Music Trade Review

Issue: 1905 Vol. 40 N. 26

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THE
fflJilC TRADE
VOL. XL. No. 26.
Published Every Saturday by Edward Lyman Bill at 1 Madison Ave*, New York, July \, 1905.
PADEREWSKI GETS $7,000.
A CLEVER AMERICAN PIANISTE.
New York Central Railroad Settles for the
Shock Pianist Got When Train Left the
Rails.
Mme. Olga Samaroff, who will visit America in
November, for a concert tour under the manage-
ment of J. E. Francke, of Steinway Hall, is a
pianiste of marked ability, who has won the most
favorable opinions of leading critics in London.
An American by birth, she has studied at the
Paris Conservatoire and under such teachers as
Jcdliczka and Delaborde. A well-known writer
says that her playing combines a clear and fluent
technique, a caressing touch, and a decided power
of emotion and expression.
Mme. Samaroff, who made her debut as pianiste
Seven thousand dollars has just been paid by
the New York Central Railroad to Ignace Pade-
rewski, the pianist, as damages for a jolting he
received in a railroad accident three miles from
Syracuse on April 22 last. After the jolting, the
pianist was prostrated from neuritis and was
forced to cancel his American tour.
The railroad lawyers are congratulating them-
selves at the settlement, and are joyful because
the accident was not more serious. One of them
said to-day:
"It is hard to estimate the damages a jury
might have given Paderewski had the injuries
been permanent. Probably the record would
have been broken and the railroad taxed hun-
dreds of thousands of dollars."
Paderewski made as high as $9,000 in a few
hours at a concert in Melbourne, Australia, and
computing the average revenue received from
each, and assuming that he should live to be
seventy years old, his earnings would amount to
$30,000,000. The lawyers say that his earning
capacity and probable length of life would have
been taken into account in case of trial.
Paderewski accepted the $7,000 offered by the
railroad lawyers and has given in return a care-
fully drawn release of damages. The amount
was fixed after many conferences between Mr.
Allinson, manager for Paderewski, and Charles
A. Pooley, of Buffalo, counsel in Western New
York for the railroad.
Dr. Francis B. Fronczak, the Polish physician
of Buffalo, who attended Paderewski and accom-
panied him to Boston, whence he sailed for Eu-
rope, said to-day:
"Few persons realize how near paralysis Mr.
Paderewski came. Had he neglected his ailment
a few days he would undoubtedly have lost com-
plete control of his muscles, as his nerves were
seriously affected."
Paderewski had completed an engagement at
Syracuse on the night of April 22, and was leav-
ing in his private car for Auburn, when sud-
denly there was a great jar, and the pianist fell
from his seat. The engine of the train had
jumped the track, taking the forward car with
it. It was not until a day later that Paderewski
noticed a numbness in his muscles somewhat
akin to paralysis. He consulted Dr. Fronczak,
with the result that the tour was canceled.
BOOK OF AUSTRIAN FOLK SONGS.
The Austrian Ministry of Public Instruction
is making preparations on the most elaborate
scale for gathering and publishing the folk songs
of the empire. A number of well-known philolo-
gists, musicians, and ethnologists will co-operate
In order to ensure scientific accuracy and results
that will bear critical inspection. The collection
will include genuine folk songs, which origi-
nated among the people and also what the Ger-
mans call the volkstiimliche Lied, that is, art
songs that have been adopted and adapted by the
people.
MME. OLGA SAJIAROFF.
in Carnegie Hall, January 19, 1904, is splendidly
equipped on every side of her art, and wherever
her numbers call for breadth or tenderness, or
power, or delicacy, she is always able to meet
these demands. Her repertoire is very large
GRAND OPERA MOTHERS NOW IN LINE.
Grand opera singers who go into operetta are
becoming common enough. Fritzi Scheff, Schu-
mann-Heink and David Bispham will all be in-
cluded in that list, and there are others likely
to follow. It took an astute manager like C. B.
Dillingham, however, to think of putting a grand
opera mother into the lighter work, says the Sun.
Anna Yaeger, mother of Fritzi Scheff, is coming
over here next winter to be in her daughter's
company. She was for some years a well-known
singer in Germany and has just ended an en-
gagement at Frankfort. All that remains for
some more daring impresario is to put the eight
children of Schumann-Heink into a musical
farce in support of their gifted mother.
SAINT-SAENS NEW OPERA.
