THE ORCHESTRAL CONDUCTOR
Music appears to be the most exacting
of all the Arts, the cultivation of which presents
the greatest difficulties, for a consummate interpretation
of a musical work so as to permit an appreciation of
its real value, a clear view of its physiognomy, or
discernment of its real meaning and true character,
is only achieved in relatively few cases. Of
creative artists, the composer is almost the only one
who is dependent upon a multitude of intermediate
agents between the public and himself; intermediate
agents, either intelligent or stupid, devoted or hostile,
active or inert, capable from first to last of
contributing to the brilliancy of his work, or of
disfiguring it, misrepresenting it, and even destroying
it completely.
Singers have often been accused of
forming the most dangerous of these intermediate agents;
but in my opinion, without justice. The most
formidable, to my thinking, is the conductor of the
orchestra. A bad singer can spoil only his own
part; while an incapable or malevolent conductor ruins
all. Happy indeed may the composer esteem himself
when the conductor into whose hands he has fallen
is not at once incapable and inimical; for nothing
can resist the pernicious influence of this person.
The most admirable orchestra is then paralyzed, the
most excellent singers are perplexed and rendered
dull; there is no longer any vigor or unity; under
such direction the noblest daring of the author appears
extravagant, enthusiasm beholds its soaring flight
checked, inspiration is violently brought down to earth,
the angel’s wings are broken, the man of genius
passes for a madman or an idiot, the divine statue
is precipitated from its pedestal, and dragged in the
mud. And what is worse, the public, and even auditors
endowed with the highest musical intelligence, are
reduced to the impossibility (if a new work is rendered,
and they are hearing it for the first time) of recognizing
the ravages perpetrated by the orchestral conductor of
discovering the follies, faults, and crimes he commits.
If they clearly perceive certain defects of execution,
not he, but his victims, are in such cases made responsible.
If he has caused the chorus-singers to fail in taking
up a point in a finale, if he has allowed a discordant
wavering to take place between the choir and the orchestra,
or between the extreme sides of the instrumental body,
if he has absurdly hurried a movement, or allowed
it to linger unduly, if he has interrupted a singer
before the end of a phrase, they exclaim: “The
singers are detestable! The orchestra has no
firmness; the violins have disfigured the principal
design; everybody has been wanting in vigor and animation;
the tenor was quite out, he did not know his part;
the harmony is confused; the author is no accompanist;
the voices are etc.
Except in listening to great works
already known and esteemed, intelligent hearers can
hardly distinguish the true culprit, and allot to him
his due share of blame; but the number of these is
still so limited that their judgment has little weight;
and the hostile conductor in presence of
the public who would pitilessly hiss a vocal accident
of a good singer reigns, with all the calm
of a bad conscience, in his baseness and inefficiency.
Fortunately, I here attack an exception; for the malevolent
orchestral conductor whether capable or
not is very rare.
The orchestral conductor full of goodwill,
but incapable, is on the contrary very common.
Without speaking of innumerable mediocrities, directing
artists who frequently are much their superiors, an
author for example, can scarcely be accused of conspiring
against his own works. Yet how many are there
who, fancying they are able to conduct, innocently
injure their best scores!
Beethoven, it is said, more than once
ruined the performance of his symphonies; which he
would conduct, even at the time when his deafness
had become almost complete. The musicians, in
order to keep together, agreed at length to follow
the slight indications of time which the concertmeister
(first violin-player) gave them; and not to attend
to Beethoven’s conducting-stick. Moreover,
it should be observed, that conducting a symphony,
an overture, or any other composition whose movements
remain continual, vary little, and contain few nice
gradations, is child’s play in comparison with
conducting an opera, or like work, where there are
recitatives, airs, and numerous orchestral designs
preceded by pauses of irregular length.
The example of Beethoven, which I
have just cited, leads me at once to say that if the
direction of an orchestra appears to be very difficult
for a blind man, it is indisputably impossible for
a deaf one, whatever may have been his technical talent
before losing his sense of hearing.
The orchestral conductor should see
and hear; he should be active and vigorous,
should know the composition and the nature
and compass of the instruments, should be able
to read the score, and possess besides
the especial talent of which we shall presently endeavor
to explain the constituent qualities other
indefinable gifts, without which an invisible link
cannot establish itself between him and those he directs;
otherwise the faculty of transmitting to them his
feeling is denied him, and power, empire, and guiding
influence completely fail him. He is then no
longer a conductor, a director, but a simple beater
of the time, supposing he knows how to beat
it, and divide it, regularly.
The performers should feel that he
feels, comprehends, and is moved; then his emotion
communicates itself to those whom he directs, his
inward fire warms them, his electric glow animates
them, his force of impulse excites them; he throws
around him the vital irradiations of musical
art. If he is inert and frozen, on the contrary,
he paralyzes all about him, like those floating masses
of the polar seas, the approach of which is perceived
through the sudden cooling of the atmosphere.
His task is a complicated one.
He has not only to conduct, in the spirit of the author’s
intentions, a work with which the performers have
already become acquainted, but he must also introduce
new compositions and help the performers to master
them. He has to criticise the errors and defects
of each during the rehearsals, and to organize the
resources at his disposal in such a way as to make
the best use he can of them with the utmost promptitude;
for, in the majority of European cities nowadays,
musical artisanship is so ill distributed, performers
so ill paid and the necessity of study so little understood,
that economy of time should be reckoned among
the most imperative requisites of the orchestral conductor’s
art.
Let us now see what constitutes the
mechanical part of this art.
The power of beating the time,
without demanding very high musical attainments, is
nevertheless sufficiently difficult to secure; and
very few persons really possess it. The signs
that the conductor should make although
generally very simple nevertheless become
complicated under certain circumstances, by the division
and even the subdivision of the time of the bar.
The conductor is, above all, bound
to possess a clear idea of the principal points and
character of the work of which he is about to superintend
the performance or study; in order that he may, without
hesitation or mistake, at once determine the time of
each movement desired by the composer. If he
has not had the opportunity of receiving his instructions
directly from the composer, or if the times
have not been transmitted to him by tradition, he
must have recourse to the indications of the metronome,
and study them well; the majority of composers, nowadays,
taking the precaution to write them at the beginning,
and in the course, of their pieces. I do not mean
to say by this that it is necessary to imitate the
mathematical regularity of the metronome, all music
so performed would become of freezing stiffness, and
I even doubt whether it would be possible to observe
so flat a uniformity during a certain number of bars.
