Music Trade Review

Issue: 1898 Vol. 27 N. 19

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
little nobody by the Archbishop of Salz-
burg. It is to Mendelssohn, Liszt, and
other masters of the Victorian era that
musicians are indebted for their social
emancipation. These men were well edu-
cated in a general sense, and they could
converse intelligently on topics other than
music. So the musician of to-day by his
all-round education has come to be looked
upon more as a companion than as a boor.
*
TT is invigorating to visit the American
* Theatre these days where the Castle
Square Opera Company is appearing in
grand opera. In Verdi's famous works,
"Aida" and "II Trovatore," and during
the present week in Gounod's "Romeo and
Juliet," this excellent organization has en-
hanced its reputation in no inconsiderable
degree. The mounting and appointments
of these productions have been character-
ized by the accustomed beauty and appro-
priateness ; the casts have always been
exceptionally able, and the chorus work
a model for many more pretentious or-
ganizations.
The audiences at the American Theatre
are always a study. Their keen apprecia-
tion of the opera and their discriminating
encouragement afford proof that the Castle
Square organization is not only entertain-
ing but educating its supporters.
We can hardly adequately estimate the
splendid work which the Castle Square
Opera Company are accomplishing toward
bringing these great operatic works—
which unfortunately are largely unknown,
owing to the excessive prices hitherto
charged for grand opera—closer to the
masses of the people.
The managers of the Castle Square Opera
Company are giving wonderful values at
prices within the reach of all, and they
deserve the heartiest support from every-
body having at heart the musical education
and advancement of our people.
•X'
\ I 7 A L T E R DAMROSCH'S new " Te
^* Deum," composed in honor of Ad-
miral Dewey's great victory at Manila,
has just been published by the John Church
Co. It will be sung by the Oratorio So-
ciety under the direction of Frank Dara-
rosch, Dec. 3d.
*
HPHE effect of music on the pulse has
* been discussed lately in Paris. Mr.
Philip Hale of Boston writes apropos,
that he has a singular little book entitled
" Nouvelle Methode facile et curieuse pour
connoitre le Pouls par les Notes de la
Musique." It was written by a physician
and botanist named Marquet, and pub-
lished in 1747. Marquet says in his pre-
face, " I am not the first to institute a
parallel between musical rhythms and
pulse-beats. Avicenna, Savonarola, Saxon,
Fernel, and several other learned physi-
cians of by-gone days suggested this paral-
lel without making practical experiments."
Not the less curious feature of Marquet's
treatise is the addition of plates illustrating
these pulse-beats. Mr. Hale, who has an
eye for the comic side of musical life, too,
has the following in the October number
of the Musical Record:
You know Delilah's air: "Amour, viens
aider ma faiblesse!" in Saint-Saens's opera;
I see by the programme of a concert given
at Evanston, Illinois, that in the neighbor-
hood of Chicago they word it, "Armour,
viens aider ma faiblesse!" Such is their
trust in pork and canned goods in time of
trouble.
he experimented upon the interelation of
the senses.
"Different liquors and cordials sug-
gested certain musical instruments to his
overwrought brain, and he constructed
what he called a 'taste orchestrian.' It
was a cabinet containing innumerable
strange foreign drinks, and by passing
with a wine glass from one tap to another
IV/IYRON W. WHITNEY, JR., is the he produced the effect of a symphony.
' * * youngest son of the distinguished How was that for a fantastic conception ?
artist whose name he bears. He is a Har- I mention this book, which was written by
vard graduate of '95, and has
been in Italy ever since his
graduation, studying vocal
music, for which he has,
from his earliest years,
shown the greatest talent.
Inheriting his father's beau-
tiful voice, he started on his
musical career while still a
student at Harvard, being
the bass at Dr. Miner's
church in Boston, in the
quartet under the conductor-
ship of George W. Chad-
wick. Previous to his de-
parture for Italy he had the
advantage of seven years'
training with Myron W.
Whitney, senior, whose meth-
od and style, particularly
in oratorio, have thus been
handed down from father
to son.
In Florence, Italy, he was
for several years the pupil
of his father's master, Sig.
