Music Trade Review

Issue: 1897 Vol. 25 N. 23

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
tion to good meals. The nose of a singer
is kept in a healthy condition by being
constantly needed for breathing purposes,
the injurious mouth breathing so much in-
dulged in by others being impossible in
this case. That the ear, too, is cultivated,
need not be added. In short, there is
hardly any kind of gymnastics that exer-
TELEPHONE NUMBER, 1745.-EIQHTEENTH STREET.
cises and benefits so many organs as sing-
The musical supplement to The Review is
ing does.
published on the first Saturday of each month.
OPERA THIS SEASON.
The plans for an operatic season at the
Metropolitan Opera House have been per-
fected by Walter Damrosch and Charles H.
Ellis. The season will cover a period of
five weeks and include twenty perform-
ances in Italian, German and French.
The company will include the following
artists: Sopranos and contraltos—Mmes.
Melba, Nordica, Gadski, Barna, Seygard,
Toronta, Staudigl, Mattfeld and Van Cau-
teren. Tenors—Messrs. Ibos, Rothmuhl,
Salignac, Van Hoose, Vanni and Kraus.
Baritones and bassos—Messrs. Bispham,
Campanari, Boudouresque, Staudigl, Steh-
mann, Rains, Viviani and Fischer.
This will be the first appearance in
America of Mme. Barna and Mile. Toronta,
both of American birth. M. Ibos is the
leading tenor of France and he will make
his American debut early in January as
will also M. Boudouresque, the French
basso.
Performances will begin on January 17
and be given every Monday, Wednesday
and Saturday afternoons. The twenty per-
formances will be about equally divided
between the French and Italian operas and
the German.
©
IN SINGING IS HEALTH.
Singers exercise their lungs more than
other people, and therefore have the strong-
est and soundest lungs, says Dr. Barth in a
recent contribution on "Laryngology."
The average man takes into his lungs 3,200
cubic centimeters of air at a breath, while
professional singers take in 4,000 to 5,000.
The tenor Gunz was able to.fill his lungs at
one gasp with air enough to suffice for the
singing of the whole of Schumann's song,
" T h e Rose, The Lily," and one of the old
Italian sopranists was able to trill up and
down the chromatic scale two octaves in
one breath.
A singer not only supplies his lungs with
more oxygen than other persons do, but he
snbjects the muscles of his breathing ap-
paratus to a course of most beneficial gym-
nastics. Almost all the muscles of the
neck and chest are involved in these gym-
nastics. The habit of deep breathing cul-
tivated by singers enlarges the chest capa-
city and gives to singers that erect and
imposing attitude which is so desirable
and so much admired. The ribs, too, are
rendered more elastic, and singers do not,
in old age, suffer from the breathing diffi-
culties to which others are so much sub-
ject. By exercising so many muscles, sing-
ing furthermore improves the appetite,
most vocalists being noted for their inclina-
O
HUSICAL GENIUS NO SPECIAL GIFT.
There is no special thing that we can
call genius; it is simply that a man is en-
dowed with a quicker and heavier brain
than the common; that his nervous system
is quick to feel. It is generally supposed
that a scientific man is the antithesis of an
artist or musician, but there is no real
reason for thinking so. The scientist feels
the same glow in hunting down a shadowy
fact as the musician feels in creating music.
There is the same abnormal quickness of
brain, and the same emotion. Only the
aptitudes of the musician and scientists
are different, and so their mental energy
works in different fields. The quickness
and powerful concentration of thought of a
Napoleon would have made a musical
genius of him if he had only possessed the
requisite sensitiveness of brain to sound,
the capability of mentally grasping sound
(which is what we call an ear for music).
The fact that the older musicians such as
Beethoven and Mozart seemed to have been
wrapped up entirely in their music is no
proof that musical genius is a special gift;
because in those days a musician had not
the modern advantages of education, and
genius without education is nearly help-
less. The history of music shows, on the
contrary, that a musical genius is a genius
in other directions. Berlioz had great
literary gifts, so had Schumann, so had
Wagner, so, too, had Mendelssohn, judging
by his letters.
be readily grasped by imitating the popu-
larity of others who have won success by
giving free scope to their own marked in-
dividualities. Hence is it that so much of
our home-made comic opera has a strong
second-hand aspect. Often he makes a
bolt in the direction of Arthur Sullivan;
but as the charm of that delightful melodist
lies in the graceful flow and spontaneous
naturalness of his tunes rather than in
choppy, ear-tickling rhythms, imitation is
trying and rarely successful; hence the
native composer has recourse to the less
exacting copying of the dance and march
music of Viennese composers, and the con-
sequences are that the score of one native
opera bears a wearisome and exasperating
resemblance to that of another, and that
home musical invention puts on the ap-
pearance of exhaustion."