Saint Saens is working at a new opera, "L'An-
cetre," which is to be produced at Monte Carlo
in the winter. It is.to be in two acts and three
tableaux. The libretto is by Auge de Lassus.
SINGLE COPIES. 10 CENTS.
$2.00 PER YEAR.
TEACHERS FOR LOEB SCHOOL.
Frank Damrosch Engages Instructors for the
Musical Institute.
Frank Damrosch has returned from Europe,
where he has been selecting the faculty for the
JLoeb School of Music, founded by the $500,000
fund given by James Loeb and other members of
his family. Mr. Damrosch has been in Berlin,
Vienna, Bonn, Cologne, Paris, London and Scot-
land.
"I have made many engagements," Mr. Dam-
rosch said, "but they must, be laid before the
trustees of the school before they are made pub-
lic."
Nevertheless we may say that the vocal de-
partment of the school has been practically en-
gaged in full. It is known that George Hens-
chel and Etelka Gerster, the latter a favorite
colorature soprano of twenty-five years ago, have
been secured for the vocal department, and that
a distinguished professor is to come from. Ger-
many to head the piano school. Mrs. Hess-Burr,
of Chicago, and two of the other instructors in
that department will be here at the opening of
the school in October.
The four members of the Kneisel Quartet will
also be instructors and will take up their resi-
dence in this city. Hitherto it has been the cus-
tom of students of music to go to Europe to place
themselves under the instruction of world-fa-
mous teachers and to saturate themselves In that
artistic atmosphere which is believed to exist
only on the Continent.
It seems to be Mr. Damrosch's purpose to im-
port a number of renowned instructors and thus
obviate the necessity for students to go abroad.
Commenting on this view of the matter, a writer
in the Sun said recently: "It has always been,
however, a pet theory with local musicians that
when the foreign celebrity settled in America he
quickly lost the glamor through which he was
viewed from this side of the ocean to the other.
It remains to be seen whether American aspi-
rants for musical learning will hasten to throw
themselves at the feet of the imported teachers to
whose personalities distance will no longer lend
enchantment. If Mr. Damrosch's experiment is
successful, music study will be made much less
expensive and more practicable."
HAMBOTJRG TO SOUTH AFRICA.
On July 8th, Mark Hambourg leaves for a con-
cert tour in South Africa. $20,000 will be paid
him for thirty concerts—a trifle over $665 each.
OPERA RECEIPTS IN NEW YORK.
Heinrich Conried, manager of the Metropolitan
Opera House, stated in a recent interview in
London that his exact receipts during the past
opera season in New York amounted to $1,233,-
600.
The original manuscript of a song entitled,
"The Bonnets of Bonnie Dundee," written by Sir
Walter Scott in 1825, and introduced into the
drama of "The Doom of Devorgoil," fetched $425
recently at an auction sale.
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE: MUSIC TRADE
WAUIStR CURlOSIlltS
His Arrangements of Compositions by Other
Composers—Reminders of His Paris Days.
A writer in Die Musik has been looking up the
achievements of Richard Wagner in dealing with
other people's works. In the forties the then
little-known master from time to time superin-
tended the production of certain famous composi-
tions, with the ordinary performances of which
he was not content. Among these were Pales-
trina's "Stabat Mater" (March, 1848), Gluck's
"lphigenie en Aulide" (February, 1847), and
Beethoven's "Choral" symphony (April, 1846).
His arrangements of works for the Paris firms
of Schlesinger and Troupenas included a piano-
forte score of Donizetti's "La Favorite," of which
the title-page read as thus: "La Favorite. Re-
duite avec accompagnement de piano par Richard
Wagner. A Monsieur G. Meyerbeer, Director-
General de la Musique Royale de Prusse, Membre
correspondent de l'lnstitut de France, Chevalier
de plusieurs ordres, etc., respectuesment dedie."
Various transcriptions from the same opera are
mentioned as by Wagner—one for piano only, a
second for four hands, a third in the form of a
quartet for violins or flutes, and so on. Other
operas treated in much the same manner were
Halevy's "La Reine de Chypre," Auber's "Zan-
etta," and Herold's "Zampa." Wagner also ar-
ranged for four hands some of the very popular
fantasies of Henri Herz. The most important of
these had the following inscription: "Grande
fantaisie sur la 'Romanesca,' fameux air de danse
du XVIe. siecle, par Henri Herz (Op. 111). Ar-
range a quatre mains par Richard Wagner."
These examples of the "strange bedfellows" with
which poverty makes men acquainted are now
very scarce. The Wagner Museum at Eisenach
is said to possess one of them.
