Music Trade Review

Issue: 1898 Vol. 26 N. 10

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
same ease as Campanini. He sang Vasco di
Gama in Meyerbeer's "L'Africaine" for the
first time at the Academy of Music in this
city and the afternoon of the day before the
performance he did not know a note of the
third act. At the performance the next night
he sang the role so perfectly as to excite en-
thusiasm.
Herr Stehmann, of the Damrosch-Ellis
Opera Co., is noted for several remarkable
feats of memorizing. Called upon this season
to sing the Wanderer in "Siegfried" at short
notice, he learned the part in eight hours.
Last season he performed a truly extraor-
dinary feat. Herr Kraus was to have sung
the leading role in Scharwenka's "Matas-
wintha." Twenty-four hours before the per-
formance it was found that he was too ill to
attempt the part. Herr Stehmann, who had
never seen it, went through the final re-
hearsal score in hand, but by the time for the
performance the next evening he had memor-
ized words and music.
Mr. Bispham, considering that he has been
only six years on the stage, has memorized a
large operatic repertoire and knows so many
songs that he has to keep a list of them in a
book.
Plunket Greene, who sings several hundred
songs from memory, has a peculiar reason for
never singing from note.
His audiences
have often noticed that he seems afflicted
with nervousness, and have wondered that
so experienced a singer should show so much
trepidation. This nervous affection is due to
an accident he met with when a boy. While
skating he fell and struck the back of his
head on the ice. His nerves have never re-
covered from the shock. Were he to sing
from notes the tremor of his hands would
cause the music to shake so that the effect of
his fine singing would be sadly marred. But
of all concert singers the Henschels have the
most remarkable repertoire. They sing hun-
dreds of songs from memory, and Mr.
Henschel plays the accompaniments to all of
them without the music before him.
The famous pianists and conductors have
furnished many instances of remarkable
memory. Among modern musicians none
has approached the achievements of Dr.
Hans von Biilow and Rubinstein. It has
been said that these two musical giants, if
every note of music which was worth preserv-
ing had been destroyed, could between them
have reproduced every line of it.
Von Biilow often conducted entire concert
programs without score and led even Wagner
music-dramas from memory. He had memo-
rized all the sonatas of Beethoven and could
give a score of piano recitals, striking no less
than 1,250,000 notes, each one of which had
to be retained in its exact position in his
memory. He once, while traveling in a rail-
road train, read through, for the first time,
the score of a Saint-Saens concerto and in
the evening played it from memory at a con-
cert.
During one season Rubinstein played over
one thousand compositions, aggregating five
million notes. Joseffy, Paderewski and Rum-
mel all have large repertoires, which testify
to remarkable musical memory.
Henry Wolfsohn recalled in a recent talk a
remarkable feat of memory by Signor Gore,
who traveled as conductor with a concert
company organized by Campanini. The music
trunk not having arrived in time for a con-
cert, Signor Gore accompanied from memory
on the piano the entire third act of " Faust,"
at the same time transposing the music half
a tone.
An interesting story is told of Mascagni,
the composer of "Cavalleria Rusticana." One
of his friends had casually said that there
was no work of any of the six most famous
composers, whose names were mentioned,
which Mascagni could not play faultlessly
from memory. The statement being ridiculed
as impossible, Mascagni reluctantly con-
sented, in order to settle the dispute, to make
the effort. A number of musical experts were
invited to attend the recital, each one in turn
selecting a composition for performance. In
vain they tried to baffle the composer, who
not only answered the challenge brilliantly in
every instance, but filled up the intervals
with delightful improvisations of his own.
o
to the past for the model and the basis of his
future work, just as Wagner looked back to
Jacopo Peri. But how far is he to look back?
In what mold will his work be cast ? After
what model shall he build ? On the lines of
the dramas of the " Niebelungen Ring " or of
an earlier work ?
The world's history and development has
been always carried along by great men, but
it is quite possible, and history has shown,
that sometimes the greatness of a man may
be so intense, so overpowering, as to impede
and even arrest the development which he
himself inaugurated. It may seem both heret-
ical and paradoxical to say so, but, while ex-
alting opera as an art-form to a position that
THE BALEFUL INFLUENCE OF WAQNERISM.
