Music Trade Review

Issue: 1903 Vol. 37 N. 14

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE
REVIEW
who takes up concerts with a Chicago man-
ager.
The operatic star for concerts hereabout
will
be the great French bass, Pol Planc,on.
HP HERE is every indication that the Met- at Montreal and sings here later. Suzanne
Walter
Damrosch has a lecture tour in No-
ropolitan Opera House will enjoy an Adams, still "the youngest of the prima
vember,
when he will tell Kansas City and
unusually successful season under the man- donnas," will begin another tour with Leo
other
towns
the latest news about "Parsi-
agement of Heinrich Conried, judging from Stern on Oct. 5. Lillian Blauvelt returns
fal"
and
"The
Ring." In different cities he
the support given the enterprise by the in January. Ernestine Schumann-Heink,
will
have
the
assistance
of Van Rooy and
subscribers as well as the general public, as the only prima donna contralto since Sofia
Bispham.
evidenced at the opening of the box office Scalchi, has announced her first farewell
Richard Strauss, after all is said and
this week. The enterprise is an important and will last from February to June.
done,
is the lion of the year. He will be
Louise Homer, who, with David Bispham,
in
the
van of the European invasion, for he
opens the Brooklyn Institute concerts on
is
announced
to conduct the opening con-
Oct. 22, was also the star feature at the
cert
of
Herman
Hans Wetzler's orchestra
Worcester, which closed in a blaze of glory
on
Oct.
30.
As
Strauss's latest composi-
yesterday.
tion is called a "Symphonica Domestica" it
October will see many more enterprises
is not surprising to hear that Mme. Strauss
. afoot and afield. Sousa's band, fresh from
de Ahna is to appear at all the Strauss con-
a British tour, pays a flying visit to New
certs. In Philadelphia and in Boston, also,
York on Oct. 4. John S. Duss announces
they will be assisted by the Philadelphia
his far western tour with Nordica, Kather- Orchestra and Fritz Scheel; in Chicago, by
ine Fisk, Nahan Franko and the Metropol- the Chicago Orchestra and Theodore
itan orchestra, from Oct. 5, to Nov. 12. On Thomas. Strauss in New York will be one
Oct. 6, Fritz Scheel gives a farewell sym- of the Philharmonic Society's distinguished
phony concert in San Francisco.
guest-conductors, together with Gustav F.
Of the pianists this year, there will be Kogel, of Frankfort; Henry J. Wood, of
special interest in Ferraccio Busoni, who is London; Victor Herbert, of Pittsburg;
to appear with the Boston Symphony Or- Felix Weingartner, of Munich, and W.
chestra. Adele Aus der Ohe makes her re- Von Safonoff, of Moscow.
appearance on Oct. 30-31 in Philadelphia
At the opening of the Philharmonic sea-
with the Symphony Orchestra. During
November she will give recitals in this city.
She is also booked to play four concert
with the Boston Symphony. Rafael
Joseffy will also reappear. Harold Bauer's
third American tour is likely to win oid-
time favor for this artist. The first tour of
Reisenauer, "the great German," makes his
debut in January next. Fannie Bloomfield-
Zeisler, limited to twenty appearances, wiil
make one of these on Dec. 3 at Association
JACQUES THIBAUD.
Hall, Brooklyn. Others to be heard arc
one and includes forty-five nights and fif- Ottokar Malek, from Bohemia via Chicago ;
teen matinees opening November 23d and Frieda Siemens, from Germany via Boston .
ending March 5th next. The personnel of Augusta Cottolow, who has played here,
the great artists who will participate in the and a stranger rejoicing in the portentous
opera season are largely overlooked by the prsenomen of Zudie Harris.
general public for the first time, and inter-
Jacques Thibaud, of Bordeaux, is the
est seems to center on the production of new violinist of the year. He plays on Oct.
"Parsifal" which will be produced about 30 at a Wetzler concert and on Nov. 13-14
December 21st. Some operatic novelties at the first Philharmonic and on Nov. 20
are promised, but judging from the past, it he gives his first recital in Carnegie Hall.
will be wiser to speak of these later than to- Maud Powell's return will be welcomed in
day.
