<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_II" id="CHAPTER_II"></SPAN>CHAPTER II</h2>
<h2>AN AMERICAN COMPOSER</h2>
<h2 class="subh2">THE PASSING OF EDWARD MACDOWELL</h2>
<p>Whom the gods love——!</p>
<p>Admirers of Edward MacDowell's Sonata
Tragica may recall the last movement, in which,
after a triumphant climax, the curtain falls on
tragic misery. It was the very Greek-like belief
of MacDowell that nothing is more sublimely
awful than "to heighten the darkness
of tragedy by making it follow closely on the
heels of triumph." This he accomplished in his
first sonata, and fate has ironically transposed
to the life of its composer the cruel and tragic
drama of his own music. Despite occasional
days brightened by a flitting hope, the passing
of Edward MacDowell has begun. He is no
longer an earth-dweller. His body is here,
but his brain elsewhere. Not mad, not melancholy,
not sunken in the stupor of indifference,
his mind is translated to a region where serenity,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[Pg 7]</SPAN></span>
even happiness, dwells. It is doubtless the
temporary arrest of the dread mental malady
before it plunges its victims into darkness.
Luckily, with the advent of that last phase, the
body will also succumb, and the most poetic
composer of music in America be for us but a
fragrant memory.</p>
<p>Irony is a much-abused word, yet does it
not seem the very summit of pitiless irony for
a man of MacDowell's musical and intellectual
equipment and physical health to be stricken
down at the moment when, after the hard
study of twenty-five years, he has, as the expression
goes, found himself? And the gods
were good to him—too good.</p>
<p>At his cradle poetry and music presided.
He was a born tone-poet. He had also the
painter's eye and the interior vision of the
seer. A mystic and a realist. The practical
side of his nature was shown by his easy grasp
of the technics of pianoforte-playing. He had
a large, muscular hand, with a formidable grip
on the keyboard. Much has been said of the
idealist MacDowell, but this young man, who
had in his veins Scotch, Irish, and English
blood, loved athletic sports; loved, like Hazlitt,
a fast and furious boxing-match. The call of
his soul won him for music and poetry. Otherwise
he could have been a sea-captain, a soldier,
or an explorer in far-away countries. He
had the physique; he had the big, manly
spirit. We are grateful, selfishly grateful, considering
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[Pg 8]</SPAN></span>
his life's tragedy, that he became a
composer.</p>
<p>Here, again, in all this abounding vitality,
the irony of the skies is manifest. Never a
dissipated man, without a touch of the improvidence
we ascribe to genius, a practical
moralist—rare in any social condition—moderate
in his tastes, though not a Puritan, he nevertheless
has been mowed down by the ruthless
reaper of souls as if his were negligible clay.
But he was reckless of the most precious part
of him, his brain. He killed that organ by
overwork. Not for gain—the money-getting
ideal and this man were widely asunder—but
for the love of teaching, for the love of sharing
with others the treasures in his overflowing
storehouse, and primarily for the love of music.
He, American as he was—it is sad to speak
of him in the past tense—and in these piping
days of the pursuit of the gold piece, held steadfast
to his art. He attempted to do what others
have failed in, he attempted to lead, here in
our huge, noisy city, antipathetic to æsthetic
creation, the double existence of a composer
and a pedagogue. He burned away the delicate
neurons of the cortical cells, and to-day he
cannot say "pianoforte" without a trial. He
suffers from aphasia, and locomotor ataxia has
begun to manifest itself. It would be tragedy
in the household of any man; it is doubly so
in the case of Edward MacDowell.</p>
<p>He has just passed forty-five years and there
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[Pg 9]</SPAN></span>
are to his credit some sixty works, about one
hundred and thirty-two compositions in all.
