THE VIRTUOSO’S CAREER AS IT REALLY IS
The father of a young woman who was
preparing to become a virtuoso once applied to a famous
musical educator for advice regarding the future career
of his daughter. “I want her to become one
of the greatest pianists America has ever produced,”
he said. “She has talent, good health,
unlimited ambition, a good general education, and she
is industrious.” The educator thought for
awhile, and then said, “It is very likely that
your daughter will be successful in her chosen field,
but the amount of grinding study she will be obliged
to undergo to meet the towering standards of modern
pianism is awful to contemplate. In the end she
will have the flattery of the multitude, and, let us
hope, some of their dollars as well. In return,
she may have to sacrifice many of the comforts and
pleasures which women covet. The more successful
she is, the more of a nomad she must become.
She will know but few days for years when she will
not be compelled to practice for hours. She becomes
a kind of chattel of the musical public. She will
be harassed by ignorant critics and perhaps annoyed
by unreliable managers. In return she has money
and fame, but, in fact, far less of the great joy and
purpose of life than if she followed the customary
domestic career with some splendid man as her husband.
When I was younger I used to preach quite an opposite
sermon, but the more I see of the hardships of the
artist’s life the less I think of the dollars
and the fame it brings. It is hard enough for
a man, but it is twice as hard for a woman.”
GOLDEN BAIT
Some cynic has contended that the
much-despised “Almighty Dollar” has been
the greatest incentive to the struggling virtuoso in
European music centers. Although this may be
true in a number of cases, it is certainly unjust
in others. Many of the virtuosos find travel in
America so distasteful that notwithstanding the huge
golden bait, the managers have the greatest difficulty
in inducing the pianists to come back. Indeed,
there are many artists of great renown whom the managers
would be glad to coax to our country but who have
withheld tempting offers for years. One of these
is Moritz Moszkowski, probably the most popular of
modern pianoforte composers of high-class music.
Grieg, when he finally consented to make the voyage
to America, placed his price at two thousand five
hundred dollars for every concert a sum
which any manager would regard prohibitive, except
in the case of one world-famous pianist. Grieg’s
intent was obvious.
The inconveniences of travel in America
have been ridiculously exaggerated in Europe, and
many virtuosos dread the thought of an American trip,
with the great ocean yawning between the two continents,
and red-skinned savages just beyond New York or certainly
not far from Chicago. De Pachmann detests the
ocean, and when he comes over in his favorite month
of June he does not dare return until the following
June. Others who have never visited America must
get their idea of American travel from some such account
as that of Charles Dickens in his unforgivable American
Notes (1842), in which he said, in describing
one of our railroads:
“There is a great deal of jolting,
a great deal of noise, a great deal of wall,
not much window, a locomotive engine, a shriek
and a bell. The cars are like shabby omnibuses
holding thirty, forty, fifty people. In the
centre of the carriage there is usually a stove,
fed with charcoal or anthracite coal, which is
for the most part red hot. It is insufferably
close, and you see the hot air fluttering between
yourself and any other object you may happen to look
at.”
There could have been but little improvement
in our railroads in 1872 when Rubinstein came to America,
for although he accepted $40,000 for 215 concerts
during his first trip, he refused an offer of $125,000
for only 50 concerts when a manager tried to persuade
him to return.
American railroads now present the
acme of comfort, convenience, and even luxury in travel,
yet the European artist has difficulty in adjusting
himself to journeys of thousands of miles crowded in
a short winter season when he has been accustomed
to little trips of a few hundred kilometers.
He comes to dread the trains as we might a prison
van. Paderewski resorts to a private car, but
even this luxurious mode of travel may be very monotonous
and exhausting.
The great distances must certainly
account for some of the evidences of strain which
deform the faces and exhaust the minds of so many
virtuosos. The traveling salesman seems to thrive
upon miles of railroad travel as do the crews of the
trains, but the virtuoso, dragged from concert to
concert by his showman, grows tired oh,
so tired, pale, wan, listless and indifferent!
At the beginning of the season he is quite another
person. The magnetism that has done so much to
win him fame shines in his eyes and seems to emanate
from his finger-tips, but the difference in his physical
being at the end of the season is sickening.
Like a bedraggled, worn-out circus coming in from the
wear and tear of a hard season, he crawls wearily
back to New York with a cinematographic recollection
of countless telegraph poles flying past the windows,
audience after audience, sleeping cars, budding geniuses,
the inevitable receptions with their equally inevitable
chicken salad or lukewarm oysters, and the “sweet
young things,” who, like Heine’s mythical
tribe of Asra, must love or perish. Some
virtuosos have the physical strength to endure all
this, even enjoy it, but many have confessed to me
that their American tours have been literal nightmares.