But the metronome is none the less excellent to consult
in order to know the original time, and its chief
alterations.
If the conductor possess neither the
author’s instructions, tradition, nor metronome
indications, which frequently happens in
the ancient masterpieces, written at a period when
the metronome was not invented, he has
no other guide than the vague terms employed to designate
the time to be taken, and his own instinct, his feeling more
or less distinguishing, more or less just of
the author’s style. We are compelled to
admit that these guides are too often insufficient
and delusive. Of this we have proof in seeing
how old operas are given in towns where the traditional
mode of performance no longer exists. In ten
different kinds of time, there will always be at least
four taken wrongly. I once heard a chorus of
Iphigenia in Tauride performed in a German
theatre allegro assai, two in the bar, instead
of allegro non troppo, four in the bar; that
is to say, exactly twice too fast. Examples might
be multiplied of such disasters, occasioned either
by the ignorance or the carelessness of conductors
of orchestras; or else by the real difficulty which
exists for even the best-gifted and most careful men
to discover the precise meaning of the Italian terms
used as indications of the time to be taken.
Of course, no one can be at a loss to distinguish
a Largo from a Presto. If the Presto be two in
a bar, a tolerably sagacious conductor, from inspection
of the passages and melodic designs contained in the
piece, will be able to discern the degree of quickness
intended by the author. But if the Largo be four
in a bar, of simple melodic structure, and containing
but few notes in each bar, what means has the hapless
conductor of discovering the true time? And in
how many ways might he not be deceived? The different
degrees of slowness that might be assigned to the
performance of such a Largo are very numerous; the
individual feeling of the orchestral conductor must
then become the sole authority; and, after all, it
is the author’s feeling, not his, which is in
question. Composers therefore ought not to neglect
placing metronome indications in their works; and orchestral
conductors are bound to study them closely. The
neglect of this study on the part of the latter, is
an act of dishonesty.
I will now suppose the conductor to
be perfectly well acquainted with the times of the
different movements in the work of which he is about
to conduct the performance or rehearsals; he wishes
to impart to the musicians acting under his orders
the rhythmical feeling within him, to decide the duration
of each bar, and to cause the uniform observance of
this duration by all the performers. Now this
precision and this uniformity can only be established
in the more or less numerous assemblage of band and
chorus by means of certain signs made by their conductor.
These signs indicate the principle
divisions, the accents of the bar, and, in many cases,
the subdivisions, and the half-accents. I need
hardly here explain what is meant by the “accents”
(accented and unaccented parts of a bar); I am presupposing
that I address musicians.
The orchestral conductor generally
uses a small light stick, of about a foot in length,
and rather whitish than of a dark color (it is seen
better), which he holds in his right hand, to make
clearly distinct his mode of marking the commencement,
the interior division, and the close of each bar.
The bow, employed by some violinist conductors (leaders),
is less suitable than the stick. It is somewhat
flexible, and this want of rigidity, together with
the slight resistance it offers to the air, on account
of its appendage of hair, renders its indications less
precise.
The simplest of all times two in a bar is
beaten simply.
The arm and the stick of the conductor
are raised, so that his hand is on a level with his
head, he marks the first beat, by dropping the point
of his stick perpendicularly (bending his wrist
as much as possible; and not lowering the whole arm),
and the second beat by raising the stick by a contrary
gesture.
The time one in a bar being
in reality, and particularly for the conductor, but
the time of an extremely rapid two in a bar, should
be beaten like the preceding. As the conductor
is obliged to raise the point of his stick, after
having lowered it, he necessarily divides this into
two portions.
In the time four in a bar the
first gesture, or down beat, is universally adopted
for marking the first accented part, the commencement
of the bar.
The second movement made by the conducting-stick, from right
to left, rising, indicates the second beat (first unaccented part). A third, transversely, from left to right, indicates the third
beat (second accented part); and a fourth, obliquely, from down
to up, indicates the fourth beat (second unaccented part). The combination
of these four gestures may be figured thus:
It is of importance that the conductor,
in thus delivering his different directions, should
not move his arm much; and consequently, not allow
his stick to pass over much space; for each of these
gestures should operate nearly instantaneously; or
at least, take but so slight a movement as to be imperceptible.
If the movement becomes perceptible, on the contrary,
and multiplied by the number of times that the gesture
is repeated, it ends by throwing the conductor behind
in the time he is beating, and by giving to his conducting
a tardiness that proves injurious. This defect,
moreover, has the result of needlessly fatiguing the
conductor, and of producing exaggerated evolutions,
verging on the ridiculous, which attract the spectators’
attention, and become very disagreeable to witness.
In the time, three in a bar, the first gesture made, from up
to down, is likewise universally adopted for marking the first beat; but there
are two ways of marking the second. The majority of orchestral conductors
indicate it by a gesture from left to right; thus:
Some German Kapel-meisters do the contrary; and carry the
stick from right to left; thus:
This way has the disadvantage when
the conductor turns his back to the orchestra, as
in theatres of permitting only a small number
of musicians to perceive the very important indication
of the second beat; the body of the conductor then
hiding the movement of his arm. The other method
of proceeding is preferable; since the conductor stretches
his arm outwards, withdrawing it from his chest;
and his stick, which he takes care to raise slightly
above the level of his shoulder, remains perfectly
visible to all eyes. When the conductor faces
the players, it is immaterial whether he marks the
second beat to the right, or to the left.
However, the third beat of the time,
three in a bar, is always marked like the last of
the time, four in a bar; by an oblique movement upwards.
The times, five and seven
in a bar, would be more comprehensible for
the performers, if instead of indicating them by a
particular series of gestures, they were treated as
though the one was composed of three and two in a
bar, and the other composed of four and three.
Then, these times would be beaten thus:
Example of seven in a bar:
These different times, in order to
be divided in this way, are assumed to belong to movements
of moderate measure. The advice would not hold
good if their measure were either very quick or very
slow.
The time, two in a bar, I have already
signified, cannot be beaten otherwise than as we have
before seen whatever its degree of rapidity.
But if, as an exception, it should be very slow, the
conductor ought to subdivide it.
