<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_IX" id="CHAPTER_IX"></SPAN>CHAPTER IX.</h2>
<h3>THOUGHTS ON SINGING.</h3>
<p>Our vocal composers, followed by many singing-teachers
and singing institutions, have almost banished
from music the true art of singing; or, at
least, have introduced an unnatural, faulty, and
always disagreeable mode of delivery, by which
the voice has been destroyed, even before it has
attained its full development. The consideration
of this fact induces me to communicate some portions
from my journal, and to unite with them a
few opinions of the noted singing-master, Teschner,
of Berlin.</p>
<hr style='width: 45%;' />
<p>Must we again and again explain to German
composers that, though we do not require them to
compose in Italian, they ought, at least, to learn
to write in German in a manner suited for singing?
otherwise, in their amazing ignorance and infatuation,
they will wear out the powers of opera singers,
and torture the public, apparently without a suspicion
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_97" id="Page_97"></SPAN>[97]</span>that it is possible to write both grand and
light operas with true, characteristic German thoroughness.
Even German opera requires a constant
attention to the right use of the voice, and a
methodical, effective mode of singing. It tolerates
no murderous attacks on single male and female
voices, or on the full opera company; it is opposed
to that eager searching after superficial effect,
which every sincere friend of the opera must lament.</p>
<p>Is it, then, so difficult to obtain the requisite
knowledge of the human voice, and to study the
scores of Gluck, Haydn, Mozart, Rossini, Bellini,
and Donizetti with a special regard to this? Do
our vocal composers make too great a sacrifice to
their creative genius in making a study of those
things which are essential? You consider it
mortifying to inquire of those who understand
singing, and you are sensitive about any disturbance
of your vain over-estimate of your own
powers; but you are not ashamed to cause the
destruction of man's noblest gift,—the human
voice! If taste, feeling, and a fine ear are, and
always must be, the chief requirements in composing
for the great public, I ask you how you can lay
claim to these three trifles, when you constantly
violate them?</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_98" id="Page_98"></SPAN>[98]</span><span class="smcap">Composer.</span> If Mrs. N. had executed my aria to-day
in as earnest and masterly a style, and with as
agreeable a voice, as she did that of Rossini yesterday,
she would have given as much satisfaction;
for it is much more interesting and expressive
both musically and harmonically, and written with
more dramatic effect.</p>
<p><span class="smcap">Singer.</span> You make a mistake, and you always
will do so, as long as you consider the study of the
voice as of secondary importance, or, in fact, pay
no attention whatever to it. The latter aria, which
is composed with a regard to the voice, and to the
employment of its most agreeable tones, puts me
into a comfortable mood, and gives me a feeling
of success; yours, on the contrary, into one of dissatisfaction
and anticipation of failure. Of what
importance is the musical value of a composition,
if it can only be sung with doubtful success, and if
the voice is obliged to struggle with it, instead of
having it under control? You attach less importance
to the free, agreeable exercise of the voice
than does the unanimous public. I do not wish to
excite compassion, but to give pleasure by a beautifully
developed style of singing. You pay some
attention to adaptability to the piano or the violin:
why are you usually regardless of fitness for the
voice?</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_99" id="Page_99"></SPAN>[99]</span>Critics have often asked, Why does Jenny Lind
sing so coolly? why does she not sing grand, passionate
parts? why does she not select for her performances
some of the later German or even Italian
operas? why does she always sing Amina, Lucia,
Norma, Susanna, &c.? In reply to these and similar
questions, I will ask, Why does she wish always
to remain Jenny Lind? why does she endeavor to
preserve her voice as long as possible? why does
she select operas in which she may use her pure,
artistic, refined mode of singing, which permits no
mannerism, no hypocritical sentiment, and which
possesses an ideal beauty? why does she choose
operas in which she can give the most perfect possible
image of her own personality? why operas in
which she may allow the marvellous union of her
powers of song to shine conspicuously, without
doing violence to her voice and forcing its tones,
or casting doubt upon her lofty, noble, and beautiful
art? why does she first regard the singing, and only
afterwards the music, or both united? This is the
answer to the same questions which are likewise
asked about Henrietta Sontag and all great singers.
