Music Trade Review

Issue: 1900 Vol. 31 N. 22

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
PUBLIC LIBRARY,.
THE
ARTISTS'
DEPARTMENT.
EM1LIE FRANCES BAUER, Editor.
TELEPHONE
NUMBER,
1745.--EIGHTEENTH STREET
The Artists' Department of The Review is
published on the first Saturday of each month.
WOMEN AS riANAQERS.
\ 1 7 I T H the fact staring us in the face
that women are working into all
commercial fields, it is not astonishing
that the occupation of manager should be
tried and should be one wherein a woman
might be pre-eminently successful. With
this as with everything else there are some
who will make notable successes and some
who will be dolorously and disastrously
unsuccessful. In this respect, if in no
other, they will not be different from many
of their brothers in the same business, as
there are always a few successful ones and
hordes of disappointed in every line of
life.
It has reached the point.where the suc-
cess of musical attractions lies in the hands
of women, whether in clubs or as individ-
uals. The stock in trade of a manager is
knowing the country, having- the ability to
place his press notices, supplying artists
that are what they are represented to be,
having enough capital to "boom" his peo-
ple and having enough fortitude to endure
the strain which, after all, exists in all
commercial life. That the entire scheme
entails risk is certain, as the caprices of a
public and the indigestion of the critics are
exigencies which cannot be anticipated or
prepared for.
In all this there is nothing that a woman
might not control as well as a man, and it
were strange if a woman could not place
an artist as well as a man if her judgment
be calm, cool and commercial, in other
words, if she be able to judge the commer-
cial value of an artist which certainly does
not depend upon art alone:
Everybody is agog at the announcement
that Mme. Paderewska is to manage her
liege lord's business. Wherefore? This will
keep the Paderewski income intact, and
that is all that is necessary for any one to
know. Probably the Madame is perfectly
capable and can endure the strain of a busi-
ness life. When it comes to questioning
any further it ceases to belong to the pub-
lic.
Were Paderewski a poor, struggling
artist whose life must needs be saddened
by the impossibility of marrying and sup-
porting the woman of his choice, her de-
termination to join her fate to his, to as-
sume the commercial burden and help him
MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
into position and happiness would have
caused still greater comment, but the com-
ment would have been one of admiration
for the pluck of a woman who stands ready
to face the brunt and storm of a business
life to be near the man she loves, to share
his good or ill-luck, to be in truth his help^
mate, his companion, his inspiration.
Such a woman would be contributing
with lavish hand her share to art, she
would be giving something of rare and
beautiful value to the world. But, indeed,
after all, the romance that has surrounded
Paderewski and his career, the phase of
his wife as business manager falls with " a
dull and heavy thud " upon the hero wor-
shippers, and in that fall it drags down a
good deal of sentiment that is actually nec-
essary to keep Paderewski where he belongs.
It makes his love seem coldly commercial,
and it makes his art icy to a Klondike de-
gree. It is repulsive to hear the clink of
the dollars between the movements of the
Appassionata Sonata.
It is perfectly reasonable to expect a man
who marries an artist to assume her busi-
ness management. It is to be expected that
a man will take the burden upon himself
and spare the woman he loves. The re-
verse of this is not the case, as the first
thing to be expected of a man is that he
protect his wife from the storms of life
whether he be an artist or a cobbler if he
be successful enough to do this without
her assistance.
It is well for the woman who is com-
pelled to face the world to do so manfully
and bravely. To a woman of innate re-
finement whose delicacy of nature must
shrink from all the blows that any one in
business is open to, a commercial career
at its very best is a hardship and one
which takes the -sweetness of life away
from woman and makes of her naught but
a craft at the mercy of the wind and waves
with no certainty of a safe arrival in har-
bor until the spark of life is extinct and
the journey is over. Is it possible that
Paderewski with all his Polish estates and
his last American capture need subject his
wife to this?
WORDS AND TONES.
T H E subjoined interesting remarks on
the " Clangtint of Words" are by
Rowland Sill:—"It is interesting to notice
what a difference there is in words as to
their atmosphere. Two terms that the dic-
tionaries give as being nearly or quite sy-
nonymous may have widely different values
for literary use. Each has its own envel-
oping suggestiveness—'airs from heaven,'
or emanations from elsewhere. Of two
words denoting the same object or action,
one may come drawing with it a light, a
glory, a fair, luminous cloud; the other
bringing a disagreeable smudge. Accord-
