As a harpsichordist, on February 20, 1938 he participated in the Carnegie Hall premiere of J.S. Bach's Coffee Cantata under the direction of Walter Damrosch; the other performers on that occasion included singers Charles Kullman, Helen Jepson, and Lawrence Tibbett; flutist Frances Blaisdell; violinists Jascha Heifetz and Sascha Jacobsen; violist Leon Barzin; cellist Gaspar Cassadó; and double bassist Anselme Fortier.
Among the other (racially integrated) performers were American concert artists Marian Anderson, Lawrence Tibbett, and Kate Smith, singing classical and light popular music; and folk performers Lily May Ledford and the Coon Creek Girls; Josh White; the Golden Gate Quartet; Sam Queen and the Soco Gap Square Dance Team, who demonstrated clog dancing; and Alan Lomax, singing cowboy songs.
D. H. Lawrence | Lawrence Ferlinghetti | Lawrence, Kansas | Lawrence | Martin Lawrence | Saint Lawrence River | Lawrence, Massachusetts | Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory | Lawrence Ritter | Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory | T. E. Lawrence | Steve Lawrence | Lawrence Summers | Sarah Lawrence College | Lawrence Welk | Lawrence Taylor | Gertrude Lawrence | Lawrence v. Texas | The Lawrence Welk Show | Lawrence Weiner | Lawrence Kasdan | Jacob Lawrence | Tracy Lawrence | Thomas Lawrence | Lawrence University | Lawrence Hayward | Lawrence of Rome | Lawrence Lessig | Lawrence County | Lawrence Township |
In 1931, the Palau Brothers orchestra appeared in the early sound film The Cuban Love Song, which was directed by W. S. Van Dyke and starred by Lawrence Tibbett, Lupe Vélez, Ernest Torrence and Jimmy Durante.