Music Trade Review

Issue: 1897 Vol. 25 N. 19

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48 PAGES.
HIE
With which is Incorporated THE KEYNOTE.
VOL. XXV.
N o . 19.
siNG&°°copiEs, E it CENTS.
Published Every Saturday, at 3 East Fourteenth Street. New York, November 6,1897.
PROQRAJl nUSIC DISCUSSED.
I once read somewhere an ingenious
defence of program music. The plea put
forward was that it is not worse for a com-
poser to give you a printed description of
what he means to express, than it is for a
painter to give a long description of his
picture in a catalogue; and it was also
pointed out that many pictures would be
quite unintelligible if they lacked an ex-
planatory title. That sounds very plausible,
says Edward Baughan in Music (London),
but, to begin with, though a painter should
not require a long printed description to
explain his picture, it is not as the com-
poser's program, inasmuch as, descrip-
tion or no description, a picture actually
presents the outward semblance of life,
whereas music cannot,and does not. So that
in the one case,the description is merely ex-
planatory, but in the other, is an arbitrary
labeling of certain musical phrases. The
mistake the modern program composer has
made is that he has not confined his music to
the description of feeling,but has attempted
to illustrate material events and actions,
which, as a rule, are outside the power of
music to express. Most of us believe that
music had its origin in the desire to ex-
press emotion, though there are those who
hold that it originated in a wish to con-
struct patterns of musical sound. I well
remember arguing the point with a well-
known musical critic at Covent Garden,
and he, the better to convince me, drew
some hieroglyphics on the nice clean
wall with a very black lead-pencil, much
to the disgust of one of the atten-
dants. The hieroglyphics did not con-
vince me, and I still believe that music
had its origin in the desire to express feel-
ing.
If you hold with that critic why you
must admit the art has been developing
since Beethoven on quite the wrong lines,
whereas if you are of my opinion you will
agree that the expression of feeling must
be its aim, if the art is to remain a form of
human utterance. And that is all the
program I demand. That the composer
should express feeling, either his own or
what he may imagine someone else would
feel, as the song-writer has to do, for in-
stance. But the "tone-fools" want to do
more than this, and by their absurdities
they are bringing about a reaction which
will stop the growth of the popularity of
the art. For if our musicians, in disgust,
go back to the beautiful pattern-music of
Mozart and express nothing but music, the
art will lose its hold on the public and will
only attract cultivated musicians. It is
precisely because modern music (especially
Wagner's) is human and expresses feeling
that our musical audiences have increased
so much of late. The days when the man
in the street was frightened of music be-
cause he did not understand it are passing
away, and he is gradually learning that
Beethoven was not a dry, scientific musi-
cian, but, in most of his compositions, a
tone-poet. The man in the street could be
made to see Bach in the same light, too.
o
11LLE. RACHEL HOFFttANN.
The young Bel-
gian pianist, Mile.
Hoffman, who is to
tour America this
winter, is one of the
y o u n g e s t of the
world's brilliant pi-
anists, and hereto-
fore in Europe, and
particularly in her
own country, has
carried enthusiasm and success with her,
eliciting the highest praise.
Mile. Hoffmann is a pupil of the famous
Conservatory of Music at Brussels, and
from her entrance at the age of eleven
years, attracted general notice because of
her markedly artistic nature. In 1889
August Dupont, the late great professor
of the piano, presented his pupil, Rachel
Hoffmann, to the Concours and the young
pianist not only carried off the first prize,
but by her playing awoke such enthusi-
asm, in both the jury and the public, as to
cause the same to be recorded as a "musi-
cal furore" by the Belgian journals. Mile.
Hoffmann won afterwards five more first
prizes and competed with the greatest suc-
cess for the "Grand Diploma de Capacite,"
the highest award that the Conservatory of
Brussels can give. On this occasion she
was decorated by the King of Belgium
with the Gold Medal of Leopold II.
Mile. Hoffmann, who is only twenty-
three years old and of a decidedly prepos-
sessing appearance, will be heard in a very
extensive and well selected repertory, in-
cluding the Concerto in F minor by
Dupont, of whom Mile. Hoffmann was the
preferred pupil. This interesting work,
very brilliant and full of poetry, receives
but infrequent revivals,
o
GRAND OPERA PLANS.
