TERESA CARRENO
EARLY EVIDENCES OF INDIVIDUALITY
It is difficult for me to discuss
the subject of individuality without recollecting
one of the most impressive and significant events of
my entire career. When I was taken to Europe
as a child, for further study, it was my good fortune
to meet and play for the immortal Franz Liszt.
He seemed deeply interested in my playing, and with
the kindliness for which he was always noted he gave
me his blessing, a kind of artistic sacrament that
has had a tremendous influence upon all my work as
an artist. He laid his hand upon my head and
among other things said: “Little girl,
with time you will be one of us. Don’t imitate
anyone. Keep yourself true to yourself.
Cultivate your individuality and do not follow blindly
in the paths of others.”
In this one thought Liszt embodied
a kind of a pedagogical sermon which should be preached
every day in all the schools, conservatories and music
studios of the world. Nothing is so pitiful as
the evidences of a strong individuality crushed out
by an artificial educational system which makes the
system itself of paramount importance and the individual
of microbic significance.
The signs of individuality may be
observed in little folks at a very early age.
With some children they are not very pronounced, and
the child seems like hundreds of others without any
particular inclination, artistic or otherwise.
It is then that the teacher’s powers of divination
should be brought into play. Before any real progress
can be made the nature of the child must be studied
carefully. In the case of other children, the
individuality is very marked at an early age.
As a rule, the child with the marked individuality
is the one from whom the most may be expected later
in life. Sometimes this very individuality is
mistaken for precocity. This is particularly the
case with musicians. In a few instances the individuality
of the master has been developed late in life, as
was the case of Richard Wagner, whose early individual
tendencies were toward the drama rather than music.
NEW PROBLEMS AT EVERY STEP
The teacher in accepting a new pupil
should realize that there at once arises new problems
at every step. The pupil’s hand, mind, body
and soul may be in reality different from those of
every other pupil the teacher has taught. The
individual peculiarities of the hand should be carefully
considered. If the hand has long, tapering fingers,
with the fingers widely separated, it will need quite
different treatment from that of the pupil with a
short, compact, muscular hand. If the pupil’s
mind indicates mental lethargy or a lack of the proper
early educational training, this must be carefully
considered by the teacher.
If the pupil’s body is frail
and the health uncertain, surely the teacher will
not think of prescribing the same work she would prescribe
for a robust, energetic pupil who appears never to
have had a sick day. One pupil might be able
to practice comfortably for four and five hours a
day, while another would find her energy and interest
exhausted in two hours. In fact, I would consider
the study of individuality the principal care or study
of the teacher.
The individuality of different virtuoso
performers is very marked. Although the virtuoso
aspires to encompass all styles that is,
to be what you would call an “all-around”
player it is, nevertheless, the individuality
of the player that adds the additional charm to the
piano-recital. You hear a great masterpiece executed
by one virtuoso, and when you hear the same composition
played by another you will detect a difference, not
of technical ability or of artistic comprehension,
but rather of individuality. Rembrandt, Rubens
and Vandyke might have all painted from the same model,
but the finished portrait would have been different,
and that difference would have been a reflection of
the individuality of the artist.
THE TEACHER’S RESPONSIBILITY
Again let me emphasize the necessity
for the correct “diagnosis” of the pupil’s
individuality upon the part of the teacher. Unless
the right work is prescribed by the teacher, the pupil
will rarely ever survive artistically. It is
much the same as with the doctor. If the doctor
gives the wrong medicine and the patient dies, surely
the doctor is to blame. It makes no difference
whether the doctor had good intentions or not.
The patient is dead and that is the end of all.
I have little patience with these people who have
such wonderful intentions, but who have neither the
ability, courage nor willingness to carry out these
intentions. Many teachers would like to accomplish
a very great deal for their pupils, but alas! they
are either not able or they neglect those very things
which make the teacher’s work a mission.
One of the teacher’s greatest responsibilities
lies in determining at first upon a rational educational
course by divining the pupil’s individuality.
Remember that pupils are not all like sheep to be shorn
in the same identical fashion with the same identical
shears.
EDWARD MACDOWELL’S INDIVIDUALITY
One of the most remarkable cases of
a pronounced musical individuality was that of the
late Edward MacDowell, who came to me for instruction
for a considerable time. He was then quite youthful,
and his motives from the very first were of the highest
and noblest. His ideals were so lofty that he
required little stimulation or urging of any kind.
