Music Trade Review

Issue: 1897 Vol. 25 N. 6

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
44 PAGES.
With which is Incorporated THE KEYNOTE.
VOL. XXV.
N o . 6.
Published Eyery Saturday at 3 East Fourteenth Street. New York, August 7,1897.
VERDI IN HIS OLD AGE.
This is the age of "grand old men,"
and Giuseppe Verdi is the grand old man
of music. At the age of four years above
four score Verdi is as bright mentally as
he was when he wrote " I I Trovatore,"
and if everything told about him be true
he is just as severe and uncompromising
as ever when he is wielding the baton.
They tell a story of him to illustrate
this trait. Not long ago he was con-
ducting an orchestra in a town in Italy.
The orchestra was a local one and each
of the players had his own ideas about
the importance of his own instrument
in concerted pieces. The drummer
had special notions concerning the
necessity that devolved upon him to
pound the sheep skin severely, to the
extent of drowning out the sound of
the other instruments.
Verdi's nerves suffered." Every vig-
orous thump caused his heart to bound
and his nerve centers to shrink.
Finally, unable to bear the strain,
the grand old man stopped the re-
hearsal.
"Give me that drum," he said in
peremptory tones, "and the sticks."
The frightened drummer gave up
the instrument.
"Now, go and seat yourself in the ;'i
parterre."
The drummer did as he was told.
But the maestro told him to go further
back. Then the orchestra was ordered
to resume the passage in which the
objectionable drumming occurred.
Verdi played the drum accompaniment
with a pretty little tap.
" Can you hear that ?"
" Yes, maestro."
Then the drummer was ordered up into
the first gallery, and Verdi continued his
gentle tapping. He again asked the drum-
mer if the tap was audible, and that per-
former was again forced to admit that it
was. Next Verdi sent him to the furthest
seat in the highest gallery, and tested his
capacity for hearing there. Of course, the
drummer saw the error of his ways, and
after that the master had no difficulty in
persuading the members of the orchestra to
play their parts as he desired them to.
Verdi will never permit any stranger to
be present while he is rehearsing. Indeed,
he will tolerate the presence of no one but
those who take part in the rehearsal. Once
when he was rehearsing "Falstaff" at La
Scala the great publisher, Sonzogno, wan-
dered into the theatre and sat down in the
parquet. The great leader's back was
turned, but he felt instinctively that some
GIUSEPPE
VERDI.
$3.00 PER YEAR.
SINGLE COPIES, 10 CENTS.
organist in Milan. His first work was a mus
ical drama, entitled "Oberto di San Boni-
fazio." The "Lombardi," the first of his
serious operas, made a strong impression in
Italy, and laid the foundation of his fame.
©
AN AIR "WITH A PAST."
An interesting history of an old ancP
well-known comic tune has been given
by a professor of music. He said that
when the army of the first Napoleon
was in Egypt in 1799 the camp for a
while was near the Pyramids.
One afternoon about sunset, the
band was playing. The inhabitants
of the desert had collected near, and
were listening to the music. Nothing
unusual happened until the band struck
up a tune which we now hear under the
name of "We won't go home till morn-
ing."
Instantly there was the wildest
demonstration of joy among the
Bedouins. They embraced each other,
and shouted and danced in the delirium
of their pleasure. The reason was
that they were listening to the favorite
and oldest tune of their people.
The professor states that the tune
had been taken to Europe from Africa
in the eleventh century by the Cru-
saders, and had lived separately in
both countries for over 700 years.
^•" This is certainly enough to make "We
won't go home till morning" a classic.
Its origin is more of a mystery than
the source of the Nile.
©
strange presence was in the place. With-
out turning he stopped the music and said
that somebody was in the parterre, and
asked who had opened the doors. Some
one explained who the great visitor was,
but Verdi would not resume the rehearsal
until he had left the house. Verdi has pe-
culiar ideas about matters of this kind. He
holds that a rehearsal is a purely private
consultation between himself and his or-
chestra, and that no one should be present
except those who are directly concerned.
