Music Trade Review

Issue: 1902 Vol. 34 N. 9

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE
7V^USIO TRKDE. REVIEW
I (all, and it would seem necessary to change
the name as the size of the hall makes the
appellation of ''chamber music" decidedly an
error in terminology, yet the string quartet
can not be more out of place in Carnegie Hall
than a piano recital, and we have learned to
believe this quite the proper thing—in the
event that the pianist is great enough.
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And what shall we say of the Sunday
night popular concerts at the Metropolitan
()]>era House ? There are certainly two
sides to the question and to be perfectly
just one must present both. No one can
deny that the popular Sunday night concert
fills a certain demand or we may even call it
a need, for music is afforded to hundreds
who can not very well, or do not go to other
concerts. Good music is presented with the
best singers that the world affords, the best
available orchestra and conductor. (cer-
tainly the great Symphony orchestras are
not available), the best oratorios are given
in a superb manner, (there is always room
to cavil), and what more c;m be desired?
< )n the other hand, we all appreciate, with
regret, that these concerts cut with a' keen
blade into the possibility of our concert-giv-
ers to gain patronage, and it leaves the local
artist fairly on the verge of despair. Yet
we are back at the beginning of the old ar-
gument, and how can the matter be helped?
We are simply dealing with facts, not prob-
lems, for than this there is nothing harder.
Still. T believe if Damrosch, either Frank
or Walter, were to give popular Sunday night
oratorios, with the best talent available either
Carnegie or the Metropolitan might be filled
and music would thus be popularized by ele-
vating the public to the plane where it can
understand and appreciate the best—and
here it must be said that Gran has done a
great work and credit to whom credit is due.
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It is amusing to note the determination
with which people build idols for themselves
and the way in which they exert themselves
to keep these idols upon the pedestals. Judg-
ment, education, even common sense, play
no part, and some of us are too matter-of-
fact to believe in psychic phenomena. Still
we confront the "why"' with a heavy sense of
emptiness, for we know that it never will be
answered.
Again we have been delighted with a visit
from Paderewski, who is the foremost figure
in the pianistic world. This does not in any
sense mean that Paderewski is the greatest
pianist in the world, but that he, of all pian-
ists, is first in the eye of the people. To
what this position may be attributed is not
clear, and never will be made so. Tn some
respects Paderewski is supreme. It were
well nigh impossible to conceive that any Bloomfield Zeisler. For the satisfaction of
one could go beyond him in many things, many artists, who have their eyes on San
especially the minute details that go to make Francisco, but who do not know with whom
the great artist far beyond the pale of the to correspond, it is a pleasure to state that
virtuoso. Paderewski is the highest repre- Messrs. Alfred Bouvier and William Greene-
sentation of music under control of a liter- baum have taken up this very important
ary mind, a refined, delicate nature, and a work in San Francisco, and can hardly be
forceful determination. He never fails to anything but successful, for Bouvier was
the most successful theatrical manager that
hold the interest of his hearers, for he is al-
the West ever had, and Greenebaum has
ways original and always commanding.
always interested himself in musical mat-
He is gigantic in these qualities, in fact.
ters.
Yet on the Herculean side he is undeniably
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weak. There is a difference between a tre-
A huge testimonial concert is announced
mendously sonorous, powerful blow in which for Herman Grau, at Carnegie Hall. The
every note is distinguishable, and the waves participants will include grand opera artists
of sound roll full and strong with the majes- and theatrical combinations from all over
ty and the dignity of the ocean, and a crash- the city, and finally Rafael Joseffy is being
ing, smashing blow, under which the noblest urged to appear. If Joseffy can be prevailed
instrument wails in agony, and hearers wince upon to play, all the rest of the "talent" can
in sympathy not less than in pain. There be dispensed with as superfluous, for he can
i.; no begging the question, such failings fill Carnegie Hall to its utmost capacity, and
make it impossible to concede a man the first then he will turn away enough to fill another
place in the rank of pianists, especially when hall. Has any one forgotten the tremen-
there are those who are not guilty of these dous and fascinating power of this colossal
tresspasses. Even one might find an excuse artist—this modest, unassuming little man,
if. when working up to a tremendous climax, Joseffy.
a man's emotions fairly get away from under
Emilie Frances Bauer.
j*
his control and these crashes are the wild-
VAN
HOOSE'S
GROWING
POPULARITY.
est expressions of emotion at its most hyster-
LLISON
VAN
HOOSE
is to-day the
ical pitch. But not so in Paderewski's case,
foremost
tenor
in
America,
a position
lie elects to give these crushing chords as
preludes, interludes, and introductions to all which he has gained by his continued success
solos, and it is quite beyond understanding. every place in which he has sung during the
Neither are his interpretations always within present season. The demands for his ser-
understanding, for his pauses are carried out vices are growing every day, and last week
of all sense of rhythm, and his slow move- his manager, Henry Wolfsohn, closed for
ments are sentimental to a degree. Again be him the following list of important engage-
it said that, notwithstanding this, Paderew- ments. The Cincinnati Musical Festival,
ski is a most remarkable pianist and a still May 12th to 17th, at which he will share the
more remarkable personage in the musical leading tenor roles with Ben Davies. The
Louisville Festival, during the week of April
world.
