Music Trade Review

Issue: 1897 Vol. 25 N. 6

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
CROCHETS AND QUAVERS.
Dr. Hubert Parry has written an orches-
tral elegy on Johannes Brahms.
Miss Jessie Shay, the young American
pianiste, will return to America this
month.
An obelisk adorned with a medallion of
•Chopin has been erected at Retnerz, where
he gave his first concert.
There is some doubt whether Mile.
Chaminade's health will permit her to
come to this country next season.
A complete edition of the works of Liszt
will soon be published by The Associa-
tion of German Musicians.
Mascagni has a son eight years of age
now studying the violin in the Rossini
Academy of Pesaro. He will soon be
heard in public.
James P. Keough, secretary of the Mu-
sic Teachers' National Association, was
married on July 22. Miss R. Alice Killen,
the bride, is a well-known voice teacher.
Miss Celeste Cunningham, a former res-
ident of Columbia, S. C , has been appoint-
ed musical directress of one of the High
Schools of this city.
Ysaye, the eminent violinist, will open at
the Philharmonic Society of New York on
November 12 and 13, playing Brahms'con-
certo.
Mme. Nordica, who by the way has fully
recovered from her recent serious illness,
will receive $50,000 for forty concerts to
be given in the United States beginning
late in October.
Nicolini, perhaps now best known as the
husband of Mme. Patti, is suffering from a
complication of disorders of a serious nature
and although he may live for months, he
ma)' die at any time.
Victor Herbert and his Twenty-second
Regiment Band opened a month's engage-
ment at the Tennessee Centennial Exhibi-
tion on August 2. The band will after-
wards go on a tour until November.
William Armstrong, the distinguished
musical critic of Chicago, who recently
lectured in London on ' ' American Song
Composers," was well received, as also were
the compositions interpreted in the course
of his remarks.
An arrangement has been entered into
with the manager of the DeWolf Hopper
Co. to combine Sousa's band and the opera
for a six weeks tour beginning in April.
The double attraction will appear at
the Metropolitan Opera House for two
nights.
At the Annual Convention of the Illinois
Music Teachers held the early part of July,
in Kankakee, the following officers were
elected: President, John Thompson, Gales-
burg; vice-president, Allen Spencer, Chi-
cago; secretary and treasurer, C. W. Weeks,
Ottawa.
The annual entrance examinations of the
National Conservatory of Music will take
place as follows: Singing, Wednesday,
September 15; piano and organ, Thursday,
September 16; string instruments, wind
instruments and orchestra, Friday, Sep-
tember 17, and children's examination,
Saturday, September 18.
HISS THUDICHUn.
The original of this por-
trait, Miss Thudichum, a
distinguished soprano whose
magnificent voice has "turn-
ed the heads" of European
critics, will be one of the
galaxy of stars to appear
next season under Mr. Wolf-
s o h n ' s management. As
prima donna of the English
Opera Co., as in oratorio and
concert, she has attained en-
during fame. "MissThudi-
chum'sattractivenesslies not
more in the quality of her
voice," say the critics, "which
is in itself unusual in range
and charm, than in hei
splendid method of using it.
Her phrasing is admirable
and her voice is truly a won-
derful combination of sweet
ness and power."
Miss Thudichum on a re-
cent occasion in Glasgow
appeared in lieu of Mme.
Patti and achieved a most
brilliant artistic success.
ELECTRIC AID FOR SINGERS.
Electricity is now being used in Paris
for the purpose of strengthening the human
voice. Dr. Montier was the first to use it
in this way and his experiments in this line
are exceptionally interesting. He discov-
ered by mere chance that the vocal organs
could be benefited by the use of electricity,
and now he says, unhesitatingly, that there
is no greater boon for singers and all others
whose voices need to be strengthened than
franklinization, by which he simply means
the application of electricity. For tired or
weak voices it is especially the ideal tonic,
the "dynamogene" par excellence.
M. Granier, a member of the Paris Con-
servatory of Music, collaborated with Dr.
