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During
this period, the School is located at
238 East 105th Street. |
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The
main hall is Hubbard Auditorium,
built in 1938. |
Information on this
page is arranged in ascending year order for this decade.
It includes Manhattan School of Music historical facts and
images from the School's archives, as well as items and quotes
submitted by alumni. Each section also includes some Other
Highlights of New York City's music history.
- View the
Mysterious & Miscellaneous Photos
section at the end and see if you can identify the time,
place, and people in the photos.
- Submit your own memories
and photos through the Class
Notes section of the Online Community.
1940
The Concert and Placement Bureau
(placement office) opens in May “to secure engagements
for our gifted students so that they may have the encouragement
and discipline of frequent appearances.”
The School has 525 students
and a faculty of 58.

Appearing
in recital at the School are Harold Bauer (pictured); Rudolf
Serkin; the two-piano duo of Rudolph Gruen and Frances Hall;
and one of the School's first graduates, Dora Zaslavsky (pictured).
Other Highlights of New York
City Musical History:
• Bela Bartók moves to New York
from Hungary.
• Frank Sinatra joins the Tommy Dorsey Orchestra.
• Virgil Thomson becomes a music critic for the New
York Herald-Tribune.
• Higher and Higher, music by Richard Rodgers,
lyrics by Lorenz Hart, opens with Jack Haley and Marta Eggerth
at the Shubert Theater (84 performances).
• Texaco begins sponsorship of the Metropolitan Opera’s
Saturday afternoon broadcasts, with Ezio Pinza and Licia
Albanese in Mozart’s Le nozze di Figaro.
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1941

Postgraduate department is formed.
Courses are offered in conducting by Hugo Kortschak (pictured);
in ensemble by Harris Danziger, Dora Zaslavsky, and by Oliver
Edel, Julius Shaier, and Rachmael Weinstock of the Roth Quartet;
in scoring, arranging, fugue, and composition by Vittorio
Giannini; and advanced dictation, ear-training, analysis,
score reading, and keyboard harmony by Dr. Howard Murphy (pictured
below).

Other Highlights of New York
City Musical History:
• Folk singer and songwriter Joan
Baez born on Staten Island, January 9.
• Lady in the Dark, music by Kurt Weill, lyrics
by Ira Gershwin, opens with Gertrude Lawrence and New York-born
Danny Kaye at the Alvin Theater (162 performances).
• Billy Strayhorn composes “Take the A Train.”
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1942
The School awards its first postgraduate diploma.
Conductor Leopold Stokowski attends a Manhattan
School of Music orchestral concert. A communiqué from
Janet Schenck to the members of the School’s orchestra
following a concert mentions “all the very complimentary
things Mr. Stokowski had to say … how delighted Mr.
Stokowski was and that he could not say enough about the performance,
the phrasing, and Mr. Kortschak’s leadership. He was
also much interested in Miss [faculty member and alumna Ludmila]
Ulehla’s composition.”
Monthly concerts for children are inaugurated
at the Metropolitan Museum of Art.
Other Highlights of New York City
Musical History:
• Rock singer-songwriter and guitarist
Lou Reed born in Brooklyn, March 2.
• Irving Berlin composes White Christmas.
• Charlie Parker joins Earl Hines band, alongside
Dizzy Gillespie.
• 12-year-old Lorin Maazel conducts the New York Philharmonic.
• Barbra Streisand born in Brooklyn, April 24.
• Aaron Copland’s Rodeo, with Harlem-born dancer
Agnes de Mille, debuts.
• Frank Sinatra breaks contract with Tommy Dorsey,
then opens at the Paramount Theater on a program headed
by Benny Goodman.
• Steinway & Sons retools its factory to begin producing
gliders for the U.S. Air Force, some of which are used on
D-Day.
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1943

Friedrich
Schorr (pictured, left), having just retired from twenty years
at the Metropolitan Opera and with a great European tradition
behind him, takes over the vocal department and Opera Workshop.
Amendment to the charter authorizes the School
to grant the bachelor of music degree.
Other Highlights of New York City
Musical History:
• Bela Bartók composes Concerto for
Orchestra, a commission from the Serge Koussevitsky
Foundation, at the urging of conductor Fritz Reiner and
violinist József Szigeti.
• Isaac Stern, 22, makes Carnegie Hall debut.
• Duke Ellington, 44, makes Carnegie Hall debut.
• The New York City Center of Music and Drama opens
(West 55th Street).
• New York City Opera founded, debuts with Puccini’s
Tosca at City Center.
• Oklahoma by Rodgers and Hammerstein, choreography
by Agnes de Mille, starring Alfred Drake, Celeste Holm,
and Howard da Silva, opens at the St. James Theater (2,212
performances).
• First authentic Afro-Cuban jazz tune, Tanga,
by Mario Bauzá, is recorded by Machito and the Afro-Cubans.
• Leonard Bernstein, 25, makes conducting debut with
the New York Philharmonic, substituting for Bruno Walter,
at Carnegie Hall.
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1944
Mr. Bertram Borden, a Trustee of MSM, gives a large endowed
gift to the School in memory of his wife, who had also been
a Trustee. Given through the Mary Owen Borden Memorial Foundation,
it was the largest single gift the School had received up
to that time.
Other Highlights of New York City
Musical History:
• Ned Rorem
(MSM current faculty) begins studies with Virgil Thompson.
• Miles Davis moves to NYC to study at Juilliard.
• New York jazz singer William Clarence “Billy” Eckstine
forms big band playing new “bebop” jazz; Sarah Vaughan,
20, records “I’ll Wait and Pray” with the Billy Eckstine
big band.
• Pianist Leon Fleisher, 16, debuts with the New York
Philharmonic, conducted by Pierre Monteux at Carnegie Hall.
• National Negro Opera Theater brings Verdi’s La
Traviata to Madison Square Garden.
• Hindemith’s Symphonic Metamorphosis premieres,
conducted by Artur Rodzinsky.
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1945