A very rapid four in a bar, on the
contrary, should be beaten two in a bar; the four
accustomed gestures of a moderate movement becoming
then so hurried as to present nothing decided to the
eye, and serving only to confuse the performer instead
of giving him confidence. Moreover, and
this is of much more consequence, the conductor,
by uselessly making these four gestures in a quick
movement, renders the pace of the rhythm awkward,
and loses the freedom of gesture which a simple division
of the time into its half would leave him.
Generally speaking, composers are
wrong to write in such a case the indication of the
time as four in a bar. When the movement is very
brisk, they should never write any other than the sign
[Symbol: two in a bar], and not that of [Symbol:
four in a bar], which might lead the conductor into
error.
It is exactly the same for the time,
three in a bar, fast 3/4 or 3/8. Then the conductor
must omit the gesture of the second beat, and, by
remaining the period of a beat longer on the first,
only raise the stick at the third.
It would be absurd to attempt to beat the three in
a bar of one of
Beethoven’s scherzos.
In slow movements the rule for these
two times is like that for two in a bar. If the
movement is very slow, each time must be divided; and
consequently eight gestures must be made for the time,
four in a bar, and six for the time, three in a bar,
repeating (and shortening) each of the principal gestures
we have before instanced.
Example of three in a bar, very slow:
Example of four in a bar, very slow:
The arm should take no part in the
little supplementary gesture indicating the subdivision
of the bar; merely the wrist causing the stick to
move.
This division of the different times
is intended to prevent the rhythmical divergences
which might easily take place among the performers
during the interval which separates one beat from
the other. The conductor not indicating anything
during this period (rendered somewhat considerable
by the extreme slowness of the movement), the players
are then entirely left to themselves, without conductor;
and as the rhythmical feeling is not the same with
all, it follows that some hurry, while others slacken,
and unity is soon destroyed. The only exception
possible to this rule is that of a first-rate orchestra,
composed of performers who are well acquainted with
each other, are accustomed to play together, and know
almost by heart the work they are executing. Even
then, the inattention of a single player may occasion
an accident. Why incur its possibility?
I know that certain artists feel their self-love hurt
when thus kept in leading-strings (like children,
they say); but with a conductor who has no other view
than the excellence of the ultimate result, this consideration
can have no weight. Even in a quartet, it is
seldom that the individual feeling of the players can
be left entirely free to follow its own dictates.
In a symphony, that of the conductor must rule.
The art of comprehending it, and fulfilling it with
unanimity, constitutes the perfection of execution;
and individual wills which can never agree
one with another should never be permitted
to manifest themselves.
This being fully understood, it will
be seen that subdivision is still more essential for
very slow times; as those of 6/4, 6/8, 9/8, 12/8 etc.
But these times where the
triple rhythm plays so important a part may
be divided in various ways.
If the movement is brisk or moderate,
it is rarely well to indicate other than the simple
beats of these times, according to the procedure adopted
for the analogous simple times.
The times of 6/8 allegretto, and of
6/4 allegro, therefore, are to be beaten like those
of two in a bar: [Symbol: two in a
bar] = or 2 = or 2/4; the time, 9/8 allegro, should
be beaten like that of three in a bar 3/4
moderato, or like that of 3/8 andantino; and the time,
12/8 moderato or allegro, like the time, simple four
in a bar. But if the movement be adagio, largo
assai, or andante maestoso, either all the quavers,
or a crotchet followed by a quaver, should be beaten,
according to the form of the melody, or the predominant
design.
It is unnecessary, in this three in
a bar, to mark all the quavers; the rhythm of a crotchet
followed by a quaver in each beat suffices.
As to the subdivision, the little
supplementary gesture for simple times should be made;
this subdivision will however separate each beat into
two unequal portions, since it is requisite to indicate
visibly the value of the crotchet, and that of the
quaver.
If the movement is still slower, there
can be no hesitation; the only way to ensure unity
of execution is to beat all the quavers, whatever be
the nature of the written bar.
Taking the three measures shown above in order, the conductor
must beat three quavers down, and three up, for the time of 6/8:
Three down, three to the right, and three up, for the time of 9/8:
Three down, three to the left, three to the right, and three
up, for the time of 12/8:
A dilemma sometimes presents itself
when certain parts for the sake of contrast are
given a triple rhythm, while others preserve the dual
rhythm.
If the wind-instrument parts in the
above example are confided to players who are good
musicians, there will be no need to change the manner
of marking the bar, and the conductor may continue
to subdivide it by six, or to divide it simply by
two. The majority of players, however, seeming
to hesitate at the moment when, by employing the syncopated
form, the triple rhythm clashes with the dual rhythm,
require assurance, which can be given by easy means.
The uncertainty occasioned them by the sudden appearance
of the unexpected rhythm, contradicted by the rest
of the orchestra, always leads the performers to cast
an instinctive glance towards the conductor, as if
seeking his assistance. He should look at them,
turning somewhat towards them, and marking the triple
rhythm by very slight gestures, as if the time were
really three in a bar, but in such a way that the
violins and other instruments playing in dual rhythm
may not observe the change, which would quite put
them out. From this compromise it results that
the new rhythm of three-time, being marked furtively
by the conductor, is executed with steadiness; while
the two-time rhythm, already firmly established, continues
without difficulty, although no longer indicated by
the conductor. On the other hand, nothing, in
my opinion can be more blamable, or more contrary
to musical good sense, than the application of this
procedure to passages where two rhythms of opposite
nature do not co-exist, and where merely syncopations
are introduced. The conductor, dividing the bar
by the number of accents he finds contained in
it, then destroys (for all the auditors who see him) the effect of
syncopation; and substitutes a mere change of time for a play of rhythm of the
most bewitching interest. If the accents are marked, instead of the beats,
in the following passage from Beethovens Pastoral Symphony, we have the
subjoined:
whereas the four previously maintained display the
syncopation and make it better felt:
This voluntary submission to a rhythmical
form which the author intended to thwart is
one of the gravest faults in style that a beater of
the time can commit.
