokowski and the orchestra. Premieres: Stokowski opens the season with the US premiere of Siegmund von Hausegger's symphonic poem Wieland der Schmied. Hausegger (1872-1948) was an Austrian composer and conductor. Henri Rabaud (1873-1949) was a French composer and conductor. A student of Massenet he made his name with the colorful oriental opera Marouf, savetire du Caire. 24 October was the US premiere of his Symphony #2. In November Stokowski conducts the US premiere of Enrique Arbos' Guajiras. Arbos (1863-1939) was a Spanish composer. That concert also was the US premiere of Florent Schmitt's Rapsodie Viennoise. Schmitt (1870-1958) was a French composer who is marginally known today but Thompson comments that he has a "leading place among French composers." January 2 was the US premiere of Roussel's Evocation #2. 14 January: Jenõ Hubay (1858-1937) was a Hungarian composer whose compositions included four symphonies and four violin concertos. He taught Szigeti. In February Stokowski conducts the world premiere of Henry Lang's First Symphony.
Philadelphia: 17-18 October 1913
Wagner: Meistersinger Overture
Beethoven: Symphony #3 "Eroica"
Hausegger: Wisland der Schmied
Liszt: Tasso
Philadelphia: 22 October 1913
Brahms: Academic Festival Overture
Tchaikovsky: Symphony #5
Bach: Air (Suite #3)
Sibelius: Valse triste
Liszt: Tasso
Philadelphia: 24-25 October 1913
Smetana: Bartered Bride Overture
Rabaud: Symphony #2
Tchaikovsky: Violin Concerto (Fritz Kreisler, violin)
Berlioz: Roman Carnival Overture
Philadelphia: 31 October – 1 November 1913
Bach: Brandenburg Concerto #3
Schubert: Rosamunde Overture
Schelling: Legende symphonique
Tchaikovsky: Symphony #4
Philadelphia: 5 November 1913
Wagner: Tannhauser Overture
Vieuxtemps: Violin Concerto #4 (Irma Seydell, violin)
Bizet: Carmen Suite #1
Schubert: Marche militaire
Weber: Invitation to the Dance
Charpentier: Aria from Louise (Kerns)
Liszt: Hungarian Rhapsody #1
Philadelphia: 7-8 November 1913
Beethoven: Prometheus Overture
Schumann: Genoveva Overture
Strauss: Ein Heldenleban
Vocal items by Bach, Gluck and Verdi w- Homer
Philadelphia: 14-15 November 1913
Pfitzner: Katchen von Heilbronn Overture
Dvorak: Symphony #9 "From the New World"
Rimsky-Korsakov: Schéhérazade
Philadelphia: 21-22 November 1913
Beethoven: Coriolan Overture
Brahms: Symphony #1
Schumann: Piano Concerto (Joseph Hoffman, piano)
Berlioz: Benvenuto Cellini Overture
Philadelphia: 26 November 1913
Goldmark: Sakantula Overture
Weber: Rondo alla polacca
Grieg: Sigurd Jorsalfar
Sibelius: Valse triste
Tchaikovsky: Capriccio Italien
Vocal items by Weber and Wagner w- Harvard & Krauss
Philadelphia: 28-29 November 1913
Cherubini: Anacreon Overture
Bach: Violin Concerto #2
Franck: Symphony
Arbos: Guajiras
Schmitt: Rapsodie Viennoise
Philadelphia: 5-6 December 1913
Wagner Program
Lohengrin: Prelude & Procession to Minster
Tannhauser: Overture, Venusberg Music & Act 3 Prelude
Siegfried: Idyll
Tristan: Prelude, Act 3 Prelude and Liebestod
Philadelphia: 19-20 December 1913
Mozart: Nozze di Figaro Overture
Beethoven: Symphony #2
MacDowell: Piano Concerto #2 (Teresa Carreno, piano)
Strauss: Tod und Verklarung
Philadelphia: 26-27 December 1913
Brahms: Tragic Overture
Schubert: Symphony #8 "Unfinished"
Beethoven: Violin Concerto (Mischa Elman, violin)
Wagner: Flying Dutchman Overture
Philadelphia: 31 December 1913
Young People's Matinee
Arensky: Tchaikovsky Variations
Tchaikovsky: Christ Child Legend
Episodes in the life of a child (narrated by Kitty Cheathams)
J. Strauss: Blue Danube Waltz
Tchaikovsky: Casse noisette Suite
Philadelphia: 2-3 January 1914
Mendelssohn: Ruy Blas Overture
Roussel: Evocation #2
Zeckwer: Piano Concerto (Camille Zeckwer, piano)
Tchaikovsky: Symphony #6 "Pathétique"
Philadelphia: 9-10 January 1914
Beethoven: Marcia funebre (Symphony #3 "Eroica"
Hadley: Symphony #4
Dvorak: Carnival Overture
Vocal items by Mozart, Schubert and Brahms w- Connell
Philadelphia: 14 January 1914
Herold: Zampa Overture
Saint-Saens: Piano Concerto #2 (Harold Morris, piano)
Massenet: Scenes napolitaines
Thomas: Gavotte from Mignon
Tchaikovsky: Serenade melancholique
Hubay: Azt Mondjak
Tchaikovsky: Marche slave
Philadelphia: 16-17 January 1914
Wagner Program
Parsifal: Transformation and Good Friday Music
Rheingold: Entrance of the Gods
Ride of the Walkure
Siegfried: Forest murmurs
Gotterdammerung: Funeral March and Immolation
New York: 21 January 1914
Mozart: Nozze di Figaro Overture
Brahms: Symphony #1
Strauss: Tod und Verklarung
Vocal items by Mozart and Charpentier w- Alma Gluck
Philadelphia: 22-23 January 1914
Weber: Freischutz Overture
Brahms: Piano Concerto #1 (Harold, Bauer, piano)
Tchaikovsky: Symphony #5
Philadelphia: 30-31 January 1914
Mendelssohn: Midsummer Night's Dream Suite
Brahms: Haydn Variations
Schumann: Symphony #1
Strauss: Till Eulenspiegel
Philadelphia: 6-7 February 1914
Korngold: Schauspiel Overture
Sibelius: Violin Concerto (Thaddeus Rich, violin)
Beethoven: Symphony #7
Boston: 15 February 1914
Brahms: Symphony #1
Korngold: Schauspiel Overture
Saint-Saens: Violin Concerto #3 (Mischa Elman, violin)
Wagner: Tannhauser Overture and Venusberg Music
Philadelphia: 20-21 February 1914
Mozart: Don Giovanni Overture
Beethoven: Piano Concerto #5 (Wilhelm Backhaus, piano)
Brahms: Symphony #2
Mueller: Atlantis
Philadelphia: 27-28 February 1914
Gluck: Iphigene in Aulis Overture
Haydn: Symphony #100
Debussy: Nuages & Fetes (Nocturnes)
Liszt: Les Preludes
Vocal items by Monteverdi, Brahms & Schubert w- Julia Culp
Philadelphia: 6-7 March 1914
Weber: Euryanthe Overture
Lang: Symphony #1: Fantasies of a Poet
Boellman: Symphonic Variations (Herman Hermann Sandby, cello)
Strauss: Serenade for Wind
Strauss: Dance of the 7 Veils
Philadelphia: 13-14 March 1914
Beethoven Program
Leonore #3 Overture
Symphony #9 "Choral"
Florence Hinkle, Maria Stone-Langston, Nicholas Douty, Horatio Connell
Philadelphia: 18 March 1914
Thomas: Raymonda Overture
Mozart: Gavotte from Idomeneo
Wagner: Tannhauser: Entry of the Guests
German: 3 Dances from Henry VIII
Stein: Konzerstuck
Michiels: Czardas
Vocal items by Hadyn, Wagner, Heger and Othergraven s- Braun & Rahmig
Philadelphia: 20-21 March 1914