Luigi Vannuccini, who pre-
dicts for him a great future
in concert and opera, styl-
ing him a magnificent basso
cantante. He made a most
successful debut in oratorio
in "Israel in Egypt," with
the Handel and Hayden So-
ciety, in January, '95, and
MYRON W. WHITNEY, JR.
the critics were most en-
thusiastic in his praise.
a very distinguished French novelist,
Soon after these appearances he sailed merely to show that the theory of making
for Italy, where his study and intense love one sense do duty for another is by no
of his art made him one of the foremost means a modern scientific fad, but is some-
young singers of the day. He returns a thing that has excited speculation for
thorough artist, prepared to take his part many, many years."
in oratorios, opera, or concert, and those
*
who have ^already heard him predict for
him as great a career as that of his father. 'X'ALKING about liquors a Paris doctor
* has been giving the singing world his
During the coming season he will divide
experiences,
which are of many years, as
his time between New York and Boston,
to
the
effect
on
the vocal organs of various
and many negotiations are already being
liquors
more
or
less ardent. The diversity
made for his appearance in the large cities.
of views of vocalists themselves he says is
" T ^ H I S so-called new theory of color- very great, but none of them have been
* hearing isn't new at all," said a teetotalers. Moderate wine drinking, he
friend who takes an interest in curious believes, is useful, but beer thickens the
things, '' and the whole idea is very neatly voice and makes it sound very gutteral.
embodied in the old story of the blind He has known all the best singers and of
man, who, after much reflection, told his these he tells us that Malibran drank
wife that he had discovered what scarlet Madeira and ate sardines. Martin kept
was like. ' It resembles the sound of a his vocal organs soft and flexible by always
trumpet,' he said. The same theme was putting some grains of salt into his mouth
worked out years ago in an uncanny French before he commenced singing. Chollet,
novel that described a wealthy roue who however, drank beer as his beverage; La
exhausted every form of pleasure and Persiani used to suck a chop in the first
finally retired to a secluded chateau, where Stages of cooking between that of raw
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
meat and saignante meat; Dumenal drank
six bottles of champagne before singing,
and declared that each bottle increasad the
strength and improved the quality of his
voice; he was careful, however, not to go
into excess of imbition! Garcia refreshed
her voice by drinking a "gloria," alias a
cup of coffee mixed with eau de vie.
*
jVjEVER before were there such indica-
*
tions of a prosperous opera season at
the Metropolitan as this year. The belief
that after one year of abstinence New York
would support its season of opera with
greater enthusiasm than ever is likely to
prove well founded, and the immense re-
sponsibility which the engagement of the
great company involved will seemingly be
met by the public in a way to justify what
looked like a hazardous outlay. It is said
that the outlay demanded for next year's
company is $1,000,000. It is certain that
last winter the engagements amounted to
$800,000, which it was said called for a
uniform return of $6,000 for every per-
formance. Since that time some of the
most expensive artists have been engaged,
notably Mmes. Sembrich, Lehmann and
Victor Maurel, and it is easy to understand
that the sum could have been increased to
$1,000,000. But if the responsibilities are
unprecedentedly heavy, it is also true that
the subscription is unusually large for this
time of the year. One easy way to judge
of that is by the sale of subscriptions for
the orchestra stalls. A safe indication of
the demand is the row reached by a certain
time. Never before in the history of the
Metropolitan Opera House have subscribers
at this season been compelled to content
themselves with the seats now offered. In
other words, the subscription has never
before at this time extended so far back as
it does to-day. The same condition exists
in every part of the house, and there is no
surer sign of the public interest in the
opera. The increased outlay and enter-
prise this year have been met with corre-
sponding support from the public. To
make a financial success of the coming sea-
son will be of greater credit to Maurice
Grau than any past season, as the scale on
which it has been undertaken is so much
larger. In addition to the greater expense,
the season will be longer than it has been
for some time. There was a time when
subscribers were able to get their seats at
a reduction if they took them for the
whole season. But they are satisfied now
to get them anywhere at the full price.
*
A STATUE of Tschaikowsky represent-
^*- ing him at the conducting stand, has
just been put up in St. Petersburg. It
stands at the entrance to the Royal Con-
servatory.
/ ^ I U S E P P E VERDI recently celebrated
^~* his eighty-fifth birthday, and he is
said to have seemed in better health than
usual, despite the fatigue which the visits
of his friends must have caused him and
the fact that it was the first birthday since
the death of his wife. No single figure in
Europe is to a greater extent the subject of
comment and anecdote. He sometimes
takes the trouble to deny the stories told
about him, and he has recently contradicted
the report that he was at work on an opera
drawn from Shakespeare's "King Lear."
