Music Trade Review

Issue: 1912 Vol. 55 N. 9

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE
MUSIC TRADE
THE LITERARY
July 47,1912
REVIEW
DIGEST
14?
transparent that one can see through the walls. The writer
tells us that he once sunk such a pit in a river 5 to 7 feet deep,
in which the speed of flow attained four miles per hour. He
adds however:
"The sinking of more than one or two pits diametrically
across the river should be avoided, since this impedes the
current, and the water is liable to raise the ice, in various
places, causing cracks through which the
pits are flooded."
PHOTOGRAPHING MUSIC
T
O RECORD the performance of a
pianist in such a way that it may be
reproduced at will with all its pecu-
liarities and individualities—to make a rec-
ord, in short, that will turn the mechanical
player with which it is used into a Paderewski
or a Joseffy—if either of them officiated when
the record was formed—this is the feat that
has been successfully accomplished, we are
told, by Melville Clark, of Chicago. Robert
H. Moulton, who writes of it in The Tech-
nical World (Chicago, July), tells us that
many of the ablest minds in the commercial
field of music have been turned to the so-
lution of this problem—that of devising a
means for the making of music that shall be
an actual and permanent record of a per-
formance, instead of a mere musical score,
and have pronounced it an impossibility.
He goes on:
to the cunningly introduced 'accidentals'—made the
presence of the composer at the piano seem a certainty. His
tempo, his style, his pedaling, the power of his stroke on the
keys, and the sensuous element—the expression—were repro-
duced in such an accurate way that the mechanism seemed to
be endowed with a human mind.
"The operation of Mr. Clark's device—which he calls a
recorder—may best be explained in the simple statement that the
pressure of a button, turning on the electric
current, sensitizes every playing part of the
piano—keys, pedals, and all—to the slightest
touch of the performer, and secures in perfect
relation every playing movement made.
"While the importance of this achieve-
ment in the field of the mechanical player
can be readily appreciated, its influence upon
the development of musical history repre-
sents its chief value. It is from this stand-
point that it appeals most to its inventor.
He frankly states that he does not think it
has commercial value.
"To be able to sit down at the piano,
imprint one's individuality in all its phases
upon the interpretation of any given musi-
cal composition, have the music so produced
cut, and then to use it on a piano-player
and hear oneself play, certainly seems the
fulfilment of the composer's wildest dream.
"But that is not all. The recorder re-
lieves the composer of the manual drudgery
of putting his thoughts down on paper with
pen or pencil. Also,- it enables him to
preserve the continuity of his thoughts,
which is difficult when he is forced to stop
to jot down his composition."
Possibly in the near future some one will
tell us just how the "recorder" works, but
the mechanical details are apparently a
Krom " The Technical World Magazine" (Chicago).
secret for .the present—a fact that will
MELVILLE CLARK,
make some malicious critics suspect Mr.
Whose invention records musical
Moulton's assurance that commercial success
compositions automatically.
is not the inventor's aim.
"There is a man in Chicago, however,
Melville Clark, for whom the word impos-
sible has never held terrors. So he quietly
set to work a couple of years ago, convinced
in his own mind that he would succeed
where others had failed. Mr. Clark is gen-
erally acknowledged to be one of the greatest
designers and builders of pianos and piano-players in the world.
He was the first to build a piano-player to operate over the
entire keyboard.
"Consequently when he announced a short time ago that
he had perfected a device which would not only make a per-
manent record of a performance on a piano, but do it so faith-
fully and accurately that not a single eccentricity of the pianist's
individuality would be lost, the respectful attention of the-
musical world was immediately forthcoming.
"Naturally there were many skeptics—men who desired to
be shown. One of these was a pianist and composer of inter-
national reputation.
"Of course, Clark,' he said, when told of the new invention,
[ know you have accomplished wonders in your line. But in
this case your claims sound, ah
'
"'Preposterous?' said Mr. Clark. 'Sure! I don't blame you
at all for thinking so. But just come along to my office and see
for yourself.'
"Together they repaired to Mr. Clark's private office, where
a piano was in readiness. In one corner of the room stood a
little closet. The pianist also noticed that a wire ran from the
alectric light fixture in the middle of the room into the closet.
