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Guildford Borough Council Concerts season brochure [1976/1977]

Subject:
Guildford Borough Council Concerts season brochure
Classification:
Sub-classification:
Sub-folder:
Year:
1976
Date:
1976 to 1977
Text content:

Guildford
_
Borough Council

Guildford
Philharmonic

Orchestra

Philharmonic
Choir

Proteus Choir

Concerts
Season 1976/77

ON iTem ate
Guildford Surrey

CONCERT BOOKING ARRANGEMENTS

Guildford

BOOKING DATES
Booking opens 6th September 1976, for concerts before Christmas, and 3rd January 1977

Borough

for concerts in the New Year.

SEAT PRICES
Balcony:
Stalls:

£1.70; £1.30; £1.10;

Price Concessions:

(a)
(b)

Council

Reserved

90Op Reserved; 70p. 60p Unreserved

(a) and (b) Stalls only 45p, 35p, 30p.

Organised parties of full-time students, members of youth organisations and schools.
Retirement pensioners — individuals receiving a National Insurance Pension — on

YOUR LEISURE IS OUR PLEASURE

production of the Pension Book.

(c)

Season Tickets (Members of the Philharmonic Society only) — see below.

GUILDFORD SPORTS CENTRE

WHERE TO BOOK

ae

Advance Booking:

All tickets are available in advance from The Public Library,

Bedford Road

North Street, Guildford (at the Information Desk, Quick Reference
Dept., ground floor). The Library is open Mondays 11 a.m. to 7 p.m.
Tuesdays to Fridays 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. and Saturdays 9.30 a.m. to

GUILDFORD LIDO
Stoke Road
(Tel: 62515)
A heated outdoor pool in parkland setting
(Season : May to September)

12.30 p.m. for the sale of tickets.

2.

Late Booking:

All tickets remaining unsold will be sent from the Public Library
to The Box Office, Civic Hall, London Road, Guildford, on the day
of the concert, where they will be available one hour before the
concert begins.

CIVIC HALL

London Road
(Tel: 71651/3 daytime and bookings)
(Tel : 67314 evening of events)

HOW TO BOOK
{.

In Person:

At the Public Library at the times stated above, or (during the last hour

before the concert commences) at the Civic Hall Box Office.
a

By post:

Available for a wide range of occasions and events

At the Public Library, North Street, Guildford. All postal applications must

be accompanied by a stamped, addressed envelope. Cheques and Postal Orders should

GUILDFORD MUSEUM

be crossed and made payable to Guildford Borough Council. Cash should not be sent

Castle Arch

through the post.

3:

(Tel: 71651/3)
Recreation for all the family

Quarry Street

By telephone. At the Public Library, North Street, Guildford (Tel.68496-7). Telephone

(Tel: 66551)

Collections of great interest

bookings should be collected and paid for not later than two days prior to the concert.

GUILDFORD PHILHARMONIC ORCHESTRA

Tickets reserved and not paid for will be sold 30 minutes before the concert commences.
Please note that telephone bookings cannot be accepted at the Civic Hall Box Office,

(Tel : 73800
— Mon.-Fri. 10 am-1 pm; 2 pm-4 pm)
A season of concerts at the Civic Hall

but availability of tickets may be ascertained by phoning the Box Office during the

last hour before the concert commences (telephone Guildford 67314).

GUILDFORD HOUSE

It is regretted that no tickets can be exchanged or accepted for re-sale at the Civic Hall Box

155 High Street

Office or the Public Library.

(Tel: 32133)

Exhibitions of art and sculpture for all
SEASON TICKETS (Philharmonic Society only)

PARKS AND OPEN SPACES

Members of the Philharmonic Society may order Season Tickets at reduced rates by filling in

the yellow Application Form in the centre of this booklet. Applications for Season Tickets

Details from: Municipal Offices

should be despatched by 21st August. Information about the Philharmonic Society is given

High Street

(Tel: 71111)

Parks are for people

on page 17, if you wish to join, or renew your membership, please complete the relevant part
of the yellow Application Form.

ns

FOREWORD

Encouraged by this, | have planned the 1976/77 series with the same optimism
and the trust already mentioned. There is something else to celebrate in the

coming season, in that it is the tenth anniversary of the granting of the Charter to