January. A November recital is planned
The forces of the Metropolitan Opera for Edwin Grasse, a young American pupil
House are this year to be greatly strength- of Cesar Thompson. A new 'cellist for Jan-
ened not only as regards the orchestra, but uary is Pablo Casals.
also in other directions. During his recent
And still the soloists come, Melba will
ADELE AUS DER OHE, Pianist.
stay in Europe Mr. Conried, not without sing at a Boston Symphony concert in New
difficulty, succeeded in engaging a number York and Gadski in Brooklyn. Here are son Nov. 13, Edouard Colonne, of Paris,
of German and Italian singers for the Met- some other vocalists who will figure in local will be the leader. The program will be
ropolitan chorus, besides a portion of the bills: Charlotte Maconda and Mary His- devoted to Berlioz in honor of his centen-
new corps de ballet, which is to appear here sem de Moss, both familiar; Mmes. Shot- ary. The one American invited is Victor
in the incidental divertissements and clas- well-Piper and Harmon-Force, hyphenated Herbert, and in return his Pittsburg orches-
tra is to entertain all the rest of the half
sical ballet or ballets that will be presented
and new; Alice Esty, who made a dignified
dozen. "Prima donna conductors" are a
this season.
appearance in English grand opera; Kelley
In the concert field we are promised a Cole and William Green, English tenors; new system here, if not in Germany. The
season of great activity. Adelina Patti Charles Tree, English bass; George Ham- experiment will bear watching. The Bos-
Nicolini Cedarstrom, on Nov. 2, at Carne- lin, of Chicago, and Theodore Lierhammer, ton Symphony Orchestra goes on its accus-
gie Hall, is to wake the echoes of "Norma" of Vienna, who sing the Strauss songs; tomed way. Here in New York and Brook-
and "Linda," "II Bacio," "Last Rose" and Van Yorx and Dufft, De Voll and Isham, lyn their season opens on Nov. 5, 6 and 7,
"Home, Sweet Home," not to mention a Gwilym Miles, Campanari, Van Rooy and a week before the Philharmonic, and at in-
tervals of five weeks for five months after-
new encore suggestively entitled "The Last
many more. Bispham has the Byron-Schu- ward. The People's Symphony Concerts
Farewell." Nelly Melba, with Charles Gili-
mann "Manfred" ready. Adolph Muhl- will be resumed. Walter Damrosch's Sym-
bert and Ellison Van Hoose in her com-
man is an operatic friend, tried and true, phony Society will give its initial concert
pany, opens an American tour in October
WHAT THE MUSICAL SEASON OFFERS.
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE: MUSIC TRADE: REIVIEIW
UNIONS VERSUS GOVERNMENT.
which are steadily being taken advantage
The American Federation of Musicians of. Hence it is growing in favor.
Of the comedies of the type of "The
have evidently declared war against Govern-
ment bands, and wherever they are engaged Roger Bros, in London," and the "Whoop-
in future, such as for parades and other func- Dee-Doo," at Weber & Fields, it is un-
tions, union bands will necessary to speak. They fill a place ap-
not participate. The an- parently demanded, but are not to be con-
imus of the Federation sidered in the same class as those above
seems to be particularly mentioned. One thing is obvious, and it
directed against the U. S. is that New Yorkers find much pleasure
Military Bands at Wash- in musical comedies and when the book •
ington and West Point. and music are good and the presentation
During the past week satisfactory, managers are sure of prosper-
tie organizers of the ous runs, and plethoric bank accounts.
K
Centennial festivities in
NOW
A
RUSSIAN
SYMPHONY
ORCHESTRA.
Chicago were put to
much inconvenience and "INHERE are scores of Russian musicians
in New York and hundreds of other
trouble by the refusal of
the local bands to take transplanted Russians who love the music
part in the Centennial of their native land and who would like to
parade, owing to the U. acquaint the natives of their adopted coun-
S. Marine Band being try with the best works of the Russian
engaged to take part. composers, especially of the Neo-Russian
This action in Chicago, school. Therefore the Russian Symphony
which is just now in the Society has been incorporated and the Rus-
grasp of a labor mon- sion Symphony Orchestra, numbering
opoly by far more exact- more than sixty musicians, has been
ing and more tyrannical formed. The projectors have been in cor-
than any other trust, is respondence with the elite of the Russian
musical world, and so far expressions of
not surprising.
the
heartiest sympathy and warm prom-
It would certainly be
ises
of
co-operation have come in reply. Six
a sad condition of things
concerts
at popular prices have been ar-
in this country were
ranged
for
the season, at which the main-
freedom of action uni-
stays
of
the
Russian concert stage, un-
versally denied, and the
known
here,
will
be performed.
