The World of Music News
All March 1921
THE Baton Rouge Philharmonic
Orchestra is the first organization of this nature, of symphony size, to be
formed in the State of Louisiana. It gave its first program January 11th.
MARY Garden has added, as her last
conquest, the appointment as General Director of the Chicago Opera Company to
her list. For the first time in history a woman impressario is at the helm of
one of the largest musical enterprises.
GERVASE Elwes, the distinguished
English tenor, died in Boston, January 11th, as the result of being struck by a
train the Back Bay Station.
OTAKAR Seveik, world famous violin
teacher, who arrived January 15th, to make America his home, isone of the few
"Child Prodigies" who have fulfilled the precocious promises of their
early years.
THE Oklahoma State Federation of
Music Clubs recently held a three day mid winter festival of music in Oklahoma
City, with a chorus of 1,000 and an orchestra of 200 performers, gathered from
all parts of the State.
ALEXANDRE Glazounoff, the
distinguished Russian composer, died recently in Petrograd. He was born there
August 6, 1866.
CHARPENTIER'S "Louise",
first given at the Opera Comique in Paris on February 2, 1900, after twenty-one
years, had its first performance at the Metropolitan Opera House of New York on
January 22nd. It had its American premiere at the Manhattan Opera House of
Hammerstein on January 3, 1907.
THE Forty-Second Annual Meeting of
the National Music Teachers Association, held in Chicago, January 6th to 8th,
was declared their "most successful one". Music in the public schools
was the theme most prominently before them.
THE Annual Subsidy of the Paris
Grand Opera House, from the national treasury, has been doubled, thus raising it
to $300,000.
DON Juan, in a new guise, as the
three-act play by Henri Bataille, with incidental music by Reynaldo Hahn, has
created a sensation at the "Theatre de Paris". It is named "The
Man with the Rose", from the incident of the gay deceiver hero wearing a
rose in his hat instead of the usual cockade.
A PRODIGY Organist is the latest
California sensation. Baby Boynton, seven years old, recently attracted wide
attention by her successful manipulation of the big organ of the California
Theater of San Francisco.
F. CRESSON Schell has been
"discovered and identified" as the "Father of the Philadelphia
Orchestra". What is now recognized as one of the leading orchestras of the
world had its beginning in a small group of musicians led by Mr. Schell,
"the piano player".
$19,500 has been paid by Lloyds, of
London, in settlement of their underwriting of the ill fated open air
performance of Aida at San Francisco more than a year ago. The insurance was
against inclement weather. The original demand of the creditors was for $20,000.
ANDREW Black, at one time the
leading concert and oratorio bass of England and well known in America, died
recently in Australia at the age of sixty-one.
MANUSCRIPT Compositions of William
Byrd, in some numbers, have recently been discovered at Wimborne Minster.
ARTHUR Nevin has been appointed
Municipal Director of Music and Dramatic Art in Memphis, Tenn.
ERNEST von Dohnanyi, world famous
Hungarian pianist, is soon to visit America again for an extended concert tour.
MISS Lucille Kellogg, a cousin of
the once famous Clara Louise Kellogg, made her debut in a song recital in New
York, January 16th.
THE following prizes will be awarded
at the meeting of the Ohio State Music Teachers Association at Dayton, Ohio,
April 27th, 28th, 29th: The Ella May Smith Chamber Music Prize ($100), the John
C. Freund Prize ($50) for vocalists, the Civic Music League of Dayton Prize
($100) for pianists, the Edgar Stillman Kelley Prize ($15) for paper on
"Orchestration", the Talbott Prize ($50) for violinists. Particulars
from Adelaide O'Brien, 205 North Main Street, Dayton, Ohio.
NEGRO Musicians now publish at least
two very interesting journals devoted entirely to their interests. The Master
Musician and Music and Poetry do credit to their enterprise and advancement.
THE One Hundredth Anniversary of the
first performance of von Weber's Der Freischutz in Berlin will occur this year
on the 18th of June; while on next Christmas Eve will come the golden jubilee of
the first hearing of Verdi's Aida in Cairo, Egypt.
CHARLES M. Schwab has been elected
president of the famous Bach Choir of Bethlehem, Pa. On receiving notification
he wrote: "I am happy to accept the presidency of a typically American
organization that is upholding the best standards of choral music".
HANS Pfitzner, when the singer of
the role of Cardinal Novagerio in a recent Berlin performance of his opera
Palestrina was taken suddenly ill, stepped into the part and did it himself.
A $100,000 Municipal Organ has been
ordered by the city of Cleveland, Ohio.