One of the greatest pianists was obliged
to stay in New York for a while before attempting
the voyage homeward. At the time he was so weak
from the rigors of the tour that he could scarcely
write his name. His haggard face suggested the
tortures of a Torquamada rather than Buffalo, Kansas
City, Denver and Pittsburgh. His voice was tired
and faltering, and his chief interest was that of
the invalid getting home as soon as possible.
To have talked with him upon music at that time would
have been an injustice. Accordingly, I led him
away from the subject and dwelt upon the woes of his
native Poland, and, much to his surprise, left him
without the educational material of which I had been
in quest. He asked the reason, and I told him
that a musical conference at that time could serve
no purpose.
As men and women, aside from the attainments
which have made them illustrious, virtuosos are for
the most part very much like ordinary mortals who
have to content themselves at the foot of Parnassus.
It has been my privilege to know thirty or more of
the most eminent artists, and some have become good
personal friends. It is interesting to observe
how several very different types of individuals may
succeed in winning public favor as virtuosos.
Indeed, except for the long-haired caricature which
the public accepts as the conventional virtuoso there
is no “virtuoso type.” Here is a
business man, here an artist, here an engineer, here
a jurist, here an actor, here a poet and here a freak,
all of them distinguished performers. Perhaps
the enthusiastic music-lover will resent the idea
of a freak becoming famous as a pianist, but I have
known no less than three men who could not possibly
be otherwise described, but who have nevertheless made
both fame and fortune as virtuosos.
FREAK PIANISTS
The anthropologist who chooses to
conduct special investigations of freaks can find
no more entertaining field than that of the remarkable
freaks of the brain, shown in the cases of some astonishing
performers whose intelligence and mental capacity
in other ways has been negligible. The classic
case of Blind Tom, for instance, was that of a freak
not so very far removed in kind from the Siamese Twins,
or General Tom Thumb. Born a slave in Georgia,
and wholly without what teachers would term a musical
education, Blind Tom amazed many of the most conservative
musicians of his time. It was possible for him
to repeat difficult compositions after hearing them
played only once. I conversed with him a number
of years ago in New York, only to find that intellectually
and physically he was allied to the cretin.
Blind Tom’s peculiar ability
has led many hasty commentators to conclude that music
is a wholly separate mental faculty to be found particularly
in a more or less shiftless and irresponsible class
of gifted but intellectually limited human beings.
The few cases of men and women whose musical talent
seems to eclipse their minds so that they remain in
utter darkness to everything else in life, should not
be taken as a basis for judging other artists of real
genius and undisputed mental breadth. I have
in mind, however, the case of one pianist who is very
widely known and highly lauded, but who is very slightly
removed from the class of Blind Tom. A trained
alienist, one acquainted with the difference between
the eccentricities which frequently accompany greatness
and the unconscious physical and psychical evidences
of idiocy which so clearly agree with the antics of
the chimpanzee or the droll Capuchin monkeys, might
find in the performer to whom I refer a subject for
some very interesting, not to say startling reflections.
Few have ever been successful in inducing this pianist
to talk upon any other subject than music for more
than a few minutes at a time. Another pianist,
who was distinguished as a Liszt pupil, and who toured
America repeatedly, seemed to have a hatred for the
piano that amounted to an obsession. “Look,”
he exclaimed, “I am its slave. It has sent
me round and round the world, night after night, year
after year. It has cursed me like a wandering
Jew. No rest, no home, no liberty. Do you
wonder that I drink to forget it?”
A PATHETIC EXAMPLE
And drink he did in Bacchanalian measure!
One time he gave an unconscious exhibition of his
technical ability that, while regrettable, would have
been of immense interest to psychologists who are seeking
to prove that music depends upon a separate operation
of a special “faculty.” During his
American tours I called frequently upon this virtuoso
for the purpose of investigating his method of playing.
