DAVID BISPHAM
So many things enter into the great
problem of interpretation in singing that it is somewhat
difficult to state definitely just what the young
singer should consider the most important. Generally
speaking, the following factors are of prime significance:
1. Natural Aptitude.
2.
General Education and Culture.
3. Good Musical
Training.
4. Accurate Vocal Training.
5.
Familiarity with Traditions.
6. Freedom of
Mind.
7. Good Health.
8. Life Experience.
9. Personal Magnetism one of the
most essential, and
10. Idealism.
1. Natural Aptitude. You
will notice that foremost consideration is given to
those broad general qualities without which all the
technical and musical training of the world is practically
worthless. The success of the art worker in all
lines depends first upon the nature of the man or
woman. Technical training of the highest and best
kind is essential, but that which moves great audiences
is not alone the mechanics of an art, but rather the
broad education, experience, ideals, culture, the
human sympathy and magnetism of the artist.
2. The Value of Education and Culture. I
cannot emphasize too strongly the value of a good
general education and wide culture for the singer.
The day has passed when a pretty face or a well-rounded
ankle could be mistaken for art on the operatic stage.
The public now demands something more than the heroic
looking young fellow who comes down to the footlights
with the assurance of youth and offers, for real vocal
art, a voice fresh but crudely trained, and a bungling
interpretation.
Good education has often been responsible
for the phenomenal success of American singers in
European opera houses. Before the last war, in
nearly all of the great operatic centers of the Continent,
one found Americans ranking with the greatest artists
in Europe. This was a most propitious condition,
for it meant that American audiences have been compelled
to give the long-delayed recognition to our own singers,
and methods of general and vocal education.
In most cases the young people of
America who aspire to operatic triumphs come from
a somewhat better class than singers do in Europe.
They have had, in most cases, better educational, cultural
and home advantages than the average European student.
Their minds are trained to study intelligently; they
are acquainted with the history of the great nations
of the world; their tastes are cultivated, and they
are filled with the American energy which is one of
the marvels of the centuries. More than this,
they have had a kind of moral uplift in their homes
which is of immense value to them. They have higher
ideals in life, they are more businesslike and they
keep their purposes very clearly in view. This
has created jealousy in some European centers; but
it is simply a case of the survival of the fittest,
and Europe was compelled to bow in recognition of
this. Vocal art in our own land is no longer to
be ignored, for our standards are as high as the highest
in the world, and we are educating a race of singers
of which any country might be proud.
3. Good Musical Training. A
thorough musical training that is, a training
upon some musical instrument such as the piano is
extremely desirable, but not absolutely essential;
for the instrument called the Human Voice can be played
on as effectively as a violin. The singer who
is convinced of his ability, but who has not had such
advantages in early youth, should not be discouraged.
He can acquire a thorough knowledge of the essentials
later on, but he will have to work very much harder
to get his knowledge as I was obliged to
do. Artistic ability is by no means a certain
quality. The famous art critic, Vassari, has
called our attention to the fact that one painter who
produced wonderful pictures had an exhaustive technical
training, another arising at his side who also achieved
wonderful results had to secure them by means of much
bungling self-study. It is very hard to repress
artistic ability. As the Bible says: “Many
waters cannot quench love.” So it is with
music; if the ability is there, it will come to the
front through fire and water.
4. Accurate and Rational Vocal
Training. I have added the word rational
for it seems a necessary term at a time when so much
vocal teaching is apparently in the hands of “faddists.”
There is only one way to sing, that is the right
way, the way that is founded upon natural conditions.
So much has been said in print about breathing, and
placing the voice, and resonance, that anything new
might seem redundant at this time. The whole
thing in a nutshell is simply to make an effort to
get the breath under such excellent control that it
will obey the will so easily and fluently that the
singer is almost unconscious of any means he may employ
to this end. This can come only through long practice
and careful observation. When the breath is once
under proper control the supply must be so adjusted
that neither too much nor too little will be applied
to the larynx at one time. How to do this can
be discovered only by much practice and self-criticism.
When the tone has been created it must be reinforced
and colored by passing through the mouth and nose,
and the latter is a very present help in time of vocal
trouble. This leads to a good tone on at least
twenty-six steps and half-steps of the scale and with
twenty or more vowel sounds no easy task
by any means. All this takes time, but there
is no reason why it should take an interminable amount
of time. If good results are not forthcoming in
from nine months to a year, something is wrong with
either the pupil or the teacher.