Schillings: Symphonic Prologue (Dedipus)
Schumann: Symphony #2
Brahms: Violin Concerto (Carl Flesch, violin)
Brahms: Academic Festival Overture
Philadelphia: 27-28 March 1914
Vivaldi: Concerto in A minor
Grieg: Piano Concerto (Catherine Goodson, piano)
Berlioz: Symphonie Fantastique
Philadelphia: 1 April 1914
Gluck-Mottl: Ballet Suite
Wagner: Tristan Prelude and Liebestod
Beethoven: Piano Concerto #5 (Ignance Paderewski, piano)
Philadelphia: 3-4 April 1914
Beethoven: Egmont Overture
Mozart: Symphony #40
Van Den Beemt: Intro & Shepherd Scene
Strauss: Don Juan
Vocal items by Mozart & Schubert w- Ernestine Ernestine Schumann-Heink, contralto
Philadelphia: 11-13 April 1914
Weber: Oberon Overture
Brahms: Symphony #4
Mendelssohn: Violin Concerto (Maud Powell, violin)
Berlioz: Damnation of Faust excerpts
Philadelphia: 15 April 1914
Wagner: Tannhauser Overture
Weber: Invitation to the Dance
J. Strauss: Blue Danube Waltz
Goldmark: Sakantula Overture
Sibelius: Valse triste
Boellman: Symphonic Variations (James Liebling, cello)
Liszt: Hungarian Rhapsody #1
Vocal items by Huberti and Poldowski w. Emilia Conti, soprano
Philadelphia: 17-18 April 1914
Request Program
Beethoven: Leonore #3 Overture
Schubert: Symphony #8 "Unfinished"
Wagner: Tannhauser Overture and Venusberg Music
Liszt: Les Preludes
The third season features additional concerts in Akron, Atlantic City, Baltimore, Buffalo, Cleveland, Detroit, Erie, Indianapolis, Oberlin, Reading, Washington, and Wilmington as well as the universities of Michigan and Princeton. John offers no dates or programs for these tours. It is another season with renowned soloists (Kreisler, Hofmann, and Casals to mention but a few.) There are several pieces from composers seldom heard today including Amy Beach's Gaelic Symphony (12-13 March). . For your information she was one of Olga's students. In October Stokowski conducted Bruckner for one of only two times in his career at Philadelphia. . I find this odd since the Stokowski Sound seems so perfect for this composer. Premieres: March is the first Bach-Stokowski piece, Wachet auf, performed. Paul Hindemith's Nusch-Nuschi Tanze is given its US premiere in November. In February Stokowski gives the world premiere of Ferruccio Busoni's "Indian Fantasy" with the composer at the piano. Also in February Stokowski gives the world premiere of Ferruccio Busoni's "Indian Fantasy" with the composer at the piano. Busoni (1866-1924) was a German-Italian composer who first appeared at the age of 8 as a pianist. His styles included the "aesthetic of 'junge Klassizitat' by which he intended a return to the clarity and purely musical innovation of Bach and Mozart." He first appeared with Stokowski in Cincinnati as a pianist. I assume the Parsifal "Synthesis" is Stokowski's. WWI had started by this time. Stokowski adopted US citizenship around to avoid the draft into the English army. He was in his early 30s at this point. Later in life he was asked if he would like to revert so he could be knighted. He declined. Other composers rarely heard today include: Frederick Stock (February) was the conductor of the Chicago Symphony for 38 years.
Philadelphia: 16-17 October 1914
Weber: Freischutz Overture
Brahms: Symphony #2
Sibelius: Swan of Tuonela
Rimsky-Korsakov: Capriccio espagnol
Philadelphia: 23-24 October 1914
Mozart: Nozze di Figaro Overture
Schubert: Rosamunde excerpts
Tchaikovsky: Symphony #4
Vocal items by Mozart and Verdi w- Alma Gluck
Philadelphia: 30-31 October 1914
Bruckner: Symphony #4
Lalo: Violin Concerto (Frank Gittelson, violin)
Liszt: Hungarian Rhapsody #1
Philadelphia: 6-7 November 1914
Schumann: Symphony #3
Bruch: Violin Concerto (Efrem Zimbalist, violin)
Efrem Zimbalist: 2 Russian Dances
Tchaikovsky: Marche slave
Philadelphia: 13-14 November 1914
Handel: Armininus Overture
Beethoven: Symphony #8
Saint-Saens: Rouet d'Omphale
Svendsen: Carnival in Paris
Vocal items by Bach and Meyerbeer w- Homer
Philadelphia: 20-21 November 1914
Smetana: Bartered Bride Overture
Mendelssohn: Symphony #4
Tchaikovsky: Piano Concerto #1 (Olga Samaroff, piano)
Wagner: Lohengrin Prelude
Philadelphia: 27-28 November 1914
Wagner Program
Parsifal: Prelude & Symphonic Synthesis
A Faust Overture
Siegfried: Idyll
Kaisermarsch
Philadelphia: 11-12 December 1914
Mozart: Zauberflote Overture
Beethoven: Piano Concerto #3
Brahms: Symphony #4
Weber: Oberon Overture
Philadelphia: 18-19 December 1914
Schubert: Symphony #9 "The Great"
Berlioz: Roméo & Juliet excerpts
Wagner: Rienzi Overture
Vocal items by Bruch and Meyerbeer w- Ernestine Schumann-Heink
Philadelphia: 25-26 December 1914
Bach: Sinfonia (Christmas Oratorio)
Bach: Concerto for piano, flute and violin
Mozart: Symphony #41 "Jupiter"
Franck: Symphonic Variations
Grieg: Sigurd Jorsalfar
Philadelphia: 1-2 January 1915
Dvorak: Symphony #9 "From the New World"
Vivaldi: Concerto in A minor
Smetana: The Moldau
New York: 4 January 1915
Vivaldi: Concerto in A minor
Beethoven: Piano Concerto #5 (Olga Samaroff, piano)
MacDowell: Dirge (Indian Suite)
Tchaikovsky: Symphony #4
Philadelphia: 8-9 January 1915
Beethoven: Fidelio Overture
Beethoven: Symphony #4
Wagner: Meistersinger Overture
Wagner: Flying Dutchman Overture
Vocal items by Goetz & Wagner w- Gerhardt
Philadelphia: 15-16 January 1915
Liszt: Tasso
Paderewski: Symphony in B minor
Philadelphia: 22-23 January 1915
Haydn: Symphony #94
Mozart: Piano Concerto #20 (Ossip Gabrilowitcsh, piano)
Weber: Konzertstuck
Strauss: Till Eulenspiegel
Philadelphia: 29-30 January 1915
Schumann: Manfred Symphony
Brahms: Violin Concerto (Fritz Kreisler, violin)
Beethoven: Symphony #5
Philadelphia: 5-8 February 1915
Stock: Symphony in C minor
Lalo: Cello Concerto (Herman Hermann Sandby, cello)
Chabrier: Espana
Philadelphia: 12-13 February 1915
Lully: Suite
Mozart: Piano Concerto #24 (Fannie Bloomfield-Ziesler, piano)
Kalinnikov: Symphony #1
Liszt: Hungarian Fantasia
Philadelphia: 19-20 February 1915
Sandby: The Woman & the Fiddler Suite
Brahms: Symphony #3
Busoni: Indian Fantasy (Ferruccio Busoni, piano)
Liszt-Busoni: Spanish Fantasy
Philadelphia: 26-27 February 1915
Mozart: Don Giovanni Overture
Beethoven: Piano Concerto #4 (Harold Randolf, piano)
