Music Trade Review

Issue: 1899 Vol. 28 N. 22

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With which is incorporated T H E KEYNOTE.
VOL. XXVIII. No. 22.
Published Every Saturday at 3 East Fourteenth Street.
MR. C. Q. CONN.
MONG the men who are playing an
important part in the development of
the musical culture of the American people
to-day, is Mr. C. G. Conn, whose picture
appears on the cover page of this issue.
His was the master mind, which some-
thing over a quarter of a century ago saw
the great possibilities for active work in
the improvement of band and orchestral
instruments.
At that time the United States was
exclusively controlled by foreign manufac-
turers, everything considered "anything"
was imported. With that grit and enter-
prise so characteristic of the Western
pioneer, Mr. Conn started in to manufac-
ture in Elkhart, Ind., with a few assistants
and modest capital. He labored tirelessly
but effectively to blaze his way along new
paths of effort. He utilized brain as well
as muscle. After a careful study of the
various makes of band instruments he
realized their defects and through his
technical and inventive genius originated
such remedial and improved methods of
construction as have made their author
famous among the great inventors and
improvers of our time.
The celebrated " Wonder " band, orches-
tral and string instruments manufactured
by Mr. Conn are to-day the best monument
to his ability and enterprise. They have
won the encomiums of the famous band
masters and instrumental soloists in this
country and abroad. In construction, in
tonal quality in all essentials that go to
make the best in their line they are stamped
with the individuality of the maker, and
estimated from any standpoint are sui gen-
eris.
Through the opening of the New York
warerooms some two years since Mr. Conn's
personality has been made better known to
Eastern musicians. This move has also
helped toward a wider recognition of the
intrinsic merits of the different instruments
which he manufactures.
As might be expected from a man of Mr.
Conn's force of character, expansion has
been the order of the day in his establish-
ment, and new moves all tending to a
greater augmentation of prestige have been
recorded from time to time. The latest is
the securing of new quarters at 34 E.
Fourteenth street, to be known as the Conn
Building and which will be occupied early
this month. In this immense establish-
New York, June 3,1899.
ment of five stories, will be centered his
various interests, the object being to es-
tablish a central emporium, worthy of the
metropolis, where everything in the musi-
cal line can be purchased.
That Mr. Conn is destined to become a
still greater force in the musical life of
America seems to us certain and is logical-
ly based upon past achievements. If we
consider him as a creator of an individual
system of band instrument manufacture
which is the superior of any the world
over; as the owner of one of the largest
factories in the world devoted to the manu-
facture of these instruments; as the orig-
inator of a co-operative plan by which
profits are divided between himself and
his employees; as a capable and clever
writer and editor; as a Mayor several times
of his native City, Elkhart; as a legislator
in the halls of Congress; or as a progres-
sive opening-of-the-century business man
—take him in either or all of these po-
sitions and it must be admitted that Mr.
Conn is a unique and forceful personality
who is bound to make his way still higher
not only in the estimation of men but in
inventive, musical and industrial spheres.
*
TEAN DE RESZKE, who recently sang
^ with a number of the Grau forces
at Windsor Castle, has been invested by
Queen Victoria with the Royal Victorian
Order of the fourth class. Sir Arthur
Sullivan is the only other musician who
has received this decoration. We hope this
will not result in the entrance fee being
increased at the Metropolitan next season.
*
T H E Secretary of the Park Board an-
* nounces the following schedule of
band concerts to be given in the various
parks of Manhattan borough during the
summer: Central Park 71 st Regiment Band,
Fanciulli, thirty concerts, Saturday and
Sunday afternoons at 4 o'clock, beginning
May 27. Mount Morris, Squadron A Band,
Laderhaus, thirteen concerts, Tuesday
evening at 8 o'clock, beginning May 30.
Abingdon square, Old Guard Band, Ram-
pone, fifteen concerts, Wednesday evenings,
beginning May 31. Washington square,
8th Regiment Band, Crowley, eleven con-
certs, Monday evening, beginning May 29.
Madison square, 14th Regiment Band,
Conterno, fifteen concerts, Thursday even-
ings, beginning June 1. Battery, 69th
Regiment Band, Bayne, thirteen concerts,
$2.00 PER YEAR.
SINGLE COPIES 10 CENTS.
