Music Trade Review

Issue: 1901 Vol. 32 N. 18

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
THE VALUE OF MUSIC IN THE PUBLIC SCHOOL SYSTEM.
question of the value of music in
the public school system has long since
been decided by educators, and it only be-
comes a question of special local needs.
Singing is now taught in all the best schools
in the country, and in New England it has
been well taught for many years. In some
cities music has been so highly valued as
a factor in developing the aesthetic side of
children that classes in musical form, har-
mony and analysis are formed in ihe high
schools. These classes are usually conducted
by an able pianist, who plays a series of com-
positions representing the various schools
of composition and points out certain
attractive features of the pieces.
This
work is only possible, or even advisable, in
communities where music has long been
taught and where there is a decided demand
for it on the part of parents.
Humboldt has somewhere said: "What-
ever we wish to see introduced into the life
of a nation must first be introduced into its
schools." I am quite sure that we are fast
learning that the best education does not
consist in simply collecting facts. The old.
idea of studying simply the three R's
and nothing more, is now as much of a relic
of the past as the old Murray reader. The
modern education which tries to train the
hands and the heart, as well as the mind,
needs music for this new work. It should
not be the province of the public school sys-
tem to train musicians any more than it is
to train ministers or doctors. The aim of
the public school system is to give to "all-
round" foundation for citizenship. No one
expects or desires it to turn out specialists,
but modern educators do desire some atten-
tion to the finer side of character building.
That music, properly taught, has a re-
markable power in softening the hard lines
in the character of children has been proved
beyond all possible cavil over and over again,
and it is this side of the teaching of music
in schools that is most valuable and should
be dwelt upon.
Of course, the teaching of the reading of
music is valuable, for it gives the child the
ability to know something of the one univer-
sal language which is now more than ever
a part of life. But it the almost indescrib-
able power to stir these emotions that gives
music its greatest claim to an important
place in a child's education. This point is
likely to be overlooked at first glance, be-
cause it is not one which can easily be meas-
ured by the yard stick or the examination
paper. Unfortunately, the peculiar kind of
teaching that gets the best out of music
and does the children the greatest good is
too little in evidence. There is altogether
too much of that purely mechanical teach-
ing that enables the child simply to tell the
names of notes and rests, while the real es-
sence of music—its aesthetic and emotional
significance—escapes them entirely. The
charm of the story-songs which unconscious-
ly convey the lessons of patriotism, heroism,
tenderness and sympathy, is entirely lost on
the children who are badly taught. Sing-
ing, above all subjects, should be taught by
a specialist, for it seems to require rather
more than anything else certain special qual-
ifications.
For financial reasons, however, it is usu-
ally necessary for the regular grade teach-
ers to do most of the teaching of singing,
guided and directed by the supervisor of
music. It is only possible for the super-
visor to visit each school occasionally, and
direct what work shall be done and how.
The supervisor is thus enabled to have a
general oversight of the work and correct
any serious defects in the work of the reg-
ular teacher.
It is by no means a serious reflection upon
the usual grade teacher to say that she is
not really competent to teach singing to the
children without special supervision, be-
cause it is an extremely difficult subject to
teach and many excellent musicians are not
successful in the handling of children's
voices.
One of the most serious difficulties in the
teaching of singing is the management of
children's voices. In most of the schools
the children sing ten or fifteen minutes at
each session, whether music is regularly
taught or not, and their voices, without the
guidance of an able supervisor, often are
entirely ruined by the harsh, unmusical qual-
ity which the unskilled teachers permit. The
utmost skill and simplicity are required in
teaching children to sing properly. Their
voices never should be forced and strained
M. L PINKH AM
Musical Bureau
into that strident cruel tone which classes of
children often employ. On the contrary, they
singing tone, which is not only grateful to
should gradually be cultivated into a mellow
the ear, but is the principal means of reach-
ing the soul of the child through the art of
of the most supreme importance in public
get children to sing with a loud noise and
with sufficient precision to win the admira-
tion of undiscriminating listeners, but he
misses the most important part of music
without which the teaching of it must prove
a failure from a higher point of view. This
important part is the expressiveness of music
which touches the emotions.