More than a dozen years ago an eminent
English critic, commenting on the signs of
that imitation, that plagiarism of the Wagner
manner already then evident among compos-
ers, pointed out the danger that would exist
if Wagner's most enthusiastic supporters
should attempt—as they certainly have done—
to carry his views and theories even further
than he carried them himself. He says:
"This warns us of serious danger, danger
that the free course of art may be paralyzed
by a soulless mannerism worthy only of the
meanest copyist; danger, on the other hand,
of a reaction which will be all the more vio-
lent and unreasoning in proportion to the
amount of provocation needed to excite it."
He remarks further, and with truth: " I t
would take us a long day to tire of Wagner,
but we can not take him at second-hand.
'Wagnerism,' nor gods nor men can tol-
erate."
Does not this warning seem almost proph-
etic ? Are not the operatic composers of the
day imitators almost to the extent of plagiar-
ism ? Are we not, indeed, getting "Wagner-
ism" Wagner at second-hand usque ad nauseam?
Are there not two perils, stagnation and re-
action, which lie in wait for us ? and does it
not appear more than probable that between
the two opera is likely to come to a consider-
able amount of grief ? There is certainly
stagnation in opera at the present day. Oper-
atic managers all over the world are looking
for operatic novelties and find none. Within
the last decade the operas written which have
any artistic significance, or even the slightest
element of enduring merit and lasting popu-
larity, might be counted on the fingers of one
hand, and as a result of this undoubted stag-
nation are we not more than likely to get a
reaction which may well be in the direction
of simpler forms, and a more euphonious, less
pedantic and involved expression of musical
thought ? As the future that lies before us,
whatever it may be, must be prepared by a
careful and unremitting study of the past, so
the leader of the new period of operatic writ-
ing, who is certainly yet to appear, must look
REGINALD DE KOVEN.
it had never held before, Wagner, for the time
being at least,practically killed opera as a form
of art.
"With all his genius, with all his over-
whelming individuality and influence,Wagner
did not succeed in founding a school."
Reginald De Koven.
©
The aged Johann Strauss, the waltz king,
recently appeared as an orchestral conductor
in Vienna after a long absence from public
view. The Vienna papers say he looked
erect and elastic and conducted his newest
waltz, " O n the Elbe," with all his old time
authority. Mark Twain was present with his
daughter and after the concert was presented
to the master in his box.
Season 1898.
:. FRANZ RUMMEL .:
ON TOUR OF THE
UNITED STATES ..
Chickering Piano Used
DIRECTION OF
CHICKERING & SONS,
791 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
8
MUSIC AS THE CENTURY ENDS.
It has become almost natural to look at the
closing of a century as putting the period to
this or that development in esthetics, and to
take a proportionately solemn account of it in
its relation to the art-productiveness just be-
yond it. Our overlook and outlook toward
music as the year 1901 comes closer, stimu-
lates grave thought. The decade now finish-
ing, especially suggests a period of almost final
—let us say final—efflorescence, similar to the
great epochs of European painting, architec-
ture and sculpture. How mighty are the things
that we have all been watching, or rather
hearing, so well done for us! What bright
names have adorned the century's last quarter
and less! But the same works seem to have
said the last word in their kind. In this year
of grace and art, the bright names are chiefly
the names of the dead. In no part of the
history of music, youngest and most mystic
of all the arts, has there been a richer show-
ing of master-thinkers, of more startling,
varied and complex phases, of more exhaus-
tive workings-out of new and fecund theories
and principles! Who and what shall now suc-
ceed to all this movement? Where are the
signs of new genius; of new yet old art—the
obvious two needs of the generation just com-
ing on with the new century—unless we are
to do nothing but revert to music's glorious
and fertile past?