21st and also the Kansas City Festival. In
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San Francisco is having its share of mu- addition to these he will be heard in a half
sic this season. Josef IJofmann has had a dozen other important festivals during the
perfect avalanche of success, and it is no month of May. During the middle of March
wonder that this artist has met with such Mr. Van Hoose will have three of the most
appreciation, lor that Western Metropolis is important engagements in New York City
extremely critical, and the degree of his art that has fallen to the lot of any American
is well calculated to win the most difficile. tenor in many years past. On the 14th and
Nordica, also, has just sung there with the 15th he is to be the soloist with the New York
success that might have been anticipated. Philharmonic Society, and in addition will
The Chicago Symphony orchestra with sing the tenor role in Liszt's "Faust." On
Aclolph Rosenbecker, conductor, will play a the 16th he will be heard in Wolfsohn's Sun-
season in that city and on the coast.
day concert at the Metropolitan Opera House,
Fannie P>loomneld-Zeisler, who has never when, with Mine. Gertrude Stein he will sing
found more ardent admirers any where than the second act of "Samson and Delilah," and
in San Francisco, is to appear there this sea- on Tuesday evening, March i8th, he will be
son, and all San Francisco is in delight in heard with the New York Oratorio Society
the anticipation of this rare Ireat, for no one in Carnegie Hall in "Paradise and Peri."
can get closer to the desires of the people,
. «*
and still remain more thoroughly ensconced
Master Philip Reitz is a musical prodigy
in her art than this same bewitching, bewil- of Evansville, Tnd., who is destined to be
dering l'ernhardt, of the kev-board—Fannie heard from.
MIGHTY
LAK'
A ROSE"
Is destined to be
SUNG
WITH
Sona
IMMENSE
SUCCESS
THE
CINCINNATI
LONDON
BY LILLIAN
NORDICA AT
JOHN
CHURCH
NEW YORK
ALL
Two Keys, each 40 cts.
HER
ENGAGEMENTS
co.
LEIPS1C
CHICAGO
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE
7VYUSIC TRMDE
spoke through the episode which permits
Jagu to sway "Manru" from wife and child
and duty by means of the melodies of the
gypsy tribe, which is a clear statement that
music has a psychic influence which is the
strongest of conflicting forces in the fearful
ARTISTS' DEPARTMENT.
rind wonderful construction of man. The
TELEPHONE NUMBER. 1745.--EIQHTEENTH STREET
amalgamation of Polish and gypsy music is
The Artists' Department of The Review is
published oh the first Saturday of each month. very fascinating and very powerful, for they
are two essentially distinct types.
VOCALISM.
In the same week Paderewski played his
I.
Vocalism, measure, concentration, determination, own concerto with the admirable setting of
and the divine power to speak words;
Are you full-lung'd and limber-lipp'd from long the Boston Symphony Orchestra. This is
trial? from vigorous practice? from physique? a noble piece of writing, following the prin-
Do you move in these broad Iand9 as broad as
ciples of absolute music. It is almost classi-
they?
Come duly t» the divine power to speak words?
cal in its structure, yet essentially modern.
For only at last after many years, after chastity,
friendship, procreation, prudence, and na- It is colored with his-nationality and the note
kedness,
of suffering is there. The concerto was first
After treading ground and breasting river and
played
in America by Julie Rive-King in
lake,
After a loosen'd throat, after absorbing eras, Boston with the Symphony Orchestra under
temperaments, races, after knowledge, free-
dom, crimes,
After complete faith, after clarifyings, elevations,
and removing obstructions,
After these and more, it is just possible there
comes to a man, a woman, th« divine power to
speak words;
Then toward that man or that woman swiftly
hasten all—none refuse, all attend,
Armies, ships, antiquities, libraries, paintings,
machines, cities, hate, despair, amity, pain,
theft, murder, aspiration, form in close ranks,
They debouch as they are wanted to march
obediently through the mouth of that man oj
that woman.
II.
O, what is it in me that makes me tremble so at
voicei?
Surely whoever speaks to me in the right voice,
him or her I shall follow,
As the water followc the moon, silently, with fluid
•teps, anywhere around the globe.
All waits for the right voices;
Where
is the practis'd and perfect organ? Where
1
is the develop'd soul?
For I see every word utter'd thence has deeper,
sweeter, new sounds, impossible on less terms.
I §ee brains and lips closed, tympans and temples
unstruck,
Until that comes which has the quality to strike
and to unclose,
Until that comes which has the quality to bring
forth that lies slumbering forever ready in all
words.
—WALT WHITMAN.
PADEREWSKI THE COMPOSER.