Goldmark: Rustic Wedding Symphony
Weber: Invitation to the Dance
Philadelphia: 12-13 March 1915
Amy Beach: Gaelic Symphony
Paganini: Violin Concerto #1 (Thaddeus Rich, violin)
Strauss: Tod und Verklarung
Philadelphia: 19-20 March 1915
Bach-Stokowski: Wachet auf
Wolf: Italian Serenade
Tchaikovsky: Symphony #5
[Vocal items by Mozart and Verdi w- Harrison]
Philadelphia: 26-27 March 1915
Mendelssohn: Hebrides Overture
Schumann: Symphony #4
Rubinstein: Piano Concerto #3 (Joseph Hofman, piano)
Dukas: The Sorcerer's Apprentice
Philadelphia: 3-5 April 1915
Wagner Program
Rheingold: Entry of the Gods
Walkure: Ride of the Valkyries, Wotan's Farewell
Siegfried: Forest Murmurs
Gotterdammerung: Rhine Journey, Funeral March & Immolation
Philadelphia: 9-10 April 1915
Enesco: Rumanian Rhapsody #2
Dvorak: Cello Concerto (Pablo Casals, cello)
Beethoven: Symphony #3 "Eroica"
Richmond: 12 April 1915
Liszt: Les Preludes
Verdi: Requiem
Emmy Destinn, Margaret Ober, Johannes Sembach, Emilio de Gogorza
Richmond: 13 April 1915 (afternoon concert0
Mozart: Nozze di Figaro Overture
Beethoven: Symphony #5
Rubinstein: Piano Concerto #3 (Frances Larrabee, piano)
Weber: Invitation to the Dance
Vocal items by Gluck and Massenet
Richmond: 13 April 1915 (evening)
Tchaikovsky: Marche slave
Sibelius: Valse triste
Sibelius: Finlandia
Vocal solos and choruses be Wagner, Gounod, Liszt, Mendelssohn, Donizetti, and Handel w- Emily de Gogorza
Philadelphia: 16-17 April 1915
Tchaikovsky Request Program
1812 Overture
Casse noisette Suite
Symphony #6 "Pathétique"
Of course the 1915-16 season is the Mahler 8th Season. In addition there were other premieres. Schoenberg's Kammersymphonie is given its US premiere in November. Stokowski also leads the US premiere of Scriabin's Divine Poem that month. Daniel Mason (1873-1953) was an American composer who lived in New England. 18 February was the world premiere of his 1st Symphony. Stokowski also programs the first US performance of Strauss' Alpine Symphony in April. For the first time Percy Grainger and Stokowski collaborate in the Grieg concerto. In December Stokowski conducts the Symphonic Variations of Ernest Schelling. Schelling (1876-1939) was an American pianist, composer and conductor. He was popular in his day and founded the New York Philharmonic's Children's' Concerts. He first appeared with Stokowski as a soloist in 1913. Additional concerts took place in Atlantic City, Baltimore, Bryn Mawr, Buffalo, Cleveland, Columbus Dayton, Detroit, Easton, New York, Oberlin, Wilmington and Ypsilanti as well as the University of Princeton and the Philadelphia Metropolitan Opera. Visits to local schools and colleges replaced the Wednesday series of popular concerts. As usual no dates or repertoire are mentioned in Mr. Hunt's book
Philadelphia: 15-16 October 1915
Beethoven: Lenore #3 Overture
Beethoven: Symphony #7
Mendelssohn: Midsummer Night's Dream
Wagner: Rienzi Overture
Philadelphia: 22-23 October 1915
Brahms: Tragic Overture
Beethoven: Piano Concerto #5 "Emperor" (Joseph Hofmann, piano)
Tchaikovsky: Symphony #4
Philadelphia: 29-30 October 1915
Gluck: Iphigénie in Aulis Overture
Brahms: Symphony #2
Strauss: Don Juan
Vocal items by Mozart & Massenet w- Henri Scott, basso
Philadelphia: 5-6 November 1915
Schoenberg: Kammersinfonie
Goldmark: Violin Concerto (Mischa Elman, violin)
Dvorak: Carnival Overture
Philadelphia: 12-13 November 1915
Rousseau: Devin du village Overture
Schubert: Symphony #8 "Unfinished"
Grétry: Céphale et Procris
Liszt: Piano Concerto #1 (Ernest Hutcheson, piano)
Ippolitov-Ivanov: Caucasian Sketches
Philadelphia: 19-20 November 1915
Smetana: Bartered Bride Overture
Scriabin: Divine Poem
Tchaikovsky: Roméo & Juliet
Vocal items by Gluck & Saint-Saens w- Sophie Breslau, contralto
Philadelphia: 26-27 November 1915
Wagner Program
Rheingold: Entrance of the Gods & Alberich's Curse
Walkure: Ride of the Valkyries & Wotan's Farewell
Siegfried: Forest Murmurs
Gotterdammerung: Rhine Journey, Funeral March & Immolation
Philadelphia: 10-11 December 1915
Mozart: Nozze di Figaro Overture
Beethoven: Symphony #6 "Pastoral"
Schelling: Symphonic Variations (Ernest Schelling, piano)
Liszt: Les Preludes
Philadelphia: 17-18 December 1915
Bach: Suite #2
Haydn: Symphony #104
Debussy: Prelude to the Afternoon of a Faun
Dukas: Sorcerer's Apprentice
Vocal items by Gluck & Berlioz w- Emilio de Gogorza, baritone
Philadelphia: 31 December 1915
Weber: Oberon Overture
Schumann: Symphony #1
Straube: Variations (conducted by the composer)
Svendsen: Carnival in Paris
Vocal items by Mozart & Wagner w- Lambert Murphey, tenor
Philadelphia: 1 January 1916
Weber: Oberon Overture
Schumann: Symphony #1
Straube: Variations (conducted by the composer)
Svendsen: Carnival in Paris
Vocal items by Mozart & Wagner w- Lambert Murphey, tenor
Philadelphia: 7-8 January 1916
Schumann: Genoveva Overture
Chopin: Piano Concerto #1 (Ossip Gabrilowitsch, piano)
Sibelius: Symphony #1
Philadelphia: 14-15 January 1916
Gluck: Alceste Overture
Brahms: Haydn Variations
Dvorak: Symphony #9 "From the New World"
Vocal items by Beethoven, Kreisler, Strauss & Schubert w- Julia Culp, contralto
Philadelphia: 21-22 January 1916
Mozart: Don Giovanni Overture
Beethoven: Violin Concerto (Kathleen Parlow, violin)
Strauss: Ein Heldnleben
Philadelphia: 28-29 January 1916
Berlioz: Corsair Overture
Rabaud: Symphony #2
Grieg: Piano Concerto (Percy Grainger, piano)
Grainger: Molly on the Shore
Elgar: Pomp & Circumstance March
Philadelphia: 4-5 February 1916
Cherubini: Anacreon Overture
Sandby: Cello Concerto (Hermann Sandby, cello)
Zeckwer: Sohrab and Rustum
(conducted by the composer)
Mozart: Symphony #39
Sibelius: Finlandia
Philadelphia: 11-12 February 1916
Mendelssohn: Symphony #3
Brahms: Piano Concerto #2 (Harold Bauer, piano)
Berlioz: Roman Carnival Overture
Philadelphia: 18-19 February 1916
Beethoven: Prometheus Overture
Brahms: Violin Concerto (Albert Spalding, violin)
Mason: Symphony in C minor
Wagner: Huldigungsmarsch
Philadelphia: 25-26 February 1916
Schumann: Symphony #2
Debussy: Nuages et fetes (Nocturnes)
Liszt: Piano Concerto #2 (Yolanda Mero, piano)
Goldmark: Sakantula Overture
Philadelphia: 2-4 March 1916
