Music Trade Review

Issue: 1899 Vol. 29 N. 1

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
Blue Danube " began in the United States.
It was sung first in Vienna by a choir of
male voices, and having made no great
impression, dropped out of use for a while.
Here it was introduced as an orchestra
number, and was popular everywhere be-
fore Vienna and other European cities
became nearly so familiar with it.
Strauss's last triumph was the perform-
ance of "Die Fledermaus " at the Grand
Opera in Vienna, on Pentecost, he himself
conducting the overture. The excitement
proved too much for him, and from that
day his vital powers waned. When the
will was opened it was found that he had,
after providing for his relatives, left all his
property, including six houses, to the
Gesellschaft der Musikfreunde.
. *
'"FHE opening of the summer night con-
* certs scheduled for St. Nicholas Rink
have been delayed owing to the difficulty
of getting the hall ready. Franz Kalten-
born will conduct an orchestra of forty
musicians when the concerts begin in pop-
ular and classical selections. In the mean-
time Sousa and the free concerts must satis-
fy the public demand for music.
*"
I I ERR FRANZ SCHALK says that his
*• *• failure to return to New York and con-
duct the Wagner operas at the Metropolitan
was not due to any disagreement over terms
with Maurice Grau, but was the result of
his inability to get leave of absence from
his duties as third conductor at the Royal
Opera in Berlin. He says that he is too
young a man to haggle over terms and
appreciates too much the value of associa-
tions with a company like that at the Metro-
politan to interfere with his future connec-
tions by remaining away on account of a
question of salary. If he broke his con-
tract in Berlin it would be impossible for
him to conduct in any of the German opera
houses. So he will remain in Berlin until
he gets permission to leave.
Emil Paur, will, it is expected, succeed
Kerr Schalk. Mr. Paur is at present in
Europe where the contract will be signed,
all details having been previously arranged.
*
P R E S I D E N T McKINLEY, it is stated,
will likely present a prize to the
United Singers of Brooklyn to be com-
peted for at the great National Saenger-
fest by the delegates from abroad who are
expected to attend. This has been de-
cided on in view of the fact that the dele,
gates from the several societies in this
country are to struggle for a trophy to be
presented by Emperor William of Germany.
The fact that William of the United States
is partial to coon or rag-time music will
not, we trust, interfere with the entente
cordiale which now happily exists with
William of Germany, and his present and
former subjects.
r
I T would seem now that New York opera,
goers are destined to hear two new
Elsas next season if the contracts of Mme.
Sembrich and Mile. Calve are carried out
in their present terms. Mme. Sembrich
decided soon after she observed the Wag-
nerian influence here that she should share
in the glory to some extent by singing Elsa
and Eva. She has sung in "Lohengrin"
in Italian, but never in German, and will
be heard in the part for the first time here
next winter. Her experience with Eva
was confined to the Seidl benefit. Mile.
Calve is said by the French newspapers to
have included in her contract not only
Elsa, but also Elisabeth in " Tannhauser "
and to have learned that role in German.
This is probably incorrect. Mile. Calve
has never sung in " Lohengrin," although
at one time she studied the part in French
and was to sing it in a contemplated pro-
duction of the work in Paris at the old
Opera Comique.
*
1\ A ME. MELBA announces that she has
* * * definitely dropped the Wagner roles
from her repertoire. It was at one time
said that she was preparing to appear as
Eva, but according to her present plans
that has been given up, along with any
thought of future appearances as Elsa or
Elizabeth. Mile. Calve is likely to compli-
cate still further the old Juliette troubles,
for she is to sing that role for the first time
here next season. As Jean de Reszke will
in all probability be unavailable for Romeo,
it will be interesting to observe how great
the public demand for the opera is. With
Mmes. Sembrich, Melba and Mile. Calve,
not to mention the other women in the
company, the usual supply of eminent
daughters of the Capulets will be on hand.
The Elsas will be nearly as abundant.
Mme. Sembrich has theories of her own as
to the way in which Elsa should be sung,
and that is different enough from the
standard popular here to make it certain
that her performance will be interesting,
whether or not it will conform to present
taste. The Elsas of recent seasons have
occasionally accentuated in singing as well
as in acting the heroic side of the char-
acter. Mile. Calve is promised as Cheru-
bino in " Le Nozze de Figaro," as A'ida
and as Sapho. Mile. Calve has never sung
Aida before. She was to appear in the
role at the. Opera in Paris before she broke
with that institution several years ago.
*
lVJOBODY will be more delighted than
1 ^ Mme. Sembrich at Mile. Calves'
return to the company. It will make pos-
sible the double bills which were formerly
so popular when Mile. Calve and Mme.
Melba were in the company together.