"T" HIS great pianist, who has long held
sway over the audiences of Europe and
of America, is no longer content to shine
nr the reflected light as interpreter, but he
aspires to the greater—perhaps it may be
called the greatest height—that of composer.
We have had Padcrewski this month at the
greatest advantage that any composer has
ever appeared. Whatever may have been the
sorrows in Paderewski's early life—and we
all know that they were keen and numerous
—his present position is one of exceptional
happiness, for he has seen the triumphant
reception accorded his opera, and other com-
positions have met with similar success. The
music of "Manru," for the greater part, is a
burst of inspiration, and inspiration in the
hands of one who knows how to use it to the
best possible advantage. The orchestration
and the general treatment show the master
hand, and the thematic matter shows the ge-
nius. As far as stagecraft is concerned,
Paderewski has some things to learn, and al-
though the musician is of imposing dimen-
sions, he shows the pianist in his treatment
! of the voices, which is not as skillfully done
as it might be. Just how much Paderewski
had to do with the book cannot be known,
yet it is distinct that the musician of him
wondrous instrument, the medium for all
emotions and passions. Nor is it the play-
thing of a dull or frivolous woman. It is
controlled by a musician richly endowed with
musical temperament."
S
MUSIC THE MOST EMOTIONAL
C R O M the commencement of civilization
great thoughts and great events have
demanded an outlet whereby, while losing
nothing of their spiritual intensity, they
might take upon them material guise. The
result has been Art. The most natural ex-
pression has been painting and sculpture;
these, reaching the already tutored eye, have
worked their purpose. The most intellectual
expression has been poetry; this has reached
the less ready brain and also worked its pur-
pose, but less well because less widely. The
most emotional has been music; and this,
dependent altogether upon the feelings
which are so elusive where two or more are
concerned, has served its intention least
clearly in the matter of revelation, but it has
at the same time sacrificed less of its spirit-
ual aspect than have the sister arts. Its
very elusiveness seems so bound up with that
same Something which has baulked every
metaphysical idea yet propounded that, at
least, it is always hovering on the borders
of a realm to which the other arts, by rea-
son of their more material modes of pres-
entation, will never soar. And over all and
giving nourishment to each is the haunting
shadow of philosophy.
. . • . ; •.
ORGANISTS' SALARIES IN ENGLAND.
HJNACE l'ADERKSWKI.
Nikisch in March of 1891. The same year
Paderewski played it in New York, and it
has not been heard since, consequently it was
interesting to a great degree. All of the art
that has been attributed to Paderewski was
perceptible in his playing of this number, and
it revealed to many a side of the artist which
had been as yet unknown. It was a mem-
orable event.
3

• •
MME. GERTRUDE STEIN.
R local organists who complain occa-
sionally of inadequate pecuniary com-
pensation can comprehend how much better
off they are than their brethren of Mcrrie
Kngland, on reading the following facts taken
from The Referee:
.
The average salary of an organist is £50
a year, and for this he is expected to play
not less than at four services, and to hold
two and three rehearsals a week, to train
his boys, and produce the voices of his choir
men. He must be a competent player of
the most difficult of instruments, and has
little chance of gaining a good appointment
without being a Fellow of the Royal Col-
lege of Organists, or holding some univer-
sity degree. Tn a large number of churches
the stipend is £25 or £30 per annum, and
the applicant is quietly told that he can in-
crease his salary by giving music lessons.
Matters have improved of later years, but,
considering the responsibilities, require-
ments of the position, and the enormous in-
fluence an organist exerts, it is the poorest-
paid branch of the profession.
.<
cover page this week is adorned by
an excellent portrait of Mme. Ger-
trude Stein, who, during recent years has
gained the enviable reputation of being
America's finest contralto. She has been the
soloist in the leading festivals and with the
choral and orchestral societies, and had the
honor of being the first soloist engaged for
the last Worcester Festival. Mme. Stein has
just been engaged to sing the contralto part
in the "Paradise and Peri" performance,
which is to be given in Carnegie Hall by the
VERDI THE IMMORTAL
Oratorio Society. In addition Mme. Stein HP HE full estimate of a man and his
is to be heard in many of the leading festi-
works is never conceived until he is
vals this spring.
dead. Tt is interesting to note in this con-
A distinguished critic speaking of Mme. nection that since the death of Verdi, his
Stein says: "Her voice is a remarkable one, operas have come more and more to the
not easily classified. The lower register is front in Italy, where they are gradually dis-
full and deep, with the luscious richness that placing the ephemeral products of the young
is found only in the true contralto. And yet Italian school. French composers—espec-
the range is mezzo-soprano, without a strik- ially Massenet and Saint-Saeiis—are much
ing contrast in quality. Her extreme upper in vogue, and three of the principal cities—
tones are neither pale nor shrill, nor are Naples. Rome, and Milan—opened their
there tubby, hollow tones about the middle C, season with Wagner operas, which, how-
as is so often the case in voices otherwise ever, were badly sang and inadequately
staged,
impressive or sensuous, This voice is a

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