Here it was necessary to study the pupil’s nature
very carefully, and provide work that would develop
his keenly artistic individuality. I remember
that he was extremely fond of Grieg, and the marked
and original character of the Norwegian tone-poet
made a deep impression upon him. He was poetical,
and loved to study and read poetry. To have repressed
MacDowell in a harsh or didactic manner would have
been to have demolished those very characteristics
which, in later years, developed in such astonishing
fashion that his compositions have a distinctiveness
and a style all their own.
It gives me great pleasure to place
his compositions upon my programs abroad, and I find
that they are keenly appreciated by music lovers in
the old world. If MacDowell had not had a strong
individuality, and if he had not permitted this individuality
to be developed along normal lines, his compositions
would not be the treasures to our art that they are.
DEVELOPING INDIVIDUALITY THROUGH POETRY
If the teacher discovers a pupil with
apparent musical talent, but whose nature has not
been developed to appreciate the beautiful and romantic
in this wonderful world of ours, he will find it quite
impossible to alter the pupil’s individuality
in this respect by work at the keyboard alone.
The mundane, prosaic individual who believes that the
sole aim of musical study is the acquisition of technic,
or the magic of digital speed, must be brought to
realize that this is a fault of individuality which
will mar his entire career unless it is intelligently
corrected. Years and years spent in practice
will not make either a musician or a virtuoso out
of one who can conceive of nothing more than how many
times he can play a series of notes within the beats
of the metronome, beating 208 times a minute.
Speed does not constitute virtuosity,
nor does the ability to unravel the somewhat intricate
keyboard puzzles of Bach and Brahms make in itself
fine piano playing. The mind of the artist must
be cultured; in fact, quite as cultured as that of
the composer who conceived the music. Culture
comes from the observation of many things: Nature,
architecture, science, machinery, sculpture, history,
men and women, and poetry. I advise aspiring
music students to read a great deal of poetry.
I find great inspiration in Shakespeare,
inspiration which I know is communicated to my interpretations
of musical masterpieces at my concerts. Who can
remain unmoved by the mystery and psychology of Hamlet,
the keen suffering and misery of King Lear,
the bitter hate and revenge of Othello, the
sweet devotion of Romeo and Juliet, the majesty
of Richard III, and the fairy beauty of A
Midsummer Night’s Dream? In this wonderful
kaleidoscope of all the human passions one can find
a world of inspiration. I am also intensely fond
of Goethe, Heine, and Alfred de Musset. It gives
me pleasure to compare them to the great masters of
music. Shakespeare I compare to Brahms, Goethe
to Bach and Beethoven, and Heine and Musset to Chopin
and Liszt.
CULTIVATING VIVACITY AND BRILLIANCY
Vivacity and brilliancy in playing
are largely matters of temperament and a fluent technic.
I owe a great deal in this respect to Gottschalk.
When he came back to America fresh from the hands of
the inimitable Chopin, he took the most minute pains
to cultivate this characteristic in my playing.
Chopin’s own playing was marked by delicacy and
an intensity that was apart from the bravura playing
of most of the artists of his time. Gottschalk
was a keen observer, and he did everything possible
to impart this style to me. I have used the studies
of Czerny, Liszt, Henselt and Clementi to develop
brilliancy with pupils.
It should be remembered that the root
of all brilliant playing lies in one thing accuracy.
Without accuracy any attempt at brilliancy must result
in “mussiness.” It is impossible to
explain these things by means of books and theories.
Remember what Goethe says: “Alle Theorie
is grau, mein Freund” (all theory
is foggy or hard to comprehend). One can say
fifty times as much in twenty minutes as one can put
in a book. Books are necessary, but by no means
depend entirely upon books for technical instruction.
Individuals who are careless possess
a trait that will seriously mar their individuality
as musicians and artists. Carelessness is so often
taken for “abandon” in playing. “Abandon”
is something quite different and pertains to that
unconsciousness of technical effort which only comes
to the artist after years of practice. To play
with “abandon” and miss a few notes in
this run, play a few false notes in the next, strike
the wrong bass note here and there, mumble trills and
overlook the correct phrasing entirely, with the idea
that you are doing the same thing you have seen some
great virtuoso do, is simply the superlative degree
of carelessness.