'"Just a moment,' said Mr. Clark, as he turned on the current.
Immediately there issued from the closet the soft hum of a tiny
dynamo.
'"The recorder is in that closet,' explained Mr. Clark, 'and
this current operates it. Now all you've got to do is to fire
away, and the recorder will do the rest.'
"The pianist fired. Resolved to make the job a good one and
test the instrument to the limit of its capabilities he improvised
a selection as fiery and brilliant as a thunderstorm.
"When he had finished, Mr. Clark went into the closet and
returned with a roll of paper, similar in appearance to those used
on piano-players. Placing the roll in another piano with a repro-
ducing attachment, he set the reproducer in motion with his feet.
"The effect was startling. The exactness of the record—even
STARCH AS A POISON —The recent
conviction of a druggist by English magistrates for selling an
infants' food containing over 70 per cent, of starch, calls at-
tention to the fact that this almost universal food substance
is not innocuous to all persons and under all circumstances.
The British Medical Journal (London, June 13), commenting on
this conviction, tells us that—
"There is overwhelming evidence that the digestive disorders
to which many young children are subject have resulted from
feeding them upon foods largely composed of starch. Hitherto
no very great effort has been made to prevent these foods being
sold, beyond the general advice which is given to mothers and
nurses by doctors and health visitors as to the harmfulness of
them. The medical officer of health of the county of Rutland,
Dr. Christopher Rolleston, has, however, succeeded in obtaining
a conviction before the local justices against a chemist for selling
a preparation of infants' food which contained upward of 70
per cent, of practically unaltered starch, and which was there-
fore held to be not of the nature, substance, and quality demand-
ed by the purchaser. The preparation was described as being
suitable for an infant only a few days old. A dessert-spoonful
of the mixture was directed to be put into a basin to be mixt
to the thickness of a smooth cream with cold milk or water; to
this was to be added half a pint of milk and water in equal parts,
and it was then to be brought to the boil. It was contended
by the chemist that the boiling would convert the starch into
sugar, and this view was supported by a member of the Society
of Public Analysts. There are some artificially prepared infants'
foods in which the conversion of the starch into saccharine bodies
is complete, but they do not contain 70 per cent, of starch."
The writer complains that it is not very satisfactory that the
harmfulness or otherwise of the preparation should be left to
the decision of a local bench of magistrates. Health boards, he
thinks, should have summar}- power in such matters.
Here's the plan: Order one sample roll of hand-played music from all other
cutters. Then let us send you a roll of our autograph hand-played music, gratis.
Gather all the folks around your instrument; make the comparison. We are
already smiling over the result.
M E L V I L L E C L A R E P I A N O CO,
Sales Agents for Q. R. S. CO.
410 FINE ARTS BUILDING, GHIGAGO
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8
THE
MUSIC TRADE
REVIEW
:<
THE PLAYER-PIANISTS' DEPARTMENT
[It is in every way eminently desirable that a publication
which undertakes to give so much space and so authoritative
a treatment to the great player industry, as does The Re-
view, should not neglect what is after all the real excuse
for the player's existence, namely, the music that is evoked
from it. Recognizing the extraordinary importance of do-
ing everything possible to spread more widely appreciation
and love for music among player-pianists, The Review's
Player Section for the present month contains below, and
will in future regularly contain, a department devoted to
the musical interests of player-pianists and of the player-
piano. Each month one musical article of general interest
will appear, together with useful hints, notes and comments.
This is in addition to the regular sub-section of the Player
Section which analyzes the monthly issues of music rolls.
Professional demonstrators, salesmen and player-pianists of
every degree will find each month on the "Player-Pianist's"
page of the Player Section much valuable information. And
the Editor of the Player Section will at all times be glad
to answer inquiries on any and all musical player matters.]
Now, it is to be noted that just as music, ordi-
narily speaking, appeals to the plain man merely
as a succession of more or less pleasing sounds
until he begins to feel its influence more deeply;
so also all development of the art itself has been
from a more objective to a more subjective con-
dition. Many writers on Music have taken views
which appear to be widely different from this.