Metropolitan audiences will have the op-
portunity to hear Mme. Sembrich in "Don
Pasquale," " L a Fille du Regiment," and
one or two lighter operas that are not
sufficient for a whole evening's entertain-
ment. This was part of Mr. Grau's scheme
last winter, but it miscarried through Mile.
Calve's illness. It is not thought that Mme.
Sembrich and Mile. Calve are delighted to
be together for any other reason than their
artistic advancement. Indeed, they met
several years ago in St. Petersburg and
parted without having formed any very
deep and abiding friendship. They are
also to be heard together in Bizet's "Car-
men " at special performances of what will
probably serve as the medium of Mile.
Calve" s New York appearances more fre-
quently than any of the new or old roles of
her repertoire. She will always be Carmen
to American audiences more than any
other heroine.
*
'"THINGS have come to a pretty pass in
*• England. Sir John Stainer, the gov-
ernment's chief inspector of music under
the education department, professor of
music in Oxford and former organist of
St. Paul's Cathedral, declares that the pro-
fession is altogether overstocked and that
a serious crisis is at hand. Great num-
bers of musicians of character and attain-
ments are on the verge of starvation for
want of employment. He ascribes this as
partly due to the fact that the profession
is becoming fashionable.
Of the young people who are flocking to
the profession in crowds a vast majority
have not the most remote chance of even
moderate success. He declares that hardly
half a dozen composers in England can live
by writing music. He himself had tested
about 15,000 voices in the past thirteen
years, and discovered perhaps twenty-five
first-rate ones in that number. He says,
that nobody, unless exceptionally endowed,
should think of the musical profession as a
career unless prepared to become a teacher
as well as a performer.
*
LAMOUREUX, the distinguished
• French conductor, is quoted as ex-
pounding the following opinion, musically,
of the English nation: "I do not doubt
but that in ten years' time the English
race will produce some great musical
genius who shall rank with Shakespeare in
literature; their musical education is so
sure and so complete." This is flattering
and hopeful. M. Lamoureux, no doubt,
expects that the "musical genius" will
come from this side of the "big pond."
*
T H E largest music school in the world is
* the Guildhall in London. The num-
ber of pupils this year is 3,600. In
1898 the professors, 121 in number, were
paid the sum of something over $118,-
000; and during the same period the
school received from students and endow-
ments the sum of $139,525.
of the biggest singing festivals
ever known here will be held in this
city during the first four days in July by
sixty-three singing societies representing
the German trades unions of the New Eng-
land and Middle Atlantic States. A re-
markable program has been arranged, and
it is said that 4,000 persons will participate
in the concerts.
The most noteworthy feature of the fes-
tival will be the singing of songs devoted
to the various trades members of the so-
cieties are engaged in. The Rockville,
Conn., weavers will sing a song entitled
" T h e Weavers," which will tell in thrill-
ing musical effects and words what weavers
must undergo during strikes, lockouts and
periods of enforced idleness. The song
will tell of the misery of the weavers with
the most dramatic and realistic accuracy.
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
Miners from Hudson County, N. J.,
will sing a song entitled " T h e Miners'
Lot," describing how the miner goes down
into the mine at the risk of his life, about
explosions and other accidents.
On July i the singers will get together.
July 2 the singers will have a banquet at
7 P. M., at the Grand Central Palace. On
July 3 there will be a grand rehearsal and
a singers' convention, and in the evening
a big torchlight parade. On July 4 there
will be a concert and picnic at Brommer's
Union Park.
O IEGFRIED WAGNER is getting along
^
rapidly on the road to fame. Not
only has the vocal score of his opera ap-
peared, with all modern improvements,
but Walther Wossidlo has prepared and
issued a pamphlet of 31 pages entitled
"Siegfried Wagner's Barenhauter, a Pop-
ular Guide through Poem and Music."
*
""PHE Music Department of the Brooklyn
* Institute has already decided not to
give a series of choral concerts next season.
It appears these concerts do not attract.
With possibly one exception, the choral
concerts have been given at a financial loss,
and artistically they have not come up to
expectations. Last year the Institute gave
a series of Spring organ recitals, and these
have been abandoned this year, for the
same reason that the Department of Music
refuses to undertake the choral concerts for
next season. The five matinees by the
Boston Symphony Orchestra are also likely
to be cut off. This does not speak well for
Brooklyn borough. Is it possible that the
union of the cities has exercised an injuri-
ous influence? In the olden days of civic
independence there used to be abroad in
Brooklyn a creditable ambition to hold no
minor place in musical matters. Why the
retrogression?
*
FT is evident that the energetic impresa-
' rio, Mr. Victor Thrane, intends to make
the season of 1899-1900 a "red letter" one
in his career. He has secured a number of
famous artists whose achievements abroad
entitle them to more than ordinary consid-
eration from the concert-loving public of
this country.