Mahler: Symphony #8 "Symphony of a Thousand"
Florence Hinkle, Magna Barbourr, Una Fischer, (sopranos) Margaret Keyes, Mulier Dercum (contraltos) Lambert Murphey, tenor; Marianus Werrenrath, baritone; Pater Whitehill, bass
Philadelphia: 10-11 March 1916
Beethoven: Coriolan Overture
Brahms: Symphony #3
Tchaikovsky: Violin Concerto (Wassily Beserkirsky, violin)
Granados: Intermezzo & Epilogue (Goyescas)
Philadelphia: 17-18 March 1916
Wagner Program
Flying Dutchman Overture
Minster-Tannhauser Overture and Venusberg Music
Meistersinger: Overture & Act 3 Prelude
Siegfried: Idyll
Tristan und Isolde: Prelude & Liebestod
Philadelphia: 24 March 1916
Mendelssohn: Hebrides Overture
Brahms: Double Concerto (Thaddeus Rich, violin & Hans Kindler, cello)
Franck: Symphony in D minor
Philadelphia: 25 March1916
Mendelssohn: Hebrides Overture
Wieniawsky: Violin Concrto #2 (Thaddeus Rich, violin)
Franck: Symphony in D minor
Philadelphia: 27-29 March 1916
Mahler: Symphony #8 "Symphony of a Thousand"
[Soloists as per 2-4 March]
Philadelphia: 3-5 April 1916
Mahler: Symphony #8 "Symphony of a Thousand"
[Soloists as above]
Philadelphia: 7-8 April 1916
Mozart: Zauberflote Overture
Beethoven: Symphony #5
Strauss: Tod und Verklarung
Vocal items by Stradella & Strauss w- Marcella Craft, soprano
New York: 9 April 1916
Mahler: Symphony #8 "Symphony of a Thousand"
[Soloists as per original US premiere]
Philadelphia: 14-15 April 1916
Beethoven: Fidelio Overture
Brahms: Symphony #1
D'Indy: Istar
Tchaikovsky: Piano Concerto #1 (Leopold Godowsky, piano)
Philadelphia: 28-29 April 1916
Strauss Program
Eine Alpensinfonie
Tod und Verklarung
The 1916-17 season is very busy, especially when you add in the road shows. Additional concerts take place in Albany, Atlantic City, Baltimore, Buffalo, Cleveland, Dayton, Detroit, Grand Rapids, Jamestown, Lebanon, Lima, Manchester NJ, Oberlin, Pittsburgh, Portland, Reading PA, Richmond, Springfield, Wilmington and Ypsilanti as well as Princeton. As usual there are no dates or repertoire. I can't help but wonder if the Don Giovanni (20-21 October) used Stokowski's ending. Another thing that occurs to me is how the programs of 80+ years ago are not so different from those today. Stokowski has two all-Wagner programs, the first in many he will schedule in following years. Sylvan Levin, who worked as orchestra pianist and associate conductor and I had the pleasure to meet, told me that Stokowski always wanted to conduct a Wagner opera. Premieres: In December Stokowski leads the world premiere of Max Bruch's concerto for two pianos. That month Stokowski also leads the US premiere of Mahler's Das Lied von der Erde. There were also non-premiere performances of music from sources barely known today. On December 5th Stokowski programmed Leon Boellmann's Symphonic Poem. He was French composer and organist who lived from 1862-1897. In January Stokowski performs the music of Max Vogrich (1852-1916) born in Austria but traveled extensively and died in New York. On January 11, in New York, Stokowski performs a piece by Michel Dvorsky. This is, in fact, a pseudonym of Joseph Hofmann, the acclaimed pianist.
Philadelphia: 13-14 October 1916
Beethoven: Coriolan Overture
Brahms: Symphony #3
Reger: Hiller Variations
Sibelius: Finlandia
Philadelphia: 17 October 1916
School Concert
Beethoven: Coriolan Overture
Brahms: Symphony #3
Bizet: L'Arlesienne Suite
Sibelius: Finlandia
Vocal items by Verdi & Leoncavallo w-William Multer, baritone
Philadelphia: 20-21 October 1916
Mozart: Don Giovanni Overture
Beethoven: Symphony #2
Bizet: L'Arlesienne Suite
Tchaikovsky: Marche slave
Vocal items by Bruch and Wagner w- Ernestine Schumann-Heink
Philadelphia: 27-28 October 1916
Cherubini: Anacreon Overture
Brahms: Violin Concerto (Frank Gittelson, violin)
Rimsky-Korsakov: Schéhérazade
Philadelphia: 3-4 November 1916
Wagner: Meistersinger Overture
Brahms: Piano Concerto #1 (Olga Samaroff, piano)
Beethoven: Allegretto (Symphony #7)
Schumann: Symphony #4
Philadelphia: 6 November 1916
School Concert
Wagner: Meistersinger Overture
Rimsky-Korsakov: Schéhérazade
Liszt: Hungarian Fantasia (Letitia Radcliffe Miller, piano)
Wagner: Entry of the Gods (Rheingold)
Philadelphia: 9-10 November 1916
Wagner Program
Rheingold: Entry of the Gods & Alberich's Curse
Walkure: Ride of the Walkure & Wotan's Farewell
Siegfried: Rhine Journey
Gotterdammerung: Funeral March & Immolation Scene
Philadelphia: 17-18 November 1916
Haydn: Symphony #88
Arensky: Tchaikovsky Variations
Tchaikovsky: Francesca da Rimini
Vocal items by Mozart & Glinka w- Gluck
Philadelphia: 5 December 1916
School Concert
Wagner: Ride of the Walkures
Wagner: Forest Murmurs (Siegfried)
Wagner: Wotan's Farewell (Walkure)
Boellmann: Symphonic Poem
Tchaikovsky: Marche slave
Vocal items by Massenet, Charpentier & Puccini w- Farringdon-Smith, soprano & Hans Kindler, cello
Philadelphia: 8-9 December 1916
Weber: Euryanthe Oveture
Schumann: Symphony #3
Stock: Violin Concerto in D minor (Efrem Zimbalist, violin)
Oldberg: June
(Conducted by the composer)
Liszt: Hungarian Rhapsody #2
Philadelphia: 15-16 December 1916
Beethoven: Egmont Overture
Strauss: Don Juan
Mahler: Das Lied von der Erde (Tilly Koenen, contralto; Johannes Sembach, tenor)
Philadelphia: 22-23 December 1916
Wagner: Funeral March (Gotterdammerung)
Brahms: Piano Concerto #2 (Ossip Gabrilowitsch, piano)
Strauss: Sinfonia Domestica
Philadelphia: 29-30 December 1916
Weber: Freischutz Overture
Beethoven: Symphony #4
Bruch: Concerto for 2 Pianos (Rose & Ottilie Sutro, pianos)
Wagner: Rienzi Overture
Philadelphia: 2 January 1917
School Concert
Weber: Freischutz Overture
Haydn: Minuet & Finale (Symphony #88)
Saint-Saens: Violin Concerto #3 (Madeleine McGuigan, violin)
Wagner: Rienzi Overture
Vocal items by Weber & Puccini w- Marie Zeckwer Holt, soprano
Philadelphia: 5-6 January 1917
Brahms: Haydn Variations
Vogrich: "E pur si muove" (Galilco 1633) Ho abiurato
Saint-Saens: Intro & Rondo Capriccioso (Soloist Mischa Elman, violin)
Scriabin: Divine Poem
New York: 11 January 1917
Brahms: Haydn Variations
Dvorsky: Chromaticon
Schelling: Violin Concerto (Fritz Kreisler, violin)
Scriabin: Divine Poem (Joseph Hofmann, piano)
