Music Trade Review

Issue: 1899 Vol. 29 N. 23

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
powerful agencies for the spread of relig-
ion and suggesting that sacred Sunday
symphony concerts be held in the churches.
He has received replies favoring the plan
from some of the best-known religious
teachers of the city and it is probable that
some concerts will be given.
'""FHERE has been much discussion anent
* the wisdom of Maurice Grau's plan
this season in having his Opera Company
make an extended Western tour ptevious
to its appearance in this city. Most of the
prominent singers have been unable to
withstand the sudden changes of temper-
ature in the West and have been nursing
colds and other ills. The stockholders and
subscribers are not looking forward joyfully
to listening to the invalid story and con-
sider that it was unwise to jeopardize the
season of opera in this city which is, after
all, the most liberally patronized and the
surest source of income, by undertaking a
long road tour that is open to great perils.
The daily press have contained innu-
merable stories of the non-appearance,
owing to illness, of leading artists in the
various cities visited. The prospect of such
a thing occurring in this city is not pleasant
and comes particularly hard on those of
moderate means who have to pay a good
sum of money to hear a certain artist and
find on entering that "owing to illness" her
place has been taken by Mme.
. Mean-
while let us hope for the best.
*
LARA BUTT has been, by all odds, the
most interesting figure on the con-
cert platform since the season opened. Her
voice is a contralto, ranging from C in the
bass clef to high A in the treble. In qual-
ity it is distinct, full and resonant and
moves one by its richness and power. Al-
though this season chronicles the first ap-
pearance of Miss Butt in this country she
has been before the public for nine years
and has sung at most of the prominent
musical festivals in England where she is
a great favorite. Her artistic skill is great,
and her intellectual appreciation of the
high class of music to which she has de-
voted herself is true and thorough. Her
recitals on Tuesday night and Saturday
afternoon of last week were the occasions
of the warmest demonstrations of appre-
ciation of her abilities by audiences com-
posed of New York's elite. Her farewell
takes place at the Metropolitan Opera
House to-morrow evening. She sails for
England December 9th, to participate in
various Christmas performances of the
"Messiah."
During her present tour she has been
under the management of Henry Wolf-
sohn, and it is safe to predict that this
astute manager will secure her for a longer
period next season. She is an artist whom
all will enjoying hearing again.
of great interest to scholars
A SCHEME
in music the world over is in progress
in the music-room of the British Museum
library. Now that the great printed gen-
eral catalogue is nearly finished, the au-
thorities have decided to prepare for publi-
cation a series of monographs on the great
composers, based on the material relating
to their works in the library and other de-
partments. The series will extend to
twenty-five volumes, those now in prepara-
tion being on Wagner and Beethoven.
*
T H E R E has been a remarkable develop-
'
ment in musical taste and musical ap-
preciation in this country within a compar-
itively recent date. Meanwhile an apti-
tude for music is not enough; an "ear for
MJSS CLARA
BUTT.
music" is not enough. There must be the
power of feeling music, of thinking in it.
It is just here that the average student is
so disappointing. There is technical skill,
which must be taken for granted in a modern
artist, but there is no warmth of conception
—nothing to show that the student really
feels the music; and it is absurd to
suppose that when the poetic musical tem-
perament is lacking, an interpretation will
have the power of charming an audience.
The fact is that a talent for any of the arts
does not pre-suppose a capability of rising
to distinction in them. A singer may have
a fine voice, but of what avail is it if she
have no sense of musical expression? There
have been cases, it is true, of singers who
have risen to the top simply because of
their fine voices, just as there are examples
of pianists who have ma^f a name by their
exceptional digital powers; but such cases
are exceptions to the rule, and not one in
five thousand students has any chance of
achieving a reputation by technic alone.
And yet it is generally a technical aptitude
that leads to the profession of music being
chosen as a means of earning a livelihood
just as a talent for drawing is popularly
supposed to be sufficient grounds for the
painter's career. The schools are full of
these technically talented young people.
Medals have been gained, and the highest
certificates awarded; but the world hears
no more of these successful students unless
they have real musical feeling.
ANOTHER point—until a community
c a n learn to estimate music on its
own account, and not with reference to
certain favored
names, will any
genuine musical at-
mosphere be created.
