About the Book
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 34. Chapters: 1922 musicals, 1922 operas, 1922 songs, Musical groups disestablished in 1922, Musical groups established in 1922, Record labels disestablished in 1922, Record labels established in 1922, Toronto Symphony Orchestra, New Jersey Symphony Orchestra, The Cabaret Girl, Blue Monday, Rochester Philharmonic Orchestra, Renard, Along the Road to Gundagai, Ain't Nobody's Business, Whirled into Happiness, Columbia Graphophone Company, Sancta Susanna, Lovesick Blues, Mavra, Madame Pompadour, Polypheme, Chicago Civic Opera, 1922 in jazz, Hagith, Do It Again, Der Zwerg, Carolina in the Morning, Kleider machen Leute, Dynamite, Aborn Opera Company, Way Down Yonder in New Orleans, Amadis, Cameo Records, Wonderful One, The Laughing Policeman, Debora e Jaele, Downhearted Blues, Bilbao Symphony Orchestra, Victory, Three O'Clock in the Morning, My Buddy, Chappelle and Stinnette Records, Banner Records, Dream On, Hot Lips, Farewell Blues, China Boy, 1922 in country music, National Music Lovers Records, Aco Records, Bugle Call Rag, If I Could Hear My Mother Pray Again, Broadway Rag, Runnin' Wild, Persimfans, Belvedere Records. Excerpt: The New Jersey Symphony Orchestra (NJSO) is a symphony orchestra located in the state of New Jersey, United States. Philip James founded the orchestra in 1922. The orchestra is headquartered in Newark, New Jersey. Neeme Jarvi, the NJSO's music director from 2005 to 2009, is currently the orchestra's conductor laureate and artistic advisor. Since January 2007, the NJSO's President and Chief Executive Officer is Andre Gremillet. During the 1940s, the orchestra performed at Newark Symphony Hall. Currently, the NJSO does not have a single performance venue. Instead, the orchestra gives concerts at venues in seven cities around the state: A 2007 internal evaluation by the orchestra studied the trends of attendanc...