0
WHAT TWO GREAT SINGERS SAY.
Mme. Marcella Sembrich, the great col-
orature singer, in a recent talk, advised
American girls to stick closely to old-
fashioned methods. This means that the
course of developments laid down by the
Italian school of singing is to be strictly
followed by no excursions into more violent
and thunderous spheres of harmony. She
points to Patti—the greatest singer alive
to-day—whose success has been won strict-
ly along what are called old-fashioned
lines.
Frau Julie Kopacsy, Hungary's greatest
opera-comedy artist, says: " The American
girl who wants to be a prima donna should
assure herself—first, that she has a voice;
second, that she has the talent necessary
for using it effectively; and third, that she
has industry. And the greatest of these is
industry, for the genius of a singer is pre-
eminently the capacity for taking infinite
pains."
Talking of failures and successes in the
vocal field, Frau Kopacsy says: " Of course
©
nine out of ten girls will fail; the nine
THE CURSE OF POPULARITY SEEKING.
failures can be accomplished quite as grace-
Some sensible remarks anent comic fully at home, and the successful girl will
opera were recently made by B. E. Woolf, succeed anywhere. It is absurd to fancy
the well-known critic of Boston. In his that European study is necessary."
opinion a pall seems to have settled on this
©
innately delightful species of entertain-
CALVE'S SUCCESS IN "SAPHO."
ment. The artistic element that was so
Jules Massenet's opera "Sapho," which
prominent in the operas of Offenbach,
is founded on Alphonse Daudet's novel of
Lecocq, Audran, and Sullivan is wholly
that name, was produced at the Ope"ra
lacking, especially in the scores of our na-
Comique, Paris, Nov. 27. Mme. Calve"
tive producers of comic opera; and as for
appeared as Sapho and sang the part mag-
the librettos, they are so silly in subject, so nificently. It was due to her that the
weak in treatment, and so flabby in humor production was a great success. The plot
that they are not worth considering in a of the novel was greatly altered to meet
spirit of serious criticism.
the exigencies of an opera. The music
"The native comic opera composer is was graceful.
not much better off," says Mr. Woolf. "He
©
has not yet gained the courage of his con-
THE MUSICAL MONARCH.
victions, if he have any, and is content to
" You are young, Kaiser William." the old man
go on his way as a plagiarist—if not liter-
said,
ally, yet in essence; and, unfortunately,
" And your knowledge of music is nil,
what he copies are invariably the vulgar- And yet you conducted an ode that you made—
ities and not the refinements of his origi-
What gave you this wonderful skill ?"
nals. Should he be possessed of musical -* In my childhood," the Kaiser replied, with a
smile,
individuality he resolutely stifles it and
41
My own little trumpet I'd blow,
seeks popularity, not the popularity that is And as I continue the practice, I style
difficult of achievement, but that which can
Myself a musician, you know."
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
HELODY, THE TRUE FORH.
The secret contained in music is melody.
Let it be ever so complex, as to demand
the greatest technical skill and it be devoid
of melody, that which appeals to the many,
to the best of our senses, and the work will
pass devoid of any lasting purpose.
It is not necessary to divorce technic
from melody or the latter from the former.
They may stand together, and when they
do, the technic, which is the least appre-
ciated, except by the student or the musi-
cal adept, is the more readily understood.
The one is, in a measure, as necessary as
the other, but there are composers who
mass technic in such form as to make
beauty utterly impossible of appearance,
and to make it appreciable would require
the skill of a master, such as there are few
who exist.
There are many composers and musi-
cians of the present time who cry out
against the predominance of the melodic,
of that in music which most easily and
quickly touches in the listener a responsive
chord. These are apt to run to the ex-
tremes in technic and in so doing offer
nothing that is pleasing, nothing that is
satisfying to the lovers of good musical
form and expression, and, when the truth
is told, is of little more than interest to
the musical student and scholar.
Melody is music's true form. Nature
asserts this and man has never been able
to supplant her. Walk, and in walking
listen, in any of Nature's spacious courts,
and learn how true this is. The music
may be complex, hundreds of instruments
may contribute to the total result, which,
invariably, will result in a melody fault-
less in character.
"Wagner approached near to Nature's
forms, others who have come after him, or
lived contemporaneous, have done the
same," says an authority, but there are
other avenues which, as yet, have not been
discovered. The music which will live is
that based on melody, not that depending
on technic alone. The technical and the
melodic must stand together, when they
do music will serve the double purpose of
satisfying the pedantic and the lover of
music, because of the pleasure and charm
emanating from it.
It being a fact that melody is of great
importance, if music is to meet the best
ends it may be directed to, composers
should see to it that technic does not hide,
and the performer should be careful not to
cover melody with the same.
o
Mme. Patti never sings now for less than
$4,000. Mme. Melba's fee for a private
performance at the opera or a private en-
gagement at an " a t home" is $1,750.