When he upbraidsa performer for an error he
does not believe it should be done in public.
Verdi's life began among the lowly. His
father was an innkeeper at Rancala and
Giuseppe's first lessons were taken from an
A recent discovery in New Mexico is a
mysterious musical cavern. Sounds of an
orchestra playing "Nearer, My God, to
Thee," proceed from it. Hundreds of peo-
ple are said to have visited the place, but
fear and superstition have prevented an
examination to ascertain the real source of
the music.
0
The remains of Suppd, the composer of
"Boccaccio" and "Fatinitza," have been
transferred to a place in the musical corner
of the Viennese Cemetery, next to Her-
beck's grave, where a monument by the
sculptor Tautenhayn has been erected.
©
SenorManen, the young Spanish violinist,
will be heard in concert in New York the
coming season.
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
TELEPHONE NUMBER, 1745—EIGHTEENTH STREET.
The musical supplement to The Review is
published on the first Saturday of each month.
NOTED VIRTUOSOS COMING.
Four pianists of international repute,
two of whom haveneveryet appeared in this
country, will be heard in concert the com-
ing season. One of the most interesting of
the newcomers is M. Raoul Pugno, the
French pianist. In Paris he is compared
to Rubenstein, but as the French critics
are notoriously poor judges of piano play-
ing, M. Pugno's first audience in this coun-
try will be a curious one. He appeared
several years ago in London, and was there
received with much enthusiasm. He is
acknowledged to be a composer of more
than ordinary merit, his sonata in D minor
being an especially graceful and well writ-
ten work. Several years ago he was re-
ported to be at work on an opera, the
libretto of which was to be by Alphonse
Daudet. He has also written the music
for a number of pantomimes and ballets,
and is professor of harmony in the Con-
servatoire of Paris.
M. Pugno's principal rival in the piano
field will be MoritzRosenthal, who returns
to this country to finish the concert tour
that was so unfortunately interrupted by
his illness. He is Paderewski's "only
rival" and by a great many is believed to
be even greater than the blonde Pole. An-
other pianist, new to this country, is Siloti.
He has a big reputation in Europe and
made a hit last season in London. He was
one of Liszt's favorite pupils, having lived
in the house with the great pianist and
acted as his secretary for a number of
years. The group of pianists is completed
by Sieveking, with the steel fingers, whose
admirable work last season won him a
host of new friends and admirers.
pianists and violinists. Paderewski ap-
peals more to women than to men, and
d'Albert more to men than to women; Sara-
sate is particularly a feminine violinist,
whereas Joachim and Ysaye are not. In
order to disarm gathering indignation, I
may as well say that by masculine and
feminine I do not refer to the mere acci-
dent as to whether a human being is born
a man or a woman, but to the essential
cast of mind and temperament, and the
word woman is to be taken as applying to
many who go about the world in the guise
of manhood, and the word man to many
who speak to us in the voice of women and
angels."
0
OPERA FOR NEXT SEASON.
The Damrosch opera season will open in
Philadelphia on Nov. 29. C. A. Ellis, Mr.
Damrosch's business partner, who recently
arrived from abroad, said to a newspaper
correspondent that Mme. Melbamay arrive
in the United States early in November.
"We shall open the opera season soon after
she arrives," said Mr. Ellis. "After the
season closes in London she will go to
Bergamo to take part in the Donizetti cen-
tenary in the latter part of August and the
first of September. Then she will return
to England, where, in October, she will go
on a concert tour of three weeks.
"Alvarez has not been engaged, but I
think that we have a tenor who is destined
to create a sensation here. His name is
Ibos. He has sung in Paris, although he
does not come directly from there. For
the last two seasons he has been in Madrid.
He is a young man, I should say about
thirty-two, and a fine dramatic singer.
Bimboni will share the conductor's desk
with Mr. Damrosch. Mr. Damrosch will
conduct the German opera. We have
twenty operas in our repertoire, and Melba
may appear in a number of new roles.
