Music Trade Review

Issue: 1900 Vol. 31 N. 5

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
in concert. William Paull and Chauncey
Moore are other baritones that I have en-
gaged, and Leslie Walker and Hanlin com-
T"HE annual Worcester Festival begins plete the list of bassos. Mr. Grau and I
* Sept. 24th and ends the 28th of the have heard voices in London, Paris, Berlin,
same month. It will include seven con- Munich, Dresden, Vienna and Nice, and I
certs and seven public rehearsals. Cesar think we have got together a company ad-
Franck's "Beatitudes," the "German Re- mirably arranged for our purposes. Some
quiem" of Brahms, Verdi's " Te Deum," of my former singers will appear with
and Sullivan's "The Golden Legend "are them from time to time, and I am confi-
the principal choral works. Glazounow's dent that we shall give admirable perform-
Sixth Symphony, Mendelssohn's Scotch ances of opera in English."
Symphony and the B minor of Schubert,
j*
the "Unfinished," are to be in the pro- T H E librarian of the Opera in Paris, M.
gram. The solo singers will be Lillian
* Malherbe, is exhibiting as a feature of
Blauvelt, Sara Anderson, Schumann-Heink, the Congress of the History of Music at
Evan Williams, Theodore Van Yorx, Giu- the Paris Exposition a collection of auto-
seppe Campanari and Gwilym Miles. graphs of all the famous composers in the
George W. Chadwick will conduct.
world, which is said to include " a piece of
stands for the hem of the garment of the
goddess."
TELEPHONE
NUMBER,
1745 --EIGHTEENTH
STREET
The musical supplement to The Review is
published on the first Saturday of each month.
" O H A L L the street piano grinders be
^
driven from the city? " seems to be
a "paramount issue" locally, judging- from
the agitation these days in the daily papers.
Our aldermanic assembly, so distinguished
for the many necessary things it leaves un-
done, has, after much arduous labor, actu-
ally discovered that the street piano is a
tremendous nuisance and must go—that
is, unless the Italian vote is in danger of
going over to the enemy at the forthcom-
ing election. Seriously speaking, from one
point of view the street piano may be a
nuisance, but isn't that viewpoint very
narrow? Musical cakes and ale the street
piano and its tribe may be, but when you
can't get anything else to eat, drink and
make merry with, or, yet more important,
when your appetites and appreciations have
not been whetted and civilized up to any
higher point—why, cakes and ale are just
about the best things going.
Many of our readers, at least the man
and woman with seventeen weeks of grand
opera every winter to look forward to, and
with an abundance of good music at all
seasons that they choose to pay for, may
have no need for the street piano. There's
just this, though—no man or woman
was ever truly musical who didn't love all
music. True musical affection levels all
ranks; it knows no caste; it is strictly
democratic. What's more, your true
music lover must have some other sorts of
love in him too; for one thing, sympathy
for his fellowman. He doesn't despise
another's liking for the street piano; he
recognizes it as kin to him and his in kind,
if not in degree, and he doesn't believe in
quenching tre spark of that liking—as that
clever writer of the woman's department
of the Sun, said in writing on this subject
recently: "It's the folk with neither love
of music nor love for their fellowman that
want to hush the street pianos. There
are a good many people in this world who
have no use for anything whose benefit to
the community cannot be gauged by
dollars and cents.
By them, large
libraries, fine-art museums and the like
are only allowed because they have the
sanction of dollars and cents; no commer-
cial benefit can, of course, accrue from
such things, but when endowed and in-
dorsed by persons representing dollars and
cents they acquire a certain dignity. But
the lesser, humbler'agencies to remind us,
that no matter how down we are on all
fours, there is such a thing as wings, and
right here in this workaday world, too—the
street musicians, the Punch and Judy shows
and others of their ilk—these, to the prac-
tical, commercial mind, are ' public nui-
sances,' and as such to be suppressed. The
hand-organ may not be high art, but it
LJENRY W. SAVAGE, who is to be as-
* *• sociated with Maurice Grau in the
season of opera in English to be given at
the Metropolitan Opera House next winter
and who has been abroad for two months
selecting artists for the new organization,
has just returned home. Some of those
whose engagements have already been
announced are Zelie de Lussan, Minnie
Tracey, Louise Meisseinger among the
women, and MM. Phillip Brozel, Lionel
d'Aubigne and Clarence Whitehall among
the men of the company. Signor Sepilli
and Richard Eckholdt are to be the con-
ductors. Mmes. De Lussan and Meis-
seinger have sung at the Metropolitan in
the regular seasons. Miss Tracey is a so-
prano who has sung with success in France
and was a member of the Hinrichs com-
pany in Philadelphia four years ago.
