TE RANGI PAI
♦ The opportunity of hearing Te Rangi Pai in sacred music is one which no lover of the art can ufford to miss, and the Town Hall, Hamilton, sh uld b>' packed to the doors on Sunday to hear Mrs Howie and her company in the tine programme they advertise in to-morrow's issue. There is little to say of Te Kaagi Pai that has not already been said. Her brilliant successes in London, that world - centre nf musical art, and the magnificent receptions she has received throughout New Zealand, on her return to her native land, are sufficient to stamp her as an artiste of the very highest order. Those who have been privileged to hear her, speak in most enthusiastic terms of the 'cello-like tones of her glorious vjice. And sime who are able to compare her with , England's greatest contralto, Madame Clara Butt, contrast Te Rangi Pai to advmtage with that gifted singer. The concert should be the treat of the year, and we urge all who love music in its highest and best sense, to grasp this oppore tunity of listening to thi divine art inter■f preted by New Z alaud's ereatest singer.
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Bibliographic details
Waikato Times, Volume LVII, Issue 8020, 28 September 1906, Page 3
Word Count
198TE RANGI PAI Waikato Times, Volume LVII, Issue 8020, 28 September 1906, Page 3
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