PRIZE COMPETITION FOR PART SONG.
The Schubert Glee Club, of Jersey City, N. J.,
of which Mr. Louis R. Dressier is conductor, will
next season celebrate its twentieth anniversary.
To commemorate this event, the club has offered
a prize of fifty dollars in gold for the best part
song for men's voices. The composition is to be
in four parts, with or without accompaniment and
with or without incidental solos. The selection
of the text is left to the composers; the time of
the performance must not exceed twelve minutes.
All compositions submitted must be received by
the secretary on or before August 15, 1905, and
must be signed by a nom-de-plume of the com-
poser. The real name and address of the com-
poser must accompany the manuscript, in a separ-
ate, sealed envelope, on the outside of which must
be written the nom-de-plume used. This envelope
will not be opened until the award has been an-
nounced by the committee. The committee of
award consists of Messrs. Dudley Buck, Horatio
Parker and Victor Herbert. Manuscripts should
be addressed to Mr. Leon O. Gilmore, 12 Cottage
street, Jersey City, N. J., who will retain them
unopened, until the above date, when they will
be forwarded to the committee of award.
AMERICAN GUILD OF ORGANISTS.
On Tuesday evening, May 2, 1905, at the Church
of the Incarnation, 35th street and Madison ave-
nue, New York, the annual election of the Amer-
ican Guild of Organists was held, which resulted
in the following officers being elected:
For warden (presiding officer), John Hyatt
Brewer, organist Lafayette Avenue Presbyterian
Church, Brooklyn; sub-warden, Warren R. Hed-
den, organist Church of the Incarnation, New
York; chaplain, Rev. William M. Grosvenor,
D.D., rector Church of the Incarnation, New
York; secretary, Clifford Demarest, organist Re-
formed Church on the Heights, Brooklyn; treas-
urer, Charles T. Ives, organist First Presbyterian
Church, Montclair, N. J.; registrar, H. Brooks
Day, organist St. Luke's P. E. Church, Brooklyn;
librarian, George Francis Morse, organist Dutch
Reformed Church, Flatbush, N. Y.; auditors,
Mark Andrews, Montclair, N. J.; Frederic Max-
REVIEW
son, Philadelphia, Pa.; councillors, Samuel A.
Baldwin, Brooklyn; S. Archer Gibson, New York;
Carl G. Schmidt, Brooklyn; William C. Carl, New
York, and John Spencer Camp, Hartford, Conn.
rector Mahler for the Vienna opera company for
the next two seasons. She will sing leading so-
prano roles in Wagnerian music dramas and
lighter operatic productions.
A HISTORY OF IRISH MUSIC.
POPULAR AIRS GROW BETTER.
It has long been known that Ireland has many
charming folk songs, and that it has produced
several eminent composers—John Field, Balfe,
Wallace, Stanford, Victor Herbert—but the au-
thor of "A History of Irish Music," just issued
in Belfast, W. H. Grattan Flood, goes so far as
to claim that the Irish invented musical form
(the germ which developed into the sonata
form), that they were the first to employ har-
mony and counterpoint, and that they "gener-
ously diffused music all over Europe." In a
chapter on Shakespeare and Irish music, Mr.
Flood shows that the great poet was acquainted
with many Irish songs.
WINNER OF HAMBOURG PRIZE.
The offering of prizes by well-known pianists
is now quite the thing. Before Josef Hofmann
left New York he offered a number of prizes for
the purpose of encouraging composers and in
London Mark Hambourg did the very same thing.
The prize of $50.00 for the best pianoforte piece
offered by Mark Hambourg was won by Frank
Bridge. His Capriccio in A Minor when played
in London by Hambourg was warmly applauded,
so much so that the player had to repeat it. This
was followed by the composer being twice called
on the platform.
STRENUOUS LIFE IN MUSIC.
The strenous life in music was personified by
the late Ernst Pauer of London. When Dr. Hans-
lick visited him during the time of the London
Exposition, he found him giving lessons eight or
nine hours a day, yet returning to his family
bright and smiling, and eager for his dinner.
During a residence of over twenty years he had
never found time to visit the Westminster Abbey.
PEOPLE'S MUSIC SCHOOL DISSOLVED.
The People's Music School, founded in Paris
a few years ago, by Charpentier, the composer
of "Louise," has ceased to exist. It was opened
for the benefit of sewing girls and milliners, and
they showed no lack of appreciation of their op-
portunities, but the funds soon gave out and the
school had to be closed. The deficit of the first
year, amounting to nearly $5,000, was paid by
Charpentier.
