Music Trade Review

Issue: 1899 Vol. 28 N. 1

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
really precious things that Leschetizky de-
velops in his pupils.
And then there is the habit he is always
counseling- of practicing away from the
piano, says Cleveland Moffctt in the Ladies'
Home Journal, not practicing with the hands,
but with the mind, by thinking out apiece,
note by note, passage by passage, until a
distinct and original idea of it has been ob-
tained. This work may be done, he says,
at almost any time, once the habit is
formed, and may be done with or without
notes.
*
JV/IISS NEALY STEVENS, the well-
* * known pianist, has the courage of
her convictions. In a recent talk she
says: " It is quite a popular fad nowadays,
to say that one may receive as fine a musi-
cal education in America as can be secured
in Europe. We certainly have some very
brilliant musicians, and music as an art
is taking high rank and some of the cities
are becoming noted as musical centers.
I may become unpopular in assuming my
position, but there is a certain air and finish
to be obtained under the masters of Europe
that is not obtainable in America. I do
not think that this will always be so, and
I believe that in time Europe will look to
America in music as it does in.other things
in which this country has taken the lead-
ing place.
" One thing is certain, and that is that
it is much harder to obtain a reputation
and recognition here than there. In Amer-
ica the people appreciate only the very
best, while in Europe, and Germany es-
pecially, they appreciate what you attain
and do not blame you for what you do not
possess. There are undoubtedly splendid
opportunities here, if the people would
only take advantage of them. Those who
hope to obtain a finished musical education
should first take every advantage of the
opportunities offered in this country. As
Patti said, the people of this country want
to obtain the art without the education. I
think that our lack of elemental training is
due to our ambitions—the people are al-
ways wanting something new. They want
too many fads.
"The people of Germany are very
grateful, while those of America are the
reverse. I think this difference is attrib-
utable to the long and thorough schooling
of the German people. You should em-
phasize the fact that students should se-
cure all that this country affords before
going abroad to study, which gives them
more time and greater opportunity to re-
ceive the rounding and finishing of the old
world masters without having to go
through the text books after arriving
there."
M E W YORK is not to hear two pianists
*• ^ who expected to return this winter.
One of these is Siloti, who appeared here
late last spring and made such a success
that he might have become famous if his
career had begun earlier in the winter.
Just as he was beginning to be most talked
about the season ended and the time for
pianists was over. It is said that he will
remain in Russia during the present year.
When Siloti came here it was on his own
responsibility.
In finding engagements
he was successful enough to warrant a
second season.
The other pianist who
has decided not to come here is a Hollander
who made his particular reputation as a
player of Bach. He was to have played
here first in January. The influx of pian-
ists this year was largely due to the knowl-
edge that Paderewski would remain in
Europe. That the field is already over-
crowded is apparent, and the success of
some of the eminent foreigners who have
appeared here has not been sufficient to
encourage others to come. This is, above
NICHOLAS SF.r.ASTIAX.
all, true of the pianists, who must do
something little short of wonderful if they
meet with popular success in any great
degree.
*
VjICHOLAS SEBASTIAN, whose coun-
* ^ terfeit presentment appears herewith
is one of the great favorites of the season
in musical and social circles.
He is a
promising tenor, well and favorably known
in London. Since his arrival here he has
sung with great success at a number of
private musicales. He will soon make his
appearance in Cleveland, O., Ann Arbor,
Mich., and with the Cecilia Society in De-
troit, Mich., under Henry Wolfsohn's
management.
M
ASCAGNI,at an interview with Queen
Margherita, the other day, said that
his next opera, to be ready about a year
hence, would be entitled " Le Maschere,"
the libretto again being by Illica.
JOSEF HOFMANN is one of the few
^
pianists who do not believe in ex-
cessive practice. He says that overpractic-
ing "makes one's mind grow stupid and
confused and naturally one's fingers follow
the brain,"
NOTWITHSTANDING his great repu-
tation abroad, Ernest Van Dyck has
not succeeded in making a great or endur-
ing impression here. As an impersonator
of character—an artist with a complete
command of all the resources of expres-
sion—it is admitted that he has few peers,
but it has been found impossible to over-
look the vocal side of his endeavors. In
this connection one of our leading critics
very correctly remarks: A great reputa-
tion abroad does not necessarily insure the
success of an artist in America. Proofs of
this fact are to be found in the records of
every musical season in New York. Cases
in point which may be cited are those of
the Ravogli sisters, highly esteemed in
London; Marie Van Zandt, pet of the
St. Petersburg public; Sybil Sanderson,
Sigrid Arnoldson, Tamagno and Las-
salle. These few names will suffice as
illustrations. They were all failures—
in a greater or lesser degree—in spite
of their established positions in the
operatic art.of the old world.