The matter of securing vocal flexibility
should not be postponed too long, but may in many
instances be taken up in conjunction with the studies
in tone production, after the first principles have
been learned. Thereafter one enters upon the
endless and indescribably interesting field of securing
a repertoire. Only a teacher with wide experience
and intimacy with the best in the vocal literature
of the world can correctly grade and select pieces
suitable to the ever-changing needs of the pupil.
No matter how wonderful the flexibility
of the voice, no matter how powerful the tones, no
matter how extensive the repertoire, the singer will
find all this worthless unless he possesses a voice
that is susceptible to the expression of every shade
of mental and emotional meaning which his intelligence,
experience and general culture have revealed to him
in the work he is interpreting. At all times his
voice must be under control. Considered from
the mechanical standpoint, the voice resembles the
violin, the breath, as it passes over the vocal cords,
corresponding to the bow and the resonance chambers
corresponding to the resonance chambers in the violin.
5. Familiarity With Vocal Traditions. We
come to the matter of the study of the traditional
methods of interpreting vocal masterpieces. We
must, of course, study these traditions, but we must
not be slaves to them. In other words, we must
know the past in order to interpret masterpieces properly
in the present. We must not, however, sacrifice
that great quality individuality for
slavery to convention. If the former Italian
method of rendering certain arias was marred by
the tremolo of some famous singers, there is no good
artistic reason why any one should retain anything
so hideous as a tremolo solely because it is traditional.
There is a capital story of a young
American singer who went to a European opera house
with all the characteristic individuality and inquisitiveness
of his people. In one opera the stage director
told him to go to the back of the stage before singing
his principal number and then walk straight down to
the footlights and deliver the aria. “Why
must I go to the back first?” asked the young
singer. The director was amazed and blustered:
“Why? Why, because the great Rubini
did it that way he created the part; it
is the tradition.” But the young singer
was not satisfied, and finally found an old chorus
man who had sung with Rubini, and asked him whether
the tradition was founded upon a custom of the celebrated
singer. “Yes,” replied the chorus
man, “da gretta Rubini he granda
man. He go waya back; then he comea front; then
he sing. Ah, grandissimo!” “But,”
persisted the young American, “Why did he
go to the back before he sang?” “Oh!”
exclaimed the excited Italian; “Why he go back?
He go to spit!”
Farcical as this incident may seem,
many musical traditions are founded upon customs with
quite as little musical or esthetic importance.
Many traditions are to-day quite as useless as the
buttons on the sleeves of our coats, although these
very buttons were at one time employed by our forefathers
to fasten back the long cuffs. There are, however,
certain traditional methods of rendering great masterpieces,
and particularly those marked by the florid ornamentation
of the days of Handel, Bach and Haydn, which the singer
must know. Unfortunately, many of these traditions
have not been preserved in print in connection with
the scores themselves, and the only way in which the
young singer can acquire a knowledge of them is through
hearing authoritative artists, or from teachers who
have had wide and rich experience.
6. Freedom of Mind. Under
ideal conditions the mind should be free for music
study and for public performance. This is not
always possible; and some artists under great mental
pressure have done their best work solely because
they felt that the only way to bury sorrow and trouble
was to thrust themselves into their artistic life and
thus forget the pangs of misfortune. The student,
however, should do everything possible to have his
mind free so that he can give his best to his work.
One who is wondering where the next penny is coming
from is in a poor condition to impress an audience.
Nevertheless, if the real ability is there it is bound
to triumph over all obstacles.
7. Good Health. Good
health is one of the great factors of success in singing.
Who needs a sounder mind than the artist? Good
health comes from good, sensible living. The
singer must never forget that the instrument he plays
upon is a part of his body and that that instrument
depends for its musical excellence and general condition
upon good health. A $20,000 Stradivarius would
be worthless if it were placed in a tub of water;
and a larynx that earns for its owner from $500 to
$1,500 a night is equally valueless when saturated
with the poisons that come from intemperate or unwise
living. Many of the singer’s throat troubles
arise from an unhealthy condition of the stomach caused
by excesses of diet; but, aside from this, a disease
localized in any other part of the body affects the
throat sympathetically and makes it difficult for the
singer to get good results. Recital work, with
its long fatiguing journeys on railroads, together
with the other inconveniences of travel and the responsibility
and strain that come from knowing that one person
alone is to hold from 1,000 to 5,000 people interested
for nearly two hours, demands a very sound physical
condition.
8. Life Experience. Culture
does not come from the schoolroom alone. The
refining processes of life are long and varied.
