6
THE MUSICAL CRITIC AND TRADE REVIEW.
MUSICAL NOTES.
January 20th, 1881.
OUR STAFFCORRESPONDENTS.
ABROAD.
PHILADELPHIA.
Mdme. Trebelli and Monsieur Musin, assisted by Signor Ghilberti, have
CHAMBER CONCEETS—THEODORE AHREND—HER MAJESTY'S OPERA—BOCOACOIO
organized a tour through Belgium.
—THE GERMANIA ORCHESTRA.
After the lapse of half a century Cherubini's "Medea " has, despite the
PHILADELPHIA, Jan. 15, 1881.
illness of some of the artists and other obstacles, at length been revived at
the Imperial Opera house, Vienna, to the delight of all genuine musical
OR twenty years Philadelphia was the favored home and centre of
amateurs. Mad. Friedrich-Materna (Wagner's incomparable Briinnhilde)
chamber music. Carl Gaertner, Carl Hohnstock, Carl Wolfsohn,
was Medea ; Mad. Elian, Circe; Herr Rokitansky, Creon ; and Herr Labatt, Messrs. Jarvis, Hennig, Kopta, Guhlemann Stoll, Cross, Plagemann,
Jason.
Schmitz, and a good many other musicians of marked eminence and culture
The Emperor Wilhelm has selected Gluck's " Armida " for the gala per- participated at one time or another in different quartette and quintette clubs
formance at the Royal Opera house, Berlin, on the occasion of the marriage which gave series of classical concerts annually. Sometimes there were four
different s€ries giving concerts, on as many Saturday nights each month.
of Prince Wilhelm of Prussia.
Miss Anna Jackson kept up a fine series for eleven consecutive winters.
Mr. Walter Macfarren is composing a Concertstiick, for pianoforte with Chas. H. Jarvis, who is spending this winter in Europe, gave us seventeen
orchestral accompaniments, expressly for Miss Kuhe, to be performed in seasons of classical soirees; and so on. I remember when Mr. Rudolph
February at Mr. Kuhe's annual Brighton Festival.
Hennig left Philadelphia, in 1872, to join the Mendelssohn Club, he could
avoid expressing his surprise at finding many of the modern pieces,
Franz Erkel's new opera, " The Nameless Heroes," has been produced not
at the National Theatre, Pesth. The pieces most applauded were two speci- already familiar here, entirely unheard of in musical Boston.
My motive for recalling these circumstances arises from contemplating our
mens of dance-music, a " Verbungos " at the end of the first and the " War-
Dance " in the course of the third act ; the second of these is especially present remarkable dearth of this species of musical entertainments. The only
one recently given here was on the 8th inst., when the Philadelphia Musical
pleasing.
Academy, to which I have before alluded as an excellent conservatory, gave
Wilhelm Treiber, Gapellmeisier of the Euterpe Society, Leipsic, will their fourth concert of the present season at Association Hall. The pro-
succeed to the conductorship left vacant by Herr Eeiss, at the Grand-Ducal gramme was choice. It comprised four vocal numbers: '' Felice notte,
Theatre, Baden.
Marietta," by Raff, and Schumann's " Wanderlied,"sungby Emil Gastel; "O
The receipts on the opening night at the Teatro Costanzi, Rome, with Ruddier than the Cherry," from Handel's " Acis and Galatea," sung by Mr.
Rossini's " Semiramide " were 16,000 francs , on the second evening the house Wm. W. Gilchrist, and " The Lord is a Man of War," from "Israel in Egypt,"
given by both the singers, and given indifferently, which was a pity, as both
was nearly empty.
of them are artists and should have done better. For one thing, neither of
The deaths are announced—at Angers, aged 60, of Madame Gruber, them has either the quality or quantity of voice for such music as this
pianist; at Bergamo, aged 82, of Guiseppe Nini, a pupil of Rossini, a pianist; duo. They are both light baritones. Mr. R, Zeckwer, the proprietor of the
at Lisbon, aged 52, of Guglielmo Cossoul, impressario and conductor of the Academy, performed some piano selections by Bendel and Xavier Schar-
San Carlo there.
wenka, the young Danish composer, who was so popular in London last
Mr. Zeckwer also presided at the piano during two movements of
Two early overtures of Meyerbeer, " Host and Guest " and "Ubaldo," year.
