Music Trade Review

Issue: 1899 Vol. 29 N. 1

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THENEWYORK
PUBLIC LIBRARYY
146536 WITH
MUSICAL SUPPLEMENT,
IV
A8TOB, LFNOX AND
TILOSN FOUNOAT»N«
1100,
With which is incorporated THE KEYNOTE.
V O L . XXIX. N o . 1.
Published Every Saturday by Edward Lyman Bill at 3 East Fourteenth Street. New York, July 1,1899.
MUSIC IN THE SCHOOL.
If there are discords in the life of musical
people,
it is not because of the music, but
JV/I USIC rises through rhythm and mel-
in
spite
of it.
*** ody to harmony and symphony.
Music
may be taught in school so as to
Good music in the school brings the pop-
be
a
mere
glossing of the life, or it may
ulace up to the enjoyment of all the com-
reach
to
the
fountains of character. No
fort, peace and joy of music, in so far as
art
can
be
spread
out so thin, as none can
music has a common interest for mankind.
run
so
deep.
It also brings music as an art into the
every-day life of the world by making it
the habitual companion in their impres-
PEAKING of "the neglect of the Ameri-
sionable years of those, who are to be the
can composer" Philip Hale says: Do
Americans of the future.
not accuse me lightly of any want of true
We are beginning to beautify school- patriotism. I am an American, but not a
rooms with reproductions of works of art, jingo, not even a German-American, who
reprints of the master-pieces. Too much 55peaks English with a rich, fruity accent,
cannot be said of the benefit to be derived and complains because conductors do not
from placing these where children can see produce his overture to Iphigenia in Hobo-
them day by day, but even this is hardly to ken, or his symphonic poem, In Cincinnati's
be compared with the influence of the Rhine-land.
daily singing of historic songs, the weav-
I am a Yankee of the Yankees. I am of
ing of selections from master-pieces into an eighth generation of Yankees, born, bred,
the heart and the voice of children, to be educated, in New England. I have certain-
taken by them into after life.
ly as good a right to speak about "Ameri-
Albert E. Winship well says: "The can music" as have the sons and daughters
problems are how to get the most of music of parents who were born in foreign lands,
into school, and the most out of the music of fathers some of whom were never natu-
of the school. Let us have music in every ralized, some of whom died without the
school in America. It is almost as absurd ability to speak or write English. It is
to have a school without music as to have not to me a pleasant thought that the three
a school-room without sunlight. When chief orchestral conductors in this country
music is in the school, it should be so are Germans; that the language spoken in
taught as to be a factor in character mak- orchestral rehearsals is German; that nine-
ing. Sunlight in the school-room will not tenths of the players in the chief orchestras
insure health without proper ventilation are foreigners by birth. This does not
and appropriate exercise; indeed, it can prevent me from acknowledging the fact
ruin the eyes if it is directly faced. So that few American musicians, American
music will not make character simply by born of American parents, are at present
competent to fill leading positions in the
admitting it to the school-room."
Music is of service to a greater number Boston Symphony, the New York Philhar-
of persons than any other art. More ap- monic, or the Chicago orchestra.
There are several reasons.for this: lack
preciate it and execute it, more are influ-
of
opportunity, the absence of a "musical
enced by it and use it for the pleasure and
atmosphere,"
the disinclination of the
good of others. The poorest get from it
comfort and enjoyment, and the rich joy American to make haste slowly, the poor
and peace. The laborer at his toil, the pecuniary reward given, except in few ex-
millionaire at his dinner, the servant and ceptional cases, to players of certain
the servantless housewife in the kitchen, orchestral instruments.
and the society queen in the drawing
Fashion, I regret to say, has at present
room, all find music their tonic.
much to do with the choice of a conductor.
Music rests the body, balances the mind, I doubt whether Mr. Higginson, the
and pacifies the soul. It is said that one founder of the Boston Symphony Or-
cannot be hypnotized when he is singing. chestra, would entertain for one moment
The violently insane do not sing. An an- the idea of an American conductor at the
gry man cools off if he begins to sing. head of his orchestra. He believes, for he
There are no angles in a song. The ten- is a man of conservative tastes and
dency of music is to make one beautiful. opinions, that a first-class orchestral con-
SINGLE COPIES 10 CENT'
ductor must be a German. It is a pity
that this idea is not confined to the village
of Boston. It is a pity that many of the
villagers accept this idea blindly and
passionately.