Montier in making his experiments, and
the result of their investigations was the
positive discovery that, while electricity
can benefit the human voice greatly, there
are certain limits beyond which it cannot
go. For example, in case of a lesion, it
can do no good. It cannot give speech to
the dumb, neither can it give new life to
vocal chords which are either broken or
utterly exhausted. It can do much but it
cannot resuscitate the dead. The physical
integrity of the organ is by no means all
that is required in the case of the human
voice, and especially of the singing voice,
which is a singularly delicate instrument,
and which if imperfect is of little use. The
slightest disturbance of the nervous system,
even though there be no apparent lesion, is
sufficient to spoil it, since in this way are
produced ailments which may be called
dynamic and in some cases immaterial.
Such troubles are usually the result either
of overwork or of violent emotions, or of
excesses of all kinds, or of that depression
which is produced by certain diseases such
as clorosis and neurasthenia. In all such
cases the singer, though he may not have
actually lost his voice, seems to have for-
gotten how to use it. The fact is he is un-
able to govern his breathing, and no one
who lacks power in this direction can hope
to sing properly. The singer who is unable
to control either the muscles of the chest
and throat or the sonorous vibrations of
the vocal chords, or the respiratory rhythm,
feels the same difficulty in singing that a
person suffering from locomotor ataxia
feels when he attempts to walk.
At this point electricity comes to the
rescue and in the simplest manner possible.
The patient seats himself on a stool with
glass feet, which is connected with the
negative pole of an electrical machine, and
while he is in that position the electricity
is administered in such a manner that his
throat feels the immediate effects of it.
This treatment lasts from ten to twenty-
five minutes, according to the impression-
ability of the patient. After twelve or fif-
teen seances of this treatment, which is
said to be delightful, sometimes even after
two or three seances, the voice is said to
recover all its scope and original power.
Almost always, too, it is said to receive a
new freshness and purity as a result of this
treatment. At the same time the sense of
weariness vanishes, the breathing becomes
more easy, more tractable and more ample,
and the passage from one register to the
other is made with more facility.
In a word, what Dr. Montier describes
is so thorough a transformation that per-
sons are now asking whether it will not
soon be possible to fashion entirely new
voices and even to give serviceable voices
to the deaf. Emile Gautier, too, asks in all
seriousness whether the hour may not be
close at hand when every lyric theatre will
have its electro-therapeutist, justas it has
its orchestra leader, who will be always on
duty and who will on demand be able to
furnish a new tenor or a new soprano.
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
HOW YSAYE HONORED ST. PATRICK.
On St. Patrick's day, 1894, five through
trains, bound both to the eastward and
westward of the Oregon Short Line of the
Union Pacific, were tied up at Glenns
Ferry, Ida. They had been caught be-
tween two serious washouts, one at
Pocatello and the other at Indian Creek,
three days before, and had to wait at
Glenns Ferry for track repairs along the
line before they could proceed. Glenns
Ferry is a bleak little railroad and sheep
herders' town of 300 or 400 inhabitants,
situate on a sagebrush bluff overlooking
the unspeakably dark and dreary Snake
river.
The five stalled trains carried 600
passengers of as miscellaneous a character
as could be gotten together at a carefully
selected congress of types. There were
immigrants and millionaires; soldierson the
move; dainty women in palace cars and wo-
men bound forCreede and Cripple Creek in
day coaches; miners who killed time during
the wait in shooting magpies circling over
the Snake river; Shoshone Indians travel-
ing to the limits of their reservation; well
behaved and quiet people, noisy and
tumultuous people. But all were stuck
alike, and they made the best of it.
Lines of social demarcation were for the
time erased. All hands mingled easily on
the little station platform and in the little
station waiting room. The supply of food
on the dining cars gave out the first day
of the hitch, and everybody was fed, and
well fed, too, in the station eating room.
They sat down at the tables in relays and
patiently awaited their turns.
The railroad employees and their wives
were to give a dance at the little town hall
in honor of St. Patrick's night. The
switchman who had been customarily
employed to fiddle for them had been
switched to another division. In a quan-
dary, the dance committee toured the
trains and station to ascertain if any of the
stalled passengers happened to be carrying
a violin and was capable of producing
music on it. In one of the sleeping cars
they came across an artistic looking man,
with very long hair, a seraphic, oleaginous
countenance and exceedingly baggy clothes.
They were looking for a fiddler, they said.