Rubinstein's G minor " Trio," op. 15, a work new here, but not unknown to
have been purchased at Berlin by M. Brandus, of Paris.
students of chamber music. They very wisely omitted the concluding
Weber's " Preciosa" has been arranged in Germany for concert pur- presto, partly because the programme was already too long, and partly
poses, and an English adaptation was presented on Dec. 20th by the Brixton because Rubinstein, like many another composer, has apparently grown tired
Choral Society, under Mr. Lemare.
when he comes to this stage of his composition and indulges in " padding," as
paragrapher would state it. Mr. R. Hennig who, happily for music in this
The prize of a thousand florins, offered for the best opera to inaugurate a city,
is once more a resident, fairly electrified the large audience by his per-
the National Opera at Prague, was won by Smetana's "Libressa," with formance
of a familiar fantaisie (I don't know what number or opus it is, but
honors to Bendel's " Gernohorci " and Jibich's "Blanik."
he has often played it before) by Servais. I have never heard him play so
A Sig. Sonzogno at Milan will shortly publish a new musical paper, II finely before, and that is saying a good deal for Hennig. He marred the
Teatro Illustrate, treating of music in all its branches and having special cor- effect by giving for an encore a rollicking, topsy-turvey Danish sailor's
dance, not in keeping with so dignified a programme. Mr. R. Graner, form-
respondents in every part of the world.
erly of the Thomas orchestra, and a ripe musical scholar, played on the violin
Madame D'Angeri, is about to marry Signor Vittorio Salem, a rich aWilhelmj transcription of "Walter's Prize Song," by Wagner. He also per-
Trieste merchant, and leave the stage.
formed on the piano Chopin's G minor " Ballade," and the inevitable "Rhap-
sody," No. 2, by Liszt. Mr. Felix Grischow, the youngest and most promis-
The summer season at Her Majesty's Theatre, London, will commence ing pianist among the party, was taken with a stage fright or something of
on Saturday, April 30. It is stated that Christine Nilsson and the tenor that sort and left the stage suddenly after playing but one of his allotted
Maas are engaged for the season. And who else ?
pieces, the " Ricordanza Etude," of Liszt. To open the concert he had
The programmes of the Crystal Palace Concerts, the new series of which previously played with Mr. Hennig the D major " Sonata " of Mendelssohn.
I never listen to that D major without recalling Theodore Ahrend,
opens on February 5th, will contain some of Schubert's Symphonies hitherto
unknown. Most of them are manuscripts and property of George Grove. At whom I first heard play it in 1864 with Carl Wolfsohn. What a violoncello
player that was! When he played here at Mark Hassler's benefit in 1861,
the first concert the earliest of the set, No. 1 in D, will be presented.
all of the orchestra players filed in from the wings to listen. Ho had all of
Queen Victoria has accepted the dedication of the "Life of Weber," writ- a violinist's delicacy and all of a violinist's execution on his instrument.
ten by Sir Julius Benedict for the series of biographies of " The Great Musi- Personally uncouth, with long bony hands, his lingers reminded one of a
cians," of which Mr. Francis Hueffer is the editor, and Messrs. Sampson, Low, huge spider crawling over the strings. He had no pride. He was just as
Marston & Co., the publishing firm. The first volumes of the series will, we well satisfied to play at a beer garden as in the opera house. One night at
understand, appear early next year. The contributors, among others, are Miller's Winter Garden, many years ago, where he was employed with two
Mr. F. Hueffer (Wagner), Mr. Sutherland Edwards (Rossini), Signor Arrigo or three other players, Henri Vieuxtemps chanced to stroll in. Ahrend,
Boito (Marcello), M. Frost (Schubert), Mr. W. H. Cummings (Purcell), and knowing who it was, commenced to play one of Vieuxtemps' violin con-
certos on his 'cello. The great virtuoso could scarcely believe his eyes or
Mr. W. A. Barrett (English Church musicians).