Among the Thrane luminaries in the
musical firmament Mark Hambourg, the
famous Russian pianist, is destined to
shine brilliantly. His success in London,
on the European Continent and Australia,
of which country he has made two tours,
has been phenomenal. The critics pro-
nounce him a pianist of the first rank, pos-
sessing keen musical temperament and
thoroughly schooled in technique. His
metropolitan engagement will be an event
in the musical world. We understand he
has been engaged for the December con-
certs of the New York Philharmonic Soci-
ety.
Perhaps one of the greatest in the Thrane
roster of stars is the Russian violinist,
Alex. Petschnikoff. This artist is said to
be the very realization of perfection in tone
and execution. Petschnikoff is in the
bloom of youth, being only twenty-six
years old. He comes from humble origin
with pronounced natural musical tastes,
which in early life were carefully trained.
His musical development latterly was
guided by the great violinist, Hrimaly.
Petschnikoff will make his American debut
with the New York Philharmonic Society,
in Carnegie Hall, on Dec. 17 and 18.
Leonora Jackson, the young American
violiniste, who won the Mendelssohn State
Prize at Berlin last fall for which artists
of various nationalities, vocalists as well
as instrumentalists, competed, will occupy
a prominent place in New York's musical
season this year. During the past season she
ALEX. PETSCHNIKOFF.
has won remarkable success in the musical
centers of Europe. At the Leipzig Ge-
wandhaus Symphony, the London Philhar-
monic and the Paris Colonne concerts—the
most distinguished musical organizations
in Europe—her superb playing won the most
enthusiastic praise from the critics. At a
recent concert under Nikisch at Leipzig
she was recalled five times amid the great-
est applause. Her American appearance
will occur on Jan. 5 and 6, 1900, with the
New York Philharmonic Society.
Another artist, new to America, who it
is said will rival the success won by young
Gerardy, is Miss Elsa Ruegger, 'cellist.
Miss Ruegger is the daughter of a Swiss
LEONORA JACKSON.
Government official and was educated at
Brussels. She made her debut when but
eleven years old, amazing all by her won-
derful facility and inborn musical feeling.
Under competent teachers she has grown
to be an artist of remarkable attainments.
She has passed through the ordeal of Ber-
lin criticism with flying colors. Her tone
is said to be delightfully captivating and
her playing throughout dominated by an
exceedingly poetic and musical tempera-
ment.
Two other artists, not entirely unfamiliar
to us will be included in Mr. Thrane's
"list" the coming season—Martinus Sie-
veking, the Dutch pianist, and Mine.
Frances Saville, of the Imperial Opera,
Vienna, who will appear in concert work.
Mme. Saville is a Californian whose ex-
quisite voice and charming personality made
her a great favorite during her appearance
at the Metropolitan Opera House.
Mr. Thrane, however, is not confining
his season to European celebrities, for he is
managing the tours of a number of famous
American artists. He intends to arrange
a series of recitals in several Western
cities when he will bring forward the differ-
ent artists which he is managing, rnore
particularly the artists whose pictures ap-
pear in these pages.
*
A WRITER in one of our local papers
'*> "hits the nail on the head" when he
says that "pilgrims to Bayreuth this sum-
mer will have to be satisfied with a good deal
of second-class singing." They will have su-
perb orchestral performances with such ma-
estri as Mottl and Richter, and beautiful
stage settings designed by Kniese, but they
will have to listen to some singers who
have been and some who never will be.
The Wotan of Van Rooy, the Mime of
Breuer, the Erda and Waltraus of Schu-
mann-Heink will be offset by the Sieg-
mund and the Walther Von Stolzing of
Ernst Kraus and the Sieglinde of Rosa
Sucher. All three of the Brunnhildes are
to be sung by Ellen Gulbranson, from
Christiania, of whom it is said that she is
all voice and nothing else.
*
P R E S I D E N T HARPER of the Chicago
*- University is endeavoring to give a
solar-plexus blow to that now famous
classic " A Hot Time in the Old Town"
which has been hailed by our newly ac-
quired fellow citizens of Latin extraction
as the American national anthem. A few
days ago he sent an official note to Prof.
Glenn Hobbs, who has charge of the Uni-
versity band, putting a ban on the playing
of this Ethiopian chef-d'oeuvre.
"The tune is vulgar and immoral,"
wrote President Harper, "and its effect
upon undergraduates is demoralizing."
These words settle the fate of " A Hot
Time" in the Chicago University. The
President further said the band must not
head any procession to the athletic field,
and must play impartial music, nothing
that would tend to irritate opposing ath-
letic teams.
Thus Chicago takes another step for-
ward in the slow march toward a greater
musical culture.
the secrets of the wider diffusion
O NE of of musical
knowledge in Europe and
the prevalence of that "atmosphere" so
much talked about, can be traced undoubt-
edly to the large measure of support given
by the municipalities, sovereigns and the
State to the different opera houses through-

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