LIBRARY THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA SANTA BARBARA PRESENTED BY MRS. ERIC SCHMIDT c ex GREAT ITALIAN AND FRENCH COMPOSERS BY GEORGE T. FERRIS \\ NEW YORK D. APPLETON AND COMPANY' 189; COPYRIGHT, 1878, BY D. APPLETON AND COMPANY NOTE. THE task of compressing into one small vol- ume suitable sketches of the more famous Ital- ian and French composers has been, in view of the extent of the field and the wealth of mate- rial, a somewhat embarrassing one, especially as the purpose was to make the sketches of inter- est to the general music-loving public, and not merely to the critic and the scholar. The plan pursued has been to devote the bulk of space to composers of the higher rank, and to pass over those less known with such brief mention as sufficed to outline their lives and fix their place in the history of music. In gathering the facts embodied in these musical sketches, the author acknowledges his obligations to the following works : Ilullah's " History of Modern Music " ; Fetis's " Biographic Universelle des Musiciens " ; 4 NOTE. dementi's " Biographic des Musiciens " ; Ho garth's " History of the Opera " ; Sutherland Edwards's " History of tlie Opera " ; Schliiter's " History of Music " ; Chorley's " Thirty Years' Musical Reminiscences"; Stendhall's "Viede Rossini " ; Bellasys's " Memorials of Cherubi- iii": Y ithout dramatic movement, they are full of mel- ody and majesty, a majesty serene, unruffled by the sliiditr--! suggestion of human passion. Voices are now and then used for individual expression, but either in unison or harmony. As in all great church music, the chorus is the key of the work. The general judgment of musicians agrees that repose and enjoyment are more characteristic of this music than that of any other master. The choir of the Sistine chapel, by the inheritance of long-cherished tradition, is the most perfect ex- ponent of the Palestrina music. During the an- imal performance of the "Improperie" and "Lam- entations," the altar and walls are despoiled of their pictures and ornaments, and everything is draped in black. The cardinals dressed in serge, no incense, no candles: the whole scene is a strik- ing picture of trouble and desolation. The faith- ful come in two by two and bow before the cross, while the sad music reverberates through the chapel arches. This powerful appeal to the imagi- nation, of course, lends greater power to the musi- TALESTRIXA. 15 cal effect. But all minds who have felt the lift and beauty of these compositions have acknowl- edged how far they soar above words and creeds, and the picturesque framework of a liturgy. Mendelssohn, in a letter to Zelter on the Pa- lestrina music as heard in the Sistine chapel, says that nothing could exceed -the effect of the blend ing of the voices, the prolonged tones gradually merging from one note and chord to another, softly swelling, decreasing, at last dying out. " They understand," he writes, " how T to bring out and place each traii in the most delicate light, without giving it undue prominence ; one chord gently melts into another. The ceremony at the same time is solemn and imposing ; deep silence prevails in the chapel, only broken by the reecho- ing Greek ' holy,' sung with unvarying sweetness and expression." The composer Paer was so im- pressed with the wonderful beauty of the music and the performance, that he exclaimed, " This is indeed divine music, such as I have long sought for, and my imagination was never able to realize, but which, I knew, must exist." Palestrina's versatility and genius enabled him tc lift ecclesiastical music out of the rigidity and frivolity characterizing on either hand the oppos- ing ranks of those that preceded him, and to em- body the religious spirit in works of the highest art. He transposed the ecclesiastical melody (canto fermo) from the tenor to the soprano (thus 16 GREAT ITALIAN AND FRENCH COMPOSERS. rendering it more intelligible to the ear), and cre- ated that glorious thing choir song, with its re- fined harmony, that noble music of which his works are the models, and the papal chair the oracle. No individual preeminence is ever al- lowed to disturb and weaken the ideal atmo- sphere of the whole work. However Palestrina's successors have aimed to imitate his effects, they have, with the exception of Cherubim, failed for the most part ; for every peculiar genus of art is the result of innate genuine inspiration, and the spontaneous growth of the age which produces it. As a parent of musical form he was the protagonist of Italian music, both sacred and secular, and left an admirable model, which even the new school of opera so soon to rise found it necessary to follow in the construction- of har- mony. The splendid and often licentious music of the theatre built its most worthy effects on the work of the pious composer, who lived, labored, and died in an atmosphere of almost anchorite sanctity. The ureat disciples of his school, Nannini and Allegri, continued his work, and the splendid " Miserere " of the latter was regarded as such an inestimable treasure that no copy of it was al- lowed to go out of the Sistine chapel, till the in- fant prodigy, Wolfgang Mozart, wrote it out from the memory of a single hearing. PICCIXI, TAISIELLO, AND CDIAROSA. 17 PICCINT, PAISIELLO, AND CIMAROSA. Mrsie, as speaking the language of feeling, emotion, and passion, found its first full expansion in the operatic form. There had been attempts to represent drama with chorus, founded on the an- cient Greek drama, but it was soon discovered that dialogue and monologue could not be embodied in choral forms without involving an utter absurdity. The spirit of the renaissance had freed poetry, statuary, and painting, from the monopolizing claims of the church. Music, which had become a well equipped and developed science, could not long rest in a similar servitude. Though it is net the aim of the author to discuss operatic history, a brief survey of the progress of opera from its birth cannot be omitted. The oldest of the entertainments which ri- pened into Italian opera belongs to the last years of the fifteenth century, and was the work of the brilliant Politian, known as one of the revivalists of Greek learning attached to the court of Cosmo de' Medici and his son Lorenzo. This was the musical drama of " Orfeo." The story was written in Latin, and sung in music principally choral, though a few solo phrases were given to the prin- cipal characters. It was performed at Rome with 18 GREAT ITALIAN AND FREXCH COMPOSERS. great magnificence, and Vasari tells us that Peruz- zi, the decorator of the papal theatre, painted such -rrnery for it that even the great Titian was so struck with the vrai semblance of the work that he was not satisfied until he had touched the can- vas to be sure of its not being in relief. We may fancy indeed that the scenery was one great at- tri'i-tion of the representation. In spite of spas- modic encouragement by the more liberally raind- '! pontiffs, the general weight of church influ- ence was against the new musical tendency, and the most skilled composers were at first afraid to devote their talents to further its growth. What musicians did not dare undertake out of dread of the thunderbolts of the church, a com- pany of literati at Florence commenced in 1580. The primary purpose was the revival of Greek art, including music. This association, in conjunc- tion with the Medicean Academy, laid down the rule that distinct individuality of expression in music was to be sought for. As results, quickly came musical drama with recitative (modern form of the Greek chorus) and solo melody for charac- teristic parts of the legend or story. Out of this beginning swiftly grew the opera. Composers in the new form sprung up in various parts of Italy, though Naples, Venice, and Florence continued to be its centres. I Jet \vt-en 1637 and 1700, there were performed three hundred operas at Venice alone. An ac- PICCINI, PAISIELLO, AND CIMAROSA. 19 count of the perf ormance of " Berenice," composed by Domenico Freschi, at Padua, in 1680, dwarfs all our present ideas of spectacular splendor. In this opera there were choruses of a hundred vir- gins and a hundred soldiers ; a hundred horsemen in steel armor ; a hundred performers on trumpets, cornets, sackbuts, drums, flutes, and other instru- ments, on horseback and on foot ; two lions led by two Turks, and two elephants led by two In- dians ; Berenice's triumphal car drawn by four horses, and six other cars with spoils and prison- ers, drawn by twelve horses. Among the scenes in the first act was a vast plain with two triumph- al arches ; another with pavilions and tents ; a square prepared for the entrance of the triumphal procession, and a forest for the chase. In the second act there were the royal apartments of Be- renice's temple of vengeance, a spacious court with view of the prison and a covered way with long lines of chariots. In the third act there were the royal dressing-room, the stables with a hundred live horses, porticoes adorned with tapestry, and a great palace in the perspective. In the course of the piece there were representations of the hunt- ing of the boar, the stag, and the lions. The whole concluded with a huge globe descending from the skies, and dividing itself in lesser globes of fire on which stood allegorical figures of fame, honor, nobility, virtue, and glory. The theatri- cal manager had princes and nobles for bankers 2Q GREAT ITALIAN AND FRENCH COMPOSERS. and assistants, and they lavished their treasures of art and money to make such spectacles as the modern stagemen of London and Paris cannot ap- proach. In Evelyn's diary there is an entry describing opera at Venice in 1645. " This night, having with my lord Bruce taken our places before, we went to the opera, where comedies and other plays are represented in recitative musiq by the most excellent musicians, vocal and instrumental, with variety of scenes painted and contrived with no lesse art of perspective, and machines for flying in the aire, and other wonderful motions ; taken together it is one of the most magnificent and ex- ] tensive diversions the wit of man can invent. The history was Hercules in Lydia. The sceanes changed thirteen times. The famous voices, Anna Kencia, a Roman and reputed the best treble of women ; but there was a Eunuch who in niy opin- ion surpassed her ; also a Genoise that in my judg- ment sung an incomparable base. They held us by tlu' eyes and ears till two o'clock i' the morn- ing." Again he writes of the carnival of 1646 : " The comedians have liberty and the operas are open ; witty pasquils are thrown about, and the mountebanks have their stages at every corner. The diversion which chiefly took me up was three noble operas, where were most excellent voices and music, the most celebrated of which was the famous and beautiful Anna Rencia, whom we in- PICCIXI, PAISIELLO, AND CIMAROSA. 21 vited to a fish dinner after four dales in Lent, when they had given over at the theatre." Old Evelyn then narrates how he and his noble friend took the lovely diner out on a junketing, and got shot at with blunderbusses from the gondola of an infuriated rival. Opera progressed toward a fixed status with a swiftness hardly paralleled in the history of any art. The soil was rich and fully prepared for the growth, and the fecund root, once planted, shot into a luxuriant beauty and symmetry, which nothing could check. The Church wisely gave up its op- position, and henceforth there was nothing to im- pede the progress of a product which spread and naturalized itself in England, France, and Ger- many. The inventive genius of Monteverde, Ca- rissimi, Scarlatti (the friend and rival of Han- del), Durante, and Leonardo Leo, perfected the forms of the opera nearly as we have them to- day. A line of brilliant composers in the school of Durante and Leo brings us down through Per- golesi, Derni, Terradiglias, Jomelli, Traetta, Cic- cio di Majo, Galuppi, and Giuglielmi, to the most distinguished of the early Italian composers, Xic- colo Piccini, who, mostly forgotten in his works, is principally known to modern fame as the rival of the mighty Gluck in that art controversy which shook Paris into such bitter factions. Yet, over- shadowed as Piccini was in the greatness of his rival, there can be no question of his desert as the 22 GREAT ITALIAN AXD FRENCH COMPOSERS. most brilliant ornament and exponent of the early operatic school. No gi vat er honor could have been j.aid to him than that he should have been chosen us their champion by the It<.ili:liW.?, ran away at the sight of a stranger. The duke excused himself for his want of ceremony, and added, " I am delighted to see so great a man living in such simplicity, and that the author of ' La Bonne Fille ' is such a good father." Piccini's placid and pleasant life wa.s destined, however, to pass into stormy wa- ters. His sway over the stage and the popular pref- erence continued until 1773, when a clique of envious rivals at Rome brought about his first disaster. The composer was greatly disheart- ened, and took to his bed, for he was ill alike in mind and body. The turning-point in his career had come, and he was to enter into an arena 3 26 GREAT ITALIAN* AND FRENCH COMPOSERS. which taxed his powers in a contest such as he had not yet dreamed of. His operas having been heard and admired in France, their great reputa- tion inspired the royal favorite, Mme. du Barry, with the hope of finding a successful competitor to the great German composer, patronized by Marie Antoinette. Accordingly, Piccini was of- i'eivd an indemnity of six thousand francs, and a residence in the hotel of the Neapolitan ambas- sador. When the Italian arrived in Paris, Gluck was in full sway, the idol of the court and pub- lic, and about to produce his " Armide." Piccini was immediately commissioned to write a new opera, and he applied to the brilliant Marmontel for a libretto. The poet rearranged one of Quinault's tragedies, " Roland," and Pic- cini undertook the difficult task of composing music to words in a language as yet unknown to him. Marmontel was his unwearied tutor, and he writes in his " Memoirs " of his pleasant yet ar- duous task : " Line by line, word by word, I had everything to explain ; and, when he had laid hold of the meaning of a passage, I recited it to him, marking the accent, the prosody, and the cadence of the verses. He listened eagerly, and I had the satisfaction to know that what he heard was carefully noted. His delicate ear seized so read- ily the accent of the language and the measure of the poetry, that in his music he never mistook them. It was an inexpressible pleasure to me to PICCIXI, TAISIELLO, AXD CIMAROSA. 27 see him practice before my eyes an art of which before I had no idea. His harmony was in his mind. lie wrote his airs with the utmost rapid- ity, and when he had traced its designs, he filled up all the parts of the score, distributing the traits of harmony and melody, just as a skillful painter would distribute on his canvas the colors, lights, and shadows of his picture. When all this was done, he opened his harpsichord, which he had been using as his writing-table ; and then I heard an air, a duet, a chorus, complete in all its parts, with a truth of expression, an intelligence, a unity of design, a magic in the harmony, which delighted both my ear and my feelings." Piccini's arrival in Paris had been kept a close secret while he was working on the new opera, but Abbe du Rollet ferreted it out, and acquainted Gluck, which piece of news the great German took with philosophical disdain. Indeed, lie at- tended the rehearsal of " Roland ; " and when his rival, in despair over his ignorance of French and the stupidity of the orchestra, threw down the baton in despair, Gluck took it up, and by his magnetic authority brought order out of chaos and restored tranquillity, a help as much, proba- bly, the fruit of condescension and contempt as of generosity. Still Gluck was not easy in mind over this in- trigue of his enemies, and wrote a bitter letter, which was made public, and aggravated the war 28 GREAT ITALIAN* AND FRENCH COMPOSERS. of public feeling. Epigrams and accusations flew back and forth like hailstones.* "Do you know that the Chevalier (Gluck's title) has an Armida and Orlando in his port- folio ? " said Abbe Arnaud to a Piccinist. " But Piccini is also at work on an Orlando," \va* the retort. So much the better," returned the abbe, " for then we shall have an Orlando and also an Orlandino," was the keen answer. The public attention was stimulated by the war of pamphlets, lampoons, and newspaper arti- cles. Many of the great literati were Piccinists, among them Marmontel, La Harpe, D'Alembert, etc. Suanl du Rollet and Jean Jacques Rous- sean fought in the opposite ranks. Although the nation was trembling on the verge of revolution, and the French had just lost their hold on the Ka>t. Indies ; though Mirabeau was thundering in the tribune, and Jacobin clubs were commen- cing their baleful work, soon to drench Paris in blood, all factions and discords were forgotten. The question was no longer, " Is he a Jansenist, a Molinist, an Encyclopaedist, a philosopher, a free-thinker?" One question only was thought of : "Is he a Gluckist or Piccinist?" and on the answer often depended the peace of families and the cement of long-established friendships. Piccini's opera was a brilliant success with the * See article on Gluck in " Great German Composers." PICCIXI, PAISIELLO, AND CIMAROSA. 29 fickle Parisians, though the Gluckists sneered at it as pretty concert music. The retort was that Gluck had no gift of melody, though they admit- ted he had the advantage over his rival of making more noise. The poor Italian was so much dis tressed by the fierce contest that he and his fam- ily were in despair on the night of the first repre- sentation. He could only say to his weeping wife and son : " Come, my children, this is unreason- able. Remember that we are not among savages ; we are living with the politest and kindest nation in Europe. If they do not like me as a musician, they will at all events respect me as a man and a stranger." To do justice to Piccini, a mild and timid man, he never took part in the controversy, and always spoke of his opponent with profound respect and admiration. in. MARIE ANTOINETTE, whom Mine, du Barry and her clique looked on as Piccini's enemy, as- tonished both cabals by appointing Piccini her singing-master, an unprofitable honor, for he re- ceived no pay, and was obliged to give costly copies of his compositions to the royal family. He might have quoted from the Latin poet in re- gard to this favor from Marie Antoinette, whose faction in music, among other names, was known as the Greek party, " Timeo Danaos et dona fe- 30 GREAT ITALIAN AND FRENCH COMPOSERS. rentes" * Bcaumarcliais, the brilliant author of " Figaro," had found the same inconvenience when acting as court teacher to the daughters of Louis XV, Tha French kings were parsi- monious except when lavishing money on their vices. The action of the dauphiness, however, paved the \vay for a reconciliation between Piccini and Gluck. Berton, the manager of the opera, gave a luxurious banquet, and the musicians, side by side, pledged each other in libations of champagne. Gluck got confidential in his cups. " These French," he said, " are good enough people, but they make me laugh. They want us to write songs for them, and they can't sing." In fact the quarrel was not between the musicians but their adherents. In his own heart Piccini knew his inferiority to Gluck. De Vismes, Berton's successor, proposed that both should write operas on the same subject, " Iphigenia in Tauris," and gave him a libretto. " The French public will have for the first time," he said, " the pleasure of hearing two operas on the same theme, with the same incidents, the same characters, but composed by two great mas- ters of totally different schools." " But," objected the alarmed Italian, " if Gluck's opera is played first, the public will be so delighted that they will not listen to mine." * I fear the Greeks, though offering gifts. PICCIXI, PAISIELLO, AND CIMAROSA. 31 " To avoid that catastrophe," said the director, u we will play yours first." " But Gluck will not permit it." " I give you my word of honor," said De Vi.--.nies, " that your opera shall be put in rehear- sal and brought out as scon as it is finished." Before Piccini had finished his opera, he heard that his rival was back from Germany with his " Iphigenia " completed, and that it was in re- hearsal. The director excused himself on the plea of its being a royal command. Gluck's work was his masterpiece, and produced an unparal- leled sensation among the Parisians. Even his enemies were silenced, and La Harpe said it was the chef cVceuvre of the world. Piccini's work, when produced, was admired, but it stood no chance with the profound, serious, and wonder- fully dramatic composition of his rival. On the night of the first performance Mile. Laguerre, to whom Piccini had trusted the role of Iphigenia, could not stand straight from in- toxication. "This is not 'Iphigenia in Tauris,' said the witty Sophie Arnould, "but 'Iphigenia in champagne.' " She compensated afterward though by singing the part with exquisite effect. While the Gluck- Piccini battle was at its height, an amateur who was disgusted with the contest returned to the country and sang the praises of the birds and their gratuitous perform- ances in the following epigram : 32 GREAT ITALIAN AND FRENCH COMPOSERS. " La n'est point d'art, d'ennui scientifique ; Piccini, Gluck, n'ont point note les airs. Nature seule en dicta la musique, Et Marmontel n'en a pas fait les vers." The sentiment of this was probably applauded by the many who were wearied of the bitter re- criminations, which degraded the art which they professed to serve. During the period when Gluck and Piccini were composing for the French opera, its affairs flourished liberally under the sway of De Vismes. Gluck, Piccini, and Rameau wrote serious operas, while Piccini, Sacchini, Anfossi, and Paisiello composed comic operas. The ballet flourished with unsurpassed splendor, and on the whole it may be said that never has the opera presented more magnificence at Paris than during the time France was on the eve of the Reign of Terror. The gay capital was thronged with great singers, the traditions of whose artistic ability compare favorably with those of a more recent period. The witty and beautiful Sophie Arnould, who had a train of princes at her feet, was the princi- pal exponent of Gluck's heroines, while Mile. La- gucnv was the mainstay of the Piccinists. The rival factions made the names of these charming and capricious women their war-cries not less than those of the composers. The public bowed and cringed before these idols of the stage. Gaetan Vestris, the first of the family, known as the PICCIXI, PAISIELLO, AND CIMAROSA. 33 de la Danse" and who held that there were only three great men in Europe, Frederick the Great of Prussia, Voltaire, and himself, dared to dictate even to Gluck. " Write me the music of a chaconne, Monsieur Gluck,'' said the god of dancing. " A chaconne ! " said the enraged composer. " Do you think the Greeks, whose manners we are endeavoring to depict, knew what a chaconne was ? " "Did they not?" replied Vestris, astonished at this news, and in a tone of compassion con- tinued, "then they are much to be pitied." Vestris did not obtain his ballet music from the obdurate German ; but, when Piccini's rival " Ijthi'yexic en Tral of Paisiello's comic operas still keep a dramatic place on the German stage, where excel- lence is not sacrificed to novelty. VI. A STILL higher place must be assigned to an- other disciple and follower of the school perfected by Piccini, Dominic Cimarosa, born in Naples in K-"H. His life down to his latter years was an uninterrupted flow of prosperity. His mother, an humble washerwomen, could do little for her fatherless child, but an observant priest saw the promise of the lad, and taught him till he was old enough to enter the Conservatory of St. Maria di PICCIXI, PAISIELLO, AND CTMAROSA. 43 Loretto. His early works showed brilliant inven- tion and imagination, and the young Cimarosa, before he left the Conservatory, had made himself a good violinist and singer. He worked hard, dur- ing a musical apprenticeship of many years, to lay a solid foundation for the fame which his teachers prophesied for him from the onset. Like Paisiello, he was for several years attached to the court of Catherine II. of Russia. lie had already produced a number of pleasing works, both serious and comic, for the Italian theatres, and his faculty of production was equaled by the richness and vari- ety of his scores. During a period of four years spent at the imperial court of the Xorth, Cimarosa produced nearly five hundred works, great and small, and only left the service of his magnificent patroness, who was no less passionately fond of art than she was great as a ruler and dissolute as a woman, because the severe climate affected his health, for he was a typical Italian in his tem- perament. He was arrested in his southward journey by the urgent persuasions of the Emperor Leopold, who made him chapel-master, with a salary of twelve thousand florins. The taste for the Italian school was still paramount at the musical capital of Austria. Though such composers as Haydn, Salieri, and young Mozart, who had commenced to be welcomed as an unexampled prodigy, were in Vienna, the court preferred the suave and shal- 44 GREAT ITALIAN AND FRENCH COMPOSERS. low beauties of Italian music to their own serious German school, which was commencing to send down such deep roots into the popular heart. Cimarosa produced " II Matrimonio Segreto " (The Secret Marriage), his finest opera, for his new patron. The libretto was founded on a forgotten French operetta, which again was adapted from Garrick and Colman's " Clandestine Marriage." The emperor could not attend the first representa- tion, but a brilliant audience hailed it with de- light. Leopold made amends, though, on the second night, for he stood in his box, and said, aloud : " Bravo, Cimarosa, bravissimo ! The whole opera is admirable, delightful, enchanting ! I did not applaud, that I might not lose a single note of this masterpiece. You have heard it twice, and I must have the same pleasure before I go to bed. Singers and musicians pass into the next room. Cimarosa will come, too, and preside at the banquet prepared for you. When you have had sufficient rest, we will begin again. I encore the whole opera, and in the mean Avhile let us ap- plaud it as it deserves." The emperor gave the signal, and, midst a thunderstorm of plaudits, the musicians passed into their midnight feast. There is no record of any other such compliment, except that to the Latin dramatist, Plautus, whose " Eunuchus " was performed twice on the same day. PICCINI, PAISIELLO, AND CIMAROSA. 45 Yet the same Viennese public, six years before, had actually hissed Mozart's " Nozze di Figaro," which shares with Rossini's " II Barbiere " the greatest rank in comic opera, and has retained, to this day, its perennial freshness and interest. Cimarosa himself did not share the opinion of his admirers in respect to Mozart. A certain Vien- nese painter attempted to flatter him, by decry- ing Mozart's music in comparison with his own. The following retort shows the nobility of genius : " I, sir ? What would you call the man who would seek to assure you that you were superior to Rapaael ? " Another acute rejoinder, on the respective merits of Mozart and Cimarosa, was made by the French composer, Gretry, in answer to a criticism by Napoleon, when first consul, that great man affecting to be a /, the composer having practised them many a time in his youth." This opera is still performed in many parts of Europe to delighted audiences, and is ranked by competent critics as the third finest comic opera extant, Mozart and Rossini only surpassing him in their masterpieces. It was a great favorite with Lablache, and its magnificent performance by Grisi, Mario, Tamburini, and the king of bassos, is a gala reminiscence of English and French opera-goers. We quote an opinion also front another able authority : " The drama of ' Gli Orazi ' is taken from Corneille's tragedy ' Les Horaces.' The music is full of noble simplicity, beautiful mel- ody, and strong expression. In the airs dramatic- truth is never sacrificed to vocal display, and the concerted pieces are grand, broad, and effective. Taken as a whole, the piece is free from anti- quated and obsolete forms ; and it wants nothing but an orchestral score of greater fullness and variety to satisfy the modern ear. It is still fre- quently performed in Germany, though in France and England, and even in its native country, it seems to be forgotten.'' 48 GREAT ITALIAN AND FRENCH COMPOSERS. Cardinal Consalvi, Cimarosa's friend, caused splendid funeral honors to be paid to him at Koine. Canova executed a marble bust of him, which was placed in the gallery of the Capitol ROSSINI. THE " Swan of Pesaro " is a name linked with some of the most charming musical associations of this age. Though forty years silence made fruitless what should have been the richest crea- tive period of Rossini's life, his great works, poured forth with such facility, and still retain- ing their grasp in spite of all changes in public opinion, stamp him as being the most gifted com- poser ever produced by a country so fecund in musical geniuses. The old set forms of Italian opera had already yielded in large degree to the energy and pomp of French declamation, when Rossini poured into them afresh such exhilaration and sparkle as again placed his country in the van of musical Europe. With no pretension to the grand, majestic, and severe, his fresh and delightful melodies, flowing without stint, excited alike the critical and the unlearned into a species of artistic craze, a mania which has not yet ROSSINI. 49 subsided. The stiff and stately Oubliclieff con- fesses, with many compunctions of conscience, that, when listening for the first time to one of Rossini's operas, he forgot for the time being all that he had ever known, admired, played, or sung, for he was musically drunk, as if with champagne. Learned Germans might shake their heads and talk about shallowness and contra- puntal rubbish, his crescendo and stretto passages, his tameness and uniformity even in melody, his want of artistic finish ; but, as Richard Wagner, his direct antipodes, frankly confesses in his " Oper und Drama," such objections were dis- pelled by Rossini's opera-airs as if they were mere delusions of the fancy. Essentially different from Beethoven, Bach, Mozart, Haydn, or even Weber, with whom he has some affinities, he stands a unique figure in the history of art, an original both as man and musician. Gioacchino Rossini was the son of a town- trumpeter and an operatic singer of inferior rank, born in Pesaro, Romagna, February 29, l?9 - 2. The child attended the itinerant couple in their visits to fairs and musical gatherings, and was in danger, at the age of seven, of becoming a thor- ough-paced little vagabond, when maternal alarm trusted his education to the friendly hands of the music-master Prinetti. At this tender age even he had been introduced to the world of art, for he sang the part of a child at the Bologna opera. 50 GREAT ITALIAN AND FRENCU COMPOSERS. "Nothing," said Mme. Georgi-Righetti, "could be imagined more tender, more touching, than the voice and action of this remarkable child." The young Rossini, after a year or two, came under the notice of the celebrated teacher Tesei, of Bologna, who gave him lessons in pianoforte playing and the voice, and obtained him a good place as boy-soprano at one of the churches. He now attracted the attention of the Countess Per- ticari, who admired his voice, and she sent him to the Lyceum to learn fugue and counterpoint at the feet of a very strict Gamaliel, Padre Mattel. The youth was no dull student, and, in spite of his capricious indolence, which vexed the soul of his tutor, he made such rapid progress that at the age of sixteen he was chosen to write the cantata, annually awarded to the most promising student. Success greeted the juvenile effort, and thus we see Rossini fairly launched as a composer. Of the early operas which he poured out for five years it is not needful to speak, except that one of them so pleased the austere Marshal Massena that he exempted the composer from conscription. The first opera which made Rossini's name fa- mous through Europe was " Tancredi," written for the Venetian public. To this opera belongs the charming "Di tanti palpiti," written under the following circumstances : Mme. Melanotte, the prima donna, took the whim during the final re hearsal that she would not sing the opening air, ROSSIXI. 51 but must have another. Rossini went home in sore disgust, for the whole opera was likely to be put off by this caprice. There were but two hours before the performance, He sat waiting for his macaroni, when an exquisite air came into his head, and it was written in five minutes. After his great success he received offers from almost every town in Italy, each clamoring to be served first. Every manager was required to furnish his theatre with an opera from the pen of tl:o new idol. For these earlier essays he received a thousand francs each, and he wrote five or six a year. Stendhall, Rossini's spirited biographer, gives a picturesque account of life in the Italian theatres at this time, a status which remains in some of its features to-day : " The mechanism is as follows : The manager is frequently one of the most wealthy and consid- erable persons of the little town he inhabits. He forms a company consisting of jirnmi o;ison of 1816. Years before Rossini had thought of setting the sparkling comedy of Beaumarchais to mu- sic, and Sterbini, the author of the lil>r<:tto used by Paisiello, had proposed to rearrange the story. Rossini, indeed, had been so complaisant as to write to the older composer for permission to set fresh music to the comedy ; a concession not needed, for the plays of Metastasio had been used by different musicians Avithout scruple. Paisiello intrigued against the neAV opera, and organized a conspiracy to kill it on the first night. Sterbini made the libretto totally different from the other, 58 GREAT ITALIAN AND FRENCH COMPOSERS. and Rossini finished the music in thirteen days, during which he never left the house. "Not even did I get shaved," he said to a friend. "It seems strange that through the ' Barber ' you should liave gone without shaving." " If I had shaved," Rossini explained, " I should have gone out ; and, if I had gone out, I should not have come back in time." The first performance was a curious scene. The Argentina Theatre was packed with friends and foes. One of the greatest of tenors, Garcia, the father of Malibran and Pauline Viardot, sang Almaviva, Rossini had been weak enough to al- low Garcia to sing a Spanish melody for a sere- nade, for the latter urged the necessity of vivid national and local color. The tenor had forgotten to tune his guitar, and in the operation on the singe a string broke. This gave the signal for a tumult of ironical laughter and hisses. The same hostile atmosphere continued during the evening. Even Madame Georgi-Righetti, a great favorite of the Romans, was coldly received by the audi- ence. In short, the opera seemed likely to be damned. When the singers went to condole with Ros- sini, they found him enjoying a luxurious supper with che gusto of the gourmet that he was. Set- tled in his knowledge that he had written a mas- terpiece, he could not be disturbed by unjust clamor. The next night the fickle Romans made ROSSINI. 