Music Trade Review

Issue: 1897 Vol. 24 N. 23

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
definite plan of work ordetailed system until
he returns from his European vacation. He
will enter upon his new duties September i.
©
An innovation is promised in connection
with the regular summer band concerts
which were inaugurated in Central Park
last Saturday. A proposition has been
made by the People's Choral Union, to pro-
vide, without pay, a body of one thousand
vocalists to give a number of concerts in
connection with the regular force of mu-
sicians at stated periods during the summer.
Last autumn five hundred members of
the Choral Union volunteered to sing at
the final Sunday concert in the park, and
the attendance on that occasion was tre-
mendous. Almost sixty thousand people
were present, who enthusiastically applaud-
ed the singers, while the average attend-
ance at the regular concerts is from two to
three thousand.
The park commissioners have the matter
under consideration, and as President Mc-
Millan is heartily in favor of the idea, it is
very probable the request will be granted.
The educational and artistic influences
which such concerts would excite are ob-
vious, and the movement in the direction
proposed deserves the heartiest encourage-
ment. The choral concerts will serve to
relieve the monotony of the ordinary pro-
grams furnished by the band, and they
should prove a means of attracting thou-
sands to enjoy not alone good music but to
appreciate the beauty and value of the
great park of the people.
o
Tamagno, the tenor who appeared at the
Grand Opera House in this city a couple of
seasons ago, and who did not achieve any
remarkable success, has evidently won his
way into the good graces of opera-goers in
Germany.
He was paid $1200 a night
during his recent appearance in that coun-
try. It is evident that America is not the
only land where singers can pick diamonds
off the streets. As the slang phrase has it,
"there are others."
In England, Paderewski has announced
that he will accept engagements from pri-
vate parties at $5,000 an evening, and the
same price has been offered to Patti to sing
in private drawing rooms. Special talents
have always commanded and will com-
mand a market in any part of the world.
This in spite of the insularism and narrow-
mindedness of certain writers, who like to
win popular sympathy for a purpose by in-
dulging in jingoistic rodomontade.
0'
Max Maretzek, the old-time operatic im-
presario, died at his home at Pleasant
Plains, S. I., the early days of last month.
Mr. Maretzek had been prominently iden-
tified with opera in this country for almost
forty years. He was born in Briinn, Aus-
tria, seventy-six years ago. He was the
first tenant of the Academy of Music. He
had an interesting career interspersed, of
course, with success and failure. He was
a thorough musician and a genial gentle-
man who had a host of friends who admired
and respected him. Mr. Maretzek's labors
toward the introduction of opera in this
country in the earlier da)'S of our history,
and the influence generated in influencing
the musical taste of our people will ever be
remembered.
o
Siegfried Wagner has already completed
the first act of the comic opera on which
he began work last winter in Rome. He
is writing the words as well as the music.
The libretto is founded on one of Grimm's
fairy tales, which may indicate that Herr
Wagner has not been unmindful of Hum-
perdinck's success with stories of a similar
character. The action takes place during
the time of the Thirty Years' War near
Culumbach. Musicians who have had an
opportunity to hear the music agree that
it indicates a talent for music which is
fresh and melodious, as well as a particular
power of comic characterization in the gro-
tesque situations of the work,
o
Thanks to the enterprise of Chickering
& Sons of this city, lovers of orchestral
music, and they are legion, will be enabled
to enjoy some splendid concerts at popular
prices, by the Metropolitan Permanent
Orchestra, under the leadership of Anton
Seidl, the coming musical season. The
concerts will occur on Nov. 9, Dec. 7, '97;
Jan. 4, Feb. 1, March 1, and April 5, '98.
In addition to the orchestra a number of
noted artists, vocal and instrumental, will
be secured, so that the affair promises to be
an event to look forward to with interest.
The prices will be low enough to enable
everyone to enjoy these musical feasts.
©
The patrons of operatic music in Boston
have been asked to subscribe to a-guaran-
tee fund in connection with the Damrosch
operatic season, proposed to be held at the
Boston Theatre. A season of four weeks
with four operas each week is proposed.
It is estimated that the expense for the
month's presentation will not be far from
$70,000. The guarantee fund will not be
used unless there is a deficiency in receipts.