*
union become a greater
it
power than the Govern-
NORDICA'S SUCCESS IN MUNICH.
ment itself. It is tending
\ 4 M E . LILLIAN NORDICA can cer-
that way, and the future
tainly claim the title of the greatest
will tell whether this
living Wagnerian soprano judging from
condition of things will
her enormous success as Briinhilde in the
be tolerated.
Nibelung Festival performances at Mu-
SUZANXK ADAMS.
at
nich. The journals of that city bear wit-
MUSICAL COMEDIES, GALORE.
having announced several vacancies to be
ness to her triumph and it is rather a hard
USICAL comedy, farce and operetta
filled among violins and 'cellos.
dose for the German critics to acknowl-
seem to dominate the theatrical sea-
Last, not least, the Kneisel Quartet this
edge the supremacy of an American, but
season, for the first time, will be missed son up to date. Fancy dresses, and fan-
they were evidently compelled to pay un-
from the Boston orchestra and will devote tastic dancing, tuneful songs, satiric jests
equivocal tribute to her talents. As a
the entire season to chamber music. It has constitute the make-up of these creations
mark of favor Mme. Nordica has received
no rivals now, and it will make a tour of which attract thousands nightly.
a Ludwig medal from the Prince Regent
Europe next summer and afterward. Lo-
Of the four or five musical plays now on
of
Bavaria.
cal quartet plans are as nebulous as the Broadway, the two English pieces, namely,
at
newest comet. Timothee Adamowski, the "Three Little Maids," at Daly's, and the
ROBERT GRAU INCORPORATED.
latest musical benedict, is announced to ap- "Princess of Kensington," at the Broad-
Papers were filed in the State of New Jer-
pear with his trio in Brooklyn.
way, are unquestionably
head and sey this week incorporating "Robert
•t
shoulders above their American rivals. Grau, Limited," with a paid-up capital of
THE PEOPLE'S CHORAL UNION.
This applies not only to the music, but to
H E People's Choral Union will begin the book. Not that they are works of any $100,000. The officers of the new company
its twelfth season early this month startling originality, but there is a refine- are: President, Robert Grau; Vice-Presi-
dent, W. E. Woodend; Secretary and
with seventeen classes for the study of
ment and intelligence in both productions Treasurer, Louis J. Bruck. The company
sight singing and choral music. This fall
the union under Frank Damrosch will that pleases. The artistic restraint which will have offices at 17 Ridgewood avenue,
study the "Fire Cross" by Max Bruch and is noticeable in the chorus as well as the Hackensack, and in the Windsor Arcade,
will give a public performance early next deftness, harmony and due sense of pro- Forty-sixth street and Fifth avenue. The
portion which prevails, delight those who purposes of the company are the direction
year.
*
have become weary of boisterousness and in America of foreign stars and of Ameri-
Rudolph Krasselt, the new 'cellist of the vulgarity. Some of the songs from the
can stars in Europe.
Boston Symphony Orchestra, will make his
*
first appearance in America at the second "Princess of Kensington" and the "Three
concert of that organization. His year of Little Maids," are bound to become exceed-
"PARSIFAL" IN PARIS.
compulsory military service in the German ingly popular.
\A
GAILHARD, Director of the Paris
Army is just expiring, and he will not be
Notwithstanding the unfavorable criti-
Opera, has taken a leaf out of Mr.
free in time to play at the first concert.
cism made of Geo. Ade's "Peggy From Conried's book and is thinking of produc-
The Afro-English Coleridge-Taylor has Paris," at Wallack's, it marks a new de- ing "Parsifal" in Paris. It is not easy to
written "Six American Lyrics for Con- parture along improved lines, and is bound
see how this is possible under the copy-
tralto or Baritone" which are'well spoken of.
to
win
a
larger
popularity
than
people
ex-
right
conventions that prevail between Eu-
Four of the poems are by Ella Wheeler
Wilcox, one by Whittier, and one by Whit- pected the opening week. The plot af- ropean countries; and it is still harder to
fords unusual scope for comedy and pathos imagine "Parsifal" in French.
man.
in November and is down for a midwinter
concert with Plangon, Thibaudand Suzanne
Adams for the Hebrew charities of Brook-
lyn. The Women's String Orchestra is
again to play, Conductor Carl V. Lachmund

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