Music Trade Review

Issue: 1904 Vol. 39 N. 1

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE
MUSIC TRADE
REVIEW
TIMELY TALKS ON TIMELY TOPICS.
In speaking of the coming season the matter
of artists came up, and one of the greatest musi-
cians before the public was designated as too
well known to make a sensational success. "What
we want," was added, "are sensations—novel-
ties." And this seems to be the general feeling
in America. If the art is ever thought about is
a great question. Simply has an artist the power
or the elements to make a sensation? The dan-
gers of catering to the love of sensation in
America are farther-reaching than a cursory
glance at the matter would show. There is no
question that this holds back the genuine prog-
ress of the people themselves, not only of the art,
as true art is lost sight of in the presence of
the sensational, and instead of setting forward
the art, the sensational sides are exploited. The
artist knows this, and there are those noble
enough and great enough to give no thought to
any side but to the art itself, but there are few,
and we find that the first idea is that of how to
be a sensation, not how to be an artist.
It is now twenty-five years since the first ap-
pearance in this country of one of the greatest
artists of the past or present. If anyone should
take the trouble to study the life and the work
of Rafael Joseffy he would be astonished to find
what is carried with twenty-five years' influence
of an artist of the greatest calibre, who detests
everything that is not in keeping with the dig-
nity of all that is highest and best in art. One
such artist as Joseffy, who having lived with
us for twenty-five-years, is worth fifty sensations
a season in its effect upon music in America.
To have turned out hundreds of pupils with the
highest ideals, to have played for thousands and
to have created a standard thereby which might
serve to measure everything before and after
him, were but the smallest part of what Joseffy
has done for t^he country which he has elected to
make his own. What we need is a few more
Joseffys and a few less sensations.
The engagement of a number of conductors by
the Philharmonic Society has been designated
by some of the more serious-minded as sensa-
tional. This is viewed from a wrong standpoint,
as the benefit therefrom is so educational that
the sensational side is fairly and squarely lost.
We must not regard the words "attractive" and
"sensational" as synonymous because while
anything extremely attractive has the element
of sensation about it, i t is attractive first and
only sensational in so far as it is related to the
public, and that is the side which should be be-
low the dignity of any artist. The visiting con-
ductors have served to stimulate everything in
the orchestral way; i t has brought people into
a keener appreciation of the Boston Symphony
Orchestra, at least, into a keener study of its
methods, as also the methods of other orches-
tras in the country. If nothing but this had
been accomplished, it were enough, but this was
by far the least important lesson taught by the
notable men who conducted last season's con-
certs of the Philharmonic Society. I t is j3aid
that a concert is planned where Ysaye and
D'Albert will appear both as soloists and as con-
ductors; that is, Ysaye will conduct while
D'Albert plays, after which D'Albert will re-
turn the compliment. However, as both men are
known to be conductors of pronounced capabili-
ties, we must overlook the sensational in the
presence of the opportunity which it will give
us to study their musical sense, as only the
conductor can show it. The most serious ob-
jection that presents itself under these condi-
tions is the fact that the long line of Philhar-
monic conductors is broken, and that during
these seasons, the Philharmonic Society will
probably go down in history as without a con-
ductor rather than with seven or eight.
On the 22d of July Bayreuth will open its Wag-
nerian season in a fashion most approved by
America; that is to say, with "Tannhauser," of
which there will be five performances. Begin-
ning July 23d there will be seven performances
of "Parsifal," while the Niblungen Ring will
have eight performances, or to be more exact,
the entire cycle will be produced twice. The
conductors for the season are to be Hans Richter,
Carl Muck, Siegfried Wagner, Franz Beidler and
Michael Balling. The cast includes names that
are singularly strange to us. It is thus probably
because all those whom we know have aroused
the ire of the powers at Bayreuth, owing to
their connection with opera in America. There
is little doubt that America will get as much
"Parsifal" as it wants next season. The coun-
try will be deluged, in the first place, with lec-
turers, and then with entertainments based upon
"Parsifal" in some form or another. Henry W.
Savage is certainly very much in earnest, as he
will give it to the exclusion of almost everything
else, having one company for nightly perform-
ances and matinees besides. There is just a
question in the writer's mind as to how long the
people will retain an interest in this play, as the
novelty having worn off, they will see neither
symbol nor music, and will be on the qui vive
for another sensation. Of course, there are not
many sensations possible to obtain that could
compare with that of presenting "Parsifal" in
America in the face of all obstacles. That has
been the attraction to American audiences, alas!
not the great work itself, the more the pity. In
selecting Mrs. Kirkby Lunn to sing the role of
Kundry, it will be noticed that in order to get
an English speaking singer capable of presenting
the role, Mr. Savage was compelled to take a con-
tralto instead of a soprano; however, it is prob-
able that Mrs. Lunn has a very wide range, and
that the part does not lie very high. It is cer-
tain, however, that Mrs. Lunn will realize some
of the strenuousness of the opera singer's life
before she has finished with an entire season of
"Parsifal."
