Music Trade Review

Issue: 1900 Vol. 31 N. 14

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
impossible to estimate the number of stu-
dents that come from all over the country
for study in New York. Not alone to be
with the best teachers, but to hear music,
should be the aim of all of these students.
The opera is a great school, too great,
indeed, to be overlooked, even if they can
afford no better seats than the topmost
row of the top gallery, but too few stu-
dents of singing remember there is any
music outside of the vocal; this is a piti-
ful mistake and the failure of most singers
is due to this short-sightedness. The stu-
dent who confines himself to the narrow
study of vocal music is totally unfit to
meet the demands of the public, and the
public should not tolerate many things
that it does, although to its credit be it
said that it is growing more fastidious all
the time. Therefore, to fit one's self for a
vocal career the student should attend or-
chestral, and chamber music concerts,
should study piano carefully to the point
of virtuosity, and by all means study the
English, French and German languages.
HP HE RE is, perhaps, no musical an-
nouncement made that is hailed with
more delight by the truly musical people
than that of the Kneisel quartet, whose
present season is the ninth in New York.
However hard these people may have
striven to win favor by adhering rigidly to
. the best and noblest in music and in meth-
ods, they stand to-day in a unique and en-
viable position. The houses will be full to
overflowing as they always are and the au-
diences will represent the culture and re-
finement of New York's people, for to
them the Kneisels are as they should be
to all who are capable of understanding
the embodiment of art in its purest and
highest form. Some interesting assistants
will be announced later.
less clavier. It is worth its price over
again, if only to save the wear and tear of
a magnificent piano, to say nothing of the
wear and tear of the nervous system of
those within hearing distance of the pa-
tient practicer.
The results have been very flattering to
the Virgil people, and great as the appre-
ciation is of what has been done, the
scheme is in its incipiency and will be until
the clavier is as much of a necessity in the
home of every musician, as the piano is.
j*
IN the professional card column of a San
Francisco paper a tenor advertises his
services and adds "no thank-you engage-
ments desired." This looks grotesque
only for a moment to those who know how
many "thank you engagements" fall to
the lot of those who make a living by their
musical talents. Fortunate are they if
even a "thank you" goes with it. For the
greater part services given are not even
considered of enough importance to say
"thank you." In different parts of the
country the gratis services are due to
different causes, but whatever the causes
are, a stand should be taken against
them.
For instance, teachers should not encour-
age their pupils to public appearance; if a
pupil is not finished enough to be paid for
his or her work, the pupil is not fit to be
heard, and probably does the teacher more
harm than good. The music clubs and the
women's clubs are in a great measure re-
sponsible for much of the "thank you"
work, and the professionals should certain-
ly draw the line here.
There is a very great difference between
becoming well known and being hack-
neyed, and that is what the most of them
become. People like to hear novelties,
and one must choose between being a nov-
elty or a favorite, and it is in the power of
very few to be the latter.
day follows Sunday and there are many
churches.
That there is a great dearth of sacred
music of dignity is proven by the enor-
mous amount of wretched stuff that even
good musicianly organists permit upon
their programs, and to use melodies that
are banal and adapt sacred words to them
should be beneath the dignity of any self-
respecting singer.
A publishing house will give considera-
tion to an anthem or a mass about ten
times as quickly as it will to a ballad.
Try it and see.
A MONG the different devices to facili-
tate chord structures and relations,
nothing is more feasible and intelligent
than the chart just invented and issued by
H. M. Bosworth, of San Francisco, who
has given the larger part of his life to the
workings of this system. His chief aim
seems to have been accomplished, and that
was to make it perfectly lucid, yet forceful
and exhaustive withal. It carries a great
deal of the personality of Mr. Bosworth,
and that is to eliminate everything that is
not meat and sinew, to have a purpose and
to set it forth briefly, concisely and exact-
Mr. Bosworth is one of the strongest fig-
ures in the musical life of the Pacific coast,
and his work will doubtless make itself felt
east and west; in fact, Mr. Bosworth has
no more complimentary comment than has
been given him by Rosenthal, Ysaye,
Paderewski and other musicians of under-
standing and note.
T H E Yersin sisters, who have had large
classes in New York in French dic-
tion, spent the summer months in their
home in Paris. They are expected back
shortly and will locate for the season in
Boston, where they should have extremely
1VIOW is the season to be dreaded by
large classes.
those unfortunate enough to have
There is a hugely mistaken idea con-
musical tastes, especially, if they be house-
A LOIS LEJEAL, of San Francisco, has cerning a language and its application to
hunting, flat-hunting, or apartment-hunt-
just published his sixth mass, and it is the voice, especially the French with its
ing. It was bad enough to have property
a
truly
beautiful composition, being tune- many nasals. Let no ordinary teacher of
owners, or rather the all-important agents,
dictate as to how many children a family ful and well-written. Lejeal is no stran- languages believe that he is capable of
might be permitted, in order that they ger in the repertory of the fine organists of equipping a singer with the proper diction
might live in the localities where gentle- the country, as he has done some of the unless he understand tone production, at
folks abide, but to put pianos and their best church work of any of the American least a proper speaking tone production,
operators, (mechanical or otherwise) sing- composers, and his masses are well-known and by the way, when one listens to the
ers, etc., under the ban—indeed, it is too and appreciated in the Catholic churches. abominable speaking tonal quality in many
heartless. May all the piano-organs of He is a scholarly musician and is very who pose as singers it makes one tremble
New York infest those neighborhoods, and prominent in San Francisco.
at the thought of what the vocal tone must
may Allah grant that the organs be out of
be.
j*
HTHERE is a vast field for composers; for
tune!
much as has been accomplished, it DEROSI has not become discouraged by
the merciless scoring he got from all
/"^AN it be possible, that the energetic counts for almost nothing where the de-
sides,
but he set to music a Hymn to the
mand
for
good
church
music
is
so
great.
projectors of the Virgil clavier, are
in league with these property owners? But The old music will never grow too old to Redeemer, by Leo XIII, which will be per-
what a relief, after all, is the almost noise- do its duty in divine worship, but Sun- formed Dec. 24, at St. Peter's,
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
I •