Another name of importance may
now be added to this list—that of Ernest
Van Dyck. In Europe he is considered
to be one of the great tenors of the
day. In London and Paris his visits are
regarded as gala events. In Vienna he
is a fixture.
At the Bayreuth Fest-
spielhaus he is accepted as the highest
exponent of the tenor heroes of Wag-
ner, and the role of Parsifal is held in
sacred trust for him. New York has
now made his acquaintance, and the
result is a feeling of surprise. It is
difficult to understand how he has be-
come famous. It would seem as if
such fame as has been awarded to him
should be reserved for one in whose
artistic equipment the several essentials
were more evenly balanced.
*
T H E Emil Paur Sunday concerts have
*
been abandoned for the present. It
was found that the competition of the
Opera House, with its many available so-
loists of rank, was too strong. It is said
there is a plan under consideration to in-
stitute a series of Sunday afternoon con-
certs.
A DELINA PATTI and Sibyl Sanderson
* * are the two richest prima donnas of
the time. Mine. Patti's fortune came from
a long and active career, which has scarce-
ly yet terminated, as her concert appear-
ances from time to time in London are
highly successful. An attempt was made
not long ago to persuade her to come next
year to this country, but she was unwilling
to take the journey. Miss wSanderson will
inherit her money through the death of her
husband, Antonio Terry. By the terms
of his separation from his first wife, Mr.
Terry's daughter is to live with her grand-
mother, although the father and mother
were both to see her at certain times. She
is the only person to share with the second
Mrs. Terry the large estate he left. The
first Mrs. Terry was a woman of wealth,
and left a fortune to her daughter. Miss
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
Sanderson has almost recovered from the
stroke of paralysis from which she suffered
soon after her marriage. She is said to be
quite as beautiful as ever, and there are no
traces of her illness to be observed beyond
a slight difficulty in walking. It is thought
this will soon disappear. Mme. Patti has
recently confessed to fifty-six years, and is
at least that old.
Miss Sanderson is still
quite young.
She has been before the
public for some time, although she is only
now in the early thirties. Probably Miss
Sanderson will be found to be the richer of
the two when her husband's estate is set-
tled. Her retirement from the stage at
the time of her marriage was evidently
permanent. She has sung once or twice
at private concerts, but kept to her inten-
tion . never to appear again professionally.
*
splitting the orchestra up into quartets and
giving free concerts for the people of these
quarters. We are not surprised to learn
that these have even been more successful
in their way than the more formal classical
concerts on Sunday evenings. When we
consider the power for good generated by
the hearing of good music, we may estimate
more fully the splendid labors of the mayor
of Boston and his co-workers who are en-
deavoring to make the lots of their less
fortunate brethren in the world's battle-
field happier—bringing the sunlight of
education and music into their lives. This
broad spirit of consideration is more potent
p E R O S I ' S " Resurrection of Christ" was
*
sung in the Church of the Twelve
Apostles, Rome, on Dec. 13. The corres-
pondent of a London paper says: ' ' Twelve
Cardinals and numerous prelates and mem-
bers of the aristocracy were present, the
audience numbering nearly 3,000. There
was a chorus of 300, and a full orchestra.
Don Perosi was greeted with what seemel
to be interminable applause. I noticed
Mascagni applauding enthusiastically. Don
Perosi received a delirious ovation at the
close of the first part, the unique sight
being witnessed of Cardinals, prelates and
grand ladies cheering the little Napoleon-
like priest. On leaving the church, Don
Perosi received an ovation from the crowd
which filled the Piazza. The critics unan-
imously expressed admiration for his crea-
tion, in which dramatic and ecclesiastic. 1
music are beautifully blended."
*
I I ERR EMIL SAUR, the celebrated pi-
* *• anist arrived in town this week, and
will make his debut at the Metropolitan
Opera House next Tuesday evening, Jan.