Philadelphia: 12-13 January 1917
Franck: Symphony in D minor
Saint-Saens: Piano Concerto #4 (Joseph Hofmann, piano)
Dvorsky: Chromaticon
Weber: Invitation to the Dance
Philadelphia: 19-20 January 1917
Beethoven: Prometheus Overture
Mozart: Symphony #40
Elgar: Enigma Variations
Vocal items by Handel, Mahler & Schubert w- Connell
Philadelphia: 26-27 January 1917
Rabaud: Symphony #2
Debussy: La demoiselle elue (Mabel Garrison, soprano)
Debussy: Prelude to the afternoon of a Faun
Philadelphia: 2-3 February 1917
Schumann: Manfred Overture
Mendelssohn: Symphony #4
Schelling: Impressions From an Artist's Life (Ernest Schelling, piano)
Strauss: Tod und Verklarung
Philadelphia: 9-10 February 1917
Gluck: Alceste Overture
Beethoven: Symphony #8
Sibelius: Swan of Tuonela
Liszt: Tasso
Vocal items by Mozart & Chadwick w- Reginald Werrenrath, baritone
Philadelphia: 23-24 February 1917
Glinka: Ruslan & Ludmila Overture
Borodin: Symphony #2
Glière: Les sirenes
Tchaikovsky: Intermezzo (Suite #1)
Rimsky-Korsakov: Capriccio espagnol
Philadelphia: 2-3 March 1917
Mozart: Nozze di Figaro Overture
Beethoven: Violin Concerto (Theodore Spiering, violin)
Liszt: Faust Symphony (Lambert Murphy, tenor)
Philadelphia: 6 March 1917
School Concert
Mozart: Nozze di Figaro Overture
Mendelssohn: March (Symphony #4)
Lalo: Cello Concerto (Philip Abbas, cello)
Rimsky-Korsakov: Capriccio espagnol
Liszt: Hungarian Rhapsody #2
Vocal items by Mozart and Wagner w- Elsa Meiskey, soprano
Philadelphia: 9-10 March 1917
Bach: Brandenburg Concerto #3
Mahler: Kindertotenlieder
Brahms: Symphony #1
Wagner: Huldigungsmarsch
Other vocal items by Beethoven w- Elena Gerhardt, soprano
Philadelphia: 15-17 March 1917
Gluck-Mottl: Ballet Suite
D'Albert: Cello Concerto (Hans Kindler, cello)
Strauss: Ein Heldenleban
Philadelphia: 23-24 March 1917
Wagner Program
Flying Dutchman Overture
Lohengrin: Prelude
Tannhauser: Overture & Venusberg Music
Meistersinger: Overture & Act 3 Prelude
Siegfried: Idyll
Tristan und Isolde: Prelude & Liebestod
Philadelphia: 29-30 March 1917
Bach: Saint Matthew Passion
Philadelphia Chorus
Florence Hinkle, soprano; Margaret Keyes contralto; Morgan Kingston, tenor; Reinald Werrenrath, baritone; Herbert Witherspoon, bass
Philadelphia: 6-7 April 1917
Mozart: Zauberflote Overture
Beethoven: Symphony #3 "Eroica"
Vieuxtemps: Violin Concerto #4 (Thaddeus Rich, violin)
Rimsky-Korsakov: Russian Easter Overture
Philadelphia: 13-14 April 1917
Lully: Suite
Bach: Piano Concerto in D minor (Harold Bauer, piano)
D'Indy: Symphony of a French Mountain Air
Berlioz: Roman Carnival Overture
Philadelphia: 18 April 1917
School Concert
Lully: Suite
Liszt: Piano Concerto #1 (Idette Feinman, piano)
Tchaikovsky: Casse noisette Suite
Berlioz: Roman Carnival Overture
Vocal items by Puccini & Bizet w- Elsa Lyons Cook, soprano
Philadelphia: 20-21 April 1917
Tchaikovsky Program
Symphony #6 "Pathétique"
Casse noisette Suite
1812 Overture
Well, Stokowski starts off the 1917-18 season sans a single warhorse. In fact, they would all have been 'contemporary'. I assume you know who Foote is. The first concert of the season includes Philip Henry Goepp's Heroic March. Goepp (1864-1934) was an American composer and resident of Philadelphia at the time. That month Stokowski also programmed Rubin Goldmark's Samson. Goldmark (1872-1936) was an American composer and nephew of Karl. Edgar Kelley (1857-1944) was also from the US. Christian Sinding (1856-1941) was a Norwegian composer. He is fairly well known today: December. Selim Palmgren(1878-1951) was a Finnish composer: March. Note the Fur Elise on 9-10 November. I wonder if Stokowski wrote the orchestration. The duo-art piano is a player piano that works on a roll: 21 January. This season is also when the orchestra and Stokowski make their first recording for RCA, Brahms' Hungarian Dance #5.
Philadelphia: 12-13 October 1917
R. Goldmark: Samson
Kelley: New England Symphony
Foote: 4 Character Pieces
Goepp: Heroic March
Philadelphia: 19-20 October 1917
Dvorak: Symphony #9 "From the New World"
Franck: Variations symphoniques
Liszt: Piano Concerto #1 (Karl Friedberg, piano)
Charpentier: Impressions italiens
Philadelphia: 25 October 1917
Mendelssohn: Symphony #5
Bach: Suite #2
Matthews: The City of God
(Conducted by the composer)
Philadelphia: 26-27 October 1917
Borodin: Polovtsian Dances
Kalinnikov: Symphony #1
Scriabin: Poeme de l'extase
Tchaikovsky: Marche slave
Philadelphia: 2-3 November 1917
Cherubini: Anacreon Overture
Schubert: Symphony #8 "Unfinished"
Stravinsky: L'oiseau de feu
Vocal items by Mozart and Wagner w. Margaret Matzenauer, soprano
Philadelphia: 9-10 November 1917
Beethoven Program
Coriolan Overture
Fur Elise
Symphony #2
Symphony #5
Philadelphia: 16-17 November 1917
Nicolai: Die lustigen Weiber Overture
Goldmark: Rustic Wedding Symphony
Wieniawski: Violin Concerto #2 (Mischa Elman, violin)
Amani-Mischa Elman: Orientale
Chabrier: Espana
Philadelphia: 30 November & 1 December 1917
Haydn: Symphony #99
Bach: Concerto for 3 Pianos
Mozart: Concerto for 2 Pianos (Olga Samaroff, Ossip Gabrilowitsch, pianos)
Beethoven: Leonore #3 Overture
Philadelphia: 7-8 December 1917
Dvorak: In Nature's Realm Overture
Brahms: Symphony #4
Lalo: Violin Concerto (Jacques Thibaud, violin)
Ravel: Rapsodie espagnole
Philadelphia: 14-15 December 1917
Tchaikovsky Program
Symphony #6 "Pathétique"
Casse noisette Suite
1812 Overture
Philadelphia: 21-22 December 1917
Svendsen: Norwegian Rhapsody #2
Sinding: Symphony in D minor
Grieg: Symphonic Dance #2
Grieg: Aftenstemming (Lyric Suite)
Jarnefelt: Praeludium
Sibelius: Valse triste
Sibelius: En Saga
Philadelphia: 28-29 December 1917
Weber: Euryanthe Overture
Beethoven: Piano Concerto #4 (Guiomar Novaes, piano)
Schubert: Symphony #9 "The Great"
Philadelphia: 4-5 January 1918
Mozart: Zauberflote Overture
Schumann: Symphony #1
Saint-Saens: Danse macabre
Wagner: Tannhauser Overture
Vocal items by Handel, Debussy, Duparc & Lalo w- Nicolas Douty, tenor
Philadelphia: 11-12 January 1918
Brahms: Symphony #2
Chausson: Poeme (Thaddeus Rich, violin)
Berlioz: Damnation of Faust Excerpts
Philadelphia: 18-19 January 1918
Bloch concert conducted by the composer.