These include essays in every form, except
music-drama—symphonic and lyric, concertos
and sonatas for piano, little piano pieces of delicate
workmanship, charged with poetic meanings,
suites for orchestra and a romance for
violoncello, with orchestral accompaniment. As
a boy of fifteen MacDowell went to the Paris
Conservatoire, there entering the piano classes
of Marmontel. It was in 1876. Two years
later I saw him at the same institution and
later in comparing notes we discovered that we
had both attended a concert at the Trocadero,
wherein Nicholas Rubinstein, the brilliant
brother of Anton, played the B flat minor concerto
of a youthful and unknown composer,
Peter Illyitch Tschaikovsky by name. This
same concerto had been introduced to America
in 1876 by Hans von Bülow, to whom it is
dedicated. Rubinstein's playing took hold of
young MacDowell's imagination. He saw there
was no chance of mastering such a torrential
style in Paris, or, for that matter, in Germany.
He had enjoyed lessons from Teresa Carreño,
but the beautiful Venezuelan was not then the
virtuosa of to-day.</p>
<p>So MacDowell, who was accompanied by
his mother, a sage woman and deeply in sympathy
with her son's aims, went to Frankfort,
where he had the benefit of Karl Heymann's
tuition. He was the only pianist I ever heard
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[Pg 10]</SPAN></span>
who could be compared to our Rafael Joseffy.
But his influences, while marked in the development
of his American pupil, did not weaken
MacDowell's individuality. Studies in composition
under Joachim Raff followed, and then
he journeyed to Weimar for his baptism of
fire at the hands of <ins class="mycorr" title="changed from: Lizst" id="tnote1">Liszt</ins>. That genial Prospero
had broken his wand of virtuoso and devoted
himself to the culture of youthful genius and
his own compositions. He was pleased by the
force, the surety, the brilliancy and the poetic
qualities of MacDowell's playing, and he laughingly
warned Eugen d'Albert to look to his
laurels. But music was in the very bones of
MacDowell, and a purely virtuoso career had
no attraction for him. He married in 1884
Marian Nevins, of New York, herself a pianist
and a devoted propagandist of his music. The
pair settled in Wiesbaden, and it was the happiest
period of MacDowell's career. He taught;
he played as "guest" in various German cities;
above all, he composed. His entire evolution
is surveyed in Mr. Lawrence Gilman's sympathetic
monograph. It was in Wiesbaden that
he laid the foundation of his solid technique as
a composer.</p>
<p>I once asked him during one of our meetings
how he had summoned the courage to leave
such congenial surroundings. In that half-smiling,
half-shy way of his, so full of charm
and naïveté, he told me his house had burned
down and he had resolved to return home and
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[Pg 11]</SPAN></span>
make enough money to build another. He
came to America in 1888 and found himself,
if not famous, at least well known. To Frank
van der Stucken belongs the glory of having
launched the young composer, and so long ago
as 1886 in the old Chickering Hall. Some would
like to point to the fact that America was MacDowell's
artistic undoing, but the truth is
against them. As a matter of musical history
he accomplished his best work in the United
States, principally on his farm at Peterboro,
N. H.—hardly, one would imagine, artistic
soil for such a dreamer in tones. But life has
a way of contradicting our theories. Teaching,
I have learned, was not pursued to excess by
MacDowell, who had settled in Boston. Yet
I wish there were sumptuary legislation for
such cases. Why should an artist like MacDowell
have been forced into the shafts of dull
routine? It is the larger selfishness, all this,
but I cling to it. MacDowell belonged to the
public. Joseffy belongs to the public. They
doubtless did and do much good as teachers,
but the public is the loser. Besides, if MacDowell,
who was a virtuoso had confined himself
to recitals he might not——</p>
<p>Alas! all this is bootless imagining. He
launched himself with his usual unselfishness
into the advancement of his scholars, and when
in 1896 he was called to the chair of music at
Columbia the remaining seven years of his
incumbency he gave up absolutely to his classes.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[Pg 12]</SPAN></span>
A sabbatical year intervened. He went to
Switzerland for a rest. Then he made a tour
of the West, a triumphal tour; and later followed
the regrettable difference with Columbia.
