excerpt from 'Memories of a Musician: Reminiscences of Seventy years of Musical Life' pp. 77-8 (149 words)

excerpt from 'Memories of a Musician: Reminiscences of Seventy years of Musical Life' pp. 77-8 (149 words)

part of

Memories of a Musician: Reminiscences of Seventy years of Musical Life

original language

urn:iso:std:iso:639:ed-3:eng

in pages

77-8

type

text excerpt

encoded value

IN 1855 I thought the time had now arrived when I should give a public concert, as I had a good connection and many friends and pupils, having also made the acquaintance of many distinguished people at Lady Waldegrave's. I gave my first London concert at the old Queen's Concert Rooms in Hanover Square, on June 14th, and have given annual concerts ever since. The audience included Lady Waldegrave and many of the musical circle I had met at Nuneham. The concert was most successful, and at its close I received many congratulations. I played Weber's "Concertstuck" with quartette accompaniment and felt very nervous; but it went off very well. Among the artists who assisted me were Herr Heinrich Ernst, the great violin virtuoso, and Herr Alexander Reichardt, the popular tenor from Vienna, whose pretty song, "Thou art so near and yet so far," became a great favourite with singers.

appears in search results as

excerpt from 'Memories of a Musician: Reminiscences of Seventy years of Musical Life' pp. 77-8 (149 words)

1436182135916:

reported in source

1436182135916

documented in
Page data computed in 346 ms with 1,744,168 bytes allocated and 35 SPARQL queries executed.