59 ample amends, for the opera was concluded amid the warmest applause, even from the friends of Paisiello. Rossini's " II Barbiere," within six months, was performed on nearly every stage in Europe, and received universally with great admiration. It was only in Paris, two years afterward, that there was some coldness in its reception. Every one said that after Paisiello's music on the same sub- ject it was nothing, when it was suggested that Paisiello's should be revived. So the St. Peters- burg " Barbiere " of 1T8S was produced, and be- side Rossini's it proved so dull, stiipid, and anti- quated that the public instantly recognized the beauties of the work which they had persuaded themselves to ignore. Yet for this work, which placed the reputation of the young composer on a lofty pedestal, he received only two thousand francs. Our composer took his failures with great phlegm and good nature, based, perhaps, on an in- vincible self-confidence. "When his " Sigismonde " had been hissed at Venice, he sent his mother a fiasco (bottle). In the last instance he sent her, on the morning succeeding the first performance, a letter with a picture of zjiaschetto (little bottle). in. THE same year (1816) was produced at Xaples the opera of " Otello," which was an important 60 GREAT ITALIAN AND FRENCH COMPOSERS. point of departure in the reforms introduced by Rossini on the Italian stage. Before speaking further of this composer's career, it is necessary to admit that every valuable change furthered by him had already been inaugurated by Mozart, a musical genius so great that he seems to have in- cluded all that went before, all that succeeded him. It was not merely that Rossini enriched the orchestration to such a degree, but, revolting from the delay of the dramatic movement, caused by the great number of arias written for each char- acter, he gave large prominence to the concerted pieces, and used them where monologue had for- merly been the rule. He developed the basso and baritone parts, giving them marked importance in serious opera, and worked out the choruses and finales with the most elaborate finish. Lord Mount Edgcumbe, a celebrated connois- seur and admirer of the old school, wrote of these innovations, ignoring the fact that Mozart had giveu the weight of his great authority to them before the daring young Italian composer : "The construction of these newly-invented pieces is essentially different from the old. The dialogue, which used to be carried on in recita- tive, and which, in Metastasio's operas, is often so beautiful and interesting, and now cut up (and rendered unintelligible if it were worth listening to) into pezzi concertati, or long singing conversa- tions, which present a tedious succession of un- ROSSINI. 61 connected, ever-changing motives, having nothing to do with each other ; and if a satisfactory air is for a moment introduced, which the ear would like to dwell upon, to hear modulated, varied, and again returned to, it is broken off, before it is well understood, by a sudden transition in an entirely different melody, time, and key, and recurs no more, so that no impression can be made, or recol- lection of it preserved. Single songs are almost exploded. . . . Even the prima donna, who for- merly would have complained at having less than three or four airs allotted to her, is now satisfied with having one single cavatina given to her dur- ing the whole opera." In " Otello," Rossini introduced his operatic changes to the Italian public, and they were well received ; yet great opposition was manifested by those who clung to the time-honored canons. Si- gismondi, of the Naples Conservatory, was hor- ror-stricken on first seeing the score of this opera. The clarionets were too much for him, but on see- ing third and fourth horn-parts, he exclaimed : " What does the man want ? The greatest of our composers have always been contented with two. Shades of Pergolesi, of Leo, of Jomelli ! How they must shudder at the bare thought ! Four horns' ! Are we at a hunting-party ? Four horns ! Enough to blow us to perdition ! " Donizetti, who was Sigismondi's pupil, also tells an amusing incident of his preceptor's disgust. He was turn- 52 GREAT ITALIAN AND FRENCH COMPOSERS. ing over a score of " Semiramide " in the library, when the maestro came in and asked him what music it was. " Rossini's," was the answer. Si- gismoncli glanced at the page and saw 1. 2. 3. trumpets, being the first, second, and third trum- pet parts. Aghast, he shouted, stuffing his fingers in his ears, " One hundred and twenty-three trum- pets ! Corpo (U Cristu ! the world's' gone mad, and I shall go mad too ! " And so he rushed from the room, muttering to himself about the hundred and twenty-three trumpets. The Italian public, in spite of such criticism, very soon accepted the opera of " Otello " as the greatest serious opera ever written for their stage. It owed much, however, to the singers who illus- trated its roles. Mme. Colbran, afterward Ros- sini's wife, sang Desdemona, and Davide, Otello. The latter was the predecessor of Rubini as the finest singer of the Rossinian music. He had the prodigious compass of three octaves ; and M. Bertin, a French critic, says of this singer, so hon- orably linked with the career of our composer : " He is full of warmth, verve, energy, expression, and musical sentiment ; alone he can fill up and give life to a scene ; it is impossible for another singer to carry away an audience as he does, and, when he will only be simple, he is admirable. He is the Rossini of song ; he is the greatest singer I ever. heard." Lord Byron, in one of his letters to Moore, speaks of the first production at Milan, ROSSINI. 63 and praises the music enthusiastically, while con- demning the libretto as a degradation of Shake- speare. " La Cenerentola " and " La Gazza Ladra " were written in quick succession for Naples and Milan. The former of these works, based on the old Cinderella myth, was the last opera written by Rossini to illustrate the beauties of the contralto voice, and Madame Georgi-Righetti, the early friend and steadfast patroness of the musician during his early days of struggle, made her last great appearance in it before retiring from the stage. In this composition, Rossini, though one of the most affluent and rapid of composers, dis- plays that economy in art which sometimes char- acterized him. He introduced in it many of the more beautiful airs from his earlier and less suc- cessful works. He believed on principle that it was folly to let a good piece of music be lost through being married to a Aveak and faulty li- bretto. The brilliant opera of " La Gazza Ladra," set to the story of a French melodrama, " La Pie Voleuse," aggravated the quarrel between Paer, the director of the French opera, and the gifted Italian. Paer had designed to have written the music himself, but his librettist slyly turned over the poem to Rossini, who produced one of his masterpieces in setting it. The audience at La Scala received the work with the noisiest demon- strations, interrupting the progress of the drama 64 GREAT ITALIAN AND FREXCII COMPOSERS. with constant cries of "Bravo! Maestro!" %> I'ii'/f /!<>t t>ll usual with the first act, and all went well till the third, when, the passage of the Red Sea being at hand, the audience as usual prepared to be amused. The laughter was just beginning in the pit, when it was observed that Moses was about to sing. He began his solo, the first verse of a prayer, which all the people repeat in chorus after Moses. Surprised at this novelty, the pit listened and the laughter entirely ceased. The chorus, exceedingly fine, was in the minor. Aaron con- tinues, followed by the people. Finally, Eleia ad- dresses to Heaven the same supplication, and the people respond. Then all fall on their knees and repeat the prayer with enthusiasm ; the miracle is performed, the sea is opened to leave a path 06 GREAT ITALIAN AND FREXCH COMPOSERS. for the people protected by the Lord. This last part is in the major. It is impossible to imagine the thunders of applause that resounded through llu' house : one would have thought it was com- ing down. The spectators in the boxes, standing up and leaning over, called out at the top of their voices, ' J>< //<>, bdlo ! chc bdlo /' I never saw so much enthusiasm nor such a complete success, which was so much the greater, inasmuch as the people were quite prepared to laugh. ... I am almost in (cars when I think of this prayer. This state of things lasted a long time, and one of its cfl't'cts was to make for its composer the reputa- tion of an assassin, for Dr. Cottogna is said to have remarked : 'I can cite to you more than forty attacks of nervous fever or violent convul- sions on the part of young women, fond to excess of music, which have no other origin than the prayer of the Hebrews in the third act, with its superb change of key.'" Thus by a stroke of genius, a scene which first impressed the audience as a piece of theatrical burlesque, was raised to sublimity by the solemn music written for it. M. Bochsa some years afterward produced " Mose" as an oratorio in London, and it failed. A new libretto, however, " Pietro L'Eremito," * again transformed the music into an opera. Ebers Tin- s:ime music was set to a poem founded on the first crusade, all the most effective situations being dramatically utilized for the Christian legend. ROSSIXI. 67 tells us that Lord Sefton, a distinguished con- noisseur, only pronounced the general verdict in calling it the greatest of serious operas, for it \v;:s received with the greatest favor. A gentleman of high rank was not satisfied with assuring the manager that lie had deserved well of his country, but avowed his determination to propose him for membership at the most exclusive of aristocratic clubs White's. " La Donna del Lago," Rossini's next great Avork, also first produced at the San Carlo during the Carnival of 1820, though splendidly performed, did not succeed well the first night. The com- poser left Naples the same night for Milan, and coolly informed every one />/( was a little stung when it was made known that Rossini had simply modified and reshaped one of his early and immature pro- ductions as his tirst attempt at composition in French opera. His other works for the French stage were " 11 Yiaggio a Kheims," " Le Comte ( )ry," and " Guillaume Tell." The last-named opera, which will ever be Kos- sini's crown of glory as a composer, was written with his usual rapidity while visiting the chateau of M. Aguado, a country-seat some distance from Paris. This work, one of the half-dozen greatest ever written, was first produced at the Academic Hoyale on August :>, IS'25). In its early form of libretto it had a run of tifty-six representations, and was then withdrawn from the stage ; and the work of remodeling from five to three acts, and other improvements in the dramatic framework, was thoroughly carried out. In its new form the opera blazed into an unprecedented popularity, ROS>INI. 73 for of the greatness of the music there had never been but one judgment. F>'t,i>, the eminent critic, writing of it immediately on its production, said, " The work displays a new man in an old one, and proves that it is in vain to measure the action of genius," and follows with, " This production opens a new career to Rossini," a prophecy un- fortunately not to be realized, for Rossini was soon to retire from the field in which he had made such a remarkable career, while yet in the very prime of his power-. " Guillaurne Tell " is full of melody, alike in the solos and the massive choral and ballet music. It runs in rich streams through every part of the composition. The overture is better known to the general public than the opera itself, and is one of the great works of musical art. The open- ing andante in triple time for the five violoncelli and double basses at once carries the hearer to the regions of the upper Alps, where amid the eternal snows Xature sleeps in a peaceful dream. We perceive the corning of the sunlight, and the hazy atmosphere clearing away before the new- born day. In the next movement the solitude is all dispelled. The raindrops fall thick and heavy, and a thunderstorm bursts. But the fury is soon spent, and the clouds clear away. The shepherds are astir, and from the mountain-sides come the peculiar notes of the " Ranz des V aches " from their pipes. Suddenly all is changed again. 74 GREAT ITALIAN AXD FRENCH COMPOSERS. Trumpets call to arms, and with the mustering battalions the music marks the quickstep, as the shepherd patriots march to meet the Austrian chivalry. A brilliant use of the violins and reeds depicts the exultation of the victors on their re- turn, and closes one of the grandest sound-paint- ings in music. The original cast of " Guillaume Tell " includ- ed the great singers then in Paris, and these were so delighted with the music, that the morning after the first production they assembled on the terrace before his house and performed selections from it in his honor. With this last great effort Rossini, at the age of thirty-seven, may be said to have retired from the field of music, though his life was prolonged for forty years. True, he composed the " Stabat Mater " and the " Messe Solennelle," but neither of these added to the reputation won in his pre- vious career. The " Stabat Mater," publicly per- formed for the first time in 1842, has been recog- nized, it is true, as a masterpiece ; but its entire lack of devotional solemnity, its brilliant and showy texture, preclude its giving Rossini any rank as a religious composer. He spent the forty years of his retirement partly at Bologna, partly at Passy, near Paris, the city of his adoption. His hospitality wel- comed the brilliant men from all parts of Europe who loved to visit him, and his relations with ROSSINI. 75 other great musicians were of the most kindly and cordial character. His sunny and genial na- ture never knew envy, and he was quick to recog- nize the merits of schools opposed to his own. He died, after intense suffering, on November 13, 1868. He had been some time ill, and four of the greatest physicians in Europe were his almost constant attendants. The funeral of " The Swan of Pesaro," as he was called by his compatriots, \\ as attended by an immense concourse, and his remains rest in Pere-Lachaise. V. 3IosciiELES, the celebrated pianist, gives us some charming pictures of Rossini in his home at Passy, in his diary of 1860. He writes : " Felix [his son] had been made quite at home in the villa on former occasions. To me the />n the " humoristic variations," so boldly do they seem to raise the standard of musical revolution ; his title of the " Grand Valse " he finds too un- assuming. " Surely a waltz with some angelic creature must have inspired you, Moscheles, with this composition, and that the title ought to ex- press. Titles, in fact, should pique the curiosity of the public." "A view uncongenial to me," adds Moscheles ; " however, I did not discuss it. ROSSINI. 77 .... A dinner at Rossini's is calculated for the enjoyment of a ' gourmet,' and he himself proved to be the one, for he went through the very select menu as only a connoisseur would. After dinner he looked through my album of musical auto- graphs with the greatest interest, and finally we became very merry, I producing my musical jokes on the piano, and Felix and Clara figuring in the duet which I had written for her voice and his imitation of the French horn. Rossini cheered lustily, and so one joke followed another till we received the parting kiss and ' good night.' . . . At my next visit, Rossini showed me a charming ' Lied ohne Worte,' which he composed only yes- terday ; a graceful melody is embodied in the well-known technical form. Alluding to a per- formance of ' Semiramide,' he said with a mali- cious smile, ' I suppose you saw the beautiful decorations in it ? ' He has not received the Sis- icrs Marchisio for fear they should sing to him, nor has he heard them in the theatre ; he spoke warmly of Pasta, Lablache, Rubini, and others, then he added that I ought not to look with jeal- ousy upon his budding talent as a pianoforte- player, but that, on the contrary, I should help to establish his reputation as such in Leipsic. He again questioned me with much interest about my intimacy with dementi, and, culling me that master's worthy successor, he said he should like to visit me in Leipsic, if it were not for those 78 GREAT ITALIAN AND FRENCH COMPOSERS. dreadful railways, which he would never travel by. All this in his bright and lively way ; but when we came to discuss Chevet, who wishes to supplant musical notes by ciphers, he maintained in an earnest and dogmatic tone that the system of notation, as it had developed itself since Pope Gregory's time, was sufficient for all musical re- r* . ([uiivments. He certainly could not withhold some appreciation for Chevet, but refused to in- dorse the certificate granted by the Institute in his favor ; the system he thought impracticable. " The never-failing stream of conversation flowed on until eleven o'clock, when I was favored with the inevitable kiss, which on this occasion was accompanied by special farewell blessings." Shortly after Moscheles had left Paris, his son forwarded to him most friendly messages from Rossini, and continues thus : "Rossini sends you word that he is working hard at the piano, and, when you next come to Paris, you shall find him in better practice. . . . The conversation turning upon German music, I asked him ' Avhich was his favorite among the great masters ? ' Of Beetho- ven he said : ' I take him twice a week, Haydn four times, and Mozart every day. You will tell me that Beethoven is a Colossus who often gives you a dig in the ribs, while Mozart is always adorable ; it is that the latter had the chance of going very young to Italy, at a time when they still sang well.' Of Weber he says, ' He has ROSSIXI. 79 talent enough, and to spare ' (H a du talent d re- vcndre, celui-ld). He told me in reference to him, that, when the part of ' Tancred ' was sung at Ber- lin by a bass voice, Weber had written violent articles not only against the management, but against the composer, so that, when Weber came to Paris, he did not venture to call on Rossini, who, however, let him know that he bore him no grudge for having made these attacks ; on receipt of that message Weber called and they became acquainted. " I asked him if he had met Byron in Venice ? ' Only in a restaurant,' was the answer, ' where I was introduced to him ; our acquaintance, there- fore, was very slight ; it seems he has spoken of me, but I don't know what he says.' I translated for him, in a somewhat milder form, Byron's words, which happened to be fresh in my mem- ory : 'They have been crucifying Othello into an opera; the music good but lugubrious, but, as for the words, all the real scenes with lago cut out, and the greatest nonsense instead, the handker- chief turned into a billet-doux, and the first singer would not black his face singing, dresses, and music very good.' The t/i regretted his ignorance of the English language, and said, ' In my day I gave much time to the study of our Italian literature. Dante is the man I owe most to ; he taught me more music than all my music- masters put together, and when I wrote my ' Otel- 80 GREAT ITALIAN* AND FRENCH COMPOSERS. lo,' I would introduce those lines of Dante you know the song of the gondolier. My librettist would have it that gondoliers never sang Dante, and but rarely Tasso, but I answered him, ' I know all about that better than you, for I have lived in Venice and you haven't. Dante I must and will have.' "' VI. AN ardent disciple of Wagner sums up his ideas of the mania for the Rossini music, which ji(ic>-r(l Europe for fifteen years, in the follow- ing : '* Rossini, the most gifted and spoiled of her sons [speaking of Italy] sallied forth with an in- numerable army of Bacchantic melodies to con- quer the world, the Messiah of joy, the breaker of thought and sorrow. Europe, by this time, had tiicd of the empty pomp of French declamation. It lent but too willing an ear to the new gorpel, and eagerly quaffed the intoxicating potion, which Rossini poured out in inexhaustible streams." This very well expresses the delight of all the countries of Europe in music which for a long time almost monopolized the stage. The charge of being a mere tune-spinner, the denial of invention, depth, and character, have been common watchwords in the mouths of crit- ics wedded to other schools. But Rossini's place in music stands unshaken by all assaults. The vivacity of his style, the freshness of his melo- ROSSINI. 81 dies, the richness of his combinations, made all the Italian music that preceded him pale and color- less. No other writer revels in such luxury of beauty, and delights the ear with such a succes- sion of delicious surprises in melody. Henry Chorley, in his " Thirty Years' Musical Recollections," rebukes the bigotry which sees nothing good but in its own kind : " I have nev- er been able to understand why this [referring to the Rossinian richness of melody] should be con- temned as necessarily false and meretricious why the poet may not be allowed the benefit of his own period and time why a lover of architecture is to be compelled to swear by the Dom at Bam- berg, or by the Cathedral at Monreale that he must abhor and denounce Michel Angelo's church or the Baths of Diocletian at Rome why the person who enjoys ' II Barbiere ' is to be de- nounced as frivolously faithless to Mozart's ' Fi- garo' and as incapable of comprehending 'Fi- delio,' because the last act of ' Otello ' and the second of ' Guillaume Tell ' transport him into as great an enjoyment of its kind as do the duet in the cemetery between ' Don Juan ' and ' Leporel- lo ' and the ' Prisoners' Chorus.' How much good, genial pleasure has not the world lost in music, owing to the pitting of styles one against the other ! Your true traveler will be all the more alive to the beauty of Nuremberg because he has looked out over the ' Golden Shell ' at Pa- 82 GREAT ITALIAN AND FRENCH COMPOSERS. lermo ; nor delight in Rhine and Danube the less because he has seen the glow of a southern sunset over the broken bridge at Avignon." As grand and true as are many of the essen- tial elements in the Wagner school of musical composition, the bitterness and narrowness of spite with which its upholders have pursued the memory of Rossini is equally offensive and un- warrantable. Rossini, indeed, did not revolu- tionize the forms of opera as transmitted to him by his predecessors, but he reformed and perfect- ed them in various notable ways. Both in comic and serious opera, music owes much to Rossini. He substituted genuine singing for the endless recitative of which the Italian opera before him largely consisted ; he brought the bass and bari- tone voices to the front, banished the pianoforte from the orchestra, and laid down the principle that the singer should deliver the notes written for him without additions of his own. He gave the chorus a much more important part than be- fore, and elaborated the concerted music, espe- cially in the finales, to a degree of artistic beauty before unknown in the Italian opera. Above all, he made the operatic orchestra what it is to-day. Every new instrument that was invented Rossini found a place for in his brilliant scores, and there- by incurred the warmest indignation of all writers of the old school. Before him the orchestras had consisted largely of strings, but Rossini added ROSSINI. 83 an equally imposing element of the brasses and reeds. True, Mozart had forestalled Rossini in many if not all these innovations, a fact which the Italian cheerfully admitted ; for, with the sim- ple frankness characteristic of the man, he always spoke of his obligations to and his admiration of the great German. To an admirer who was one day burning incense before him, Rossini said, in the spirit of Cimarosa quoted elsewhere : " My ' Barber ' is only a bright farce, but in Mozart's ' Marriage of Figaro ' you have the finest possible masterpiece of musical comedy." With all concessions made to Mozart as the founder of the forms of modern opera, an equally high place must be given to Rossini for the vigor and audacity with which he made these available, and impressed them on all his contemporaries and successors. Though Rossini's self-love was flat- tered by constant adulation, his expressions of re- spect and admiration for such composers as Mozart, Gluck, Beethoven, and Cherubini display what a catholic and generous nature he possessed. The judgment of Ambros, a severe critic, whose bias was against Rossini, shows what admiration was wrung from him by the last opera of the composer: " Ox all that particularly characterizes Rossini's early operas nothing is discoverable in ' Tell ; ' there is none of his usual mannerism ; but, on the con- trary, unusual richness of form and careful finish of detail, combined with grandeur of outline. 84 GREAT ITALIAN AND FRENCH COMPOSERS. Meretricious embellishment, shakes, runs, and ca- dences are carefully avoided in this work, which is natural and characteristic throughout ; even the melodies have not the stamp and style of Rossini's earlier times, but only their graceful charm and lively coloring." Rossini must be allowed to be unequaled in srenume comic opera, and to have attained a dis- tinct greatness in serious opera, to be the most comprehensive and at the same time the most national composer of Italy, to be, in short, the Mozart of his country. After all has been ad- mitted and regretted that he gave too little at- tention to musical science; that he often neglected to infuse into his work the depth and passion of which it was easily capable ; that he placed too high a value on merely brilliant effects ad captan- dum vulgus there remains the fact that his operas embody a mass of imperishable music, which will live with the art itself. Musicians of every coun- try now admit his wondrous grace, his fertility and freshness of invention, his matchless treat- ment of the voice, his effectiveness in arrange- ment of the orchestra. He can never be made a model, for his genius had too much spontaneity and individuality of color. But he impressed and modified music hardly less than Gluck, whose tastes and methods were entirely antagonistic to his own. That he should have retired from the exercise of his art while in the full flower of his DONIZETTI AND BELLINI. 85 genius is a perplexing fact. No stranger story is recorded in the annals of art with respect to a genius who filled the world with his glory, and then chose to vanish, " not unseen." On finishing his crowning stroke of genius and skill in " Wil- liam Tell," he might have said with Shakespeare's enchanter, Prospero : '.... But this magic I here abjure ; and when I have required Some heavenly music (which even now I do) To work mine end upon their senses that This airy charm is for, I'll break my staff Bury it certain fathoms in the earth, And, deeper than did ever plummet sound, I'll drown mv book." DONIZETTI AND BELLINI. A BRIGHT English critic, whose style is as charming as his judgments are good, says, in his study of the Donizetti music : " I find myself thinking of his music as I do of Domenichino's pictures of ' St. Agnes ' and the ' Rosario ' in the Bologna gallery, of the ' Diana ' in the Borghese Palace at Rome, as pictures equable and skillful in the treatment of their subjects, neither devoid of beauty of form nor of color, but which make 86 GREAT ITALIAN AND FRENCH COMPOSERS. neither the pulse quiver nor the eye wet ; and then such a sweeping judgment is arrested by a work like the ' St. Jerome ' in the Vatican, from which a spirit comes forth so strong and so exalted, that the beholder, however trained to examine, and compare, and collect, finds himself raised above all recollections of manner by the sudden ascent of talent into the higher world of genius. Essentially a second-rate composer,* Donizetti struck out some first-rate things in a happy hour, such as the last act of ' La Favorita.' " Both Donizetti and Bellini, though far inferior to their master in richness of resources, in crea- tive faculty and instinct for what may be called dramatic expression in pure musical form, were disciples of Rossini in their ideas and methods of work. Milton sang of Shakespeare " Sweetest Shakespeare, Fancy's child, Warbles his native wood-notes wild ! " In a similar spirit, many learned critics have writ- ten of Rossini, and if it can be said of him in a musical sense that he had " little Latin and less Greek," still more true is it of the two popular composers whose works have filled so large a space in the opera-house of the last thirty years, for their scores are singularly thin, measured by * Mr. Chorlcy probably means " second-rate " as compared with the few very great names, which can be easily counted on the fingers. DONIZETTI AND BELLINI. 8? the standard of advanced musical science. Spe- cially may this be said of Bellini, in many respects the greater of the two. There is scarcely to be found in music a more signal example to show that a marked individuality may rest on a narrow base. In justice to him, however, it may be said that his early death prevented him from doing full justice to his powers, for he had in him the material out of which the great artist is made. Let us first sketch the career of Donizetti, the author of sixty-four operas, besides a mass of other music, such as cantatas, ariettas, duets, church music, etc., in the short space of twenty- six years. Gaetano Donizetti was born at Bergamo, Sep- tember 25, 1798, his father being a man of mod- erate fortune.* Receiving a good classical educa- * Admirers of the author of " Don Pasquale " and " Lucia " may be interested in knowing that Donizetti was of Scotch descent. His grandfather was a native of Perthshire, named Izett. The young Scot was beguiled by the fascinating tongue of a recruiting-sergeant into his Britannic majesty's service, and was taken prisoner by General La Hoche during the latter's invasion of Ireland. Already tired of a private's life, he ac- cepted the situation, and was induced to become the French general's private secretary. Subsequently he drifted to Italy, and married an Italian lady of some rank, denationalizing his own name into Donizetti. The Scottish predilections of our composer show themselves in the music of " Don Pasquale," noticeably in "Com' e gentil;" and the score of ''Lucia" is strongly flavored by Scottish sympathy and minstrelsy. 88 GREAT ITALIAN AND FRENCH COMPOSERS. tion, the young Giietano had three careers open before him : the bar, to which the will of his father inclined ; architecture, indicated by his tal- ent for drawing ; and music, to which he was powerfully impelled by his own inclinations. His father sent him, at the age of seventeen, to Bo- logna to benefit by the instruction of Padre Mat- tei, who had also been Rossini's master. The young man showed no disposition for the heights of musical science as demanded by religious com- position, and, much to his father's disgust, avowed his determination to write dramatic music. Pa- ternal anger, for the elder Donizetti seems to have had a strain of Scotch obstinacy and austerity, made the youth enlist as a soldier, thinking to find time for musical work in the leisure of bar- rack-life. His first opera, " Enrico di Borgogna," was so highly admired by the Venetian manager, to whom it was offered, that he induced friends of his to release young Donizetti from his mili- tary servitude. He now pursued musical compo- sition with a facility and industry which aston- ished even the Italians, familiar with feats of im- provisation. In ten years twenty-eight operas were produced. Such names as " Olivo e Pas- quale," " La Convenienze Teatrali," " II Borgo- maestro di Saardam," " Gianni di Calais," "L'Esule di Roma," "II Castello di Kenilworth," "Imelda di Lambertazzi," have no musical significance, except as belonging to a catalogue of forgotten DONIZETTI AND BELLINI. 89 titles. Donizetti was so poorly paid that need drove him to rapid composition, which could not wait for the true afflatus. It was not till 1831 that the evidence of a strong individuality w^s given, for hitherto he had shown little more than a slavish imitation of Rossini. " Anna Bolena " was produced at Milan and gained him great credit, and even now, though it is rarely sung even in Italy, it is much respected as a work of art as well as of promise. It was first interpreted by Pasta and Rubini, and La- blache Avon his earliest London triumph in it. '' Marino Faliero " was composed for Paris in 1835, and " L'Elisir d'Amore," one of the most graceful and pleasing of Donizetti's works, for Milan in 18:>:>. " Lucia di Lammermoor," based on Walter Scott's novel, was given to the public in 1835, and has remained the most popular of the composer's operas. Edgardo was written for the great French tenor, Duprez, Lucia for Persiani. Donizetti's kindness of heart Avas illustrated by the interesting circumstances of his saving an obscure Neapolitan theatre from ruin. Hearing that it Avas on the verge of suspension and the performers in great distress, the composer sought them out and supplied their immediate wants. The manager said a new work from the pen of Donizetti would be his sah'ation. "You shall have one within a Aveek," was the answer. Lacking a subject, he himself rearranged an 90 GREAT ITALIAN AND FRENCH COMPOSERS. old French vaudeville, and within the week the libretto was written, the music composed, the parts learned, the opera performed, and the theatre saved. There could be no greater proof of his generosity of heart and his versatility of talent. In these days of bitter quarreling over the rights of authors in their works, it may be amusing to know that Victor Hugo contested the rights of Italian librettists to borrow their plots from French plays. When " Lucrezia Borgia," composed for Milan in 1834, was produced at Paris in 1840, the French poet instituted a suit for an infringement of copyright. He gained his action, and " Lu- crezia Borgia " became " La Rinegata," Pope Alexander the Sixth's Italians being metamor- phosed into Turks.* "Lucrezia Borgia," which, though based on one of the most dramatic of stories and full of * Victor Hugo did the same thing with Verdi's " Ernani," and other French authors followed with legal actions. The matter was finally arranged on condition of an indemnity being paid to the original French dramatists. The principle involved had been established nearly two centuries before. In a privi- lege granted to St. Amant in 1653 for the publication of his " Moise Sauve," it was forbidden to extract from that epic ma- tt-rials for a play or poem. The descendants of Beaumarchais fought for the same concession, and not very long ago it was decided that the translators and arrangers of " Le Nozze di Figaro " for the Theatre Lyrique must share their receipts with the living representatives of the author of " Le Manage de Figaro." DONIZETTI AND BELLINI. 