Surrey University, and for the first time University and Borough forces, in this
case the University of Surrey Choir and the Proteus Choir, will be combining ina

concert on the 24th October 1976. In that concert as well, Professor Smith

Brindle’s Symphony will be given its first public performance. In the second part
of the season a very beautiful work by the newly appointed Master of the Queen’s

Musick will be performed in a concert which welcomes the return to Guildford of
one of our international musical celebrities, James Galway. Joseph Kalichstein
and Claude Frank are two more artists with internation reputations who will be
coming to Guildford, Claude Frank for the third time, and they will share the

A few months ago the national press thundered out a story about fees which could
be asked by certain conductors and soloists. As with any sensational press story

there were jokes, indignation and denials in the air, and as explanation followed
‘cover-up’, the root subject, namely concerts, was buried under the debris of
verbiage. Two things were avoided or forgotten in all the discussion. In the first
place it was assumed that anyone able to command huge fees, obtained those fees
because he or she was good ‘box office’. And, secondly, it was assumed that because

such a fee wasreceived the recipient was somehow good for us all musically. Indeed,
there could be no other reasons for paying such high fees in a world where artistic
standards were considered. But many concerts given by world famous conductors
and soloists with quite popular programmes are only half full in the London

concert halls, and managements lament the declining box office returns. The
country’s economic condition can be blamed, rather than the musical policy. |
would suggest that the declining box office has much more to do with the visible

trend of ten or fifteen years, where the stranglehold of the artists with recording
contracts has tightened around the necks of orchestral managements. So we reach
the situation where, alas, none of the above assumptions is valid; and perhaps one
other thing achieved little notice during all the fuss — the music.

Artist's fees do rise, although those quoted for the highest paid great conductors
and soloists were modest compared to some commanded by almost unskilled

labour in the ‘pop’ world, or, for that matter, the fees for leading singers at the
Opera in Paris, Berlin or New York. The unfortunate conclusion to be drawn from
all this is that although Great Britain runs its music pretty badly, it does not

necessarily follow that other countries run theirs much better, for abroad the

concert repertoire is narrower than here. Taken as a whole, Great Britain produces
a greater variety of music than any other country, but the music of the metropolis
is so much in the grip of commercial interests that it can cater for only a very
narrow-minded audience. Indeed, in a series that | am to conduct next year with

concert platform with young British and foreign artists amongst whom are
established soloists and those at the beginning of their careers. The demands made

on the choirs are as great as ever, with a range of works from Haydn through

Elgar and Walton to Patrick Hadley and Kodaly, to master during the season. The

accent as always has been on this range of styles, for if | dwell in this Foreword

on unfamiliar works a casual glance through the season will show that Mozart,

Haydn, Beethoven, Brahms and Tchaikovsky are not in any way neglected. It is
always a pleasure to welcome guest conductors who in turn evince delighted

surprise at the atmosphere which is the hallmark of a Guildford concert. My

colleague, Christophér Seaman, has been heard with the BBC Scottish Sy mphony

Orchestra in countless broadcasts and more recently seen on television in the
‘Diversions’ series. Fewer people will have come into contact with James Stobart,
but those interested in recordings will have noted the warm response to his recent
‘Contrasts in Brass’. With the Philharmonic Society’s Members’ Evenings, these

concerts release Guildfordians from the need to go to London except on very

special occasions, for recitals, lectures, classical, choral, neglected and modern

music all appear in a season, which has been carefully planned by my team.

In view of the muddled discussion that | referred to in my first paragraph and in
view of the declining box office and repertoire that that muddle produces; in view
of maintained high attendance at Guildford concerts and that trust which has
implemented it, may | urge you all to take a musical step forward when so much
of music seems to be taking a commercial step backward. If you find something
in these programmes to please you, take on trust with that a programme or two

that might on the surface not please you. In the fourteen years that it.-has been

my privilege to conduct for you, | have received hundreds of letters praising the

‘enterprising’ series, and only one or two actually attacking a couple of the works

included. In supporting concerts which contain music that you do not know, you
are taking the first step towards helping cure a situation where music becomes

inbred and the concert audience disillusioned. | am sure that the orchestra, soloists

and choirs in these concerts will help you make that step an exciting one.

a great London orchestra, programmes accepted by the orchestra have had to be

altered in favour of ‘something safer and more popular’. In Guildford we have
long been protected against this sort of thing by the tripartite trust displayed

between the Borough,.its musicians and the public. In a year when box offices all
over the country showed an alarming decrease in returns, that of Guildford was
not as bad as elsewhere, and as we started in a much stronger position than most
orchestras, our attendance figures were still very healthy by any standards. This
was done without recourse to programmes which were ‘safer and more popular’.