Even the passionate Schröder-Devrient seldom
made an exception to this rule, although she
was not independent of the theatres.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_100" id="Page_100"></SPAN>[100]</span>These questions should be an urgent warning
to our young female singers not to sacrifice themselves
to any of the modern screaming operas,
unsuited for singing; but to preserve and watch
over their voices, and to guard them from immoderate,
continued, and often inartistic exertion; in
fact, to sing always in the voice-register with
which nature has endowed them, and never to
shriek; to renounce the present, fashionable, so-called
"singing effects," and the modern scene-screaming,
as Jenny Lind and Henrietta Sontag
have always done. Then their voices would remain
useful for the opera, as was formerly the case,
from ten to twenty years; and they would not have
to mourn, as is too common, after a very short time,
a feeble, broken voice and departed health.</p>
<p>Let Jenny Lind and Henrietta Sontag be placed
as the finest models before our young, gifted, ambitious
singers. They are to be regarded as miraculous
phenomena; especially in our times, when the
modern style of singing has, for reasons difficult
to justify, so widely deviated from the old school
which was so fruitful in brilliant results,—that
of Pistocchi, Porpora, and Bernacchi. What could
show more clearly the destructiveness of our present
opera style than the sublime beauty of their
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_101" id="Page_101"></SPAN>[101]</span>singing, combined with their noble, refined, sound
voices, such as may perhaps still be found among
you?</p>
<hr style='width: 45%;' />
<p>The managers of our theatres are in want of
tenor singers who can act. They should consider
that tenors who have any voices left have never
learned to act, and tenors who are able to act
no longer have any voices; because, as a rule, they
either have studied too little, or have studied erroneously.
Unless the voice has received a correct
and fine culture, the German comic operas lead
immediately to destruction of the voice, especially
of the sensitive, easily injured German tenor voice.</p>
<p>Here I take occasion to remark upon the universal
prejudice, that "a tenor ought to develop the
chest-tones as far as possible, that they are the
finest." In tenors, with very few exceptions, this
mistaken treatment has been speedily followed by
the loss both of voice and health. Nicely shaded
singing, from <i>piano</i> onwards, is thereby rendered
impossible; and tones which are always forced
must remain unpleasant, even although powers
thus laboriously gained may sometimes have a
fine effect in the opera. A tenor who wishes to
preserve his voice and not to scream in the upper
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_102" id="Page_102"></SPAN>[102]</span>tones, who desires always to have a <i>piano</i> at command
and to possess the necessary shading and
lightness as well as elegance and flexibility, should
cultivate the <i>falsetto</i>, and endeavor to bring it down
as far as possible into the chest-register. This is
as indispensable as is the use of the head-tones
for the soprano. When the <i>falsetto</i> has too striking
a resemblance to the chest-voice, and is even
inferior to it in power, it is the result of want of
perseverance and prudence in its cultivation. It
ought to be almost imperceptibly connected with
the chest-register by the introduction of the mixed
tones.</p>
<hr style='width: 45%;' />
<p>We shall probably soon be called upon to read
an "Address of Young Female Singers to the
Composers of Germany," as follows: "Freedom
of thought! freedom in composition! freedom in
the opera! but no annihilation of the throat! You
are hereby notified that we protest against all
operas which are repugnant to the true art of
singing; for it is not in your power to compensate
us for the loss of our voices, although it may
be possible for you, after using up our talent as
quickly as possible, to look around for others, with
whom you can do the same. First learn to understand
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_103" id="Page_103"></SPAN>[103]</span>singing, or, rather, first learn to sing, as your
predecessors have done, and as Italian composers
still do, and then we will talk with you again."</p>
<hr style='width: 45%;' />
<p>"What a pedantic outcry about German want
of adaptability for singing! Pray where is there
the most singing?" It is, I agree, in Germany.