A guarantee has already been given in
Philadelphia on a similar basis.
o
Australia is a long way off, but we had
not supposed that its people are utter
greenhorns. Three plays have been per-
formed in Australian theatres, the de-
lighted audiences believing the advertise-
ments which assured them that " Shamrock
Green " had been written by the late Charles
Stewart Parnell, " T h e Factory Girl," by
the late Charles Haddon Spurgeon, the
eminent Baptist misister; and " Liberty or
Death," by William E. Gladstone!
o
The cover page of this issue contains an
artistic portrait of Martinus Sieveking, the
Dutch pianist, who has just left for Europe
after a highly successful tour of this coun-
try. Mr. Sieveking has won for himself a
most exalted position among piano virtu-
osi, and noted critics have evidently found
it a great pleasure as well as a duty to com-
mend this artist's work in no unmeasured
terms. Mr. Sieveking will return to this
country in the fall and will continue under
the management of Mr. Victor Thrane.
MME. LILLIAN BLAUVELT.
Mine. Lillian Blauvelt, the distinguished
concert soloist, sailed for Europe on Tues-
day last. She has been engaged to sing
the " Forest Bird " in " Siegfried " at Bay-
reuth; and last week Mr. Henry Wolfsohn,
who is at present in Europe, arranged for
her to appear at the Centennial Festival in
honor of Donizetti to be held in Bergamo,
Italy, in August next.
Mme. Blauvelt will return to America
in September, and will enter the concert
MME. LILLIAN KLAUVELT.
field extensively under Mr. Wolfsohn's
management. Mme. Blauvelt's vocal tal-
ents are so pronounced that she cannot fail
to win no little success abroad.
Her
many friends will watch her career in
Europe with much interest.
o
OPERA IN EUROPE.
The Imperial Opera House in Vienna,
like our own costly Metropolitan, has its
financial troubles.
Even with its large
company, its fine chorus and orchestra,
and its elaborate scenic productions, the
expenses of the establishment are undoubt-
edly much less than those which Maurice
Grau is compelled to meet here. Salaries
in Vienna are comparatively small, and the
entire cost of the season's artistic features
is on a much lower scale. The Emperor
grants to the management a subvention
of $120,000 and the use of the theatre.
Here the management of the opera gets
only the Metropolitan building. The ex-
penses of the opera amounted this year to
$520,000. The deficit at the Imperial Op-
era House this year amounted to $20,000,
which may not be a very large sum, but is
sufficient to indicate the difficulty, even in
a European capital of musical taste, in con-
ducting grand opera without loss. Another
experience of the theatre is similar to that
of the Metropolitan—the losses have come
from the production of new works which
the public would not patronize. The Im-
perial Theatre of Vienna, which has a big
subvention, reported this year a deficit of
$28,000.
There were, however, special
reasons for this large loss that do not al-
ways exist. But both the opera and the
theatre fail every year to cover their ex-
penses.
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
0
WHY THE OLD PREVAILS.
A correspondent inquires why it is that
concert programs, not only here, but else-
where, continue to present so much music
that is old and so little that is new. The
only answer appears to be that the old mu-
sic is more worth the hearing than is the
greater part of the new. A vast quantity
of music is written, but little of it lives;
there are many fine musicians, but few of
them write masterpieces. Countless sym-
phonies have been produced since the time
of Mendelssohn by composers eminent in
their art, but between the time of that
master and the present the especially no-
table works in the field of symphony, works
about which the future is likely to trouble
itself, may be counted on the fingers of
one hand. A return must always be made
to the old because the new gives no accept-
able equivalent for it. Brahms has pro-
duced works of this order that will prob-
ably survive, and Raff has composed one
or two, and Rubinstein one that, perhaps,
may linger through the ages, but the great
mass of symphonies that have been pro-
duced since Schumann and Mendelssohn
are destined to exist only in the libraries
of the collectors, and yet hundreds of ex-
cellent symphonies, perfect in workman-
ship, faultless in technique, admirable in
musicianship, have been written and
played, only to fall into obscurity after a
brief career. Knowledge does much, in-
vention does much, but it is now difficult
to find something new to say in symphony,
and more difficult still, after having found
it, to say it in a manner that shall cause it
to live. Not many years ago Spohr was a
name to conjure with. He wrote nine
great symphonies, but they have all disap-
peared. His fourth, "The Consecration of
Sound," is sometimes heard, but rarely.
His thirty-four string quartets have gone
in the same direction, and of his 154 works,
with opus numbers, scarcely one survives
vigorously. He is as much underrated now
as he was once overrated. Complainings
continually go forth from solo violinists of
the scarcity of violin concertos, but how
seldom do they take refuge in the seven-
teen compositions of this kind written by
this master of the violin?
The musical seasons are changing in Lon-
don. According to the Daily News: "The
spring and late autumn are becoming far
more important than the summer for the
higher class of concerts, and accordingly
the Philharmonic for the first time in its
history of nearly eighty-five years will give
performances in ^October and November.