June 1 —
Janet D. Schenck, the School's director and founder, is assisted
by Dr. Harold Bauer (pictured, right) in conferring the degree
of Bachelor of Music at Manhattan School of Music for the
first time.
Special classes are arranged to help the returning
veterans. The School is one of two music schools in New York
City, outside the universities, qualified by the government
to accept returning veterans both under Public Law 346 (G.I.
Bill of Rights) and Public Law 16 (Veterans Vocational Rehabilitation
Law).
Janet Schenck meets several times with NYC Mayor
Fiorello LaGuardia. "His interest in the school had been
significant," writes Mrs. Schenck.
Other Highlights of New York City
Musical History:
• Up in Central Park,
music by Sigmund Romberg, lyrics by Dorothy Fields, opens
at the Century Theater (504 performances).
• New York Philharmonic joins in mourning President
Roosevelt’s death by cancelling its concert, April 13.
• Carousel by Rodgers and Hammerstein opens
at the Majestic Theater (890 performances).
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1946

Early in
the year, John Lewis (pictured) begins work toward a Bachelor
of Music degree, studying theory. This same year, he joins
Dizzy Gillespie’s big band and premieres his “Toccata
for Trumpet” with Dizzy’s band at Carnegie Hall
in 1947. Lewis later works with Miles Davis’s nonet and founds
the Modern Jazz Quartet.
Other Highlights of New York City
Musical History:
• Juilliard String Quartet is
founded, Robert Mann (MSM faculty) and Robert Koff violins;
Raphael Hillyer, viola; Arthur Winograd, cello.
• Annie Get Your Gun by Irving Berlin opens
at the Imperial Theater with Ethel Merman, includes “There’s
No Business Like Show Business” (1,147 performances).
• Virgil Fox begins 19-year tenure as organist at
Riverside Church.
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1947
Amendment to the charter authorizes the School to confer
the master of music degree.
The School has 663 students.
Other Highlights of New York City
Musical History:
• Atlantic Records is founded by Ahmet
and Neshuri Ertegun and Jerry Wexler at Jefferson Hotel.
• New York-born Tito Puente leads his first band,
The Picadilly Boys.
• Pianist George Shearing emigrates to New York from
England.
• Café Society and Café Society Uptown close following
savage attacks by newspaper columnists Walter Winchell and
Lee Mortimer.
• Street Scene by Kurt Weill premieres (Adelphi
Theater); Kurt Weill receives first TONY Award for best
original score.
• Louis Armstrong and Billie Holiday appear at
Carnegie Hall.
• Brigadoon by Alan Jay Lerner and Frederick
“Fritz” Lowe opens at the Ziegfeld Theater (581 performances).
• Brooklyn-born Lena Horne, alto saxophonist Charlie
Parker, and Ella Fitzgerald make Carnegie Hall debuts.
• The Mother of Us All, music by Virgil Thomson
with libretto by Gertrude Stein, premieres (Brander Matthews
Hall, Columbia University).
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1948

Class of 1948 (courtesy of Dr. Marilyn
Teitler Tyler BM '48 / MM '49 -- top row, fourth from right)
Other Highlights of New York City
Musical History:
• George Rochberg awarded the
George Gershwin Award for Overture in C.
• Igor Stravinsky’s ballet Orpheus, choreography
by George Balanchine, opens at City Center.
• The Weavers founded by Pete Seeger, Lee Hays, Fred
Hellerman, and Ronnie Gilbert.
• Kiss Me Kate by Cole Porter opens at the
New Century Theater (1,077 performances).
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1949

Nicholas Granitto joins the
Academic Faculty where he teaches Italian and French until
retiring in 1989.
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Other Highlights of New York City
Musical History:
• Vladimir Horowitz premieres Samuel
Barber’s Piano Sonata, op. 26.
• Miles Davis records “Birth of Cool”; musicians
include pianist John Lewis (MSM alumnus).
• Pianist George Shearing debuts “Lullabye of
Birdland.”
• Robert
Sirota (current MSM president) born NYC, October 13.
• Birdland opens with saxophonist Charlie Parker as
headliner (on Broadway).
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Mysterious
& Miscellaneous Photos
If you can identify
the time, place, and people in these photos, please let
us know.


Do you have a photo with unknown people
in it or are you just not sure when or where the photo was
taken? Send us a copy
and we'll help you find out.
Learn About Other Decades
Pre-1940’s
| 1950’s
| 1960’s
| 1970’s
| 1980’s
| 1990’s
| 2000’s
AUTUMN IN NEW YORK
JOIN
US IS MORNINGSIDE HEIGHTS WHEN
COLORS ARE AT THEIR PEAK TO
CELEBRATE MANHATTAN SCHOOL OF MUSIC'S 90TH ANNIVERSARY.
“IT'S
GOOD TO LIVE IT AGAIN.”
— FROM
VERNON DUKE'S "AUTUMN IN NEW YORK"
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