To one whose individuality is marred
by carelessness let me recommend very slow playing,
with the most minute attention to detail. Technically
speaking, Czerny and Bach are of great value in correcting
carelessness. In Czerny the musical structure
of the compositions is so clearly and openly outlined
that any error is easily detected, while in Bach the
structure is so close and compact that it is difficult
to make an error without interrupting the movement
of some other voice that will reveal the error.
The main consideration, however, is personal carefulness,
and it makes little difference what the study is,
so long as the student himself takes great pains to
see that he is right, and exactly right, before he
attempts to go ahead. Most musicians, however,
would say that Bach was the one great stone upon which
our higher technical structure must firmly stand.
Some individuals are so superficial
and so “frothy” that it is difficult to
conceive of their doing anything serious or really
worth while. It is very hard for the teacher
to work with such a pupil, because they have not realized
themselves as yet. They have not looked into their
lives and discerned those things which make life of
most importance. Life is not all play, nor is
it all sorrow. But sorrow often does much to
develop the musician’s character, to make him
look into himself and discover his more serious purposes.
This might also be accomplished by some such means
of self-introspection as “Christian Science.”
Although I am not a “Christian Scientist,”
I am a great believer in its wonderful principles.
The greatest care must be taken in
developing the individualities of the superficial
pupils. To give them Bach or Brahms at the outstart
would be to irritate them. They must be led to
a fondness for music of a deeper or more worthy character
by gradual steps in that direction. In my own
case I was fortunate in having the advice of mature
and famous musicians, and as a child was given music
of a serious order only. I have always been grateful
for this experience. At one of my first New York
concerts I had the honor of having Theodore Thomas
as first violinist, and I well remember his natural
bent for music of a serious order, which was in a
decided contrast to the popular musical taste of the
times.
THE IMPORTANCE OF STUDYING MUSICAL HISTORY
Every composer has a pronounced individuality.
To the experienced musician this individuality becomes
so marked that he can often detect the composer’s
style in a composition which he has never heard.
The artist studies the individuality of the composer
through the study of his biography, through the study
of musical history in general and through the analysis
of individual compositions.
Every music student should be familiar
with the intensely necessary and extremely valuable
subject of musical history. How else can he become
familiar with the personal individualities of the great
composers? The more I know of Chopin, Beethoven,
Scarlatti or Mendelssohn as men, and the more I know
of the times in which they lived, the closer I feel
to the manner in which they would have wished their
compositions interpreted. Consider how markedly
different are the individualities of Wagner and Haydn,
and how different the interpretations of the works
of these masters should be.
Strauss and Debussy are also very
different in their methods of composition. Strauss
seems to me a tremendous genius who is inventing a
new musical language as he goes. Debussy does
not appeal to me in the same manner. He always
seems to be groping for musical ideas, while with
Strauss the greatness of his ideas is always evident
and all-compelling.
In closing, let me say that Time,
Experience and Work are the moulders
of all individuality. Few of us close our days
with the same individualities which become evident
in our youth. We are either growing better or
worse all the time. We rarely stand still.
To the musician work is the great sculptor of individuality.
As you work and as you think, so will you be.
No deed, no thought, no hope is too insignificant
to fail to influence your nature. As through work
we become better men and women, so through work do
we become better musicians. Carlyle has beautifully
expressed this thought in “Past and Present”
thus: “The latest Gospel in this world is,
’Know thy work and do it.’ Blessed
is he who has found his work; let him ask no other
blessedness. He has a WORK, a life purpose; he
has found it and will follow it.”
QUESTIONS ON STYLE, INTERPRETATION, EXPRESSION
AND TECHNIC OF PIANO PLAYING
SERIES VI
TERESA CARRENO
1. Why should imitation be avoided?
2. Should individuality in playing
be developed at an early age?
3. Should individual physical
peculiarities be taken into consideration?
4. In what way was Edward MacDowell’s
individuality marked?
5. How may individuality be developed through
poetry?
6. What studies are particularly
useful in the cultivation of brilliant playing?
7. What is the best remedy for careless playing?
8. How must superficial pupils be treated?
9. Why is the study of musical history so important?
10. What may be called the sculptor
of individuality in music?