Phonograph Monthly Review, Vol. 3, No. 3 (1928-12)

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H t»« MIJS,C HAS SH, cpr ^qV** * 0 * ° FF THE, « Ff Cr/ ...says DEEMS TAYLOR you have not heard part singing.” And Olin Downes of the N. Y. Times states: “A concert by The English Singers is for the listener a unique and unforgettable experience, a con- tact with a beauty that is rare and haunting.” Now Enjoy The English Singers In Your Home What a happy inspiration it is to have the most beauti- ful of these enchanting melodies recorded on Roycroft “Living Tone” Records! Now every music lover can have these immortal songs as a permanent possession and a lasting joy. When Cuthbert Kelly—founder and leader of The English Singers—heard the first finished records, he exclaimed: “Living Tone recording has caught completely the very life of our music!” George Gershwin writes, “I am playing these records over and over, and the more I play them the more they ap- peal to me.” “They have given us a new joy in music,” asserts Harold Bauer. While Fritz Kreisler says, “It’s beau- tiful music, beautifully sung!” If you would know more about The English Singers and their music, if you want to know why everybody praises their Roy croft Living Tone Records, we suggest that you mail the coupon below. It will bring you a descriptive book with information as to how you may have a private audition of these remarkable Roycroft Records in your home. WM. H. WISE & CO. (Roycroft Distributors ) Dept. PR 12, 50 West 47th Street, New York, N. Y. What “The PHONOGRAPH MONTHLY REVIEW” says about ROYCROFT “Living Tone” RECORDS “The recording leaves nothing to be desired in the way of perfect clarity and tonal purity . . . essential to the library of every person of sensibilities powers of appreciation. . . . These works are to be numbered among the choicest gold of our musical treasury!” Wm . H. W i se & Co., {Roycroft Distributors ) Dept. PR 12, 50 West 47th Street, New York, N. Y. Please send me your booklet about The English Singers and their Roycroft Living Tone Records. This does not obligate me in any way. Name Address City State T HERE’S never been anything like it in musical history— the wave of enthusiasm that has swept the country for The English Singers. Thunderous applause from music lovers and discriminating critics alike. A deluge of praise from eminent composers like Walter Damrosch and George Gershwin. Glowing tributes from famous singers like Jeritza and Edward Johnson of the Metropolitan Opera and a host of other notables. These men and women can't be mistaken. The English Singers must be supremely well worth hearing. And they are. Not only for the songs they sing, but for the superb artistry with which they sing them. Their songs are old—the very ones that were sung in Shakespeare’s day when “Merrie Eng- land” was merry indeed, and the whole country a “nest of singing birds.” Then Puritanism descended like a pall over English life to hush the light hearted gayety of these songs. The Puri- tans, in their fury, smashed the organs in cathedrals and destroyed all the music they could lay hands on. So the happy voices of “Merrie England” were stilled, and through long years this beautiful Elizabethan music was neglected and at last forgotten. Only recently have these lost songs been recovered after 300 years to open new worlds of delight for every music lover. Here are melodies as sparkling, as fresh and fragrant as a May morning. And how marvelously these great artists sing them! Deems Taylor enthusiastically declares: “Hear The English Singers when you can, for until you have heard them