The case of three young men who.insulted the
audience, M. Colonne, his orchestra and Pader-
ewski when he played the Beethoven Concerto
in Paris came up for trial recently. These young
men again insisted that they had no object fur-
ther than protesting against a musical form
which they regarded as contrary to art. The
judgment will be rendered July the 6th. There
would be much to say concerning this outrageous
presumption if it had not already been said with
such exceptional grace and perspicacity by
Charles M. Widor, one of the great authorities
who was called to give testimony by the lawyer
of the offending parties. The nature of Mr. Wi-
dor's communication reads as follows:
Respected Sir.—Your clients hiss the virtuosi; the
cook of Foyot will not endure tragedy at the Odeon.
another will only tolerate the Cake Walk at the Nou-
veau-Cirque ; Mr. Jaures desires no more army, M. Herve
no more country, the telephone girls no more foreign
languages, a master-mason demanded yesterday the Im-
mediate demolishing of the cupola of St. Peter to ce-
ment the Franco-Italian alliance—long ago Le Fontaine
told us the story jof the Fox who wanted to cut the tails
of all the other foxes. It is only possible to regard your
clients as subjects for medical treatment, for they are
touched with a slight hypertrophy of 'me.' Bach, Handel,
Haydn, Mozart, Beethoven, Weber, Schumann, Brahms,
Liszt, Mendelssohn, Saint-Saens, etc., have given to the
question that you have wished to ask me the most elo-
quent answer—In producing these admirable works of
genial virtuosity which enrapture multitudes to devote
themselves to the art. I admit willingly that your
clients possess an ideal extremely superior to that of
Bach or Beethoven, but it is not In hissing that they
prove this superiority. I t is so simple not to go to a
concert when the program dlpleases you. Believe me.
sirs, etc.
CHARLES MABIE WIDOR.
It is so refreshing to know that America is so
far ahead of Paris in the attitude of the classes,
even of the lowest classes, to music. This, how-
ever, will not prevent constant flings and sneers
of the foreign press at the taste of America. We
are judged by those upon whom the foreigners
feed, and we will be judged further after Jean
De Reszke will turn away hundreds of Ameri-
cans who, on bended knee, will pray for the
privilege of paying him forty dollars an hour.
The greatest crime of the American is not ignor-
ance, it is only an inordinate case of hero-wor-
ship—rather snobbery—from which it may never
in our day recover.
It was to have been expected that America
would come in for her share of criticism when
Richard Strauss would return to his country.
However, the country must have been more of a
revelation to Strauss than Strauss was to the
country, notwithstanding the extreme fascination
that some of his works had for many people.
Dr. Strauss saw two disgusting phases of Ameri-
can life, the one was created by the man who is
always out with his knife, the other was the
molly-coddling and obsequious fawning of those
who thought it was the proper thing to do; there
were a few who bore themselves admirably in
the matter, but these were probably not brought;
into the notice of Dr. Strauss. However, what-
ever Strauss did or did not do, he succeeded in
furnishing a good deal of copy at the time when
it was the most needed.
EMILIE FRANCES BAUER.
CHAUTAUQUA'S MUSICAL PLANS.
Oratorios, Musical Dramas and Other Features
That Will Interest.
The musical program a t Chautauqua, N. Y.,
this summer is to be more varied than ever.
Among the special musical events of interests are
two presentations of the musical drama "Hia-
watha" with stereopticon illustrations, two pre-
sentations of the "Sad Shepherd," an old English
play in conjunction with which a good deal of
quaint music is introduced, a lecture, a reading
and an illustrated lecture with piano selections,
on "Parsifal," a lecture recital on the "Music of
the American Indian" and an illustrated lecture
on "Wagner."
Chautauquans will be glad to hear that the
well-known vester choir from the First Metho-
dist Church, of Akron, Ohio, will be at Chau-
tauqua, N. Y. this year for a week, and that be-
sides the special concert which they will give on
the afternoon of July 23, they will participate in
the presentation of the oratorio of "Messiah" on
July 22d, and take part in the Sacred Song Ser-
vice of Sunday the 24th.
Chautauqua, N. Y., as usual, is reaching out in
its musical program and has provided this year
for two oratorious—Handel's "Messiah" and
Haydn's "Creation."