The ideal musical instruction in the pub-
lic school system would be a system in which
all the work would lie done under the im-
mediate direction of a specially competent
supervisor by a sufficient number of qual-
ified assistants to do all the teaching of mu-
sic. If the supervisor be competent and be
given a free hand, this would insure a sys-
tematic instruction from specialists who
would be far more competent than the reg-
ular grade teachers for this special work.
This would, perhaps, do injustice to some
grade teachers who are really competent to
do the work. Occasionally one finds a grade
teacher who is an exceptionally good teach-
er of singing. But this ideal system would be
somewhat more expensive than could be
considered at present.
Of course, the success of music in the
schools depends upon the supervisor. The
person who can do this work successfully
is not so easily found, but once found he
or she should be given a pretty free hand in
the matter of the system and materials to be
used. It would hardly appear wise to do
otherwise. A teacher can do his best work
with tools of his own choosing. Above all
things, a supervisor should be wise in the
management of the children's voices. The
child voice is so tender and delicate that it
is easily overburdened and its beautiful qual-
ity ruined forever.
Perley Dunn Aldrich.
j*
Augusta Holmes, the charming composer,,
comes in for a good deal of lionizing at pres-
ent in Paris. She has recently finished a
series of songs entitled "Les Heures," which,
owing to the warm commendation of French
critics, are enjoying a furore in the American
drawing rooms.
My list of artists for the season
of igo 1-2 is now being prepared, and
will soon be completed.
Musical organizations everywhere
87-88 Decker Bldg., 33 Union Square
NEW YORK
are requested to communicate
me respecting soloists for
with
their next
season s work.
The Pianists of the SM. L. Tinkham ^Musical "Bureau play the
SteirCtony "Piano exclusively*.
M. L. PINKH AM.
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
ANTON DVORAK NOW A PEER.
M ERR ANTON DVORAK, formerly
*• * conductor of the New York Conser-
vatory of Music and now professor at
Prague, was recently raised to the Austrian
House of Lords by the Emperor. He is the
first composer to receive this rare distinction
in Austria. The upper house of the Impe-
rial Austrian Parliament, called the Herren-
haus, consists of about two hundred and forty
members. Of these, excluding the imperial
princes, sixty-seven hereditary nobles, and
eighteen archbishops and bishops of princely
title, there are one hundred and thirty-six
life members nominated by the Emperor on
account of being distinguished in art or sci-
ence, or who have rendered signal services
to Church or State.
Anton Dvorak was born at Mulhausen, in
U
of their professional life, although they con- Opera House last Monday night, in which
tained nothing to be ashamed of. But then, all available artists appeared. The supple-
the truly great have little time for the cul- mentary tour of the company this season was
tivation of vanity.
quite successful, the sojourn in Chicago be-
ing especially so. This year the "windy
TO HAVE A BAND OF ENLISTED flEN.
city"
made up for past deficiencies.
' T H E Thirteenth Regiment Heavy Artill-
j*
* ery, Col. David E. Austen command-
A CHAT WITH QABRIL0W1TSCH.
ing, is to have a new band, composed entirely
of enlisted men. W. S. Mygrant, former Y\I HEN Ossip Gabrilowitsch, the young
Russian pianist who has just closed
band leader of the Thirteenth, has been cho-
his
successful
and brilliant tournee of the
sen bandmaster.
Every member of the
United
States,
was
asked what composer he
band will take the usual oath of allegiance
liked
best,
said
that
naturally he revered
to the State, agreeing to serve five years. It
Rubinstein
above
all
others,
for it was Ru-
is hoped by this means to obtain a band of
binstein
who
first
gave
him
real
encourage-
thoroughly drilled men at much smaller ex-
pense than under the present system. Any ment and took upon himself the responsi-
member of the regiment who thinks he has bility for his musical education. He added,
an aptitude for field music can apply for however: "I am certainly not blind to the
admission to the band, and if accepted will delicious tone-poetry of Schumann, to the
fantastic brilliancies of Chopin, the encom-
receive a musical education at the expense
passing sweetness of Mendelssohn, the ma-
of the regiment. This is an innovation and
the success of the move will be watched with
some interest.