But due consideration of the facts in the case
will be likely to show the justice of what is here
urged.
Three hundred years measure the whole period
of Music's development as an art. Form, con-
tent and practice have all been brought to a rela-
THE MEANING OF MODERN MUSIC.
tive perfection within that comparatively short
time. It is not, therefore, at all surprising that
Prolegomena.
It may be taken as a truism that most people the state of mind which has characterized our
begin really to get interested in music only as soon attitude toward Music has hitherto been almost
as music becomes something to them far apart entirely objective. The classic masters had no
from their original notions of it. The plain man mental problems to solve. Their business was to
write Music that would sound well and at the
considers the world around him from an em-
pirical, objective, concrete standpoint. Abstrac- same time agree with the rules laid down by the
tions are less obscure than meaningless to him. experience of the past and improved or extended
He constantly looks outward and very seldom by their own genius. Beethoven broke the crust
thinks pi reversing the process. Inner vision, in- of simple objective presentation which Mozart,
trospection, subjectivity are mere words to the Haydn and their school had so firmly cemented.
Mozart and the classic masters wrote most lovely
average person.
music.
But their music was entirely without any
Now, so long as one maintains this attitude ex-
mental significance. It did not mean anything.
clusively, it is plain that an art like music can
One man may look at the sea and perceive merely
appeal only from a corresponding aspect. In
its play of color, its tossing waters, its deep boom
other words, if I look at the world entirely from
on
a distant beach. Another may see the same
what is (though very erroneously) called a "prac-
sight, yet find awakened in him deepest emo-
tical" point of view, enumerating and judging
its wealth of details without looking for the more tions, which he cannot explain, and which cannot
general idas underlying them, any art which ap- otherwise be evoked. The first sees as the classic
school wrote—external beauty and nothing else.
peals to me can do so only through its own ob-
jective presentations. Its outer form and ves- The second sees as Beethoven wrote—deep in-
ternal emotions similar to those which governed
ture may wake in me something like interest or
even enthusiasm, but into its secret penetralia I the composer himself.
Beethoven, during the greater part of his pro-
never shall enter; principally because I shall be
ductive life, was a deaf man, shut off entirely
totally unconscious of their existence.
This is, indeed, the attitude of the plain man. from the audible world. His music, therefore,
But it is not to be supposed that therefore it is was an expression of his own inner thoughts and
either inevitable, or even necessarily normal. feelings. It is almost purely—at least from the
There are two principal ways of looking at things. period beginning in 1805—a representation of
We may consider, ourselves as individuals who mind-states. The plain man may therefore find
are parts of and in a world, with things happen- Beethoven at times obscure, but the slightest nat-
ing around us, in which we have more or less ural sensitiveness to music will soon enable him,
of a part. That is the ordinary objective or com- after a little familiarity with the master's works,
mon-sense view. Then, again, with equal pro- to see more and more clearly into their depths.
priety, we may consider ourselves each as an in- It is perhaps with Beethoven, above all other
writers, that the novice should begin, who wishes
dividual being, in front of whom, and around
whom, a world exists; a world which is con- to know what Music to-day really means.
With the, romantic school which followed Beet-
tinually acting on us and on which we in turn are
continually acting, and which consists of every- hoven and which Schumann headed, we see even
thing else in the world except ourselves, who are more of this tendency; this desire to make Music
opposed to it. The world may either include or tell the secrets of the heart, the true mysteries of
exclude us. The first is the common-sense view Eleusis. Schumann was less controlled than
Beethoven, had less power over himself, and was
and the second the philosophic.
Now, all the fine arts do more or less produce inclined to an exaggeration of subjectivity which
the second state of mind, in that they awake emo- mars his work. But he nobly carried on the great
tions and ideas much deeper lying than we can movement which finally was to resolve itself into
usually evoke when dealing with the ordinary the musical current of to-day. Wagner, again,
was a marvelous reversion to the objective pres-
world. We can throw ourselves into the state of
entation
idea. He was neither crude like the
mind which is most favorable for the thinking of
abstract thoughts by reading a book or a poem, classic masters nor held back from 'progress by
by gazing at a picture or by listening to music. their limited command over the technic of the art.
