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YOUNG 'CELLIST TO PERFORM

As everyone interested in the Little Nine Partners Historical Society in Pine Plains, N.Y., knows, the infant organization wishes to raise money by selling fine live music. To do this, contact was made with one of the world's best schools of music, Juilliard in Manhattan, and through its concert manager and its graduates, wonderful young musicians have been hired to give the quality playing the organization wants at the bargain basement price it can pay.

The fourth concert of the outdoor series on Aug. 15 on the grounds of the Pine Plains Center School at 8:30 will present young Daniel Domb, 1965 graduate of Juilliard, a promising and brilliant young student of the cello.

Last week the New York Times carried a special from Chicago dated July 21, which reads as follows:

"Daniel Domb, a young cellist from New York, won the 1965 Michaels Memorial Music Award last night at the Ravinia Pavilion.

The Israeli-born musician's prize was $1,500 and a promise of engagements with 10 orchestras this year. At 20 years of age, he is the youngest winner in the 16-year history of the competition.

Mr. Domb is a graduate of the Juilliard School of Music in New York and a former pupil of Leonard Rose. He is now studying for a master's degree at the same school with Claus Adam and Louis Persinger."

Mr. Domb first started his musical studies as a violinist, but changed to the cello at the age of twelve and started his studies with the French master, Paul Tortalier in Haifa and Paris. As a scholarship student at Juilliard, which he entered in 1958 he is presently studying with Mr. Adam, the cellist of the Juilliard String Quartet.

Mr. Domb's awards include first prize in the Washington Merriweather Post Contest in 1959, 2nd prize in the Second International Competition in Moscow in 1962, the Concert artist Guild Audition in 1963, which resulted in the Town Hall Debut in November of that year and the first prize in the Artist's Advisory Council International Auditions in Chicago in May of 1965.

Daniel Domb has appeared extensively in recitals and as concert soloist with major orchestras including the New York Philharmonic under the direction of Lenoard Bernstein in nationwide telecast. He has also appeared with the Haifa Symphony Orchestra, the National Symphony Orchestra of Washington and the Orchestra of Jeunesses Musicales in Canada.

Mr. Domb's program on Aug. 15 will include Bach's Adagio in A Major, Francoeur's Sonata in F Major, Kodaly's Sonata for Violoncello, and Tchaikowsky's Variations on a Rococo Theme.

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DANIEL DOMB


Baroque Music at Red Fox

The Baroque orchestra will make its second appearance of the season at the Red Fox Music Barn in New Marlboro, Mass., this Saturday, Aug. 14, at 8:30 p.m. with pianist Daniel Sher as the featured soloist in the Bach Concerto in F Minor.

Mr. Sher is a graduate of the Oberlin Conservatory in Oberlin, Ohio, has studied at the Juilliard School of Music in New York City, and is presently teaching and performing in New York City. The Baroque Orchestra is conducted by Jack Ervin, who will also be the pianist in the performance of Schubert's Fantasie, Opus 159, for Violin and Piano. William Haroutounian is the violinist.

The other work on the program is a major one, the Brahms E Flat Minor Trio for Clarinet, Cello and Piano. Larry Combs, clarinetist; Peter Spurbeck, cellist; and Margaret Lacy, pianist, will be performers.

The New Marlboro Chamber Players will appear in a concert on Aug. 25 at 8:30 p.m. at the Woodstock Music Festival in Woodstock, Conn.


Artists Exhibit in Old RR Station

T. Merrill Prentice, architect, of Frid, Prentice and Ferguson in Hartford, has joined the Cornwall artist group of "The Friends of Rose Algrant," and will show a series of water colors including several of Cornawall barns, at the Friends' seventh annual exhibition in the old West Cornwall (Conn.) Railway Station on Saturday, August 14 and Sunday, August 15.

Other participating artists include, as in other years, Armin and Amy Landeck, Marc and Genevieve Simont, Ruth Gannett, Ann Spencer Pratt, Norman Hart, Mira Jedwabnik and Roland Mousseau, Pilar Sureda and Arlington Yutzler. Genevieve Simont will also show a sand casting; Roland Mousseau will show some of his calligraphy for a poem by Robert Frost. Katee Walker, Joanna Lindholm, Lili Hollander and Ursula Dalton will show handicraft-work, and there will be a special exhibit, not for sale, of original drawings by James Thurber made to illustrate Margaret Ernst's book, In a Word, a quarter century ago and never before shown in public.

The exhibit wil blw [[will be]] open on the two days, August 14 and 15, from ten to six.


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Facilities for Group Parties, Weddings and Special Celebrations


THE LAKEVILLE JOURNAL, Section II, August 12, 1965       11