<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XXVIII" id="CHAPTER_XXVIII"></SPAN>CHAPTER XXVIII</h2>
<h2>VIOLINISTS NOW AND YESTERYEAR</h2>
<p>With the hair of the horse and the entrails
of the cat, magicians of the four strings weave
their potent spells. What other instrument
devised by the hand of man has ever approached
the violin? Gladstone compared it with the
locomotive; yet complete as is the mechanism
of the wheeled monster, its type is transitional;
steam is already supplanted by electricity;
while the violin is perfection, as perfect as a
sonnet, and in its capacity for the expression
of emotion next to the human voice; indeed
it is even more poignant. Orchestrally massed,
it can be as terribly beautiful as an army with
banners. In quartet form it represents the
very soul of music; it is both sensuous and intellectual.
The modern grand pianoforte with
its great range, its opulence of tone, its delicacy
of mechanism is, nevertheless, a monster
of music if placed beside the violin, with its
simple curves, its almost primitive method of
music-making. The scraping of one substance
against another goes back to prehistoric times,
nay, may be seen in the grasshopper and its
ingenious manner of producing sound. But
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_324" id="Page_324">[Pg 324]</SPAN></span>
the violin, as we know it to-day, is not such an
old invention; it was the middle of the sixteenth
century before it made its appearance,
with its varnished and modelled back.</p>
<p>Restricted as is its range of dynamics, the
violin has had for its votaries men of such widely
differing temperaments as Paganini and Spohr,
Wilhelmj and Sarasate, Joachim and Ysaye.
Its literature does not compare with that of
the piano, for which Bach, Beethoven, Schumann,
Chopin, and Brahms have written their
choicest music, yet the intimate nature of the
violin, its capacity for passionate emotion,
crowns it—and not the organ, with its mechanical
tonal effects—as the king of instruments.
Nor does the voice make the peculiar
appeal of the violin. Its lowest note is the G
below the treble clef, and its top note a mere
squeak; but it seems in a few octaves to have
imprisoned within its wooden walls a miniature
world of feeling; even in the hands of a
clumsy amateur it has the formidable power
of giving pain; while in the grasp of a master
it is capable of arousing the soul.</p>
<p>No other instrument has the ecstatic quality;
neither the shallow-toned pianoforte, nor the
more mellow and sonorous violoncello. The
angelic, demoniacal, lovely, intense tones of
the violin are without parallel in music or
nature. It is as if this box with four strings
across its varnished belly had a rarer nervous
system than all other instruments. It is a
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_325" id="Page_325">[Pg 325]</SPAN></span>
cry, a shriek, a hymn to heaven, a call to arms,
an exquisite evocation, a brilliant series of
multi-coloured visions, a broad song of passion,
or mocking laughter—what cannot the violin
express if the soul that guides it be that of an
artist? Otherwise, it is only a fiddle. It is
the hero, the heroine, the vanguard of every
composition. As a solo instrument in a concerto,
its still small voice is heard above the
din and thunder of the accompaniment. In
a word, this tiny music-box is the ruler among
instruments.</p>
<p>Times have changed since 1658 in England,
when the following delightful ordinance was
made for the benefit of musical genius, or otherwise:</p>
<p>"And be it enacted that if any person or
persons, commonly called Fiddlers, or minstrels,
shall at any time after the said first of
July be taken playing, fiddling, or making
music in any inn, alehouse or tavern, or shall
be proffering themselves, or desiring, or entreating
any person or persons to hear them
play ... shall be adjudged rogues, vagabonds,
and sturdy beggars."</p>
<p>Decidedly, England was not then the abode of
the muses, for the poor actor suffered in company
with the musician. You wonder whether
this same penalty would be imposed upon
musical managers ... they certainly do "entreat"
the public to listen to their "fiddlers."
Yet in 1690 when Corelli, the father of violin
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_326" id="Page_326">[Pg 326]</SPAN></span>
playing, led the band at Cardinal Ottoboni's
house in Rome, he stopped the music because
his churchly patron was talking, and he made
an epigram that has since served for other
artists: "Monsignore," remarked this intrepid
musician, when asked why the band had ceased,
"I feared the music might interrupt the conversation."