"Is not singing taught in the public schools?
And consider, too, the innumerable singing clubs,
singing societies, and singing institutions!"</p>
<p>That is just the misfortune which requires a
thorough investigation. How many promising
voices do these institutions annually follow to the
grave? Who is it who sing in the schools? Boys
and girls from thirteen to fifteen years old. But
boys ought not to be allowed to sing while the
voice is changing; and girls, also from physical
reasons, ought not to sing at all at that age. And
what kind of instructors teach singing here? Our
epistolary and over-wise age overwhelms our superintendents
and corporations with innumerable petitions
and proposals; but no true friend of humanity,
of music, and of singing, has yet been found to
enlighten these authorities, and to prove to them
that the most beautiful voices and finest talents are
killed in the germ by these unsuitable so-called
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_104" id="Page_104"></SPAN>[104]</span>singing-lessons, especially in the public schools.
Girls' voices may be carefully awakened, and skilfully
practised, and made flexible and musical; but
they should be used only in <i>mezzo-voce</i>, and only
until the period of their development, or up to the
thirteenth year, or a few months sooner or later.
This ought also to be done with great experience,
delicacy, practical knowledge and circumspection.
But where are we to find suitable singing-professors,
and who is to pay them a sufficient salary?
Therefore, away with this erroneous instruction
of children in singing! away with this abortion
of philanthropy and the musical folly of this extravagant
age! Can such a premature, unrefined,
faulty screaming of children, or croaking in their
throats, without artistic cultivation and guidance,
compensate for the later inevitable hoarseness and
loss of voice, and for the destruction of the organs
of singing?</p>
<p>The tenors who belong to these singing societies
and institutions force out and sacrifice their uncultured
voices, and scream with throat, palate,
and nasal tones, in the execution of four-part songs
by this or that famous composer, which are far
from beautiful, and which serve only to ruin the
voice. Who was the lady who sang the solo in
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_105" id="Page_105"></SPAN>[105]</span>yonder singing academy? That girl, a year ago,
had a fresh, beautiful, sonorous voice; but, although
she is only twenty years old, it already begins to
fail her, and she screws and forces it, by the help
of the chest-tones, up to the two-lined <i>a</i>, without
any thing having ever been done for the adjustment
of the voice-registers and for the use of
the head-tones, and without proper direction from
a competent superintendent. Instead of this, he
was continually exclaiming: "Loud! forcibly! <i>con
espressione!</i>"</p>
<p>While even the street boys in Italy sing clearly,
and often with great ability, their national songs,
so well suited to the voice, and in their most beautiful
language, our northern voices, which are
obliged to contend with the great difficulties of
the German language, are sacrificed in the most
cold-blooded and self-satisfied manner in the schools
and singing societies, while all artistic preparation,
by which alone the voice may be preserved and
cultivated, is neglected.</p>
<p>Who are at the head of these institutions and
societies? Musicians it is true; but they are
strangers to any special education in singing, or
are not skilful singing-teachers, who understand
how to combine methodical cultivation of the voice
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_106" id="Page_106"></SPAN>[106]</span>with practical execution. Their entire instruction
consists, at most, in hitting the notes and keeping
time. These musicians say: "Whoever joins my
society must know how to sing!" What does that
mean? Where are they to learn it? And, even
when you have succeeded in obtaining for your
academy a few imprudent but well-taught singers,
does not the preservation of their voices then
require the greatest care and watchfulness? Is
that in your power? Have you the requisite
knowledge for it? Are not these few well-educated
voices obliged to sing by the side of singers
who have been taught in a wrong manner, and
who have no pure, correct intonation? Then what
do these societies amount to? Do they improve
or destroy the voice? They make the members
musical. A fine consolation for the loss of the
voice! They teach them to hit the notes and to
keep time. A great comfort after the voice has
been destroyed by false culture!</p>
<hr style='width: 45%;' />
<p>A singing-teacher who has no firm, decided
principle, who is constantly wavering backwards
and forwards, and who frequently leads others into
error by his untenable opinions; who cannot quickly
