JOSEF LHEVINNE
RUSSIA’S MANY KEYBOARD MASTERS
“Russia is old, Russia is vast,
Russia is mighty. Eight and one-half million
square miles of empire not made up of colonies here
and there all over the world, but one enormous territory
comprising nearly one hundred and fifty million people,
of almost as many races as one finds in the United
States, that is Russia. Although the main occupation
of the people is the most peaceful of all labor agriculture Russia
has had to deal with over a dozen wars and insurrections
during a little more than a century. In the same
time the United States has had but five. War
is not a thing to boast about, but the condition reflects
the unrest that has existed in the vast country of
the Czar, and it is not at all unlikely that this
very unrest is responsible for the mental activity
which has characterized the work of so many artists
of Russian birth.
Although Russia is one of the most
venerable of the European nations, and although she
has absorbed other territory possessed by races even
more venerable than herself, her advance in art, letters
and music is comparatively recent. When Scarlatti,
Handel, and Bach were at their height, Russia, outside
of court circles, was still in a state of serfdom.
Tolstoi was born as late as 1828, Turgenieff in 1818
and Pushkin, the half-negro poet-humorist, was born
in 1799. Contemporary with these writers was
Mikhail Ivanovitch Glinka the first of the
great modern composers of Russia. Still later
we come to Wassili Vereschagin, the best known of
the Russian painters, who was not born until 1842.
It may thus be seen that artistic development in the
modern sense of the term has occurred during the lifetime
of the American republic. Reaching back into
the centuries, Russia is one of the most ancient of
nations, but considered from the art standpoint it
is one of the newest.
The folk songs that sprang from the
hearts of the people in sadness and in joy indicated
the unconcealable talent of the Russian people.
They were longing to sing, and music became almost
as much a part of their lives as food. It is
no wonder then that we find among the names of the
Russian pianists such celebrities as Anton Rubinstein,
Nicholas Rubinstein, Essipoff, Siloti, Rachmaninoff,
Gabrilowitsch, Scriabin, de Pachmann, Safonoff, Sapellnikoff
and many others. It seems as though the Russian
must be endowed by nature with those characteristics
which enable him to penetrate the artistic maze that
surrounds the wonders of music. He comes to music
with a new talent, a new gift and finds first of all
a great joy in his work. Much the same might be
said of the Russian violinists and the Russian singers,
many of whom have met with tremendous success.
WITH THE MUSICAL CHILD IN RUSSIA
The Russian parent usually has such
a keen love for music that the child is watched from
the very first for some indication that it may have
musical talent. The parent knows how much music
brings into the life of the child and he never looks
upon the art as an accomplishment for exhibition purposes,
but rather as a source of great joy. Music is
fostered in the home as a part of the daily existence.
Indeed, business is kept far from the Russian fireside
and the atmosphere of most homes of intelligent people
is that of culture rather than commerce. If the
child is really musical the whole household is seized
with the ambition to produce an artist. In my
own case, I was taught the rudiments of music at so
early an age that I have no recollection of ever having
learned how to begin. It came to me just as talking
does with the average child. At five I could
sing some of the Schumann songs and some of those
of Beethoven.
THE KIND OF MUSIC THE RUSSIAN CHILD HEARS
The Russian child is spared all contact
with really bad music. That is, he hears for
the most part either the songs of the people or little
selections from classical or romantic composers that
are selected especially with the view of cultivating
his talent. He has practically no opportunity
to come in contact with any music that might be described
as banal. America is a very young country and
with the tension that one sees in American life on
all sides there comes a tendency to accept music that
may be most charitably described as “cheap.”
Very often the same themes found in this music, skilfully
treated, would make worthy musical compositions.
“Rag-time,” and by this I refer to the
peculiar rhythm and not to the bad music that Americans
have come to class under this head, has a peculiar
fascination for me. There is nothing objectionable
about the unique rhythm, any more than there is anything
iniquitous about the gypsy melodies that have made
such excellent material for Brahms, Liszt and Sarasate.