Philadelphia: 21 January 1918
Bizet: L'Arlesienne Suite
Saint-Saens: Piano Concerto #2
(Duo-Art Piano)
Dvorak: Symphony #9 "From the New World"
Philadelphia: 25-26 January 1918
Gluck: Alceste Overture
Mozart: Symphony #41
Liszt: Tasso
Vocal items by Gluck & Tchaikovsky w- Claussen
Philadelphia: 1-2 February 1918
Franck: Symphony in D minor
Rubinstein: Piano Concerto #4 (Joseph Hofmann, piano)
Wagner: Tristan und Isolde Prelude & Liebestod
Philadelphia: 8-9 February 1918
Wagner: Meistersinger Overture
Brahms: Violin Concerto (Max Rosen, violin)
Tchaikovsky: Symphony #4
Toronto: 18 February 1918
Concert for Toronto Mendelssohn Choir
Beethoven: Leonore #3 Overture
Dvorak: Symphony #9 "From the New World"
Toronto: 19 February 1918
Concert for Toronto Mendelssohn Choir
Berlioz: Roman Carnival Overture
Debussy: Prelude to the Afternoon of a Faun
Sibelius: Valse triste
Borodin: Polovtsian Dances
Toronto: 20 February 1918
Concert for Toronto Mendelssohn Choir
Smetana: Bartered Bride Overture
Philadelphia: 22-23 February 1918
Saint-Saens: Symphony #2
Grétry: Céphale et Procris
Debussy: Dances Sacred and Profane (Carlos Salzedo, harp)
Ravel: Introduction and Allegro
Berlioz: Roman Carnival Overture
Philadelphia: 1-2 March 1918
Wagner: Flying Dutchman Overture
Dorlay: Concert passione (Pablo Casals, cello)
Rimsky-Korsakov: Schéhérazade
Philadelphia: 8-9 March 1918
Brahms: Symphony #1
Wagner: Rienzi Overture
Vocal items by Mendelssohn & Liszt w- Olive Fremstad, soprano
Philadelphia: 15-16 March 1918
Tchaikovsky: Roméo & Juliet
Arensky: Tchaikovsky Variations
Borodin: Polovtsian Dances
Scriabin: Poeme de l'extase
Rimsky-Korsakov: Capriccio espagnol
Philadelphia: 22-23 March 1918
Rimsky-Korsakov: Russian Easter Overture
Wagner: Parsifal Good Friday Music
Bach: Suite #2
Beethoven: Violin Concerto (Efrem Zimbalist, violin)
New York: 27 March 1918
Bach: Suite #2
Mozart: Concerto for 2 Pianos
Lully: Suite
Bach: Concerto for 3 Pianos (Olga Samaroff, Harold Bauer & Ossip Gabrilowitsch, pianos)
Philadelphia: 29-30 March 1918
Lully: Suite
Beethoven: Symphony #8
Palmgren: Piano Concerto #2 (Arthur Shattuck, piano)
Debussy: Nuages et fetes (Nocturnes)
Philadelphia: 6-7 April 1918
Mozart: Symphony #40
Brahms: Haydn Variations
Tchaikovsky: Violin Concerto (Sasha Jacobinof, violin)
Svendsen: Carnival in Paris
Philadelphia: 13-14 April 1918
Mendelssohn: Midsummer Night's Dream Suite
Liszt: Les Preludes
Tchaikovsky: Symphony #5
1918-1919: Specific dates for many of the concerts are missing. Mr. Plumb explains that this is due to matters beyond his control. Premieres: March is the first US performance of Widor's Symphony #6. This was for organ and large orchestra. It was held in Wanamaker's Department Store. At its center was a large organ where daily performances took place. It was possible to clear the main floor and set up chairs for performances. In March Stokowski and the Philadelphia Orchestra joined forces with the organist Charles Courboin for this premiere. This marks Stokowski's 10th year as a conductor. His pattern is now clear. There is lots of contemporary music. Even Glazunov was still alive when Stokowski performed his 7th Symphony. I wonder if by December 1918 Stokowski had fiddled with Beethoven's 7th Symphony. Ilabrando Pizzetti (1880-1968) was an Italian composer who was really very prolific: April.
Philadelphia: ? October 1918
Elgar: Prelude & Farewell (Gerontius)
Elgar: Carillon
Elgar: Le drapeau belge
Tchaikovsky: Symphony #4
Philadelphia: ? November 1918
Chabrier: Gwendoline Overture
Chausson: Poeme de l'amor et de la mer
Skilton: 2 Indian Dances
Rimsky-Korsakov: Schéhérazade
Tchaikovsky group of songs w. Margaret Matzenauer, contralto
Baltimore: 11 November 1918
Chabrier: Gwendoline Overture
Brahms: Violin Concerto (Toscha Seidel, violin)
Tchaikovsky: Symphony #4
Philadelphia: ? November 1918
Concert to celebrate the end of The Great War included
MacDowell: Dirge (Indian Suite)
New York: 19 November 1918
Tchaikovsky: Symphony #4
Tchaikovsky: Group of songs w. Margaret Matzenauer, contralto
Chausson: Poeme de l'amour et de la mer
Svendsen: Carnival in Paris
Philadelphia: ? November 1918
Svendsen: Carnival in Paris
MacDowell: Indian Suite
Brahms: Violin Concerto (Toscha Seidel, violin)
Philadelphia: ? November 1918
Beethoven: Coriolan Overture
Tchaikovsky: Symphony #6 "Pathétique"
Saint-Saens: Cello Concerto (Hans Kindler, cello)
Brahms: Haydn Variations
Philadelphia: ? December 1918
Dvorsky: Haunted Castle
Liszt: Les Preludes
Berlioz: Harold in Italy (Emile Ferir, viola)
Philadelphia: ? December 1918
Saint-Saens: Rouet d'Omphale
Brahms: Symphony #3
Chabrier: Espana
Vocal items by Mozart & Duparc w- Marcia van Dresser, soprano
Philadelphia: ? December 1918
Beethoven Program
Egmont Overture
Piano Concerto #1 (Alfred Cortot, piano)
Symphony #7
New York: 17 December 1918
Brahms: Symphony #3
Rachmaninoff: Piano Concerto #2 (Ossip Gabrilowitsch, piano)
Rimsky-Korsakov: Capriccio espagnol
Philadelphia: ? December 1918
Hadley: Lucifer Symphonic Poem
Lalo: Cello Concerto (Captain Fernano Pollain, cello)
Dvorak: Symphony #9 "From the New World"
Philadelphia:? December 1918
Gluck: Alceste Overture
Berlioz: Damnation of Faust Suite
Mendelssohn: Symphony #3
Vocal items by Mozart & Debussy w- Magie Teyte, soprano
Philadelphia: ? January 1919
Beethoven: Symphony #8
Mozart: Violin Concerto (#?)
Chausson: Poeme (Jacques Thibaud, violin)
Debussy: Three Nocturnes
Philadelphia: ? January 1919
Wagner: Tristan und Isolde Prelude & Liebestod
Beethoven: Piano Concerto #5 "Emperor" (Harold Bauer, piano)
Amy Beach: Symphony in E minor
New York: 21 January 1919
Beethoven: Symphony #8
Mozart: Violin Concerto #5 (Efrem Zimbalist, violin)
Debussy: 3 Nocturnes
Philadelphia: ? January 1919
Beethoven: Leonore #3 Overture
Scriabin: Poeme de l'extase
Brahms: Piano Concerto #2 (Olga Samaroff, piano)
Philadelphia: ? February 1919
Stanford: Irish Symphony
Rachmaninoff: Air
Glière: Sirenes
Beethoven: Symphony #5
Philadelphia: ? February 1919
Weber: Freischutz Overture
Schubert: Symphony #8 "Unfinished"
Wagner: Meistersinger Overture
Vocal items by Carpenter, Converse, Clugh-Leighter & Forsythe w- Edwin Evans, bartione
New York: Beethoven: 11 February 1919
Lenore #3 Overture
Scriabin: Poeme de l'extase
Brahms: Piano Concerto #2 (Olga Samaroff, piano)
Philadelphia: ? February 1919
Beethoven: Prometheus Overture
Mozart: Symphony #40
MacDowell: Piano Concerto in D minor (Leo Ornstein, piano)
Tchaikovsky: Marche slave
Ornstein, also played solos he had composed
Toronto: 21 February 1919
No program given.
