The Shepherd Sinfonia



RICE UNIVERSITY


NieiJherd
School,
of Music


THE SHEPHERD SINFONIA

C. William Harwood, guest conductor

*Mark Janas, conductor

ЗЙМ

⅝⅛i*29

Tuesday, January 29, 1980

8:00 p.m. in Hamman Hall

PROGRAM

Overture to William Tell

Gioacchino A, Rossini
(1792-1868)

ʌ            Ouirt Saffron Hour             '          “

Phillip Lindsey
(b. 1954)

Mark Jatiasl conductor

Divertissement
Introduction
Cortege
Nocturne
Valse
Parade
Finale

Jaajues Ibert
(1890-1962)

Intermission

Symphony No. 2 in D Major, Op. 36

Ludwig van Beethoven
(1770-1827)


Adagio motto; Allegro con brio

Larghetto

Allegro

Allegro molto

C. William Harwood, conductor

* Appearing in partial fulfillment of the Master of Music degree in conducting. Mr. Janas is
a student of Samuel Jones.

↑Pεrformed in partial fulfillment of the Master of Music degree in composition. Mr.
Lindsey is a student of Paul Cooper.

    1   2  


More intriguing information

1. The name is absent
2. The name is absent
3. The Variable-Rate Decision for Multiple Inputs with Multiple Management Zones
4. GENE EXPRESSION AND ITS DISCONTENTS Developmental disorders as dysfunctions of epigenetic cognition
5. A Rational Analysis of Alternating Search and Reflection Strategies in Problem Solving
6. The name is absent
7. The name is absent
8. Tariff Escalation and Invasive Species Risk
9. Review of “The Hesitant Hand: Taming Self-Interest in the History of Economic Ideas”
10. The name is absent
11. The name is absent
12. EMU's Decentralized System of Fiscal Policy
13. The name is absent
14. Spectral calibration of exponential Lévy Models [1]
15. Constructing the Phylomemetic Tree Case of Study: Indonesian Tradition-Inspired Buildings
16. Long-Term Capital Movements
17. APPLYING BIOSOLIDS: ISSUES FOR VIRGINIA AGRICULTURE
18. Estimation of marginal abatement costs for undesirable outputs in India's power generation sector: An output distance function approach.
19. The Global Dimension to Fiscal Sustainability
20. Trade Liberalization, Firm Performance and Labour Market Outcomes in the Developing World: What Can We Learn from Micro-LevelData?