SERGE Kussevitzky, progressive
conductor and music publisher of Russia, early in January conducted a program,
at the Royal Albert Hall, of London, devoted entirely to the works of
Tschaikowsky.
"THE Emperor's Poet" (Des
Kaisers Dichter), an opera by Clemens von Frankenstein, has been produced
successfully in Hamburg.
DUCI de Kerekyarto, who recently
made his successful American debut, began his career at three, made his debut as
a prize pupil of Hubay at eleven, and for the lat few years has been most
successful in central Europe. He was a favorite of Carmen Sylva, Queen of
Roumania.
SIR Thomas Beecham has retired
temporarily from his arduous labors in the cause of music in London.
OSSIP Gabrilowitsch, by a new
contract, is to remain two more years as the conductor of the Detroit Symphony
Orchestra.
DR. Karl Muck is one of the
successors of Otto Hess as conductor of the opera at Munich.
ERICH Korngold, now twenty-three
years of age and one of the conductors of the Hamburg State Theater, as a boy
composed songs, sonatas, overtures, chamber music and symphonies.
MME. Galli-Curci, hailed by many as
"Patti's only successor", and one of the greatest coloratura singers
of the age, was married to Homer Samuels on January 15th. The wedding took place
in the parlor of the home of the groom's parents in Minneapolis, a
congregational minister officiating. Mr. Samuels is an able pianist, whose very
artistic playing has contributed greatly to the noteworthy recitals of Mme.
Galli-Curci. He has also written many charming songs. The couple announce that
they will build a $100,000 home in Minneapolis. Let us wish this musical pair
all the happiness which came to the Henschels and the Stengels. Mme. Sembrich
was really Mme. Stengel.
MANA-ZUCCA, founder and president of
the Society of American Music Optimists, personally offers a prize of $500 for
the best quintet (piano and strings) by an American composer. The contest closes
November 1, 1921. Manuscripts are to be sent to the secretary, M. Gobert, 4 West
130th Street, New York. Josef Stransky, Henry Hadley, Hans Letz, Roberto
Moranzoni, Bernard Linsheimer, Herman Spilter and Joan Manen will act as judges.
GRISSHA Monasevitch, an eighteen
year old pupil of Frederick Hahn, of Philadelphia, has won the Sevcik prize over
fifty-five contestants. The prize is valued at $1,200, and the winner is
entitled to one year of study with Sevcik at Ithaca. Monasevitch has attracted
much attention in Philadelphia, where he previously won the Stokowski medal.
SOUSA'S "El Capitan" has
been "revived" by the Philadelphia Operatic Society.
FRANZ von Veesey, the Hungarian
violinist has recently been compelled to give an "overflow" concert to
satisfy the demand to hear him in Berlin. Von Veesey was a famous
"Wunderkind".
GIORGIO Polacca, formerly one of the
leading conductors of the Metropolitan Opera Company and later with the Chicago
Opera Association, also recently connected with the operatic affairs of Paris,
arrived in America on January 30, to resume work with the Chicago Company.
A MUSIC Hall for the Bronx, to be
equal to any similar institution in elegance and facilities, and to be known as
the Thomas Auditorium, is to be built at once.
JEAN Sibelius, the Finnish master
composer, is announced as the next addition to the faculty of the Eastman School
of Music at Rochester University. Mr. Sibelius is to have the chair of
composition. It would seem that Rochester must soon be recognized as one of the
music centers of America.
CARUSO'S improvement continues so
satisfactorily that it is announced that he will not cancel his engagement for
the appearances of the Metropolitan Opera Company at the Atlanta Festival, late
in April, till he is quite certain that he is not to be able to fill this
contract.
ERIKA Morini, a young Austrian
violinist, who made her New York debut on the 26th of January, "bids fair
to take the place of the late Maud Powell as the leading violinist of her
sex". She has created a genuine "furore" in Gotham's musical
circles.
THE International Music Festival
League, organized in 1915, with the idea of fusing the varied nationalities of
America through the medium of choral singing and musical festivals, is now
planning its first International Music Festival, to be given in New York.
BEETHOVEN dominated all the musical
activities of Leipsic during the month of December, when all the larger affairs
were more or less in the nature of a celebration of the one hundred and fiftieth
anniversary of the master's birth.
AN American Song Composer's Festival
is to be held in Greenwood, Indiana, June 1st to 3d. Liberal prizes are offered
for various classes of songs. For particulars address "Indiana Song
Contest", Greenwood, Indiana.
The Etude Magazine
March 1921