How well Liszt knew this anecdote
may be recalled by his retort to a czar of
Russia under similar circumstances.</p>
<p>Until a few months ago I had not heard
Eugene Ysaye play for years. In the old days
he had enchanted my ears, and in company
with Gerardy, the violoncellist and Pugno the
pianist had made music fit for the gods. Considering
the flight of the years, I found the art
of the Belgian comparatively untouched. Like
Liszt, like Paderewski, Ysaye has his good
moments and his indifferent. He is the Paderewski
of the strings in his magical interpretations.
And unlike his younger contemporaries,
he still carves out the whole block of
the great classics, sonatas, and concertos. He
plays little things tenderly, exquisitely, and
the man is first the musician, then the virtuoso.</p>
<p>I heard neither Paganini nor Spohr. Joachim,
Wilhelmj, Wieniawski, and Ysaye I have heard
and seen. My memory assures me of keener
satisfactions than any book about these giants
of the four strings could give me. The first violinist
I ever listened to was in the early seventies.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_327" id="Page_327">[Pg 327]</SPAN></span>
I was hardly at the age of musical discrimination.
Yet I remember much. It was
at the opera, a matinee in the Philadelphia
Academy of Music. Nilsson was singing. I
can't recall her on that occasion, though it
seems only the other day when Carlotta Patti
sang the Queen of the Night in The Magic
Flute, and limped over the stage—possibly
the lameness fixed the event in my mind more
than the music.</p>
<p>A "front" set was dropped between the acts
at this particular matinee—I do not recollect
the name of the opera—and through a "practicable"
door came an old gentleman with a
violin in his hands. He was white-haired, he
wore white side-whiskers, and he looked to my
young eyes like a prosperous banker. He
played. It was as the sound of falling waters
on a moonlight night. I asked the name of
the old gentleman. My father said, "Henri
Vieuxtemps," which told me nothing then,
though it means much to me now. What did
he play? I do not know. Yet whenever I
hear the younger men attack his Fantaisie
Caprice, his Ballade and Polonaise, his Concertos,
I think proudly: "I have heard Vieuxtemps!"
He was a Belgian, born 1820, died
1881. His style was finished, elegant, charming.
He was a pupil of <ins class="mycorr" title="changed from: De Beriot" id="tnote20">De Bériot</ins> and represented,
with his master, perfection in the Belgian
school.</p>
<p>After an interval of some years, I heard the
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_328" id="Page_328">[Pg 328]</SPAN></span>
only pupil of Paganini, as he called himself,
Camillo Sivori. It was in Paris, 1879. The
precise day I can't say but my letter from
Paris which appeared in the Philadelphia <i>Evening
Bulletin</i> was dated January 31, 1879. I
still preserve it in a venerable scrap-book. I
was in my 'teens but I wrote with the courage
of youthful ignorance as follows: (It almost
sounds like a musical criticism.) "Although
it was generally supposed that Sivori, the great
violinist, would not play this season in Paris,
he, nevertheless delighted a large audience,
last Sunday, at the Concert Populaire, with
his lovely music. He is no longer a young man,
but the vigour and fire of his playing are immense.
He gave, with the orchestral accompaniment,
a Berceuse, his own composition,
with unapproachable delicacy. It was played
throughout with the mute. In contrast came
a Mouvement Perpetuel. Sivori's tone is not
like that of Joachim or Wilhelmj, but it is sweeter
than either. It reminds one of gold drawn to
cobweb fineness. As an encore he played the
too well known Carnival of Venice. That it
was given in the style of his illustrious master,
Paganini, who may say? But it was amazing,
painful, finally tiresome." That same season
I heard Anna Bock, Boscovitz, Diémer, Planté,
Theodore Ritter, the two Jaells, fat Alfred and
his thin wife.</p>
<p>Sivori (1815-1894), dapper, modest, stood
up in the vast spaces of the Cirque d'Hiver,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_329" id="Page_329">[Pg 329]</SPAN></span>
which was engaged every Sunday by Jacques
Pasdeloup and his orchestra. (Jacob Wolfgang
was the real name of this conductor who braved
the wrath of his audiences by putting Wagner
on his programmes; and one afternoon we had
a pitched battle over Rimsky-Korsakoff's Symphonic
Poem, Sadko.) Sivori played a tarantella;
every tone was clearly heard in the great,
crowded auditorium. Pupils of De Bériot and
Paganini I have heard, though I hardly recall
the style of the former and nothing of the latter.
But there was little of Paganini's fiery attack
in Sivori; possibly he was too old. Fire and
fury I later found in Wieniawski.</p>
<p>I must not omit the name of Ole Bull (1810-1880),
for, though I heard him as a boy, I best
remember him in 1880, when he gave his last
concerts in America. In the fifties, while on a
visit to my father's house, he went on his two
thumbs around a dining-table, lifting his body
clear from the ground. His muscular power
was remarkable. It showed in the dynamics
of his robust and sentimental playing. Spohr
discouraged him as a boy, but later spoke of
his "wonderful playing and sureness of his
left hand; unfortunately, like Paganini, he
sacrifices what is artistic to something that is
not quite suitable to the noble instrument.
His tone, too, is bad...." For Spohr any
one's tone was, naturally enough, bad, as he
possessed the most monumental tone that ever
came from a violin.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_330" id="Page_330">[Pg 330]</SPAN></span>
The truth is that Ole Bull was not a classical
player; as I remember him, he could not play
in strict tempo; like Chopin, he indulged in
the rubato and abused the portamento. But
he knew his public. America a half-century
ago, particularly in the regions he visited,
was not in the mood for sonatas or concertos.
Old Dan Tucker and the Arkansaw Traveller
were the mode. Bull played them both, played
jigs and old tunes, roused the echoes with the
Star Spangled Banner and Irish melodies. He
played such things beautifully, and it would
have been musical snobbery to say that you
didn't like them. You couldn't help yourself.
The grand old fellow bewitched you. He was
a handsome Merlin, with a touch of the charlatan
and a touch of Liszt in his tall, willowy
figure, small waist, and heavy head of hair.
Such white hair! It tumbled in masses about
his kindly face like one of his native Norwegian
cataracts. He was the most picturesque old
man I ever saw except Walt Whitman, at that
time a steady attendant of the Carl Gaertner
String Quartet concerts in Philadelphia. (And
what Walt didn't know about music he made
up in his love for stray dogs; he was seldom
without canine company.)</p>
<p>Those were the days when Prume's La Mélancolie
and Wieniawski's Légende were the
two favourite, yet remote, peaks of the student's
répertoire. How we loved them! Then
came Wieniawski with Rubinstein in 1872-1873,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_331" id="Page_331">[Pg 331]</SPAN></span>
and such violin playing America had never
before heard—nor has it since, let me hasten
to add. This Pole (1835-1880) was a brilliant
master. His dash and fire and pathos carried
you off your feet. His tone at times was
like molten metal. He had a caressing and
martial bow. His technique was infallible, his
temperament truly Slavic, languorous, subtle,
fierce. Wieniawski always reminded me of
a red-hot coal. How chivalric is his Polonaise—that
old war-horse! How elegiac his Légende!
His favourite pupil was Leopold Lichtenberg,
the greatest violin talent that has been
thus far unearthed in America. Lichtenberg
had everything when a youth—temperament,
brains, musical feeling, and great technical
ability.</p>
<p>After Wieniawski followed Wilhelmj, who
did not efface his memory, but plunged one
into another atmosphere; that of the calm,
profound, untroubled, and classic. No doubt
Spohr's tone was larger, yet this is difficult to
believe. Wilhelmj drew from his instrument
the noblest sounds I ever heard; not Joachim,
not Ysaye excelled him in cantabile. He was
the first to play Wagner transcriptions—no
wonder Wagner made him leader of the strings
at Bayreuth in 1876. How he read the Beethoven
Concerto, the Bach Chaconne. Or the
D flat Nocturne of Chopin—in D. Or the
much abused Mendelssohn E Minor Concerto—with
Max Vogrich accompanying him at
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_332" id="Page_332">[Pg 332]</SPAN></span>
the piano. A giant in physique, when he faced
his audience there was something of the majestic,
fair-haired god Wotan in his immobile
posture. He never appealed to his public as
did Wieniawski; there was always something
of chilly grandeur and remoteness in Wilhelmj's
play. The last time I saw him was at
Marienbad, shortly before his death, where, a
stooped-shouldered, grey-haired old man, he
was taking a Kur. He walked slowly, his hands
clasped behind him, in his eyes the vacant
look of one busy with memories. He reminded
me of Beethoven's pictures.</p>
<p>Joseph Joachim, that mighty Hungarian,
was past his prime when I heard him in London.
He played out of tune—some of his
pupils have imitated his failing—but whether
in a Beethoven quartet, concerto, sonata with
piano, he always stamped on your consciousness
that Joseph Joachim was the greatest violinist
that had ever lived. This is, of course, absurd,
this unfair comparison of one artist with another.
Yet it is human to compare, and if a
violinist can evoke such a vision of perfection,
then he must be of uncommon powers. Maud
Powell, a distinguished pupil of Joachim, has
asserted that it took her three years before she
could recover herself in the presence of Joachim's
overwhelming personality. Yet he struck me as
not at all assertive. He seemed an "objective"
player, <i>i. e.</i>, you thought only of Beethoven, of
Brahms, as he calmly delivered himself of their
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_333" id="Page_333">[Pg 333]</SPAN></span>
Olympian measures. The grand manner is now
out of fashion. We care more for exotic rhetoric
than for simple and lofty measures. Sarasate
and Dengremont charmed me more; Wieniawski
set my blood coursing faster; but in Joachim's
presence I felt as if near some old Grecian
temple hallowed by the presence of oft-worshipped
gods.</p>
<p>Remenyi was a puzzle. He could play divinely,
and scratch diabolically. He belonged
to that old romantic school in which pose and
gesture, contortion and grimace occupied a
prominent place. I had an opportunity to
study Remenyi (whose Austrian name was
Hoffman) (1830-1898), at close quarters. He
brought to my father's house in the early eighties
his favourite instruments, and such a wild
night of music I never heard. He played hour
after hour, everything from Bach to Brahms—and
incidentally scolded Brahms for "stealing"
some of his, Remenyi's, Hungarian dances!
(Which is a joke, as Brahms only followed
the examples of Liszt and Joachim in avowedly
employing Hungarian folk melodies). He did
such tricks as dashing off in impeccable tune
his arrangement of the D Flat Valse of Chopin
in double notes at a terrific tempo. Violinists
will understand the feat when I tell them
that the key was the original one—D flat.
He made the walls shiver when he struck his
bow clangorously in the opening chords of the
Rackoczy March. What a hero then seemed
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_334" id="Page_334">[Pg 334]</SPAN></span>
this stout, little, prancing, baldheaded man
with the face of an unfrocked priest. How he
could talk in a half-dozen different languages;
he had travelled enough and encountered enough
celebrated people to fill a dozen volumes with
his recollections. He was a violinist of unquestionable
power; that he deteriorated in
his later years was to have been expected.
Liszt understood and appreciated Remenyi
from the first; he nicknamed him "the Kossuth
of the Fiddle."</p>
<p>To recall all the celebrities of the violin I
have heard since 1870 would be hardly possible.
I've forgotten most of them, though I do remember
that wonderful boy, Maurice Dengremont,
who ended his life, so rich in possibilities,
it is said as a billiard marker. He was
spoiled by women, for he was a comely lad.
Another wonder-child kept his head, and to-day
fascinating Fritz Kreisler is a master of
masters and a favourite in America without
peer. He first appeared at Boston and in 1888.
In Paris I recall Marsick and his polished style;
the gallant Sauret, Johannes Wolf, and the
brilliant and elegant Timothée Adamowski.
And in 1880, Marie Tayau and her woman
quartet, a member of which was Jeanne Franko,
the sister of the conductors and violinists,
Sam Franko and Nahan Franko; Cæsar Thomson,
the miraculous; C. M. Loeffler—subtle
player, subtle composer; Sarasate with his
sweet tone; Brodsky and his masculine manner;
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_335" id="Page_335">[Pg 335]</SPAN></span>
Willy Burmester and his pallid pyrotechnics;
the learned Schradieck, the Bohemian Ondricek,
the dashing Ovide Musin, Bernhard Listemann,
Carl Halir; Gregorowitsch, the languid;
brilliant Marteau; Alexander Petschinikoff, the
Russian; the musicianly Max Bendix; the
astonishing John Rhodes, the wonder-worker
Kubelik and his icy perfections; Kocian, Willy
Hess, Efrem Zimbalist, Albert Spalding, Arthur
Hartman, and a myriad of spoiled youths,
Von Veczsey, Horszowski—all have crossed
the map of my memory. And Franz Kneisel
and the Kneisel Quartet, dispensers of musical
joys for decades, but alas! no more. Alas!
I would not barter memories of their music-making
for a wilderness of virtuosi. I must
not forget Joseph White, the Cuban violinist,
who was with Theodore Thomas one season.