Lionel d'Aubigne made his debut in
grand opera at the Metropolitan five years
ago as David in "Die Meistersinger." He
has been singing abroad since that time.
Mme. De Lussan will sing with the regu-
lar company later in the season. The
English season will begin on Oct. 1 and
continue until Dec. 15, when the perform-
ances in French, German and Italian will
be resumed.
"In addition to the artists whose en-
gagements have been announced," said
Mr. Savage in the course of an interview,
"I have engaged as sopranos Phciebe
Strakosch, Ingelborg Balstrom and Rita
Elandi. Miss .Strakosch sang with great
success a year ago at Covent Garden, ap-
pearing as Santuzza, Marguerite, Elsa and
Hero. She has sung in the Italian cities
in the old repertoire, as well as in 'Sapho'
and 'Fedora.' Rita Elandi is a Cleveland
girl who has made a reputation abroad. I
do not think she has ever appeared here in
opera. Miss Balstrom is a brilliant so-
prano who has sung with success in Berlin
and Stockholm. Elsa Marny of Wiesba-
den is a contralto who will, in my opinion,
make a great success here.
"Lempriere Pringle is to be one of our
bassos, and another will be Clarence White-
hall, the only American basso who has ever
sung at the Opera Comique in Paris. I
had some trouble in getting him, as he was
under contract to sing at Nice, but it was
finally arranged. Francis Rogers is a young
Boston singer who has been heard here
music by the German Emperor which is
part of an opera by the Imperial com-
poser." This official recognition of the
Kaiser as a "composer" by France should
certainly help to wipe out old scores. (Not
a pun.) Meanwhile what will the party of
" revanche" say?
A CCORDINGto Andrew Lang most poets
** and literary men hate music. He
adds that while you need not look at pictures
or statuary, or read poetry, you cannot get
away from music. "There is no escape
from it any more than from the influenza."
When Andrew wrote this he was no doubt
in one of those whimsical moods which are
peculiar to genius—we shouldjhave said, to
A. L. Anyway a writer in a Glasgow paper,
like a great many other sensible men, does
not agree with Mr. Lang and says that
the latter probably speaks chiefly for him-
self, having frankly admitted that nature
did not make him musical. The writer in
question brings to notice a long line of
literary men who have been far removed
from hatred of music—Johnson and Scott
and Lamb, who, while proclaiming his
lack of musical ear, would visit Novello's
to hear him play on the organ and listen
to his daughter sing, to which list he adds
an even longer list of authors who de-
lighted in music—De Quincey, Browning,
Goldsmith, Rogers, Ruskin, Moore, Camp-
bell, and Shakespeare—who he thinks
must be included by virtue of his man who
"hath no music in his soul." He next
mentions Stevenson, to whose fondness
for music he devotes a column, proving
his statements by extracts from the for-
mer's letters. All readers of the Steven-
son letters will remember the frequency
with which music forms almost the con-
tents of a letter.
To this list might be added a long line
of poets, essayists and novelists to whom
music has evidently been a great delight,
including Goethe, whose advice to.hear
each day a little good music, read some
good writer, and hear a little sensible talk,
is so often quoted. To the list of poets
who have loved music, as shown by recent
books, must be added our own Celia Thax-
ter, Lanier—not only in his "Music and
Poetry," but in his more recent published
"Letters,"—and the charming "Prose
Works of Edward Rowland Sill," one of
whose most delightful essays is the one on
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
times. Becker continued this tour until Saleza is to receive next season just twice
the death of his father in 1884, when he the salary paid to him last year. This
accepted the position of solo-cellist at the change in his arrangements with the Met-
Opera House in Frankfort, where he re- ropolitan Opera House management is im-
mained two years. Then, many concert portant in that it puts him in the rank of
engagements being offered him, he deci- the "great tenors" so far as that distinc-
ded to adopt a concert career. The Phil- tion is determined by salary. M. de
harmonic Concerts in Berlin and Hamburg, Reszke is going 1 to devote his time before
under the direction of Dr. Hans von Bulow, December, when he hopes to join the
laid a good foundation for his reputation, opera company in Boston, to recovering
which was also furthered by Bazzini com- his vocal health if possible. He is said to
posing and dedicating to him a cello con- be anxious to return to this country next
certo (still in manuscript.) Another con- year and will neg'ect no precaution which
certo for cello was comoosed for and ded- will enable him to sign a contract for a
tour here. But much
J*
depends, of course,
TJORATIO PARKER, of Yale, is now
on his recovery from
*• * in England preparing to conduct the
the trouble which has
performance of " Hora Novissima " at the
just compelled him to
Chester Musical Festival. He will remain
abandon his London
in Europe for two months and is to con-
engagements.
duct at Hereford his new setting of the
Psalm, "Oh, give thanks unto the Lord."