Regarding his plans for grand opera dur-
ing the season of 1898-9, Maurice Grau, who
returned from Europe for a brief stay on
Saturday last, said he had not definitely
outlined any plans as yet, but had many
elaborate ideas in mind. "I am in
hopes," he said, "of giving as great, if not
a greater, season than ever known before
in the history of this country. I have done
considerable traveling in many parts of
Europe in search of some new operas since
I left here, thinking it might be possible
to secure a novelty suitable for the Metro-
politan Opera House, but it must be said
out of the seventeen operas I heard in fif-
teen days not one would suit the public
here. On my return to Europe I will make
another effort, by going through France,
Italy, and Germany."
Mr. Grau was most emphatic in saying
that the season would be divided as hereto-
fore between German, French and Italian
opera. There will be no special season of
Wagner. "Parsifal" will not be given, and
arriving at this decision Mr. Grau appreci-
ates that the surroundings of the Metro-
politan are not adapted to this opera. Van
Dyck has been engaged and will relieve
Jean de Reszke of some of his labors.
Melba and Calve will also be with the com-
pany. The production of "Sappho" is the
only novelty Mr. Grau is prepared to an-
nounce.
©
One of the London "stores" has on its
price list a "composer" who can be hired
at two guineas a night. Military bands,
too, are on the list, numbering from ten to
forty performers, at $5 to $10 a man. The
system of appealing for private engage-
ments is due to the fact that English army
bands are maintained chiefly at the cost of
the regimental officers, the government pay
and allowances being absurdly inadequate.
Were not the players allowed to accept pri-
vate work, the already heavy contributions
of the officers to the band fund would be
enormously increased.
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
the changes in the thought or the action of
the poetry. Then, too, nature's aspects
and changes find glorious expression.
Schubert's songs are among the finest ex-
amples of what is called descriptive music.
His tone-painting, his coloring, is both
wonderful and varied. There are magnifi-
cent
contrasts, not only between the dif-
TELEPHONE NUMBER, 1745.—EIGHTEENTH STREET.
ferent songs, but often between the indi-
The musical supplement to The Review is vidual parts of the same song.
published on the first Saturday of each month.
OPERA IN THE VERNACULAR.
Dudley Buck does not agree with those
musical critics who demand that operas
should be sung in the language in which
they are written. "New York City, for
instance, is cosmopolitan," says Mr. Buck,
''and agrand operaaudience generally com-
prises speakers of all the great languages
and some of the lesser. To such persons,
familiar with the work in their native
tongue, a rendering in English would
doubtless, at first hearing, sound more or
less befremdend, as the Germans say—
foreign—and that in an unpleasantly sur-
prising sense. But the German does not
complain of Gounod's "Faust" in German,
nor the Frenchman of the text of Wagner's
operas when given in French. On the con-
trary, they demand it. Minor drawbacks
are more than counterbalanced by the
greater pleasure and comprehension of the
majority. Would we say that the works of
a Dante, Goethe, Victor Hugo, and a host
of others shall remain sealed books with-
out translation because, forsooth, there are
a relative few who can read them in their
originals? "
o
SCHUBERT, THE HEISTER-SINGER.
Before Schubert, the song, in spite of its
beauty, was, with very few exceptions,
limited in range; the accompaniments were
for the most part of the simplest descrip-
tion or were not an integral part of the
whole, while the general structure was
lacking in dramatic fitness, in harmony
with the demands of the words. Schubert
appropriated that which was best in the
national song, elaborated it, idealized it,
made it over into a fairer, sweeter, larger
form.
Entering with the strength and passion
of a true poet into the meaning of the
poetry he chose to set, feeling with the
mood of the poet, thrilled by the same
•emotion, he reproduced it with vivid and
striking power in his music—the vocal
parts being intensified by peculiarly rich
and highly developed accompaniments.
We are again confronted by the difficulty
of definition. But one secret of Schubert's
power in the song, writes Kenyon West, is
that he seems to have a musical expression
for every kind and variety of emotion
of which the human heart is capable.
Beautiful melodies, frequent and unex-
pected modulations, even occasional dis-
cords, form his means of expression. He
so entered into the spirit of the poems of
Goethe and other poets that he seized at
once, by divine intuition, the most charac-
teristic and fitting music for them. With
glorious freedom and insight he followed
0
THE ENCORE NUISANCE.
