Up for sale is:
Volume 66, Number 11, November 1948
Joseph Haydn, Austria, composer
Good Pre-Owned Condition, The original mailing label is on this issue. Tearing and Chipping on the spine and edges of covers

Table of Contents

Te Deum Laudamus

Needs of the Young Singer (interview with Giuseppe Valdengo)

Shake Hands With the School!: How the Teacher May Profit by Keeping in Touch With the Day School

Christ and Etude

This is Berlin

Theodore Presser (1848-1925): Educator, Publisher, Philanthropist, A Centenary Biography, Part 5

Stumbling Into Music (interview with Douglas Taylor)

Richard L. Austin (Obituary)

Jenny Lind's Vocal Exercises: Additional Advice from a Great Singer of the Past, Supplementing the Article in the Etude from February 1948

People's Song to Their God: A Delightful Picture of the Medieval Origin of the Gregorian Chant

Make Your Christmas Music Attractive!

Municipal Band and Its Place in the Musical Life of America

Alto Clarinet

Johnny Makes a Discovery: He Likes Music But Doesn't Know It

About Fingerings on the Violin

Leschetizky's Pianistic Philosophy: Reasons for the Great Success of Theodore Leschetizky as a

Bach's Gavotte and Musette in G Minor (A Master Lesson)

Wasted Motion

Recital? Yes—Stage Fright? No

Twenty-third Psalm (from the Bay Psalm Book)

From One Contrabassist to Another


Editorial Reviews

From Digital Commons @ Gardner-Webb University:

Etude Magazine was published by Theodore Presser Company between 1883 and 1957. It was a staple for music teachers throughout the country, providing articles related to music history, new developments in music, and practical teaching techniques, as well as musical scores from the classics and new pieces for beginning to advanced students. Begun as an aid for piano teachers, the magazine grew to include information and literature for vocal and instrumental enthusiasts as well. Not only is the series important to the musician, but it provides an insight into the culture itself, including the impact of the development of the car, radio, and television, and expands to world music and the influence of world wars on that culture.