91 beautiful music, is not dramatically treated by the composer, seems to mark the distance about half way between the styles of Rossini and Verdi. In it there is but little recitative, and in the treat- ment of the chorus we find the method which Verdi afterward came to use exclusively. AVhen Donizetti revisited Paris in 1840 he produced in rapid succession " I Martin," " La Fille du Re giment," and " La Favorita." In the second of these works Jenny Lind, Sontag, and Alboni won bright triumphs at a subsequent period. n. " LA FAVORITA," the story of which was drawn from "L'Ange de Xigida," and founded in the first instance on a French play, " Le Comte de Commingues," was put on the stage a.1 the Acade- mie with a magnificent cast and scenery, and achieved a success immediately great, for as ;i dramatic opera it stands far in the van of all the composer's productions. The whole of the grand fourth act, with the exception of one cavatina, was composed in three hours. Donizetti had been dining at the house of a friend, who was engaged in the evening to go to a ball. On leaving the house, his host, with profuse apologies, begged the composer to stay and finish his coffee, of which Donizetti was inordinately fond. The latter sent out for music paper, and, finding himself in the vein for composition, went on writing till the corn- 92 GREAT ITALIAN AND FRENCH COMPOSERS. pletion of the work. He had just put the final stroke to the celebrated " Viens dans iin autrc jxitrie " when his friend returned at one in the morning to congratulate him on his excellent method of passing the time, and to hear the music sung for the first time from Donizetti's own lips. After visiting Rome, Milan, and Vienna, for which last city he wrote "Linda di Chamouni," our composer returned to Paris, and in 1843 wrote " Don Pasquale " for the Theatre Italien, and " Don Sebastian " for the Academic. Its lugu- brious drama was fatal to the latter, but the brill- iant gayety of " Don Pasquale," rendered special- ly delightful by such a magnificent cast as Grisi, Mario, Tamburini, and Lablache, made it one of the great art attractions of Paris, and a Fortuna- tus purse for the manager. The music of this work perhaps is the best ever written by Doni- zetti, though it lacks the freshness and sentiment of his " Elisir d'Amore," which is steeped in rus- tic poetry and tenderness like a rose wet with dew. The production of " Maria di Rohan " in Vienna the same year, an opera with some power- ful dramatic effects and bold music, gave Ronconi the opportunity to prove himself not merely a fine buffo singer, but a noble tragic actor. In this work Donizetti displays that rugged earnestness and vigor so characteristic of Verdi ; and, had his life been greatly prolonged, we might have seen him ripen into a passion and power at odds with DONIZETTI AND BELLIM. 93 the elegant frivolity "which for the most part tainted his musical quality. Donizetti's last opera, " Catarina Comaro " the sixty-third one represent- ed, was brought out at Naples in -the year 1844 without adding aught to his his reputation. Of this composer's long list of works only ten or eleven retain any hold on the stage, his best seri- ous operas being " La Favorita," " Linda," " Anna Bolena," " Lucrezia Borgia," and " Lucia ; " the finest comic works, " L'Elisir d'Aniore," " La Fille du Regiment, " and " Don Pasquale." In composing Donizetti never used the piano- forte, writing with great rapidity and never mak- ing corrections. Yet curious to say, he could not do anything without a small ivory scraper by his side, though never using it. It was given him by his father when commencing his career, with the injunction that, as he was determined to become a musician, he should make up his mind to write as little rubbish as possible, advice which Doni- zetti sometimes forgot. The first signs of the malady, which was the cause of the composer's death, had already shown themselves in 1845. Fits of hallucination and all the symptoms of approaching derangement dis- played themselves with increasing intensity. An incessant worker, overseer of his operas on twenty stages, he had to pay the tax by which his fame became his ruin. It is reported that he anticipa- ted the coming scourge, for during the rehearsals 94 GREAT ITALIAN AND FRENCH COMPOSERS. of " Don Sebastian " he said, " I think I shall go mad yet." Still he would not put the bridle on his restless activity. At last paralysis seized him, and in January, 1846, he was placed under the care of the celebrated Dr. Blanche at Ivry. In the hope that the mild influence of his native air might heal his distempered brain, he was sent to Bergamo, in 1848, but died in his brother's arms April 8th. The inhabitants of the Peninsula were then at war with Austria, and the bells that sound- ed the knell of Donizetti's departure mingled their solemn peals with the roar of the cannon fired to celebi-ate the victory of Goi'to. His faithful valet, Antoine, wrote to Adolphe Adam, describing his obsequies : " More than four thousand persons," he relates, " were present at the ceremony. The procession was composed of the numerous clergy of Bergamo, the most illustri- ous members of the community and its environs, and of the civic guard of the town and the sub- urbs. The discharge of musketry, mingled with the light of three or four thousand torches, pre- sented a fine effect ; the whole was enhanced by the presence of three military bands and the most propitious weather it was possible to behold. The young gentlemen of Bergamo insisted on bearing the remains of their illustrious fellow-townsman, although the cemetery was a league and a half from the town. The road was crowded its whole length by people who came from the surrounding coun- DONIZETTI AND BELLINI. 95 try to witness the procession ; and to give due praise to the inhabitants of Bergamo, never, hitherto, had such great honors been bestowed upon any member of that city." in. THE future author of " Norma " and " La Sonnambula," Bellini, took his first lessons in music from his father, an organist at Catania.* He was sent to the Naples Conservatory by the generosity of a noble patron, and there was the fellow-pupil of Mercadante, a composer who blazed into a temporary lustre which threatened to outshine his fellows, but is now forgotten ex- cept by the antiquarian and the lover of church music. Bellini's early works, for he composed three before he was twenty, so pleased Barbaja, the manager of the San Carlo and La Scala, that he intrusted the youth with the libretto of " II Pirata," to be composed for representation at Flor- ence. The tenor part was written for the great singer, Rubini, whose name has no peer among artists, since male sopranos were abolished by the outraged moral sense of society. Rubini retired to the country with Bellini, and studied, as they were produced, the simple touching airs with which he so delighted the public on the stage. * Bellini was born in 1802, nine years after his contempo- rary and rival, Donizetti, and died in 1835, thirteen years be- fore. 96 GREAT ITALIAN* AND FRENCH COMPOSERS. La Scala rang with plaudits when the opera was produced, and Bellini's career was assured. " I Capuletti " Avas his next successful opera, per- formed at Venice in 1829, but it never became popular out of Italy. The significant period of Bellini's life was in the year 1831, which produced " La Sonnambula," to be followed by " Norma " the next season. Both these were written for and introduced before the Neapolitan public." In these works he reached his highest development, and by them he is best known to fame. The opera-story of " La Sonnam- bula," by Romani, an accomplished writer and scho- lar, is one of the most artistic and effective ever put into the hands of a composer. M. Scribe had already used the plot both as the subject of a vau- deville and a choregraphic drama ; but in Romani's hands it became a symmetrical story full of poetry and beauty. The music of this opera, throbbing with pure melody and simple emotion, as natural and fresh as a bed of wild flowers, went to the heart of the universal public, learned and un- learned ; and, in spite of its scientific faults, it will never cease to delight future generations, as long as hearts beat and eyes are moistened with human tenderness and sympathy. And yet, of this work an English critic wrote, on its first London pre- sentation : " Bellini has soared too high ; there is nothing of grandeur, no touch of true pathos in the com- DOXIZETTI AND BELLIXI. 97 mon-place workings of his mind. He cannot reach the opera semi-seria ; he should confine his powers to the musical drama, the one-act opera l>itffa" But the history of art-criticism is replete with such instances. " Norma " was also a grand triumph for the young composer from the outset, especially as the lofty character of the Druid priestess was sung by that unapproachable lyric tragedienne, the Sid- dons of the opera, Madame Pasta, Bellini is said to have had this queen of dramatic song in his mind in writing the opera, and right nobly did she vindicate his judgment, for no European audience afterward but was thrilled and carried away by her masterpiece of acting and singing in this part. Bellini himself considered " Norma " his chef cFceuvre. A beautiful Parisienne attempted to extract from his reluctant lips his preference of his own works. The lady finally overcame his evasions by the query : " But if you were out at sea, and should be shipwrecked " " Ah ! " he cried, without allowing her to finish. " I would leave all the rest and try to save 'Norma.'" " I Puritani " was composed for and performed at Paris in 1834, by that splendid quartette of artists, Grisi, Rubini, Tamburini, and Lablache. Bellini compelled the singers to execute after his style. While Rubini was rehearsing the tenor part, the composer cried out in rage : " You put no life into your music. Show some feeling. Don't 9 98 GREAT ITALIAN AND FRENCH COMPOSERS. you know what love is ? " Then changing his tone : " Don't you know your voice is a gold- mine that has not been fully explored ? You are an excellent artist, but that is not sufficient. You must forget yourself and represent Gualtiero. Let's try again." The tenor, stung by the admo- nition, then gave the part magnificently. After the success of " I Puritan!,"" the composer received the Cross of the Legion of Honor, an honor then not often bestowed. The "Puritani" season is still remembered, it is said, with peculiar pleasure by the older connoisseurs of Paris and London, as the enthusiasm awakened in musical circles has rarely been equaled. Bellini had placed himself under contract to write two new works immediately, one for Paris, the other for Naples, and retired to the villa of a friend at Puteaux to insure the more complete seclusion. Here, while pursuing his art with al- most sleepless ardor, he was attacked by his fatal malady, intestinal fever. "From his youth up," says his biographer Mould, " Vincenzo's eagerness in his art was such as to keep him at the piano night and day, till he was obliged forcibly to leave it. The ruling pas- sion accompanied him through his short life, and by the assiduity with which he pursued it brought on the dysentery which closed his brilliant career, peopling his last hours with the figures of those to whom his works owed so much of their success. DONIZETTI AXD BELLINI. 99 During the moments of delirium which preceded his death, he was constantly speaking of Lablache, Tamburini, and Grisi ; and one of his last recog- nizable impressions was that he was present at a brilliant representation of his last opera at the Salle Favart. His earthly career closed Septem- ber 23, 1835, at the age of thirty-one. On the eve of his interment, the Theatre Italien reopened with the "Puritani." It was an occa- sion full of solemn gloom. Both the musicians and audience broke from time to time into sobs. Tamburini, in particular, was so oppressed by the death of his young friend that his vocalization, generally so perfect, was often at fault, while the faces of Grisi, Rubini, and Lablache too plainly showed their aching hearts. Rossini, Cherubini, Paer, and Carafa had charge of the funeral, and M. Habeneck, chef tFor- chestre of the Academic Royale, of the music. The next remarkable piece on the funeral pro- gramme was a Lacrymosa for four voices without accompaniment, in which the text of the Latin hymn was united to the beautiful tenor melody in the third act of the " Puritani." This was executed by Rubini, Ivanoff, Tamburini, and La- blache. The services were performed at the Church of the Invalides, and the remains were interred in Pere Lachaise. Rossini had ever shown great love for Bellini, and Rosario Bellini, the stricken father, wrote to 100 GREAT ITALIAN AND FRENCH COMPOSERS. him a touching letter, in which, after speaking of his grief and despair, the old man said : " You always encouraged the object of my eternal regret in his labors ; you took him under your protection, you neglected nothing that could increase his glory and his welfare. After my son's death, what have you not done to honor my son's name and render it dear to posterity ? I learned this from the newspapers ; and I am pen- etrated with gratitude for your excessive kindness as well as for that of a number of distinguished artists, which also I shall never forget. Pray, sir, be my interpreter, and tell these artists that the father and family of Bellini, as well as of our compatriots of Catania, will cherish an imperish- able recollection of this generous conduct. I shall never cease to remember how much you did for my son. I shall make known everywhere, in the midst of my tears, what an affectionate heart belongs to the great Rossini, and how kind, hos- pitable, and full of feeling are the artists of France." * Bellini was affable, sincere, honest, and affec- tionate. Nature gave him a beautiful and ingenu- ous face, noble features, large, clear blue eyes, and abundant light hair. His countenance instantly won on the regards of all that met him. His dis- position was melancholy ; a secret depression often DOXIZETTI AND BELLIXI. 101 crept over his most cheerful hours. We are told there was a tender romance in his earlier life. The father of the lady he loved, a Neapolitan judge, refused his suit on account of his inferior social position. When Bellini became famous the judge wished to make amends, but Bellini's pride interfered. Soon after the young lady, who loved him unalterably, died, and it was said the com- poser never recovered from the shock. IV. DONIZETTI and Bellini were peculiarly moulded by the great genius of Rossini, but in their best works they show individuality, color, and special creative activity. The former composer, one of the most affluent in the annals of music, seemed to become more fresh in his fancies with increased production. He is an example of how little the skill and touch, belonging to unceasing work, should be despised in comparison with what is called inspiration. Donizetti arrived at his freshest creations at a time when there seemed but little left for him except the trite and threadbare. There are no melodies so rich and well fancied as those to be found in his later works ; and in sense of drama- tic form and effective instrumentation (always a faulty point with Donizetti) he displayed great progress at the last. It is, however, a noteworthy fact, that the latest Italian composers have shown themselves quite weak in composing expressly for 102 GREAT ITALIAN AND FRENCH COMPOSERS. the orchestra. No operatic overture since " Wil- liam Tell " has been produced by this school of music, worthy to be rendered in a concert-room. Donizetti lacked the dramatic instinct in con- ceiving his music. In attempting it he became hollow and theatric ; and beautiful as are the melo- dies and concerted pieces in " Lucia," where the subject ought to inspire a vivid dramatic nature with such telling effects, it is in the latter sense one of the most disappointing of operas. He redeemed himself for the nonce, however, in the fourth act of "La Favorita," where there is enough musical and dramatic beauty to condone the sins of the other three acts. The solemn and affecting church chant, the passionate romance for the tenor, the great closing duet in which the ecs- tasy of despair rises to that of exaltation, the re- sistless sweep of the rhythm all mark one of the most effective single acts ever written. He showed himself here worthy of companionship with Ros- sini and Meyerbeer. In his comic operas, " L'Elisir d'Amore," " La Fille du Regiment," and " Don Pasquale," there is a continual well-spring of sunny, bubbling hu- mor. They are slight, brilliant, and catching, everything that pedantry condemns, and the pop- ular taste delights in. Mendelssohn, the last of the German classical composers, admired " L'Eli- sir " so much that he said he would have liked to have written it himself. It may be said that while DONIZETTI AND BELLINI. 103 Donizetti lacks grand conceptions, or even great beauties for the most part, his operas contain so much that is agreeable, so many excellent oppor- tunities for vocal display, such harmony between sound and situation, that he will probably retain a hold on the stage when much greater composers are only known to the general public by name. Bellini, with less fertility and grace, possessed far more picturesqueness and intensity. His powers of imagination transcended his command over the working tools of his art. Even more lacking in exact and extended musical science than Donizetti, he could express what came with- in his range with a simple vigor, grasp, and beauty, which make him a truly dramatic composer. In addition to this, a matter which many great com- posers ignore, Bellini had extraordinary skill in writing music for the voice, not that which merely gave opportunity for executive trickery and em- bellishment, but the genuine accents of passion, pathos, and tenderness, in forms best adapted to be easily and effectively delivered. He had no flexibility, no command over mirth- ful inspiration, such as we hear in Mozart, Ros- sini, or even Donizetti. But his monotone is in subtile rapport with the graver aspects of nature and life. Chorley sums up this characteristic of Bellini in the following words : " In spite of the inexperience with which the instrumental score is filled up, the opening scene 104 GREAT ITALIAN AXD FREXCH COMPOSERS. of ' Xorma ' in the dim druidical wood bears the true character of ancient sylvan antiquity. There is daybreak again a fresh tone of reveille in the prelude to ' I Puritani.' If Bellini's genius was not versatile in its means of expression, if it had not gathered all the appliances by which sci- ence fertilizes Nature, it beyond all doubt included appreciation of truth, no less than instinct for beauty. VERDI. Iv 1872 the Khedive of Egypt, an oriental ruler, whose love of western art and civilization has since tangled him in economic meshes to escape from which has cost him his independence, produced a new opera with barbaric splendor of appointments, at Grand Cairo. The spacious theatre blazed with fantastic dresses and showy uniforms, and the curtain rose on a drama which gave a glimpse to the Arabs, Copts, and Francs present of the life and religion, the loves and hates of ancient Pharaonic times, set to music by the most celebrated of living Italian composers. That an eastern prince should have commis- sioned Giuseppe Verdi to write " Aida " for him, in his desire to emulate western sovereigns as a VERDI. 105 patron of art, is au interesting fact, but not won- derful or significant. The opera itself was freighted, however, with peculiar significance as an artistic work, far sur- passing that of the circumstances which gave it origin, or which saw its first production in the mysterious land of the Kile and Sphinx. Originally a pupil, thoroughly imbued with the method and spirit of Rossini, though never lacking in original quality, Verdi as a young man shared the suffrages of admiring audiences with Donizetti and Bellini. Even when he diverged widely from his parent stem and took rank as the representative of the melodramatic school of mu- sic, he remained true to the instincts of his Ital- ian training. The remarkable fact is that Verdi, at the age of fifty-eight, when it might have been safely as- sumed that his theories and preferences were finally crystallized, produced an opera in which he clasped hands with the German enthusiast, who preached an art system radically opposed to his own and lashed with scathing satire the whole musical cult of the Italian race. In "Aida" and the " Manzoni Mass," written in 18T3, Verdi, the leader among living Italian composers, practically conceded that, in the long, bitterly fought battle between Teuton and Italian in music, the former was the victor. In the opera we find a new departure, which, if not embodying 106 GREAT ITALIAN AXD FRENCH COMPOSERS. all the philosophy of the " new school," is stamped with its salient traits, viz. : The subordination of all the individual effects to the perfection and symmetry of the whole ; a lavish demand on all the sister arts to contribute their rich gifts to the heightening of the illusion ; a tendency to enrich the harmonic value in the choruses, the concerted pieces, and the instrumentation, to the great sacri- fice of the solo pieces ; the use of the heroic and mythical element as a theme. Verdi, the subject of this interesting revolu- tion, has filled a very brilliant place in modern musical art, and his career has been in some ways as picturesque as his music. Verdi's parents were literally hewers of wood and drawers of water, earning their bread, after the manner of Italian peasants, at a small set- tlement called La Roncali, near Busscto, where the future composer was born on October 9, 1814. His earliest recollections were with the little village church, where the little Giuseppe listened with delight to the church organ, for, as with all great musicians, his fondness for music showed itself at a very early age. The elder Verdi, though very poor, gratified the child's love of music when he was about eight by buying a small spinet, and placing him under the instruction of Provesi, a teacher in Busseto. The boy entered on his studies with ardor, and made more rapid VERDI. 107 progress than the slender facilities which were allowed him would ordinarily justify. An event soon occurred which was destined to wield a lasting influence on his destiny. He one day heard a skillful performance on a fine piano, while passing by one of the better houses of Bus- seto. From that time a constant fascination drew him to the house ; for day after day he lingered and seemed unwilling to go away lest he should perchance lose some of the enchanting sounds which so enraptured him. The owner of the premises was a rich merchant, one Antonio Barez- zi, a cultivated and high-minded man, and a pas- sionate lover of music withal. 'Twas his daugh- ter whose playing gave the young Verdi such pleasure. Signer Barezzi had often seen the lingering and absorbed lad, who stood as if in a dream, obli- vious to all that passed around him in the practi- cal work-a-day world. So one day he accosted him pleasantly and inquired why he came so con- stantly and stayed so long doing nothing. " I play the piano a little," said the boy, " and I like to come here and listen to the fine playing in your house." " Oh ! if that is the case, come in with me that you may enjoy it more at your ease, and hereafter you are welcome to do so whenever you feel in- clined." It may be imagined the delighted boy did not 108 GREAT ITALIAN AND FRENCH COMPOSERS. refuse the kind invitation, and the acquaintance soon ripened into intimacy, for the rich merchant learned to regard the bright young musician with much affection, which it is needless to say was warmly returned. Verdi was untiring in study and spent the early years of his youth in humble quiet, in the midst of those beauties of nature which have so powerful an influence in molding great susceptibilities. At his seventeenth year he had acquired as much musical knowledge as could be acquired at a place like Busseto, and he became anxious to go to Milan to continue his studies. The poverty of his family precluding any assist- ance from this quarter, he was obliged to find help from an eleemosynary fund then existing in his native town. This was an institution called the Monte di Pieta, which offered yearly to four young men the sum of twenty-five lire a month each, in order to help them to an education ; and Verdi, making an application and sustained by the influence of his friend the rich merchant, was one of the four whose good fortune it was to be selected. The allowance thus obtained with some assist- ance from Barezzi enabled the ambitious young musician to go to Milan, carrying with him some of his compositions. When he presented himself for examination at the conservatory, he was made to play on the piano, and his compositions exam- ined. The result fell on his hopes like a thunder- VERDI. 109 bolt. The pedantic and narrow-minded examiners not only scoffed at the state of his musical knowl- edge, but told him he was incapable of becoming a musician. To weaker souls this would have been a terrible discouragement, but to his ardor and self-confidence it was only a challenge. Ba- rezzi had equal confidence in the abilities of his prottye, and warmly encouraged him to work and hope. Verdi engaged an excellent private teacher and pursued his studies with unflagging energy, denying himself all but the barest necessities, and going sometimes without sufficient food. A stroke of fortune now fell in his way ; the place of organist fell vacant at the Busseto church, and Verdi was appointed to fill it. He returned home, and was soon afterward married to the daughter of the benefactor to whom he owed so much. He continued to apply himself with great diligence to the study of his art, and completed an opera early in 1839. He succeeded in arrang- ing for the production of this work, " L'Oberto, Conte de San Bonifacio," at La Scala, Milan ; but it excited little comment and was soon for- gotten, like the scores of other shallow or imma- ture compositions so prolifically produced in Italy. The impresario, Merelli, believed in the young composer though, for he thought he discovered signs of genius. So he gave him a contract to write three operas, one of which was to be an opera buff a, and to be ready in the following au- 10 110 GREAT ITALIAN AND FRENCH COMPOSERS. tumn. With hopeful spirits Verdi set to work on the opera, but that year of 1840 was to be one of great trouble and trial. Hard)y had he set to work all afire with eagerness and hope, when he was seized with severe illness. His recovery was followed by the successive sick- ening of his two children, who died, a terrible blow to the father's fond heart. Fate had the crowning stroke though still to give, for the young mother, agonized by this loss, was seized with a fatal inflammation of the brain. Thus within a brief period Verdi was bereft of all the sweet consolations of home, and his life became a burden to him. Under these conditions he was to write a comic opera, full of sparkle, gayety, and humor. Can we wonder that his work was a failure ? The public came to be amused by bright, joyous music, for it was nothing to them that the composer's heart was dead with grief at his afflictions. The audience hissed " Un Giorno di Regno," for it proved a funereal attempt at mirth. So Verdi sought to annul the contract. To this the impresario replied : " So be it, if you wish ; but, whenever you want to write again on the same terms, you will find me ready." To tell the truth, the composer was discour- aged by his want of success, and wholly broken down by his numerous trials. He now withdrew from all society, and, having hired a small room VERDI. HI in an out*of-the-way part of Milan, passed most of his time in reading the worst books that could be found, rarely going out, unless occasionally in the evening, never giving his attention to study of any kind, and never touching the piano. Such was his life from October, 1840, to January, 1841. One evening, early in the new year, while oftt walking, he chanced to meet Merelli, who took him by the arm ; and, as they sauntered toward the theatre, the impresario told him that he was in great trouble, Nicolai, who was to write an opera for him, having refused to accept a libretto entitled " Xabucco." To this Verdi replied : " I am glad to be able to relieve you of your difficulty. Don"!: you remember the libretto of ' II Proscritto, 1 which you procured for me, and for which I have never composed the music ? Give that to Xicolai in place of ' Nabucco.' " Merelli thanked him for his kind offer, and, as they reached the theatre, asked him to go in, that they might ascertain whether the manuscript of " II Proscritto " was really there. It was at length found, and Verdi was on the point of leaving, when Merelli slipped into his pocket the book of " Nabucco," asking him to look it over. For want of something to do, he took up the drama the next morning and read it through, realizing how truly grand it was in conception. But, as a lover forces himself to feign indifference 112 GREAT ITALIAN AND FRENCH COMPOSERS. to his coquettish inn(tiii<>r; "Attila," at Venice in 1846; and "Mac- betto," at Florence in 1847, were all of them successful works. The last created such a genu- ine enthusiasm that he was crowned with a golden laurel-wreath and escorted home from the theatre by an enormous crowd. " I Masnadieri " was written for Jenny Lind, and performed first in London ir( 184T with that great singer, Gardoni, and Lablache, in the cast. His next productions were " II Corsaro," brought out at Trieste in 1848 ; " La Battaglia di Legnano " at Rome in 1849 ; " Luisa Miller " at Naples in the same year ; and " Stiffelio " at Trieste in 1850. By this series of works Verdi impressed himself powerfully on his age, but in them he preserved faithfully the color and style of the school in which he had been trained. But he had now arrived at the com- mencement of his transition period. A distin- guished French critic marks this change in the following summary : " When Verdi began to write, the influences of foreign literature and new 114 GREAT ITALIAN AND FRENCH COMPOSERS. theories on art had excited Italian composers to seek a violent expression of the passions, and to leave the interpretation of amiable and delicate si-ntiments for that of sombre flights of the soul. A serious mind gifted with a rich imagination, Verdi became the chief of the new school. His music became more intense and dramatic ; by vigor, energy, verve, a certain ruggedness and sharpness, by powerful effects of sound, he con- quered an immense popularity in Italy, where success had hitherto been attained only by the charm, suavity, and abundance of the melodies produced." In " Rigoletto," produced in Venice in 1851, the full flowering of his genius into the melodra- matic style was signally shown. The opera story adapted from Victor Hugo's " Le Roi s'amuse " is itself one of the most dramatic of plots, and it seemed to have fired the composer into music singularly vigorous, full of startling effects and novel treatment. Two years afterward were brought out at Rome and Venice respectively two operas, stamped with the same salient qualities, "II Trovatore" and "La Traviata," the last a lyric adaptation of Dumas/fe's " Dame aux Came- lias." These three operas have generally been considered his masterpieces, though it is more than possible that the riper judgment of the future will not sustain this claim. Their popularity was such that Verdi's time was absorbed for several VERDI. H5 years in their production at various opera-houses, utterly precluding new compositions. Of his later operas may be mentioned " Les Vepres Sicili- cnnes," produced in Paris in 1855 ; " Un Ballo in M.ischera," performed at Rome in 1859 ; " La Forza del Destino," written for St. Petersburg, where it was sung in 1863 ; " Don Carlos," pro- duced in London in 1867 ; and " Aida" in Grand Cairo in 1S?':2. When the latter work was fin- ished, Verdi had composed twenty-nine operas, beside lesser works, and attained the age of fifty- seven. Verdi's energies have not been confined to music. An ardent patriot, he has displayed the deepest interest in the affairs of his country, and taken an active part in its tangled politics. After the war of 1859 he was chosen a member of the Assembly of Parma, and was one of the most in- fluential advocates for the annexation to Sardinia. Italian unity found in him a passionate advocate, and, when the occasion came, his artistic talent and earnestness proved that they might have made a vigorous mark in political oratory as well as in music. The cry of "Viva Vei'di " often resounded through Sardinia and Italy, and it was one of the war-slogans of the Italian war of liberation. This enigma is explained in the fact that the five let- u-r- of his name are the initials of those of Vitto- rio Emanuele R6 D'ltalia. His private resources 116 GREAT ITALIAN AND FRENCH COMPOSERS. were liberally poured forth to help the national cause, and in 1861 he was chosen a deputy in Parliament from Parma. Ten years later he was appointed by the Minister of Public Instruction to superintend the reorganization of the National Musical Institute. The many decorations and titular distinctions lavished on him show the high esteem in which he is held. He is a member of the Legion of Honor, corresponding member of the French Academy of Fine Arts, grand cross of the Prus- sian order of St. Stanislaus, of the order of the Crown of Italy, and of the Egyptian order of Os- manli. He divides his life between a beautiful residence at Genoa, where he overlooks the waters of the sparkling Mediterranean, and a country villa near his native Busseto, a house of quaint artistic architecture, approached by a venerable, moss-grown stone bridge, at the foot of which are a large park and artificial lake. When he takes his evening walks, the peasantry, who are devoted- ly attached to him, unite in singing choruses from his operas. In Verdi's bedroom, where alone he composes, is a fine piano of which instrument, as well as of the violin, he is a master a modest library, and an oddly-shaped writing-desk. Pictures and statu- ettcs, of which he is very fond, are thickly strewn about the whole house. Verdi is a man of vigor ous and active habits, taking an ardent interest VERDI. 117 in agriculture. But the larger part of his time is taken up in composing, writing letters, and read- ing works on philosophy, politics, and history. His personal appearance is very distinguished. A tall figure with sturdy limbs and square shoulders, surmounted by a finely-shaped head ; abundant hair, beard, and mustache, whose black is sprin- kled with gray ; dark-gray eyes, regular features, and an earnest, sometimes intense, expression make him a noticeable-looking man. Much sought after in the brilliant society of Florence, Rome, and Paris, our composer spends most of his time in the elegant seclusion of home. in. VERDI is the most nervous, theatric, sensuous composer of the present century. Measured by the highest standard, his style must be criticised as often spasmodic, tawdry, and meretricious. He instinctively adopts a bold and eccentric treat- ment of musical themes ; and, though there are always to be found stirring movements in his scores as well as in his opera stories, he constantly offends refined taste by sensation and violence. With a redundancy of melody, too often of the cheap and shallow kind, he rarely fails to please the masses of opera-goers, for his works enjoy a popularity not shared at present by any other composer. In Verdi a sudden blaze of song, brief spirited airs, duets, trios, etc., take the 118 GREAT ITALIAN* AND FREXCH COMPOSERS. place of the elaborate and beautiful music, chis- eled into order and symmetry, which character- izes most of the great composers of the past. Energy of immediate impression is thus gained at the expense of that deep, lingering power, full of the subtile side-lights and shadows of suggestion, which is the crowning benison of great music. He stuns the ear and captivates the senses, but does not subdue the soul. Yet, despite the grievous faults of these ope- ras, they blaze with gems, and we catch hc:o and there true swallow-flights of genius, that the noblest would not disown. With all his pueril- ities there is a mixture of grandeur. There are passages in " Ernani," " Rigoletto," " Traviata," " Trovatore," and " Aida," so strong and digni- fied, that it provokes a wonder that one with such capacity for greatness should often descend into such bathos. To better illustrate the false art which mars so much of Verdi's dramatic method, a compari- son between his " Rigoletto," so often claimed as his best work, and Rossini's " Otello " will be op- portune. The air sung by Gilda in the " Rigo- letto," when she retires to sleep on the eve of the outrage, is an empty, sentimental yawn ; and in the quartet of the last act, a noble dramatic op- portunity, she ejects a chain of disconnected, un- musical sobs, as offensive as Violetta's consump- tive cough. Desdemona's agitated air, -on the VERDI. 