Jt
A VALUABLE PUBLICATION.
ANTON DVORAK.
the district of Prague, Bohemia, in 1841. The
son of a butcher and innkeeper, he early
showed signs of musical services, and, on
making his way to Prague, received a musi-
cal education in the government schools.
His compositions soon gave him rank among
the national composers of Bohemia. His
"Stabat Mater" was greatly appreciated, and
made his European reputation. In 1891 he
came to America, having been engaged as
director of the National Conservatory of
Music in New York, and remained over
here for three years, during which period
he wrote his symphony "From the New
World" and his cantata, "The American
Flag."
The personality of this great composer is
remarkable. When we consider the diffi-
culties he had to encounter in his fight for
recognition and for the expression of the
life within him, it is not to be wondered
that a man of his forcefulness of character
should feel a pride in attaining such a posi-
tion as to win the recognition accorded him
by the Emperor of Austria. Dvorak is dis-
tinguished from many other conductors, not
unknown to us, who now would be highly
indignant if reminded of the early phases
Artists, managers and laymen will be in-
terested in the Chas. L. Young Musical
Club and Amusement Directory which will
shortly make its appearance.
This book
promises to be invaluable in its exhaustive
and resourceful information. Previous at-
tempts to provide a compendium which
should be of assistance to those seeking
knowledge on the subjects treated of in this
volume were not successful. The Charles
L. Young Musical Club and Amusement
Directory, however, seems to leave no avenue
unexplored along all the lines it undertakes
to embrace. The index of the various head-
ings as well as the statement made by the
publisher, A. V. Young, in the introductory
prospectus, leads the most casual reader to
believe that in this gazeteer a search on any
subject indicated will be rewarded with the
information required.
That such information wil be authentic,
and therefore reliable, is also reasonably cer-
tain, because Mr. Young has been actively
engaged for many years in the several fields
from which the data have been collected both
in this country and abroad; and pledge is
given that the directory will be kept up-to-
date, and all changes in any department
noted and added from time to time. To
have embraced in one volume, reliable infor-
mation along so many lines, a book so vastly
comprehensive in scope and character, and
accurate in every detail, should insure a
widespread demand and far-reaching recog-
nition when it is published in the near fu-
ture/ In make-up it is handsome and at-
tractive, being printed on heavy glazed paper,
with wide margins, and clear type. Two
hundred leaves are embellished with half
tones, and advertisements are judiciously in-
terspersed among the reading matter which
is carefully arranged, and the whole is sub-
stantially bound in cloth.
OPERA SEASON S VALEDICTORY.
/~\NE hundred and ninety-two performan-
^-^ ces in all were given by the Maurice
Grau Opera Co. which closed its season with
a farewell representation at the Metropolitan
OSSIP GABRILOWITSCH.
j-estic sonority of Beethoven, the solemn
classicism of Bach. When I study these
one after another I try to enter into the very
soul of the master, and for the time being
become rapt like the dervish in the divine
trance of the prophet. Imbued with such
varied and boundless admiration for all, I
have no favorites.
"I was delighted to be told by an eminent
critic that Russian music and Russian liter-
ature had long since taken a firm hold upon
the American character. It shows that
Americans are themselves creatures of the
great wide world, assimilating what is best
of every nation, just as I, a young musi-
cian, try to assimilate the best of all masters,
with the hope that eventually I shall work
out my own personal salvation as a com-
poser, as this young country is sure to
take its stand in literature, art and music
among the great nations, as it has in finance,
and more recently in war. You say that the
vastness of Russia is inconceivable to Amer-
icans, and doubtless I have just as little ap-
preciation of the extent of this country."
y*
Ignace Paderewski has resumed the con-
cert tour interrupted by the death of his in-
valid son, Alfred, at a Bavarian health re-
sort.

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