discern the special talent and capacity of his pupils,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_107" id="Page_107"></SPAN>[107]</span>or discover the proper means to get rid of what is
false or wrong, and adopt the speediest road to
success, without any one-sided theories of perfection;
who mistrusts and blames, worries, offends,
and depresses, instead of encouraging; who is
always dissatisfied instead of cordially acknowledging
what is good in the pupil; who at one time
rides a high horse instead of kindly offering a helping
hand, and at another time praises as extravagantly
as he before has blamed, and kills time in
such ways as these,—he may be an encyclopædia
of knowledge, but his success will always fall short
of his hopes. Firmness, decision, energy, and a
delicate, quick perception; the art not to say too
much or too little, and to be quite clear in his own
mind, and with constant considerate kindness to
increase the courage and confidence of his pupils,—these
are requisite above all things for a singing-master
as well as for a piano-teacher.</p>
<hr style='width: 45%;' />
<p>"My singers are to be educated for the public,
for the stage, and must therefore sing loud, study
hard, force their execution, and make use of a
great deal of breath. How else will they be able
to produce an effect?"</p>
<p><i>Answer.</i> What, then, is the effect of your culture?
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_108" id="Page_108"></SPAN>[108]</span>I know of none, except that they at first
are applauded, because they are young and pretty,
and are novelties; because they have good voices,
and the benevolent public wishes to encourage
them; and then they disappear in a year or two
without leaving any trace.</p>
<p>"The singing-teacher can succeed in cultivating
not more than one good voice in twenty, with any
noteworthy result. Hence the decadence of the
art of singing."</p>
<p><i>Answer.</i> Unless some unusual disturbance or
sickness occur, all voices improve till the twenty-fourth
year. When this is not the case, it is to
be attributed only to the singing-teacher.</p>
<p>"Many voices acquire a sharp tone, which is the
precursor of decay."</p>
<p><i>Answer.</i> All voices are, and will remain, more
or less tender, if their culture is correct.</p>
<p>"Only Jenny Lind and Henrietta Sontag were
allowed by the public to give out their voices naturally
and lightly without straining them, and to
sing <i>piano</i> and <i>pianissimo</i>, and their celebrity is a
justification of this privilege."</p>
<p><i>Answer.</i> But how would they have obtained
their celebrity, if this were not the true, correct,
and pure mode of singing?</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_109" id="Page_109"></SPAN>[109]</span>"Our singers also try the <i>piano</i> and <i>pianissimo</i>;
but they can produce no effect on their audiences
by it, as you may see every day."</p>
<p><i>Answer.</i> Good heavens! I should think so!
With such a <i>piano</i>, with strained voices, faulty
attack, and the use of too much breath,—a <i>piano</i>
which only gurgles in the throat, or deeper! That
I do not mean: I must refer you again to the three
trifles mentioned in my eighth chapter.</p>
<p>"But some voices have no <i>piano</i>, and many
singers do not take the right course to acquire
it."</p>
<p><i>Answer.</i> What a wide-spread, groundless excuse!
Here we may see the error of our times.
People look for the fault outside of themselves,
and not in themselves. The inventive power of
the age is here truly astonishing! When, owing
to false management, the voice soon degenerates
instead of improving with time, it is the consequence
of a faulty formation of the throat, and of
the neglect of London throat brushes! If such
badly educated voices can no longer produce a
<i>piano</i>, it is owing to the unskilfulness of nature,
and to the false construction of the necessary
organs! If the <i>piano</i> is only a wheeze, the reason
is found in the deficiency of palate, and excess of
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_110" id="Page_110"></SPAN>[110]</span>muscles! If several times in the month, the worn
out, weary voice can only groan and sigh, or cannot
emit a sound, it is the result of a change in the
weather, or other meteorological conditions! If we
complain of unpleasant, shrieking tones, occasioned
by the mouth being too widely stretched, then "the
rays of sound take an oblique, instead of a direct
course"! If the poor, strained medium voice, even
with the help of a great deal of breath, can only
produce dull, hollow, veiled, and unpleasant tones,
that is said to be a necessary crisis, of which cruel
Nature requires a great many in the course of her
development of the voice! Finally, if from long
and forced holding of the chest-tones, they are
changed into noises like the bellowing of calves
and the quacking of ducks, and the instructor
finally perceives it, then again we have a crisis!