Of all the possible arts, music, of course, is the On the contrary, his technical command over the
most favorably situated for the evocation of the forms of composition was tremendous, his imagi-
subjective state. For Music is itself nothing that nation abounding, and his grasp of a- musical
scheme unparalleled. All the same, in each and
can be seen or touched. It can be heard, but that
is all. It is an abstraction, an evanescent series every one of his works, with the exception of
of impressions which float before our minds, "Parsifal," we find him purely objective. He
presents outer ideas in music of marvelous de-
vanishing almost as soon as they are born.
Just through this very intangibility does Music scriptive power. The love-durt "Tristan and
gain its greatest power. It awakes in us, if we Tsolde" is a truly wonderful picture of elemental
passion. But it is not subjective; very far from
be at all sensitive to it, states of mind that cannot
'be duplicated otherwise. The plain man becomes it. "Parsifal," on the contrary, sp'te of its elab-
for the moment a dreamer. And being so trans- orate stage accessories and the great amount of
formed, he is, whether he know it or not, in the descriptive music it contains, is governed through-
out by a purely subjective motive of mind.
abstract state.
But Wagner, the great objectivist, could not
forever stem a current flowing away from him.
Modern Music again has swung into line with the
forces that have for so long been urging it on-
ward into the deepest realms of subjectivity. The
modern composer, of course, has been assisted
greatly by Wagner's work, because through it
he has learned to control the orchestra and to
sound depths of harmonic richness unknown even
to Beethoven and Schumann. He has captured
Wagner's armory, but he goes forth from it
armed for a different quest.
The fact is that the whole present tendency
of modern Music is found in a constant attempt
to get away from the objective presentation of
beautiful sound or the crude picturing of event,
into the representation of mind states. Music now
seeks to preach a gospel of modern ideas through
tones. It is suggestive, representative, subjective.
But in the very richness of suggestion thus
sought, in the very possibility of making music
the true art, the art which shall universally appeal
to the minds of men, which shall bind all the
civilized world into one art-brotherhood, there
lie gravest dangers. If so be it the present tendency
of composition brings us masters who are as far
ahead of Richard Strauss and Cesar Franck as
these are above Okeghem, then perchance Music
may be turned into a prophet and bringer of evil.
The modern world is an old world, a spent and
satiated world in respect of its sensations. One
fears the possibility of a great master in tone who
shall boldly and to all the world, in his music,
speak that which must be unspoken, reveal the
unseen.
Already we hear the first faint whispers that
give half timed expression to thoughts still re-
garded as too advanced. Busoni would have it
that our musical scale is outworn; no longer able
to bear the burden of modern harmonic seeking.
He talks, almost boldly of a new scale with three
divisions to the step. Some day in the near future
we are going to have music written in this way
and instruments built to play that music. Some
day we are going to have a new musical idiom,
bound down by no cast-iron rules of notation and
scale. Some day the naked power of tone is to
be loosed on the ears and minds of a trembling
world. So say the prophets.
These things may b.e but dreams. Yet have they
within them more than the stuff that dreams are
made of. The future is big with coming events.
Music enters a new era. May it not be entirely
lost in the forests and deeps of obscurantism!
Here end the prolegomena.
A HEART TO HEART TALK
On Public Taste.
The other day the writer of the present re-
marks had occasion to buy some music rolls. He
selected from a well-known catalogue some dozens
of titles, and after he had done so, took occa-
sion to talk with the salesman upon the business
of selling music rolls and the art of buying them.
The conversation was interesting and illuminating
and suggested some lines of thought which are
the basis of what is here written. No man who
undertakes to talk to the public on any matter
which has any interest for them should neglect to
keep in touch with those who are daily in closest
contact with such subject. When one fails to
maintain this close communion, one finds that the
results of one's thinking are often rather pain-
fully erroneous.
It was the opinion of this salesman that the
class of- music which he was selling to the writer
of these paragraphs represented possibly five per
cent, of the total volume of sales. The public
taste seems irrevocably committed to the purchase

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