Guildford House,
155 High Street,

Telephone 73800.

Guildford;

10am-1pm, 2pm-4pm.

CONCERT PROGRAMMES 1976/77 SEASON
CIVIC HALL
— GUILDFORD
GUILDFORD PHILHARMONIC ORCHESTRA
Associate Leaders: Hugh Bean, John Ludlow

Conductor: Vernon Handley

Sunday 19 September 1976 at 3.00 p.m.
Overture ‘Die Meistersinger’

Wagner

Piano Concerto No.2, in B flat major

Beethoven

Symphony No.9, in E minor
(From the New World)

Christopher Seaman

Joseph Kalichstein

Dvorak

Joseph Kalichstein

Guest Conductor: Christopher Seaman

Saturday 2 October at7.45 p.m.
Overture ‘Donna Diana’

Reznicek

Violin Concerto in D

Tchaikovsky

Oceanides

Sibelius

En Saga

Sibelius

Myoko Sato

Saturday 9 October at 7.30 p.m.
Dorking Halls — Dorking

Overture ‘The Wasps’

Vaughan Williams

Violin Concerto in D minor

Sibelius

Symphony No.6, in B minor

(Pathetique)

Tchaikovsky

Maureen Smith
Vernon Handley
A concert promoted by Mole Valley District Council
with financial support from Reigate and Banstead
Miyoko Sato

Borough Council and the South East Arts Association.

Sunday 24 October at 7\30 p.m.

Town ‘and ‘Gown Concert to celebrate the tenth anniversary of the

foundation-efthe University of Surrey
Coronation Anthem — Zadok the Priest
Symphony (First performance)
Belshazzar’s Feast

Handel

Reginald Smith Brindle
Walton

University of Surrey Choir
Proteus Choir
Norman Welsby — Baritone
The Mayor and Members of Guildford Borough Council will be present at this
concert

Saturday 6 November at 7.45 p.m.

Norman Welsby

Bernard Partridge

The Trees so High

Patrick Hadley

Violin Concerto

Moeran

Symphony No.4 in F minor

Vaughan Williams

Philharmonic Choir
Bernard Partridge

Thursday 11 November at 7.30 p.m.
Leas Cliff Hall — Folkestone

Symphony No.101, in D (Clock)

Haydn

Horn Concerto No.4, in E flat
K.495

Mozart

Variations on an original theme —
Enigma

Elgar

Alan Civil
Vernon Handley

A concert promoted by Shepway District Council
with financial assistance from South East Arts Association

Sunday 21 November at 3.00 p.m.
Overture ‘The Magic Flute’

Mozart

Sinfonia Concertante in E flat major,
for violin and viola (K.364)

Mozart

Symphony No.1, in C minor

Brahms

Carl Pini

Csaba Erdelyi

Concerto for Cello and Orchestra
Missa Brevis

Hindemith
Kodaly

Csaba Erdely!

Ralph Kirshbaum
Philharmonic Choir

Sunday 16 January 1977 at 3.00 p.m.
The Crossley Clitheroe Concert
Pavane for a dead Infanta

Ravel

Piano Concerto No.21, in C (K.467)

Mozart

Symphony No.5, in C minor

Beethoven

Claude Frank

Thursday 3 February
TWO CONCERTS FOR SCHOOLS
Programme details to be circulated to Schools
Ralph Kirshbaum

Claude Frank

* Saturday 5 February at 7.45 p.m.
Gwenneth Pryor

Music for Strings

Bliss

Concerto for Oboe and Orchestra

Richard Strauss

La Mer

Debussy

Gordon. Hunt
*

Rehearsal Seminar at 2.00 p.m. with Vernon Handley, Civic Hall.