We have engaged the Metropolitan Opera
House for our season. Mr. Grau told me
in London that there was to be no opera
there during the season."
0
Clarence Eddy, the famous organist of
Chicago, who recently gave a recital at the
Trocadero in Paris, has been warmly com-
©
plimented by Parisian organists and musi-
MASCULINE AND FEniNINE IN MUSIC.
cians. His program on the occasion em-
Roughly, one can divide composers into braced all schools.
two classes: that which appeals to men,
©
and that which appeals to women. Among
THE PIANO ACCOHPANIST.
the first a writer in a London paper puts
Few listeners have any adequate com-
Brahms, Bach, Beethoven, Wagner, and prehension of the arduous and responsi-
•Schumann, and among the second, Men- ble duties devolving upon the person who
delssohn, Grieg, and Chopin. Some com- is modestly placed as accompanist. The
posers appeal to both men and women, as requirements of an accompanist are numer-
Wagner. He says: " I am not at all sure ous and varied and demand a much greater
that women really care for what is best in amount of attention and study than is
his music. They like his emotion, but generally supposed or than the exponent
do they admire his solidity, the richly of the art of accompanying is credited with
embroidered purple of his harmony, the giving. A distinguished writer and an
wondrous web of his polyphony, the sombre authority says he must be a quick and ac-
emphasis of his declamation? All women curate reader, able to readily grasp the
like Chopin, on the other hand, just as intention of the composer as in progress
very few women really care for Beethoven the ideas of the composition are unfolded.
unless they be educated musicians—for To this end the phrasing must be correct,
education balances the influence of sex. and the quality of the touch employed
Then there are masculine and feminine must be such as will produce the tone re-
quired to properly represent the sentiment
expressed by the composer.
While having a fairly decided conception
of his own, he must be prepared to absorb
the conception felt by the soloist, and so
mold his own ideas that they blend with
those of the soloist and form a complete
and well developed background to the
musical picture of which the solo is the cen-
tral figure. In carrying out this design
great care is necessary, so that the soloist
receives just the proper amount of support.
The accompaniment should not force or
override the solo; neither must it be of that
dragging character which causes the singer
to feel as if pulling a heavy burden up a
steep incline. To preserve this "happy
medium " is the crucial test of a true ac-
companist, and the possession of such abil-
ity may well condone the lack of some other
traits. For the time being soloist and ac-
companist should be as one. To accomplish
this desirable result the player should have
as complete knowledge of the composition
as the singer.
While he must be a correct timist, it is
necessary to possess that flexibility of
temperament that will enable him to flow
along with the principal through bars of
ever changing value,'irrespective of what
the time signature may be. Of course he
must be able to transpose to meet the re-
quirements of pianos of incorrect pitch or
the effect of the weather upon the voice of
the soloist.
MUSIC IN THE PARKS.
The quality of the programs furnished
by the bands in the different city parks
during the summer is a perennial subject
for discussion. We notice that the daily
papers contain the usual quota of letters
complaining of the prevalence of musical
twaddle, and the absence of classical music,
which a number of well meaning and in-
telligent citizens consider essential to the
"elevation of the masses."
It seems to us that it is between the so-
ealled "twaddle" and the ^"classics"—the
happy medium—that the bandmaster can
find the correct "prescription" or program
to effect the necessary "elevation" and to
please the public.
Up to recent date—and we say "recent
date" advisedly, for Neyer's Sunday pro-
gram in Central Park is a big improvement
over that of his predecessor's—many band-
masters apparently overlooked, as they do
to-day, that in order to be "popular" it is
not necessary to descend to vulgarity.
There is not a musician of note in the world
who would dare to raise his voice against
music that is essentially popular. Beeth-
oven founded his great symphonies upon a
simple melody. But there is a great gulf
fixed between the music that has left its
impress upon the heart of a generation of
workers, and the mawkish strains that
catch the ear only to be forgotten in the
craze for some new melodic monstrosity.
Some time ago Walter Damrosch speak-
ing on this subject said, "I do not object to
popular music, and it would be absurd to

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