A PLAIN TALK TO VOCAL STUDENTS.
«
• f
Y
t
• I ;•
Y
BY THE EDITOR.
"TO sing is to use the voice in accordance
*• with musical laws. The voice is the
sound produced by the passage of the air
through the glottis, or aperture formed by
the apposition, without contact, of the vo-
cal cords, bands or ligaments, the air being
impelled by the lungs, causing them to
vibrate. Singing is an art by which
thought and feeling are expressed by means
of vocalization and articulation. Of course
you understand vocalization to mean work
of the vowels, and articulation that of the
consonants in form of words.
It is distinctly my intention not to pre-
sent to you singing, or the voice from the
pedagogic, or to be more simple, the teach-
er's side. This article has nothing to say
to you of tone production, registers, or
anything that pertains to the voice as a
study. For that you have your teacher.
This is simply meant to handle the voice
from the hearer's standpoint, and be as-
sured that the hearer is more critical than
you think. Critical is perhaps not the
word, for it is a criticism that is not based
upon a technical knowledge, nor indeed
upon any knowledge, but upon a natural
sense. This sense will make it necessary
to regard the voice from three sides. First,
the voice as a thing of beauty; the voice
as a method of expression; and the voice
as a musical instrument.
Let us linger over the voice as a thing
of beauty, for is not beauty a pleasurable
thing of which to think—to speak? Is not
beauty worth working for? Is it not worth
thought and study to achieve beauty? So
let us accept, if you please, that beauty is
the first element to be desired in a voice.
Now then, what constitutes beauty? If
I were asked for an unbiassed expression,
I should say that quality is first, foremost,
and—well, I was going to say everything,
but perhaps I would better not be so
sweeping.
Do I prefer contralto or soprano? Well,
for a contralto, I prefer a contralto, and
for a soprano, I prefer a soprano, and there
is more in that remark than you will get
from it on one hearing. In fact, it might
well be said that quality entirely depends
upon the development of a voice, leaving
the voice where it belongs. There is per-
haps no more insurmountable difficulty
presented to the teacher than this one,
leaving out of question the voices ruined
by ignorant treatment, that are brought to
a teacher, voices shrieking out high notes
when they should be singing low ones, forc-
ing low grumbly weak tones when they
should have ringing high ones. Strange as
it may seem, if these distorted voices be in
the possession of docile, intelligent beings,
there is hope. Scientific treatment, or to
be more plain, scholarly voice-building,
will overcome this, even though the path
be dreary and weary and stony.
But what indeed—what of the pupil who
knows better than the teacher; who will
be a soprano, even though God himself has
.