Concert ticket holders welcome

Saturday 19 February at 7.45 p.m.
Overture ‘Force of Destiny’

Verdi

Piano Concerto No.2 in C minor

Rachmaninov

Ballet Suite — Swan Lake

Tchaikovsky

Gwenneth Pryor

Sunday 6 March at 3.00 p.m.

Symphony for Wind Instruments
Concerto for Flute and Orchestra
Symphonic Variations

Stravinsky
Ibert
oe
Malcolm Williamson

James Galway

Sunday 20 March at 7.30 p.m.

The Creation

Haydn

Philharmonic Choir

Eidwenn Harrhy

a

Keith Lewis
William Mason
James Galway

a

Guildford

Philharmonic

Society

APPLICATION TO JOIN OR RENEW MEMBERSHIP

AND TO PURCHASE SEASON TICKETS IF ee

(see also next two pages)

Please complete this form and send it with your remittance made payable
to the ‘Guildford Philharmonic Society’, enclosing a stamped self-addressed

Malcolm Binns

envelope for reply to R. A. Forrow Esq., Hon. Treasurer, Guildford

Peter & David Clack

Philharmonic Society, Flat 3, 6 Mareschal Road, Guildford. Personal
applications for membership may be made at the Society’s desk in the

Civic Hall on concert dates.

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Subscriptions

Rate

Annual Subscription

£2.00

Husband and Wife

.

Jane Manning
|

Sarah Walker

:

Nigel Rogers

.

Malcolm King

Joint Subscription

£3.00

Persons under the age of 18

£1.00

Retirement Pensioner

£1.00

No.

Note:

Total Subscriptions

In order to hold a Season Ticket,

Season Ticket requirements A

i

you must be a subscribing member

/

of the Philharmonic Society. Any

Single ticket requirements B

person wishing to purchase a

Donation to Musical Aid Fund

Season Ticket may do so by

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£

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joining the Society at the same time. |Tota! Remittance £

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1.

Retirement Pensioners: Concessionary rates for stalls tickets only as shown below. Please quote Pension Book No.(s).........:.eeeeeees

2.

The Season Ticket rate for the Sunday evening concerts is only available if the applicant is also booking either the 7 Saturday evening concerts

3.
4.
5.

SEASON TICKETS

|
||

a) Single Seats. Rows A—D 30p. Rows E—M 45p. Rows N—S 35p.

b) Season Tickets. 50% off the Season Ticket prices shown in the table below (Stalls tickets only).

or the 5 Sunday afternoon concerts (or both).

Please indicate preferred seating area by circling the seats on seating plan overleaf. (N.B. Precise seating cannot be guaranteed).
Transfer totals from A & B to summary of Remittance on previous page.
Closing date for Season Ticket Applications is 21st August 1976.

7 SATURDAY EVENING
CONCERTS

|

Dates:

| |

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AREA (&® NORMAL PRICE)

CIVIC HALL

1 season

5 SUNDAY AFTERNOON
CONCERTS

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7/5/77.

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;

No.

ticket

Total

required

Dates:

:

£

1 season

ticket

2 SUNDAY EVENING
CONCERTS

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a 76; 16/1/77;

Dates:

No.

Total

1 season

f

13/77;

17/4/77.

required

£

ticket

Front Balcony A—C

(£1.70)

£10.90

£8.00

£3.00

Centre Balcony

Side Balcony A 8 B

(£1.30)

£8.20

£6.00

£2.20

Rear Balcony J—P

(£1.10)

£6.90

£5.00

£2.00

Stalls E—M reserved

(.90p)

£5.70

£4.20

£1.60

Stalls N—S unreserved

(.70p)

£4.40

£3.30

£1.20

Stalls A—D unreserved

(.60p)

£3.70

£2.80

£1.00

Choir — unreserved

(.60p)

£3.70

£2.80

£1.00

D—H

|

TOTAL

24/10/76; 20/3/77.

No.

required

Total

Sanat

Sundays)
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(A)

SEASON TICKETS TOTAL — £

(B) ADDITIONAL SINGLE TICKETS (at normal prices) for concerts between September and December 1976.
Obtainable in advance through the Society up to 20th September 1976.
,

Date

3

;

Area

Normal

Price

No.