The flood of gossip about him continues,
and the days of his youth are explored in
search of stories. One of these dwells on
the time when he was an acolyte, who be-
came so absorbed in the music of the organ
that he forgot all about his duties, and had
to be recalled to a sense of them by a kick
which sent him down the steps of the
altar. Later, when it was decided that he
should be a priest, it was the organ that
satisfied him more than any other feature
with the life of the clergy. The priest
who had mapped out his vocation for him
was celebrating mass one day while Verdi
was at the organ. The priest was struck
by the beauty of the music, which seemed
more than usually remarkable from an or-
ganist who received only $7 a year salary.
He asked what the music was. Verdi, em-
barrassed at the question and anticipating
a reproach, said that he had forgotten to
bring his music and had been improvising.
" I played as I felt," he continued. The
priest decided that any boy with such musi-
cal feeling should be allowed to follow his
own tastes and become a musician if he
wanted to.
as well as in the Riviera towns. She is
related by marriage to the former Agnes
Ethel, who retired from the stage at the
height of her reputation to marry a wealthy
man of the same name as the singer. She
took an interest in Miss Rodebusch and
helped her to secure the musical education
which prepared her for the stage. Fanchon
Thompson is another singer who may de-
cide not to come here. She is somewhat
staggered at the number of sopranos en-
gaged and she is wondering what oppor-
tunity there will be among that number for
a debutante. It looks as if Stefano in
"Romeo et Juliette " would be her only
role. Miss Thompson has sung Carmen
at the Opera Comique in Paris, and is not
willing to relinquish the possibilities of
such roles abroad. So she may remain in
Europe if her ambitions seem to be more
likely to find a field there and come to win
her laurels at home after she has had more
experience abroad.
*
' * T N one of his writings Wagner tells us
* that he never felt any musical in-
spiration unless a dramatic idea had taken
complete possession of him," writes Hous-
ton Stewart Chamberlain on " How Rich-
ard Wagner Wrote his Operas," in the
November Ladies' Home Journal. "When
this was the case the different personages
would, one after another, obtrude upon
his fancy, gaining gradually in bodily con-
sistency. Then, all of a sudden, in the
CMMA CALVE, who will be detained in dusk of evening, one of these creatures of
*—' Europe by sickness, is not the only his fancy would rise up before him, gazing
singer who will follow the majority of the at him with eyes wide open. Fascinated
operatic artists to this country instead of and almost trembling, Wagner would re-
coming with them. Ernst Krauss, the main with eyes fixed on those of his guest
tenor of the Ellis company's Philadelphia from Dreamland; but lo! the shadows
season, will not arrive here until after the lips tremble and open! what issues from
performances begin, and M. Van Dyck, them is neither words nor song; it is a
who has been loaned by Maurice Grau to superhuman language, but the poet under-
his brother managers, will fill Krauss's stands it, and it remains ringing in his
place. The Philadelphia audiences will ears when the apparition has vanished.
not lose by this, as Mr. Van Dyck is an This is the precise moment of inspiration.
artist of much greater reputation than the All that follows is more or less mechanical,
younger singer. It is agreeable to observe more or less fortuitous. Whether a work
that the impresarios of rival organizations be written out and completed sooner or
are on such friendly terms. Marie Brema later will depend upon all sorts of circum-
and Anton Van Rooy will not arrive in New stances—time, health, etc.
York until the
A HAND THAT OFTEN EARNS $1,000 AN HOUR.
local season is
about to open,
and will not be
heard at all in
Chicago. The
circum s t a n c e s
of Miss Rode-
busch's return
to h e r own
country
were
particularly
sad. She had
sung for several
seasons w i t h
success
in
Europe, but yet
h a d to make
a n impression
in h e r own
country.
She
This is a picture, natural size, of the dexterous digits of New York's reigning musical sensation,
had sung at Herr Moriz Rosen thai, the Folish pianist. The critics say he rivals Paderewski, whose uimble finger^
earned him $80,000 in one season in the United States.
Jierr Roaenthal cannot insure against its loss or injury by accident for more than a week.
Covent Garden

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