When the eighteenth century's end came
there had passed away, man by man, Bach,
Handel, Gluck and Mozart; Haydn, an old
man, was only a few years from following
them. But there were then discerned, right
and left, new influences and phases that spoke
loudly for music's immediate future. Certain
of the younger men—especially in Germany,
that to-day is musically almost dead as it can
be—felt what there was to be newly and bet-
ter said in the old paths, as well as described
what was in itself new. An instrument of
vast importance, the pianoforte, was develop-
ing into a marvel of esthetic mechanism. A
special creative influence was to radiate from
it. And so succeeded Beethoven, Schubert,
Schumann, Mendelssohn and Chopin. There-
with came, too, the vivid development in
Italy of Italian opera, and the romantic
movement in German opera, and a French
course of things that now is classic blossomed
out. But that happy chapter of new musical
creativeness had by no means come to its
close, nor had the future of the art grown
dark to the general eye, before Wagner and
Liszt, revolutionists in ideas and labors,
opened a new whole volume to the lyric com-
poser, and Berlioz was fighting a battle for
the New in his France. The first perform-
ance of "Lohengrin" and "Tannhauser"
meant music's revivification as well as reform,
meant new prophets, new revelations.
Where are ours? The great chapter of
music's history last defined—we have read it,
heard it to the end. The symphony that
Haydn began as the eighteenth century was
drawing on to a finish has been ended by
Brahms for us of the last years of the nine-
teenth. Opera, transmuted to music drama,
opera long and short, musical or only nomi-
nally so, opera refined or vulgar, opera from
"La Serva Padrona" to "Siegfried," or "Fal-
staff," or "Le Boheme," is finished. Orato-
rio has really had little worth saying to say
since Mendelssohn's elegance, force and pro-
portion improved on Handel's great chain of
sacred works; and the secular cantata little
more. Orchestration for orchestration's sake
is an epidemic. New melody could not be
expected now. But its substitute might be
less scientifically arid, from learned writers
who think they have the gift. Pianoforte
music, chamber music in general, the organ's
library—for none of these important branches
can we feel that a new phase is at hand early
in the new century nearly born. In virtuo-
sity of performance, in musical execution,
we should hardly expect finer art than ours.
The past fifteen years have brought im-
pressive losses to creative music,as the giants
that had to die have dropped down in the
century's last marches. But it is part of the
aspect of things now to come that only in a
few instances have the careers of the great
workers lately gone from us been incomplete,
or of a sort that suggests their continued in-
fluences in the field. Wagner dies, with
"Parsifal " as his swan-song; and it is doubt-
ful if we cannot well spare his unfinished
" Die Busser," just as we spare Beethoven's
Tenth Symphony. For, good and bad, Wag-
ner had said his say. Liszt, with his virtu-
osity at the pianoforte and in the orchestral
score, was an old man, no longer eloquent.
Berlioz was retired.
The German-Russian
Rubinstein, the Italian Ponchielli — who
founds, with the aged Verdi and with Boito,
no longer young, the neo-Italian school of
opera — they had finished their course.
Brahms, Gounod, Franck, all these were
nearly composers of a past significance.
Verdi still is with us, but at eighty-five he is
not likely to make us alert. Tschaikowsky
died in some prematureness, true; but the
musical art of Russia had already derived
from him what we may believe was his best.
In France no composer of absolute individu-
ality and of secure promise in work of large
form has died since Bizet, in 1875.
Altogether, the cheerfulest musical out-
looks for those audiences at concert-room
and opera-house during the next few years—
so far as such auditors seek novelties of fair
interest—are two. One is toward France.
There, indeed, musicians may not say new
things in art, but in France there is musical
life, movement; and there art lends bright-
ness to the tarnished or even the trivial.
The French are never dull, even where artis-
tically unsuccessful.
The other outlook is
Italian. At eight-five Verdi may be excused,
or advised silence after so glorious a career.
But the " new young men " are making over
Italian opera strenuously, and, on the whole,
effectively. Germany is in a state of musical
post-mortem. The Slaves and Scandinavians
and Russians, and so on, are too national for
general and permanent acceptance. America?
—our own land? It is a land of promise, we
are glad to believe. But it has yet to say an
authoritative sentence to the universal musical
ear. Let us hope that it may come.
So ends the century, and closes a period in
music of indeed astonishing and ominous
completeness and splendor. The twilight of
the gods is more than come. • The past is an
exhaustless heritage. Music's old treasures
may long be the substitutes for new ones.'
Perhaps we may expect the latter grace, in
some small measure. But when all is antici-
pated or guessed at, the question abides,
whether or not we have not all over the West-
ern world, European and American, to
broaden startlingly our system of harmony
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