There is another dilemma, extremely troublesome for a
conductor, and demanding all his presence of mind. It is that presented by
the super-addition of different bars. It is easy to conduct a bar in dual
time placed above or beneath another bar in triple time, if both have the same
kind of movement. Their chief divisions are then equal in duration, and
one needs only to divide them in half, marking the two principal beats:
But if, in the middle of a piece slow in movement, there is
introduced a new form brisk in movement, and if the composer (either for the
sake of facilitating the execution of the quick movement, or because it was
impossible to write otherwise) has adopted for this new movement the short bar
which corresponds with it, there may then occur two, or even three short bars
super-added to a slow bar:
The conductor’s task is to guide
and keep together these different bars of unequal
number and dissimilar movement. He attains this
by dividing the beats in the andante bar, N, which
precedes the entrance of the allegro in 6/8, and by
continuing to divide them; but taking care to mark
the division more decidedly. The players of the
allegro in 6/8 then comprehend that the two gestures
of the conductor represent the two beats of their
short bar, while the players of the andante take these
same gestures merely for a divided beat of their long
bar.
It will be seen that this is really quite simple, because the
division of the short bar, and the subdivisions of the long one, mutually
correspond. The following example, where a slow bar is super-added to the
short ones, without this correspondence existing, is more awkward:
Here, the three bars allegro-assai
preceding the allegretto are beaten in simple two
time, as usual. At the moment when the allegretto
begins, the bar of which is double that of the preceding,
and of the one maintained by the violas, the
conductor marks two divided beats for the long bar, by two equal gestures
down, and two others up:
The two large gestures divide the
long bar in half, and explain its value to the hautboys,
without perplexing the violas, who maintain the
brisk movement, on account of the little gesture which
also divides in half their short bar.
From bar N, the conductor ceases
to divide thus the long bar by 4, on account of the
triple rhythm of the melody in 6/8, which this gesture
interferes with. He then confines himself to marking
the two beats of the long bar; while the violas,
already launched in their rapid rhythm, continue it
without difficulty, comprehending exactly that each
stroke of the conductor’s stick marks merely
the commencement of their short bar.
This last observation shows with what care dividing the beats
of a bar should be avoided when a portion of the instruments or voices has to
execute triplets upon these beats. The division, by cutting in half the
second note of the triplet, renders its execution uncertain. It is even
necessary to abstain from this division of the beats of a bar just before the
moment when the rhythmical or melodic design is divided by three, in order not
to give to the players the impression of a rhythm contrary to that which they
are about to hear:
In this example, the subdivision of
the bar into six, or the division of beats into two,
is useful; and offers no inconvenience during bar
N, when the following gesture is made:
But from the beginning of bar N it is necessary to make
only the simple gestures:
on account of the triplet on the third
beat, and on account of the one following it which
the double gesture would much interfere with.
In the famous ball-scene of Mozart’s
Don Giovanni, the difficulty of keeping together
the three orchestras, written in three different measures,
is less than might be thought. It is sufficient
to mark downwards each beat of the tempo di minuetto:
Once entered upon the combination,
the little allegro in 3/8, of which a whole bar represents
one-third, or one beat of that of the minuetto, and
the other allegro in 2/4, of which a whole bar represents
two-thirds, or two beats, correspond with each other
and with the principal theme; while the whole proceeds
without the slightest confusion. All that is requisite
is to make them come in properly.
A gross fault that I have seen committed, consists in
enlarging the time of a piece in common-time, when the author has introduced
into it triplets of minims:
In such a case, the third minim adds
nothing to the duration of the bar, as some conductors
seem to imagine. They may, if they please, and
if the movement be slow or moderate, make these passages
by beating the bar with three beats, but the duration
of the whole bar should remain precisely the same.
In a case where these triplets occur in a very quick
bar in common-time (allegro-assai), the three gestures
then cause confusion, and it is absolutely necessary
to make only two, one beat upon the first
minim, and one upon the third. These gestures,
owing to the quickness of the movement, differ little
to the eye, from the two of the bar with two equal
beats, and do not affect the movement of those parts
of the orchestra which contain no triplets.
We will now speak of the conductors method of beating in
recitatives. Here, as the singer or the instrumentalist is reciting, and
no longer subject to the regular division of the bar, it is requisite, while
following him attentively, to make the orchestra strike, simultaneously and with
precision, the chords or instrumental passages with which the recitative is
intermingled; and to make the harmony change at the proper instant, when the
recitative is accompanied either by holding-notes or by a tremolo in several
parts, of which the least apparent, occasionally, is that which the conductor
must most regard, since upon its motion depends the change of chord:
In this example, the conductor, while
following the reciting part, not kept time to, has
especially to attend to the viola part, and to make
it move, at the proper moment, from the F to the E,
at the commencement of the second bar; because otherwise,
as this part is executed by several instrumentalists
playing in unison, some of them would hold the F longer
than the rest, and a transient discord would be produced.
Many conductors have the habit, when directing the orchestra
in recitatives, of paying no heed to the written division of the bar, and of
marking an up beat before that whereon a brief orchestral chord occurs, even
when this chord comes on an unaccented part of the bar:
In a passage such as this, they raise
the arm at the rest which commences the bar, and lower
it at the time of the chord.
I cannot approve of such a method,
which nothing justifies, and which may frequently
occasion accidents in the execution. Neither do
I see why, in recitatives, the bar should not be divided
regularly, and the real beats marked in their place,
as in music beaten in time. I therefore advise for
the preceding example that the first beat
should be made down, as usual, and the stick carried
to the left for striking the chord upon the second
beat; and so on for analogous cases; always dividing
the bar regularly. It is very important, moreover,
to divide it according to the time previously indicated
by the author, and not to forget, if this
time is allegro or maestoso, and if the
reciting part has been some time reciting unaccompanied, to
give to all the beats, when the orchestra comes in
again, the value of those of an allegro or of a maestoso.
For when the orchestra plays alone, it does so generally
in time; it plays without measured time only when
it accompanies a voice or instrument in recitative.
In the exceptional case where the
recitative is written for the orchestra itself, or
for the chorus, or for a portion of either orchestra
or chorus, it being then requisite to keep together,
whether in unison or in harmony, but without regular
time, a certain number of performers, the conductor
himself becomes the real reciter, and gives to
each beat of the bar the duration he judges fit.
According to the form of the phrase, he divides and
subdivides the beats, now marks the accents, now the
semiquavers, if there are any, and, in short, indicates
with his stick the melodic form of the recitative.