119 other hand, under Rossini's treatment, though broken short in the vocal phrase, is magnificently sustained by the orchestra, and a genuine passion is made consistently musical ; and then the won- derful burst of bravura, where despair and reso- lution run riot without violating the bounds of strict beauty in music these are master-strokes of genius restrained by art. In Verdi, passion too often misses intensity and becomes hysterical. He lacks the elements of ten- derness and humor, but is frequently picturesque and charming by his warmth and boldness of color. His attempts to express the gay and mirthful, as for instance in the masquerade music of " Travi- ata " and the dance music of " Rigoletto," are dreary, ghastly, and saddening ; while his ideas of tenderness are apt to take the form of mere sentimentality. Yet generalities fail in describ- ing him, for occasionally he attains effects strong in their pathos, and artistically admirable ; as, for example, the slow air for the heroine, and the dreamy song for the gypsy mother in the last act of " Trovatore." An artist who thus contra- dicts himself is a perplexing problem, but we must judge him by the habitual, not the occa- sional. Verdi is always thoroughly in earnest, never frivolous. He walks on stilts indeed, instead of treading the ground or cleaving the air, but is never timid or tame in aim or execution. If he 120 GREAT ITALIAN AND FRENCH COMPOSERS. cannot stir the emotions of the soul he subdues and absorbs the attention against even the dic- tates of the better taste ; while genuine beauties gleaming through picturesque rubbish often re- pay the true musician for what he has under- gone. So far this composer has been essentially rep- 'ative of melodramatic music, with all the faults and virtues of such a style. In "Aida," his last work, the world remarked a striking change. The noble orchestration, the power and beauty of the choruses, the sustained dignity of treatment, the seriousness and pathos of the whole work, reveal how deeply new purposes and meth- ods have been fermenting in the composer's devel- opment. Yet in the very prime of his powers, though no longer young, his next work ought to settle the value of the hopes raised by the last. CHERUBIXI AXD HIS PREDECESSORS. IN France, as in Italy, the regular musical drama was preceded by mysteries, masks, and re- ligious plays, which introduced short musical parts, as also action, mechanical effects, and dan- cing. The ballet, however, where dancing was CHERUBIXI AXD HIS PREDECESSORS. 121 the prominent feature, remained for a long time the favorite amusement of the French court until the advent of Jean Baptiste Lulli. The young Florentine, after having served in the king's band, was promoted to be its chief, and the composer of the music of the court ballets. Lulli, born in 1633, was bought of his parents by Chevalier de Guise, and sent to Paris as a present to Mile, de Montpensier, the king's niece. His capricious mistress, after a year or two, deposed the boy of fifteen from the position of page to that of scullion ; but Count Nogent, accidentally hearing him sing and struck by his musical talent, influenced the princess to place him under the care of good masters. Lulli made such rapid progress that he soon commenced to compose mu- sic of a style superior to that before current in divertissements of the French court. The name of Philippe Quinault is closely asso- ciated with the musical career of Lulli ; for to the poet the musician was indebted for his best libret- fcos. Born at Paris in 1636, Quinault's genius for poetry displayed itself at an early age. Before he was twenty he had written several successful comedies. Though he produced many plays, both tragedies and comedies, well known to readers of French poetry, his operatic poems are those which have rendered his memory illustrious. He died on November 29, 1688. It is said that during his last illness he was extremelv penitent on account 11 122 GREAT ITALIAN AND FRENCH COMPOSERS. of the voluptuous tendency of his works. All his lyrical dramas are full of beauty, but " Atys," " Phaeton," " Isis," and " Armide " have been ranked the highest. " Armide " was the last of the poet's efforts, and Lulli was so much in love with the opera, when completed, that he had it performed over and over again for his own plea- sure without any other auditor. When " Atys " was performed first in 1676, the eager throng began to pour in the theatre at ten o'clock in the morning, and by noon the building was filled. The King and the Count were charmed with the work in spite of the bitter dislike of Boileau, the Aristarchus of his age. " Put me in a place where I shall not be able to hear the words," said the latter to the box-keeper ; "I like Lulli's music very much, but have a sovereign contempt for Quinault's words." Lulli obliged the poet to write " Armide " five times over, and the felicity of his treatment is proved by the fact that Gluck afterward set the same poem to the music which is still occasionally sung in Germany. Lulli in the course of his musical career be- came so great a favorite with the King that the originally obscure kitchen-boy was ennobled. He was made one of the King's secretaries in spite of the loud murmurs of this pampered fraternity against receiving into their body a player and a buffoon. The musician's wit and affability, how- ever, finally dissipated these prejudices, espesially CHERUBIXI AXD HIS PREDECESSORS. 123 as he was wealthy and of irreproachable charac- ter. The King having had a severe illness in 1686, Lulli composed a " Te Deum " in honor of his re- covery. When this was given, the musician, in beating time with great ardor, struck his toe with his baton. This brought on a mortification, and there was great grief when it was announced that he could not recover. The Princes de Vendome lodged four thousand pistoles in the hands of a banker, to be paid to any physician who would cure him. Shortly before his death his confessor severely reproached him for the licentiousness of his operas, and refused to give him absolution un- less he consented to burn the score of " Achille et Polyxene," which was ready for the stage. The manuscript was put into the flames, and the priest made the musician's peace with God. One of the young princes visited him a few days after, when he seemed a little better. " What, Baptiste,"' the former said, " have you burned your opera ? You were a fool for giving such credit to a gloomy confessor and burning good music." " Hush, hush ! " whispered Lulli with a satiri- cal smile on his lip. " I cheated the good father, I only burned a copy. " He died singing the words, " II faut mourir, pecheur, il faut mourir" to one of his own opera airs. 124 GREAT ITALIAN AND FKENCH COMPOSERS. Lulli was not only a composer, but created his own orchestra, trained his artists in acting and singing, and was machinist as well as ballet-mas- ter and music-director. He was intimate with Corneille, Moliere, La Fontaine, and Boileau ; and these great men were proud to contribute the texts to which he set his music. He introduced female dancers into the ballet, disguised men having hitherto served in this capacity, and in many es- sential ways was the father of early French opera, though its foundation had been laid by Cardinal Mazarin. He had to fight against opposition and cabals, but his energy, tact, and persistence made him the victor, and won the friendship of the leading men of his time. Such of his music as still exists is of a pleasing and melodious charac- ter, full of vivacity and fire, and at times indicates a more deep and serious power than that of merely creating catching and tuneful airs. He was the inventor of the operatic overture, and introduced several new instruments into the orchestra. Apart from his splendid administrative faculty, he is en- titled to rank as an original and gifted, if not a great, composer. A lively sketch of the French opera of this period is given by Addison in No. 29 of the "Spectator." "The music of the French," he says, " is indeed very properly adapted to their pronunciation and accent, as their whole opera wonderfully favors the genius of such a gay, airy CHERUBIXI AXD HIS PREDECESSORS. 125 people. The chorus in which that opera abounds gives the parterre frequent opportunities of join- ing in concert with the stage. This inclination of the audience to sing along with the actors so prevails with them that I have sometimes known the performer on the stage to do no more in a celebrated song than the clerk of a parish church, who serves only to raise the psalm, and is after- ward drowned in the music of the congregation. Every actor that comes on the stage is a beau. The queens and heroines are so painted that they appear as ruddy and cherry-cheeked as milkmaids. The shepherds are all embroidered, and acquit themselves in a ball better than our English dan- cing-masters. I have seen a couple of rivers ap- pear in red stockings ; and Alpheus, instead of having his head covered with sedge and bulrushes, making love in a fair, full-bottomed periwig, and a plume of feathers ; but with a voice so full of shakes and quavers, that I should have thought the murmur of a country brook the much more agreeable music. I remember the last opera I saw in that merry nation was the ' Rape of Proser- pine,' where Pluto, to make the more tempting figure, puts himself in a French equipage, and brings Ascalaphus along with him as his valet de iJniutbre. This is what we call folly and imper- tinence, but what the French look upon as gay and polite." 126 GREAT ITALIAN AND FRENCH COMPOSERS. II. THE French musical drama continued with- out much change in the hands of the Lulli school (for the musician had several skillful imitators and successors) till the appearance of Jean Phi- lippe Rameau, who inaugurated a new era. This celebrated man was born in Auvergne in 1683, and w.is during his earlier life the organist of the Clermont cathedral church. Here he pursued the scientific researches in music which entitled him in the eyes of his admirers to be called the New- ton of his art. He had reached the age of fifty without recognition as a dramatic composer, when the production of " Hippolyte et Aricie " excited a violent feud by creating a strong current of op- position to the music of Lulli. He produced works in rapid succession, and finally overcame all obstacles, and won for himself the name of being the greatest lyric composer which France up to that time had produced. His last opera, "Les Paladins," was given in 1760, the composer being then seventy-seven. The bitterness of the art-feuds of that day, afterward shown in the Gluck-Piccini contest, was foreshadowed in that waged by Rameau against Lulli, and finally against the Italian new- comers, who sought to take possession of the French stage. The matter became a national quarrel, and it was considered an insult to France CHERUBIX! AXD HIS PREDECESSORS. 127 to prefer the music of an Italian to that of a Frenchman an insult which was often settled by the rapier point, when tongue and pen had failed as arbitrators. The subject was keenly de- bated by journalists and pamphleteers, and the press groaned with essays to prove that Rameau was the first musician in Europe, though his works were utterly unknown outside of France. Perhaps no more valuable testimony to the char- acter of these operas can be adduced than that of Baron Grimm : " In his operas Rameau has overpowered all his predecessors by dint of harmony and quantity of notes. Some of his choruses are very fine. Lulli could only sv.e-tain his vocal psalmody by a simple bass ; Rameau accompanied almost all his recitatives with the orchestra. These accompani- ments are generally in bad taste ; they drown the voice rather than support it, and force the singers to scream and howl in a manner which no ear of any delicacy can tolerate. "We come away from an opera of Rameau's intoxicated with harmony and stupefied with the noise of voice and instru- ments. His taste is always Gothic, and, whether his subject is light or forcible, his style is equally heavy. He was not destitute of ideas, but did not know what use to make of them. In his recitatives the sound is continually in opposition to the sense, though they occasionally contain happy declamatory passages. ... If he had 128 GREAT ITALIAN AND FRENCH COMPOSERS. formed himself in some of the schools of Italy, and thus acquired a notion of musical style and habits of musical thought, he never would have said (as he did) that all poems were alike to him, and that he could set the ' Gazette de France ' to music." From this it may be gathered that Rameau, though a scientific and learned musician, lacked imagination, good taste, and dramatic insight qualities which in the modern lyric school of France have been so preeminent. It may be ad- mitted, however, that he inspired a taste for sound musical science, and thus prepared the way for the great Gluck, who to all and more of Ra- meau's musical knowledge united the grand genius which makes him one of the giants of his art. Though Rameau enjoyed supremacy over the serious opera, a great excitement was created in Paris by the arrival of an Italian company, who in 1752 obtained permission to perform Italian burlettas and intermezzi at the opera-house. The partisans of the French school took alarm, and the admirers of Lulli and Rameau forgot their bickerings to join forces against the foreign in- truders. The battle-field was strewed with floods of ink, and the literati pelted each other with ferocious lampoons. Among the literature of this controversy, one pamphlet has an imperishable place, Rousseau's famous "Lettre sur la Musique Franpaise," in GHERUBIXI AXD HIS PREDECESSORS. 129 which the great sentimentalist espoused the cause of Italian music with an eloquence and acrimony rarely surpassed. The inconsistency of the author was as marked in this as in his private life. Not only did he at a later period become a great ad- vocate of Gluck against Piccini, but, in spite of his argument that it was impossible to compose music to French words, that the language was quite unfit for it, that the French never had music and never would, he himself had composed a good deal of music to French words and produced a French opera, " Le Devin du Village." Diderot was also a warm partisan of the Italians. Per- golesi's beautiful music having been murdered by the French orchestra players at the Grand Opera- House, Diderot proposed for it the following witty and laconic inscription : " Hie Marsyas Apollinem," * Rousseau's opera, " Le Devin du Village," was performed with considerable success, in spite of the repugnance of the orchestral performers, of whom Rousseau always spoke in terms of unmea- sured contempt, to do justice to the music. They burned Rousseau in effigy for his scoffs. " Well," said the author of the " Confessions," " I don't wonder that they should hang me now, after hav- ing so long put me to the torture." The eloquence and abuse of the wits, however } * Here Marsyas flayed Apollo. 130 GREAT ITALIAN AND FRENCH COMPOSERS did not long impair the supremacy of Rameau ; for the Italian company returned to their own land, disheartened by their reception in the French capital. Though this composer commenced so late in life, he left thirty-six dramatic works. His greatest work was " Castor et Pollux." Thir- . j years later Grimm recognized its merits by ad- mitting, in spite of the great faults of the com- poser, "It is the pivot on which the glory of French music turns." When Louis XIV. offered Rameau a title, he answered, touching his breast and forehead, " My nobility is here and here." This composer marked a step forward in French music, for he gave it more boldness and free- dom, and was the first really scientific and well- equipped exponent of a national school. His choruses were full of energy and fire, his orches- tral effects rich and massive. He died in 1764, and the mortuary music, composed by himself, was performed by a double orchestra and chorus from the Grand Opera. in. A DISTINGUISHED place in the records of French music must be assigned to Andre Ernest Gretry, born at Liege in 1741. His career covered the most important changes in the art as colored and influenced by national tastes, and he is justly re- garded as the father of comic opera in his adopted country. His childish life was one of much se- CHERUBIXI AND HIS PREDECESSORS. 131 vere discipline and tribulation, for he was dedi- cated to music by his father, who was first violin- ist in the college of St. Denis when he was only six years old. He afterward wrote of this time in his " Essais sur la Mnaiqne " : " The hour for the lesson afforded the teacher an opportunity to exercise his cruelty. He made us sing each in turn, and woe to him who made the least mistake ; he was beaten unmercifully, the youngest as well as the oldest. He seemed to take pleasure in in- venting torture. At times he would place us on a short round stick, from which we fell head over heels if we made the least movement. But that which made us tremble with fear was to see him knock down a pupil and beat him ; for then we were sure he would treat some others in the same manner, one victim being insufficient to gratify his ferocity. To maltreat his pupils was a sort of mania with him ; and he seemed to feel that his duty was performed in proportion to the cries and sobs which he drew forth." In 1T59 Grt'try went to Rome, where he stud- ied counterpoint for five years. Some of his works were received favorably by the Roman public, and he was made a member of the Phil- harmonic Society of Bologna. Pressed by pecu- niary necessity, Gretry determined to go to Paris ; but he stopped at Geneva on the route to earn money by singing-lessons. Here he met Voltaire at Ferney. " You are a musician and have geni- 133 GREAT ITALIAN AND FRENCH COMPOSERS. us," said the great man ; " it is a very rare thing, and I take much interest in you." In spite of this, however, Voltaire would not write him the text for an opera. The philosopher of Ferney feared to trust his reputation with an unknown musician. When Gretry arrived in Paris he still found the same difficulty, as no distinguished poet was disposed to give him a libretto till he 'had made his powers recognized. After two years of starving and waiting, Marmontel gave him the text of " The Huron," which was brought out in 1769 and well received. Other successful works followed in rapid succession. At this time Parisian frivolity thought it good taste to admire the rustic and na'ive. The idyls of Gessner and the pastorals of Florian were the favorite reading, and "Watteau the popular paint- er. Gentlefolks, steeped in artifice, vice, and intrigue, masked their empty lives under the as sumption of Arcadian simplicity, and minced and ambled in the costumes of shepherds and shep- herdesses. Marie Antoinette transformed her chalet of Petit Trianon into a farm, where she and her courtiers played at pastoral life the farce preceding the tragedy of the Revolution. It was the effort of dazed society seeking change. Gretry followed the fashionable bent by compos- ing pastoral comedies, and mounted on the wave of success. In 1774 " Fausse Magie " was produced with CHERUBIXI AND HIS PREDECESSORS. 133 the greatest applause. Rousseau war present, and the composer waited on him in his box, meeting a most cordial reception. On their way home after the opera, Gretry offered his new friend his arm to help him over an obstruction. Rousseau with a burst of rage said, " Let me make use of my own powers," and thenceforward the sentimental misanthrope refused to recognize the composer. About this time Gretry met the English humorist Hales, who afterward furnished him with many of his comic texts. The two combined to produce the " Jugement de Midas," a satire on the old style of music, which met with remarkable popular favor, though it was not so well received by the court. The crowning work of this composer's life was given to the world in 1785. This was " Ri- chard Cceur de Lion," and it proved one of the great musical events of the period. Paris was in ecstasies, and the judgment of succeeding gener- ations has confirmed the contemporary verdict, as it is still a favorite opera in France and Ger- many. The works afterward composed by Gre- try showed decadence in power. Singularly rich in fresh and sprightly ideas, he lacked depth and grandeur, and failed to suit the deeper and sound- er taste which Cherubini and Mehul, great fol- lowers in the footsteps of Gluck, gratified by a series of noble masterpieces. Gretry's services to his art, however, by his production of comic op- 12 134 GREAT ITALIAN AND FRENCH COMPOSERS. eras full of lyric vivacity and sparkle, have never been forgotten nor underrated. His bust was placed in the opera-house during his lifetime, and he was made a member of the French Academy of Fine Arts and Inspector of the Conservatory. Gretry possessed qualities of heart which en- deared him to all, and his death in 1813 was the occasion of a general outburst of lamentation. Deputations from the theatres and the Conserva- tory accompanied his remains to the cemetery, where Mehul pronounced an eloquent eulogium. In 1828 a nepheAV of Gretry caused the heart of him who was one of the glorious sons of Liege to be returned to his native city. Gretry founded a school of musical composi- tion in France which has since been cultivated with signal success, that of lyric comedy. The efforts of Lulli and Rameau had been turned in another direction. The former had done little more than set courtly pageants to music, though he had done this with great skill and tact, enrich- ing them with a variety of concerted and orches- tral pieces, and showing much fertility in the invention alike of pathetic and lively melodies. Rameau followed in the footsteps of Lulli, but expanded and crystallized his ideas into a more scientific form. He had indeed carried his love of form to a radical extreme. Jean Jacques Rous- seau, who extended his taste for nature and sim- plicity to music, blamed him severely as one who CHERUBIXI AND HIS PREDECESSORS. 135 neglected genuine natural tune for far-fetched harmonies, on the ground that " music is a child of nature, and has a language of its own for ex- pressing emotional transports, which can not be learned from thorough bass rules." Again Rous- seau, in his forcible tract on French music, says of Rameau, from whose school Gretry's music was such a significant departure : " One must confess that M. Rameau possesses very gre.it talent, much tire and euphony, and a considerable knowledge of harmonious combina- tions and effects ; one must also grant him the art of appropriating the ideas of others by changing their character, adorning and developing them, and turning them around in all manner of ways, On the other hand, he shows less facility in in- venting new ones. Altogether he has more skill than fertility, more knowledge than genius, or rather genius smothered by knowledge, but al- ways force, grace, and very often a beautiful c all so beautiful that no breathing time was granted the listener. In one year the opera was performed two hundred times, and at short intervals two hun- dred more representations took place. The Revolution culminated in the crisis of 1793, which sent the King to the scaffold. C'lie- rubini found a retreat at La Chartreuse, near Rouen, the country seat of his friend, the archi- tect Louis. Here he lived in tranquillity, and com- posed several minor pieces and a three-act opera, never produced, but afterward worked over into " Ali Baba " and " Faniska." In his Norman re- treat Cherubini heard of the death of his father, and Avhile suffering under this infliction, just be- fore his return to Paris in 1794, he composed the opera of " Elisa." This work was received with much favor at the Feydeau theatre, though it did not arouse the admiration called out by " Lodo- iska." In 1795 the Paris Conservatory was founded, and Cherubini appointed one of the five inspectors, 148 GREAT ITALIAN AND FRENCH COMPOSERS. as well as professor of counterpoint, his associates being Lesueur, Gretry, Gossec, and Mehul. The same year also saw him united to Cc-cile Tourette, to whom he had been so long and devotedly at- tached. Absorbed in his duties at the Conserva- tory he did not come before the public again till 1797, when the great tragic masterpiece of " Mc- dee " was produced at the Feydeau theatre. " Lo- do'iska " had been somewhat gay ; " Elisa," a work of graver import, followed ; but in "Medee" was attained the profound tragic power of Gluck and Beethoven. Hoffman's libretto was indeed un- worthy of the great music, but this has not pre- vented its recognition by musicians as one of the noblest operas ever written. It has probably been one of the causes, however, why it is so rarely represented at the present time, its overture alone being well known to modern musical audiences. This opera has been compared by critics to Shake- speare's " King Lear," as being a great expression of anguish and despair in their more stormy phases. Chorley tells us that, when he first p,aw it, he was irresistibly reminded of the lines in Barry Cornwall's poem to Pasta : " Now them art like some winged thing that cries Above some city, flaming fast to death." The poem which Chorley quotes from was in- spired by the performance of the great Pasta in Simone Mayer's weak musical setting of the fable CIIERUBIXI AND HIS PREDECESSORS. 149 of the Colchian sorceress, which crowded the opera-houses of Europe. The life of the French classical tragedy, too, was powerfully assisted by Rachel. Though the poem on which Cherubim worked was unworthy of his genius, it could not be from this or from lack of interest in the theme alone that this great work is so rarely performed ; it is because there have been not more than three or four actresses in the last hundred years com- bining the great tragic and vocal requirements ex- acted by the part. If the tragic genius of Pasta could have been united with the voice of a Cata- lani, made as it were of adamant and gold, Cheru- bini's sublime musical creation would have found an adequate interpreter. Mdlle. Tietjens, indeed, has been the only late dramatic singer who dared essay so difficult a task. Musical students rank the instrumental parts of this opera with the or- gan music of Bach, the choral fugues of Handel. and the symphonies of Beethoven, for beauty of form and originality of ideas. On its first representation, on the 13th of March, 1797, one of the journals, after praising its beauty, professed to discover imitations of Mehul's manner in it. The latter composer, in an indignant rejoinder, proclaimed himself and all others as overshadowed by Cherubim's genius : a singular example of artistic humility and justice. Three years after its performance in Paris, it was given at Berlin and Vienna, and stamped by the 150 GREAT ITALIAN AND FRENCH COMPOSERS. Germans as one of the world's great musical mas- terpieces. This \vork was a favorite one with Schubert, Beethoven, and Weber, and there have been few great composers who have not put on record their admiration of it. As great, however, as " Medec " is ranked, " Les Deux Journees," * produced in 1800, is the opera on which Cherubini's fame as a dramatic composer chiefly rests. Three hundred consecu- tive performances did not satisfy Paris ; and at Berlin and Frankfort, as well as in Italy, it was hailed with acclamation. Bouilly was the author of the opera-story, suggested by the generous ac- tion of a water-carrier toward a magistrate who was related to the author. The story is so inter- esting, so admirably written, that Goethe and Mendelssohn considered it the true model for a comic opera. The musical composition, too, is nearly faultless in form and replete with beauties. In this opera Cherubini anticipated the reforms of Wagner, for he dispensed with the old system which made the drama a web of beautiful melo- dies, and established his musical effects for the most part by the vigor and charm of the choruses and concerted pieces. It has been accepted as a model work by composers, and Beethoven was in the habit of keeping it by him on his writing- table for constant study and reference. * In German known as " Die Wassertragcr," in English " The Water-Carriers." CHERUBIXI AND HIS PREDECESSORS. 151 Spohr in his autobiography says: "I recol- lect, when the 'Deux Journees' was performed for the first time, how, intoxicated with delight and the powerful impression the work had made on me, I asked on that very evening to have the score given me, and sat over it the whole nisjht ; and that it was that opera chiefly that gave me my first impulse to composition." Weber, in a letter from Munich written in 1812, says : " Fancy my delight when I beheld lying upon the table of the hotel the play-bill with the magic name Ar- manct. I was the first person in the theatre, and planted myself in the middle of the pit, where I waited most anxiously for the tones which I knew beforehand would elevate and inspire me. I think 1 may assert boldly that ' Les Deux Journees ' is a really great dramatic and classical work. Eve- rything is calculated so as to produce the greatest effect ; all the various pieces are so much in their proper place that you can neither omit one nor make any addition to them. The opera displays a pleasing richness of melody, vigorous declama- tion, and all-striking truth in the treatment of situations, ever new, ever heard and retained with pleasure.'' Mendelssohn, too, writing to his father of a performance of this opera, speaks of the en- thusiasm of the audience as extreme, as well as of his own pleasure as surpassing anything he had ever experienced in a theatre. Mendelssohn, who never completed an opera, because he did not find 152 GREAT ITALIAN AND FRENCH COMPOSERS. until shortly before his death a theme which properly inspired him to dramatic creation, cor- responded with Planche, with the hope of getting from the latter a libretto which should unite the excellences of " Fidelio " with those of " Les Deux Journees." He found, at last, a libretto, which, if it did not wholly satisfy him, at least overcame some of his prejudices, in a story based on the Rhine myth of Lorelei. A fragment of it only was finished, and the finale of the first act is occa- sionally performed in England. BEFORE Napoleon became First Consul, he had been on familiar terms with Cherubini. The soldier and the composer were seated in the same box listening to an opera by the latter. Napo- leon, whose tastes for music w r ere for the suave and sensuous Italian style, turned to him and said : " My dear Cherubini, you are certainly an excellent musician ; but really your music is so noisy and complicated that I can make nothing of it" ; to which Cherubini replied : "My dear gen- eral, you are certainly an excellent soldier ; but in regard to music you must excuse me if I don't think it necessary to adapt my music to your com- prehension." This haughty reply was the begin- ning of an estrangement. Another illustration of Cherubim's sturdy pride and dignity was his rejoinder to Napoleon, when the latter was prais- CIIERUBIXI AND HIS PREDECESSORS. . 153 ing the works of the Italian composers, and cov- ertly sneering at his own. " Citizen General," he replied, " occupy yourself with battles and vic- tories, and allow me to treat according to my talent an art of which you are grossly ignorant." Even when Napoleon became Emperor, the proud composer never learned " to crook the pregnant hinges of his knee " to the man before whom Eu- rope trembled. On the 12th of December, 1800, a grand per- formance of "The Creation" took place at Paris. Napoleon on his way to it narrowly escaped beinu killed 1/7 an infernal machine. Cherubini was one of the deputation, representing the various corporations and societies of Paris, who waited on the First Consul to congratulate him upon his escape. Cherubini kept in the background, when the sarcasm, " I do not see Monsieur Cherubini," pronounced in the French way, as if to indicate that Cherubini was not worthy of being ranked with the Italian composers, brought him promptly forward. "Well,'' said Napoleon, "the French are in Italy." " Where would they not go," an swered Cherubini, " led by such a hero as you ? " This pleased the First Consul, who, however, soon got to the old musical quarrel. " I tell you I like Paisiello's music immensely ; it is soft and tran- quil. You have much talent, but there is too much accompaniment." Said Cherubini, "Citi- zen Consul, I conform myself to French taste." 154 GREAT ITALIAN AXD FRENCH COMPOSERS. " Your music," continued the other, " makes too much noise. Speak to me in that of Paisiello ; that is what lulls me gently." " I understand," replied the composer ; " you like music which doesn't stop you from thinking of state affairs." This witty rejoinder made the arrogant soldier frown, and the talk suddenly ceased. As a result of this alienation Cherubini found himself persistently ignored and ill-treated by the First Consul. In spite of his having produced such great masterpieces, his income was very small, apart from his pay as Inspector of the Con- servatory. The ill will of the ruler of France was a steady check to his preferment. When Na- poleon established his consular chapel in 1802, he invited Paisiello from Naples to become director at a salary of 12,000 francs a year. It gave great umbrage to the Conservatory that its famous teachers should have been slighted for an Italian foreigner, and musical circles in Paris were sha- ken by petty contentions. Paisiello, however, found the public indifferent to his works, and soon wearied of a place where the admiration to which he had been accustomed no longer flattered his complacency. He resigned, and his position was offered to Mehul, who is said to have declined it because he regarded Cherubini as far more worthy of it, and to have accepted it only on condition that his friend could share the duties and emolu- ments with him. Cherubini, fretted and irritated CHERUBIXI AND HIS PREDECESSORS. 