ears when he saw this ugly, rusty-looking musician, with a cigar in his
Volkmann, a popular Berlin musician, was condemned to eighteen months' mouth and half an inch of ashes on the end of it, playing with the utmost
imprisonment on a charge of having, in private conversation, used language ease on his unwieldy instrument a work which taxes severely the technique
insulting to his royal Majesty the good Emperor William. The unfortu- of a violin player on the instrument for which it was written. Poor Ahrend
nate musician solemnly denied the truth of the charge, but he was convicted died in 1865, and so poor that I believe the musicians in the orchestra here
on the testimony of the director of his company, of the director's wife, and subscribed to pay his funeral expenses.
of Fraulein Hartkopf, a young harpist. After he had served seven months
of his term of imprisonment, Fraulein Hartkopf, unable to bear the pangs of
If you wished this correspondence restricted to novelties, there is
a guilty conscience, confessed that the charge against Volkmann was wholly scarcely a subject that could be taken up here which is less of a novelty to
unfounded, and had been trumped up by the director and his wife through you than the present engagement of Her Majesty's Opera. The season of
personal enmity, and that they had forced her to corroborate their perjured nine nights and one matinee began last Monday night with " Aida." The
testimony. Volkmann was thereupon released, and had the great satisfac- advance sale was quite large—perhaps the largest ever known here for an
tion of seeing the charge of " insulting Majesty " dismissed. The director operatic season. I learn from much more assured sources than advance
was sentenced to three years' imprisonment for perjury, but his wife was agents that the curtain rose on last Monday evening to an advance sale
acquitted as insane. Of the many brutal and despotic prosecutions for pretty close up to $20,000. I know by eyesight that since last Wednesday
insulting the majesty of the paternal Emperor William, this probably takes week there has been an unbroken line at the ticket office of anxious buyers.
the palm.
I scarcely felt so aroused over the " Aida " as last season, but that was
because last season's splendid performance was so much better
The attempted abduction of a prima donna has been the subject of much probably
any which had ever been given here that I had prepared for still
gossip in Vienna. A week or two ago, about the hour when Mile. Bianchi than
revelations. Signor Campanini never sang'much better, and Misa
was performing the title role in Brail's " Bianca," at the Opera House, her greater
Gary was very fine in the fourth act. After her powerful scene at that point
would-be abductor was laying his plot before the artist's coachman, and she
was greeted with a volley of costly bouquets, one of which she tossed
endeavoring by a bribe to induce him to enter into the scheme. The shrewd amiably
Arditi, who caught it " on the fly " as dexterously as if he
fellow unhesitatingly assured the gentleman that he would do everything in had been to in Sig.
the base ball business all his life. Now, if I were so fond of
his power to promote the success of the project. On the departure of the puns as is one
your correspondents, I might say that skill at the baton
stranger the driver at once disclosed the circumstances to the managerial and at the bat of were
naturally co-existent. The orchestra for "Aida,"
authorities at the theatre. The following night, after depositing Mile. including^tage band, numberedseventy
players.
Bianchi and her mother as usual at their residence, the coachman drove
Mme. Gerster was greeted with wonderful houses both on Tuesday and
hastily to the rendezvous agreed upon, where the languishing lover had for
some time been impatiently awaiting his arrival. Upon seeing the carriage Thursday. There was not one of the more than three thousand seats in the
the man rushed up to the carriage door, where he was instantly pounced Academy of Music left for her Lucia, five nights before her appearance on
upon by two detectives and carried off to a police station. Upon" investiga- Tuesday the 11th inst. Her appearance in " Martha " proved not less popu-
tion he turns out to be a hair-brained lunatic, who for a long time past has lar. There is a tremendous mass of people now awaiting her appearance in
been sending billets-doux to the lady. He is now lodged in a lunatio "Don Giovanni," which is to be given next Tuesday night. The opera
season is one of the most successful eyer known in Philadelphia.
asylum.
F