At present there is
scarcely any limit to
the hollow pretense
and affectation in the
musical field. As the
C h i c a g o Times-
Herald w e l l s a y s :
H u n d r e d s whose
only desire is to
follow a fashionable
tad, copy the airs
and manners of musi-
cal connoisseurs, and
assume an interest
in the classic music
forms w h i c h they
are far from feeling.
Severe music of the
classic and scientific
school they neither
understand nor en-
joy, and yet, with
an affectation which
is most absurd, they
refuse to endorse any
other. Greater hon-
esty a n d a m o r e
catholic spirit could
not fail, therefore,
to broaden any mu-
sical field in a most
desirable m a n n e r .
There is plenty of ''good .music by the
best composers, which will serve to inspire
and educate those who have not advanced
to the point of appreciating abstract forms
and the more elaborate symphonies and
music dramas, and such music deserves
encouragement.
**•
HP HE Boston Symphony Orchestra ehang-
* ed the aspect of Carnegie Hall at its
last concerts in this city by using on the
stage an interior scene which had the ad-
vantage of increasing the effectiveness of
the orchestra's playing, even if it did not
add much to the usual condition of the stage
in the hall. There is no reason why a more
tasteful and decorative interior could not
have been selected and the artistic side of
the matter looked after with some greater
care. But there seems to be some circum-
stance unfavorable to the proper appearance
of the stage at Carnegie Hall. Sometimes a
short curtain is hung from the top of the
arch and when this happens the drapery is
adjusted in so awkward a fashion as to be a
constant irritation to the"eye. When it is
not in use some other feature of the stag^
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
furnishing is likely to possess the same
distracting quality. Only at the concerts
given by the Musical Art Society is any
serious attempt made to beautify the in-
terior of the hall. And that is always suc-
cessful enough to encourage other persons
to follow this good example. The perform-
ances of the Oratorio Society are usually
made visually attractive by a great bank
of singers seated at the back of the stage,
but the disarranged canvas or some other
circumstance is likely to add its disturbing
influence even to these occasions.
in which it is now proposed to distinguish
Mr. Grau, but they were all at the time
subjects of the Austrian Empire. Mr.
Grau was born in Brunn, and his family
have lived there for many years, but he
long ago became an American citizen, and
in spite of his foreign birth he is as dis-
tinctly an American of New York as a
man who had never been out of this city.
It was a curious incident of his return to
this country in September that he never
referred in any interview to the fact of his
decoration by the French Government, al-
though he was very naturally flattered at
DUSSIAN music is the strangest para- the honor.
* ^ dox—it owes more to the music of
* -
other countries than any other school, yet T H E extraordinary advance sale for
no music is more thoroughly individual
* Paderewski's recitals, the first of
and unmistakable. It clothes itself after which occurs on the afternoon of Dec.
the form and fashion of its neighbors, but 12th, demonstrates that this great virtuoso
beneath its garb peeps out a physiognomy is still the stellar attraction in the pianistic
indubitably Slavonic. Sixty years ago
there was no Russian school of music,
properly speaking; then suddenly it sprang
into being. The man who first turned with
serious intent to the pent-up musical re-
sources of his own country was Michael
Ivanovitch Glinka (180^-1857). He had
sufficient strength of purpose to carry out
his designs—he became the founder of the
modern Russian school of music and the
father of Russian opera.
In spite of all apparent contradictions
and anomalies, Glinka's life-work and ten-
dencies were the natural results of events;
his course was directed by the tide of cir-
cumstances, as a brief study of Russian
history, will show. He did for Russian
music what his contemporary, Pouschkin,
did for Russian literature, each in his own
department representing a national move-
ment. Perhaps it is not too far-fetched a
ISABELLA hEATON.
theory to trace this movement to the mo- world. On Wednesday last he left Europe,
mentous date of 1812, when it fell to the for this country by the "Oceanic" and
lot of Russia to administer the first check before sailing gave his services for the
in Napoleon's triumphant career. To have benefit of the England Relief Fund organ-
repulsed a Napoleon was a mighty deed, ized for the support of the wives and chil-
which could reveal to the Russians of what dren of the English Reserves who are now
stuff they were made. Glinka, Pouschkin, doing military service in the Transvaal.
and their followers sought no foreign aid;
*
they represent a Russian renaissance. They I N the musical affairs of this country wo-
were content, indeed, to abide by the forms * men are rapidly asserting their ability
universally adopted elsewhere, but the to cope with their brothers as composers
spirit of their art manifestation was Rus- and executants. A brilliant pianist who is
sian to its core.