It must of course be understood that
the performers, knowing their parts almost by heart,
keep their eye constantly upon him, otherwise, neither
security nor unity can be obtained.
In general, even for timed music,
the conductor should require the players he directs
to look towards him as often as possible.
An orchestra which does not watch
the conducting-stick has no conductor. Often,
after a pedal-point for instance, the conductor is
obliged to refrain from marking the decisive gesture
which is to determine the coming in of the orchestra
until he sees the eyes of all the performers fixed
upon him. It is the duty of the conductor, during
rehearsal, to accustom them to look towards him simultaneously
at the important moment.
If the rule just indicated were not observed in the above
bar, of which the first beat, marking a pedal-point, may be prolonged
indefinitely, the passage
could not be uttered with firmness
and unity; the players, not watching the conductor’s
stick, could not know when he decides the second beat
and resumes the movement suspended by the pedal-point.
The obligation upon the performers
to look at their conductor necessarily implies an
equal obligation on his part to let himself be well
seen by them. He should, whatever
may be the disposal of the orchestra, whether on rows
of steps, or on a horizontal plane, place
himself so as to form the centre of all surrounding
eyes.
To place himself well in sight, a
conductor requires an especial platform, elevated
in proportion as the number of performers is large
and occupies much space. His desk should not be
so high that the portion sustaining the score shall
hide his face for the expression of his countenance
has much to do with the influence he exercises.
If there is no conductor for an orchestra that does
not and will not watch him, neither is there any if
he cannot be well seen.
As to the employment of noises of
any kind whatever, produced by the stick of the conductor
upon his desk, or by his foot upon the platform, they
call for no other than unreserved reprehension.
It is worse than a bad method; it is a barbarism.
In a theatre, however, when the stage evolutions prevent
the chorus-singers from seeing the conducting-stick,
the conductor is compelled to ensure, after
a pause, the taking up a point by the chorus to
indicate this point by marking the beat which precedes
it by a slight tap of his stick upon the desk.
This exceptional circumstance is the only one which
can warrant the employment of an indicating noise,
and even then it is to be regretted that recourse
must be had to it.
While speaking of chorus-singers,
and of their operations in theatres, it may here be
observed that chorus-masters often allow themselves
to beat time at the side-scenes, without seeing the
conductor’s stick, frequently even without hearing
the orchestra. The result is that this time,
beaten more or less ill, and not corresponding with
that of the conductor, inevitably induces a rhythmical
discordance between the choral and instrumental bodies,
and subverts all unity instead of tending to maintain
it.
There is another traditional barbarism
which lies within the province of an intelligent and
active conductor to abolish. If a choral or instrumental
piece is performed behind the scenes, without accompaniment
from the principal orchestra, another conductor is
absolutely essential. If the orchestra accompany
this portion, the first conductor, who hears the distant
music, is then strictly bound to let himself be
guided by the second, and to follow his time by
ear. But if as frequently happens
in modern music the sound of the chief orchestra
hinders the conductor from hearing that which is being
performed at a distance from him, the intervention
of a special conducting mechanism becomes indispensable,
in order to establish instantaneous communication between
him and the distant performers. Many attempts,
more or less ingenious, have been made of this kind,
the result of which has not everywhere answered expectations.
That of Covent Garden Theatre, in London, moved by
the conductor’s foot, acts tolerably well.
But the electric metronome, set up by Mr. Van
Bruge in the Brussels Theatre, leaves nothing to be
desired. It consists of an apparatus of copper
ribbons, leading from a Voltaic battery placed beneath
the stage, attached to the conductor’s desk,
and terminating in a movable stick fastened at one
end on a pivot before a board at a certain distance
from the orchestral conductor. To this latter’s
desk is affixed a key of copper, something like the
ivory key of a pianoforte; it is elastic, and provided
on the interior side with a protuberance of about
a quarter of an inch long. Immediately beneath
this protuberance is a little cup, also of copper,
filled with quicksilver. At the instant when the
orchestral conductor, desiring to mark any particular
beat of a bar, presses the copper key with the forefinger
of his left hand (his right being occupied in holding,
as usual, the conducting-stick) this key is lowered,
the protuberance passes into the cup filled with quicksilver,
a slight electric spark is emitted, and the stick
placed at the other extremity of the copper ribbon
makes an oscillation before its board. The communication
of the fluid and the movement are quite simultaneous,
no matter how great a distance is traversed.
The performers being grouped behind
the scenes, their eyes fixed upon the stick of the
electric metronome, are thus directly subject to the
conductor, who could, were it needful, conduct, from
the middle of the Opera orchestra in Paris, a piece
of music performed at Versailles.
It is merely requisite to agree upon
beforehand with the chorus-singers, or with their
conductor (if as an additional precaution, they have
one), the way in which the orchestral conductor beats
the time whether he marks all the principal
beats, or, only the first of the bar since
the oscillations of the stick, moved by electricity,
being always from right to left, indicate nothing
precise in this respect.
When I first used, at Brussels, the
valuable instrument I have just endeavored to describe,
its action presented one objection. Each time
that the copper key of my desk underwent the pressure
of my left forefinger, it struck, underneath, another
plate of copper, and, notwithstanding the delicacy
of the contact, produced a little sharp noise, which,
during the pauses of the orchestra, attracted the
attention of the audience, to the detriment of the
musical effect.
I pointed out the fault to Mr. Van
Bruge, who substituted for the lower plate of copper
the little cup filled with quicksilver, previously
mentioned. Into this the protuberance so entered
as to establish the electric current without causing
the slightest noise.
Nothing remains now, as regards the
use of this mechanism, but the crackling of the spark
at the moment of its emission. This, however,
is too slight to be heard by the public.
The metronome is not expensive to
put up; it costs 16 pounds at the most. Large
lyric theatres, churches, and concert-rooms should
long ago have been provided with one. Yet, save
at the Brussels Theatre, it is nowhere to be found.
This would appear incredible, were it not that the
carelessness of the majority of directors of institutions
where music forms a feature is well known; as are
their instinctive aversion to whatever disturbs old-established
customs, their indifference to the interests of art,
their parsimony wherever an outlay for music is needed,
and the utter ignorance of the principles of our art
among those in whose hands rests the ordering of its
destiny.