«t.
ordained otherwise. How can such a dif-
ficulty be overcome—alas! how, indeed?
Now; to return to the first proposition—to
the voice as a thing of beauty. To be
beautiful a voice must have quality and it
must have its own quality. Is it perhaps
the standard of beauty that is difficult to
establish? Is it that a pupil does not rec-
ognize beauty? To the one, beauty means
naught save a few coarse high notes, vul-
gar indeed—loud, shoddy. To another,
beauty means a sickly, pale, quivering,
tearful tone, either of which is equally dis-
agreeable to the hearer.
Let, then, the first step be the mastery
of one's own opinions, and the proper con-
ception of the necessary quality for beauty,
which must be formed by study and defer-
ence to the opinions of those who know—
your teacher, for instance.
It is a noteworthy fact that among wo-
men the desires run toward being a sopra-
no. More voices are ruined by this incon-
ceivable attraction for high notes than by
any other vice known to the human voice.
We will divide the voice, as is the custom,
into six classes, but we will only deal
with the female voices at present. The
voices are divided into soprano, mezzo-
soprano and contralto; tenor, baritone and
bass. There are two distinct classes of
mezzo-soprano, the one leaning to soprano
capable of singing moderately high music
at times, the other tending to contralto.
Perhaps it would be more intelligible to di-
vide the female voices into contralto, mez-
zo-contralto, mezzo-soprano, dramatic so-
prano and soprano leggiera.
Not only does that seem better, but it
seems to correct the first flagrant error
concerning the voice, and to establish that
it is quality and not range, that makes
known to you what a voice is. It is not a
question of compass, but of timbre. Many
mezzo-sopranos can sing higher notes than
many sopranos. But upon the texture of
the middle voice, the voice must be built
and, whereas it would be a trifling matter
for the mezzo to sing a very high note, or
very many of them for that matter, it
would be a terrible strain upon the voice,
(and the audience as well, do not forget
this) to sing a song which lies in the so-
prano part of the scale.
If only students could be brought into
the realization that a tone or half-tone, or
let us say, to use a better phraseology, a
step, or half step, makes absolutely no
difference in glory as far as high notes are
concerned, and so very much throughout
the entire song in artistic effect in the
matter of the lay of the voice in general.
If, in any way, you could be impressed
with the absolute truth of this, if you
could be made understand the blind un-
reasonableness of this terrible mistake;
the inevitable ruin of your voice and your
career.
Let me talk more intimately to you—
there may be some of you to whom the
outlay of so much money as a musical ed-
ucation costs is not easy. You may be
working hard to save enough for it; if you
are not, someone else may be toiling and
economizing and denying him or herself
all enjoyments, even necessities, that your
beautiful talent may be cultivated, that
you may be independent, that you may
gain reputation, and that you may be val-
uable in turn to the circle which will sur-
round you as you begin to live your own
life.
Think how serious the present moment;
consider your voice as a young child; with
what care, with what purity must that
young life be surrounded that it may grow
into usefulness to its fellow-man, that it
diffuse goodness and purity instead of
polluting the atmosphere around it. Do
not, I pray you—do not think that I am
exaggerating the importance of this.
Let us step for a moment out of the sub-
ject in hand as a study or an art, and re-
gard it ethically. Let us see what is its
relation in a moral sense to your life. I
know—I understand that many of you are
studying for nothing but your own homes
and your friends; you are girls who do not
expect to use your voices as a means of
earning your living, and to you this part
of my talk would not need to be addressed
if—yes, there is an if—if we might look
into the future and see that you always
would occupy the positions which you do
now. If there were no such occurrences
as reverses; if the day would never come
when by a Wall street crash you would find
yourself face to face with the problem how
to make a living; if, when standing in the
presence of this problem, you did not solve
it in that most natural way—teach—sing
—use the musical education. So, young
ladies, this may apply to you also, even
though at the present moment this be the
furthest from your expectations.
Now let us come into the future. You
have arrived at that point where the in-
struction of young voices is in your hands.
Do you know what responsibility that
means? If you do not; first and foremost
let me tell you it means the health of the
pupil. There is a straight line between
ruined voices and consumption. The
throat is a delicate organ and will not
stand abuse. It will not stand to be car-
ried out of its register, whether the strain
be towards the high or the low notes. The
voice becomes fatigued, which shows itself
in hoarseness or a difficulty in making the
voice speak readily, the delicate membrane
which lines the vocal cords becoming
slightly abraded. Then the voice is forced,
and in forcing the chest, the ribs will feel
the strain, headaches will set in, and gen-
eral debility of the whole system will come
on. The voice will not stay in tune, the
sweetness will be gone, and loudness im-
possible to control is all that will be left,
if, indeed, even this is left.
The circle of mediocrity is being con-
stantly enlarged. Will you not study to
diminish rather than to increase the num-
ber who are doomed to study long and
hard, and seriously, and to build hopes,
and to spend money—money that is per-
haps sadly needed elsewhere? And to ac-
complish this they trust to you. Will you
—can you abuse this trust?

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