New York Philharmonic

New York Philharmonic appears in the following:

The American Virtuoso

Tuesday, January 01, 1980

The rise of gifted American performers.

Comment

New York Philharmonic

Wednesday, July 19, 1950

New York Philharmonic concert, July 19, 1950, Lewisohn Stadium Der Fliegende Hollander. Overture / Richard Wagner Symphony, no. 3, op. 90, F major / Johannes Brahms Intermission...

Comment

New York Philharmonic

Wednesday, June 28, 1950

New York Philharmonic concert, June 28, 1950 Lewisohn Stadium concert. Il Guarany. Overture / Gomes Scheherazade / Nikolay Rimsky-Korsakov Intermission feature with David Randol...

Comment

New York Philharmonic

Wednesday, June 21, 1950

New York Philharmonic concert, June 21, 1950, Lewisohn Stadium Chorale prelude, arr / Johann Sebastian Bach Symphony, no. 4, op. 98, E minor / Johannes Brahms Intermission featu...

Comment

Leopold Stokowski Conducts

Saturday, March 12, 1949

One in this series of New York Philharmonic programs intended for young audiences featuring musical analysis interspersed with performance. This program begins with conductor Le...

Comment

New York Philharmonic Rehearsal

Tuesday, February 01, 1949

The exact date of this episode is unknown. We've filled in the date above with a placeholder. What we actually have on record is: 1949-02-uu.

This episode is from the WNYC archives. It may contain language which is no longer politically or socially appropriate.

Portions of a rehearsal at Carnegie ...

Comment

Igor Buketoff Conducts

Saturday, December 18, 1948

One in this series of New York Philharmonic programs intended for young audiences featuring musical analysis interspersed with performance. Selections Performed: --Beethoven, Lu...

Comment

NY Philharmonic Rehearsal

Tuesday, February 17, 1948

This episode is from the WNYC archives. It may contain language which is no longer politically or socially appropriate.

Incomplete. Begins abruptly.

New York Philharmonic Orchestra rehearsal of Richard Strauss' Don Quixote at Carnegie Hall.
Bruno Walter, Conducting


Audio courtesy of the NYC Municipal Archives WNYC ...

Comment