Nobody disputes the technical qualifica-
tions of the three conductors now in power.
I am not speaking of persons; I am speak-
ing of the principle.
There are several men in this country,
good Americans, men of marked natural
ability, men who have studied faithfully
and intelligently in foreign cities, who, I
firmly believe, would be most admirable
conductors, if they only had greater oppor-
tunities. But how can they learn this trade?
Our laj-ge cities have no permanent opera;
few of them have any orchestra. And
even if there were sub-conductors in the
chief orchestras, would these Americans be
chosen to fill these subordinate positions?
You will find in London a man by the
name of Henry J. Wood at the head of a
very large orchestra. Many concerts are
given under his direction. Time and time
again have such critics as Mr. Runciman
and Mr. Blackburn held up his hands by
their encouragement and praise. To-day
he has more than local fame. His skill is
known to the best informed in cities of the
Continent. He was obliged to work his
way; but when he proved himself worthy,.
his claim was not refused because his name
was Wood, and not Von Holtz or Dubois.
Nor am I protesting against foreigners
because they are foreigners. The best
available player of horn, oboe, bassoon,
kettle drums, should have the vacant posi-
tion, whether he be Russian or Italian,
French or American, German or Zulu,
Belgian or Filipino.
But the American should have an equal
chance—provided he be worthy to fill the
place.
musical sensation of the moment in
T HE Paris
is the mass by the Landgrave of
Hesse, sang at the Madeleine. The illus-
trious composer is said to be a sort of
modern Palestrina, with Beethoven inter-
mingled. The organ accompaniment is re-
duced to a minimum. One or two pas-
sages are overlengthy, notably the con-
cluding portions of the "Credo," but the
work is majestic and the sacred melody
very touching.
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.
'T'HE concerts in the public parks seem
* to be attracting unusually large au-
diences this summer. In Central Park,
Sig. Fanciulli's fine band is heard twice
weekly in programs of rare excellence—a
happy blending of the classical and good
popular music. The bandmaster of the
Seventy-first Reg't is fortunate in having
among his staff of artists such a brilliant
cornetist and cultured musician as Wm.
Paris Chambers. His solo playing is an
attractive feature of every concert in New
York's great park.
To appreciate fully the beneficial influ-
ence exercised by our municipal concerts,
Battery Park, Washington Square, Tomp-
kins Square, Madison Square and other
points, must be visited on the nights when
the bands play. These breathing-spots of
the big city are always thronged. The
audiences are appreciative and have a defi-
nite taste. They prefer stirring marches,
coon songs, sentimental melodies, to all
other things. They keep time to the
marches, they voice impromptu choruses
to the ditties of the day, and as they are
generally in couples they draw closer one
to the other when the cornet-player toots a
tune that tells of loving hearts. These
concerts are events. If any one doubts
the existence of a love for music among
the masses he may easily discover his mis-
take on any pleasant evening.
*
ALKING of "music" and the "masses, 1 '
brings to mind the multitude there
are in every large city who go about utter-
ing the passionate cry, " Give us a tune!"
Their desire for a tune might well move a
diminished seventh to tears, or cause the
stoutest augmented fourth to quail and re-
spect the triad. It is no manner of use
telling them that there are tunes in the
operas of Wagner, that the " Meistersinger"
streams with tunes, that "Tristan" is full
of melody, that the wood-bird music in
"Siegfried," the spring-night music in
"Die Walkiire," is magically tuneful, that
the overture to "Tannhauser" and the
third act of "Lohengrin" contain airs to
turn us into mandarins. They reply that
they want tunes that are tunes. Never
argue with them. It is useless, and leads
to discords, and they prefer concords,
though very often they could not tell you
the difference between one and the other.
These partially musical people, who swarm
like bees in the highways and by-ways like
something tripping. They dread a fugue
more than pestilence, a piece of strict
counterpoint more than famine. Talk not
to them of subject and countersubject, of
sequences and modulations, of exposition
T
—which they connect with Paris and the
next century—and of inversion. They
cannot dissect music, nor do they desire
to. They decline to use their intellect in
connection with a gay art—as they con-
sider it. What they want is to sit in a
comfortable seat and hear tunes. Yet they
are not the totally unmusical. They are
the partially musical, and they have every
right to be considered. Also they can be
gently educated, if you don't let them
know it, just as children can swallow pills
if they don't know they are swallowing
pills, but are totally unable to get them
down if they do.
month just closed has been a busy
one for music teachers in all parts of
the country. At Cincinnati, the Music
Teachers' National Association closed one
of its most successful reunions, the pro-
grams and business meetings being well
attended, and the results on the whole
being of such a nature as to help for-
ward the cause of American music every-
where. In a number of States conventions
have also occurred. In fact the concern
manifested in the success of these meetings
this year has been above the average, thus
demonstrating very properly that the in-
terests of American musicians and Ameri-
can music can best be conserved and ad-
vanced by an active personal participation
in movements of this character.