I have not yet said all on the subject
of those dangerous auxiliaries named chorus-masters.
Very few of them are sufficiently versed in the art,
to conduct a musical performance, so that the orchestral
conductor can depend upon them. He cannot therefore
watch them too closely when compelled to submit to
their coadjutorship.
The most to be dreaded are those whom
age has deprived of activity and energy. The
maintenance of vivacious times is an impossibility
to them. Whatever may be the degree of quickness
indicated at the head of a piece confided to their
conducting, little by little they slacken its pace,
until the rhythm is reduced to a certain medium slowness,
that seems to harmonize with the speed at which their
blood flows, and the general feebleness of their organization.
It must in truth be added, that old
men are not the only ones with whom composers run
this risk. There are men in the prime of life,
of a lymphatic temperament, whose blood seems to circulate
moderato. If they have to conduct an allegro
assai, they gradually slacken it to moderato;
if, on the contrary, it is a largo or an andante sostenuto,
provided the piece is prolonged, they will, by dint
of progressive animation, attain a moderato
long before the end. The moderato is their
natural pace, and they recur to it as infallibly as
would a pendulum after having been a moment hurried
or slackened in its oscillations.
These people are the born enemies
of all characteristic music, and the greatest destroyers
of style. May Fate preserve the orchestral conductor
from their co-operation.
Once, in a large town (which I will
not name), there was to be performed behind the scenes
a very simple chorus, written in 6/8, allegretto.
The aid of the chorus-master became necessary.
He was an old man.
The time in which this chorus was
to be taken having been first agreed upon by the orchestra,
our Nestor followed it pretty decently during the
first few bars; but, soon after, the slackening became
such that there was no continuing without rendering
the piece perfectly ridiculous. It was recommenced
twice, thrice, four times; a full half-hour was occupied
in ever-increasingly vexatious efforts, but always
with the same result. The preservation of allegretto
time was absolutely impossible to the worthy man.
At last the orchestral conductor, out of all patience,
came and begged him not to conduct at all; he had
hit upon an expedient: He caused the chorus-singers
to simulate a march-movement, raising each foot alternately,
without moving on. This movement, being in exactly
the same time as the dual rhythm of the 6/8 in a bar,
allegretto, the chorus-singers, who were no longer
hindered by their director, at once performed the
piece as though they had sung marching; with no less
unity than regularity, and without slackening the
time.
I acknowledge, however, that many
chorus-masters, or sub-conductors of orchestras, are
sometimes of real utility, and even indispensable for
the maintenance of unity among very large masses of
performers. When these masses are obliged to
be so disposed as that one portion of the players
or chorus-singers turn their back on the conductor,
he needs a certain number of sub-beaters of the time,
placed before those of the performers who cannot see
him, and charged with repeating all his signals.
In order that this repetition shall be precise, the
sub-conductors must be careful never to take their
eyes off the chief conductor’s stick for a single
instant. If, in order to look at their score,
they cease to watch him for only three bars, a discrepancy
arises immediately between their time and his, and
all is lost.
In a festival where 1200 performers
were assembled under my direction, at Paris, I had
to employ four chorus-masters, stationed at the four
corners of the vocal mass, and two sub-conductors,
one of whom directed the wind-instruments, and the
other the instruments of percussion. I had earnestly
besought them to look towards me incessantly; they
did not omit to do so, and our eight sticks, rising
and falling without the slightest discrepancy of rhythm,
established amidst our 1200 performers the most perfect
unity ever witnessed.
With one or more electric metronomes,
it seems no longer necessary to have recourse to this
means. One might, in fact, thus easily conduct
chorus-singers who turn their back towards the chief
conductor; but attentive and intelligent sub-conductors
are always preferable to a machine. They have
not only to beat the time, like the metronomic staff,
but they have also to speak to the groups around them,
to call their attention to nice shades of execution,
and, after bar-rests, to remind them when the moment
of their re-entry comes.
In a space arranged as a semicircular
amphitheatre, the orchestral conductor may conduct
a considerable number of performers alone, all eyes
then being able to look towards him. Nevertheless,
the employment of a certain number of sub-conductors
appears to me preferable to individual direction,
on account of the great distance between the chief
conductor and the extreme points of the vocal and instrumental
body.
The more distant the orchestral conductor
is from the performers he directs, the more his influence
over them is diminished.
The best way would be to have several
sub-conductors, with several electric metronomes beating
before their eyes the principal beats of the bar.
And now, should the orchestral
conductor give the time standing or sitting down?
If, in theatres where they perform
scores of immense length, it is very difficult to
endure the fatigue of remaining on foot the whole evening,
it is none the less true that the orchestral conductor,
when seated, loses a portion of his power, and cannot
give free course to his animation, if he possess any.
Then, should he conduct reading from
a full score, or from a first violin part (leader’s
copy), as is customary in some theatres? It is
evident that he should have before him a full score.
Conducting by means of a part containing only the
principal instrumental cues, the bass and the melody,
demands a needless effort of memory from a conductor;
and moreover, if he happens to tell one of the performers,
whose part he cannot examine, that he is wrong, exposes
him to the chance of the reply: “How do
you know?”
The disposal and grouping of the players
and chorus-singers come also within the province of
the orchestral conductor; particularly for concerts.
It is impossible to indicate arbitrarily the best method
of grouping the performers in a theatre or concert-room;
the shape and arrangement of the interior of these
places necessarily influence the course to be taken
in such a case. Let us add, that it depends, moreover,
upon the number of performers requiring to be grouped;
and, on some occasions, upon the style of composition
adopted by the author whose work is to be performed.
In general, for concerts, the following
disposal of the orchestra seems best: An
amphitheatre of eight, or at least, five rows is indispensable.
The semicircular form is the best for the amphitheatre.
If it is large enough to contain the whole orchestra,
the entire mass of instrumentalists can be disposed
of along these rows; the first violins in front on
the right, facing the public; the second violins in
front on the left; the violas, in the middle,
between the two groups of violins; the flutes, hautboys,
clarinets, horns, and bassoons behind the first violins;
a double rank of violoncellos and double-basses behind
the second violins; the trumpets, cornets, trombones,
and tubas behind the violas; the rest of
the violoncellos and double-basses behind the wooden
wind instruments; the harps in the foreground, close
to the orchestral conductor; the kettle-drums, and
other instruments of percussion behind or in the centre
of the brass instruments; the orchestral conductor,
turning his back to the public, at the base of the
orchestra, and near to the foremost desks of the first
and second violins.