Did he know of any on the train? Well,
he didn't know (in outrageously bad Eng-
lish) ; he played a little himself once in
awhile, and had rather a fair fiddle with
him. The long haired man accented the
"fiddle" rather curiously. But the rail-
road men were overjoyed. Would he play
for them to dance with their wives and
sweethearts? Certainly! Did he know dance
music? Well, some.
All of the stalled passengers\vere invited
to the dance, and they all went. A good
many of them could not get in. The bag-
gily clothed fiddler turned up in good time.
The pianist was waiting for him. So was
the railroad dance committee, one of the
members of which slipped $3 in one dollar
bills into the fiddler's hand as payment in
advance for the evening's work. It was
smilingly accepted. The dance began.
The fireman's wife, who
played the piano, produced
an old bethumbed violin and
piano tune book and turned
to the lancers. She told the
fiddler, at the end of the first
dance, that he did pretty
well, only he went too fast.
Then there was a waltz.
The fiddler was informed by
his accompanist that he was
getting along finely, and
everybody in the room began
to pick up his ears at the
sweetness of the violin
music, although the dances
were common enough and
tawdry enough.
Another waltz—the "Beau-
tiful Blue Danube." All of
the dancers on the floor
stopped dead at the first bar,
and the travelers with culti-
vated musical ears moved
close to the piano. The
pianist ceased. She wished
to listen. The violin music
was miraculous. The player
swayed from side to side as
he phrased. He appeared to
be oblivious of his surround-
ings. He improvised varia-
tions of inspiring tenderness.
He out-Straussed Strauss.
His violin sang, throbbed
with passion. When the last
note died away, the people in the
hall appeared to be in a dream—all but
one.
"M. Ysaye," said Charley Fair, the son
of the late United States Senator Fair,
stepping from the throng, "won't you play
that lively, rattling thing you gave us at
the Bohemian club in San Francisco the
other night? It's been running in my
head ever since."
M. Ysaye played Berlioz's "Pizzicato"
as he perhaps never played it before.
CHAS W. CLARK.
WH
CHAS. W. CLARK.
Chas. W. Clark, one of our rising young
baritones, who has been studying with
Georg Henschel in London for the past
six months, has had a remarkable success
abroad. He appeared in Liverpool, Man-
chester and London, where his interpreta-
tion of Bach's Passion Music afforded such
satisfaction that he was re-engaged for the
same part next March. Mr. Clark will
return to this country the coming fall for
a short season—November to January.
We take pleasure in publishing a portrait
of the talented artist, for whom we predict
a hearty welcome.
Bemberg', the composer of "Elaine,"
Mme. Melba's opera, may visit this country
in the fall. If so he will conduct a perform -
ance of his opera comique "Le Baiser de
Suzanne" at the series of entertain-
ments to be given in the Astoria Hotel
this fall.
MEDICATED
ARSENIC
M-, (OMPLEXION S O A P
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COMPLKX1ON SOAP realizes the FAIREST COM-
PLEXION. It is admirably adapted to preserve the health
of the SKIN and SCALP of INFANTS and CHILDREN
and to prevent minor blemishes or inherited skin diseases
becoming chronic. As a shaving soap it is far superior to
any now on the market.
FOULD'S MEDICATED ARSENIC SOAP purifies and
invigorates the pores of the skin and imparts activity to the
oil glands and tubes, thus furnishing an outlet for unwhole-
some matter, which, if retained, would create PIMPLES,
BLACKHEADS, RASHES, and other complexional blem-
ishes. The gentle and continuous action on these natural
lubricators of the skin keeps the latter TRANSPARENT,
SOFT, FLEXIBLE and HEALTHY, and cures or pre-
vents KOU4-H. CRACKED, or SCALY SKIN, and
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blemishes known to science, whether on the FACE, NECK,
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THERE IS NO OTHER SOAP LIKE IT ON EARTH FOR
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TRY IT AND BE CONVINCED OF ITS WONDER-
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WE GUARANTEE EVERY CAKE WE SELL TO
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MONEY.
FOULD'S MEDICATED ARSENIC COMPLEXION
SOAP is sold by druggists in every city in the world. We
also send it by mail securely sealed on receipt of price, 50c.
When ordering by mail address
H. B. FOULD,
Room 3.
214 6th Ave., NEW YORK.

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