These will be given on
July 22d and August 12th respectively, and will
be very effectively presented. The great Chau-
tauqua choir i s doing increasingly good work
under the directorship of Mr. Alfred Hallam,
and in the hands of Mr. Henry Vincent the or-
chestra Is gaining ground each year.
Four concerts of some novelty will be given at
Chautauqua, N. Y., this summer under the direc-
tion of Mr. Alfred Hallem. One of these, "Cin-
derella," is a children's operatta, which will be
given with children soloists, aided by the Chau-
tauqua orchestra and the children's choir. Three
evening programs will be made up from selec-
tions from three of the best known Gilbert & Sul-
livan operas: "Pinafore," "The Pirates of Pen-
zance" and "The Trial by Jury."
WILL NOT BE LITERALLY ENFORCED.
At the instance of the American Bishops, who
sent a collective letter to the Vatican, through
Mgr. Falconio, the Pope has decided that the re-
cent decree regulating the music in churches
shall not be literally enforced in the United
States. The American bishops had urged that
the absolute exclusion of women from the choirs
would, in many cases, be absolutely impracti-
cable. Instructions will soon be sent to America,
making the adoption of exclusively Gregorian
music obligatory only In cathedrals and In
churches conducted by religious orders, and
these alone will be forbidden to retain women in
their choirs.
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE
"THE PASSING OF THE PIANO.'
A Ridiculous Editorial Which Was Founded
on a Chain of Misstatements Showing That
the Piano is Passing into Innocuous Desue-
tude—The Contentions Analyzed.
Last Sunday's Times, contained an extraordi-
nary editorial under the caption of "The Passing
of the Piano," in which the writer displayed an
ignorance that is no longer surprising when any-
thing relating to the music trade is discussed
in the daily press.
It is evident that the writer's liver needs treat-
ment, or else his mentality is suffering from in-
digestion of these silly stories regarding the
burning of the old square pianos at Atlantic City.
This is not the first writer in the daily press
who has been mislead by this fake bonfire, and
whose "stories" unquestionably have done, and
are doing much injury to the piano business.
The editorial opens in this wise:
"There are many encouraging indications war-
ranting the belief that as an article of usual
household furniture the piano is passing into
innocuous desuetude. There are still several
pianos sold annually, no doubt, but the propor-
tion of those in nominal use which remain silent
from three hundred to three hundred and sixty-
five days in the year is steadily increasing. The
burning a t Atlantic City recently of a small
mountain of square pianos which could not be
sold and perhaps could not be given away was
indicative of something more than a change in
domestic architecture which makes the old shape
inconvenient."
It is apparent that these statements need no
refutation, so unfounded and so ridiculous are
they. The writer is likewise in error when he
states that the business of teaching the piano is
declining, for it is only necesary to look up the
rosters of the different colleges and schools to
know that this is not the fact. Here is what he
says in this connection:
"The business of teaching children and young
persons to play on the piano is declining. The
conviction is growing in the minds of parents
that it does not pay to expend considerable sums
of money to enable children without musical tal-
ent to acquire such superficial knowledge of this
instrument as will enable them to disturb the
peace and quiet of home without contributing
anything to its pleasures. Real piano playing
has been brought to a plane so high that one who
has not acquired proficiency by long and ardu-
ous study hesitates to confess to any knowledge
of it. .Amateur work has been further discour-
aged by the multiplication of mechanical devices
which, by the agency of strips of paper punched
full of holes and wound on spools, can make
music in more or less successful imitation of
great compositions or trivial ones, so far beyond
the ability of the average amateur piano player
as to discourage effort. The mastery of the in-
strument which is the possession of the few has
flooded the market with compositions requiring
half a lifetime of hard and unremunerative work
to comprehend and interpret. The futile little
Bird Waltzes, Battles of Prague and a Maiden's
Prayers, with variations, mastered with no great
difficulty by the schoolgirl after one or two quar-
ters of instruction, are things of the past."
The position this editorial writer takes in re-
gard to the mission of the piano player is not
a correct one. The piano player has not led to
a decline in the teaching of music; on the con-
trary, it is stimulating it.
A great campaign of education is'being carried
on by the piano player, and it has led to a much
higher taste in the selection of music, and in its
performance by the amateur players who a few
years ago were content with the trashiest kind
of music. The idle piano is becoming a thing of
the past owing to general use of the piano player.
This wiseacre, who endeavors to enlighten us
about the piano situation, closes his diatribe with
the summing up that:
"The net result is one of vast advantage to the
average citizen. This year he can sit at his open
window in a populous neighborhood and perhaps
MUSIC TRADE
REVIEW
not hear the sound of a piano once in an evening.
