Product Description This item is an original Magazine ad, taken from a vintage magazine of the years indicated. The announcement is suitable for setting and display in your home or office. The scan of this item is made with plastic film, however, is an accurate representation of the. The nominal size is 10. 5 inches by 14 inches. . . . More>>

3 brand new album. . . anyone who loves music! RUSS CASE and his Orchestra, “Music America Loves Best” MARION’S BELL “Smash Hits From Broadway” Al Goodman and his Orchestra, “The Song of the desert…… 1948 RCA Victor Records ad, A4501A.

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  1. THE SOUND OF CHRISTMAS – MATHIS on Broadway, Johnny Mathis explores Broadway’s rhythms and ballads; THE BROTHERS FOUR; BRUNO WALTER conducts Brahms; RAY CONIFF, his chorus and orchestra bring holiday music; DUKE ELLINGTON and Billy Stayhorn explore Tchaikovsky’s “The Nutcracker Suite. ” . . . . . 1960 Columbia Records Ad, A4688.
  2. Leopold Stokowski Conducting the All-American Youth Orchestra. Further featured are Igor Stravinsky, John Barbirolli, Artur Rodzinski, Frederick Stock, Dimitri Mitropoulos, Howard Barlow, Sir Thomas Beecham, and Felix Weingartner. . . . . . 1940 Columbia Records Ad A3814.
  3. The face of America: Genius Chilly. Twenty-six years, Glenn Gould is in its way, an eccentric. He is a genius. Music critics place him in the highest rank of concert artists, and his eccentricities are clear for all to see, as in this close-up Gould’s evidence of a Bach piano concerto with the Detroit Symphony Orchestra. His nose close to the keyboard to get Gould has his own plan blocks and uses a seat, lowered. At the end legs of the chair JACKS, adjustment and adaptation steps between individuals. The Auditoreum Ford is so hot that the conductor Paul Paray, the coat peeled, but Gould is filled by a Canadian sensation for a lifetime. The scarf, sweater and heavy coat, the carpet under his feet, the hot mineral water glass on the piano – all year by equipment. He absorbs the hands in warm water before playing, wearing gloves and a hat between takes, and a jacket even in summer. Presumably it helps anyone that the music is wonderful. Photography Ormond Gigli. . . . . . 1959 Saturday Evening Post, Picture, A5229A. 19590404
  4. The Symphony Orchestra – It Takes 100 Men To Play The World’s Greatest Music. The Boston Symphony Orchestra, conducted by Serge Koussevitsky, is pictured performing Beethoven’s “Eroica” symphony at a concert in Boston’s Symphony Hall. Top Orchestra Men pictured include: Violinist John Corigliano, concertmaster of the New York Philharmonic Symphony; Viola Player Carlton Cooley heads the viola section of the NBC Symphony; Cellist Leonard Rose is chief cellist of the New York Philharmonic-Symphony; Bass Player Anton Torello, is head of the Philadelphia Orchestra’s bass section; Horn Player James Chambers is the first horn of the Philadelphia Orchestra; Trumpeter Harry Glantz of the NBC Symphony; Trombonist Robert Jones of the Detroit Symphony; Tuba Player William Bell of the New York Philharmonic; Piccolp Player George Peter Madsen of the Boston Symphony; Flutist William Kincaid of the Philadelphia Orchestra; Oboist Marcel Tabuteau of the Philadelphia Orchestra; English Horn Player Harvey McGuire of the Cleveland Orchestra; Clarinetist Simeon Bellison of the New York Philharmonic; Bass Clarinetist Peter Zukowsky of the Chicago Symphony; Bassoonist Benjamin Kohon of the NBC Orchestra; Harpist Alice Chalifoux of the Cleveland Orchestra and Tympanist Saul Goodman of the New York Philharmonic. . . . . . . 1945 LIFE Magazine Article, A5109A.
  5. The Symphony Orchestra – It Takes 100 Men To Play The World’s Greatest Music. The Boston Symphony Orchestra, conducted by Serge Koussevitsky, is pictured performing Beethoven’s “Eroica” symphony at a concert in Boston’s Symphony Hall. Top Orchestra Men pictured include: Violinist John Corigliano, concertmaster of the New York Philharmonic Symphony; Viola Player Carlton Cooley heads the viola section of the NBC Symphony; Cellist Leonard Rose is chief cellist of the New York Philharmonic-Symphony; Bass Player Anton Torello, is head of the Philadelphia Orchestra’s bass section; Horn Player James Chambers is the first horn of the Philadelphia Orchestra; Trumpeter Harry Glantz of the NBC Symphony; Trombonist Robert Jones of the Detroit Symphony; Tuba Player William Bell of the New York Philharmonic; Piccolp Player George Peter Madsen of the Boston Symphony; Flutist William Kincaid of the Philadelphia Orchestra; Oboist Marcel Tabuteau of the Philadelphia Orchestra; English Horn Player Harvey McGuire of the Cleveland Orchestra; Clarinetist Simeon Bellison of the New York Philharmonic; Bass Clarinetist Peter Zukowsky of the Chicago Symphony; Bassoonist Benjamin Kohon of the NBC Orchestra; Harpist Alice Chalifoux of the Cleveland Orchestra and Tympanist Saul Goodman of the New York Philharmonic. . . . . . . 1945 LIFE Magazine Article, A5109A.