And, alas! no one thinks of "the three trifles."</p>
<hr style='width: 45%;' />
<p>What occasions the want of success of our singing-teachers,
many of whom are musical, possess
a delicate ear, fine culture and feeling, have studied
systems of singing, and exert themselves zealously
to teach rightly?</p>
<p>They fail in the culture of the tone, which is not
to be learned from books or by one's self, but only
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_111" id="Page_111"></SPAN>[111]</span>from verbal communication. To learn to produce
a clear tone, with a light, free, natural attack; to
understand how to draw forth the sound with
the use of no unnecessary breath, and to cause
the sound to strike against the roof of the mouth
above the upper row of teeth; to improve the
pronunciation; to adjust the registers,—these,
with many other things, may seem very easy; but
to teach them all in the shortest time, without wearing
out the voice and without falling into errors;
to persevere in teaching to the end, even if the
pupil already sings correctly; to know what is still
wanting and how it is to be attained,—all these
one must acquire by long and constant experience.</p>
<p>When Schröder-Devrient came from Vienna to
Dresden, a young but already celebrated singer,
though at that time wanting in the proper foundation
for singing, she was not a little surprised when
Miksch called her attention to this deficiency. She
devoted herself thoroughly to the primary formation
of the tone under the instruction of Miksch,
and must still remember the old master, and his
extraordinary practice in this particular. Miksch
learned it from Caselli, a pupil of Bernacchi. He
had just sung as a young tenor, with great applause,
in a concert, and introduced himself to
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_112" id="Page_112"></SPAN>[112]</span>Caselli, who was present, expecting to receive his
approbation; but the latter, instead of commending,
assured him frankly that his mode of singing
was false, and that with such misuse his voice
would succumb within a year, unless he adopted
a correct culture of tone. After much hard struggle,
the young Miksch renounced all further public
applause, and studied the formation of tone assiduously
and perseveringly with Caselli, after having
previously allowed his over-strained voice a time
for rest.</p>
<p>If a singing-teacher has, by chance, met with
a docile pupil, possessed of a voice of unusual
beauty, it frequently happens that the studies are
not pursued with sufficient perseverance; and, perhaps,
are continued only for a few weeks or months,
instead of allowing a year or more, according to
circumstances. Richard Wagner agrees with me,
when he says, "Why, then, write operas to be sung,
when we no longer have either male or female
singers?"</p>
<hr style='width: 45%;' />
<p>Since modern progress has come to regard "the
three trifles" as belonging entirely to the past, and
in their place has proclaimed, "Boldness, Spirit,
Power," two evil spirits have had rule: they go
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_113" id="Page_113"></SPAN>[113]</span>hand in hand, ruin the voice, wound the cultivated
ear, and provide for us—only empty opera houses.
One of these evils has been frequently alluded to
by me. It is "the expenditure of a great deal too
much breath." The finest voices are obliged to
practise with full breath until they shriek, and
the result is mere sobbing, and the heavy drawing
of the breath, just at the time when the tone
should still be heard. Even if every thing else
could be right, in such a culture of the tone, which
must very shortly relax the muscles of the voice,
that one thing, in itself, would be sufficient to destroy
all promise of success.</p>
<p>The second evil endangers even the male voice,
which is able to endure much ill-treatment; while
the female voice is quickly forced by it into a piercing
shrillness, or is driven back into the throat,
soon to be entirely exhausted, or is, at least, prevented
from attaining a natural, fine development.
