Music Trade Review

Issue: 1898 Vol. 27 N. 10

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
48 PAGES,
VOL.
XXVII. No. 10.
Published Every Saturday at 3 East Fourteenth Street. New York, Sept. 3,1898.
VICTOR HERBERT INTERVIEWED.
A RACY interview with Victor Herbert
^* appears in the "Criterion." His
estimate of Sousa is interesting in view of
the respective position occupied by each.
When asked which of the great conductors
he considered the greatest, he said:
" Oh, each has had his own qualities and
virtues. Seidl had magnetism. Thomas,
who in some ways was at least his equal,
is a wonderful drillmaster. Nikisch de-
lights, and at times surprises one, by his
ingenuity in finding new meanings in the
works which he interprets—meanings
perhaps never dreamt of by their com-
posers.
Paur is honest, rugged and
straightforward, but lacks personal charm.
Dan Godfrey (whom I have invited to
come down here to-morrow with his band)
has a certain authority which is thoroughly
English. When he conducts he seems to
be telling the public that they are hearing
something superlatively fine. He is
dignified—but metronomic. One-two, one-
two,
one-two, one-two.
That's God-
frey."
"And what do you think of Sousa as a
conductor ? "
Mr. Herbert fidgetted a little.
" I think he writes good marches," said
he.
I persisted.
" Very good marches," said Mr. Herbert,
parrying the attack again.
"Stirring,
facile, rhythmic, strong. Original ? Oh,
absolute originality is hardly to be ex-
pected of anyone nowadays. I fancy I
have detected phrases from the ' Marseil-
laise,' and from 'Boccaccio' in some of Mr.
Sousa's marches."
" But—as to his conducting ? "
He began to look uncomfortable.
" I like his way of conducting his own
marches. I don't care so much for his
readings of more serious works."
"If you had your choice, would you
emulate Seidl or Gilmore ? "
" Well, I should like to combine the pop-
ular quality of Gilmore with the more
classical merit of Seidl. You may have
seen that from my programs. The other
day, for example, besides lighter compo-
sitions, I gave my public a selection from
' Tannhauser,' a little Haydn, some
Beethoven and so on. And it was all ap-
preciated. But I see no reason to be
ashamed of composing or interpreting less
$2.00 PER YEAR.
SINGLE COPIES 10 CENTS.
pretentious things—such as waltzes or somewhat oblong, square in shape, which
marches. Why be fanatical?
Do we was hollowed, leaving at each end a solid
sneer at the daisy because it is not the piece about three or four inches in thick-
ness, and at its upper side was a kind of
rose?"
"What do you aim at chiefly in conduct- sounding-board about a quarter of an inch
in thickness. In this were made three in-
ing?"
" I try to get good, vigorous effects out cisions, two running parallel some distance
of my orchestra, and to put a little fancy lengthwise of the drum, and a third run-
into the interpretation of music.
No ning across from one of these to the other
composer can express everything. Some- just in the center. By this means two vi-
thing must always be left to the initiative brating tongues of wood were obtained,
of the conductor. Runs should not be which, when beaten with a stick, produced
taken regularly. Whether it has been in- sounds as clearly defined as those of the
dicated or not, at some point or other you kettledrums of the present day.
should emphasize, quicken or retard.
The rattle, it is stated, appears to have
Liszt, as you know, had a horror of con- occupied an important place in the cere-
ductors who merely followed their musi- monies of the ancient Mexicans. A primi-
cal directions. You may ruin the work of tive form of dance rattle still used by the
a composer by being literal.
Yaqui Indians of Sonora, Mexico, is made
of
butterfly cocoons, which are divided in-
"What a marvelous thing is this art
to
halves
and sewed together at one end
of music ! Think of it. Two hundred
years ago it was in its infancy. Almost with a double cord. Each half of the co-
every important development in its his- coon contains a grain or pebble. They
tory has been made within a century or are attached to a long cord, which is wound
so.
What will its future be? Wagner around the leg of the dancer.
has succeeded Berlioz, and now we have
The only instruments of metal in the
Richard Strauss. Orchestration which it museum collection of Mexican antiquities
would once have been thought impossible are bronze bells. These appear to have
to render—by military bands at all events been in general use by the Mexicans be-
—now figures regularly in our programs. fore the Spanish conquest, and they are
Not so long ago the march from ' Tann- often found figured in the picture writings
hauser ' was in the ' impossible ' list. Now representing the various objects which the
it is in every military repertory."
Aztecs used to pay as tribute to their sov-
ereigns.
" You swear by Wagner, I believe?"
Whistles were used in Mexico and Cen-
" I admire all great composers—Schu-
tral
and South America. The whistling
mann as well as Haydn, Wagner no less
than Bach. And I admire Berlioz, though mechanism in all is identical with that of
I think he has been greatly overrated as the modern flageolet, and the only distinc-
tion that can be made between them is by
an orchestrator."
classing the instruments which emit only
*
one sound or note as whistles, and those
which have one or more finger holes as
ABORIGINAL AMERICAN flUSIC.
flageolets. The smaller instruments are
DROFESSOR
WILSON
of
the
National
Museum states that music evidently mostly grotesque caricatures of the human
occupied a prominent place in the arts of face or figure or of animals or birds. The
the ancient Mexicans, for it is mentioned larger instruments are more like the mod-
by the early Spanish writers in connection ern flageolets. A figure is shown carved
with war, religious ceremonies, and of fes- in marble. It has six round holes, the
tivities of various kinds. The instruments lower end being carved in imitation of an
described or mentioned were drums, tim- alligator's head. It is Professor Wilson's
brels, flutes, horns, trumpets, and rattles. opinion that the antiquity of the instru-
According to Clavigero they had no stringed ment may not be very great. The fact of
instruments. There is no representative its having six finger holes, he thinks, sug-
of the ancient Mexican drum in the Na- gests European contact, as in all other
tional Museum. It is described, however, specimens of this class from the Western
the "teponaztli" of the Aztecs, as being hemisphere the usual number appears to
made of a single block of very hard wood, have been four holes
r
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.
j\]EW YORK is to have its permanent
* ^ cheap opera early this month. The
pecuniary success of the Castle Square
Opera Company last season has satisfied
the management that the scheme has pos-
sibilities of permanent success, and the en-
ergy formerly expended on the other com-
panies will be concentrated on the local
organization. Concurrently comes the an-
nouncement that heavier works will be
sung. Last year, one of the most profita-
ble performances was "Faust." Follow-
ing that intimation of the public desire,
"Lohengrin," "Aida," "Lucia," "Manon
Lescaut," (Puccini's), are announced for
this season, and the management says that
subscriptions have already begun to come
in from students who are anxious to make
themselves familiar with the standard
works and are unable to pay the prices
asked at the Metropolitan, and prefer not
to sit in the galleries.
That might be
taken to indicate that the educational
work of cheap opera was to begin here
next winter. There are, of course, vari-
ous opinions as to the efficacy of perform-
ing grand operas at prices which make it
a practical certainty that their greatest
merits will not be revealed. Some per-
sons think the end in such a case does not
justify the means. But to make a large
number of people acquainted with the best
musical works is thought by many to pro-
duce good results, even though their in-
terpretation is not faultless.
The only
really important opinion in the matter is
that of the public. If the people go to see
the operas, that settles the question. And
the managers of the cheap opera which
New York heard last winter had no ground
for complaint of poor attendance. The
public showed what opinion it held of the
desirability of cheap opera. If its mood
continues the same, the educational influ-
ences may be felt here. Quite apart from
any educational effects it may possess,
cheap opera would certainly seem to fill
one purpose well if it entertains, whether
it cultivates or not that share of the pub-
lic which calls for it.
DROF. RICHET says that it takes a
man about one-eleventh of a second
to think out each note of a musical scale.
He explains the practice that people will
often follow of bending their heads in
order to catch minute sounds, by the
fact that the smallest intervals of sound
can be much better distinguished with one
ear than with both.
Thus the separateness of the clicks of
a revolving toothed wheel were noted by
one observer when they did not exceed
sixty to the second, but using both ears
he could not distinguish them when they
occurred oftener than fifteen times a sec-
ond.
Among the various ways in which Prof.
Richet tried to arrive at conclusions as to
the amount of time necessary for realizing
any physical sensation or mental impres-
sion was the touching of the skin repeat-
edly with light blows from a small ham-
mer. The fact that the blows are separate
and not continuous pressure can be dis-
tinguished when they follow one another
as frequently as 1,000 a second.
We hear more rapidly than we can
count. If a clock clicking movement runs
more quickly than ten to the second we
can count four clicks, while with twenty
to the second we can count only two of
them.
