ALMA GLUCK
Many seem surprised when I tell them
that my vocal training did not begin until I was twenty
years of age. It seems to me that it is a very
great mistake for any girl to begin the serious study
of singing before that age, as the feminine voice,
in most instances, is hardly settled until then.
Vocal study before that time is likely to be injurious,
though some survive it in the hands of very careful
and understanding teachers.
The first kind of a repertoire that
the student should acquire is a repertoire of solfeggios.
I am a great believer in the solfeggio. Using
that for a basis, one is assured of acquiring facility
and musical accuracy. The experienced listener
can tell at once the voice that has had such training.
Always remember that musicianship carries one much
further than a good natural voice. The voice,
even more than the hands, needs a kind of exhaustive
technical drill. This is because in this training
you are really building the instrument itself.
In the piano, one has the instrument complete before
he begins; but in the case of the voice, the instrument
has to be developed and sometimes made by study.
When the pupil is practicing, tones grow in volume,
richness and fluency.
There are exercises by Bordogni, Concone,
Vaccai, Lamperti, Marchesi, Panofka, Panserson and
many others with which I am not familiar, which are
marvelously beneficial when intelligently studied.
These I sang on the syllable “Ah,” and
not with the customary syllable names. It has
been said that the syllables Do, Re, Mi,
Fa, etc., aid one in reading.
To my mind, they are often confusing.
GO TO THE CLASSICS
After a thorough drilling in solfeggios
and technical exercises, I would have the student
work on the operatic arias of Bellini, Rossini,
Donizetti, Verdi, and others. These men knew how
to write for the human voice! Their arias
are so vocal that the voice develops under them and
the student gains vocal assurance. They were written
before modern philosophy entered into music when
music was intended for the ear rather than for the
mind. I cannot lay too much stress on the importance
of using these arias. They are a tonic
for the voice, and bring back the elasticity which
the more subdued singing of songs taxes.
When one is painting pictures through
words, and trying to create atmosphere in songs, so
much repression is brought into play that the voice
must have a safety-valve, and that one finds in the
bravura arias. Here one sings for about
fifty bars, “The sky is clouded for me,”
“I have been betrayed,” or “Joy
abounds” the words being simply a
vehicle for the ever-moving melody.
When hearing an artist like John McCormack
sing a popular ballad it all seems so easy, but in
reality songs of that type are the very hardest to
sing and must have back of them years of hard training
or they fall to banality. They are far more difficult
than the limpid operatic arias, and are actually
dangerous for the insufficiently trained voice.
THE LYRIC SONG REPERTOIRE
Then when the student has her voice
under complete control, it is safe to take up the
lyric repertoire of Mendelssohn, Old English Songs,
etc. How simple and charming they are!
The works of the lighter French composers, Hahn, Massenet,
Chaminade, Gounod, and others. Then Handel, Haydn,
Mozart, Loewe, Schubert, Schumann and Brahms.
Later the student will continue with Strauss, Wolf,
Reger, Rimsky-Korsakoff, Mousorgsky, Borodin and Rachmaninoff.
Then the modern French composers, Ravel, Debussy,
Georges, Koechlin, Hue, Chausson, and others.
I leave French for the last because it is, in many
ways, more difficult for an English-speaking person
to sing. It is so full of complex and trying
vowels that it requires the utmost subtlety to overcome
these difficulties and still retain clarity in diction.
For that reason the student should have the advice
of a native French coach.
When one has traveled this long road,
then he is qualified to sing English songs and ballads.
AMERICAN SONGS
In this country we are rich in the
quantity of songs rather than in the quality.
The singer has to go through hundreds of compositions
before he finds one that really says something.
Commercialism overwhelms our composers. They
approach their work with the question, “Will
this go?” The spirit in which a work is conceived
is that in which it will be executed. Inspired
by the purse rather than the soul, the mercenary side
fairly screams in many of the works put out by every-day
American publishers. This does not mean that
a song should be queer or ugly to be novel or immortal.
It means that the sincerity of the art worker must
permeate it as naturally as the green leaves break
through the dead branches in springtime. Of the
vast number of new American composers, there are hardly
more than a dozen who seem to approach their work in
the proper spirit of artistic reverence.
ART FOR ART’S SAKE, A FARCE
Nothing annoys me quite so much as
the hysterical hypocrites who are forever prating
about “art for art’s sake.”
What nonsense! The student who deceives himself
into thinking that he is giving his life like an ascetic
in the spirit of sacrifice for art is the victim of
a deplorable species of egotism. Art for art’s
sake is just as iniquitous an attitude in its way
as art for money’s sake. The real artist
has no idea that he is sacrificing himself for art.
He does what he does for one reason and one reason
only he can’t help doing it.
Just as the bird sings or the butterfly soars, because
it is his natural characteristic, so the artist works.
Time and again a student will send
me an urgent appeal to hear her, saying she is poor
and wants my advice as to whether it is worth while
to continue her studies. I invariably refuse such
requests, saying that if the student could give up
her work on my advice she had better give it up without
it. One does not study for a goal. One sings
because one can’t help it! The “goal”
nine times out of ten is a mere accident.
Art for art’s sake is the mask
of studio idlers. The task of acquiring a repertoire
in these days, when the vocal literature is so immense,
is so overwhelming, that the student with sense will
devote all his energies to work, and not imagine himself
a martyr to art.