JAN KUBELIK COMING BACK.
A dispatch from London on Wednesday says
that Jan Kubelik, the violinist, has signed a con-
tract for a season of 100 concerts in America be-
ginning Dec. 1 next.
MISS GETTY'S SONGS ARE SUNG.
A dispatch from Paris says that Miss Alice
Getty has fallen into the new Paris fashion, of
which the Due de Massa is the shining exemplar,
of composers having their own works given by
professional executants at their own receptions.
At her apartment in the Avenue Champs Elysees
a cycle of her songs was performed and her
guests were naturally mostly Americans.
A 14-YEAR-OLD COMPOSER.
George Williams, a 14-year-old London school
boy, has composed an oratoria which has at-
tracted much attention for the musical Intelli-
gence displayed. It contains about fifty num-
bers, with choruses, solos, duets and even double
choruses with eight-part accompaniments. It
was the work of only nineteen days.
NEW YORK SINGER ENGAGED.
Miss Lillian Heidelbach, a New York singer
and a member of the Metropolitan Opera House
company last season, has been engaged by Di-
Homer N. Bartlett Finds Improvement in the
Music of the Street.
Homer N. Bartlett, the well-known composer,
is optimistic on the question of popular music.
In his opinion the street music of to-day is on a
much higher plane than that of a few years ago.
"I find," said he, "that the writers of popular
music are using better harmonies. Formerly
they limited themselves almost exclusively to the
primary triad. To-day quite a number of them
make frequent use of augmented chords. The
scope is much wider than it was.
"Although the six-eight time and the waltz
time are still the vehicles most commonly used
by composers who wish to ride to popularity, ex-
amples of stately semi-classical music are being
written. The public naturally has a preference
for the rollicking tempo and the jingle, but it has
its moods when more severe music appeals to it.
A diet of peanuts and pink lemonade can pall, at
which time roast beef becomes invested with a
taste compared to which nectar and ambrosia
are as warm water. In music, coon songs and
syncopated time marches are the peanuts and
pink lemonade, the stately, severe and classical
music is the roast beef.
"As for what constitutes a popular programme,
opinions in this as in everything else must be
widely different. Personally I do not believe that
such a programme need contain trash. The
programme which I would select probably
would not be the most popular with the hoi pol-
loi, but there is no valid reason why it should
not be. The numbers which I would select would,
in my judgment, appeal to any music-loving
public.
"My first selection would be the overture from
'Tannhiiuser,' which I consider the most effective,
most original, and greatest overture ever written.
The opening choral, harmonically unlike the old
diatonic music of this form, is used throughout
in a masterly manner, and its reappearance at
the close with the theme prolonged by making
the half notes full notes, is of magnificent effect.
"My other selections would include the Leo-
nore No. 3, overture of Beethoven; the 'Oberon,'
overture of Weber, Goldmark's 'Sakuntala,' the
Pathetique Symphony of Tschaikowsky, Beethov-
en's Seventh symphony, the Spring Song of Men-
delssohn, Saint-Saen's 'Rouet d'Omphale,' Liszt's
Second Hungarian Rhapsody, the Vorspiel from
'Lohengrin,' Liszt's Preludes, and Victor Her-
bert's American Phantasy.
"This last composition," said Mr. Bartlett, in a
talk with The Globe, aside from the popularity
which it derives from the fact that such melodies
as 'Dixie' and 'Yankee Doodle' are interpolated, is
of remarkable musical value. Many potpourris
of American airs have been written, but they
have all relapsed into innocuous desuetude. Her-
bert's phantasy will endure because of the con-
summate skill shown in the arrangement of the
melodies chosen and the skilful orchestration of
the whole. It is more than clever—it is great."
PUCCCINI TO WRITE THE MUSIC.
Clyde Fitch, the well-known dramatist, who is
now in Europe, has imparted the news that he
is going to Lucca to see Puccini, the composer
of the Tosca and the Boh erne, adding: "He iB
going to write the music for a play of mine that
Emma Eames will sing in next winter in New
York." He did not reveal the name of the play,
but said it was an old one.
H. W. Loomis, whose great specialty is Indian
music, is arranging for a tour of the West. He
will remain at Tacoma and Seattle for a time,
studying the Indians, and repeating his Indian
concert, which will also subsequently be given
at Portland, San Francisco, and Los Angeles.

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