He resigned in 1904, and I doubt if he had had
a happy day since—that is, until the wave
of forgetfulness came over him and blotted
out all recollections.</p>
<p>As a pianist I may only quote what Rafael
Joseffy once said to me after a performance of
the MacDowell D minor concerto by its composer:
"What's the use of a poor pianist trying
to compete with a fellow who writes his
own music and then plays it the way MacDowell
does?" It was said jestingly, but, as
usual, when Joseffy opens his mouth there is
a grain of wisdom in the speech. MacDowell's
French training showed in his "pianism" in
the velocity, clarity, and pearly quality of his
scales and trills. He had the elegance of the
salon player; he knew the traditions. But he
was modern, German and Slavic in his combined
musical interpretation and fiery attack.
His tone was large; at times it was brutal.
This pianist did not shine in a small hall. He
needed space, as do his later compositions.
There was something both noble and elemental
in the performance of his own sonatas. At his
instrument his air of preoccupation, his fine
poetic head, the lines of which were admirably
salient on the concert stage, and his passion
in execution were notable details in the harmonious
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[Pg 13]</SPAN></span>
picture. Like Liszt, MacDowell and
his Steinway were as the rider and his steed.
They seemed inseparable. Under the batons
of Nikisch, Gericke, Paur, and Seidl we heard
him, and for once at least the critics were unanimous.</p>
<p>When I first studied the MacDowell music
I called the composer "a belated Romantic."
A Romantic he is by temperament, while his
training under Raff further accentuated that
tendency. It is a dangerous matter to make
predictions of a contemporary composer, yet
a danger critically courted in these times of
rapid-fire judgments. I have been a sinner
myself, and am still unregenerate, for if it be
sinful to judge hastily in the affirmative, by
the same token it is quite as grave an error to
judge hastily in the negative. So I shall dare
the possible contempt of the succeeding critical
generation, which I expect—and hope—will
not calmly reverse our dearest predictions, and
range myself on the side of MacDowell. And
with this reservation; I called him the most
poetic composer of America. He would be a
poetic composer in any land; yet it seems to me
that his greatest, because his most individual,
work is to be found in his four piano sonatas.
I am always subdued by the charm of his songs;
but he did not find his fullest expression in his
lyrics.</p>
<p>The words seemed to hamper the bold wing
strokes of his inspiration. He did not go far
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[Pg 14]</SPAN></span>
enough in his orchestral work to warrant our
saying: "Here is something new!" He shows
the influence of Wagner slightly, of Grieg, of
Raff, of Liszt, in his first Orchestral Suite, his
Hamlet and Ophelia, Launcelot and Elaine;
The Saracens and Lovely Alda, the Indian
Suite, and in the two concertos. The form is
still struggling to emerge from the bonds of
the Romantics—of classic influence there is
little trace. But the general effect is fragmentary.
It is not the real MacDowell, notwithstanding
the mastery of technical material, the
genuine feeling for orchestral colour, which is
natural, not studied. There are poetic moods—MacDowell
is always a poet—yet no path-breaker.
Indeed, he seemed as if hesitating.
I remember how we discussed Brahms, Tschaikovsky,
and Richard Strauss. The former he
admired as a master builder; the latter piqued
his curiosity tremendously, particularly Also
Sprach Zarathustra. I think that Tschaikovsky
made the deepest appeal, though he said that
the Russian's music sounded better than it
was. Grieg he admired, but Grieg could never
have drawn the long musical line we find in
the MacDowell sonatas.</p>
<p>The fate of intermediate types is inevitable.