There should be a horizontal flooring,
or stage, more or less wide, extending in front of
the first rows of the amphitheatre. On this flooring
the chorus-singers should be placed, in form of a fan
turned three-quarters towards the public, so that
all shall be able easily to see the motions of the
orchestral conductor. The grouping of the chorus-singers,
in consonance with their respective order of voice,
will differ according as the author has written in
three, four, or six parts. At any rate, the women sopranos
and contraltos should be in front,
seated; the tenors standing behind the contraltos;
and the basses standing behind the sopranos.
The solo-singers should occupy the
centre, and foremost, part of the front stage, and
should always place themselves in such a way as to
be able, by slightly turning the head, to see the
conducting-stick.
For the rest, I repeat, these indications
can be but approximate; they may be, for many reasons,
modified in various ways.
At the Conservatoire, in Paris, where
the amphitheatre is composed of only four or five
rows, not circular, and cannot therefore contain the
whole orchestra, the violins and violas are on
the stage; while the basses and wind instruments alone
occupy the rows; the chorus is seated on the front
of the stage, facing the public, and the women, sopranos
and contraltos, turning their backs directly upon
the orchestral conductor, are utterly unable to see
his motions. The arrangement is very inconvenient
for this portion of the chorus.
It is of the greatest consequence
that the chorus-singers placed on the front of the
stage shall occupy a plane somewhat lower than that
of the violins; otherwise they would considerably
deaden the sound of these instruments.
For the same reason, if there are
no other rows for the choir in front of the orchestra,
it is absolutely needful that the women should be
seated, and the men remain standing up; in order that
the voices of the tenors and basses, proceeding from
a more elevated point than those of the sopranos and
contraltos, may come forth freely, and be neither
stifled nor intercepted.
When the presence of the chorus-singers
in front of the orchestra is not necessary, the conductor
must take care to send them away; since this large
number of human bodies injures the sonority of the
instruments. A symphony performed by an orchestra
thus more or less stifled, loses much of its effect.
There are yet other precautions, relative especially to the
orchestra, which the conductor may also take, to avoid certain defects in
performance. The instruments of percussion, placed, as I have indicated,
upon one of the last rows of the orchestra, have a tendency to modify the
rhythm, and slacken the time. A series of strokes on the drum struck at
regular intervals in a quick movement, like the following:
will sometimes lead to the complete
destruction of a fine rhythmical progression, by checking
the onward bound of the rest of the orchestra, and
destroying the unity. Almost always, the drum
player, through not observing the original time given
by the conductor, is somewhat behindhand in striking
his first stroke. This retardment, multiplied
by the number of strokes which follow the first one,
soon produces as may be imagined a
rhythmical discrepancy of the most fatal effect.
The conductor, all whose efforts to re-establish
unanimity are then in vain has only one
thing left to do; which is, to insist that the long
drum player shall count beforehand the number of strokes
to be given in the passage in question, and that,
knowing his part, he shall no longer look at his copy,
but keep his eyes constantly fixed upon the conducting-stick;
by which means he will follow the time without the
slightest want of precision.
Another retardment, arising from a different cause,
frequently takes place in the trumpet-parts; it is when they contain a quick
flow of passages such as this:
The trumpet-player, instead of taking
breath before the first of these three bars, takes breath at their
commencement, during the quaver-rest, A; and, not counting for anything the
short time it has taken him to breathe, gives its whole value to the
quaver-rest, which thus becomes super-added to the value of the first bar.
The result of this is the following:
an effect all the worse because the
final accent, struck at the commencement of the third
bar by the rest of the orchestra, comes a third of
the time too slow in the trumpets, and destroys unity
in the striking of the last chord.
To obviate this, the conductor must
first previously warn the players against such inexactness,
into which they almost all are led to fall unawares;
and then, while conducting, must cast a glance towards
them at the decisive moment, and anticipate a little,
by beating the first beat of the bar where they come
in. It is incredible how difficult it is to prevent
trumpet-players from doubling the value of a quaver-rest
thus placed.
When a long accelerando, little
by little, is indicated by the composer, for passing
from an allegro moderato to a presto, the majority
of orchestral conductors hurry the time by jerks,
instead of quickening it equally throughout, by an
insensible onward rate. This should be carefully
avoided.
The same remark applies to the converse
proposition. It is even more difficult to slacken
a quick time smoothly, and without checks, so as to
transform it little by little into a slow time.
Often, from a desire to testify zeal, or from defect
of delivery in his musical feeling, a conductor demands
from his players an exaggeration of nice gradations.
He comprehends neither the character nor the style
of the piece. The gradations then become so many
blemishes; the accents, yells; the intentions of the
poor composer are totally disfigured and perverted;
while those of the orchestral conductor however
politely meant they may be are none the
less injurious: like the caresses of the ass in
the fable, who crushed his master while fondling him.
And now let us instance many deplorable
abuses that are obtained in almost all the orchestras
of Europe abuses which reduce composers
to despair, and which it is the duty of conductors
to abolish as soon as possible.
Performers playing stringed instruments
will rarely give themselves the trouble to play a
tremolo; they substitute for this very characteristic
effect, a tame repetition of the note, half, and sometimes
three-quarters slower than the one whence results
the tremolo: instead of demisemiquavers, they
make triple or double ones; and in lieu of producing
sixty-four notes in a bar in four-time (adagio), they
produce only thirty-two, or even sixteen. The
action of the arm necessary for producing a true tremolo,
demands from them too great an effort. This idleness
is intolerable.
Many double-bass players permit themselves from
idleness, also, or from a dread of being unable to
achieve certain difficulties to simplify
their part. This race of simplifiers has existed
for forty years; but it cannot endure any longer.
In ancient works, the double-bass parts were extremely
simple; therefore there can be no reason to impoverish
them still more: those in modern scores are rather
more difficult, it is true; but, with very few exceptions,
there is nothing in them impossible of execution;
composers, masters of their art, write them with care,
and as they ought to be executed. If it is from
idleness that the simplifiers pervert them, the energetic
orchestral conductor is armed with the necessary authority
to compel the fulfilment of their duty. If it
is from incapacity, let him dismiss them. It
is his best interest to rid himself of instrumentalists
who cannot play their instrument.