A few years ago he would have heard a dozen un-
der like conditions, variously tortured, and each
contributing differently from the others to his
mental and physical misery. Perhaps another
reason for this is that the public has so much
perfunctory music that it welcomes peace and
quietness. To escape from music one does not
want it difficult. If he refrains from going where
it assails him, the street band or the hand organ
will follow him. All these causes contribute to
the passing of the piano, which resents abuse at
the hands of the incompetent who has other
duties in life than to become its slave."
It is laughable to read about "The Passing of
the Piano" when every year a larger output of
these instruments is recorded. I t is true the
piano is not abused as much to-day as in the
past, simply because—as we remarked before—
there is a higher appreciation of the instrument,
and its mission in the home.
An article like this referred to, when printed
editorially, can work much injury to the piano
trade, and when it teems with misinformation
and is based on incorrect premises, it is still
more dangerous. I t would be much better if
editorial writers in the daily press would con-
fine themselves to the war in the Far East or the
political situation and leave the piano alone.
ENGLISH OPERA'S GREAT YEAR.
The Savage English Grand Opera Company
Closes Longest Tour in Its History—Plans
for Next Season.
The Savage English Grand Opera Company
closed its forty weeks'. season in Pittsburg re-'
cently after the most successful and longest tour
the Boston Impresario ever gave his famous or-
ganization. Over three hundred performances
were given, including productions of fourteen
operas. The company consisted of 150 people,
including an orchestra of forty musicians, and
traveled on its own special train of twelve cars.
Most of the operas were works that no other
organization has ever attempted in English. An
idea of the success attending Mr. Savage's enter-
prise may be gained when it is known that the
gross receipts of the season were the largest of
any during the nine years' history of the or-
ganization. Thirty-one cities were visited, three
times as many as in any former year. •
Since Mr. Savage founded his company in
Boston he has produced eighty-one masterpieces
in English, the first production of Verdi's cele-
brated "Othello" this year being regarded as the
finest triumph of American singing artists. The
number of performances this year have been as
follows:
"Lohengrin," 51; "Trovatore," "Othello" and
"Carmen," over 40; "Tosca," "Tannhauser," and
"Faust," over 30; "Bohemian Girl," 25; "Aida,"
8; "Lucia di Lammermoor," 6; "Cavalleria Rus-
ticana," 6; "Martha," 6; "Romeo et Juliet," 6;
"La Boheme," 2; "Parsifal" concerts, 3.
Puccini's "La Boheme" was a special produc-
tion at the close of the season, and with Verdi's
"Othello" and Puccini's "Tosca' will probably
be in the repertoire next season when the com-
pany will visit over fifty cities, including a tour
of Canada, the South and to the Pacific Coast.
Opera festivals ranging from one to three weeks
will be given in Toronto, Montreal, Brooklyn,
Baltimore, Washington, Pittsburg, New Orleans,
Kansas City, Denver and San Francisco. This
will be the first time an English Grand Opera
Company will attempt a complete tour of the
United States.
JEAN DE RESZKE'S SCHOOL.
He Gets $40 for Singing Lessons—Not Likely
to Return Here.
Reports from Paris are to the effect that Jean
de Reszke has set to work on his singing school
with such enthusiasm that he is not likely to be
tempted to return to the stage by any salary
that may be offered to him. As a matter of fact
his new enterprise promises to be a source of
great income to him.
That the great tenor has undertaken the work
for purely artistic or benevolent purposes, no-
body believes. It is an extremely businesslike in-
stitution, and the pupils who are received there
must pay well. The rates are $40 an hour, and
that is not for a private lesson. The pupils are
taken in clases of four and each pays $10. M. de
Reszke gives a lesson to each pupil alternately
and the other three listen. As he has as many
pupils as he can receive now, it will be seen
that his school will soon be as much a source of
profit to him as his singing, even at the rates he
used to be paid.
Even if he did return to the United States it
would be the last time that a tour for him would
be posible, and he would, of course, never receive
from Mr. Conried or anybody else the terms he
demands. So it may be accepted as practically
certain that the tenor, who was always as good a
business man as an artist, will not desert his
school for one year when i t promises to be so
profitable to him.
Xlie Musician
A MONTHLY PUBLICATION DEVOTED TO THE EDUCATIONAL
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In the Teachers' Forum the most pertinent and practical questions of the teacher's work
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veloped. In the Lesson Club a series of most practical instruction is given in music theory,
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A new department, under the caption of Music in the Home, will be of exceptional interest
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