155 by his condition, retired for a time from the pur- suit of his art, and devoted himself to flowers. The opera of " Anacreon," a powerful but une- qual work, which reflected the disturbance and agitation of his mind, was the sole fruit of his musical efforts for about four years. While Cherubim was in the deepest depression for he had a large family depending on him and small means with which to support them a ray of sunshine came in 1805 in the shape of an invitation to compose for the managers of the opera at Vienna. His advent at the Austrian capital produced a profound sensation, and he re- ceived a right royal welcome from the great mu- sicians of Germany. The aged Haydn, Hum- mel, and Beethoven became his warm friends with the generous freemasonry of genius, for his rank as a musician was recognized throughout Eu- rope. The Avar which broke out after our musician's departure from Paris between France and Austria ended shortly in the capitulation of Vim, and the French Emperor took up his residence at Schon- brunn. Napoleon received Cherubini kindly when he came in answer to his summons, and it was ar- ranged that a series of twelve concerts should be given alternately at Sch"nbrunn and Vienna. The pettiness which entered into the French Em- peror's nature in spite of his greatness continued to be shown in his ebullitions of wrath because 156 GREAT ITALIAN AXD FRENCH COMPOSERS. Cherubim persisted in holding his own musical views against the imperial opinion. Napoleon, however, on the eve of his return to France, urged him to accompany him, offering the long-coveted position of musical director ; but Cherubini was under contract to remain a certain length of time at Vienna, and he would not break his pledge. The winter of 1805 witnessed two remarkable musical events at the Austrian capital, the produc- tion of Beethoven's " Fidelio " and the last great opera written by Cherubini, " Faniska." Haydn and Beethoven were both present at the latter per- formance. The former embraced Cherubini and said to him, " You are my son, worthy of my love." Beethoven cordially hailed him as " the first dra- matic composer of the age." It is an interesting fact that two such important dramatic composi- tions should have been written at the same time, independently of each other ; that both works should have been in advance of their age ; that they shoiild have displayed a striking similarity of style ; and that both should have suffered from the reproach of the music being too learned for the public. The opera of " Faniska " is based on a Polish legend of great dramatic beauty, which, however, was not very artistically treated by the librettist. Mendelssohn in after years noted the striking resemblance between Beethoven and our composer in the conception and method of dra- matic composition. In one of his letters to Edou- CIIERUBIXI AND HIS PREDECESSORS. 157 ard Devrient he says, speaking of " Fidelio " : " On looking into the score, as well as <,n listening to the performance, I everywhere perceive Cheru- bini's dramatic style of composition. It is true- that Beethoven did not ape that style, hut i* was before his mind as his most cherished pattern." The unity of idea and musical color between "Faniska" and "Fidelio" seems to have been noted by many critics both of contemporary and succeeding times. Clierubini would gladly have written more for the Viennese, by whom he had been so cordially treated; but the unsettled times and his home- sickness for Paris conspired to take him back to the city of his adoption. He exhausted many ef- forts to find Mozart's tomb in Vienna, and desired to place a monument over his neglected remains, but failed to locate the resting-place of one he loved so much. Haydn, Beethoven, Hummel. Salieri, and the other leading composers reluc- tantly parted with him, and on April 1, 180(5, his return to Paris was celebrated by a brilliant IV- te improvised for him at the Conservatory. Fate, however, had not done with her persecutions, for fate in France took the shape of Xapoleon, whose hostility, easily aroused, was implacable ; who aspired to rule the arts and letters as he did armies and state policy ; who spared neither Cherubini nor Madame de Stael. Cherubini was neglected and insulted by authoritv, while honors were 14 158 GREAT ITALIAN AND FRENCH COMPOSERS. showered on Mehul, Gretry, Spontini, and Le- sueur. He sank into a state of profound depres- sion, and it was even reported in Vienna that he was dead. He forsook music and devoted him- self to drawing and botany. Had he not been a great musician, it is probable he would have ex- celled in pictorial art. One day the great painter David entered the room where he was working in crayon on a landscape of the Salvator Rosa style. So pleased was the painter that he cried, " Truly admirable ! Courage ! " In 1808 Cherubim found complete rest in a visit to the country-seat of the Prince de Chimay in Belgium, whither he was accompanied by his friend and pupil Auber. VII. WITH this period Cherubini closed his career practically as an operatic composer, though sev- eral dramatic works were produced subsequently, and entered on his no less great sphere of ecclesias- tical composition. At Chimay for a while no one dared to mention music in his presence. Drawing and painting flowers seemed to be his sole plea- sure. At last the president of the little music society at Chimay ventured to ask him to write a mass for St. Cecilia's feast day. He curtly re- fused, but his hostess noticed that he was agitated by the incident, as if his slumbering instincts had started again into life. One day the Princess placed music paper on his table, and Cherubini on CHERUBIXI AND HIS PREDECESSORS. 159 returning from his walk instantly began to com- pose, as if he had never ceased it. It is recorded that he traced out in full score the " Kyric " of his great mass in F during the intermission of a single game of billiards. Only a portion of the mass was completed in time for the festival, but, on Cherubim's return to Paris in 1809, it was publicly given by an admirable orchestra, and hailed with a great enthusiasm, that soon swept through Eu- rope. It was perceived that Cherubini had struck out for himself a new path in church music. Fetis, the musical historian, records its reception as fol- lows : "All expressed an unreserved admiration' for this composition of a new order, whereby Cherubini has placed himself above all musicians who have as yet written in the concerted style of church music. Superior to the masses of Haydn. Mozart, and Beethoven, and the masters of the Neapolitan school, that of Cherubini is as remark- able for originality of idea as for perfection in art." Picchiante, a distinguished critic, sums up the impressions made by this great work in the following eloquent and vigorous passage : " All the musical science of the good age of religion^ music, the sixteenth century of the Christian era, was summed up in Palcstrina, who flourished at that time, and by its aid he put into form noble and sublime conceptions. With the grave Gre- gorian melody, learnedly elaborated in vigorous counterpoint and reduced to greater clearness and 160 GREAT ITALIAN AXD FREXCH COMPOSERS, elegance without instrumental aid, Palestrina knew O ' how to awaken among his hearers mysterious, ur.ui. I. deep, vague sensations, that seemed caused by the objects of an unknown world, or by sii- K-rior ] towers in the human imagination. With the same profound thoughtfulness of the old Cath- olic music, enriched by the perfection which art has attained in two centuries, and with all the means which a composer nowadays can make use of, Cherubini perfected another conception, and this counted in utilizing the style adapted to dramatic composition when narrating the church text, by which means he was able to succeed in depicting man in his various vicissitudes, now ris- ing to the praises of Divinity, now gazing on the Supreme Power, now suppliant and prostrate. So that, while Palestrina's music places God before m.-n, that of Cherubini places man before God." Adolphe Adam puts the comparison more epigram- matic.illy in saying: "If Palestrina had lived in our own times, he would have been Cherubini." Tlu- masters of the old Roman school of church music had received it as an emanation of pure , sentiment, with no tinge of human warmth and color. Cherubini, on the contrary, aimed to make his music express the dramatic passion of the words, and in the realization of this he brought to bear all tin resources of a musical science un- equaled except perhaps by Beethoven. The noble masses in F and D were also written in 1809 CHERUBINI AND HIS PREDECESSORS. 161 and stamped themselves on public judgment as no less powerful works of genius and knowledge. Some of Cherubini's friends in 1809 tried to reconcile the composer with the Emperor, and in furtherance of this an opera was written anony- mously, " Pimmalione." Napoleon was delighted, and even affected to tears. Instantly, however, that Cherubini's name was uttered, he became dumb and cold. Nevertheless, as if ashamed of his injustice, he sent Cherubini a large sum of money, and a commission to write the music for his marriage ode. Several fine works followed in the next two years, among them the Mass in D, regarded by some of his admirers as his ecclesias- tical masterpiece. Mi el claims that in largeness of design and complication of detail, sublimity of conception and dramatic intensity, two works only of its class approach it, Beethoven's Mass in D and Xiedermeyer's Mass in D minor. In 1811 Halevy, the future author of "La Juive," became Cherubini's pupil, and a devoted friendship ever continued between the two. The opera of " Les Abencerages " was also produced, and it was pronounced nowise inferior to " Me- dee " and "Les Deux Journees." Mendelssohn many years afterward, writing to Moscheles in Paris, asked : " Has Onslow written anything new ? And old Cherubini ? There's a matchless fellow ! I have got his ' Abencerages,' and can not sufficiently admire the sparkling fire, the clear 102 GREAT ITALIAN AND FRENCH COMPOSERS. original phrasing, the extraordinary delicacy and refinement with which it is written, or feel grate- ful enough to the grand old man for it. Besides, it is all so free and bold and spirited." The work would have had a greater immediate success, had not Paris been in profound gloom from the dis- astrous results of the Moscow campaign and the horrors of the French retreat, where famine and disease finished the work of bayonet and cannon- ball. The unsettled and disheartening times dis- turbed all the relations of artists. There is but little record of Cherubini for several years. A significant passage in a letter written in 1814, speaking of several military marches written for a Prussian band, indicates the occupation of Paris by the allies and Napoleon's banishment in Elba. The period of " The Hundred Days " was spent by Cherubini in England ; and the world's won- der, the battle of Waterloo, was fought, and the Bourbons were permanently restored, before he again set foot in Paris. The restored dynasty de- lighted to honor the man whom Napoleon had slighted, and gifts were showered on him alike by the Court and by the leading academies of Eu- rope. The walls of his studio were covered with medals and diplomas ; and his appointment as di- rector of the King's chapel (which, however, he refused unless shared with Lesueur, the old in- cumbent) placed him above the daily demands of CIIERUBIXI AND HIS PREDECESSORS. 163 want. So, at the age of fifty-five, this great com- poser for the first time ceased to be anxious on the score of his livelihood. Thenceforward the life of Cherubim was destined to flow with a placid current, its chief incidents being the great works in church music, which he poured forth year after year, to the admiration and delight of the artistic world. These remarkable mas>es, \>\ their dramatic power, greatness of design, and wealth of instrumentation, excited as much dis- cussion and interest throughout Europe as the operas of other composers. That written in 1*1(5. the C minor requiem mass, is pronounced by Ier- lioz to be the greatest work of this description ever composed. "NVe get some pleasant glimpses of Cherubini as a man during this serene autumn of his life. Spohr tells us how cordially Cherubini, generally regarded as an austere and irritable man, received him. The world-renowned master, accustomed, to handle instruments in great orchestral ma^si-s, was not familiar with the smaller compositions known as chamber music, in which the Germans so excelled. He was greatly delighted when the youthful Spohr turned his attention to this form of music, and he insisted on the latter directing little concerts over and over again at his house. In 1821 Moscheles writes in his diary, apropos of Cherubini and his artistic surroundings: "I spent the evening at Ciceri's, son in-law of Isabey. 164 GREAT ITALIAN AND FRENCH COMPOSERS. the famous painter, where I was introduced to one of the most interesting circles of artists. In the first room were assembled the most famous paint- ers, engaged in drawing several things for their own amusement. In the midst of these was Cheru- bini, also drawing. I had the honor, like every one newly introduced, of having my portrait taken in caricature. Begasse took me in hand and suc- ceeded well. In an adjoining room were musici- ans and actors, among them Ponchard, Levasseur, Dugazon, Panseron, Mile, de Munck, and Mme. Livere, of the Theatre Franyais. The most in- teresting of their performances, which I attended merely as a listener, was a vocal quartet by Cheru- bini, performed under his direction. Later in the evening, the whole party armed itself with larger or smaller 'mirlitons ' (reed-pipe whistles), and on these small monotonous instruments, sometimes made of sugar, they played, after the fashion of Russian horn music, the overture to ' Demophon,' two frying-pans representing the drums." On the 27th of March this " mirliton " concert was re- peated at Ciceri's, and on this occasion Cherubini took an active part. Moscheles relates of that evening : " Horace Vernet entertained us with his ventriloquizing powers, M. Salmon with his imita- tion of a horn, and Dugazon actually with a mir- liton solo. Lafont and I represented the classical music, which, after all, held its own." The distinguished pianist, in further pleasant CHERUBIXI AXD HIS PREDECESSORS. 1G5 gossip about Cherubim, tells us of hearing the first performance of a pasticcio opera, composed by Cherubim, Pae'r, Berton, Boieldieu, and Kreut- zer, in honor of the christening of the Duke of Bordeaux. Of the part written by Cherubini he speaks in the warmest praise, and says quizzically of the composer : " His squeaky sharp little voice was sometimes heard in the midst of his conduct- ing, and interrupted my state of ecstasy caused by his presence and composition." In 1822 Cherubini became Director of the re- established Conservatory, that institution having fallen into some decay, and displayed great ad- ministrative power and grasp of detail in bring- ing order out of chaos. His vigilance and ex- perience, seconded by an able staff of professors, including the foremost musical names of France, soon made the Conservatory what it has since re- mained, the greatest musical college of the world. He was incessant in the performance of his duties, and spared neither himself nor his staff of pro- fessors to build up the institution. His spirit com- municated itself both to masters and pupils. Ten o'clock every morning saw him at his office, and interviews even with the great were timed watch in hand. This law of order even prompted him to rebuke the Minister of Fine Arts severely when one day that functionary met an appointment tar- dily. Fetis tells us : " To his new functions he brought the most scrupulous exactitude of duty, 166 GREAT ITALIAN AND FRENCH COMPOSERS. that spirit of order which he possessed during the whole of his life, and an entire devotion to the prosperity of the establishment. Severe and ex- acting toward the professors and servants as he was with himself, he brought with him little love hi his connections with the artists placed under his authority." His official duties finished, this incessant worker occupied his time with original composition, or copying out the scores of other composers from memory. Though habitually cold and severe in his man- ner during these latter years, there was a spring of playful tenderness beneath. One day a child of great talent was brought by his father, -a poor man, to see Cherubini. The latter's first exclama- tion was : " This is not a nursing hospital for in- fants." Relenting somewhat, he questioned the boy, and soon discovered his remarkable talents. The same old man was charmed and caressed the youngster, saying, " Bravo, my little friend ! But why are you here, and what can I do for you ? " "A thing that is very easy, and which would make me very happy," was the reply ; " put me into the Conservatory." " It's a thing done," said Cherubini ; " you are one of us." He afterward said to his friends playfully : " I had to be careful about pushing the questions too far, for the baby was beginning to prove that he knew more about music than I did myself." His merciless criticism of his pupils did not CHERUBIXI AND HIS PREDECESSORS. 167 surpass his own modesty and diffidence. One day, when a symphony of Beethoven was about to be played at a concert, just prior to one of his own works, he said, " Now I am going to appear as a very small boy indeed." The mutual affection of Cherubini and Beethoven remained unabated through life, as is shown by the touching letter written by the latter just before his death, but which Cherubini did not receive till after that event. The letter was as follows : VIEN-XA, JA/re.'t 15, lx. HIGHLY ESTEEMED SIR : I joyfully take advantage of this opportunity to address you. I have done so often in spirit, as I prize your theatri- cal works beyond others. The artistic world has only to lament that in Germany, at least, no new dramatic work of yours has appeared. Highly as all your works are va'ued by true connoisseurs, still it is a great loss to art not to possess any fresh production of your great genius for the theatre. True art is imperishable, and the true artist feels heartfelt pleasure in grand works of genius, and that is what enchants me when I hear a new composition of yours ; in fact, I take greater interest in it than in my own ; in short, I love and honor you. "Were it not that my continued bad health stops my coming to see you in Paris, with what exceeding delight would I discuss ques- tions of art with you ! Do not think that this is meant merely to serve as an introduction to the favor I am about to ask of you. I hope and feel sure that you do not for a moment suspect me of such base sentiments. I 168 GREAT ITALIAN AND FRENCH COMPOSERS. recently completed a grand solemn Mass, and have re solved to offer it to the various European courts, as it is not my intention to publish it at present. I have there- fore asked the King of France, through the French em- bassy here, to subscribe to this work, and I feel certain that his Majesty would at your recommendation agree to do so. My critical situation demands that I should not solely fix my eyes upon heaven, as is my wont ; on the con- trary, it would have me fix them also upon earth, here below, for the necessities of life. Whatever may be the fate of my request to you, I shall for ever continue to love and esteem you ; and you for ever remain of all my contemporaries that one whom I esteem the most. If you should wish to do me a very great favor, you would effect this by writing to me a few lines, which would solace me much. Art unites all ; how much more, then, true artists! and perhaps you may deem me wor- thy of being included in that number. With the highest esteem, your friend and servant, LUDWIG VAX BEETHOVEN. LlTDWIG CHEniTBINI. Cherubini's admiration of the great German is indicated in an anecdote told by Professor Ella. The master rebuked a pupil who, in referring to a performance of a Beethoven symphony, dwelt mostly on the executive excellence : " Young man, let your sympathies be first wedded to the cre- ation, and be you less fastidious of the execution ; accept the interpretation, and think more of the CHERUPJXI AND III3 PREDECESSORS. 169 creation of these musical works which are written for all time and all nations, models for imitation and above all criticism." VIII. As a man Cherubini presented himself in many different aspects. Extremely nervous. />/-//.vy"<, irritable, and absolutely independent, he was apt to offend and repel. But under his stern reserve of character there beat a warm heart and gener- ous sympathies. This is shown by the fact that, in s>ite of the unevcnness of his temper, he was almost worshiped by those around him. Auber, llalevy, Bert on, Boieldieu, Mehtil, Spontini, and Adam, who were so intimately associated with him, speak of him with words of the warmest affection, llalevy, indeed, rarely alluded to him without tears rushing to his eyes ; and the slightest term of disrespect excited his warmest indignation. It is recorded that, after rebuking a pupil with sar- castic severity, his fine face would relax with a smile so affectionate and genial that his whilom victim could feel nothing but enthusiastic respect. Without one taint of envy in his nature, conscious of his own extraordinary powers, he was quick to recognize genius in others ; and his hearty praise of the powers of his rivals shows how sound and generous the heart was under his irritability. His proneness to satire and power of epigram made him enemies, but even these yielded to the suavity 15 170 GREAT ITALIAN AXD FREXCII COMPOSERS. and fascination which alternated with his bitter moods. His sympathies were peculiarly open for young musicians. Mendelssohn and Liszt were stimulated by his warm and encouraging praise when they first visited Paris ; and even Berlioz, whose turbulent conduct in the Conservatory had so embittered him at various times, was heartily applauded when his first great mass was produced. Arnold gives us the following pleasant picture of Cherubini : " Cherubini in society was outwardly silent, modest, unassuming, pleasing, obliging, and pos- sessed of the finest manners. At the same time, he who did not know that he was with Cherubini would think him stern and reserved, so well did the com- poser know how to conceal everything, if only to avoid ostentation. He truly shunned brag or speaking of himself. Cherubmi's voice was feeble, probably from narrow-chestedness, and somewhat hoarse, but was otherwise soft and agreeable. His French was Italianized. . . . His head was bent forward, his nose was large and aquiline ; his eye- brows were thick, black, and somewhat bushy, overshadowing his eyes. His eyes were dark, and glittered with an extraordinary brilliancy that animated in a wonderful way the whole face. A thin lock of hair came over the center of his fore- head, and somehow gave to his countenance a peculiar softness." The picture painted by Ingres, the great artist, CHERUBIXI AXD HIS PREDECESSORS. 171 now in the Luxembourg gallery, represents the composer with Polyhymnia in the background stretching out her hand over him. His face, framed in waving silvery hair, is full of majesty and brightness, and the eye of piercing luster. Cherubim was so gratified by this effort of the painter that he sent him a beautiful canon set to words of his own. Thus his latter years were spent in the society of the great artists and wits of Paris, revered by all, and recognized, after Beethoven's death, as the musical giant of Eu- rope. Rossini, Meyerbeer, TVeber, Schumann in a word, the representatives of the most diverse schools of composition bowed equally before this great name. Rossini, who was his antipodes in genius and method, felt his loss bitterly, and after his death sent Cherubini's portrait to his widow with these touching words : " Here, my dear madam, is the portrait of a great man, who is as young in your heart as he is in my mind." Actively engaged as Director of the Conserva- tory, which he governed with consummate ability, his old age was further employed in producing that series of great masses which rank with the symphonies of Beethoven. His creative instinct and the fire of his imagination remained unim- paired to the time of his death. Mendelssohn in a letter to Moscheles speaks of him as "that truly wonderful old man, whose genius seems bathed in immortal youth." His opera of " Ali Baba," com- 172 GREAT ITALIAN AND FRENCH COMPOSERS. posed at seventy-six, though inferior to his other dramatic works, is full of beautiful and original music, and was immediately produced in several of the principal capitals of Europe ; and the sec- ond Requiem mass, written in his eightieth year, is one of his masterpieces. On the 12th of March, 1842, the old composer died, surrounded by his affectionate family and friends. His fatal illness had been brought on in part by grief for the death of his son-in-law. M. Turcas, to whom he was most tenderly attached. His funeral was one of great military and civic magnificence, and royalty itself could not have been honored with more splendid obsequies. The congregation of men great in arms and state, in music, painting, and literature, who did honor to the occasion, has rarely been equaled. His own noble Requiem mass, composed the year before his death, was given at the funeral services in the church of St. Roch by the finest orchestra and voices in Europe. Similar services were held throughout Europe, and everywhere the opera- houses were draped in black. Perhaps the death of no musician ever called forth such universal exhibitions of sorrow and reverence. Cherubim's life extended from the early part of the reign of Louis XVI. to that of Louis Phi- lippe, and was contemporaneous with many of the most remarkable events in modern history. The energy and passion which convulsed society dur- CHERUBIXI AND HIS PREDECESSORS. 173 ing his youth and early manhood undoubtedly had much to do in stimulating that robust and virile quality in his mind which gave such charac- ter to his compositions. The fecundity of his in- tellect is shown in the fact that he produced four hundred and thirty works, out of which only eighty have been published. In this catalogue there are twenty-five operas and eleven ma -. As an operatic composer he laid the founda- tion of the modern French school. Uniting the melody of the Italian with the science of the German, his conceptions had a dramatic fire and passion which were, however, free from anything appertaining to the sensational and meretricious. His forms were indeed classically severe, and his style is defined by Adolphe Adam as the resur- rection of the old Italian school, enriched by the discoveries of modern harmony. Though he was the creator of French opera as we know it now, he was free from its vagaries and extravagances. He set its model in the dramatic vigor and pictu- resqueness, the clean-cut forms, and the noble in- strumentation which mark such masterpieces as " Faniska," " Medee," " Les Deux Journees," and " Lodo'iska." The purity, classicism, and wealth of ideas in these works have always caused them to be cited as standards of ideal excellence. The reforms in opera of which Gluck was the protago- nist, and Wagner the extreme modern exponent, characterize the dramatic works of Cherubini, 174 GREAT ITALIAN AND FRENCH COMPOSERS. though he keeps them within that artistic limit which a proper regard for melodic beauty pre- scribes. In the power and propriety of musical declamation his operas are conceded to be with- out a superior. His overtures hold their place in classical music as ranking with the best ever writ- ten, and show a richness of resource and knowl- edge of form in treating the orchestra which his his contemporaries admitted were only equaled by Beethoven. Cherubini's place in ecclesiastical music is that by which he is best known to the musical public of to-day ; for his operas, owing to the im- mense demands they make on the dramatic and vocal resources of the artist, are but rarely pre- sented in France, Germany, and England, and never in America. They are only given where music is loved on account of its noble traditions, and not for the mere sake of idle and luxurious amusement. As a composer of masses, however, Cherubini's genius is familiar to all who frequent the services of the Roman Church. His relation to the music of Catholicism accords with that of Sebastian Bach to the music of Protestantism. Haydn, Mozart, and even Beethoven, are held by the best critics to be his inferiors in this form of composition. His richness of melody, sense of dramatic color, and great command of orchestral effects, gave him commanding power in the inter- pretation of religious sentiments ; while an ardent MfiHUL, SPONTIXI, AND EALfiVY. 175 faith inspired with passion, sweetness, and devo- tion what Place styles his " sublime visions." Miel, one of his most competent critics, writes of him in this eloquent strain : "If he represents the passion and death of Christ, the heart feels itselt wounded with the most sublime emotion ; and when he recounts the ' Last Judgment ' the blood freezes with dread at the redoubled and menacing calls of the exterminating angel. All those admi- rable pictures that the Raphaels and Michael An- gelos have painted with colors and the brush, Che- rubim brings forth with the voice and orchestra." In brief, if Cherubini is the founder of a later school of opera, and the model which his suc- cessors have always honored and studied if they have not always followed, no less is he the chief of a later, and by common consent the greatest, school of modern church music. 3IEIITL, SPOXTIXI, AND HALfiVY. i. THE influence of Gluck was not confined to Cherubini, but was hardly less manifest in mold- ing the style and conceptions of Mehul and Spon- tini,* who held prominent places in the history of * It is a little singular that some of the most distinguished names in the annals of French music were foreigners. Thua Gluck was ;i (u-i-man, as also was Meyerbeer, while Cherubini and Spontini were Italians. 176 GREAT ITALIAN AND FRENCH COMPOSERS. the French opera. Henri fitienne Mehul was the son of a French soldier stationed at the Givet barracks, where he was born June 24, 1763. His early love of music secured for him instructions from the blind organist of the Franciscan church at that garrison town, under whom he made as- tonishing progress. He soon found he had out- stripped the attainments of his teacher, and con- trived to place himself under the tuition of the celebrated Wilhelm Hemser, who was organist at a neighboring monastery. Here Mehul spent a number of happy and useful years, studying com- position with Hemser and literature with the kind monks, who hoped to persuade their young charge to devote himself to ecclesiastical life. Mehul's advent in Paris, whither he went at the age of sixteen, soon opened his eyes to his true vocation, that of a dramatic composer. The excitement over the contest between Gluck and Piccini was then at its height, and the youthful musician was not long in espousing the side of Gluck with enthusiasm. He made the acquaint- ance of Gluck accidentally, the great chevalier interposing one night to prevent his being ejected from the theatre, into one of whose boxes Mehul had slipped without buying a ticket. Thence for- ward the youth had free access to the opera, and the friendship and tuition of one of the master minds of the age. An opera, " Cora et Alonzo," had been com- MEIIUL, SPOXTIXI, AND IIALEVY. 177 posed at the age of twenty and accepted at tin- opera ; but it was not till 1T90 that he got a hear- ing in the comic opera of " Euphrasque et Corn din," composed under the direction of Glnc-k This work was brilliantly successful, and ''Stia- toniee," which appeared two years afterward established his reputation. The French critics describe both these early works as being equally admirable in melody, orchestral accompaniment, and dramatic effect. The stormiest year of the revolution was not favorable to operatic composi- tion, and Mehul wrote but little music except pieces for republican festivities, much to his own disgust, for he was by no means a warm friend of the republic. In 1797 he produced his"Le Jeune Henri,"' which nearly caused a riot in the theatre. The story displeased the republican audience, who hissed and hooted till the turmoil compelled the fall of the curtain. They insisted, however, on the overture, which is one of great beauty, being performed over and over again, a compliment which has rarely been accorded to any composer. Meliul's appointment as inspector and professor in the newly organized Conservatory, at the same time with Cherubini, left him but little leisure for musical composition ; but he found time to write the spectacular opera "Adrian,'' which Avas fierce- ly condemned by a republican audience, not as a musical failure, but because their alert and sus- 178 GREAT ITALIAN* AND FRENCH COMPOSERS. picious tempers suspected in it covert allusions to the dead monarchy. Even David, the painter, said he would set the torch to- the opera-house rather than witness the triumph of a king. In 1806 Mehul produced the opera "Uthal," a work of stinking vigor founded on an Ossianic theme, in which he made the innovation of banishing the violins from the orchestra, substituting therefor the violas. It was in "Joseph," however, composed in 1807, that this composer vindicated his right to be called a musician of great genius, and entered fully into a species of composition befitting his grand style. Most of his contemporaries were incapable of appreciating the greatness of the work, though his gifted rival Cherubim gave it the warmest praise. In Germany it met with in- stant and extended success, and it is one of the few French operas of the old school which still continue to be given on the German stage. In England it is now frequently sung as an oratorio. It is on this remarkable work that Mehul's lasting reputation as a composer rests outside of his own nation. The construction of the opera of "Jo- seph " is characterized by admirable symmetry of form, dramatic power, and majesty of the choral and concerted passages, while the sustained beauty of the orchestration is such as to challenge com- parison with the greatest works of his contempo- raries. Such at least is the verdict of Fetis, who MfiHUL, SPOXTIX1, AND IIALEVV. 179 was by no means inclined to be over-indulgent in criticising Mehul. The fault in this opera, as in all of Mehul's works, appears to have been a lack of bright and graceful melody, though in the modern tendencies of music this defect is rapidly being elevated into a virtue. The last eight years of Mehul's life were de- pressed by melancholy and suffering, proceeding from pulmonary disease. He resigned his place in the Conservatory, and retired to a pleasant little estate near Paris, Avhere he devoted himself to raising flowers, and found some solace in the society of his musical friends and former pupils, who were assiduous in their attentions. Finally becoming dangerously ill, he went to the island of Hyeres to find a more genial climate. But here he pined for Paris and the old companion- ships, and suffered more perhaps by fretting for the intellectual cheer of his old life than he gained by balmy air and sunshine. He writes t<> one of his friends after a short stay at Hyeres : " I have broken up all my habits ; I am deprived of all my old friends ; I am alone at the end of the world, surrounded by people whose language I scarcely understand ; and all this sacrifice to obtain a little more sun. The air which best agrees with me is that which I breathe among you." He returned to Paris for a few wn-ks only, to breathe his last on October 18, 1817, aged fifty-four. 180 CHEAT ITALIAN AND FRENCH COMPOSERS. Mehul was a high-minded and benevolent man, wrapped np in his art, and singularly childlike in the practical affairs of life. Abhorring intrigue, he was above all petty jealousies, and even sacri- ficed the situation of chapel-master under Napo- leon, because he believed it should have been given to the greatest of his rivals, Cherubini. When he died Paris recognized his goodness as a man as well as greatness as a musician by a touching and spontaneous expression of grief, and funeral hon- ors were given him throughout Europe. In 1822 his statue was crowned on the stage of the Grand Opera, at a performance of his " Valentine de Rohan." Notwithstanding his early death, he composed forty-two operas, and modern musicians and critics give him a notable place among those who were prominent in building up a national stage. A pupil and disciple of Gluck, a cordial co-worker with Cherubini, he contributed largely to the glory of French music, not only by his ge- nius as a composer, but by his important labors in the reorganization of the Conservatory, that nur- sery which has fed so much of the highest musi- cal talent of the world. ir. LriGi GASPARDO PACIFICO SPONTINI, born of peasant parents at Majolati, Italy, November 14, 1774, displayed his musical passion at an early age. Designed for holy orders from childhood, MEHUL, SPONTLXI, AND IIALEVY. Igl In* priestly tutors could not make him study ; but he delighted in the service of the church, with its organ and choir effects, for here his true vocation asserted itself. He was wont, too, to hide in the belfry, and revel in the roaring orchestra of met- al, when the chimes were rung. On one occasion a stroke of lightning precipitated him 4 'rom his dangerous perch to the floor below, and the his- tory of music nearly lost one of its great lights. The bias of his nature was intractable, and he was at last permitted to study music, at first under the charge of his uncle Joseph, the cure of Jesi, and finally at the Naples Conservatory, where he was entered at the age of sixteen. His iirst opera, " I Puntigli delle Donne," was composed at the age of twenty-one, and per- formed at Rome, where it was kindly received. The French invasion unsettled the affairs of Italy, and Spontini wandered somewhat aimlessly, una- ble to exercise his talents to advantage till he went to Paris in 1803, where he found a large number of brother Italian musicians, and a cordial recep- tion, though himself an obscure and untried youth, He produced several minor works on the French stage, noticeably among them the one-act opera of " Milton," in which he stepped boldly out of his Italian mannerism, and entered on that path afterward pursued with such brilliancy and bold- ness. Yet, though his talents began to be recog- nized, life was a trying struggle, and it is doubt- 16 182 GREAT ITALIAN AND FRENCH COMPOSERS. ful if he could have overcome the difficulties in his way when he was ready to produce " La Ves- tale," had he not enlisted the sympathies of the Empress Josephine, who loved music, and played the part of patroness as gracefully as she did all others. By Napoleon's order " La Vestale " was re- hearsed against the wish of the manager and crit- ics of the Academy of Music, and produced De- cember 15, 1807. Previous to this some parts of it had been performed privately at the Tuileries, and the Emperor had said : " M. Spontini, your opera abounds in fine airs and effective duets. The march to the place of execution is admirable. You will certainly have the great success you so well deserve." The imperial prediction was jus- tified by consecutive performances of one hun- dred nights. His next work, " Fernand Cortez," sustained the impression of genius earned for him by its predecessor. The scene of the revolt is pronounced by competent critics to be one of the finest dramatic conceptions in operatic music. In 1809 Spontini married the niece of Erard, the great pianoforte-maker, and was called to the direction of the Italian opera ; but he retained this position only two years, from the disagreeable conditions he had to contend with, and the cabals that were formed against him. The year 1814 witnessed the production of "Pelage," and two MEIIUL, SPOXTIXI, AND IIALKVY. 183 years later " Les Dieux Rivaux " was composed, in conjunction with Persuis, Berton, and Kreut- zer ; but neither work attracted much attention. The opera of " Olympie," worked out on the plan of "La Vcstale " and " Cortez," was produced in 1819. Spontini was embittered by its poor success, for he had built many hopes on it, and wrought long and patiently. That he was not in his best vein, and like many other men of genius was not always able to estimate justly his own work, is undeniable ; for Spontini, contrary to the opinion of his contemporaries and of posterity, regarded this as his best opera. His acceptance of the Prussian King's oiler to become musical director at Berl'.i was the result of his chagrin. Here he remained for twenty years. " Olympie " succeeded better at Berlin, though the boisterous- ness of the music seems to have called out some sharp strictures even among the Berlinese, whose penchant for noisy operatic effects was then as now a butt for the satire of the musical wits. Apro- pos of the long run of " Olympie " at Berlin, an amusing anecdote is told on the authority of Cas- tel Blaze. A wealthy amateur had become deaf, and suffered much from his deprivation of the en- joyment of his favorite art. After trying many physicians, he was treated in a novel fashion by his latest doctor. "Come with me to the opera this evening/' wrote down the doctor. " What's the use ? I can't hear a note," was the impatient re- 184 GREAT ITALIAN AXD FRENCH COMPOSERS. joinder. " Xover mind," said the other ; " come, and you will see something at all events." So the twain repaired to the theatre to hear Spontini's " Olympic." All went well till one of the over- whelming finales, which happened to be played that evening more fortissimo than usual. The patient turned around beaming with delight, ex- claiming, " Doctor, I can hear." As there was no reply, the happy patient again said, " Doctor, I tell you, you have cured me." A blank stare alone met him, and he found that the doctor was as deaf as a post, having fallen a victim to his own pre- scription. The German wits had a similar joke afterward at Halevy's expense. The "Punch" of Vienna said that Halevy made the brass play so loudly that the French horn was actually blown quite straight. Among the works produced at Berlin were " Xurmahal," in 1825 ; " Alcidor," the same year; and in 1829, " Agnes von Hohenstaufen." Various other new works were given from time to time, but none achieved more than a brief hearing. Spon- tini's stiff-necked and arrogant will kept him in continual trouble, and the Berlin press aimed its arrows at him with incessant virulence : a war which the composer fed by his bitter and witty rejoinders, for he was an adept in the art of in- vective. Had he not been singularly adroit, he would have been obliged to leave his post. But he gloried in the disturbance he created, and was MEHUL, SPOXTIXI, AND IIALEVV. 1^5 proof against the assaults of his numerous ene- mies, made so largely by his having come of the French school, then as now an all-suflicient cause of Teutonic dislike. Spontini's unbending intol- erance, however, at last undermined his musical supremacy, so long held good with an iron hand ; and an intrigue headed by Count Briihl, intendant of the Royal Theatre, at last obliged him to re- sign after a rule of a score of years. His influence on the lyric theatre of Berlin, however, had been valuable, and he had the glory of forming singers among the Prussians, who until his time had thought more of cornet-playing than of beautiful and true vocalization. The Prussian King al- lowed him on his departure a pension of 16,000 francs. When Spontini returned to Paris, though he was appointed member of the Academy of Fine Arts, he was received with some coldness by the musical world. He had no little difficulty in get- ting a production of his operas ; only the Con- servatory remained faithful to him, and in their hall large audiences gathered to hear composi- tions to which the opera-house denied its stage. New idols attracted the public, and Spontini, though burdened with all the orders of Europe, was obliged to rest in the traditions of his earlier career. A passionate desire to see his native land before death made him leave Paris in 1850, and he went to Majolati, the town of his birth, where 186 GREAT ITALIAN AND FRENCH COMPOSERS. he died after a residence of a few months. His cradle was his tomb. in. A WELL-KNOWX musical critic sums up his judgment of Halevy in these words : " If in France a contemporary of Louis XIV., an ad- mirer of Racine, could return to us, and, full of the remembrance of his earthly career under that renowned monarch, he should wish to find the nobly pathetic, the elevated inspiration, the ma- jestic arrangements of the olden times upon a modern stage, we would not take him to the Th6- atre Fran9ais, but to the Opera on the day in which one of Halevy's works was given." Unlike M6hul and Spontini, with whom in point of style and method Halevy must be asso- ciated, he was not in any direct sense a disciple of Gluck, but inherited the influence of the latter through his great successor Cherubim, of whom Halevy was the favorite pupil and the intimate friend. Fromental Halevy, a scion of the He- brew race, which has furnished so many geniuses to the art world, left a deep impress on his times, not simply by his genius and musical knowledge, which was profound, varied, and accurate, but by the elevation and nobility which lifted his mark up to a higher level than that which we accord to mere musical gifts, be they ever so rich and fer- tile. The motive that inspired his life is suggested MEHUL, SPONTIXI, AND IIALKVY. Jg? in his devout saying that music is an art that God has given us, in which the voices of all na- tions may unite their prayers in one harmonious rhythm. Ilah'vy was a native of Paris, born May -27. 1799. He entered the Conservatory at the age of eleven years, where he soon attracted the particu- lar attention of Cherubim. When he was twenty the Institute awarded him the grand prize for the composition of a cantata ; and he also received a government pension which enabled him to dwell at Rome for two years, assiduously cultivating his talents in composition. IIal6vy returned to Paris, but it was not till 1857 that he succeeded in having an opera produced. This portion of his life was full of disappointment and chilled ambi- tions ; for, in spite of the warm friendship of Cherubini, who did everything to advance his in- terests, he seemed to make but slow progress in popular estimation, though a number of operas were produced. Halevy's full recognition, however, was found in the great work of " La Juive," produced Feb- ruary 23, 1835, with lavish magnificence. It i< said that the managers of the Opera expended 150,000 francs in putting it on the stage. This opera, which surpasses all his others in passion, strength, and dignity of treatment, was interpret- ed by the greatest singers in Europe, and the pub- lic reception at once assured the composer that his 188 GREAT ITALIAN AND FRENCH COMPOSERS. place in music was fixed. Many envious critics, however, declaimed against him, asserting that success was not the legitimate desert of the opera, but of its magnificent presentation. Halevy an- swered his detractors by giving the world a de- lightful comic opera, "L'Jiclair," which at once testified to the genuineness of his musical inspira- tion and the versatility of his powers, and was received by the public with even more pleasure than "La Juive." Halevy's next brilliant stroke (three unsuccess- ful works in the mean while having been written) was " La Reine de Chypre," produced in 1841. A somewhat singular fact occurred during the performance of this opera. One of the singers, every time he came to the passage, Cc niortel qu'on remarque Tient-il Plus quo nous de la Parque Lefil? was in the habit of fixing his eyes on a certain proscenium box wherein were wont to sit certain notabilities in politics and finance. As several of these died during the first run of the work, super- stitious people thought the box was bewitched, and no one cared to occupy it. Two fine works, " Charles VI." and " Le Val d'Andorre," succeed- ed at intervals of a few years ; and in 1849 the no- ble music to ^Eschylus's " Prometheus Bound " was MEIIUL, SPOXTIXI, AND HALEYY. jgg written with an idea of reproducing the supposed yffects of the enharmonic style of the Greeks. Halevy's opera of " The Tempest," written for London, and produced in 1850, rivaled the suc- cess of "La Juive." Balfe led the orchestra, and its popularity caused the basso Lablaclie to write the following epigram : The "Tempest" of Differs from other tump These raiu hail. That rains gold. The Academy of Fine Arts elected the compo-er secretary in 1854, and in the exercise of his du- ties, which involved considerable literary compo- sition, Ilalevy showed the same elegance of style and good taste which marked his musical writings. He did not, however, neglect his own proper work, and a succession of operas, which were cordially received, proved how unimpaired and vigorous his intellectual faculties remained. The composers death occurred at Nice, whither he had gone on account of failing strength. March 17, 1862, His last moments were cheered by the attentions of his family and the consolations of philosophy and literature, which he dearly loved to discuss with his friends. His ruling passion dis- played itself shortly before his end in characteris- tic fashion. Trying in vain to reach a book on the table, he said : " Can I do nothing now in 190 CHEAT ITALIAN AND FRENCH COMPOSERS. time ? " On the morning of his death, wishing to be turned on his bed, he said to his daughter, " Lay me down like a gamut," at each movement repeating with a soft smile, "Do, re, mi," etc., until the change was made. These were his last words. The celebrated French critic Sainte-Beuve pays a charming tribute to Halevy, whom he knew and loved well : " Halevy had a natural talent for writing, which he cultivated and perfected by study, by a taste for reading which he always gratified in the intervals of labor, in his study, in public con- veyances everywhere, in fine, when he had a minute to spare. He could isolate himself com- pletely in the midst of the various noises of his family, or the conversation of the drawing-room if he had no part in it. He wrote music, poetry, and prose, and he read with imperturbable atten- tion while people around him talked. " He possessed the instinct of languages, was familiar with German, Italian, English, and Latin, knew something of Hebrew and Greek. He was conversant with etymology, and had a perfect passion for dictionaries. It was often difficult for him to find a word ; for on opening the dictionary somewhere near the word for which he was look- ing, if his eye chanced to fall on some other, no matter what, he stopped to read that, then another and another, until he sometimes forgot the word MtfHUL, SPOXTLNI, AND IIALEVY. 191 he sought. It is singular that this estimable man, so fully occupied, should at times have nourished some secret sadness. Whatever the hidden wound might be, none, not even his most intimate friends, knew what it was. He never made any complaint. Halevy's nature was rich, open and communica- tive. He was well organized, accessible to the sweets of sociability and family joys. In fine, he had, as one may say, too many strings to his bow to be very unhappy for any length of time. To define him practically, I would say he was a bee that had not lodged himself completely in his hive, but was seeking to make honey elsewhere too." MEHUL labored successfully in adapting the noble and severe style of Gluck to the changing requirements of the French stage. The turmoil and passions of the revolution had stirred men's souls to the very roots, and this influence was per- petuated and crystallized in the new forms given to French thought by Napoleon's wonderful career. Meliul's musical conceptions, which culminated in the opera of " Joseph," were characterized by a stir, a vigor, and largeness of dramatic movement, which came close to the familiar life of that re- markable period. His great rival Cherubini, on the other hand, though no less truly dramatic in fitting musical expression to thought and passion, was so austere and rigid in his ideals, so domi- 192 GREAT ITALIAN AND FRENCH COMPOSERS. natecl by musical form and an accurate science \vhich would concede nothing to popular preju- dice and ignorance, that he won his laurels, not by force of the natural flow of popular sympathy, but by the sheer might of his genius. Cherubim's severe works made them models and foundation stones for his successors in French music ; but Mehul familiarized his audiences with strains dig- nified yet popular, full of massive effects and bril- liant combinations. The people felt the tramp of the Napoleonic armies in the vigor and movement of his measures. Spontini embodied the same influences and characteristics in still larger degree, for his mu- sical genius was organized on a more massive plan. Deficient in pure graceful melody alike with Mehul, he delighted in great masses of tone and vivid orchestral coloring. His music was full of the military fire of his age, and dealt for the most part with the peculiar tastes and passions engendered by a condition of chronic warfare. Therefore dramatic movement in his operas was always of the heroic order, and never touched the more subtile and complex elements of life. Spon- tini added to the majestic repose and ideality of the Gluck music-drama (to use a name now natu- ralized in art by Wagner) the keenest dramatic vigor. Though he had a strong command of ef- fects by his power of delineation and delicacy of detail, his prevalent tastes led him to encumber MEIIUL, SPOXTIXI, AND II.VLEVY. 193 his music too often with overpowering military effects, alike tonal and scenic. Riehl, a great German critic, says : "He is more successful in the delineation of masses and groups than in the portrayal of emotional scenes ; his rendering of the national struggle between the Spaniards and Mexicans in ' Cortez ' is, for example, admirable. He is likewise most successful in the manage- O ment of large masses in the instrumentation. In this respect he was, like Napoleon, a great tacti- cian." In "La Vestale" Spontini attained his <-ftn-ri . Schluter in his "History of Mu- sic" gives it the following encomium : " His por- trayal of character and truthful delineation of passionate emotion in this opera are masterly in- deed. The subject of 'La Vestale' (which re- sembles that of 'Norma,' but how differently treated !) is tragic and sublime as well as intensely emotional. Julia, the heroine, a prey to guilty n ; the severe but kindly high pries: Licinius, the adventurous lover, and his faithful friend Cinna ; pious vestals, cruel priests, bold warriors, and haughty Romans, are represented with statuesque relief and finish. Both these works, 'La Yestale' (1807) and 'Cortez' (1809), *re among the finest that have been written for the stage ; they are remarkable for naturalness and sublimeness, qualities lost sight of in the noisy instrumentation of his later works." Halevy, trained under the influences of Cheru- 17 194 GREAT ITALIAN AND FRENCH COMPOSERS. bini, was largely inspired by that great master's musical purism and reverence for the higher laws of his art. Halevy's powerful sense of the dra- matic always influenced his methods and sympa- thies. Not being a composer of creative imagina- tion, however, the melodramatic element is more prominent than the purely tragic or comic. His music shows remarkable resources in the produc- tion of brilliant and captivating though always tasteful effects, which rather please the senses and the fancy than stir the heart and imagination. Here and there scattered through his works, nota- bly so in " La Juive," are touches of emotion and grandeur ; but Halevy must be characterized as a composer who is rather distinguished for the bril- liancy, vigor, and completeness of his art than for the higher creative power, Avhich belongs in such preeminent degree to men like Rossini and Weber, or even to Auber, Meyerbeer, and Gounod. It is nevertheless true that Halevy composed works which will retain a high rank in French art. " La Juive," " Guido," " La Reine de Chypre," and " Charles VI." are noble lyric dramas, full of beauties, though it is said they can never be seen to the best advantage off the French stage. Ha- levy's genius and taste in music bear much the same relation to the French stage as do those of Verdi to the Italian stage ; though the former composer is conceded by critics to be a greater purist in musical form, if he rarely equals the BOIELDIEU AND AUBER. 195 Italian composer in the splendid bursts of musi- cal passion with which the latter redeems so much that is meretricious and false, and the charming melody which Verdi shares with his countrymen. BOIELDIEU AND AUBER. THE French school of light opera, founded by G iv try, reached its greatest perfection in the au- thors of " La Dame Blanche " and " Fra Diavolo," though to the former of these composers must be accorded the peculiar distinction of having given the most perfect example of this style of composi- tion. Frangois Adrien Boieldieu, the scion of a Norman family, was born at Rouen, December l(i, 1775. He received his early musical training at the hands of Broche, a great musician and the ca- thedral organist, but a drunkard and brutal task- master. At the age of sixteen he had become a good pianist and knew something of composition. At all events his passionate love of the theatre prompted him to try his hand at an opera, which was actually performed at Rouen. The revolution which made such havoc with the clergy and their dependents ruined the Boieldieu family (the elder Bo'ieldieu had been secretary of the arehiepiscopal diocese), and young Franyois, at the age of nine- 196 GREAT ITALIAN AND FRENCH COMPOSERS. teen, was set adrift on the world, his heart full of Lope and his ambition bent on Paris, whither he set his feet. Paris, however, proved a stern stepmother at the outset, as she always has been to the strug- gling and unsuccessful. He was obliged to tune pianos for his living, and was glad to sell his bril- liant c/i, the compos- er's ch,<; ; "Le Domino Xoir," 1837 ; "Les Diamants de la C'ou- ronne," 1841 ; " Carlo Brasehi,'' 1842 ; "Ilaydee." 1847; "L'Enfant Prcdigue," ls',0 : "Zeriine," 1851, written for Madame Alboni ; " Manon Lescaut," ls>6 ; " La Fiancee du Koi do Garbe," 18G7 ; "Le Premier Jour de Bonheur," 1868 ; and " Le Revo d' Amour," 1869. The last two works were composed after Auber had passed his eighti- eth year. The indifference of this Anacreon of music to renown is worthy of remark. lie never attended 200 GREAT ITALIAN AND FRENCH COMPOSERS. the performance of his own pieces, and disdained applause. The highest and most valued distinc- tions were showered on him ; orders, jeweled swords, diamond snuffboxes, were poured in from all the courts of Europe. Innumerable invita- tions urged him to visit other capitals, and receive honor from imperial hands. But Auber was a true Parisian, and could not be induced to leave his beloved city. He was a Member of the Insti- tute, Commander of the Legion of Honor, and Cherubini's successor as Director of the Conserva- tory. He enjoyed perfect health up to the day of his death in 1871. Assiduous in his duties at the Conservatory, and active in his social rela- tions, which took him into the most brilliant cir- cles of an extended period, covering the reigns of Napoleon I., Charles X., Louis Philippe, and Na- poleon III., he yet always found time to devote several hours a day to composition. Auber was a small, delicate man, yet distinguished in appear- ance, and noted for wit. His bons mots were cele- brated. While directing a musical soiree when over eighty, a gentleman having taken a white hair from his shoulder, he said laughingly, " This hair must belong to some old fellow who passed near me." A good anecdote is told d propos of an inter- view of Auber with Charles X. in 1830. " Ma- saniello," a bold and revolutionary work, had just been produced, and stirred up a powerful popular BOIELDIEU AND AUBER. 201 ferment. " Ah, M. Auber," said tin- King, " you have no idea of the good your work has done me." "How, sire?" "All revolutions resemble each other. To sing one is to provoke one. What can I do to please you ? " " Ah, sire ! I am not am- bitious." " I am disposed to name you director of the court concerts. Be sure that I shall remem- ber you. But," added he, taking the artist's arm with a cordial and confidential air, "from this day forth you understand me well, M. Auber, I expect you to bring out the 'Muette' but r< />/ seldom" It is well known that the Brussels riots of 1830, which resulted in driving the Dutch out of the country, occurred immediately after a per- formance of this opera, which thus acted the part of " Lillibulero " in English political annals. It is a striking coincidence that the death of the au- thor of this revolutionary inspiration, May 13, 1871, was partly caused by the terrors of the Paris Commune. in. BoiELDiEr and Auber are by far the most brilliant representatives of the French school of Opera Comique. The work of the former which shows his genius at its best is " La Dame Blanche." It possesses in a remarkable degree dramatic- piquancy of rhythm, and beauty of structure. Mr. Franz Hueffer speaks of this opera as follows : "Peculiar to Boieldieu is a certain homely 202 GREAT ITALIAN AND FRENCH COMPOSERS. sweetness of melody which proves its kinship to that source of all truly national music, the popu- lar song. The ' Dame Blanche ' might be con- sidered as the artistic continuation of the chanson, in the same sense as Weber's ' Der Freischiitz ' has been called a dramatized Volkslied. With regard to Bo'ieldieu's work, this remark indicates at the same time a strong development of what has been described as the ' amalgamating force of French art and culture ' ; for it must be borne in mind that the subject treated is Scotch. The plot is a compound of two of Scott's novels : the ' Monastery ' and ' Guy Mannering.' Julian, alias George Brown, comes to his paternal castle unknown to himself. He hears the songs of his childhood, which awaken old memories in him ; but he seems doomed to misery and disappoint- ment, for on the day of his return his hall and his broad acres are to become the property of a vil- lain, the unfaithful steward of his own family. Here is a situation full of gloom and sad foreboding. But Scribe and Boieldieu knew better. Their hero is a dashing cavalry officer, who makes love to every pretty woman he comes across, the ' White Lady of Avenel' among the number. Yet no one who has witnessed the impersonation of George Brown by the great Roger can have failed to be impressed with the grace and noble gallantry of the character." The tune of "Robin Adahy' introduced by BOIELDIEU AND AUBER. 203 Boieldieu and described as " le chant ordinaire de la tribu d'Avenel," would hardly be recognized by a genuine Scotchman ; but what it loses in homely vigor it has gained in sweetness. The musician's taste is always gratified in Boieldieu's two great comic operas by the grace and finish of the instru- mentation, and the carefully composed t night's perform- ance. After the admirable trio, which is the flment of the work, Levas^eur. wlio person- ated Jj< i'(r"i,'. sprang through the trap to rejoin the kingdom of the dead, whence he can mysteriously. Ilt.i-t, on the other hand, had to remain on the earth, a converted man. and des- tined to happiness in marriage with his prii I&.tbilt' . Xourrit, the H<>1 ri of the performance, misled by the situation and the fervor of his own feelings, threw himself into the trap, which wa- not properly set. Fortunately the mattresses be- neath had not all been removed, or the tenor would have been killed, a doom which those on the stage who saw the accident expected. The audience supposed it was part of the opera, and the people on the stage were full of terror and lamentation, when Xourrit appeared to calm their fears. Mile. Dorus burst into tears of joy, and the audience, recognizing the situation, broke into shouts of applause. The opera was brought out in London the >anu year, with nearly the same cast, but did not excite so much enthusia.-m as in Paris. Lord Mount Edgcumbe, who represented the connoisseurs of the old school, expreed the then current opinion 214 GREAT ITALIAN AND FRENCH COMPOSERS. of London audiences : " Never did I see a more disagreeable or disgusting performance. The sight of the resurrection of a whole convent of nuns, who rise from their graves and begin dan- cing like so many bacchantes, is revolting ; and a sacred service in a church, accompanied by an organ on the stage, not very decorous. Neither does the music of Meyerbeer compensate for a fable which is a tissue of nonsense and improba- bility." * M. Veron was so delighted with the great suc- cess of " Robert " that he made a contract with Meyerbeer for another grand opera, " Les Hugue- nots," to be completed by a certain date. Mean- while, the failing health of Mme. Meyerbeer obliged the composer to go to Italy, and work on the opera was deferred, thus causing .him to lose thirty thousand francs as the penalty of his bro- ken contract. At length, after twenty-eight re- hearsals, and an expense of more than one hun- dred and sixty thousand francs in preparation, " Les Huguenots " was given to the public, Feb- ruary 26, 1836. Though this great work excited transports of enthusiasm in Paris, it was inter- dicted in many of the cities of Southern Europe on account of the subject being a disagreeable one to ardent and bigoted Catholics. In London it has always been the most popular of Meyer- * Yet Lord Mount Edgcumbe is inconsistent enough to be an ardent admirer oi' Mozart's " Zauberflote." MEYERBEER. -J15 beer's three great operas, owing perhaps partly to the singing of Mario and Grisi, and more lately of Titieus and Giuglini. AVhen Spontini resigned his place as chapel- master at the Court of Berlin, in 183:2, Meycrbtvr succeeded him. lie wrote much music of an ac- cidental character in his new position, but a slum- ber seems to have fallen on his greater creative faculties. The German atmosphere was not fa- vorable to the fruitfulness of Meyerbeer's genius. He seems to have needed the volatile and spark- ling life of Paris to excite him into full activity. Or perhaps he was not willing to produce one of his operas, with their large dependence on elabo- i-ate splendor of production, away from the Paris Grand Opera. . During Meyerbeer's stay in Berlin he introduced Jenny Lind to the Berlin public, as he afterward did indeed to Paris, her debut there being made in the opening performance of " Das Feldlager in Schlesien," afterward remodeled into "L'&oileduXord." Meyerbeer returned to Paris in 1849, to pre- sent the third of his great operas, " Le Proplu-te/' It was given Avith Roger, Viardot-Garcia, and Castellan in the principal characters. Mine. Viar- dot-Garcia achieved one of her greatest dramatic triumphs in the difficult part of Fides. In Lon- don the opera also met with splendid success, hav- ing, as Choi-ley tells us, a great advantage over the Paris presentation in " the remarkable person- 216 GREAT ITALIAN AND FRENCH COMPOSERS. al beauty of Signer Mario, whose appearance in his coronation robes reminded one of some bishop- saint in a picture by Van Eyck or Dtirer, and who could bring to bear a play of feature without grimace into the scene of false fascination, entire- ly beyond the reach of the clever French artist Roger, who originated the character." " L'Fjtoile du Nord " was given to the public February 16, 1854. Up to this time the opera of " Robert " had been sung three hundred and thir- ty-three times, " Les Huguenots " two hundred and twenty-two, and " Le Prophete " a hundred and twelve. The " Pardon de Ploermel," also known as " Dinorah," was offered to the world of Paris April 4, 1859. Both these operas, though beautiful, are inferior to his other works. in. MEYERBEER, a man of handsome private for- tune, like Mendelssohn, made large sums by his operas, and was probably the wealthiest of the great composers. He lived a life of luxurious ease, and yet labored with intense zeal a certain number of hours each day. A friend one day begged him to take more rest, and he answered smilingly, " If I should leave work, I should rob myself of my greatest pleasure ; for I am so accustomed to work that it has become a neces- sity." Probably few composers have been more splendidly rewarded by contemporary fame and MEYERBEER. 217 wealth, or been more idolized by their admirers. No less may it be said that few have been the object of more severe criticism. His youth was spent amid the severest classic influences of (icr man music, and the spirit of romanticism and na- tionality, which blossomed into such beautiful and characteristic works as those composed by his friend and fellow pupil Weber, also found in his heart an eloquent echo. But Meyerbeer resolutely disenthralled himself from what he appeared to have regarded as trammels, and followed out an ambition to be a cosmopolitan composer. In pur- suit of this purpose he divested himself of that fine flavor of individuality and devotion to art for its own sake which marks the highest labors of genius. He can not be exempted from the criticism that he regarded success and the imme- diate plaudits of the public as the only satisfac- tory rewards of his art. lie had but little of the lofty content which shines out through the vexed and clouded lives of such souls as Beethoven and Gluck in music, of Bacon and Milton in literature, who looked forward to immortality of fame as the best vindication of their work. A marked char- acteristic of the man was a secret dissatisfaction with all that he accomplished, making him restless and unhappy, and extremely sensitive to criti- cism. With this was united a tendency at times to oscillate to the other extreme of vainglorious- ness. An example of this was a reply to Rossini 19 218 GREAT ITALIAN AND FRENCH COMPOSERS. one night at the opera when they were listening to " Robert le Diable." The " Swan of Pesaro " was a warm admirer of Meyerbeer, though the latter was a formidable rival, and his works had largely replaced those of the other in popular re- pute. Sitting together in the same box, Rossini, in his delight at one portion of the opera, cried out in his impulsive Italian way, "If you can write anything to surpass this, I will undertake to dance upon my head." " Well, then," said Mey- erbeer, " you had better soon commence practicing, for I have just commenced the fourth act of ' Les Huguenots.' ' : AVell might he make this boast, for into the fourth act of his musical setting of the terrible St. Bartholomew tragedy he put the finest inspirations of his life. Singular to say, though he himself represented the very opposite pole of art spirit and method, Mozart was to him the greatest of his predecessors. Perhaps it was this very fact, however, which was at the root of his sentiment of admiration for the composer of " Don Giovanni " and " Le Nozze di Figaro." A story is told to the effect that Mey- erbeer was once dining with some friends, when a discussion arose respecting Mozart's position in the musical hierarchy. Suddenly one of the guests suggested that " certain beauties of Mozart's mu- sic had become stale with age. I defy you," he continued, " to listen to ' Don Giovanni ' after the fourth act of the ' Huguenots.' " " So much MEYERBEER. 219 the worse, then, for the fourth act of the ' Hugue- nots,' " said Meyerbeer, furious at the clumsy com- pliment paid to his own work at the expense of his idol. Critics wedded to the strict German school of music never forgave Meyerbeer for his dereliction from the spirit and influences of his nation, and the prominence which he gave to melodramatic effects and spectacular show in his operas. Not without some show of reason, they cite this fact as proof of poverty of musical invention. Men- delssohn, who was habitually generous in his judg- ment, wrote to the poet Immermann from Paris of " Robert le Diable " : " The subject is of the romantic order ; i. e., the devil appears in it (which sufiices the Parisians for romance and im- agination). Nevertheless, it is very bad, and, were it not for two brilliant seduction scenes, there would not even be effect. . . . The opera does not please me ; it is devoid of sentiment and feeling. . . . People admire the music, but where there is no warmth and truth, I can not even form a standard of criticism.'' Schliiter, the historian of music, speaks even more bitterly of Meyerbeer's irreverence and the- atric sensationalism: "' Les Huguenots ' and the far weaker production 'Le Prophete' are, we think, all the more reprehensible (nowadays es- pecially, when too much stress is laid on the sub- ject of a work, and consequently on the libretto 220 GREAT ITALIAN AND FRENCH COMPOSERS. of an opera), because the Jew has in these pieces ruthlessly dragged before the footlights two of the darkest pictures in the annals of Catholicism, nor has he scrupled to bring high mass and cho- rale on the boards." Wagner, the last of the great German com- posers, can not find words too scathing and bitter to mark his condemnation of Meyerbeer. Per- haps his extreme aversion finds its psychological reason in the circumstance that his own early ef- forts were in the sphere of Meyerbeer and Hale- vy, and from his present point of view he looks back with disgust on what he regards as the sins of his youth, The fairest of the German esti- mates of the composer, who not only cast aside the national spirit and methods, but offended his countrymen by devoting himself to the French stage, is that of Vischer, an eminent writer on aesthetics : " Notwithstanding the composer's re- markable talent for musical drama, his operas contain sometimes too much, sometimes too little too much in the subject-matter, external adorn- ment, and effective ' situations ' too little in the absence of poetry, ideality, and sentiment (which are essential to a work of art), as well as in the unnatural and constrained combinations of the plot." But despite the fact that Meyerbeer's operas contain such strange scenes as phantom nuns dan- cing, girls bathing, sunrise, skating, gunpowder MEYERBEER. 221 explosions, a king playing the flute, and the prima donna leading a goat, dramatic music owes to him new accents of genuine pathos and an addition to its resources of rendering passionate emotions. Through much that is merely showy and mere- tricious there come frequent bursts of genuine musical power and energy, which give him a high and unmistakable rank, though he has had less permanent influence in molding and directing the development of musical art than any other com- poser who has had so large a place in the annals of his time. The last twelve years of Meyerbeer's life were spent, with the exception of brief residences in Germany and Italy, in Paris, the city of his adop- tion, where all who were distinguished in art and letters paid their court to him. When he was seized with his fatal illness he was hard at work on " L'Africaine," for which Scribe had also furnished the libretto. His heart was set on its completion, and his daily prayer was that his lift- might be spared to finish it. But it was not to be. He died May 2, 1864. The same morning Rossini called to inquire after the health of the sick man, equally his friend and rival. When he heard the sad news he sank into a fit of pro- found despondency and grief, from which he :>4 GREAT ITALIAN AND FRENCH COMPOSERS. my autumn, and will also take a pood part of next spring; but with the help of God, dear friend, I hope we shall see each other again next year, free from all cares, in the charming little town of Spa, listening to the babhling of its waters and the rustling of its old ;. r r:iy oaks. Truly your friend. MEYERBEER. IV. MKYERBEER'S operas are so intricate in their elements, and travel so far out of the beaten track of precedent and rule, that it is difficult to clearly describe their characteristics in a few words. His original flow of melody could not have been very rich, for none of his tunes have become household words, and his excessive use of that element of opera which has nothing to do with music, as in the case of Wagner, can have but one explana- tion. It is in the treatment of the orchestra that he has added most largely to the genuine treasures of music. His command of color in tone-painting and power of dramatic suggestion have rarely been equaled, and never surpassed. His genius for musical rhythm is the most marked element in his power. This is specially noticeable In his dance music, which is very bold, brillir.nt, and voluptuous. The vivo vity and grace of the ballets in his operas sare more than one act which otherwise would be insufferably heavy and tedious. It is not too much to sav that the most MEYERBEER. 225 spontaneous side of his creative fancy is found ii, these affluent, vigorous, and stirring measures. Meyerbeer appears always to have been un- certain of himself and his work. There was little of that masterly prevision of effect in his mind .vhich is one of the attributes of the higher imagi- nation. His operas, though most elaborately con- structed, were often entirely modified and changed in rehearsal, and some of the finest scenes both in the dramatic and musical sense were the out- come of some happy accidental suggestion at tin- very last moment. " Robert," "Lcs Huguenots," " Le Propbete," in the forms we have them, arc quite different from those in which they were first cast. These operas have therefore been called " the most magnificent patchwork in the history of art," though this is a harsh phrasing of tlu- fact, which somewhat outrides justice. Certain it is, however, that Meyerbeer was largely in- debted to the chapter of accidents. The testimony of Dr. Veron, who was mana- ger of the Grand Opera during the most of the composer's brilliant career, is of great interest, a- illustrating this trait of Meyerbeer's composition. He tells us in his " Memoires," before alluded to, that " Robert " was made and remade before it- final production. The ghastly but effective color of the resuscitation scene in the graveyard of the ruined convent was a change wrought by a stage- manager, who was disgusted with the chorus of 226 GREAT ITALIAN AND FRENCH COMPOSERS. simpering women in the original. This led Meyer- beer to compose the weird ballet music which is, such a characteristic feature of " Robert le Dia- ble." So, too, we are told on the same authority, the fourth act of " Les Huguenots," which is the most powerful single act in Meyerbeer's operas, owes its present shape to Nourrit, the most intel- lectual and creative tenor singer of whom we have record. It was originally designed that the St. Bartholomew massacre should be organized by Queen Marguerite, but Nourrit pointed out that the interest centering in the heroine, Valentine, as an involuntary and horrified witness, would be impaired by the predominance of another female character. So the plot was largely reconstructed, and fresh music written. Another still more strik- ing attraction was the addition of the great duet with which the act now closes a duet which crit- ics have cited as an evidence of unequaled power, coming as it does at the very heels of such an as- tounding chorus as " The Blessing of the Swords." Nourrit felt that the parting of the two lovers at such a time and place demanded such an outburst and confession as would be wrung from them by the agony of the situation. Meyerbeer acted on the suggestion with such felicity and force as to make it the crowning beauty of the work. Simi- lar changes are understood to have been made in " Le Prophete " by advice of Nourrit, whose poeti- cal insight seems to have been unerring. It was MEYERBEER. >>; left to Duprez, Nourrit's successor, however, to be the first exponent of John of L> ;/- ter of Malibran, who had a generous belief in the composer's future, and such a position in the mu- sical world of Paris as to make her requests al- most mandatory. This opera, based on the fine poem of mile Augier, was well received, and cheered Gounod's heart to make fresh efforts. In 1852 he composed the choruses for Poussard's classical tragedy of " Ulysse," performed at the Theatre Francais. The growing recognition of the world was evidenced in his appointment as director of the Normal Singing School of Paris, the primary school of the Conservatory. In 1 -*."> I a five-act opera, with a libi-etto from the legend of the " Bleeding Xun," was completed and produerd, and Gounod was further gratified to see that mu- sical authorities were willing to grant him a dis- tinct place in the ranks of art, though as yet not a very high one. For years Gounod's serious and elevated mind had been pondering on Goethe's great poem as the subject of an opera, and there is reason to conjec- ture that parts of it were composed and arranged, if not fully elaborated, long prior to its final crys- tallization. But he was not yet quite ready to enter seriously on the composition of the master- piece. He must still try his hand on lesser themes. Occasional pieces for the orchestra or choruses strengthened his hold on these important elements of lyric composition, and in 1858 he produced 236 GREAT ITALIAN AND FRENCH COMPOSERS. " Le Medecin malgre lui," based on Moliere's com- edy, afterward performed as an English opera under the title of " The Mock Doctor." Gounod's genius seems to have had no affinity for the grace- ful and sparkling measures of comic music, and his attempt to rival Rossini and Auber in the field where they were preeminent was decidedly un- successful, though the opera contained much fine music. u. THE year of his triumph had at last arrived. He had waited and toiled for years over " Faust," and it was now ready to flash on the world with an electric brightness that was to make his name instantly famous. One day saw him an obscure, third-rate composer, the next one of the brilliant names in art. "Faust," first performed March 19, 1859, fairly took the world by storm. Gou- nod's warmest friends were amazed by the beauty of the masterpiece, in which exquisite melody, great orchestration, and a dramatic passion never surpassed in operatic art, were combined with a scientific skill and precision which would vie with that of the great masters of harmony. Carvalho, the manager of the Theatre Lyrique, had pre- dicted that the work would have a magnificent reception by the art world, and lavished on it every stage resource. Madame Miolan-Carvalho, his brilliant wife, one of the leading sopranos of GOUNOD AND THOMAS. 337 the day, sang the role of the heroine, though five years afterward she was succeeded by Nilssmi, who invested the part with a poetry and tender- ness which have never been quite equaled. "Faust" was received at IJerlin, Vienna, ]\Ii- lan, St. Petersburg, and London, with an enthu- siasm not less than that which greeted its Parisian debut. The clamor of dispute between the dif- ferent schools was for the moment hushed in the delight with which the musical critics and public of universal Europe listened to the magical mea- sures of an opera which to classical chastcno- and severity of form and elevation of motive united such dramatic passion, richness of melody, and warmth of orchestral color. From that day to the present " Faust " has retained its place as not only the greatest but the most popular of modern operas. The proof of the compoxi'- skill and sense of symmetry in the composition oi " Faust " is shown in the fact that each part is so nearly necessary to the work, that but few " cuts '' can be made in presentation without essentially marring the beauty of the work ; and it is there- fore given with close faithfulness to the author's score. After the immense success of " Faust," the doors of the Academy were opened wide to Gou- nod. On February 28, 1862, the " Reine de Saba" was produced, but was only a succes (Fes- thnc, the libretto by Gerard de Xerval not being 238 GREAT ITALIAN AND FRENCH COMPOSERS. fitted for a lyric tragedy.* Many numbers of this fine work, however, are still favorites on concert programmes, and it has been given in English under the name of "Irene." Gounod's love of romantic themes, and the interest in France which Lamartine's glowing eulogies had excited about "Mireio," the beautiful national poem of the Provengal, M. Frederic Mistral, led the former to compose an opera on a libretto from this work, which was given at the Theatre Lyrique, March 19, 1864, under the name of "Mireille." The music, however, Avas rather descriptive and lyric than dramatic, as befitted this lovely ideal of early French provincial life ; and in spite of its contain- ing some of the most captivating airs ever written, and the fine interpretation of the heroine by Mio- lan-Carvalho, it was accepted with reservations. It has since become more popular in its three-act form to which it was abridged. It is a tribute to the essential beauty of Gounod's music that, how- ever unsuccessful as operas certain of his works have been, they have all contributed charming morceaux for the enjoyment of concert audiences. Not only did the airs of " Mireille " become public favorites, but its overture is frequently given as a distinct orchestral work. *It has been a matter of frequent comment by the ablest musical critics that many noble operas, now never heard, would have retained their place in the repertoires of modern dramatic music, had it not been for the utter rubbish to which the music has been set. GOUXOD AND THOMAS. 339 The opera of " La Colombe," known in Eng- lish as "The Pet Dove," followed in 1866; and the next year was produced the five-act opera of " Romeo et Juliette," of which the principal part was again taken by Madame Miolan-Carvalho The favorite pieces in this work, which is a high- ly poetic rendering of Shakespeare's romantic tragedy, are the song of Q Jfob, the garden duet, a short chorus in the second act, and the duel scene in the third act. For some occult reason, "Romeo et Juliette," though recognized as a work of exceptional beauty and merit, and still occasionally performed, has no permanent hold on the operatic public of to-day. The evils that fell on France from the German war and the horrors of the Commune drove Gou- nod to reside in London, unlike Auber, who reso- lutely refused to forsake the city of his love, in spite of the suffering and privation which he fore- saw, and which were the indirect cause of the veteran composer's death. Gounod remained sev- eral years in England, and lived a retired life, seemingly as if he shrank from public notice and disdained public applause. His principal appear- ances were at the Philharmonic, the Crystal Pal- ace, and at Mrs. Weldon's concerts, where he directed the performances of his own composi- tions. The circumstances of his London residence seem to have cast a cloud over Gounod's life and to have strangely unsettled his mind. Patriotic GREAT ITALIAN AXD FRENCH COMPOSERS. grief probably had something to do with this at the outset. But even more than this as a source of permanent irritation may be reckoned the spell cast over Gounod's mind by a beautiful adventur- ess, who was ambitious to attain social and musi- cal recognition through the eclat of the great composer's friendship. Though newspaper re- port may be credited with swelling and distorting the naked facts, enough appears to be known to make it sure that the evil genius of Gounod's London life was a woman, who traded recklessly with her own reputation and the French composer's fame. However untoward the surroundings of Gou- nod, his genius did rot lie altogether dormant during this period of friction and fretf ulness, con- ditions so repressive to the best imaginative work. He composed several masses and other church music ; a " Stabat Mater " with orchestra ; the oratorio of " Tobie " ; " Gallia," a lamentation for France ; incidental music for Legouve's trage- dy of " Les Deux Reines," and for Jules Barbier's " Jeanne d'Arc " ; a large number of songs and romances, both sacred and secular, sxich as " Naza- reth," and " There is a Green Hill " ; and orches- tral works, a " Salterello in A," and the " Funeral March of a Marionette." At last he broke loose from the bonds of Deli- lah, and, remembering that he had been elected to fill the place of Clapisson in the Institute, he GOUNOD AND TIIoMAS. 241 returned to Paris in 18TG to resume the position which his genius so richly deserved. On the .~>th of March of the following year his riii-i-Mars" was brought out at the Theatre de 1'Opera ('..- mique ; but it showed the traces of the haste and eareles-.no->> with which it was written, and there- fore commanded little more than a respectful hearing. His last opera, "Polyeucte." produced at the Grand Opera, October 7, 1>>, though credited with much beautiful music, and nobly orchestrated, is not regarded by the French critics as likely to add anything to the reputation of the composer of " Faust.'' Gounod, now at the age of sixty, if we judge him by the prolonged fertil- ity of so many of the great composers, may lie regarded a* not having largely passed the prime of his powers. The world still has a right t pect much from his genius. Conceded even by his opponents to be a great musician and a thor- ough master of the orchestra, more generous crit- ics in the main agree to rank Gounod as the most remarkable contemporary composer, witli the pos- sible exception of Richard Wagner. The dis- tinctive trait of his dramatic conceptions seems to be an imagination hovering between sensuous images and mystic dreams. Originally inspired by the severe Greek sculpture of Gluck's music, he has applied that master's laws in the creation of tone-pictures full of voluptuous color, but yet solemnized at times by an exaltation which recalls 21 242 GREAT ITALIAN AND FRENCH COMPOSERS. the time when as a youth he thought of the spirit- ual dignity of the priesthood. The use he makes of his religious reminiscences is familiarly illus- trated in "Faust." The contrast between two opposing principles is marked in all of Gounod's dramatic works, and in " Faust " this struggle of "a soul which invades mysticism and which still seeks to express voluptuousness " not only colors the music with a novel fascination, but amounts to an interesting psychological problem. in. GOUNOD'S genius fills too large a space in con- temporary music to be passed over without a brief special study. In pursuit of this no better method suggests itself than an examination of the opera of " Faust," into which the composer poured the finest inspirations of his life, even as Goethe em- bodied the sum and flower of his long career, which had garnered so many experiences, in his poetic masterpiece. The story of " Faust " has tempted many com- posers. Prince Radziwill tried it, and then Spohr set a version of the theme at once coarse and cruel, full of vulgar witchwork and love-making only fit for a chambermaid. Since then Schumann, Liszt, Wagner, and Berlioz have treated the story orches- trally with more or less success. Gounod's treat- ment of the poem is by far the most intelligible, poetic, and dramatic ever attempted, and there is GOUNOD AND THOMAS. 043 no opera since the days of Gluck with so little weak music, except Beethoven's " Fidelio." In the introduction the restless gloom of the old philospher and the contrasted joys of youth engaged in rustic revelry outside are expressed with graphic force ; and the Kirmes music in the next act is so quaint and original, as well as melo- dious, as to give the sense of delightful comedy. AVhen J{-r,'f rite's delight at finding the jewels, which conjoined express the artless vanity of the child in a manner alike full of grace and pathos. The quartet that follows is one of great beauty, the music of each character being thoroughly in keep- ing, while the admirable science of the composer blends all into thorough artistic unity. It is hardly too much to assert that, the love scene which closes this act has nothing to surpass it for fire, passion, and tenderness, seizing the mind 244 GREAT ITALIAN AND FRENCH COMPOSERS. of the hearer with absorbing force by its sugges- tion and imagery, while the almost cloying sweet- ness of the melody is such as Rossini and Schu- bert only could equal. The full confession of the enamored pair contained in the brief aif. throbs with such rapture as to find its most sug- gestive parallel in the ardent words commencing Gallop apace, ye fiery-footed steeds, placed by Shakespeare in the mouth of the ex- pectant Juliet. Beauties succeed each other in swift and pic- turesque succession, fitting the dramatic order with a nicety which forces the highest praise of the critic. The march and chorus marking the return of Valentine's regiment beat with a fire and enthusiasm to which the tramp of victorious squadrons might well keep step. The wicked mu- sic of Mephistopheles in the sarcastic serenade, the powerful duel trio, and Valentini*,-* curse are of the highest order of expression ; while the church scene, where the fiend whispers his taunts in the ear of the disgraced J/urg." in " Lcs Huguenots," called forth a similar criticism from his German assailants. Some of the nmst dra- matic effects in music have been created by this species of musical quotation, so rich in its appeal to memory and association. Who that has once heard can forget the thrilling power of "La Marseillaise " in Schumann's setting of Ileinrich Heine's poem of " The Two Grenadiers"? The two French soldiers, weary and broken-hearted after the Russian campaign, approach the Ger- man frontier. The veterans are moved to tears as they think of their humiliated Emperor. l';> speaks one suffering with a deadly hurt to the other : "Friend, when I am dead, bury me in my native France, with my cross of honor on my breast, and my musket in my hand, and lay my good sword by my side/' Until this time the melody has been a slow and dirge-like stave in the minor key. The old soldier declares his be- lief that he will rise again from the clods when he hears the victorious tramp of his Emperor's squadrons passing over his grave, and the minor breaks into a weird setting of the " Marseillaisr " in the major key. Suddenly it closes with a few solemn chords, and, instead of the smoke of battle and the march of the phantom host, the imagina- 246 GREAT ITALIAN AND FREXCH COMPOSERS. tion sees the lonely plain with its green mounds and moldering crosses. Readers will pardon this digression illustrat- ing an artistic law, of which Gounod has made such effective use in the church scene of his " Faust " in heightening its tragic solemnity. The wild goblin symphony in the fifth act has added some new effects to the gamut of deviltry in music, and shows that Weber in the " Wolfs Glen" and Meyerbeer in the "Cloisters of St. Rosalie " did not exhaust the somewhat limited field. The whole of this part of the act, sadly mutilated and abridged often in representation, is singularly picturesque and striking as a nrnsi- cal conception, and is a fitting companion to the tragic prison scene. The despair of the poor crazed Marguerite ; her delirious joy in recog- nizing Faust ; the temptation to fly ; the final outburst of faith and hope, as the sense of Divine pardon sinks into her soul all these are touched with the fire of genius, and the passion sweeps with an unfaltering force to its climax. These references to the details of a work so familiar as " Faust," conveying of course no fresh informa- tion to the reader, have been made to illustrate the peculiarities of Gounod's musical tempera- ment, which sways in such fascinating contrast between the voluptuous and the spiritual. But whether his accents belong to the one or the other, they bespeak a mood flushed with earnest- GOUXOD AND THOMAS. 047 ness and fervor, and a mind which recoils from the frivolous, however graceful it may be. In the Franco-German school, of which Gou- nod is so high an exponent, the orchestra is busv throughout developing the history of the emo- tions, and in "Faust" especially it is as busy a factor in expressing the pas>ion- of the characters as the vocal parts. Xot even in the " garden scene" does the singing reduce the instruments to a secondary importance. The difference be- tween Gounod and Wagner, who professes to elaborate the importance of the orchestra in dra- matic music, is that the former has a skill in writing for the voice which the other lacks. The one lifts the voice by the orchestration, the other submerges it. Gounod's affluence of lovely mel- ody can only be compared with that of .Mozart and Rossini, and his skill and ingenuity in treat- ing the orchestra have wrung reluctant praise from his bitterest opponents. The special power which makes Gounod unique in his art, aside from those elements before al- luded to as derived from temperament, is his un- erring sense of dramatic fitness, which weds such highly suggestive music to each varying phase of character and action. To this perhaps one excep- tion may be made. While he pocenes. 248 GREAT ITALIAN AND FRENCH COMPOSERS. A good illustration of this may be found in " Le Aledecin malgre lui," in the couplets given to the drunken Sganarelle. They are beautiful music, but utterly unflavored with the vis comica. Had Gounod written only " Faust," it should sunup him as one of the most highly gifted com- posers of his age. Noticeably in his other works, preeminently in this, he has shown a melodic freshness and fertility, a mastery of musical form, a power of orchestration, and a dramatic energy, which are combined to the same degree in no one of his rivals. Therefore it is just to place him in the first rank of contemporary composers. AMONG contemporary French composers there is no name which suggests itself in comparison with that of Gounod so worthily as that of Am- broise Thomas, famous in every country where the opera is a favorite form of public amusement, as the author of " Mignon " and " Hamlet." Lacking the depth and passion of Gounod, he is distin- guished by a peculiar sparkle, grace, and Gallic lightness of touch ; and if we do not find in him the earnestness and spiritual significance of his rival's conceptions, there is, on the other hand, in the works of Thomas, a glow of poetic sentiment which invests them with a charming atmosphere, peculiarly their own. Perhaps in his own coun- try Thomas enjoys a repute still higher than that GOUNOD AXD THOMAS. 049 of Gounod, for his genius is more peculiarly French, while the composer of "Faust" shows the radical influence of the (German school, not only in the cast of his thoughts and temperament, but in his technical musical methods. Still, as all artists are profoundly moved by the tendencies of their age, it would not be difficult to find in the later works of Thomas, on which his celeb- rity is based, some unconscious modeling of form wrought by that musical school of which Richard Wagner is the most advanced type. Ambroise Thomas was born at 3let>:. France, on August 5, 1811, and is therefore by seven years the senior of Charles Gounod. His apti- tudes for mu.-ic were so strong that he learned the notes as quickly as he acquired the letters of the alphabet. At the age of four he was in- structed in his solfeggi by his father, who was a professor of music, and three years later he began t-,> take lessons on the violin and piano. When he was seventeen lie was thoroughly pro- ficient in all the preparatory studies demanded for admission to the Paris Conservatoire, and he easily obtained admission into that great institu- tion. He first studied under Zimmermann and Kalkbrenner, and afterward under Dourlen, IJar- bereau, Le Sueur, and Reicha. For successive years he carried off first prizes : for the piano in 1829; for harmony, in ls:j() : and in 1*:W till- highest honor in composition was awarded him, 250 GREAT ITALIAN AND FRENCH COMPOSERS. the Prix de Rome, which allowed him to go to Italy as a government stipendiary. Our young laureate passed three years in Italy, spending most of his time at Rome and Naples. The special result of his Italian studies was a requiem mass, which was performed with great approbation from its musical judges at Paris and Rome. After traveling in Germany, Thomas returned to Paris in 1836, thoroughly equipped for his career as composer, for he had been an indefatigable student, and neglected no opportu- nity of perfecting his knowledge. The first step in the brilliant career of Thomas was the produc- tion of a comic opera in one act, "La Double chelle," produced in 1837. This met with a good reception, and it was promptly followed by the production of several other light scores, that further enhanced his reputation for talent. He was not generally recognized by musicians as a man of marked promise till he produced " Mina," a comic opera in three acts, which was represented in 1843. The beauty of the instrumentation and the melodious richness of the work were unmis- takable, and henceforth every production of the young composer was watched with great interest, Ambroise Thomas could not be said to have reached a great popular success until he produced " Le Ca'id," a work of the opera-bouffe type, which instantly became an immense public favorite. This was first represented in 1849, and it has al- GOUNOD AND THOMAS. ._.;,, ways held its place on the French stride as one of the most delightful works of its dass, h, spite of the competition of such later outgrowths of the opera-bouffe school as Offenbach, Lecocq, and others. The score of this work proved to IK- im- mensely amusing and brightly melodious, and it was such a pecuniary success that the more judi- cious friends of Thomas feared that he mi^ht lie seduced into cultivating a field far below tin- powers of his poetic imagination and thorough musical science. Strong heads might easily !< turned by such lavish applause, and it would not have been wonderful had Thomas, dazzled by the reception of " Le Caid," remained for a long time a wanderer from the path Avhich lay open to his great talents. The composer's ambition, how- ever, proved to be too high to content itself with ephemeral success, or cultivating the more frivo- lous forms of his art, however profitable and pleasant these might be. In 1850 Ambroise Thomas produced two ope- ras : "Le Songe d'une Nuit d'KtiV resembling in style somewhat that masterpiece produced in after- years, "Mignon," and a somber work based on the legend of "The Man with the Iron Mask." "Le Secret de la Heine." The melodramatic character of this latter work seems to have been imitated from the highly accented and artificial style of Verdi, instead of possessing the bright and airy charm natural to Thomas. The vacancy 252 GREAT ITALIAN AND FRENCH COMPOSERS. left by Spontini's death in the French Institute was filled by the election of M. Thomas, who was deemed most worthy, among all the musical names offered, of taking the place of the author of "La Yestale." He justified the taste of his co-members by his production in 1853 of the comic opera of " La Tonelli," a work which, though not greatly successful with "hoi polloi" was an admirable specimen of light and graceful opera at its best. The new academician Avas recompensed for the public indifference by the cordial appreciation which connoisseurs gave this tasteful and scientific production. Another comic opera, " Psyche," which soon appeared, though full of witty burlesque and humor in the libretto, and marked by delicious melody in every part, failed to please, perhaps on account of the pre- dominance of feminine roles, and the absence of a good tenor part. Still a third comic opera, the " Carnaval de Yenise " saw the light the same season, which was written in large measure to show the marvelous flexibility of Mme. Cabal's voice. Yery few singers have been able to sing the role of Sylvia, who warbles a violin concerto from beginning to end, under the title of an "Ariette without Words." Ambroise Thomas remained silent now for half a dozen years, aside from the composition of a few charming songs. It is natural to suppose that he was brooding over the conception of his GOUXOD AND THOMAS. o.- ): > greatest work, which was next to see the light of day, and add one more to the great operas of tin- world. Such compositions are not hastily manu- factured, but grow for years out of the travail of heart and brain, deep thought, high imagining, passionate sensibilities, elaborately wrought by time and patience, till at last they are crystalli/.cd into form. "^lignon," 1 a comic opera in three acts, was first represented at the Theatre Lyriijiie, on No- vember IT, I860, before one of the most brilliant and enthusiastic audiences ever gathered in Paris. Its success was magnificent. This was seven years after Gounod had made such a great stride among the composers of the age, by the produc- tion of "Faust" ; and it is within bounds to s;iy that, since '"Faust," no opera had been produced in Paris so vital with the breath of genius and great purpose, so full of sentiment and poetry, so symmetrical and balanced in its differentiation of music measured by its dramatic value, so instant- ly and splendidly recognized by the public, cul- tured and ignorant, gentle and simple. Like " Faust," too, the opera of Thomas was based on a creation of Goethe. Without the pa- thetic episode of "Mignon," the novel of "AVil- helm Meister" would lose much of its dramatic strength and quality. Of course, every libretto must part with some of the charm of the story on which it is built ; but in this instance the au- 22 254 GREAT ITALIAN AND FRENCH COMPOSERS. thor succeeds in preserving nearly all the intrin- sic worth of the Mignon episode. The music is admirably suited to a noble theme. There is hard- ly a weak bar in it from beginning to end ; and some of the work here done by the composer will compare favorably with any operatic music ever heard. In this opera melodic phrase goes hand in hand with character and motive, and Mignon, Phillna, Wilhelm Meister, and Lothario, are dis- tinguished in the music with the finest dramatic discrimination. Among the operas of resent years, " Mignon " ranks among the first for its taste, grace, and poetry. The first act is vigorous, bright, and picturesque ; the second, touched with the finest points of passion and humor ; the third is in- spired with a pathos and poetic ardor which lift the composer to do his most magnificent work. But to describe " Mignon " to the public of to- day, which has heard it almost an innumerable number of times, is, as much as in the case of Gounod's " Faust," " carrying coals to Newcas- tle." In 1868 Thomas produced " Hamlet," and it was represented at the Grand Opera, with Mile. Christine Nilsson in the role of Ophelia, the same singer having, if we mistake not, created the role of Mignon, " Hamlet," though a marked artistic success, has failed to make the same popu- lar impression as " Mignon," possibly because the BERLIOZ. 