Music Trade Review

Issue: 1903 Vol. 36 N. 18

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE
7VYUSIC TRADE
REVIEW
THE BACH FESTIVAL IN BETHLEHEM, PA. <&
T" 1 H E third Bach Festival, to be given in
Bethlehem, Pa., the week of May u ,
will be more elaborate than either of those
that have preceded it. The performance will
be given in the Moravian Church, under the
direction of J. Frederick Wolle.
On Monday, Wednesday and Friday there
will be evening sessions only, commencing at
eight o'clock.. On Tuesday, Thursday and
Saturday there will be sessions in the after-
noon and evening, commencing, respectively,
at four and eight o'clock, excepting on Sat-
urday, when they begin at two and six, thus
enabling visitors from out of town to return
that evening.
The entire festival
scheme is a unit in
i d e a , presenting in
logical sequence the
events in the life of
Christ. As can be seen
from the following
schedule, the first two
days give voice to the
quiet, happy Christ-
m a s feeling. These
are followed by two
d a y s of contrasting
gloom a n d shadow.
The last two days are
largely expressive of
the exultant Easter
and Ascension joy.
Again, the works to
be performed on the
first, third and sixth
days are somewhat in
the nature of prelude,
interlude and postlude
—these being largely
subjective—the others
treating more directly
of the principal inci-
dents in the history of
the Lord.
The festival opens on Monday
evening w T ith the cantata, "Sleep-
ers, Wake; a Voice is Calling,"
Nicolai's three-stanza h y m n ,
composed by Bach for the twen-
ty-seventh Sunday after Trinity.
This is followed by the song
of the Virgin Mary—the great
Magnificat—written by Bach for
the festival of Christmas. Tues-
day afternoon and evening the
Christmas oratorio. Wednesday
evening, the Second Branden-
burg Concerto grosso, for solo
trumpet, flute, oboe and violin,
MARIE ZIMMERMAN, SOPRANO, AT THE BACH FESTIVAL.
Thursday afternoon and evening the St.
Matthews Passion music; Friday evening,
the Easter Cantata, "The Heavens Laugh,
the Earth Itself Rejoices, and Budding Na-
ture Bursts in Song," followed by the Ascen-
sion Cantata, "God Goeth Up With Shout-
ing." Saturday afternoon at 2, the Mass in
B Minor, Kyrie and Gloria; at 6, beginning
with the Credo.
The announcement of each session will
be made from the belfry of the church by
the choir of trombones..
Besides the usual string instruments, the
JULIAN WALKER, BARITONE, AT THE BACH
W. THEO. VAN YORX, TENOR, AT THE BACH FESTIVAL.
FESTIVAL.
with a string band, will
be played as a transi-
tion from the Christmas
music. This is followed
by the cantata for solo al-
to .voice, "Strike, Oh,
S t r i k e , Long-looked-for
Hour; Break, Oh, Break,
Thou Beauteous Day," ac-
companied by strings and
campanella, this being the
earliest known instance of
the employment of bells in
musical composition. Then
follows the cantata for solo
bass voice, " I With My
Cross-Staff Gladly Wan-
der," closing with the cho-
rale, "And So to Jesus
Christ I'll Go, Mine Arms
to Him Extending.." In
this, as in all the other
chorales of the festival,
the entire audience will
sing with the Bach choir
and choir of boys, support-
ed by the orchestra'and or-
gan.
_ ^ _^
GERTRUDE MAY STEIN, CONTRALTO, AT THE BACH FESTIVAL,
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
8
THE 7VIVSIC TRRDE
orchestra will include four flutes, four oboes,
two oboi d'amore, two English horns, two
bassoons, two French horns, three trumpets,
one pair of kettle drums and campanella.
MRS. WAGNER AGITATING.
JV/l RS, CO SI MA WAGNER is evidently
using every influence to prevent the
performance of "Parsifal" in this country.
A rather characteristic communication was
recently received by the wife of Hugo Heer-
mann, the well-known violinist who has been
REVIEW
tholomew's is one of the most noted in this
country, and the solos were sung by Mrs.
Theodore Toedt ; Mrs. Stein-Bailey, Leo Lie-
bemann and John H. Duffey. Will C. Mac-
Farlane was at the organ and Mr. Warren
directed the work.
A CLEVER AMERICAN SINGER.
We clip the following from the Hanauer
Zeitung regarding Miss Mary Neuendorffer,
the clever daughter of Carl Neuendorffer,
widely known in musical circles in this city,
who is winning quite
some fame in Germany:
The star numbers on
the program were the
songs rendered by Miss
Mary Neuendorffer, of
New York, a soprano
singer of very sympa-