ingly, in the literary art, it is not enough
to use language with an exact sense of defi-
nitions; one must add to this logical
precision a nice instinct for atmos-
pheric effect.
Just as a tone of a
particular pitch is one thing on a flute, and
another on a horn, each having its own
timbre, so a term having a precise mean-
ing is one thing if it has dropped carolling
out of Grecian skies, and from the delicate
hands of Keats and Shelley, but quite an-
other thing if it has come clattering and
rumbling up out of clod-hoppers' horse-
talk.
Moreover, just as the difference be-
tween tones on various instruments is due
to their diverse groups of harmonic over-
tones, one superposed on another, so the
individual atmosphere of any word comes
from its having its own composite set of
associations, some faint and vague, some
strong and definite, that have through all
its history been clustering upon it."
KATHEKINE bLOODQOOD IN VAUDEVILLE.
HTHIS announcement came like a thun-
derclap to those who, interested in
America and its art, were pleased to re-
gard Katherine Bloodgood as one of its
most brilliant successes. Few American
girls had achieved what this handsome
woman, with her rich contralto voice and
wide musical education had done. She
had triumphantly carried off engagements
with most of the Oratorio societies in this
country, including New York, the center
where she won unqualified praise. She
was one American to whom one could
point with pride and who might be quoted
as an example to young singers who are
struggling for recognition. She was one
contralto who might be pitted against the
numbers of foreigners who are brought into
these engagements with the remark, "Well
where are your Americans that can do it?"
Katherine Bloodgood could, and one re-
joiced in saying so.
And she has committed a deliberate ar-
tistic suicide! One can but question why,
and an attempt to arrive at a plausible so-
lution is entirely impossible. No matter
from what side this be viewed it is a piti-
able downfall and can be regarded in no
other light. If the argument be set forth
that she needed it financially, one immedi-
ately remembers that she was past the
struggling period; she had gained both
standing and recognition.
What has lost this to her?
a singer to use her brains as
voice, for it is a great art to
tion after one has attained it.
good has lost it. Her pictures
It behooves
well as her
hold a posi-
Mrs. Blood-
are now ex-
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
posed outside of the Keith doors and she
permits her artistic downfall to glare more
fiercely by using the names of the Boston
Symphony Orchestra and the New York
Oratorio Society to show the height she
had attained.
If the musical conditions are such that
this step is the result of impossibility
to get engagements, then young women
would better cease to think of art and get
down to the practical of life, for in that
case America is not worthy of art; it is a
country where advance in art is over-
shadowed with a curse. But even this
would- not justify Mrs. Bloodgood in the
move she has made.
If there were any reason why she could
no longer secure engagements, surely she
could have gone to some smaller city and
entered the ranks of teachers, as her repu-
tation would have assured her pupils. One
owes a duty t o one's art as well as to one's
self and the step from oratorio into vaude-
ville is one that is far-reaching in its evil
influence upon others who are struggling
along the same hard road and to whom
those who have achieved reputation and
success should be an example.
HONORING BRITISH MUSICIANS.
C R O M a Cambridge University corre-
spondent the information comes that
it is proposed to confer, as honorary de-
grees, Doctorships of Music upon Frederic
Hymen Cowen and Edward Elgar; and a
Mastership of Arts upon James Oswald
Dykes, D. D., Edinburgh, Principal of
Westminster College, Cambridge.
In the history of England's music there
has never been any one jump into
the world's favor so quickly and so
securely as Elgar, unless it may be
Coleridge-Taylor, also of England.
In
many respects the latter is one of the most
striking personalities among living native
composers. The son of a West African
father and an English mother, his dusky
skin and frizzy hair proclaim in unmis-
takable fashion his mixed descent, though
his music is purely European in its bril-
liancy, originality and finished art. His
greatest hit, so far, has been his "Hia-
watha " music.
Coleridge-Taylor, who is now only twen-
ty-five, begin his musical studies at the
mature age of six. At ten, he was a
chorister in a church choir at Croy-
den. Then he entered the Royal Col-
lege of Music, where he studied the vio-
lin, composition, and so forth, and car-
ried off numerous prizes. One of his
earliest works—a clarinet quintet—was in-
troduced in Berlin by Professor Stanford
and Dr. Joachim. Further chamber pieces,
songs, symphonies, orchestral ballads and
other compositions, all marked by unde-
niable melodic beauty, harmonic original-
ity, and a rare feeling for rhythm and
verve have since flowed from his fertile