255 theme is less suited to operatic treatment ; for the music per se is of a fine type, and full of the genu- ine accents of passion. In addition to the works named al>ove, Am- broise Thomas has written u La ami Hector Berlioz, and had much to do with their artistic development. Berlioz gives a very in- teresting account of his Shakespearean enthu- siasm, which also involved one of the catastrophes of his own personal life. "An English company gave some plays of Shakespeare, at that time wholly unknown to the French public. I went to the first performance of 'Hamlet 'at the Odcon. I saw, in the part of Ophelia, Harriet Smithson. who became my wife five years afterward. The effect of her prodigious talent, or rather of her dramatic genius, upon my heart and imagination, is only comparable to the complete overturning which the poet, whose worthy interpreter she was. caused in me. Shakespeare, thus coming on me suddenly, struck me as with a thunderbolt. His lightning opened the heaven of art to me with a sublime crash, and lighted up its farthest depths. I recognized true dramatic grandeur, beauty, and truth. I measured at the same time the boundlc-s inanity of the notions of Shakespeare in France, spread abroad by Voltaire. '. . . ce singe tie ireiiie. Chez rhomme en mission par k diable envoy6 ' ->64 GREAT ITALIAN AND FRENCH COMPOSERS. (that ape of genius, an emissary from the devil to man),' and the pitiful poverty of our old poetry of pedagogues and ragged-school teachers. I saw, I understood, I felt that I was alive and must arise and walk." Of the influence of "Ro- meo and Juliet " on him, he says : " Exposing myself to the burning sun and balmy nights of Italy, seeing this love as quick and sudden as thought, burning like lava, imperious, irresistible, boundless, and pure and beautiful as the smile of angels, those furious scenes of vengeance, those distracted embraces, those struggles between love and death, was too much. After the melancholy, the gnawing anguish, the tearful love, the cruel irony, the somber meditations, the heart-rackings, the madness, tears, mourning, the calamities and sharp cleverness of Hamlei ; after the gray clouds and icy winds of Denmark ; after the third act, hardly breathing, in pain as if a hand of iron were squeezing at my heart, I said to myself with the fullest conviction : 'Ah ! I am lost.' I must add that I did not at that time know a word of English, that I only caught glimpses of Shake- speare through the fog of Letourneur's transla- tion, and that I consequently could not perceive the poetic web that surrounds his marvelous crea- tions like a net of gold. I have the misfortune to be very nearly in the same sad case to-day. It is much harder for a Frenchman to sound the depths of Shakespeare than for an Englishman BERLIOZ. 265 to feel the delicacy and originality of La Fon- taine or Moliere. Our two poets are rich conti- nents ; Shakespeare is a world. But the play of the actors, above all of the actress, the succession of the scenes, the pantomime and the accent of the voices, meant more to me, and filled me a thou- sand times more with Shakespearean ideas and pa<- sion than the text of my colorless and unfaithful translation. An English critic said la-t winter in the 'Illustrated London News,' that, after seeing Miss Smithson in Jnl'ut, I had cried out, 'I will marry that woman and write my grandest symphony on this play.' I did both, but never said anything of the sort." The beautiful Miss Smithson became the ra<;e. the inspiration of poets and painters, the idol of the hour, at whose feet knelt all the rout* and rich idlers of the town. Delacroix painted her as the Ophelia of his celebrated picture, and the English company made nearly as much sen>a- tion in Paris as the Comedie Francaisc recently aroused in London. Berlioz's mind, perturbed and inflamed with the mighty images of the Shakespearean world, swept with wide, powerful passion toward Shakespeare's interpreter. He raged and stormed witli his accustomed vehe- mence, made no secret of his infatuation, and walked the streets at night, calling aloud the name of the enchantress, and cooling his heated brows with many a sigh. He, too, would prove 23 266 GREAT ITALIAN* AND FREXCH COMPOSERS. that he was a great artist, and his idol should know that she had no unworthy lover. He would give a concert, and Miss Smithson should be pres- ent by hook or by crook. He went to Cherubim and asked permission to use the great hall of the Conservatoire, but was churlishly refused. Berlioz however, managed to secure the concession over the head of Cherubini, and advertised his concert. He went to large expense in copyists, orchestra, solo-singers, and chorus, and, when the night came, was almost fevered with expectation. But the concert was a failure, and the adored one was not there ; she had not even heard of it ! The dis- appointment nearly laid the young composer on a bed of sickness ; but, if he oscillated between de- liriums of hope and despair, his powerful will was also full of elasticity, and not for long did he even rave in the utter ebb of disappointment. Throughout the whole of his life, Berlioz dis- played this swiftness of recoil ; one moment crazed with grief and depression, the next he would bend to his labor with a cool, steady fixed- ness of purpose, which would sweep all interfer- ences aside like cobwebs. But still, night after night, he would haunt the Odeon, and drink in the sights and sounds of the magic world of Shakespeare, getting fresh inspiration nightly for his genius and love. If he paid dearly for this rich intellectual acquaintance by his passion for La Belle Smithson, he yet gained impulses BERLIOZ. 0(57 and suggestions for his imagination, ravenous of new impressions, which wrought deeply and per- manently. Had Berlioz known the outcome. In- would not have bartered for immunity by losing the jewels and ingots of the Shakespeare tn-a ure-house. The year 1830 was for IJerlioz one of alter- nate exaltation and misery ; of struggle, priva- tion, disappointment; of all manner of tonne: iN inseparable from such a volcanic temperament and restless brain. But he had one consolation which gratified his vanity. He gained the Prix de Rome by his cantata of " Sardanapalus." This honor had a practical value also. It secured him an annuity of three thousand francs for a period of five years, and two years' residence in Italy. Berlioz would never let "well enough" alone, however. He insisted on adding an or- chestral part to the completed score, describinir the grand conflagration of the palace of Sarda- napalus. When the work was produced, it was received with a howl of sarcastic derision, owing to the latest whim of the composer. So Berlioz started for Italy, smarting with rage and pain, as if the Furies were lashing him with their scorpion whips. in. THE pensioners of the Conservatoire lived at Rome in the Villa Medici, and the illustrious painter, Horace Vernet, was the director, though 268 GREAT ITALIAN AND FRENCH COMPOSERS. he exercised but little supervision over the stud- ies of the young men under his nominal charge. Berlioz did very much as he pleased studied little or much as the whim seized him, visited the churches, studios, and picture-galleries, and spent no little of his time by starlight and sunlight roam- ing about the country adjacent to the Holy City in search of adventures. He had soon come to the conclusion that he had not much to learn of Italian music ; that he could teach rather than be taught. lie speaks of Roman art with the bitterest scorn, and Wagner himself never made a more savage indictment of Italian music than does Berlioz in his " Me moires." At the theatres he found the orchestra, dramatic unity, and com- mon-sense all sacrificed to mere vocal display. At St. Peter's and the Sistine Chapel religious earnestness and dignity were frittered away in pretty part-singing, in mere frivolity and mere- tricious show. The word "symphony" was not known except to indicate an indescribable noise before the rising of the curtain. Xobody had heard of Weber and Beethoven, and Mozart, dead more than a score of years, was mentioned by a well-known musical connoisseur as a young man of great promise ! Such surroundings as these were a species of purgatory to Bei'lioz, against whose bounds he fretted and raged without inter- mission. The director's receptions were signal- ized by the performance of insipid cavatinas, and BERLIOZ. 0(J9 from these, as from his companions' rove-Is in which he would sometimes indulge with the mad- dest debauchery as if to kill his own thoughts. In- would escape to wander in the majestic ruins of the Coliseum and see the magic Italian moon- light shimmer through its broken arches, or stroll on the lonely Campagna till his clothes wnv drenched with dew. No fear of the deadly Roman malaria could check his restlcs- excur- sions, for, like a fiery horse, he was irritated t> madness by the inaction of his life. To him the // Jole,'' in derision of the fierce melancholy which despised them, their pursuits and pleasures. At the end of the year he wa* ooliged to present something before the Institute as a mark of his musical advancement, and lie sent on a fragment of his c 'Mass" heard years before at St. Roch, in which the wise judges profes-rd to find the "evidences of material advancement, and the total abandonment of his former repre- hensible tendencies." One can fancy the scorn- ful laughter of Berlioz at hearing this verdict. But his Italian life was not altogether purpose- less. He ivvised his " Symphonic Fantasti<|iie," and wrote its sequel, " Lelio,'' a lyrical mono- logue, in which he aimed to express the memo- ries of his passion for the beautiful Miss Smith- son. These two parts comprised what Herlioz 270 GREAT ITALIAN' AND FREXCII COMPOSERS. named " An Episode in the Life of an Artist." Our composer managed to get the last six months of his Italian exile remitted, and his return to Paris was hastened by one of those furious par- oxysms of rage to which such ill-regulated minds are subject. He had adored Miss Smithson as a celestial divinity, a lovely ideal of art and beauty, but this had not prevented him from basking in the rays of the earthly Venus. Before leaving Paris he had had an intrigue with a certain Mile. M , a somewhat frivolous and unscrupulous beauty, who had bled his not overfilled purse with the avidity of a leech. Berlioz heard just before returning to Paris that the coquette was about to marry, a conclusion one would fancy which would have rejoiced his mind. But, no ! he was worked to a dreadful rage by what he considered such perfidy ! His one thought was to avenge himself. He provided himself with three loaded pistols one for the faithless one, one for his rival, and one for himself and was so impatient to start that he could not wait for pass- ports. He attempted to cross the frontier in women's clothes, and was arrested. A variety of contretemps occurred before he got to Paris, and by that time his rage had so cooled, his sense of the absurdity of the whole thing grown so keen, that he was rather willing to send Mile. M his blessing than his curse. About the time of Berlioz's arrival, Miss EERLIOZ. 071 Smithson also returned to Paris after a long absence, with the intent of undertaking the man- agement of an English theatre. It was a neces- sity of our composer's nature to be in love, an more inclined to fear than to love him. The young directress soon found out that the rage for Shakespeare, which had swept the public mind under the influence of the romanticism led by Victor Hugo, Dumas, Theophile Gautier, Balzac, 272 GREAT ITALIAN AND FRENCH COMPOSERS. and others, was spurious. The wave had been frothing but shallow, and it ebbed away, leaving the English actress and her enterprise gasping for life. AVith no deeper tap-root than the Gallic- love of novelty and the infectious enthusiasm of a few men of great genius, the Shakespearean mania had a short life, and Frenchmen shrugged their shoulders over their own folly, in temporari- ly preferring the English barbarian to Racine, Cor- neille, and Moliere. The letters of Berlioz, in which he scourges the fickleness of his country- men in returning again to their " false gods," are masterpieces of pointed invective. Miss Smithson was speedily involved in great pecuniary difficulty, and, to add to her misfortunes, she fell down stairs and broke her leg, thus pre- cluding her own appearance on the stage. Affairs were in this desperate condition, when Berlioz came to the fore with a delicate and manly chiv- alry worthy of the highest praise. He offered to pay Miss Smithson's debts, though a poor man himself, and to marry her without delay. The ceremony took place immediately, and thus com- menced a connection which hampered and retarded Berlioz's career, as well as caused him no little personal unhappiness. He speedily discovered that his wife was a woman of fretful, imperious tem- per, jealous of mere shadows (though Berlioz was a man to give her substantial cause), and totally lacking in sympathy with his high-art ideals. BERLIOZ. 273 "When Mme. Berlioz recovered, it was to find her- self unable longer to act, as her leg was stiff ami her movements unsuited to the exigencies of the stage. Poor Berlioz was crushed hy the weight of the obligations he had assumed, and, as tin- years went on, the peevish plaints of an invalid wife, who had lost her beauty and power of charming, withered the affection which had <>n. r been so fervid and passionate. Berlioz finally separated from his once beautiful and worshiped Harriet Smithson, but to the very last sup] died her wants as fully as he could out of the meager earnings of his literary work and of musical com- positions, which the Paris public, for the m<^t part, did not care to listen to. For his son, Lmiis, the only offspring of this union, Berlin/, felt a devoted affection, and his loss at sea in after- years was a blow that nearly broke his heart. IV. OWIXG to the unrelenting hostility of Cheru bini, Berlioz failed to secure a professorship at the Conservatoire, a place to which he was nobly entitled, and was fain to take up with the posi- tion of librarian instead. The paltry wage lu- cked out by journalistic writing, for the in.t part as musical critic of the "Journal de> De- bats," by occasional concerts, revising proofs, in a word anything which a versatile and desperate- Bohemian could turn his hand to. In fact, for 274 GREAT ITALIAN AND FRENCH COMPOSERS. many years the main subsistence of Berlioz was derived from feuilleton-writing and the labors of a critic. His prose is so witty, brilliant, fresh, and epigrammatic that he would have been known to posterity as a clever litterateur, had he not pre- ferred to remain merely a great musician. Dra- matic, picturesque, and subtile, with an admirable sense of art-form, he could have become a power- ful dramatist, perhaps a great novelist. But his soul, all whose aspirations set toward one goal, revolted from the labors of literature, still more from the daily grind of journalistic drudgery. In that remarkable book, "Memoires de Hector Berlioz," he has made known his misery, and thus recounts one of his experiences : " I stood at the window gazing into the gardens, at the heights of Montrnartre, at the setting sun ; reverie bore me a thousand leagues from my accursed comic opera. And when, on turning, my eyes fell upon the accursed title at the head of the accursed sheet, blank still, and obstinately await- ing my word, despair seized upon me. My gui- tar rested against the table ; with a kick I crushed its side. Two pistols on the mantel stared at me with great round eyes. I re- garded them for some time, then beat my fore- head with clinched hand. At last I wept furi- ously, like a schoolboy unable to do his theme. The bitter tears were a relief. I turned the pis- tols toward the wall ; I pitied my innocent gui- BERLIOZ. -j ; ;, tar, and sought a few chords, which were given without resentment. Just then my son of MX years knocked at the door [the little Louis who**- death, years after, was the last bitter drop in tin- composer's cup of life] ; owing to my ill-humor, I had unjustly scolded him that morning. 'Pa- pa,' he cried, 'wilt thou he friends?' ' I irill lie friends; come on, ray boy'; and I ran to open the door. I took him on my knee, and, with his blonde head on my breast, we slept together. . . . Fifteen years since then, and my torment still en- dures. Oh, to be always there ! scores to write, orchestras to lead, rehearsals to direct. Let me stand all day with baton in hand, training a cho- rus, singing their parts myself, and beating the measure until I spit blood, and cramp seizes un- arm ; let me carry desks, double basses, harps, remove platforms, nail planks like a porter or a carpenter, and then spend the night in rectifying the errors of engravers or copyists. I have done, do, and will do it. That belongs to my musical life, and I bear it without thinking of it, as the hunter bears the thousand fatigues of the chase. But to scribble eternally for a livelihood- It may be fancied that such a man as Berlioz did not spare the lash, once he griped the whip- handle, and. though no man was more generous than he in recognizing and encouraging genuine merit, there was none more relentless in scourging incompetency, pretentious commonplace, and the 276 GREAT ITALIAN AND FREXCII COMPOSERS. blind conservatism which rests all its faith in what has been. Our composer made more than one powerful enemy by this recklessness in tell- ing the truth, where a more politic man would have gained friends strong to help in time of need. But Berlioz was too bitter and reckless, as well as too proud, to debate consequences. In 1838 Berlioz completed his "Benvenuto Cellini," his only attempt at opera since "Les Francs Juges," and, wonderful to say, managed to get it done at the opera, though the director, Duponchel, laughed at him as a lunatic, and the whole company already regarded the work as damned in advance. The result was a most dis- astrous and eclatant failure, and it would have crushed any man whose moral backbone was not forged of thrice-tempered steel. With all these back-sets Hector Berlioz was not without encour- agement. The brilliant Franz Liszt, one of the musical idols of the age, had bowed before him and called him master, the great musical protagonist. Spontini, one of the most successful composers of the time, held him in affectionate admiration, and always bade him be of good cheer. Paganini, the greatest of violinists, had hailed him as equal to Beethoven. On the night of the failure of " Benvenuto Cellini," a strange-looking man with disheveled black hair and eyes of piercing brilliancy had forced his way around into the green-room, and, BERLIOZ. seeking out Berlioz, had fallen on his knees be- fore him and kissed his hand passionately. Then he threw his arms around him and hailed the astonished composer as the master-spirit of t he- age in terms of glowing eulogium. The next morning, while Berlioz was in bed, there \\ tap at the door, and Paganini's son, Achille, en- teivd with a note, saying his father was sick, or he would have come to pay his n-spects in p.-r>un. On opening the note Berlioz found a most com- plimentary letter, and a more substantial ev'nU-mv of admiration, a check on Baron Rothschild for twenty thousand francs ! Paganini also gave.' Berlioz a commission to write a concerto for his Stradivarius viola, which resulted in a grand sym- phony, "Harold en Italie," founded on Byron's "Childe Harold," but still more an inspiration of his own Italian adventures, which had had a strong flavor of personal if they lacked artistic- interest. The generous gift of Paganini raised Berlioz from the slough of necessity so far that he could give his whole time to music. Instantly L about his " Romeo and Juliet " symphony, which will always remain one of his masterpieces a beautifully chiseled work, from the hands of one inspired by gratitude, unfettered imagination, and the sense of blessed repose. Our com]. first musical journey was an extensive tour in Germany in 1841, of which he gives charming * 2-1- 278 GREAT ITALIAN AND FRENCH COMPOSERS. memorials in his letters to Liszt, Heine, Ernst, and others. His reception was as generous and sympathetic as it had been cold and scornful in France. Everywhere he was honored and praised as one of the great men of the age. Mendelssohn exchanged batons with him at Leipsic, notwith- standing the former only half understood this stalwart Berserker of music. Spohr called him one of the greatest artists living, though his own direct antithesis, and Schumann wrote glowingly in the " Neue Zeitschrift " : " For myself, Berlioz is as clear as the blue sky above. I really think there is a new time in music coming." Berlioz wrote joyfully to Heine : " I came to Germany as the men of ancient Greece went to the oracle at Delphi, and the response has been in the highest degree encouraging." But his Germanic laurels did him no good in France. The Parisians would have none of him except as a writer of feuilletons, who pleased them by the vigor with which he handled the knout, and tickled the levity of the million, who laughed while they saw the half- dozen or more victims flayed by merciless satire. Berlioz wept tears of blood because he had to do such executioner's work, but did it none the less vigorously for all that. The composer made another musical journey in Austria and Hungary in 1844-'45, where he was again received with the most enthusiastic praise and pleasure. It was in Hungary, espe- BERLIOZ. 079 cially, that the warmth of his audiences over- ran all bounds. One night, at Pesth, where he played the " Rackoczy Indule," an orchestral set- ting of the martial hymn of the Magyar race, the people were worked into a positive frenzy, and they would have flung themselves before him that he might walk over their prostrate bodies. Vienna, Pesth, and Prague, led the way, and the other cities followed in the wake of an enthusiasm which has been accorded to not many artists. The French heard these stories with amazement, for they could not understand how this musical demigod could be the same as he who was little O better than a witty buffoon. During this absence Berlioz wrote the greater portion of his "Damna- tion de Faust," and, as he had made some money, he obeyed the strong instinct which always ruled him, the hope of winning the suffrages of his own countrymen. An eminent French critic claims that this great work, of which we shall speak further on, contains that which Gounod's " Faust " lacks- insight into the spiritual significance of Goethe's drama. Berlioz exhausted all his resources in producing it at the Opera Comique in 1*40, but again he was disappointed by its falling stillborn on the public interest. Berlioz was utterly ruim-d. and he fled from France in the dead of winter as from a pestilence. The genius of this great man was recognized 280 GREAT ITALIAN AND FRENCH COMPOSERS. in Holland, Russia, Austria, and Germany, but among bis own countrymen, for the most part, his name was a laughing-stock and a by-word. He offended the pedants and the formalists by his daring originality, he had secured the hate of rival musicians by the vigor and keenness of his criticisms. Berlioz was in the very heat of the artistic controversy between the classicists and ro- manticists, and was associated w r ith Victor Hugo, Alexandre Dumas, Delacroix, Liszt, Chopin, and others, in fighting that acrimonious art-battle. While he did not stand formally with the ranks, he yet secured a still more bitter portion of hostility from their powerful opponents, for, to opposition in principle, Berlioz united a caustic and vigorous mode of expression. His name was a target for the wits. " A physician who plays on the guitar and fancies himself a composer," was the scoff of malignant gossips. The journals poured on him a flood of abuse without stint. French malignity is the most venomous and un- scrupulous in the world, and Berlioz was selected as a choice victim for its most vigorous exercise, none the less willingly that he had shown so much skill and zest in impaling the victims of his own artistic and personal dislike. v. To continue the record of Berlioz's life in consecutive narrative would be without BERLIOZ. 281 cancc, for it contains but little for many years except the same indomitable battle against cir- cumstance and enmitv, never vieldin- an inch, * ' . O and ahvays keeping his eyes bent on his own lofty ideal. In all of art history is there no nioiv masterful heroic struggle than Berlioz waged 1W thirty-five years, firm in his belief that some time, if not during his own life, his principles would In- triumphant, and his name ranked among the im- mortals. But what of the mean while? Thi> problem Berlioz solved, in his later as in earlier years, by doing the distasteful work of the liter- ary scrub. But never did lie cease composing ; though no one would then have his works, his clear eye perceived the coming time when his genius would not be denied, when an apotli should comfort his spirit wandering in Hades Among Berlioz's later works was an opera of which he had composed both words and music, consisting of two parts, "The Taking of Troy." and "The Trojans at Carthage," the latter of which at last secured a few representations at a minor theatre in 1863. The plan of this work required that it should be carried out under the most perfect conditions. "In order," says l', r- lioz, "to properly produce such a work as I.. - Trojans,' I must be absolute master of the the- atre, as of the orchestra in directing a symphony. I must have the good-will of all, be obeyed by all, from prima donna to scene-shifter. A lyrical 282 GREAT ITALIAN AND FEEXCH COMPOSERS. theatre, as I conceive it, is a great instrument of music, which, if I am to play, must be placed unreservedly in my hands." Wagner found a King of Bavaria to help him carry out a similar colossal scheme at Bayreuth, but ill luck followed a man no less great through life. His grand " Trojans " was mutilated, tinkered, patched, and belittled, to suit the Theatre Lyrique. It was a butchery of the work, but still it yielded the composer enough to justify his retirement from the " Journal des Debats," after thirty years of slavery. Berlioz was now sixty years old, a lonely man, frail in body, embittered in soul by the terrible sense of failure. His wife, with whom he had lived on terms of alienation, was dead ; his only son far away, cruising on a man-of-war. His courage and ambition were gone. To one who remarked that his music belonged to the future, he replied that he doubted if it ever belonged to the past. His life seemed to have been a mis- take, so utterly had he failed to impress himself on the public. Yet there were times when audi- ences felt themselves moved by the power of his music out of the ruts of preconceived opinion into a prophecy of his coming greatness. There is an interesting anecdote told by a French writer : " Some years ago M. Pasdeloup gave the sep- tuor from the 'Trojans' at a benefit concert. The best places were occupied by the people of BERLIOZ. 283 the world, biat the <'!'< ',,,1< II ; to estimate himself boldly. There was no small vanity about this colossal spirit. lie speaks of himself with outspoken frankness, as he would discuss another. We can not do better than to quote one of these self-measurements : ".My style is in general very daring, but it has not the slightest tendency to destroy any of the constructive elements of art. On the contrary, I seek to increase the number of 286 GREAT ITALIAN AND FRENCH COMPOSERS. these elements. I have never dreamed, as has foolishly been supposed in France, of writing music without melody. That school exists to-day in Germany, and I have a horror of it. It is easy for any one to convince himself that, without con- fining myself to taking a very short melody for a theme, as the very greatest masters have, I have always taken care to invest my compositions with a real wealth of melody. The value of these melodies, their distinction, their novelty, and churra, can be very well contested ; it is not for me to appraise them. But to deny their existence is either bad faith or stupidity ; only as these mel- odies are often of very large dimensions, infantile 1 and short-sighted minds do not clearly distinguish their form ; or else they are wedded to other sec- ondary melodies which veil their outlines from those same infantile minds ; or, upon the whole, these melodies are so dissimilar to the little wag- geries that the musical plebs call melodies that they can not make up their minds to give the same name to both. The dominant qualities of my music are passionate expression, internal fire, rhythmic animation, and unexpected changes." Heinrich Heine, the German poet, who was Berlioz's friend, called him a " colossal nightin- gale, a lark of eagle-size, such as they tell us ex- isted in the primeval world." The poet goes on to say : " Berlioz's music, in general, has in it some- thing primeval if not antediluvian to my mind ; BERLIOZ. it makes me think of gigantic species of extinct animals, of fabulous empires full of fabulous sins, of heaped-up impossibilities ; his magical accents call to our minds Babylon, the hanging gardens the wonders of Nineveh, the daring edifices of JNIizraim, as we see them in the pictures of the Englishman Martin." Shortly after the publi- cation of " Lutetia," in which this bold charac- terization was expressed, the first performance of Berlioz's " Enfance du Christ " was given, and the poet, who was on his sick-bed, wrote a peni- tential letter to his friend for not having given him full justice. " I hear on all sides," lie says, * tli.-.t you have just plucked a nosegay of the sweetest me- lodious flowers, and that your oratorio is through- out a masterpiece of na'iri'ti'. I shallnever forgive myself for having been so unjust to a friend." Berlioz died at the age of sixty-five. His fu- neral services were held at the Church of tin- Trinity, a few days after those of Rossini. The discourse at the grave was pronounced by Gou- nod, and many eloquent things were said of linn, among them a quotation of the epitaph of Mar- shal Trivulce, "Hie tutxlun '< *>>'/ - quam quievit" (Here is he quiet, at last, who never was quiet before). Soon after his death appeared his "Memoires," and his bones had hardly g<.t cold when the performance of his music at the Conservatoire, the Cirque, and the Chan-let beg:m to be heard with the most hearty enthusiasm. 288 GREAT ITALIAN AND FRENCH COMPOSERS. VI. THEOPHILE GAUTIER says that no one will deny to Berlioz a great character, though, the world being given to controversies, it may be argued whether or not he was a great genius. The world of to-day has but one opinion on both these questions. The force of Berlioz's character was phenomenal. His vitality was so passionate and active that brain and nerve quivered with it, and made him reach out toward experience at every facet of his nature. Quietude was torture, rest a sin, for this daring temperament. His eager and subtile intelligence pierced every sham, and his imagination knew no bounds to its sweep, often- times even disdaining the bounds of art in its audacity and impatience. This big, virile nature, thwarted and embittered by opposition, became hardened into violent self-assertion ; this naturally resolute will settled back into fierce obstinacy ; this fine nature, sensitive and sincere, got torn and ragged with passion under the stress of his unfor- tunate life. But, at one breath of true sympathy how quickly the nobility of the man asserted it- self ! All his cynicism and hatred melted away, and left only sweetness, truth, and genial kind- ness. When Berlioz entered on his studies, he had reached an age at which Mozart, Schubert, Men- delssohn, Rossini, and others, had already done BERLIOZ. 289 some of the best work of their lives. Yet it took only a few years to achieve a development that produced such a great work as the " Symphonic Fantastique," the prototype of modern programme music. From first to last it was the ambition of Ber- lioz to widen the domain of his art. He strove to attain a more intimate connection between in- strumental music and poetry in the portrayal of intense passions, and the suggestion of well-de- fined dramatic situations. In spite of the fact that he frequently overshot his mark, it does not make his works one whit less astonishing. An uncompromising champion of what has been dubbed " programme " music, he thought it legiti- mate to force the imagination of the hearer to dwell on exterior scenes during the progress of the music, and to distress the mind in its attempt to find an exact relation between the text and the music. The most perfect specimens of the works of Berlioz, however, are those in which the music speaks for itself, such as the "Scene aux Champs," and the "Marche au Supplice," in the "Symphonic Fantastique," the "Man-lie des IV- lerins," in "Harold"; the overtures to "King Lear," " Benvenuto Cellini," " Carnaval Remain," "Le Corsaire," " Les Francs Juges,' 1 etc. As a master of the orchestra, no one has been the equal of Berlioz in the whole history of music, not even Beethoven or Wagner, lie treats the or- 25 290 GREAT ITALIAN AND FRENCH COMPOSERS. chestra with the absolute daring and mastery ex- ercised by Paganini over the violin, and by Liszt over the piano. No one has showed so deep an insight into the individuality of each instrument, its resources, the extent to which its capabili- ties could be carried. Between the phrase and the instrument, or group of instruments, the equality is perfect ; and independent of this power, made up equally of instinct and knowl- edge, this composer shows a sense of oi'chestral color in combining single instruments so as to form groups, or in the combination of several separate groups of instruments by which he has produced the most novel and beautiful effects effects not found in other composers. The origi- nality and variety of his rhythms, the perfection of his instrumentation, have never been disputed even by his opponents. In many of his works, especially those of a religious character, there is a Cyclopean bigness of instrumental means used, entirely beyond parallel in art. Like the Titans of old, he would scale the very heavens in his dar- ing. In one of his works he does not hesitate to use three orchestras, three choruses (all of full di- mensions), four organs, and a triple quartet. The conceptions of Berlioz were so grandiose that he sometimes disdained detail, and the result was that more than one of his compositions have rugged grandeur at the expense of symmetry and balance of form. BERLIOZ. 091 Yet, when he chose, Berlioz could write the most exquisite and dainty lyrics possible. What could be more exquisitely tender than many of his songs and romances, and various of tin- airs and choral pieces from " Beatrice et Hem-diet," 1 from "Nuits dtf'tty" " Irlande," ami from " I/Knfance du Christ " ? Berlioz in his entirety, as man and composer, was a most extraordinary being, to \vlnnn the or- dinary scale of measure can hardly be applied. Though he founded no new school, he pushed to a fuller development the possibilities to which Beet- hoven reached out in the Ninth Symphony. He was the great rirtimmt on the orchestra, and on this Briarean instrument he played with the most amazing skill. Others have surpassed him in the richness of the musical substance out of which their tone-pictures are woven, in symmetry of form, in finish of detail ; but no one has ever equaled him in that absolute mastery over in- struments, by which a hundred become as plas- tic and flexible as one, and are made to embody every phase of the composer's thought with that warmth of color and precision of form long be- lieved to be necessarily confined to the sister ar's THE END. ^ THE LIBRARY UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA Santa Barbara THIS BOOK IS DUE ON THE LAST DATE STAMPED BELOW. FEB 1 9 RETURNED 3 1205 00157 1106 mini A 000 634 450 1