Philadelphia: ? February 1919
Lully: Suite
Sibelius: Violin Concerto (ThaddeusRrich, violin)
Beethoven: Symphony #1
Wagner: Flying Dutchman Overture
Philadelphia: ? March 1919
Berlioz: Roman Carnival Overture
Liszt: Piano Concerto #2 (Joseph Hofmann, piano)
Brahms: Symphony #2
New York: 11 March 1919
Bach: Concerto for flute, violin and piano (Andre Macquarre, flute; Jacques Thibaud,
violin; Harold Bauer, piano)
Mozart: Symphony #40
Chausson: Concerto for violin and piano (Jacques Thibaud, violin Harold Bauer, piano)
Wagner: Tristan und Isolde: Prelude and Liebestod
Philadelphia: ? March 1919
Lalo: Norwegian Rhapsody
Rachmaninoff: Piano Concerto #1 (Sergei Rachmaninoff, piano)
Rabaud: Symphony #1
Philadelphia:? March 1919
Rimsky-Korsakov: Russian Easter Overture
Brahms: Violin Concerto (Efrem Zimbalist, violin)
Tchaikovsky: Symphony #6 "Pathétique"
Philadelphia: ? March 1919
Smetana: Bartered Bride Overture
Bloch: Symphony #1
Rimsky-Korsakov: Schéhérazade
Philadelphia: 27 March 1919
Concert in Wanamaker's Department Store
Beethoven: Leonore #3 Overture
Debussy: Prelude to the Afternoon of a Faun
Wagner: Tristan und Isolde Prelude & Liebestod
Widor: Organ Symphony #6 (Charles Marie Courboin, organ)
Organ solos by Bach, Franck & Ravanello
Philadelphia: ? April 1919
Beethoven: Fidelio Overture
Mozart: Piano Concerto #20 (Ossip Gabrilowitsch, piano)
Weber: Konzertstuck
Pizzetti: Fedra Prelude
Ysaye: Exile
Schumann: Symphony #4
Philadelphia: 15-16 April 1919
Beethoven: Leonore #3 Overture
Mozart: Flute & Harp Concerto (Andre Maquarre, flute; Carlos Salzedo, harp)
Glazunov: Symphony #7
Philadelphia: ? April 1919
Chadwick: Tam O'Shanter Overture
Garnier: Vision for Orchestra
Mussorgsky: Gopak
Franck: Symphony in D minor
Vocal items by Duparc, Franck & Georges w- Povla Frijsh, soprano
Philadelphia: 29 April 1919
French War Relief Concert
Bizet: L'Arlesienne Suite
Liszt: Piano Concerto #1 (Olga Samaroff, piano)
Debussy: Prelude to the Afternoon of a Faun
Saint-Saens: Violin Concerto #3 (Jacques Thibaud, violin)
Tchaikovsky: Marche slave
Philadelphia: 2-3 May 1919
Tchaikovsky: Symphony #5
Schubert: Rosamunde excerpts
Wagner: Tannhauser Overture
The 1919-20 season includes more performances at Wanamakers. I don't recall any mention of Stokowski at the organ. Premieres: Four works by Charles Tomlinson Griffes are given world premieres in December. Griffes (1884-1920) was an American composer. His early works were in the German Romantic tradition but later he adopted a Debussyan style and then oriental culture. Stokowski led the US premiere of Rachmaninoff's "The Bells" in February. February is also the US premiere of Davies' A Solemn Melody. As mentioned earlier, Stokowski studied counterpoint with him. In March Stokowski leads the US premiere of Saint-Saens' March heroique. In the first concert Stokowski conducts the work of Edward Burlingame Hill (1872-1960) an American composer. The following concert Samuel Gardner's New Russia is another contemporary work performed that season. Gardner (1891-1984) was an American composer and violinist. Charles Skilton (1868-1941) was an American composer who studied American-Indian music: November. Gian Malipiero (1882-1973) is a name some will know. He was born and died in Italy: November. I wonder if Stokowski had altered Tchaikovsky's R&J by now, not to mention the ending of Mozart's Don. As can be seen the orchestra made several trips to New York this season. This season also saw the first solo performance of Tabuteau, one of the finest oboists ever
Philadelphia: 17-18 October 1919
Weber: Oberon Overture
Hill: Stevensoniania
Beethoven: Symphony #5
Mendelssohn: Midsummer Night's Dream Suite
Philadelphia: 24-25 October 1919
Bizet: L'Arlesienne Suite
Gardner: New Russia, tone poem
Mendelssohn: Violin Concerto (Samuel Gardner, violin)
Dvorak: Symphony #9 "From the New World"
Philadelphia: 31 October 1 November 1919
Tchaikovsky: Roméo & Juliet
Liszt: Piano Concerto #2 (Olga Samaroff, piano)
Mozart: Symphony #39
Beethoven: Choral Fantasy
Philadelphia: 7-8 November 1919
Weber: Freischutz Overture
Beethoven: Symphony #7
Dvorsky: Haunted Castle
Wagner: Rienzi Overture
New York: 11 November 1919
Same as 7-8 November.
Philadelphia: 14-15 November 1919
Beethoven: Prometheus Overture
Malipiero: 7 espressioni sinfoniche
Haydn: Symphony #88
Vocal items by Schubert, Schumann, Brahms & Wagner w. Margaret Matzenauer, soprano
Philadelphia: 28-29 November 1919
Mozart: Don Giovanni Overture
Brahms: Double Concerto (Thaddeus Rich, violin & Hans Kindler, cello)
Rimsky-Korsakov: Schéhérazade
New York: 2 December 1919
Program and soloists same as 28-29 November.
Philadelphia: 5-6 December 1919
Beethoven: Leonore #3 Overture
Schubert: Symphony #8 "Unfinished"
Mozart: Piano Concerto #23 (Harold Bauer, piano)
Loeffler: Pagan Poem
Wagner: Hollander Overture
Philadelphia: 19-20 December 1919
Bach: Sinfonia (Christmas Oratorio)
Griffes: Notturno, White Peacock, Clouds & Bacchanale
Liszt: Hungarian Rhapsody #2
Brahms: Symphony #4
Philadelphia: 26-27 December 1919
Hadley: Othello Overture
Liszt: Piano Concerto #1(Benno Moiseiwitsch, piano)
Beethoven: Symphony #6 "Pastoral"
Philadelphia: 2-3 January 1920
Smetana: Bartered Bride Overture
Rachmaninoff: Piano Concerto #3 (Alfed Cortot, piano)
Tchaikovsky: Symphony #5
New York: 6 January 1920
[Program the same as 2-3 January]
Philadelphia: 9-10 January 1920
Beethoven: Fidelio Overture
Schumann: Symphony #2
Brahms: Violin Concerto (Fritz Kreisler, violin)
Philadelphia: 23-24 January 1920
Gluck: Iphigénie in Aulis Overture
Mozart: Symphony #41 "Jupiter"
Wagner: Siegfried's Funeral March
Vocal items by Bach and Mason w- Reinald Werrenrath, baritone
Philadelphia: 30-31 January 1920
Wagner: Meistersinger Overture
Beethoven: Symphony #8
Herbert: Natoma, Act 3 Prelude
Gilbert: Riders to the Sea
Wagner: Siegfried Idyll
Philadelphia: 6-7 February 1920
Rachmaninoff Program
Piano Concerto #3 (Sergei Rachmaninoff, piano)
The Bells
Florence Hinkle, soprano; Arthur Hackett, tenor; & Fred Patton, bass
New York: 10 February 1920
Beethoven: Leonore #3 Overture
Beethoven: Choral Fantasy (Olga Samaroff, piano)
Rachmaninoff: The Bells
Same soloists as 6-7 February
Philadelphia: 13-14 February 1920
Davies: Solemn Melody
Elgar: Enigma Variations
Wagner: Tannhauser Overture & Venusberg
Vocal items by Chausson & Duparc w. Maggie Teyte, soprano
Toronto: 23 February 1920
Wagner: Meistersinger Overture
Debussy: Prelude to the Afternoon of a Faun
Wagner: Tannhauser Overture & Venusberg
Choral works by Rachmaninoff, Brahms, Schindler, Taylor, Cornelius & Elgar