This progressive policy will likewise show
how little there is left of that crusted con-
servatism which nearly wrecked the soci-
ety in 1883. The present directors have in
fact by liberal enterprise quite rejuvenated
this time-honored institution, which is now'
in the most flourishing condition."
o
Ysaye, the famous Belgian violinist, has
been engaged for a tour of the United
States during the coming winter. His
success two years ago was one of the most
notable ever achieved by an instrumen-
talist in this country.
So it is with concertos for the piano. Bee-
thoven is constantly played; Chopin sur-
vives, also Mendelssohn, weakly; Schu-
mann's one work in this kind lives, but of
the myriads of concertos for this instru-
ment, how few are heard, and how seldom !
Field lives in his nocturnes, but his seven
concertos have vanished. Ferdinand Reis,
a pupil of Beethoven, composed nine con-
certos. One of them in C sharp minor, and
another in E flat are not greatly inferior
to the works of the same order written by
his master, and yet they are no more.
Hummel's seven grand concertos, and some
really fine concertos byWoelfl, Dussek and
Moschelles have gone down among the
dead men.
It is almost appalling to reflect on the
merciless treatment to which time subjects
works that in their day bade fair to enjoy
immortality. How many names such as
DONIZETTI'S CENTENNIAL.
Admirers of Donizetti, one of the most
popular Italian dramatic composers, have
arranged to hold a Centennial celebration
in his honor in his native town, Bergamo,
Italy, next August. The Festival is of
especial interest inasmuch as Mme. Lillian
GAETANO DONIZETTI.
Blauvelt, as announced elsewhere, has been
engaged to participate.
Donizetti died about 1850. Of the sixty
or seventy operas which he composed eight
or ten have enjoyed a great popularity in the
opera loving cities of Europe and America.
" Lucrezia Borgia " and "Lucia di Lam-
mermoor " have been universally admired,
while the "Filledu Regiment," "Linda
di Chamounix," " Maria di Rohan,"
" Roberto Devereux " and several others
of his operas, besides the above named,
are all associated with the triumphs of the
great singers of the middle of the nine-
teenth century.
those of Kalliwoda, Lindpainter, who were
famous in their lives, are almost forgotten.
How much will posterity remember of the
Reineckes, the Bargiels, and the Volk-
mannsof ourtime, despite the accuracy and
the skill with which they have written?
Of all the vast number of admirable quar-
tets composed by Boccherini, only a min-
uet survives. In music, as in other things,
the law of the survival of the fittest pre-
vails, and yet it is not easy to concede that
all which has not survived is to be classed
with the unfittest. Something is to be at-
tributed to the change in musical fashion,
and yet though Gluck lives, it cannot be
said that Piccini has been justly doomed to
pass out of view.
Some one has said that music is to be
divided into "musickini, music and music-
issimus," and that the last alone has the
good fortune to pass down to posterity. All
which is discouraging to those who, with
the best intention in the world, backed even
by the most profound knowledge and per-
fect skill in manifesting it, can only achieve
"musickini" and music. Hence is it that
the foundation of our various concert pro-
grams must continue to be the compara-
tively few great works that have stood the
test of time and been acknowledged as the
masterpieces of musical art. It is noteasy
to write a great symphony, because all or
nearly all that a symphony can say has
been exhausted, and from the tendency of
modern art it does not appear that the pro-
duction of works in this class will become
any easier, notwithstanding the fact that
contemporary composers capable of writ-
ing a symphony are, as a rule, better
founded in the theory and practice of
counterpoint than was Beethoven, and are
more deeply grounded in a knowledge of
orchestral resources than was he. We have
perhaps our full share of finely educated
musicians, but we have fewer geniuses;
more of music that is perfunctory, but less
that is spontaneous.
©
A counterpart of Trilby has appeared in
the person of Mrs. Annie B. Gage of this
city, who has developed the faculty of be-
ing able to sing Italian and French songs
of "ye olden time" while in a hypnotic
state, although in her natural condition
she does not speak either language. It
seems that the hypnotic condition is
brought about by a certain chord in the
piano, when she claims to be under the in-
fluence of a great French vocalist—a favor-
ite of a century ago. The special gifts
with which Mrs. Gage is endowed devel-
oped about ten years ago. She has given
a number of exhibitions, but so far in pri-
vate.
©
Mile. Alice Verlet will not sail for Lon-
don until June 23, owing to numerous en-
gagements. Mr. Thrane announces that a
few desirable dates are still available in the
last week of June.
©
Almost two thousand tickets at $5.00
each were sold two weeks ago for this sum-
mer's Wagner performances at Bayreuth.

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