Jean de Reszke is the only operatic artist
who refuses to take private engagements.
His brother Edouard gets $500, while
Paderewski and Sarasate, who are open to
private engagements, get from $1,500 to
$1,750. As long as they can maintain these
prices there is no necessity for them to
join a trust or labor union.
AflERICA'S FOREMOST COMPOSER.
'Edward MacDowell, whose portrait is
here presented, is America's foremost com-
poser and one of the most talented of na-
tive pianists. He was born December 18,
1861, in this city, and began early the
study of the piano, at one time being a
pupil of Teresa Carreno. He went to Paris
in 1876 and was admitted to the conserva-
tory in 1877, studying piano while there
under Marmontel,and theory under Savard.
In 1879 he went to Wiesbaden and studied
for a time with Louis Ehlert, thence to
Frankfort-on-the-Main, where he enjoyed
the privilege of studying composition with
Joachim Raff and piano with Carl Hey-
man, the celebrated pianist. In 1881, at
Raff's recommendation, Mr. MacDowell
accepted the position of first piano teacher
at the Darmstadt Conservatory. In 1882
he went to Weimar to play his composi-
tions for Liszt, who became so much inter-
ested in the young American that he had
him play at the convention of the AUge-
meiner Deutscher Musik Verein, in Zurich,
his (MacDowell's) first suite for piano, op.
10, which met with great success. After
considerable successful concertizing, Mr.
MacDowell in 1884 took up hisresidence in
Wiesbaden, composing and giving piano
and composition lessons. He returned to
America in the autumn of J888 and is now
a resident of New York. The latest-recog-
nition of MacDowell's genius was the be-
stowal on him of the professorship of music
at Columbia University of New York. In
1896 Princeton conferred upon him the de-
gree of Doctor of Music—the only one ever
given by that University. He was elected
director of the celebrated Mendelssohn
Glee Club of New York, which position he
still holds.
Mr. MacDowell's works have been re-
ceived with great favor in Europe, orches-
tral compositions by him having been
played in St. Petersburg, Amsterdam,
Paris, Berlin, Dresden, Leip-
zig, Vienna, Frankfort, Wies-
baden, Darmstadt, Sonder-
shausen, Cologne, Baden-Bad-
en, Breslau, etc. In the last
named city one of his works
was repeated three times in one
season, certainly an unprece-
dented
occurrence,
which
speaks for his success as a com-
poser better than words. As an
orchestral writer Mr. MacDow-
ell's position among the best
contemporary composers is as-
sured. The Leipzig Musikal-
isches Wochenblatt, in criticis-
ing a concert in which one of
his works was given, says:
"This is most interesting mu-
sic, full of poetic feeling, which,
thanks to its wonderful Stim-
mung, made a deep and lasting
impression."
On another oc-
casion the same paper says:
"This music, with its aston-
ishing power of expression, can
be placed boldlybeside the most
celebrated works of its kind by
Berlioz." The Music Review says: " I n
this author (MacDowell) America possesses
a master of orchestral coloring second to
no living author," and Mr. Anton Seidl, in
the Forum, expressed his personal prefer-
ence for MacDowell's works to those of
Brahms. Asa composer of piano and vocal
music Mr. MacDowell has met with no
less success. His piano works have been
widely played, both in Europe and America,
by many of the most celebrated pianists.
In one of the last Paris Exposition con-
certs Mr. MacDowell played his second
piano concerto, winning general recogni-
tion, Massenet being specially enthusiastic.
One of Mr. MacDowell's recent composi-
tions, an Indian suite, a work of national
characteristics, has commanded the un-
stinted praise of leading critics.
©
If certain plans, at present under con-
sideration, materialize, the Seventh Regi-
ment Band of this city may visit Paris in
1900. With Sousa leading the way it will
he, an fait for all the leading musical or-
ganizations to educate our "cousins"
across the big pond.
I
ANTON SEIDL,
Conductor.
DATES OF CONCERTS:
December 7,1897,8 30 P. M. (Scharwenka)
January 4, 1898, 3 P.M. (vScharwenka)
February 1, 1898, 8 30 P. M. (Rummel)
March 1, 1898, 3 P M (Rummel)
April 5, 1898, 3 P. M. (Scharwenka)
FRANZ RUnMEL, XAVER SCHARWENKA AND RICHARD HOFFnAN WILL PLAY THE CHICKER1NQ PIANO.
C/-AI B nc DDircc . ' Admission,
Balcony Reserved.
Orchestra,
Course Tickets,
SCALE OF PRICES. ,- g o Cents.
$1.00.
$..50.
$s and *7-5O.
Franz Rummel will give an Afternoon Recital at 3 o'clock, February 8, 1898.

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