This second evil is the reckless and destructive
straining of single tones to their extreme limits,
even to perfect exhaustion. The poor singer urges
and squeezes out the voice, and quivers to the
innermost marrow, in order that the two requirements
of "Boldness" and "Power" may be satisfied.
But the "Spirit" is still wanting, which should
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_114" id="Page_114"></SPAN>[114]</span>be shown in a light and well-shaded delivery. The
effect of extreme shading, however, is accomplished
in a single "romanza." The unfortunate, misdirected
singer, who must aim at effect, lays out so
much force on single tones, or even on whole lines,
and that, too, in the best register of his voice (the
other registers do not permit this), that the succeeding
tones are forced to retire powerless into
the throat; and the beautiful, fresh, youthful tenor
or bass voice concludes with exhausted groaning
and mere speaking tones. The "romanza" is now
at an end, and certainly "Boldness, Spirit, and
Power" have worked in union. The task is executed
the better, because a rude accompaniment
has probably sustained the singer in a most striking
manner, and has completed the total effect.</p>
<p>By such management, to which I must emphatically
add the continual holding of the tones, even
in the <i>forte</i>, voices are expected "to come out," to
be developed, inspired, and made beautiful. What
healthy ear can endure such enormities in tone
formation, such tortures in singing? These, then,
are the modern contributions for the embellishment
of art! A curse on these evil spirits! If
my feeble pen shall assist in bringing such singing-teachers
to their senses, and shall help to save only
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_115" id="Page_115"></SPAN>[115]</span>a few of our fine voices, I shall consider my mission
fulfilled, and the aim of this book, so far as it
concerns singing, accomplished.</p>
<hr style='width: 45%;' />
<p>I have heretofore combated many prejudices,
both in earnest and in sport, successfully and
unsuccessfully; but one I find very obstinate,—it
has pursued me incessantly for years. A piano-player,
with a rigid, strained, and vicious touch,
proceeding from the arm, may play a great deal,
but his playing is thoroughly vulgar and without
beauty. He feels this himself, and the playing of
my pupils pleases him better. He wishes me to
change his style to their better manner; but he
still continues to pound, to bang, to exaggerate,
and to play in his own way, and only wishes his
style to be improved, and his power of execution
to be increased. If a performer of this sort is not
much more than twenty years of age, something
may yet be done for the improvement of his touch,
and consequently of his style of playing; but this
is only possible by laying aside all his accustomed
pieces of music, and by diligently practising, daily,
small easy exercises, which must be played delicately,
with loose fingers, and without allowing the
arm to give the slightest assistance; otherwise, all
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_116" id="Page_116"></SPAN>[116]</span>labor will be thrown away upon him. How else
can you begin, except by laying a proper foundation
for a better style? I have frequently urged
this principle both by speech and in writing; but
the difficulty always returns, and especially in the
cultivation of female singers.</p>
<p>A girl of eighteen comes to me: she has heard
of the excellent cultivation of my lady singers, and
wishes to obtain the same for herself. In order that
I may hear her voice, she selects the "Erlkönig,"
by Schubert, that perilous piece, which is apt to
lead even highly cultivated singers into frightful
atrocities. Heavens! what must I hear? With
the remains of a fine, youthful voice, whose registers
are already broken up and disconnected, she
shrieks out the "Erlkönig," between sobs and
groans, with screwed-up chest-tones, and many
modern improprieties, but nevertheless with dramatic
talent. The piercing voice, forced to its
utmost, fills me with horror; but also with pity for
such a glorious endowment, and such an unnatural
development. At the conclusion, her voice succumbed
to the effort, and she could only groan
hoarsely, and wheeze without emitting a sound.
