<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_V" id="CHAPTER_V"></SPAN>CHAPTER V.</h2>
<h3>ON THE PEDAL.</h3>
<p>I have just returned exhausted and annihilated
from a concert, where I have been hearing
the piano pounded. Two grand bravoura
movements have been thundered off, with the
pedal continually raised; and then were suddenly
succeeded by a soft murmuring passage, during
which the thirteen convulsed and quivering bass
notes of the <i>fortissimo</i> were all the time resounding.
It was only by the aid of the concert
programme that my tortured ears could
arrive at the conclusion that this confusion of
tones was meant to represent two pieces by
Döhler and Thalberg.</p>
<p>Cruel fate that invented the pedal! I mean the
pedal which raises the dampers on the piano. A
grand acquisition, indeed, for modern times! Good
heavens! Our piano performers must have lost
their sense of hearing! What is all this growling
and buzzing? Alas, it is only the groaning of the
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_60" id="Page_60"></SPAN>[60]</span>wretched piano-forte, upon which one of the modern
<i>virtuosos</i>, with a heavy beard and long hanging
locks, whose hearing has deserted him, is
blustering away on a bravoura piece, with the
pedal incessantly raised,—with inward satisfaction
and vain self-assertion! Truly time brings into
use a great deal that is far from beautiful: does,
then, this raging piano revolutionist think it beautiful
to bring the pedal into use at every bar?
Unhappy delusion.</p>
<p>But enough of this serious jesting. Hummel
never used the pedal. He was an extremist; and,
in his graceful, clear, elegant, neat, though not
grand playing, often lost fine effects, which would
have been produced by the correct and judicious
use of the pedal; particularly on the instruments
of Stein, Brodmann, Conrad Graff, and others then
in use, which were usually lightly leathered, and
had a thin, sharp tone. The use of the pedal, of
course always allowing it to fall frequently with
precision, was especially desirable in the upper
treble, in cases where the changes of the harmony
were not very frequent; for the tone of those
instruments, although sweet and agreeable, had
not much depth, and the action had but little
strength and elasticity. But on our instruments,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_61" id="Page_61"></SPAN>[61]</span>frequently too softly leathered, which have a full
tone, and are so strong and penetrating, especially
in the bass, it is enough to endanger one's sense
of hearing to be subjected to such a senseless,
incessant, ridiculous, deafening use of the pedal;
frequently, moreover, combined with a hard, stiff
touch, and an unsound, incorrect technique. A
musical interpretation in any degree tolerable is
out of the question. You cannot call that art, it
cannot even be called manual labor: it is a freak
of insanity!</p>
<p>A few words to the better sort of players. The
foot-piece to the right on the piano-forte raises the
dampers, and in that way makes the tones resound
and sing, and takes from them the dryness, shortness,
and want of fulness, which is always the
objection to the piano-forte, especially to those
of the earlier construction. This is certainly an
advantage; the more the tone of the piano-forte
resembles singing, the more beautiful it is. But,
in order not to injure the distinctness and detract
from the clear phrasing of the performance, a
very skilful and prudent use of the pedal is
necessary in rapid changes of harmony, particularly
in the middle and lower portion of the instrument.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_62" id="Page_62"></SPAN>[62]</span>You all use the pedal too much and too often,
especially on large, fine concert pianos of the new
construction, which, with their heavy stringing,
have in themselves a fuller, more vibrating tone;
at least you do not let it fall frequently enough,
and with precision. You must listen to what you
are playing. You do not play for yourselves alone;
frequently you play to hearers who are listening
for the first time to the pieces you are performing.
Try a few passages without pedal,—for instance,
those in which the changes of the harmony succeed
each other rapidly, even in the highest treble,—and
see what repose, what serene enjoyment, what
refreshment is afforded, what delicate shading is
brought out. Or at first listen, and try to feel it in
the playing of others; for your habit is so deeply
rooted that you no longer know when and how
often you use the pedal. Chopin, that highly
gifted, elegant, sensitive composer and performer,
may serve as a model for you here. His widely
dispersed, artistic harmonies, with the boldest and
most striking suspensions, for which the fundamental
bass is essential, certainly require the frequent
use of the pedal for fine harmonic effect.
But, if you examine and observe the minute, critical
directions in his compositions, you can obtain
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_63" id="Page_63"></SPAN>[63]</span>from him complete instruction for the nice and
correct use of the pedal.</p>
<p>By way of episode to my sorrowful lecture on
the pedal, we will take a walk through the streets
some beautiful evening. What is it that we hear
in almost every house? Unquestionably it is
piano-playing; but what playing! It is generally
nothing but a continual confusion of different
chords, without close, without pause; slovenly
passages, screened by the raised pedal; varied
by an empty, stiff, weak touch, relying upon the
pedal for weight. We will escape into the next
street. Oh, horrors! what a thundering on this
piano, which, by the way, is sadly out of tune!
It is a grand—that is, a long, heavy—étude, with
the most involved passages, and a peculiar style
of composition, probably with the title "On the
Ocean," or "In Hades," or "Fancies of the Insane;"
pounded off with the pedal raised through
the most marvellous changes of harmonies. Finally,
the strings snap, the pedal creaks and moans;
conclusion,—<i>c</i>, <i>c</i> sharp, <i>d</i>, <i>d</i> sharp resound together
through a few exhausted bars, and at last
die away in the warm, soft, delicious air. Universal
applause from the open windows! But who
is the frantic musician who is venting his rage or
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_64" id="Page_64"></SPAN>[64]</span>this piano? It is a Parisian or other travelling
composer, lately arrived with letters of recommendation,
who has just been giving a little rehearsal
of what we may expect to hear shortly in a concert
at the "Hôtel de Schmerz."</p>
<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_65" id="Page_65"></SPAN>[65]</span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />