DAME CLARA BUTT
HEALTH AND SINGING
It must be obvious to all aspiring
vocal students that splendid good health is well nigh
indispensable to the singer. There have been
singers, of course, who have had physical afflictions
that have made their public appearances extremely
painful, but they have succeeded in spite of these
unfortunate drawbacks. In fact, if the young singer
is ambitious and has that wonderful gift of directing
her efforts in the way most likely to bring fortunate
results, even physical weakness may be overcome.
By this I mean that the singer will work out some plan
for bringing her physical condition to the standard
that fine singing demands. I believe most emphatically
that the right spirit will conquer obstacles that
often seem impassable. One might safely say that
nine-tenths of the successes in all branches of artistic
work are due to the inextinguishable fire that burns
in the heart and mind of the art worker and incites
him to pass through any ordeal in order to deliver
his message to the world.
MISDIRECTED EFFORT
The cruel part of it all is that many
aspire to become great singers who can never possibly
have their hopes realized. Natural selection rather
than destiny seems to govern this matter. The
ugly caterpillar seems like an unpromising candidate
for the brilliant career of the butterfly, and it
oftentimes happens that students who seem unpromising
to some have just the qualities which, with the right
time, instruction and experience, will entitle them
to great success. It is the little ant who hopes
to grow iridescent wings, and who travels through conservatory
after conservatory, hoping to find the magic chrysalis
that will do this, who is to be pitied. Great
success must depend upon special gifts, intellectual
as well as vocal. Oh, if we only had some instinct,
like that possessed by animals, that would enable
us to determine accurately in advance the safest road
for us to take, the road that will lead us to the
best development of our real talents not
those we imagine we may have or those which the flattery
of friends have grafted upon us! Mr. Rumford
and I have witnessed so much very hard and very earnest
work carried on by students who have no rational basis
to hope for success as singers, that we have been
placed in the uncomfortable position of advising young
singers to seek some other life work.
WHEN TO BEGIN
The eternal question, “At what
age shall I commence to study singing?” is always
more or less amusing to the experienced singer.
If the singer’s spirit is in the child, nothing
will stop his singing. He will sing from morning
until night, and seems to be guided in most cases by
an all-providing Nature that makes its untutored efforts
the very best kind of practice. Unless the child
is brought into contact with very bad music he is
not likely to be injured. Children seem to be
trying their best to prove the Darwinian theory by
showing us that they can mimic quite as well as monkeys.
The average child comes into the better part of his
little store of wisdom through mimicry. Naturally
if the little vocal student is taken to the vaudeville
theatre, where every imaginable vocal law is smashed
during a three-hour performance, and if the child
observes that the smashing process is followed by the
enthusiastic applause of the unthinking audience,
it is only reasonable to suppose that the child will
discover in this what he believes to be the most approved
art of singing.
It is evident then that the first
thing which the parent of the musical child should
consider is that of teaching him to appreciate what
is looked upon as good and what is looked upon as
bad. Although many singers with fine voices have
appeared in vaudeville, the others must be regarded
as “horrible” examples, and the child should
know that they are such. On the other hand, it
is quite evident that the more good singing that the
child hears in the impressionable years of its youth
the greater will be the effect upon the mind which
is to direct the child’s musical future.
This is a branch of the vocalist’s education
which may begin long before the actual lessons.
If it is carefully conducted the teacher should have
far less difficulty in starting the child with the
actual work. The only possible danger might be
that the child’s imitative faculty could lead
it to extremes of pitch in imitating some singer.
Even this is hardly more likely to injure it than the
shouting and screaming which often accompanies the
play of children.
The actual time of starting must depend
upon the individual. It is never too early for
him to start in acquiring his musical knowledge.
Everything he might learn of music itself, through
the study of the piano or any other instrument would
all become a part of his capital when he became a
singer. Those singers are fortunate whose musical
knowledge commenced with the cradle and whose first
master was that greatest of all teachers, the mother.
Speaking generally, it seems to be the impression
of singing teachers that voice students should not
commence the vocal side of their studies until they
are from sixteen to seventeen years of age. In
this connection, consider my own case. My first
public appearance with orchestra was when I was fourteen.
It was in Bristol, England, and among other things
I sang Ora Pro Nobis from Gounod’s Workers.
I was fortunate in having in my first
teacher, D. W. Rootham, a man too thoroughly blessed
with good British common sense to have any “tricks.”
He had no fantastic way of doing things, no proprietary
methods, that none else in the world was supposed
to possess. He listened for the beautiful in
my voice and, as his sense of musical appreciation
was highly cultivated, he could detect faults, explain
them to me and show me how to overcome them by purely
natural methods. The principal part of the process
was to make me realize mentally just what was wrong
and then what was the more artistic way of doing it.
LETTING THE VOICE GROW
After all, singing is singing, and
I am convinced that my master’s idea of just
letting the voice grow with normal exercise and without
excesses in any direction was the best way for me.