He was rarely free from the influence of alcohol for
more than a few hours at a time. One morning
it was necessary for me to see him professionally,
and when I found him at his hotel he was in a truly
disgraceful condition. I remember that he was
unable to stand, from the fact that he fell upon me
while I was sitting in a Morris chair. He was
barely able to talk, and just prior to my leaving
he insisted upon scrawling upon his visiting card,
“Zur freundlichen Errinerung, auf einen
sehr spaeten Abend.” (Friendly remembrances
of a very late evening.) Since it was still very early
in the morning, it may be realized that he had lost
all idea of his whereabouts. Nevertheless, he
sat at the piano keyboard and played tremendously
difficult compositions by Liszt and Brahms compositions
which compelled his hands to leap from one part of
the keyboard to the other as in the case of the Liszt
Campanella. He never missed a note until
he lost his balance upon the piano stool and fell
to the floor. Disgusting and pathetic as the exhibition
was, I could not help feeling that I was witnessing
a marvelous instance of automatism, that wonderful
power of the mind working through the body to reproduce,
apparently without effort or thought, operations which
have been repeated so many times that they have become
“second nature.” More than this,
it indicated clearly that while the better part of
the man’s body was “dead to the world,”
the faculty he had cultivated to the highest extent
still remained alive. Some years later this man
succumbed to alcoholism.
THE PIANIST OF TO-DAY
Contrasted with a type of this kind
may be mentioned such men as Sauer, Rachmaninov, d’Albert,
Paderewski, Godowsky, Bachaus, Rosenthal, Pauer, Joseffy,
Stojowski, Scharwenka, Gabrilowitsch, Hofmann, Bauer,
Lhevinne, to say nothing of the ladies, Bloomfield-Zeisler,
Carreno, Goodson, et al., many of whom are
intellectual giants. Most all are exceedingly
regular in their habits, and at least two are strong
temperance advocates. Intellectually, pianists
of this class represent a very remarkable kind of
mentality. One is impressed with the surprising
quickness with which their brains operate even in ordinary
conversation. Speaking in alien languages, they
find comparatively little difficulty in expressing
themselves with rapidity and fluency. Very few
great singers ever acquire a similar ease. These
pianists are wonderfully well read, many being acquainted
with the literature of three or more tongues in the
original. Indeed, it is not unusual to find them
skipping through several languages during ordinary
conversation without realizing that they are performing
linguistic feats that would put the average college
graduate to shame. They are familiar with art,
science, politics, manufactures, even in their most
recent developments. “What is your favorite
type of aeroplane?” asked one some years ago
in the kindergarten days of cloud navigation.
I told him that I had made no choice, since I had
never seen a flying machine, despite the fact that
I was a native of the country that gave it birth.
He then vouchsafed his opinions and entered into a
physical and mechanical discussion of the matter,
indicating that he had spent hours in getting the whole
subject straightened out in his mind. This same
man, a German, knew whole cantos of the Inferno
by heart, and could repeat long scenes from King
Lear with a very creditable English accent.
The average American “tired
business man” who is inclined to look upon the
touring virtuoso as “only a pianist” would
be immensely surprised if he were called upon to compare
his store of “universal” information with
that of the performer. He would soon see that
his long close confinement behind the bars of the
dollar sign had made him the intellectual inferior
of the musician he almost ignores. But it is hardly
fair to compare these famous interpreters with the
average “tired business man.” They
are the Cecil Rhodes, the Thomas Edisons,
the Maurice Maeterlincks of their fields. It
is easy enough to find musicians of smaller life opportunities
basking in their ignorance and conceit.
While the virtuoso may be described
as intellectual in the broader sense of the term,
he usually has a great fear of becoming academic.
He aspires to be artistic rather than scholarly.
He strives to elevate rather than to teach in
the strictly pedagogical sense. Some of the greatest
performers have been notoriously weak as teachers.
They do not seek the walls of the college, neither
do they long for the cheap Bohemianism that
so many of the French feuilletonists delight in describing.
(Why should the immorality of the artist’s life
be laid at the doors of fair Bohemia?) The artist’s
life is wrapped up in making his readings of master
works more significant, more eloquent, more beautiful.
He is interested in everything that contributes to
his artistry, whether it be literature, science, history,
art or the technic of his own interpretative development.
He penetrates the various mystic problems which surround
piano playing by the infallible process of persistent
study and reflection. The psychical phase of his
work interests him immensely, particularly the phenomena
of personal attraction often called magnetism.
THE MAGIC OF MAGNETISM
Magnetism is surely one of the most
enviable possessions of the successful pianist.
Just what magnetism is and how it comes to be, few
psychologists attempt to relate. We all have our
theories, just why one pianist who often blunders
as readily as a Rubinstein, or who displays his many
shortcomings at every concert can invariably draw larger
audiences and arouse more applause than his confrere
with weaker vital forces, although he be admittedly
a better technician, a more highly educated gentleman
and perhaps a more sensitive musician.
Charles Frohman, keenest of theatrical
producers, attributed the actor’s success to
“vitality,” and in doing this he merely
chose one of the weaker synonyms of magnetism.