Flute-players, accustomed to having
their parts written in the upper octave, and not admitting
that their part can be written below that of clarinets
or hautboys, frequently transpose entire passages an
octave higher. The conductor, if he does not
carefully peruse his score, if he is not thoroughly
acquainted with the work he is conducting, or if his
ear lacks keenness, will not perceive the strange liberty
thus taken. Nevertheless, multitudes of such
instances occur, and care should be taken to banish
them entirely.
It happens everywhere (I do not say
in some orchestras only) that when ten,
fifteen, or twenty violinists have to play the same
part in unison, that they do not count the bars’
rest; each, from idleness, relying on the others doing
it. Whence it follows that scarcely half of them
come in again at the right moment; while the rest
still hold their instrument under their left arm,
and look about them. Thus the point is greatly
weakened, if not entirely missed. I invoke the
attention and vigor of orchestral conductors to this
insufferable habit. It is, however, so rooted
that they will only ensure its extirpation by making
a large number of violinists amenable for the fault
of a single player; by inflicting a fine, for example,
upon a whole row, if one of them misses coming in.
Even were this fine no more than half-a-crown, I will
answer for it that each of the violinists would count
his rests, and keep watch that his neighbors did the
same, since it might be inflicted five or six times
upon the same individuals in the course of one performance.
An orchestra, the instruments of which
are not in tune individually, and with each other,
is a monstrosity; the conductor, therefore, should
take the greatest care that the musicians tune accurately.
But this operation should not be performed in presence
of the public; and, moreover, every instrumental noise every
kind of preluding between the acts constitutes
a real offence to all civilized auditors. The
bad training of an orchestra, and its musical mediocrity
is to be inferred from the impertinent noise it makes
during the periods of quiet at an Opera or Concert.
It is also imperative for a conductor
not to allow clarinet-players to use always the same
instrument (the clarinet in Bb), without regard
to the author’s indications; just as if the
different clarinets those in D and
A, particularly had not a special
character of their own, of which the intelligent composer
knows the exact value; and as if the clarinet in A
had not moreover a low semitone more than the clarinet
in Bb , the C#, of excellent effect, produced by the E, which
E gives only the D, on the clarinet
in Bb.
A habit as vicious, and still more
baneful, has crept into many orchestras since the
introduction of horns with cylinders and pistons:
it is that of playing in open sounds; by means
of the new mechanism adapted to the instrument, those
notes intended by the composer to be produced in
closed sounds, by means of the right hand within
the bell. Moreover, the horn-players nowadays,
on account of the facility afforded by the pistons
or cylinders for putting their instrument into different
keys, use only the horn in F whatever may be
the key indicated by the author. This custom
gives rise to a host of inconveniences, from which
the conductor should use all his efforts to preserve
the works of composers who know how to write.
He should also set his face against
the economical fashion adopted by certain theatres called
lyric of causing the cymbals and the long
drum to be played by the same performer. The
sound of the cymbals when attached to the drum as
they must be to render this economy feasible is
an ignoble noise, fit only for bands at tea-gardens.
This custom, moreover, leads mediocre composers into
the habit of never employing one of these instruments
without the other, and considering their use as solely
confined to forcibly marking the accented parts of
the bar. This is an idea fruitful in noisy platitudes;
and one that has brought upon us the ridiculous excesses
beneath which, if a stop be not put to them, dramatic
music will sooner or later sink.
I conclude by expressing sincere regret
at beholding choral and orchestral studies still so
badly organized. Everywhere, for grand choral
and instrumental compositions, the system of rehearsals
in the mass is maintained. They make all the
chorus-singers study at once, on the one hand; and
all the instrumentalists at once, on the other.
Deplorable errors, innumerable mistakes, are thus committed particularly
in the intermediate parts errors which the
chorus-master and the conductor do not perceive.
Once established, these errors degenerate into habits,
and become part and parcel of the execution.
The hapless chorus-singers, moreover,
are by far the worst treated of all the performers
during their studies, such as they are. Instead
of giving them a good conductor, knowing the
times of the different movements accurately, and proficient
in the art of singing, to beat the time, and make
critical observations: a good pianist,
playing from a well-arranged pianoforte score,
upon a good piano; and a violinist,
to play in unison or in octave with the voices as each
part is learned alone instead of these
three indispensable artists, they commit them
(in two-thirds of the lyric theatres of Europe) to
the superintendence of a single man, who has no more
idea of the art of conducting than of that of singing,
who is generally a poor musician, selected from among
the worst pianists to be found, or who cannot play
the pianoforte at all some old superannuated
individual, who, seated before a battered out-of-tune
instrument, tries to decipher a dislocated score which
he does not know, strikes false chords major, when
they are minor, or vice-versa, and under the pretext
of conducting and of accompanying by himself, employs
his right hand in setting the chorus-singers wrong
in their time, and his left hand in setting them wrong
in their tune.
One might believe one’s self
in the Dark Ages, on witnessing such an exhibition
of Gothish economy.
A faithful, well-colored, clever interpretation
of a modern work, even when confided to artists of
a higher order, can only be obtained, I firmly believe,
by partial rehearsals. Each part of a chorus should
be studied singly until it is thoroughly known, before
combining it with the others. The same step should
be taken with regard to the orchestra, for a symphony
at all complicated. The violins should first be
practised alone; the violas and basses by themselves;
the wooden wind instruments (with a small band of
stringed instruments, to fill in the rests, and accustom
the wind instruments to the points of re-entrance)
and the brass instruments the same; and very often
it is necessary to practise the instruments of percussion
alone; and lastly, the harps, if they be numerous.
The studies in combination are then far more profitable,
and more rapid; and there is then good hope of attaining
fidelity of interpretation, now, alas, but too rare.
The performances obtained by the old
method of study are merely approaches to achievement;
beneath which so very many masterpieces have succumbed.
The superintending conductor, after the butchering
of a master, none the less serenely lays down his
stick with a satisfied smile; and if some few misgivings
remain with him as to the mode in which he has fulfilled
his task, should no one venture at the close to dispute
its accomplishment, he murmurs aside: “Bah!
vae victis!”