10th. We have so frequently spoken of
the remarkable standing of this pianist in
European musical circles that it is only
natural that the people of this city, and
country, for all that, should look forward
with no little anticipation to the great artis-
tic treat in store for them.
It is interesting to note the eulogistic re-
marks of the Vienna papers regarding
some concerts which he gave recently in
that city.. The Neue Freie Press. ranks
him as one of the four greatest pianists
heard in Vienna since Rubinstein.
T H E municipal authorities of Boston are
* demonstrating their progressiveness by
the inauguration of a musical campaign of
education which is as novel as it is com-
mendable. It is now proposed to follow
up the interesting free municipal concerts,
given every Sunday night, by the present-
ation sometime this month of a number of
operas of the popular order probably in
Mechanics' Hall—the largest building of its
kind in use.
Another feature of the
good work of the municipal musical com-
mission is the enjoyment afforded the
people of the poorer sections of Boston by
LELANI) LANGI.EY.
in uplifting and encouraging humanity
than all this patronizing of those individ-
uals and organizations who dole out char-
ity and make the recipients feel it is so.
Bravo for Boston, say we.
*
A BARITONE who is now rapidly mak-
* * ing his way to the front as one of our
best and brilliant vocalists is Mr. Leland
Langley, whose portrait appears on this
page. It was not originally intended that
Mr. Langley should follow music as a pro-
fession. His father, Captain Henry Lang-
ley, was in the British Army (the Eleventh
Hussars), and Mr. Leland Langley was at
one time destined for the same career.
This, however, became impossible; and,
acting upon the strongly expressed advice
of some well-known musicians, Mr. Lang-
ley went to Paris and was encouraged by
Faure—the great operatic baritone—to re-
main and continue to study under his
guidance. At the end of his studies Mr.
Langley returned to London and appeared
with great success in many of the principal
concerts with Madame Albani, Antoinette
9
Sterling, Marie Rose, Foli, Edward Lloyd,
Hollman, and numerous others, and then,
at Sir Joseph Barnby's request, turned his
attention to oratorio work. Mr. Langley
will make his American appearance under
the management of Henry Wolfsohn.
*
HE lack of originality in musical com-
position has been a pretty general ac-
cusation against musicians. It would be
quite strange to peruse a musical paper
and not find a mild insinuation that so and
so is somewhat of a plagiarist. And yet it
can happen that a man may be the most
original of writers and at the same time
the greatest of plagiar-
ists. . This is paradoxi-
cal, of course, but it will
stand analysis, even if
applied to the great
m a s t e r , Shakespeare.
Literature, in a late
issue adduces the fol-
lowing evidence in this
connection:
" We all know that
Shakespeare's borrow-
ing arm was a very
long one indeed. Old
chronicles, North's Plu-
tarch, mediaeval English
poetry, Italian novel-
ists, contemporary play-
wrights—all were laid
under contribution; and
in the same way Milton
probably
conveyed
' L'Allegro ' and
' II
Penscroso ' from Bur-
ton's ' Abstract of Mel-
ancholy,
Dialogikos, '
and certainly made con-
siderable use of the
Dutch poet's ' Lucifer '
in the construction of
'Paradise Lost.' 'Trist-
ram Shandy ' is one of
the
most
' original '
books in English litera-
ture, and yet it is a patchwork of outrageous
thefts,and Melancholy Burton himself, from
whom Sterne stole, contrived to get the
effect of ' originality ' into his 'Anatomy,'
which is a mere cento of quotations.
T
'' In one sense of the word there is no such
thing as originality, in another sense it is
not uncommon. The Italian novelists from
whom Shakespeare plagiarized were them-
selves but copyists from older sources, and
folklorists are aware that the Europeans of
the Middle Ages enjoyed tales that had
amused Asia in far antiquity. The matter
of a literary work of art may come from
nature, from life, or from another book,
while the form is created by the author.
In some of Poe's tales it is easy enough to
detect the influence of Mrs. Radcliffe, and
Mrs. Radcliffe drew her stories from a very
imperfect and distorted notion of mediaeval
romance, and mediaeval romance was
founded to a considerable extent on early
Celtic legends, and Celtic legends must owe
a good deal to prehistoric Turanian influ-
ence—and so the ladder mounts till it van-
ishes as in the Indian juggler's trick; but

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