Vitality in this sense does not imply great bodily
strength. It is rather soul-strength, mind-strength,
life-strength. Professor John D. Quackenbos, A.M.,
M.D., formerly of Columbia University, essays the
following definition of magnetism in his excellent
Hypnotic Therapeutics:
“Magnetism is nothing more than
earnestness and sincerity, coupled with insight,
sympathy, patience and tact. These essentials
cannot be bought and cannot be taught. They are
‘born by nature,’ they are dyed with
’the red ripe of the heart.’”
But Dr. Quackenbos is a physician
and a philosopher. Had he been a lexicographer
he would have found the term magnetism far more inclusive.
He would at least have admitted the phenomenon which
we have witnessed so often when one possessed with
volcanic vitality overwhelms a great audience.
The old idea that magnetism is a kind
of invisible form of intellectual or psychic electricity
has gone down the grotesque phrenological vagaries
of Gall as well as some of the pseudoscientific theories
of that very unusual man, Mesmer. We all possess
what is known as magnetism. Some have it in an
unusual degree, as did Edwin Booth, Franz Liszt, Phillips
Brooks and Bismarck. It was surely neither the
art nor the ability of Daniel Webster that made his
audiences accept some of his fatuous platitudes as
great utterances, nor was it the histrionic talent
alone of Richard Mansfield that enabled him to wring
success from such an obvious theatrical contraption
as Prince Karl. Both Webster, with his
fathomless eyes and his ponderous voice, and Mansfield,
with his compelling personality, were exceptional
examples of magnetism.
A NOTABLE EXAMPLE
Among virtuosos Paderewski is peculiarly
forceful in the personal spell he casts over his audience.
Someone has said that it cost one hundred thousand
dollars to exploit his hair before he made his first
American tour. But it was by no means curiosity
to see his hair which kept on filling auditorium after
auditorium. I attended his first concert in New
York, and was amazed to see a comparatively small gathering
of musical zealots. His command of the audience
was at once imperial. The critics, some of whom
would have found Paderewski’s hirsute crown a
delightful rack upon which to hang their ridicule,
went into ecstasies instead. His art and his
striking personality, entirely apart from his appearance,
soon made him the greatest concert attraction in the
musical world. Anyone who has conversed with
him for more than a few moments realizes what the
meaning of the word magnetism is. His entire bearing his
lofty attitude of mind, his personal dignity all contribute
to the inexplicable attraction that the arch hypnotist
Mesmer first described as animal magnetism.
That magnetism of the pianist must
be considered wholly apart from personal beauty and
great physical strength is obvious to anyone who has
given the subject a moment’s thought. Many
of the artists already mentioned (in this book) who
possess magnetism similar to that of Paderewski could
surely never make claim for personal beauty. Neither
is magnetism akin to that attraction we all experience
when we see a powerful, well-groomed horse, a sleek
hound, a handsome tiger that is, it is
not mere admiration for a beautiful animal. Whether
it has any similarity to the mysterious charm which
makes the doomed bird lose control of its wings upon
the approach of a snake is difficult to estimate.
Certainly, in the paraphernalia of the modern recital
with its lowered lights and its solitary figure playing
away at a polished instrument one may find something
of the physical apparatus employed by the professional
hypnotist to insure concentration but even
this can not account for the pianist’s real
attractiveness. If Mr. Frohman’s “vitality”
means the “vital spark,” the “life
element,” it comes very close to a true definition
of magnetism, for success without this precious Promethean
force is inconceivable. It may be only a smouldering
ember in the soul of a dying Chopin, but if it is there
it is irresistible until it becomes extinct.
Facial beauty and physical prowess all made way for
the kind of magnetism that Socrates, George Sand,
Julius Caesar, Henry VIII, Paganini, Emerson, Dean
Swift or Richard Wagner possessed.
More wonderful still is the fact that
magnetism is by no means confined to those who have
finely trained intellects or who have achieved great
reputations. Some vaudeville buffoon or some gypsy
fiddler may have more attractive power than the virtuoso
who had spent years in developing his mind and his
technic. The average virtuoso thinks far more
of his “geist,” his “talent”
(or as Emerson would have it, “the shadow of
the soul the otherwise”) than he does
of his technic, or his cadenzas. By what mystic
means magnetism may be developed, the writer does
not pretend to know. Possibly by placing one’s
deeper self (shall we say “subconscious self”)
in closer communion with the great throbbing problems
of the invisible though perpetually evident forces
of nature which surround us we may become more alive,
more sensitively vivified. What would it mean
to the young virtuoso if he could go to some occult
master, some seer of a higher thought, and acquire
that lode-stone which has drawn fame and fortune
to the blessed few? Hundreds have spent fortunes
upon charlatans in the attempt.