The fault lies in the clumsy presentation of the matter
and its associations with vulgar words. The rhythm
is often fascinating and exhilarating. Perhaps
some day some American composer will glorify it in
the Scherzo of a Symphony.
In Russia, teachers lay great stress
upon careful grading. Many teachers of note have
prepared carefully graded lists of pieces, suitable
to each stage of advancement. I understand that
this same purpose is accomplished in America by the
publication of volumes of the music itself in different
grades, although I have never seen any of these collections.
The Russian teacher of children takes great care that
the advancement of the pupil is not too rapid.
The pupil is expected to be able to perform all the
pieces in one grade acceptably before going to the
next grade. I have had numerous American pupils
and most of them seem to have the fault of wanting
to advance to a higher step long before they are really
able. This is very wrong, and the pupil who insists
upon such a course will surely realize some day that
instead of advancing rapidly he is really throwing
many annoying obstacles directly in his own path.
INSTRUCTION BOOKS
Many juvenile instruction books are
used in Russia just as in America. Some teachers,
however, find that with pupils starting at an advanced
age it is better to teach the rudiments without a book.
This matter of method is of far greater importance
than the average teacher will admit. The teacher
often makes the mistake of living up in the clouds
with Beethoven, Bach, Chopin, and Brahms, never realizing
that the pupil is very much upon the earth, and that
no matter how grandly the teacher may play, the pupil
must have practical assistance within his grasp.
The main duty in all elementary work is to make the
piano study interesting, and the teacher must choose
the course likely to arouse the most interest in the
particular pupil.
OPPORTUNITIES FOR VIRTUOSO-STUDENTS IN RUSSIA
It may surprise the American student
to hear that there are really more opportunities for
him to secure public appearances right here in his
own country than in Russia. In fact, it is really
very hard to get a start in Russia unless one is able
to attract the attention of the public very forcibly.
In America the standard may not be so high as that
demanded in the musical circles of Russia, but the
student has many chances to play that would never
come to him in the old world. There, the only
chance for the young virtuoso is at the conservatory
concerts. There are many music schools in Russia
that must content themselves with private recitals,
but the larger conservatories have public concerts
of much importance, concerts that demand the attendance
of renowned artists and compel the serious interest
of the press. However, these concerts are few
and far between, and only one student out of many hundreds
has a chance to appear at them.
One singular custom obtains in Russia
in reference to concerts. The pianist coming
from some other European country is paid more than
the local pianist. For instance, although I am
Russian by birth, I reside in Germany and receive
a higher rate when I play in Russia than does the
resident artist. In fact, this rate is often double.
The young virtuoso in the early stages of his career
receives about one hundred roubles an appearance in
Russia, while the mature artist receives from 800 to
1000. The rouble, while having an exchange value
of only fifty cents in United States currency, has
a purchasing value of about one dollar in Russia.
WHY RUSSIAN PIANISTS ARE FAMED FOR TECHNIC
The Russian pianist is always famed
for his technical ability. Even the mediocre
artists possess that. The great artists realize
that the mechanical side of piano playing is but the
basis, but they would no sooner think of trying to
do without that basis than they would of dispensing
with the beautiful artistic temples which they build
upon the substantial foundation which technic gives
to them. The Russian pianists have earned fame
for their technical grasp because they give adequate
study to the matter. Everything is done in the
most solid, substantial manner possible. They
build not upon sands, but upon rock. For instance,
in the conservatory examinations the student is examined
first upon technic. If he fails to pass the technical
examination he is not even asked to perform his pieces.
Lack of proficiency in technic is taken as an indication
of a lack of the right preparation and study, just
as the lack of the ability to speak simple phrases
correctly would be taken as a lack of preparation
in the case of the actor.
“Particular attention is given
to the mechanical side of technic, the exercises,
scales and arpeggios. American readers should
understand that the full course at the leading Russian
conservatories is one of about eight or nine years.