Music is an art of specialisation: the Wagner
music-drama, Chopin piano music, Schubert
songs, Beethoven symphony, Liszt symphonic
poems, and Richard Strauss tone-poems, all
these are unique. MacDowell has invented
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[Pg 15]</SPAN></span>
many lovely melodies. That the Indian duet
for orchestra, the Woodland Sketches, New
England Idyls, the Sea Pieces—To the Sea
is a wonderful transcription of the mystery,
and the salt and savour of the ocean—will
have a long life, but not as long as the piano
sonatas. By them he will stand or fall. MacDowell
never goes chromatically mad on his
harmonic tripod, nor does he tear passion to
tatters in his search of the dramatic. If he
recalls any English poet it is Keats, and like
Keats he is simple and sensuous in his imagery,
and a lover of true romance; not the sham
ecstasies of mock mediæval romance, but that
deep and tender sentiment which we encounter
in the poetry of Keats—in the magic of a
moon half veiled by flying clouds; in the mystery
and scent of old and tangled gardens. I
should call MacDowell a landscape-painter had
I not heard his sonata music. Those sonatas,
the Tragica, Eroica, Norse, and Keltic, with
their broad, coloured narrative, ballad-like
tone, their heroic and chivalric accents, epic
passion, and feminine tenderness. The psychology
is simple if you set this music against that
of Strauss, of Loeffler, or of Debussy.</p>
<p>But it is noble, noble as the soul of the man
who conceived it. Elastic in form, orchestral
in idea, these sonatas—which are looser spun
in the web than Liszt's—will keep alive the
name of MacDowell. This statement must
not be considered as evidence that I fail to
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[Pg 16]</SPAN></span>
enjoy his other work. I do enjoy much of it,
especially the Indian Orchestral Suite; but the
sonatas stir the blood, above all the imagination.
When the Tragica appeared I did not
dream of three such successors. Now I like
best the Keltic, with its dark magic and its
tales of Deirdré and the "great Cuchullin."
This fourth sonata is as Keltic as the combined
poetic forces of the neo-Celtic renascence in
Ireland.</p>
<p>I believe MacDowell, when so sorely stricken,
was at the parting of the ways. He spoke
vaguely to me of studies for new symphonic
works, presumably in the symphonic-poem form
of Liszt. He would have always remained the
poet, and perhaps have pushed to newer scenes,
but, like Schumann, Donizetti, Smetana and
Hugo Wolf, his brain gave way under the strain
of intense study. The composition of music involves
and taxes all the higher cerebral centres.</p>
<p>The privilege was accorded me of visiting
the sick man at his hotel several weeks ago,
and I am glad I saw him, for his appearance
dissipated the painful impression I had conjured
up. Our interview, brief as it was, became
the reverse of morbid or unpleasant before
it terminated. With his mental disintegration
sunny youth has returned to the composer. In
snowy white, he looks not more than twenty-five
years old, until you note the grey in his
thick, rebellious locks. There is still gold in
his moustache and his eyes are luminously
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[Pg 17]</SPAN></span>
blue. His expression suggests a spirit purged
of all grossness waiting for the summons. He
smiles, but not as a madman; he talks hesitatingly,
but never babbles. There is continuity
in his ideas for minutes. Sometimes the word
fits the idea; oftener he uses one foreign to his
meaning. His wife, of whose devotion, almost
poignant in its earnestness, it would be too sad
to dwell upon, is his faithful interpreter. He
moves with difficulty. He plays dominoes,
but seldom goes to the keyboard. He reads
slowly and, like the unfortunate Friedrich
Nietzsche, he rereads one page many times.
I could not help recalling what Mrs. Elizabeth
Foerster-Nietzsche told me in Weimar of her
brother. One day, noticing that she silently
wept, the poet-philosopher exclaimed:</p>
<p>"But why do you weep, little sister? Are
we not very happy?"</p>
<p>MacDowell is very happy and his wife is
braver than Nietzsche's sister. One fragment
of his conversation I recall. With glowing
countenance he spoke of the thunderbolt in his
wonderfully realistic piano poem, The Eagle.
There had been a lightning-storm during the
afternoon. Then he told me how he had found
water by means of the hazel wand on his New
Hampshire farm—a real happening. As I
went away I could not help remembering that
the final words I should ever hear uttered by
this friend were of bright fire and running water
and dream-music.</p>
<div class="blockquot"><p>[The above appeared in the New York <i>Herald</i>, June 24,
1906, and is reprinted by request. Edward MacDowell died
January 23, 1908.]</p>
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