All artists know the part that the
audience itself plays in falling under the magnetic
spell of the performer. Its connection with the
phenomena of autosuggestion is very clear. Dr.
Wundt, the famous German psychologist, showed a class
of students how superstitions unconsciously acquired
in early life affect sensible adults who have long
since passed the stage at which they might put any
credence in omens. At a concert given by a famous
player, the audience has been well schooled in anticipation.
The artist always appears under a halo his reputation
has made for him. This very reputation makes
his conquest far easier than that of the novice who
has to prove his ability before he can win the sympathy
of the audience. He is far more likely to find
the audience en rapport than indifferent.
Sometime, at the play in a theater, watch how the
audience will unconsciously mirror the facial expressions
of the forceful actor. In some similar manner,
the virtuoso on the concert platform sensitizes the
minds and emotions of the sympathetic audience.
If the effect is deep and lasting, the artist is said
to possess that Kohinoor of virtuosodom magnetism.
Some widely read critics have made
the very natural error of confounding magnetism with
personality. These words have quite different
connotations personality comprehending the
more subtle force of magnetism. An artist’s
individual worth is very closely allied with his personality that
is, his whole extrinsic attitude toward the thought
and action of the world about him. How important
personality is may be judged by the widely advertised
efforts of the manufacturers of piano-playing machines
to convince the public that their products, often
astonishingly fine, do actually reproduce the individual
effects which come from the playing of the living
artist. Piano-playing machines have their place,
and it is an important one. However, wonderful
as they may be, they can never be anything but machines.
They bring unquestioned joy to thousands, and they
act as missionaries for both music and the music-teacher
by taking the art into countless homes where it might
otherwise never have penetrated, thus creating the
foundation for a strong desire for a thorough study
of music. The piano-playing machine may easily
boast of a mechanism as wonderful as that of a Liszt,
a d’Albert or a Bachaus, but it can no more
claim personality than the typewriter upon which this
article is being written can claim to reproduce the
individuality which characterizes the handwriting of
myriads of different persons. Personality, then,
is the virtuoso’s one great unassailable stronghold.
It is personality that makes us want to hear a half
dozen different renderings of a single Beethoven sonata
by a half dozen different pianists. Each has
the charm and flavor of the interpreter.
But personality in its relation to
art has been so exquisitely defined by the inimitable
British essayist, A. C. Benson, that we can do no
better than to quote his words:
“I have lately come to perceive
that the one thing which gives value to any piece
of art, whether it be book, or picture, or music, is
that subtle and evasive thing which is called personality.
No amount of labor, of zest, even of accomplishment,
can make up for the absence of this quality.
It must be an almost instinctive thing, I believe.
Of course, the mere presence of personality in a work
of art is not sufficient, because the personality
revealed may be lacking in charm; and charm, again,
is an instinctive thing. No artist can set out
to capture charm; he will toil all the night and take
nothing; but what every artist can and must aim at
is to have a perfectly sincere point of view.
He must take his chance as to whether his point of
view is an attractive one; but sincerity is the one
indispensable thing. It is useless to take opinions
on trust, to retail them, to adopt them; they must
be formed, created, felt. The work of a sincere
artist is almost certain to have some value; the work
of an insincere artist is of its very nature worthless.”
Mr. Benson’s “charm”
is what the virtuoso feels as magnetism. It puts
something into the artist’s playing that he cannot
define. For a moment the vital spark flares into
a bewildering flame, and all his world is peopled
with moths hovering around the “divine fire.”
THE GREATEST THING OF ALL
If we have dwelt too long upon magnetism,
those who know its importance in the artist’s
life will readily perceive the reason. But do
not let us be led away into thinking that magnetism
can take the place of hard work. Even the tiny
prodigy has a career of work behind him, and the master
pianist has often climbed to his position over Matterhorns
and Mt. Blancs of industry. Days
of practice, months of study, years of struggle are
part of the biography of almost every one who has attained
real greatness. What a pity to destroy time-old
illusions! Some prefer to think of their artist
heroes dreaming their lives away in the hectic cafes
of Pesth or buried in the melancholy, absinthe and
paresis of some morbid cabaret of Paris. As a
matter of fact, the best known pianists live a totally
different life a life of grind, grind, grind incessant
study, endless practice and ceaseless search for means
to raise their artistic standing. In some quiet
country villa, miles away from the center of unlicensed
Bacchanalian revels, the virtuoso may be found working
hard upon next season’s repertoire.
After all, the greatest thing in the
artist’s life is W-O-R-K.