pen. One of his newest works, a cantata
based on Longfellow's "Blind Girl of Cas-
tel-Cuille," is to be heard at next year's
Leeds Festival. Coleridge-Taylor is a vio-
lin professor at the Croydon Conservatory
of Music, where he acts also as conductor.
variations is passing, and even it is par-
donable for a greater man to improve up-
on a smaller man's work,but to orchestrate
Beethoven is indeed to "gild the sunbeam,
to paint the lily," and it is strange that
Theodore Thomas did not see this in the
same light.
that Tinsley is a sympathetic interpreter
of Taylor's compositions. He is a pupil of
William M. Burritt and is also regarded a
song composer of merit.
Pauline Hall could sing, but she studied
hard and continued all the time. Marie
Tempest and Marion Manola could sing,
but they have passed out at least for the
present, and those who now furnish the
amusement do so purely by their ability to
be funny, by their attractive personalities,
but never by the slightest approach to
knowing how to sing. Nor is this confined
to the female portion; if anyone believes
this let him ponder over the startling exe-
cutions of Francis Wilson, James T. Pow-
ers, Cyril Scott, Dan Daly, and be con-
vinced.
COniC OPERA SINGERS.
A S soon as the discovery is made that a
young woman has a voice her thoughts
J\ A ANY will be interested to know that immediately turn to grand opera. That
the most sympathetic interpreter of there is any other field never enters her
Samuel Coleridge Taylor's songs in Amer- head; at least, if it does she tries to eject
ica is Pedro T. Tinsley, a colored man and the thought as soon as possible. But the
a resident of Chicago, says the Times- fact stares one straight in the face, that
Herald of that city.
" T h e Wedding there are so many singers with grand opera
Feast," which is regarded one of Taylor's aspirations and comic opera personalities;
two masterpieces—-the other being the and, indeed, the field for singers in comic
Hiawatha cantata—will be performed by opera is, or should be, unlimited; for where
the Apollo Club at the beginning of this can you find a handful who can sing.
Eliminating that charming artist, Hilda
year's fall and winter season. Bispham
was the first to acquaint American music Clark, as also Bertha Waltzinger and Helen
lovers with the high character of his com- Bertram, it is safe to assert that the comic
positions. Pedro T. Tinsley, however, is opera stars are favorites for their comedy,
the first American singer to make us famil- and far be it from their audiences to even
iar with the rare distinction and beauty of think of them as singers. Virginia Earl,
his songs. Tinsley is the choirmaster of Edna Wallace Hopper, Anna Held, Lillian
the Grace Presbyterian Church in Chicago, Russell, Edna May, are all favorites in
and recently gave a song recital, the pro- comic opera, and they are all charming
gram of which contained exclusively the enough in their way, but as singers—alas!
songs of Samuel Coleridge Taylor. A col- no. Not a trace of correct vocalism is to
ored man himself, it is not passing strange be detected in any of them.
SONATA ORCHESTRATION.
P R O M Chicago comes the information
that the nestor of conductors, Theo-
dore Thomas, has arranged for orchestra
some works which were originally written
as piano soli and at a recent concert he
presented the andante from Beethoven's
Kreutzer sonata for violin and piano as an
orchestral number. That this was very
interesting cannot be doubted as Thomas
is a great enough man to make anything
he says or does interesting.
Just how artistic this may have been is
another matter and one not so easily an-
swered. Beethoven himself had remark-
able powers when it came to orchestrations
and had he so desired could have made
this an orchestral work then and there.
It is not unlikely that this "caught on,"
because of the element of popularity which
it doubtless must contain, but in Chicago
after all Thomas' great and noble work
and determination to give the best and to
educate the public up to his standard,
is it necessary to drop to the level of those
who want the popular? Is it artistic and in
keeping with Mr. Thomas' highly digni-
fied policy? The day of transcriptions and
VAN DERSTUCKEN RESIGNS.
A FTER the close of the present sea-
son's concerts in Cincinnati, Van der
Stucken the eminent conductor, will leave
that field, having tendered his resignation
as conductor of the orchestra and as Dean
of the College of Music where he has pre-
sided for six years. His plans have not
been made known, but it is naturally in-
ferred that he will come east. Both his
movements and the speculation as to his
successor will make lively topics for Cin-
cinnati.
THE FIRST ORATORIO.
T H E first oratorio was entitled Rappre-
sentatione di Anima e di Corpo. It
was composed by Emilio del Cavaliere, per-
formed and printed in Rome in 1600. The

Download Page 4: PDF File | Image

Download Page 5 PDF File | Image

Future scanning projects are planned by the International Arcade Museum Library (IAML).

Pro Tip: You can flip pages on the issue easily by using the left and right arrow keys on your keyboard.