*
T H E Kaiser has devised a new scheme
*• for the encouragement of vocal music
in the German Empire. It will be put
into operation in 1899, and it consists of a
singing competition to be held in a differ-
ent town every year. Cassel has been
selected for the first competition, the
chief condition of which is that each choir
taking part will receive an unpublished
musical composition about an hour before
the contest takes place. There will be no
accompaniment. The Kaiser's prize is a
valuable jewel, and the President of the
winning choir will be allowed to wear it
for a year, the names of each singer being
engraved upon it. If one choir wins the
prize three years in succession it will be-
come its absolute property, and the Kaiser
will have another jewel made.
our front page this month there ap-
pears an excellent portrait of Dudley
Buck, son of the eminent organist and
composer of the same name—one of the
most esteemed and talented men among
our musicians of native birth.
Dudley Buck, Jr., is a tenor of great
promise, and he has just returned, after
studying with the most distinguished mas-
ters in Europe. He will appear in concert
and oratorio this fall, making his debut at
the Worcester Festival. He is under the
management of Henry Wolfsohn, who has
already booked a surprisingly large num-
ber of engagements.
Dudley Buck, Jr., is certain of a warm
welcome, both for his individual talents
and the esteem in which his father is held.
*
f ^ I U S E P P E VERDI'S home for old
^~* and poor musicians, called in Italian,
" Casa di Riposo per Musicisti," is almost
completed, and now lacks only the interior
decorations to prepare it to receive the in-
mates. The architect was a brother of
Boito, the friend and librettist of Verdi.
Accommodation is provided for one hun-
dred musicians—sixty men and forty
women. The total area is about five
thousand square yards, and it contains a
large garden for the men and a smaller
one for the women. The central court is
about six hundred square yards. On the
right of the entrance hall are the quarters
of the director, on the left the porter's room
and administrative offices. One Bide of
the building is set aside for the rrien, the
other for women. Near the two vestibules
are the rooms for receiving stranger's. A
marble staircase leads to the separate
dining rooms and to a central roottl for
meetings and concerts. This room is
about sixty-five yards long by twenty-two
and one half wide. There is also another
common room and two open terraces,
where the residents may enjoy the fresh
air in summer and look on the summits of
the distant mountains. A private chapel
and an infirmary are provided. The build"
ihg stands outside the Porta Magenta in
Milan, and, while unpretentious, is in
good taste. Verdi has ordered that his
name shall appear nowhere on the build-
ing.
The house has already cost $200,000,
and it is said that Verdi will endow it with
$300,000 more.
+
p I C H A R D BURMEISTER, who is at
* ^ present on Mackinac Island, Michi-
gan, for a few weeks of rest, spent a part
of this summer with different tribes of In-
dians.
On the 4th of July he was at a
camp of about 1,000 Mandan Indians,
who, on this occasion, performed their
war-dances, sham battles and games.
Mr. Burmeister will bring home several
new compositions for piano, violin and
songs, and be back in New York about
September 15th, to resume his winter
work. He will be heard in New York in
recitals and symphony concerts with or-
chestra.
J\fl ASCAGNI has decided that his new
' * Japanese opera, " Iris," shall close
tragically. The heroine kills herself not
by committing hari-kari, but by jumping
out of a window. In the first act, Iris, a
beautiful Japanese girl who lives with her
blind father, is abducted by Osaka. He
comes to her house with a troup of dancers
and takes her away with him.
In the
second act her father discovers her where-
abouts, and in the last scene, when she
realizes that she is not to have the gratifi-
cation of her wishes, Iris throws herself
from the window, which ought not to do
her much harm if the Japanese houses are
as low as they look in the pictures.
*
T WISH to endeavor to make it clear to
*• the non-musical reader that all music
is a matter of expression in sounds, whe-
ther by voice or instrument, and that
nothing deserving the name of music can
possibly be produced by ignorant people
grinding out sounds by mechanical means,
says a writer in an English paper. Every
time this subject is discussed in the public
press, there are some dunces ready to
come forward and assert, with a show of
virtuous indignation, that we "are trying
to deprive the poor of their music."
The fact is that no influence could be
more vulgarizing and more vitiating to
the public taste than the grinding of com-
mon-place and threadbare tunes on a bar-
rel organ.
It can have no educational
effect but in the wrong direction; our pub-
lic is one of the most unmusical in the

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