IMPRESARIOS will
Mme. Nordica has declined to sing at Bir-
* take note that Prof.
mingham in Coleridge Taylor's "Hia-
Stuart, of the Univer-
watha " on the ground that it is not suited
sity of Sydney, Aus-
to her voice and Mme. Albani has been
tralia, is said to have
engaged in her place.
made an artificial lar-
ynx for a man who
DADEREWSKI continues to utter pretty
lost his voice through
*• things about the United States. " It
disease, which can be
is amazing," he said recently, "how they
so regulated as to
are advancing in the States in knowledge
make the voice so-
of music. They make no pretense; they
prano, tenor, contralto
appear eager only to be edified; they take
or bass at will. What
the attitude of ingenuous students, and
visions^ of bliss, fame
they learn, learn, learn. I do not know a
and fortune for the ar-
field that promises to be as fruitful as
tificial larynxed man
theirs. It absorbs all things without pre-
are here unfolded.
judice, in extreme sensitiveness. It nat-
And what a perfect
uralizes all the foreign ideas. It considers
heaven for the op-
every thing with the ' open mind ' that your
eratic manager
In-
English orators like to recommend in their
ste .dof the de Reszke
speeches. America is full of the creative
brothers, Sembrich
genius. There are the best orchestras in
and Schumann-Heink,
the world, formed of musicians deeply in-
one of these twentieth
terested in their work, able to execute the
century Australians
most unexpected compositions. They
equipped
with that
have the theories at their fingers' ends.
wonderful
larynx
can
They know all that the old world can teach
be
engaged
at
a
tre-
them, and they are in a new world tre-
mendous saving of ex-
mendously active. Perhaps the evidences
pense. Of course it
HUGO BECKER.
are not flagrant to all observers, because
America gives not the aid of the State to icated to him by Eugene d'Albert. Becker would put an end to star casts; for no
art. State aid to the fine arts is my par- has played in concerts conducted by the matter how clever a man may be, and even
ticular hobby. State aid to the fine arts best known musical directors in the world, competent to sing "soprano, tenor, con-
ought to be at the basis of every civiliza- such as: Brahms, Bulow, Grieg, Dvorak, tralto and bass," he could not fill the four
tion. It refines, it encourages, it emulates, Richard Strauss, Joachim, Nikisch, Wein- roles in an opera, particularly when the
it produces. I am convinced that to leave gartner, and they all endorse him as the public wants them all on one night. Great
the cultivation of music to private resources greatest cellist of the present time. The thing, that larynx!
is to cast a slur on the enlightenment of first appearance in this country, of Hugo
Becker, an excellent portrait of whom ap- A CCORDINGtoan Italian musician who
the age."
pears on this page, will be with the Boston ^* recently set out to compile a bio-
UGO BECKER, the famous 'cellist, who Symphony Orchestra in New York, Boston,
graphical dictionary of Italian opera com-
is scheduled to visit this country next and other large Eastern cities.
posers, there are 2,550 of them and only
season, is a son of the celebrated leader of
the Florentine Quartette, Jean Becker. I T is interesting in view of the announced eighty operas survive out of the 14,000
He was born in 1863 in Strassburg, Alsatia. *• retirement of Jean de Reszke from they composed.
the management of the mind while hear-
ing music. This list might be indefinitely
extended, but it is only necessary to add
that Mr. Lang probably wrote the above
statement in some moment of irritation,
wherein, as he says, men hate music " be-
cause it thrusts itself upon them when they
don't want it—the poet when his eye is in
a fine frenzy rolling, and the prosaic liter-
ary man when he is debating about the
opening sentence of an important article."
Mr. Lang quite possibly did not intend any
portion of his tirade to be taken too seri-
ously.
H
His first teacher was Kundiger, the best
pupil of Menter, while with Grutzmacher
he studied solo playing. In the winter of
1880-81 he undertook with other members
of his family a tour of Holland, Belgium,
England, Austria, Switzerland, and Italy.
In England he made the acquaintance of
the distinguished cellist, Alfred Patti,
whom he had the opportunity to hear many
the recent season at Covent Garden to
hear that the final arrangements for the
return of Albert Saleza to this country
were made last week in London. Mr.
Saleza has been engaged to sing the lead-
ing French and Italian roles with M. de
Reszke, in case the distinguished Polish
tenor is able to return. As a matter of
detail it might be mentioned that M.
not be lacking in the custom-
W E ary will visitation
of European instru-
mentalists the coming musical season.
Among the new comers in the piano field
will be Ossip Gabrilowitsch and Harold
Bauer. We will also hear Mme. Carreno
and Messrs. Dohnanyi, Hambourg, Josef-
fy, Godowsky and a host of celebrities of

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