thetic appearance, who
called forth continued
and repeated applause
merited by her marvel-
ous voice and superior
interpretation. Also due
credit must be accorded
Miss Maja Schwekow-
ski, who accompanied
Miss Neuendorffer on
the piano. Miss Neuen-
dorffer's selections were
"Schwanenlied," and the
ballad for Loewe's "Tom
der Reimer," Schubert's
"Standchen" and "Friih-
1 i n g s g 1 aube," "Hoff-
nung" f r o m Reichardt
and Rubinstein's "Asra."
RUSKIN ON MUSIC.
T T ERE are some quo-
*• * tations from Rus-
kin's works which should
interest all musicians.
HISSEM DE MOSS, SOPRANO, AT THE BACH FESTIVAL.
Speaking of the ideal education of child-
playing in this country for the past few
months, from Cosima, in which the following ren he says: "And in their first learn-
passage occurs: "I shall be pleased if Mr,. ing of notes they shall be taught the great
Heermann makes it known everywhere that purpose of music, which is to say a thing you
the proposed performance of 'Parsifal' in mean deeply, in the strongest and clearest
America would be against the wishes of its possible way; and they shall never be taught
creator. The publishers Schott will not de- to sing what they don't mean."
"Perseverance in rightness of human con-
liver the orchestral parts, and I have written
duct
renders, after a certain number of gen-
to Damrosch to ask him, in case he has used
erations,
human art possible ; every sin clouds
any in concert performances, not to give them
it,
be
it
ever so little a one, and persistent
up. I expect of the artists who have sung
vicious
living
and following of pleasure ren-
at Bayreuth that they will refuse to take part
der, after a certain number of generations,
in such performances. I should be greatly
all art impossible. Men are deceived by the
obliged to Professor Heermann if he would
long suffering of the laws of nature. . .. .
talk about this matter in my name with the As for the individual, as soon as you learn
different artists."
to read you may know him to his heart's
ELGAR'S "LIGHT OF LIFE."
\ 1 7 HEN Elgar was presented to us through
* "
the medium of the Oratorio Society
who gave "The Dream of Gerontius" we did
not know that this was soon to be followed
by another although a smaller work. On
April 21 and 22 Richard Henry Warren
gave a beautiful performance of "The Light
of Life" by Elgar and the work is rife with
beauties.. The chorus was admirably trained
as it is well known that the choir of S t Bar-
core, through his art. Let his art gift be
never so cultivated to the height by the
schools of a great race of men, it is still but
a tapestry thrown over his own being and
inner soul."
"CYRANO DE BERGERAC."
H E R E is some prospect of a production
next winter, either at the Metropolitan
here or at one of the opera houses in Ger-
many, of the opera written by W.. J. Hen-
derson and Walter Damrosch, founded on
Rostand's ''Cyrano de Bergerac."
T
W. II. RIEGER, TENOR, AT THE BACH FESTIVAL.
MELODIES OF INDIA.
A NOVELTY at a recent concert in Lon-
* ^ don was a piece entitled "Grand Fanta-
sia on Melodies of Our Indian Empire," by
E. F. Jacques and J. M. Rogan. In regard
to it the Athenaeum remarks: "Great com-
posers made frequent use of folk-melodies in
their works. Weber once borrowed a Chin-
ese melody, and Dr. Saint-Saens has intro-
duced African melodies into a concerto; but
a whole fantasia on Indian melodies is a new
and extremely interesting departure. 'The
Hymn to Vishnu,' with which the fantasia
HERBERT WITHERSPOON, BASSO, AT THE BACH
FESTIVAL.
opens and closes has breadth, and dignity,
while of the other melodies some are slow
and expressive, some lively and quaint. In
the excellent scoring there are some charac-
teristic local color effects. An admirable per-
formance by the band of the Coldstream
Guards, under Mr. Rogan, led to a repeti-
tion of the closing section, in which a few
bars of the Rritish and Danish national an-
thems are combined with an Indian melody."
MRS. ETTA EDWARDS, Vocal Instruction, Steinert Hall
'"* Boston, Mass.
f ta> $
AU our instruments contain the fun iron frame and
patent tuning pin. The greatest Invention in the history
of piano making. Any radical changes in the climate, heat
or dampness, cannot affect the standing in tone of oar in*
•trnments, and therefor* challenge the world that
ViU excel any otfeec

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