His style was finished and Parisian. He was
a mulatto and a handsome man. The night
I heard him he played the Mendelssohn concerto,
and at the beginning of the slow movement
his chanterelle broke. Calmly he took
concert master Richard Arnold's proffered instrument
and triumphantly finished the composition.</p>
<p>Three violinists abide clear in my recollection:
Wieniawski, Wilhelmj, and Ysaye. The
last named is dearer because nearer, contrary
to the supposed rule that the older the
thing the worse it is. Ysaye is the magician
of the violin. He holds us in a spell with that
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_336" id="Page_336">[Pg 336]</SPAN></span>
elastic, curving bow of his, with those many
coloured tones, tender, silky, sardonic, amorous,
rich, and ductile. He interprets the classics
as well as the romantics; Bach, Beethoven,
Brahms; Vieuxtemps as well as Sibelius. Above
all else, his mastery of the violin's technical
mysteries, looms his musical temperament.
He has imagination.</p>
<p>I have reserved the women for the last. A
goodly, artistic company. It is not necessary
to go back to the Milanolla sisters. We still
cherish remembrances of Camilla Urso and her
broad musicianly manner; the finished style
of Normann-Neruda, Maris Soldat, the gifted
and unhappy Arma Senkrah, Nettie Carpenter,
Teresina Tua—who did not become a "Fiddle
Fairy" when she visited us in 1887—Leonora
Jackson, Dora Becker, Olive Mead, and Maud
Powell. In Europe many years ago, I heard
Marcella Sembrich, who, after playing the E
Flat Polonaise of Chopin on the piano, picked
up a violin and dashed off the Wieniawski Polonaise;
these feats were followed by songs, one
being Viardot-Garcia's arrangement of Chopin's
D Major Mazourka. Sembrich is the blue rose
among great singers. Gericke, Paur, Nikisch
were at first violinists; so was Fritz Scheel, late
conductor of the Philadelphia Symphony Orchestra.
Franz Kneisel is a conductor of great
skill; so is Frederick Stock, who followed
Theodore Thomas as conductor of the Chicago
Symphony Orchestra. Theodore Spiering formerly
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_337" id="Page_337">[Pg 337]</SPAN></span>
concert-master of the Philharmonic orchestra
proved himself an excellent conductor.
But that a little Polish woman could handle
with ease two instruments and sing like an angel
besides, borders on the fantastic. Geraldine
Morgan is an admirable violin artiste who plays
solo as well as quartet with equal authority.</p>
<p>Maud Powell has fulfilled her early promise.
She is a mature artiste, one who will never be
finished because she will always study, always
improve. A Joachim pupil, she is, nevertheless,
a pupil of Maud Powell, and her playing
reveals breadth, musicianship, beauty of tone
and phrasing. She is our greatest American
violin virtuosa.</p>
<p>I wrote this of Mischa Elman (the first of
the many Mischas and Jaschas who mew on
the fiddle strings) after I heard him play in
London: "United to an amazing technical
precision there is a still more amazing emotional
temperament, all dominated by a powerful
musical and mental intellect, uncanny in
one not yet out of his teens. What need to
add that his conception of Beethoven is neither
as lovely as Kreisler's nor as fascinating as
Ysaye's? Elman will mature. In the romantic
or the virtuoso realm he is past master. His
tone is lava-like in its warmth. He paints with
many colours. He displays numberless nuances
of feeling. The musical in him dominates the
virtuoso. Naturally, the pride of hot youth
asserts itself, and often, self-intoxicated, he
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_338" id="Page_338">[Pg 338]</SPAN></span>
intoxicates his audiences with his sensuous,
compelling tone. Hebraic, tragic, melancholy,
the boisterousness of the Russian, the swift
modulation from mad caprice to Slavic despair—Elman
is a magician of many moods. When
I listen to him I almost forget Ysaye." Yet
when I heard Ysaye play last season it was
Elman that I forgot for the moment. After
all, a critic, too, may have his moods. And
now comes another conqueror, the lad Jasha
Heifetz from Russia, a pupil of Leopold Auer
and an artist of such extraordinary attainments
that the greatest among contemporary violinists—is
it necessary to mention names?—have
said of him that his art begins where
theirs ends, and that they will shut up shop
when he plays here. All of which is a flattering
tribute, but it has been made before. Heifetz,
however, may be the dark horse in the
modern fiddle sweepstakes.</p>
<hr style="width: 65%;" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_339" id="Page_339">[Pg 339]</SPAN></span></p>
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