Toronto: 24 February 1920
Verdi: Requiem
Soloists not given. Toronto Mendelssohn Choir
Toronto: 25 February 1920
Tchaikovsky: Symphony #5
Liszt: Piano Concerto #2 (Olga Samarfoff, piano)
Wagner: Rienzi Overture
Toronto: 25 February 1920 (evening program)
Weber: Freischutz Overture
Elgar: Enigma Variations
Tchaikovsky: Marche slave
Choral works by Elgar, Bossi, Bridge, Verdi and traditional w- Toronto Mendelssohn Choir
Philadelphia: 27-28 February 1920
Dvorak: Symphony #9 "From the New World"
Lorenziti: Concerto for viola 'amore & double bass (Thaddeus Rich, violin & Anton Torello, cello)
Weber: Oberon Overture
Philadelphia: 5-6 March 1920
Schubert: Rosamunde excerpts
Paganini: Violin Concerto #1 (Thelma Given, violin)
Brahms: Symphony #1
New York: 9 March 1920
Schubert: Rosamunde excerpts
Hadley: Symphony #1
(Conducted by the composer)
Brahms: Symphony #1
Philadelphia: 12-13 March 1920
Franck: Symphony in D minor
Wagner: Lohengrin Prelude
Wagner: Entry of the Gods (Rheingold)
Wagner: Ride of the Valkyries
Liapounov: Piano Concerto in E Major (Katharine Goodson, piano)
Philadelphia: 24 March 1920
Concert in Wanamakers department store
Yon: Concerto gregoriano
Bach: Brandenburg Concerto #2
Wagner: Entry of the Gods (Rheingold)
Wagner: Ride of the Valkyries
Saint-Saens: Largo (Organ Symphony)
Also organ works by Bach, Widor, Russell, Gigout, Franck & Saint-Saen (Pietro Yon & Charles Courboin, organ)
Philadelphia: 25 March 1920
Beethoven: Leonore #3 Overture
Bach: Opening Chorus (Christmas Oratorio)
Schubert: Rosamunde excerpts
Parker: Ballad for chorus and orchestra
Wagner: Ride of the Valkyries
Elgar: March and Choral Epilogue
Unaccompanied choral works by Dett, Gretchaninov, MacDowell & Lutin
Philadelphia: 26-27 March 1920
Beethoven: Coriolan Overture
Mozart: Symphony #40
Sachnovsaki: The Clock
Rimsky-Korsakov: Russian Easter Overture
Vocal items by Gluck, Aubert & Rachmaninoff w. Emma Roberts
Philadelphia: 9-10 April 1920
Brahms: Symphony #2
Maquarre: Au clair de lune
Chanson d' amour
Weber: Bassoon Concertino (Richard Krueger, bassoon)
Berlioz: Damnation of Faust excerpts
Philadelphia: 16-17 April 1920
Schubert: Symphony #9 "The Great"
Bruch: Scottish Fantasy (Eddy Brown, violin)
Wagner: Siegfried's Rhine Journey
Philadelphia: 23-24 April 1920
Sibelius: Swan of Tuonela
Saint-Saens: Piano Concerto #5 (Rudolph Ganz, piano)
Tchaikovsky: Symphony #4
Philadelphia: 30 April 1 May 1920
Rossini: Barber of Seville Overture
Mozart: Oboe Concerto (Marcel Tabuteau, oboe)
Wagner: Forest murmurs (Siegfried)
Wagner: Wotan's Farewell (Valkyrie0
Vocal items by Rossini & Donizetti w. Estelle Hughes, soprano
Philadelphia: 7-8 May 1920
Beethoven Program
Leonore #3 Overture
Symphony #9 "Choral"
Vahrah Hanbury, soprano; Alice Fidler, contralto; Robert Quait, tenor & J. Campbell McInnes baritone
1920-21: The 19-20 November concert was a 20th Anniversary program that replicated the orchestra's very first concert. Stokowski closes the season with the "Resurrection" Symphony of Mahler. Premieres: In November Stokowski leads the US premiere of Cyril Scott's Piano Concerto. Scott (1879-1970) was an English composer and poet. Some years ago there was an LP of his Early One Morning and it is a wonderful piece. Today I can find only one recording that includes him among others. Also in November is the world premiere of John Carpenter's "A Pilgrim Vision" is on the program. Carpenter (1876-1951) was an American composer. He is best known for his orchestral works such as Perambulator and the jazz ballet Krazy Kat. Other composers perhaps not so well known today include: Leo Sowerby (1895-1968) was an American composer won the Pulitzer Prize for Canticle of the Sun: October. Also in October Guy Ropartz (1864-1955) was a French composer. In December Stokowski performs a concerto for string quartet and orchestra. The composer's name is Moor. This is probably Emanuel Moor (1863-1931) born in Hungary and died in Switzerland. He was a pianist and conductor as well as a prolific composer of over 150 works. Roger Quilter was an English composer (1877-1953): April. Jacques Arcadelt was a French or Flemish composer (?1505-1568 or 70) about whom, as you can see, little is known: also April. On 11-12 February. William Wallace Gilchrist (1846-1916) was an American composer who lived in Philadelphia: May. Mengelberg appears as a guest conductor
Philadelphia: 15-16 October 1920
Sowerby: Comes Autumn Time Overture
Weber: Euryanthe Overture
Wagner: Lohengrin Prelude
Wagner: Tannhauser Overture
Beethoven: Symphony #3 "Eroica"
Philadelphia: 22-23 October 1920
Schubert: Symphony #9 "The Great"
Casella: Italia
Sibelius: Swan of Tuonela
Sibelius: Finlandia
New York: 26 October 1920
Program as same as for 22-23 October
Philadelphia: 29-30 October 1920
Berlioz: Roman Carnival Overture
Ropartz: Symphony #4
Vocal items by Chausson, Duparc, Debussy & Tchaikovsky w. Margaret Matzenauer, contralto
Philadelphia: 5-6 November 1920
Bach: Brandenburg 3, first movement
Brahms: Symphony #4
Scott: 2 Passacaglia for orchestra
(Conducted by the composer)
Scott: Piano Concerto in C (Cyril Scott, piano)
New York: 9 November 1920
Program the same as 5-6 November
Philadelphia: 19-20 November 1920
Goldmark: In Spring Overture
Tchaikovsky: Piano Concerto #1 (Robert Schmitz, piano)
Beethoven: Symphony #5
Weber: Invitation to the Waltz
Wagner: Entry of the Gods (Rheingold)
Philadelphia: 26-27 November 1920
Dvorak: Symphony #9 "From the New World"
Brahms: Haydn Variations
Carpenter: A Pilgrim Vision
Wagner: Tannhauser Overture & Venusberg
New York: 30 November 1920
Same as 26-27 except that Carpenter's music was omitted.
Philadelphia: 3-4 December 1920
Beethoven Program
Leonore #3 Overture
Symphony #9 "Choral"
Della Baker, soprano; Ellen Rumsey, contralto; Lambert Murphy, tenor & Royal Dadman, baritone
Philadelphia: 17-18 December 1920
Mozart: Symphony #41 "Jupiter"
Strauss: Tod und Verklarung
Brahms: Double Concerto (Thaddeus Rich, violin & Micel Penha, cello)
New York: 21 December 1920
Mozart: Symphony #41 "Jupiter"
Moor: Concerto for quartet & orchestra (Flonzaley String Quartet)
Strauss: Tod und Verklarung
Philadelphia: 31 December 1 January 1920-21
Beethoven: Symphony #6 "Pastoral"
Wagner: Rienzi Overture
Debussy: Nuages et fetes (Nocturnes)
Liszt: Hungarian Rhapsody #2
New York: 4 January 1921
Program the same as above
New York: 5 January 1921
Rimsky-Korsakov: Schéhérazade
Saint-Saens: Piano Concerto #2 (Guiomar Novaes, piano)
Wagner: Rienzi Overture
Philadelphia: 7-8 January 1921
Mozart: Don Giovanni Overture
Beethoven: Violin Concerto (Fritz Kreisler, violin)