She has, however, frequently produced great effect
in society, and drawn tears with this performance:
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_117" id="Page_117"></SPAN>[117]</span>it is her favorite piece. Let us abandon this
singing for parties, this melancholy <i>dilettantismus</i>,
everywhere so obtrusive! The girl is only eighteen
years old: is she beyond salvation? I endeavor to
build her voice up again, gradually, by gentle practice.
She succeeds very well in it, and after six
lessons her natural docility arouses hope. The
head-tones again make their appearance, and the
practice of <i>solfeggio</i> brings out once more the stifled
voice which had been forced back into the throat by
senseless exertions; a better attack begins to be
developed, and the chest-register returns to its natural
limits. She now declared, with her mother's
approval, that she really would continue to study in
this way, but she could not give up the performance
of her effective and spirited conception of the
"Erlkönig." She came a few times more: I could
perceive that the good structure was tottering.
After a few months, she had entirely sacrificed her
voice to this single "Erlkönig." In such tender
years, one such idol is sufficient. What a price for
an "Erlkönig"! The old, experienced singing-teacher,
Miksch, of Dresden (with the exception of
Rossini, the last famous champion of the old school),
has often warned me that radical amendment is
seldom possible with such over-strained and broken
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_118" id="Page_118"></SPAN>[118]</span>voices, which already are obliged to struggle with
enfeebled muscles, even although youth may excite
great and decided hopes. There is also another
difficulty: that one of these strong, over-strained
voices must hereafter be used with much less
strength, if we wish to cultivate a correct tone;
and it is impossible to tell whether the chest-tones,
when they are restored to their true limit, will ever
come out again as powerful and at the same time as
beautiful. Let no musician, however talented and
cultivated he may be, ever adopt the teaching of
singing, unless he can combine with firmness of
character great patience, perseverance, and disinterestedness;
otherwise, he will experience very little
pleasure and very little gratitude. Even if the
"Erlkönig" does not stand in the way, every voice
presents new and peculiar difficulties.</p>
<p><i>A Few Words addressed to Singing-Teachers on the Accompaniment
of Etudes, Exercises, Scales, &c.</i></p>
<p>It is common for teachers to play their accompaniments
as furiously as if they had to enter into
a struggle for life and death with their singers. At
the beginning of the lesson, the lady singer ought
to commence quite <i>piano</i>, at <i>f</i> in the one-lined
octave, and to sing up and down from there through
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_119" id="Page_119"></SPAN>[119]</span>five or six notes, without any expenditure of breath,
and should guide and bring out her voice by a gentle
practice of <i>solfeggio</i>; and yet you bang, and
pound on the keys, as if you had to accompany
drums and trumpets. Do you not perceive that in
this way you induce your pupils to strain and force
their voices, and that you mislead them into a false
method? In such a noise, and while you are making
such a monstrous expenditure of strength, to
which you add a sharp, uneasy touch, and a frequent
spreading of the chords, how can you watch the
delicate movements of the singer's throat? Is it
necessary for me to explain how such a rude accompaniment
must interfere with the effort to sing
firmly and delicately? Are you not aware that a
light and agreeable, but at the same time firm and
decided, accompaniment encourages and sustains
the singer, and also assists and inspires her? You
ought, in every way, to seek to cultivate in your
pupil the feeling for the right, the true, and the
beautiful; but what is the girl of eighteen to think
of <i>your</i> culture and <i>your</i> sentiment, if you pound
the keys as if you were one of the "piano-furies"?</p>
<p>While this is your mode of accompanying the
études, how then do you accompany the aria, the
song? If, for instance, the pupil is singing tenderly,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_120" id="Page_120"></SPAN>[120]</span>and wishes to bring out an artistic, delicate shading,
you take advantage of that occasion to make yourself
heard, and to annoy the singer and the audience
with your rough shading. A singing-teacher who
does not take pains to acquire a good, delicate touch,
and who neglects to pay constant attention to it, is
wanting in the first requirement; and this is closely
connected with the want of "the three trifles."</p>
<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_121" id="Page_121"></SPAN>[121]</span></p>
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