As the violin gains in richness of tone and intrinsic
value with age, so the singer’s life experience
has an effect upon the character of his singing.
He must have seen life in its broadest sense, to place
himself in touch with human sympathy. To do this
and still retain the freshness and sweetness of his
voice should be his great aim. The singer who
lives a narrow and bigoted existence rarely meets
with wide popular approval. The public wants to
hear in a voice that wonderful something that tells
them that it has had opportunities to know and to
understand the human side of song, not giving parrot-like
versions of some teacher’s way of singing, but
that the understanding comes from the very center
of the mind, heart and soul. This is particularly
true in the field of the song recital. Most of
the renowned recital singers of the last half century,
including Schumann-Heink, Sembrich, Wuellner, the
Henschels and others, were considerably past their
youth when they made their greatest successes.
A painting fresh from the artist’s brush is
raw, hard and uninteresting, till time, with its damp
and dust, night and day, heat and cold, gives the
enriching touch which adds so wonderfully to the softness
and beauty of a picture. We singers are all living
canvases. Time, and time only, can give us those
shades and tints which reveal living experience.
The young artist should hear many of the best singers,
actors, and speakers, should read many of the best
books, should see many beautiful pictures and wonderful
buildings. But most of all, he should know and
study many people and learn of their joys and their
sorrows, their successes and their failures, their
strength and their weaknesses, their loves and their
hates. In all art human life is reflected, and
this is particularly true in the case of vocal art.
For years, in my youth, I never failed to attend all
of the musical events of consequence in my native
city. This was of immense value to me, since it
gave me the means of cultivating my own judgment of
what was good or bad in singing. Do not fear
that you will become blase. If you have
the right spirit every musical event you attend will
spur you on.
You may say that it is expensive to
hear great singers, and that you can only attend recitals
and the opera occasionally. If this is really
the case you still have a means of hearing singers
which you should not neglect. I refer to the
reproducing machines which have grown to be of such
importance in vocal education. Phonograph records
are nothing short of marvelous, and my earnestness
in this cause is shown by the fact that I have long
advocated their employment in the public schools, and
have placed the matter before the educational authorities
of New York. I earnestly urge the music teachers
of this country, who are working for the real musical
development of our children, to take this matter up
in all seriousness. I can assure them that their
efforts will bring them rich dividends in increased
interest in musical work of their pupils, and the
forming of a musical public. But nothing but the
classics of song must be used. The time for the
scorning of “high-brow” songs is past,
and music must help this country to rid itself of the
vogue of the “low-brow” and the “tough.”
Let singers strive to become educated ornaments of
their lofty profession.
9. Personal Magnetism. One
of the most essential. The subject of “personal
magnetism” is ridiculed by some, of course, but
rarely laughed at by the artist who has experienced
the astonishing phenomena in the opera house or the
concert room. Like electricity it is intangible,
indefinable, indescribable, but makes its existence
known by manifestations that are almost uncanny.
If personal magnetism does not exist, how then can
we account for the fact that one pianist can sit down
to the instrument and play a certain piece, and that
another pianist could play the same piece with the
same technical effect but losing entirely the charm
and attractiveness with which the first pianist imbued
the composition? Personal magnetism does not depend
upon personal beauty nor erudition nor even upon perfect
health. Henry Irving and Sarah Bernhardt were
certainly not beautiful, but they held the world of
the theater in the palm of their hand. Some artists
have really been in the last stages of severe illness
but have, nevertheless, possessed the divine electric
spark to inspire hundreds, as did the hectic Chopin
when he made his last famous visit to England and
Scotland.
Personal magnetism is not a kind of
hypnotic influence to be found solely in the concert
hall or the theater. Most artists possess it to
a certain degree. Without this subtle and mysterious
force, success with the public never comes.
10. Idealism. Ideals
are the flowers of youth. Only too often they
are not tenderly cared for, and the result is that
many who have been on the right track are turned in
the direction of failure by materialism. It is
absolutely essential for the young singer to have high
ideals. Direct your efforts to the best in whatever
branch of vocal art you determine to undertake.
Do not for a moment let mediocrity or the substitution
of artificial methods enter your vision. Holding
to your ideal will mean costly sacrifices to you;
but all sacrifices are worth while if one can realize
one’s ideal. The ideal is only another term
for Heaven to me. If we could all attain to the
ideal, we would all be in a kind of earthly Paradise.
It has always seemed to me that when our Lord said
“The Kingdom of Heaven is at hand,” he
meant that it is at hand for us to possess now; that
is the ideal in life.