" The encore fiend is as rampant as ever
this season, and there isn't a comic opera,
musical comedy or concert which he doesn't
attend and demand double his money's
worth in a call for the repetition of every
musical number as it comes along," says a
writer to the Herald. Isn't it peculiar
that this gentleman confines himself to
music? He does not disport himself in
this fashion at dramatic performances. He
doesn't insist that a scene shall be played
over again because he happens to like it.
When the villain falls dead in a heap, he
doesn't ask him to rise and fall dead once
more. But let the villain of the musical
stage warble his taking off in song, and the
encore fiend roars for him to do it all over
again.
This encore habit has grown to be a
positive nuisance, especially on first nights
of comic opera, when the repetition of
solos, duos and choruses practically doubles
the score and drags out to weary lengths
what might have been a brisk and lively
performance. If managers, composers and
actors are wise they will stop it by a very
simple remedy—a rule of the house for-
bidding encores. If the people are so
anxious to have this or that number re-
peated, why there is the box office; let them
buy tickets for another night. That is the
place for encores. There's money in the
idea for the house—and rest for the wearied
ones among the audience.
o
AflERICAN AND EUROPEAN ORCHESTRAS
COriPARED.
The United States has made phenom-
enal advances in musical culture during
the past ten years. This is quite appar-
ent to all who have given the subject any
attention, but it secures additional em-
phasis when the views of a man like Aug.
Hyllested, the eminent Dutch pianist, are
considered.
For the past three years he has been over
in Europe, and he has made a study of
orchestras in that country as compared
with the United States, and on his return
he gives it as his opinion that there is a
higher development in the matter of music
in this country than in the old world.
" In Europe they have been standing
still musically, while in the United States
greatprogress is being made in musicalcul-
ture," said Mr. Hyllested recently. "We
have more great and extremely artistic
events here than they do, and I think we
can get along very well without so much
-of the commonplace music that is almost
annoying in some parts of Europe."
When asked in what particulars this
musical superiority consisted, Mr. Hyl-
lested said:
"There are no grand orchestras in
Europe equal to two or three in this coun-
try. There is no doubt in my mind on
this point. Some of the German orches-
tras are equally large, but they lack the
finish and perfection to which we are ac-
customed in the work of the Chicago or-
chestra or of the Boston Symphony Or-
chestra. Their orchestras are cheaper and
do not contain so many picked men, and
to a very considerable extent their instru-
ments are inferior. This is particularly
true of the wood winds, which are often
very deficient in tone and seldom harmonize
acceptably. The strings are much better,
but the general effect of the orchestral work
that I heard in Europe is noisy rather than
refined. The one exception to this rule that
I can recall is furnished by the Grand Opera
orchestra of Paris. I had the pleasure of
hearing this band both in opera and in
symphony programs, and was very much
impressed by the delicacy and finish of its
efforts. At the same time it lacked force
and was weak in the strong explosive
passages. You know that grace and de-
licacy are peculiarities [of all French art
work, and they frequently sacrifice strength
to finish. In most of the continental or-
chestras I discovered noise enough but
very little delicacy of expression, and it is
for this reason that I place the American
orchestra in the front rank. They give us
a much wider range of artistic effect, and
not only excel in grand crashes, but in the
most delicate forms of musical expression.
Aside from a few exceptional solo artists,
we are also better provided in this depart-
ment that they are, and when we do have
grand opera companies they are more
complete and splendid in talent than our
European friends are accustomed to."
© .
AMERICAN SINGERS IN OPERA.
The success of the secondary season of
the Carl Rosa company in grand opera at
Covent Garden, London, which was closed
last week, may point a moral for the oper-
atic magnates of New York and the other
American cities. When the Carl Rosa
company proposed to lease the Covent
Garden house, all the musical wiseacres
predicted disaster. They argued that no
lesser artists could follow the De Reszkes,
Melba, Eames, Bispham et al., with the
expectation of attracting people to hear
them in profitable numbers. The Carl
Rosa management gathered a coterie of
singers especially for London. No great
stars were engaged, but artists, most of
them young and ambitious to make names.
The management fixed the seats at the pre-
vailing prices of London theatres, which
are about fifty per cent, of grand opera
rates. There have been no fashionable
audiences, but the season has demonstrated
that the masses are eager to hear grand
opera when it is brought within the reach
of their purses.
The most important positions in the
company have been filled by a group of
young American singers, Alice Esty,

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