If American composers are to become a
greater power in the musical world they
must take the initiative just as surely as
a business man would in exploiting some
product of his mind or of his factory.
These associations, National and State, are
deserving of the warmest support from all
having at heart the advancement of Ameri-
can music. That the cause may prosper
and attain the fruition we all desire is the
earnest wish of this paper.
*
IN a recent apotheosis of the rag-time
*• vogue, Rupert Hughes expresses the
opinion that while this "school" of music
meets with little encouragement from the
scholarly musician, he predicts that rag-
time has come to stay, that it will be taken
up and developed into a great dance-form
to be handled with respect, not only by a
learning body of negro creators, but by
the scholarly musicians of the whole world.
If rag-time was called tempo di raga or
rague-tenips, says Mr. Hughes, it might
win honor more speedily. Or if the word
could be allied to the harmonic ragas of
the East Indians, it would be more accept-
able. What the derivation of the word is,
I have not the faintest idea. The negroes
call their clog-dancing ' ragging,' and the
dance a ' rag.' There is a Spanish verb,
raer, ' to scrape,' and a French naval term,
rague, ' scraped,' both doubtless from the
Latin rado.
*
O YNCOPATION is an unexpected visi-
^
tant in negro music, and perhaps it is
as well to admit at once, to avoid argu-
ment, that this is borrowed from the
Cuban dance, the habanera. Rag-time,
however, bears only the faintest possible
resemblance in letter and in spirit to
the music of the Spanish races on this
continent. It has almost as much kinship
with the Hungarian dances of Brahms
and the Slavic dances of Dvorak. It has
much of the abandon of a Friska, but in
essence rag-time is utterly distinct, racy
and shiftlessly chaotic.
To formulate rag-time is to commit
synecdoche, to pretend that one tone is
the whole gamut, and to pretend that
chaos is orderly. The chief law is to be
lawless. The ordinary harmonic progres-
sions are not to be respected; the dis-
sonances are hardly to be represented by
any conventional notation, because the
chords of the accompaniment are not logi-
cally related to the bass nor to each other
nor to the air. It is a tripartite agreement
to disagree. In this beautiful independ-
ence of motion the future contrapuntalist
will fairly revel; the holy fugue itself of-
fers no more play to ingenuity.
latest phase of the rag-time mania
is the publication of such tunes as
"The Star-Spangled Banner," Mendels-
sohn's "Wedding March," and even the
"Trovatore" Miserere re-arranged in rag-
time. Their bad taste will serve at least
this use, says Mr. Hughes: It will display
the elasticity and the energy and the cap-
tivation of rag-time as a special dance-
form. It will doubtless find its way grad-
ually into the works of some great genius,
and will thereafter be canonized; and the
day will come when the decadents of the
next century will revolt against it, and will
call it a "hide-bound, sapless, scholastic
form, dead as its contemporaries, canon
and fugue." Meanwhile, it is young and
unhackneyed and throbbing with life—
and it is racial.
*
TJUGO GORLITZ, manager of Ignace
* * Paderewski, has denied that the pianist
was married on May 31, but does not ex-
clude other dates. He also says that the
pianist has not had his hair cut short. So
all, as the hero says in the melodrama, has
not yet been lost.
*
D R O F . M A C D O W E L L has a number of
*• ambitious and highly commendable
plans in view in connection with the music
department of Columbia University this
fall. He has arranged to have a Univer-
sity Chorus and a University Orchestra,
membership in either of which is required
of every male student in the department
and is permitted to all other university
students. To carry on the work effectively
Dr. MacDowell has called to his aid Gustav
Heinrichs, whose solid musicianship and
ability are too well known to need com-
ment. Under the guidance of this ex-
perienced conductor the chorus and orches-
tra should attain considerable prominence
in the musical affairs of this city. In
another course Dr. MacDowell is to teach
free harmony and the practical composition
of music, and compositions of the students
are to be discussed and analyzed. This
course may in time be expected to work
in with the orchestra and chorus, so that

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