Friday evening, beginning June 2. Tomp-
kins square, 9th Regiment Band, Bent, and
Wagner's Band, seven concerts each, Tues-
day evenings, beginning May 30. Mul-
berry Bend, Berndt's, Di Matteo's and
Camera's bands, twelve concerts, Wednes-
day evenings, beginning May 31. East
River, Boswald's and Kauer's bands, thir-
teen concerts, Thursday evenings, begin-
ning June 1. Corlears Hook, Kauer's, Ward's
and Halle's bands, twelve concerts, Monday
evenings, beginning May 29.
*
J N connection with the band concerts in
* the city par^s the suggestion is made
that this service could be admirably sup-
plemented by either the city or private in-
dividuals in giving a series of what is
termed in Liverpool "court and alley
open-air concerts." The experiment was
tried m that city about three years ago.
It has not got to London yet, but last
year Birmingham took it up, and this
year Manchester slum dwellers will be
favored. The great advantage of these
affairs is that the music is brought to
the doors of the poor, many of whom are
unable to go any distance from home.
Particulars are not at hand of the way
the concerts have been conducted in Liver-
pool, but the manner in which they might
be given easily suggests itself. The poor
have little besides hard work and indiffer-
ent food and shelter. New York is rich
enough to spend a few thousand dollars for
their entertainment, and nothing would be
more acceptable than music. One needs
but to watch the eagerness with which a
good street piano is welcomed to be con-
vinced of this, but even the street pianos
are seen but little in the sections where
they would be most appreciated, for their
proprietors must live, and small coin is
scarce in the slums.
T F rumors current over the water be cor-
* rect, Mme. Patti may again honor us
with one of her farewell tours. No doubt
she understands what a drawing card her
new title is in this democratic country of
ours, and the opportunity of adding a good
many dollai-s to her bank account is an in-
ducement she cannot well resist.
#
I EONCAVALLO is said to be writing
*-** an opera, based on the novel "Quo
Vadis." The next thing, Kipling, Marie
Corelli and Laura Jean Libbey will be im-
mortalized in some of the musical forms.
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
TELEPHONE
NUMBER,
1745.-E1GHTEENTH
STREET.
The musical supplement to The Review is
published on the first Saturday of each month.
is generally held that many great
I T songs
have been given to the world,
but, in spite of Schubert, who in a few of
his songs has done wonderful things, and
Schumann, who really had a finer idea of
the union and poetry of music, and Robert
Franz, who too often cut the knot by mak-
ing his vocal music so subservient to the
words that it is sometimes colorless and
uninteresting, there is still room for the
assertion that song writing is in its in-
fancy, says a writer in a London paper.
Wagner complained that in the old operas
music had been made an end instead of a
means of poetic expression: the same
thing can equally well be said of song
writing. I suppose such songs, in which
the absolute beauty of the music conditions
everything and completely smothers all
vital meaning out of trie hardly used
poems, will always be popular; but they
can never have more than a musical effect;
whereas a perfect marriage between words
and music can be an actual power in the
world for good or evil; it can rouse men
to heroism, stir hearts overclogged with
selfishness, and make a pulse beat which
never beats else.
*
to do this a special kind of poem is
B UT wanted
for songs, just as Wagner had
to simplify his poems so as to give music
its full expressive power. Here and there
you will find lyrics which might have been
written especially for music; but there is a
limit to them. The only way out of the
difficulty is that either a composer should
be his own poet, or that the poet should
set himself to understand the needs of the
composer, which he can easily do without
sacrificing his art-ship. The two would
then work together to a common end,
which in itself would be a greater end
than any to which either might attain by
himself.
There is another aspect, too, of this song-
question which requires a few words.
Even when we have the perfect song, we
still require—the perfect singer. We de-
mand brains, intuition, dramatic power,
emotion in our modern singers of modern
songs. To be able to sing a melody
smoothly, to overcome easily the most
awkward intervals, is not sufficient for our
purpose. We must have something more
than mere voice; there must be a human
soul behind it, or the result is incomplete.
The composer cannot notate changes of
voice color; he cannot, without cramping
the singer of intelligence, write down every
little shade of expression—almost as rea-
sonably might one expect a dramatist to
notate every change of expression in the
voice for the different sentiments in the
speeches set down for his actors. No; the
finest song ultimately rests for its com-
pleteness with the singer.