It was certainly better than hours and hours of theory,
interesting to the student of physiology, but often
bewildering to the young vocalist. Real singing
with real music is immeasurably better than ages of
conjecture. It appears that some students spend
years in learning how they are going to sing at some
glorious day in the future, but it never seems to occur
to them that in order to sing they must really use
their voices. Of course, I do not mean to infer
that the student must omit the necessary preparatory
work. Solfeggios, for instance, and scales are
extremely useful. Concone, tried and true, gives
excellent material for all students. But why spend
years in dreaming of theories regarding singing when
everyone knows that the theory of singing has been
the battleground for innumerable talented writers
for centuries? Even now it is apparently impossible
to reconcile all the vocal writers, except in so far
as they all modestly admit that they have rediscovered
the real old Italian school. Perhaps they have.
But, admitting that an art teacher rediscovered the
actual pigments used by Leonardo da Vinci,
Rembrandt or Raphael, he would have no little
task in creating a student who could duplicate Mona
Lisa, The Night Watch or the Sistine
Madonna.
After leaving Rootham, I won the four
hundred guinea scholarship at the Royal College of
Music and studied with Henry Blower. This I followed
with a course with Bouhy in Paris and Etelka Gerster
in Berlin. Mr. Rumford and I both concur in the
opinion that it is necessary for the student who would
sing in any foreign language to study in the country
in which the language is spoken. In no other way
can one get the real atmosphere. The preparatory
work may be done in the home country, but if one fails
to taste of the musical life of the country in which
the songs came into being, there seems to be an indefinable
absence of the right flavor. I believe in employing
the native tongue for songs in recital work.
It seems narrow to me to do otherwise. At the
same time, I have always been a champion for songs
written originally with English texts, and have sung
innumerable times with programs made from English lyrics.
PREPARING A REPERTOIRE
The idea that concert and recital
work is not as difficult as operatic work has been
pretty well exploded by this time. In fact, it
is very much more difficult to sing a simple song
well in concert than it is to sing some of the elaborate
Wagnerian recitatives in which the very complexities
of the music make a convenient hiding place for the
artist’s vocal shortcomings. In concert
everything is concentrated upon the singer. Convention
has ever deprived him of the convenient gestures that
give ease to the opera singer.
The selection of useful material for
concert purposes is immensely difficult. It must
have artistic merit, it must have human interest, it
must suit the singer, in most cases the piano must
be used for accompaniment and the song must not be
dependent upon an orchestral accompaniment for its
value. It must not be too old, it must not be
too far in advance of popular tastes. It is a
bad plan to wander indiscriminately about among countless
songs, never learning any really well. The student
should begin to select numbers with great care, realizing
that it is futile to try to do everything. Lord
Bolingbroke, in his essay on the shortness of human
life, shows how impossible it is for a man to read
more than a mere fraction of a great library though
he read regularly every day of his life. It is
very much the same with music. The resources
are so vast and time is so limited that there is no
opportunity to learn everything. Far better is
it for the vocalist to do a little well than to do
much ineffectually.
Good music well executed meets with
very much the same appreciation everywhere. During
our latest tour we gave almost the very same programs
in America as those we have been giving upon the European
Continent. The music-loving American public is
likely to differ but slightly from that of the great
music centers of the old world. Music has truly
become a universal language.
In developing a repertoire the student
might look upon the musical public as though it were
a huge circle filled with smaller circles, each little
circle being a center of interest. One circle
might insist upon old English songs, such as the delightful
melodies of Arne, Carey, Monroe. Another circle
might expect the arias of the old Italian masters,
Carissimi, Jomelli, Sacchini or Scarlatti. Another
circle would want to hear the German Lieder of such
composers as Schumann, Schubert, Brahms, Franz and
Wolf. Still another circle might go away disappointed
if they could not hear something of the ultra modern
writers, such as Strauss, Debussy or even that freak
of musical cacophony, Schoenberg. However diverse
may be the individual likings of these smaller circles,
all of the members of your audience are united in liking
music as a whole.
The audience will demand variety in
your repertoire but at the same time it will demand
certain musical essentials which appeal to all.
There is one circle in your audience that I have purposely
reserved for separate discussion. That is the
great circle of concert goers who are not skilled
musicians, who are too frank, too candid, to adopt
any of the cant of those social frauds who revel in
Reger and Schoenberg, and just because it might stamp
them as real connoisseurs, but who really can’t
recognize much difference between the Liebestod
of Tristan und Isolde and Rule Britannia, but
the music lovers who are too honest to fail to state
that they like the Lost Chord or the lovely
folk songs of your American composer, Stephen Foster.
Mr. Plunkett Greene, in his work upon song interpretation,
makes no room for the existence of songs of this kind.
Indeed, he would cast them all into the discard.
This seems to me a huge mistake. Surely we can
not say that music is a monopoly of the few who have
schooled their ears to enjoy outlandish disonances
with delight. Music is perhaps the most universal
of all the arts and with the gradual evolution of
those who love it, a natural audience is provided
for music of the more complicated sort. We learn
to like our musical caviar with surprising rapidity.
It was only yesterday that we were objecting to the
delightful piano pieces of Debussy, who can generate
an atmosphere with a single chord just as Murillo could
inspire an emotion with a stroke of the brush.
It is not safe to say that you do
not like things in this way. I think that even
Schoenberg is trying to be true to his muse. We
must remember that Haydn, Beethoven, Wagner and Brahms
passed through the fire of criticism in their day.
The more breadth a singer puts into her work the more
likely is she to reap success. Time only can produce
the accomplished artist. The best is to find
a joy in your work and think of nothing but large
success. If you have the gift, triumph will be
yours.