£

Date

Area

Normal

Price

No.

|

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(B) SINGLE TICKETS — £

£

Saturday 2 April at 7.45 p.m.

Borough of Guildford Civic Hall

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Vaughan Williams

Brigg Fair

Delius

Peter and David Clack

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Sunday 17 April at 3.00 p.m.

The Three-Cornered Hat (Excerpts)

Concerto de Aranuez

* Symphony in D minor

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* Guest Conductor

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Cesar Franck

Guitar
James Stobart

Saturday 7 May at 7.45 p.m.
The Kingdom

Elgar

Philharmonic Choir
Jane Manning

Sarah Walker
Nigel Rogers
Malcolm King

Programmes subject to alteration
All concerts given by the Guildford Philharmonic Orchestra in the Civic Hall, Guildford, are
promoted by Guildford Borough Council with financial assistance from the South East Arts
Association.

13

FORTHCOMING EVENTS:

CALENDAR OF EVENTS 1976/77

Saturday 21 May 1977 in Bracknell Sports Centre
GUILDFORD PHILHARMONIC ORCHESTRA

1976
19 September
3.00 p.m.

Vernon Handley
Soloist to be announced

25 September
7.30 p.m.

Guildford Philharmonic Society
Members’ Evening
The Lay Clerks of Guildford Cathedral

Civic Hall

St. Saviour’s Hall

in a programme of varied music

A concert promoted by the South East Music Trust
in association with the Johnson Wax Arts Foundation.

Saturday 4 June 1977 at 7.30 p.m. — Civic Hall, Guildford

SILVER JUBILEE CONCERT

2 October
7.45 p.m.

Guildford Philharmonic Orchestra
Myoko Sato
Vernon Handley

Civic Hall

6 October
7.30 p.m.

John Denman

Methodist Hall

9 October

Guildford Philharmonic Orchestra
Maureen Smith
Vernon Handley

Dorking Halls

23 October
7.30 p.m.

Guildford Philharmonic Society
Members’ Evening
Vernon Handley

Methodist Hall

24 October
7.30 p.m.

Guildford Philharmonic Orchestra
University Choir

Civic Hall

7.30 p.m.

Guildford Philharmonic Orchestra
Philharmonic Choir

Vernon Handley

Soloist to be announced
Information concerning concerts available from
Kathleen Atkins, Concerts Manager,
Guildford Philharmonic Orchestra,
155 High Street, Guildford. Telephone 73800. 10am — 1pm,

Guildford Philharmonic Orchestra

Joseph Kalichstein
Christopher Seaman

John Forster

Proteus Choir
Norman Welsby
Vernon Handley

1pm— 4pm

6 November
7.45 p.m.

Guildford Philharmonic Orchestra
Philharmonic Choir

Civic Hall

Bernard Partridge
Vernon Handley
Guildford Philharmonic Orchestra
Alan Civil
Vernon Handley

Leas Cliff Hall,
Folkestone

13 November
7.30 p.m.

Guildford Philharmonic Society
Members’ Evening
Omega Guitar Quartet

Methodist Hall

21 November
3.00 p.m.

Guildford Philharmonic Orchestra
Carl Pini
Csaba Erdelyi
Vernon Handley

Civic Hall

11 December

Guildford Philharmonic Orchestra
Ralph Kirshbaum
Philharmonic Choir
Vernon Handley

Civic Hall

Guildford Philharmonic Society
Members’ Evening
Penelope Cave

Methodist Hall

11 November

7.30 p.m.

SURREY COUNTY WIND ORCHESTRA
New Members Welcome
REHEARSALS: FRIDAY EVENING IN GUILDFORD

STANDARD: ASSOCIATED BOARD VI-

VIII

AGE LIMIT: 21 YEARS
FREQUENT CONCERTS
For information contact:

7.45 p.m.

DAVID HAMILTON, Director S.C.W.O.,
PELHAM LODGE, COUNTY HALL,

KINGSTON upon THAMES. 01 546 1050 ext. 3885

1977
8 January
7.30 p.m.