*
C R A N K DAMROSCH has proposed a
*• grand musical welcome for Dewey,
and suggests that his Choral Union to its full
strength greet the returning warrior with
'' See the Conquering Hero Comes." ' 'But
this does not go far enough, "says our enter-
taining friend the Criterion. '< It is not
commensurate with the measure of Dewey's
exploit. Let us rather place a group of
enormous and melodious whistles at the
furthest end of Staten Island, put a twin
set at High Bridge and then let a third set
be placed on Liberty Island. Have them
blown by steam, operated by electricity,
and played by Frank Damrosch. Then
choose some grand chorus with antiphonal
effects, and provided the day was clear and
the winds were whist, New York would be
filled with a harmony never thought of
even by the late lamented Patrick Sarsfield
Gilmore. Imagine the weird beauty of
the thing. From Staten Island to the
Borough of the Bronx, the Metropolis
would de filled with song, aud jaundiced
foreign critics would have another chance to
say that we measure merit by bigness."
This scheme is certainly novel, but why
not add church bells, trolley car gongs, a
million or two anvils, and under no circum-
stances exclude the thousand and one
factory whistles which could come in in the
chorus, or take part in the familar "encore".
In other words let it be a grand Wagnerian
pandemonium; then Dewey will at once
take the first ship back to the Philippines
and remain there for the rest of his life.
No wonder he has decided not to arrive
until October. He is waiting, no doubt,
for the frost of common sense to nip the
thousand and one schemes which the
papers are exploiting in connection with
his arrival.
'"THE opera season is still six months off,
* but developments in connection there-
with occupy considerable attention. Every
day we read of new engagements and new
plans, and if some of the things which have
been published are true there is much cause
for congratulation. The logic of the situa-
tion points strongly to the selection of
Emil Paur as conductor for the Wagnerian
performances. Unless Mr. Grau could
introduce one of the great maestri Richter
or Mottl to the New York public—and this
from recent developments seems now im-
possible—it would be an absurdity to ignore
Paur and engage Schalk, Muck or Wein-
gaertner.
The time has come when New York is
really independent of the Old World in
operatic matters. As things are now this
city is the operatic centre, and the Grau
Company is a home organization which
make an annual summer visit to London.
It can be reinforced from abroad only with
such notabilities as have a universal repu-
tation.
With Emil Paur at the conductor's desk
the matter of the orchestra itself becomes
one of acute importance. Talking along
these lines the World says: "The public
should no longer be asked to accept the
incompetent players who year after
year sit in the Opera-House pit and
offend all ears. Mr. Grau can now
afford to have a distinctive, independent
orchestra, composed of musicians who are
musicians, disciplined, and recognizing no
other authority but that of their employer,
that of their leader and that of the laws of
the land. This orchestra, with its six
months of steady work during the operatic
season, could easily be kept together for
four months more, for concert work. A
two month's vacation for rest and recuper-
ation would round off the year. The
feasibility of such a plan is beyond discus-
sion. The good results that would follow
are obvious."
'"THE question of art atmosphere, so much
* discussed by musicians as absolutely
essential to musical development, was the
subject of a talk recently by Henry B. Ful-
ler, of Chicago, who took rather a narrow
view of the situation and assumed the role of
the pessimistic prophet. According to Mr.
Fuller "our environment is hostile to art.
As Americans we have the climate against
our artistic aspirations. We have our busi-
ness* demands, forcing us to money-mak-
ing, against us. Our social ideals are
hindrances. This is the age of waste-
paper, or, somewhat differently expressed,
of widejy diffused intelligence. There is a
hand-to-mouth system of intellectual living
which makes all intellectual concentration
impossible. The motto for most of us is
'Sufficient unto the day is the newspaper
thereof. 1 Short of any ideal appreciation
of art, we are driven to 'features'—turrets
of tin, sensationalism. We are the great
'kid' nation. If we have a national dance,
it is St. Vitus's dance. Discovery and in-
vention have been shoveled in on us too
thick. We have indigestion from them.
Art ought to be disinterested, but the mod-
ern man is too self-conscious, too much of
a calculating machine. We don't swing
free enough. We talk about loving nature,
but we don't. We abuse and throttle na-
ture. All of these characteristics make up
our triumphant democracy. It is a sad
triumph, a sad democracy. There is no
art in it, nor ever will be."
Evidently Mr. Fuller must be viewing
the situation through Chicago-ground
glasses. It is true, commercialism is large-
ly in the saddle nowadays, that the sensa-
tional newspapers exercise on the masses
a larger measure of influence than they
should, and that the political arena is not
as free from bosses and charlatans as we
would wish, nevertheless when it comes to
the matter of art progress one must be suf-
fering from mental astigmatism if he can-
not notice the marvellous growth in appre-
ciation of art and music in this country es-
pecially for the past five years.
An art atmosphere such as is found in
European nations, is a matter of slow
growth in a new country like ours and the
result of centuries of evolution. The

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