commanding more than ordinary notice in
the musical world is Miss Isabelle Beaton,
TF rumors from Europe are to be believed, whose portrait appears on this page. She
*• Maurice Grau is to receive greater dis- was the favorite pupil of Moskowski, and
tinction than the Legion of Honor confer- considered one of the cleverest students
red on him last summer by the French that master has ever had. She is not only
Government. This was done, of course, as a clever pianist but has written a number
a reward for his encouragement to French of meritorious works, one of which the
dramatic and musical art, and that his ef- famous Emil Paur's Orchestra did her the
forts in this direction are not at an end is honor to perform.
shown by the combination of the two most
famous French actors whom he proposes JV/I ASCAGNI'S new opera, "The Masks,"
to bring to this country. Now comes the * * * will have a prologue after the style
report that the Emperor of Austria is to of "Pagliacci," but spoken instead of sung.
make him a baron, and this is to be done by The famous Italian actor, Ernesto Novelli,
conferring on him the Order of the Black has volunteered to recite it at the first rep-
Eagle of the second class. The only diffi- resentation. It is supposed to be delivered
culty with this would seem to be the neces- by the Impresario (an idea possibly sug-
sity for all persons who receive this order to gested by Goethe's "Faust") to re-introduce
be Austrian subjects. A number of the Roth- the celebrated types of the old Italian pan-
schild family have been made members of tomime, such as Pantaloon, Harlequin, Dr.
the Austrian nobility in the same fashion Badanzone, Brighella and Scaramouche.
The opera is on the old story of a father,
namely Pantaloon, who wishes his daugh-
ter to marry a middle-aged adventurer,
whereas she prefers the youthful Florindo.
Her confidante, at the feast of the marriage
contract, places a powder in the wine to
make the bridegroom insane, but they all
drink of it, and there is a wild scene. The
adventurer is unmasked, his supposed title-
deeds, carried by Harlequin, prove sham,
and the lovers are united.
*
JWIME. NEVADA closed three remark-
* ' • ably successful appearances at the
Metropolitan Opera House under Chas. L.
Young's direction last Sunday evening by
a delightful concert which was for the
benefit of the Hebrew Infants' Asylum.
She was assisted by Josef Weiss, pianist,
Chas. A. Kaiser, the well-known tenor of
St. Patrick's R. C. Cathedral, Flavie Van
den Hende, 'cellist, and an orchestra of
sixty under the direction of Nahan Franko.
Mme. Nevada, who will start at once on
a tour which will extend to the Pacific
Coast, appearing in all the principal cities
en route, said recently that it was her in-
tention to make a feature of new works by
American composers. "I shall devote
myself religiously," she said, " t o the hear-
ing of original American music from now
until the opening of my tour, and I have
no doubt that I shall be able to add some
surprisingly good new music to my reper-
toire. At all events I shall try."
*
C R I E N D S of Anton Seidl will be glad
*
to learn that his widow's affairs have
been arranged in a way which makes it
possible for her to live in comfort. The
sum raised by the benefit performance last
year was $12,000, and Mrs. Seidl presented
it to Columbia University, and is enjoying
the income of it during her lifetime. Her
husband's music, which represented a large
investment, was also presented to the col-
lege. Mr. Seidl was one of the few con-
ductors who spent his own money to buy
music. Most conductors are employed by
orchestras which buy their own music and
it happened that for some years he was
compelled to buy himself any novelties he
desired. Frequently these were played
only a few times and could not be used
again, as public interest in new orchestral
works is not general. Mrs. Seidl has never
sold her husband's Catskill home and lives
there during much of the year. Her in-
come from his life insurance, the benefit
fund, the Seidl book and the property he
left, now amounts to sufficient to support
her in modest comfort and enables her to
remain in this country. She ha6 tempo-
rarily given up the idea of teaching, which
she contemplated for a while.
*
P E W will disagree with Philip Hale's defi-
*• nition of the instrumental cadenza
which he says " i s generally a thing to
strike terror to the stoutest soul." It is too
often a rambling composition of inordinate
length, in which the performer is given an
opportunity to indulge himself in practice
of scales and arpeggios, and in the display
of mastery of other technical difficulties.
Occasionally there is a slight reference to

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