Christina Sargent

14

15

GUILDFORD PHILHARMONIC SOCIETY

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MEMBERS’ EVENINGS
GUILDFORD METHODIST CHURCH HALL

(Entrance in Wharf Road)

* Except Recital on 25 September which will be held in
St. Saviour’s Hall, Leas Road, Guildford
Saturday 25 September 1976 at 7.30 p.m.
The Lay Clerks of Guildford Cathedral in a programme of varied music
Saturday 23 October at 7.30 p.m.
Vernon Handley ‘‘Why conduct at all?”

Saturday 13 November at 7.30 p.m.
Omega Guitar Quartet
Saturday 8 January 1977 at 7.30 p.m.
Penelope Cave and Christina Sargent — Harpsichord and Oboe

MERROW
SOUND

Saturday 26 February at 7.30 p.m.
Trevor Herbert (Trombone Guildford Philharmonic Orchestra and Sackbut
Musica Reservata).

‘“From Sackbut to Trombone”

Saturday 23 April at 7.30 p.m.
Anthony Hopkins ‘‘How to be a successful failure’

Membership cards must be produced at these evenings.

Subscription:

£2.00 Single.

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£3.00 Husband and Wife.

60p Retirement pensioners or those 18 years or under.
Application for or renewal of membership to Hon. Treasurer, Mr. A. Forrow,
Flat 3, 6 Mareschal Road, Guildford (75274).

SPECIAL EVENT — WEDNESDAY 6 OCTOBER at 7.30 p.m.
Methodist Hall
Recital celebrating the donation of Grand Piano to the Philharmonic

Society
JOHN DENMAN

—©

Clarinet

JOHN FORSTER

Pianoforte

Works by Devienne, Mendlessohn, Mozart and Brahms
Tickets for this event — 90p — must be purchased separately from the
Concerts Manager at Guildford House, 155 High Street, Guildford.

18

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Street

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Tel. 22459

GODALMING
Tel. 6414

your home.

Also
PIANOS FOR HIRE — CONCERT TUNINGS
Bosendorfer - Steinway - Welmar.

5 STOKE FIELDS, GUILDFORD.

WS 191)
t= =1-12"

~Tel: GUILDFORD (0483) 75928/9

CHOOSETHE):

SPECIAL: GIFT
FROM
‘WORK: OF:
BRITAIN'
NS-IEAD
S: ING
CRAFTSMEN

DO YOU HAVE

DIFFICULTY IN OBTAINING SHEET MUSIC?
Write to, or phone

|

IBRITTEN’S MUSIC
SHEET MUSIC BY MAIL ORDER

POTTERY’: JEWELLERY-SILVER: GIASS:
TEXTILES:

Deerstead Cottage, St. John’s Hill Road, Woking, Surrey

Telephone: Woking 65742

(any time after 4 p.m., including weekends)

WORK
TELEPHONE COILDEORD TOF

38 CASTLE STREET-GVILDEORD-

Authorised suppliers

Special terms for

to maintained Surrey

Quick,efficient | Universities, Schools,

schools.

personal service

Choirs, Music Teachers

PTE

Caterers
to the

CIVIC HALL

UNIVERSITY OF SURREY
DEPARTMENT OF

MUSIC

Lunchtime Recitals (Wednesday, 1.15 - 2.15), and
Evening Concerts take place regularly in the Great Hall
of the University during term time. Members of the

Banquets, Dinner Dances
Wedding Receptions, Luncheons, Buffets

public are most welcome. Admission is almost always free.
If you would like to receive information about these
concerts please send your name and address to:-

LAURENCE EVANS (CORONA) LTD.
Tel Guildford 68939

Mrs. Diane Harding,

Secretary,
Department of Music,
University of Surrey.

VISIT THE TOP O’ THE TOWN BAR & BUFFET FOR LUNCH

(Tel: Guildford 71281)

Get the daily

habit oe

a

~

Orewa Revordings h

from Classics for Pleasure
at only £1:25.

forpleasure

ds

© YVONNE ARNAUD THEATRE
Director

Val May C.B.E.

Box Office Guildford 60191

PRESENTS
A VARIED PROGRAMME OF PLAYS, MUSICALS,
OPERA, BALLET AND REVUE THROUGHOUT THE YEAR

A BEAUTIFUL THEATRE IN A BEAUTIFUL SETTING

WHY TRAVEL TO LONDON?

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