During the first five years, the pupil is supposed
to be building the base upon which must rest the more
advanced work of the artist. The last three or
four years at the conservatory are given over to the
study of master works. Only pupils who manifest
great talent are permitted to remain during the last
year. During the first five years the backbone
of the daily work in all Russian schools is scales
and arpeggios. All technic reverts to these simple
materials and the student is made to understand this
from his very entrance to the conservatory. As
the time goes on the scales and arpeggios become more
difficult, more varied, more rapid, but they are never
omitted from the daily work. The pupil who attempted
complicated pieces without this preliminary technical
drill would be laughed at in Russia. I have been
amazed to find pupils coming from America who have
been able to play a few pieces fairly well, but who
wonder why they find it difficult to extend their
musical sphere when the whole trouble lies in an almost
total absence of regular daily technical work systematically
pursued through several years.
“Of course, there must be other
technical material in addition to scales, but the
highest technic, broadly speaking, may be traced back
to scales and arpeggios. The practice of scales
and arpeggios need never be mechanical or uninteresting.
This depends upon the attitude of mind in which the
teacher places the pupil. In fact, the teacher
is largely responsible if the pupil finds scale practice
dry or tiresome. It is because the pupil has
not been given enough to think about in scale playing,
not enough to look out for in nuance, evenness, touch,
rhythm, etc., etc.
MODERN RUSSIAN INFLUENCE IN MUSICAL ART
“Most musicians of to-day appreciate
the fact that in many ways the most modern effects
sought by the composers who seek to produce extremely
new effects have frequently been anticipated in Russia.
However, one signal difference exists between the
Russians with ultra-modern ideas and the composers
of other nations. The Russian’s advanced
ideas are almost always the result of a development
as were those of Wagner, Verdi, Grieg, Haydn and Beethoven.
That is, constant study and investigations have led
them to see things in a newer and more radical way.
In the case of such composers as Debussy, Strauss,
Ravel, Reger and others of the type of musical Philistine
it will be observed that to all intents and purposes,
they started out as innovators. Schoenberg is
the most recent example. How long will it take
the world to comprehend his message if he really has
one? Certainly, at the present time, even the
admirers of the bizarre in music must pause before
they confess that they understand the queer utterings
of this newest claimant for the palm of musical eccentricity.
With Debussy, Strauss and others it is different, for
the skilled musician at once recognizes an astonishing
facility to produce effects altogether new and often
wonderfully fascinating. With Reger one seems
to be impressed with tremendous effort and little result.
Strauss, however, is really a very great master; so
great that it is difficult to get the proper perspective
upon his work at this time. It is safe to say
that all the modern composers of the world have been
influenced in one way or another by the great Russian
masters of to-day and yesterday. Tchaikovsky,
Rimsky-Korsakov, Cui, Glazounov, Rachmaninov, Moussorgsky,
Arensky, Scriabine and others, have all had a powerful
bearing upon the musical thought of the times.
Their virility and character have been due to the
newness of the field in which they worked. The
influence of the compositions of Rubinstein and Glinka
can hardly be regarded as Russian since they were
so saturated with European models that they might be
ranked with Gluck, Mendelssohn, Liszt and Meyerbeer
far better than with their fellow-countrymen who have
expressed the idiom of Russia with greater veracity.”
QUESTIONS IN STYLE, INTERPRETATION, EXPRESSION
AND TECHNIC OF PIANOFORTE PLAYING
SERIES XI
JOSEF LHEVINNE
1. Is music a part of the daily
life of the child in the Russian home?
2. In what does the Russian teacher
of children take great care?
3. Why are Russian pianists famed
for their technical ability?
4. How are examinations conducted in Russia?
5. What would be thought of the
Russian pupil who attempted pieces without the proper
preliminary scale work?
6. Need the practice of scales
be mechanical and uninteresting?
7. Why do some pupils find technical studies
tiresome?
8. How does Russian musical progress
in composition differ from that of other musical nations?
9. Has Russian music influenced
the progress of other musical nations?
10. How may the compositions
of Rubinstein and Glinka be regarded?