MME. ERNESTINE SCHUMANN-HEINK
THE ARTIST’S RESPONSIBILITY
Would you have me give the secret
of my success at the very outstart? It is very
simple and centers around this subject of the artist’s
responsibility to the audience. My secret is absolute
devotion to the audience. I love my audiences.
They are all my friends. I feel a bond with them
the moment I step before them. Whether I am singing
in blase New York or before an audience of farmer
folk in some Western Chautauqua, my attitude toward
my audience is quite the same. I take the same
care and thought with every audience. This even
extends to my dress. The singer, who wears an
elaborate gown before a Metropolitan audience and
wears some worn-out old rag of a thing when singing
at some rural festival, shows that she has not the
proper respect in her mind. Respect is everything.
Therefore it is necessary for me to
have my voice in the best of condition every day of
the year. It is my duty to my audience. The
woman who comes to a country Chautauqua and brings
her baby with her and perchance nurses the little
one during the concert gets a great deal closer to
my heart than the stiff-backed aristocrat who has just
left a Pekingese spaniel outside of the opera house
door in a $6000.00 limousine. That little country
woman expects to hear the singer at her best.
Therefore, I practice just as carefully on the day
of the Chautauqua concert as I would if I were to
sing Ortrud the same night at the Metropolitan
in New York.
American audiences are becoming more
and more discriminating. Likewise they are more
and more responsive. As an American citizen, I
am devoted to all the ideals of the new world.
They have accepted me in the most whole-souled manner
and I am grateful to the land of my adoption.
THE ADVANTAGE OF AN EARLY TRAINING
Whether or not the voice keeps in
prime condition to-day depends largely upon the early
training of the singer. If that training is a
good one, a sound one, a sensible one, the voice will,
with regular practice, keep in good condition for
a remarkably long time. The trouble is that the
average student is too impatient in these days to take
time for a sufficient training. The voice at
the outstart must be trained lightly and carefully.
There must not be the least strain. I believe
that at the beginning two lessons a week should be
sufficient. The lessons should not be longer
than one-half an hour and the home practice should
not exceed at the start fifty minutes a day.
Even then the practice should be divided into two
periods. The young singer should practice mezza
voce, which simply means nothing more or less than
“half voice.” Never practice with
full voice unless singing under the direction of a
well-schooled teacher with years of practical singing
experience.
It is easy enough to shout. Some
of the singers in modern opera seem to employ a kind
of megaphone method. They stand stock still on
the stage and bawl out the phrases as though they
were announcing trains in a railroad terminal.
Such singers disappear in a few years. Their voices
seem torn to shreds. The reason is that they have
not given sufficient attention to bel canto
in their early training. They seem to forget
that voice must first of all be beautiful. Bel canto, beautiful
singing, not the singing of meaningless
Italian phrases, as so many insist, but the glorious
bel canto which Bach, Haydn and Mozart demand, a
bel canto that cultivates the musical taste,
disciplines the voice and trains the singer technically
to do great things. Please understand that I
am not disparaging the good and beautiful in Italian
masterpieces. The musician will know what I mean.
The singer can gain little, however, from music that
intellectually and vocally is better suited to a parrot
than a human being.
Some of the older singers made bel
canto such an art that people came to hear them
for their voices alone, and not for their intellectual
or emotional interpretations of a rôle. Perhaps
you never heard Patti in her prime. Ah!
Patti the wonderful Adelina with the glorious
golden voice. It was she who made me ambitious
to study breathing until it became an art. To
hear her as she trippingly left the stage in Verdi’s
Traviata singing runs with ease and finish that
other singers slur or stumble over, ah!
that was an art!
THE AGE FOR STARTING
It is my opinion that no girl who
wishes to keep her voice in the prime of condition
all the time in after years should start to study much
earlier than seventeen or eighteen years of age.
In the case of a man I do not believe that he should
start until he is past twenty or even twenty-two.
I know that this is contrary to what many singers think,
but the period of mutation in both sexes is a much
slower process than most teachers realize, and I have
given this matter a great deal of serious thought.
LET EVERYBODY SING!
Can I digress long enough to say that
I think that everybody should sing? That is,
they should learn to sing under a good singing instructor.
This does not mean that they should look forward toward
a professional career. God forbid! There
are enough half-baked singers in the world now who
are striving to become professionals. But the
public should know that singing is the healthiest
kind of exercise imaginable. When one sings properly
one exercises nearly all of the important muscles
of the torso. The circulation of the blood is
improved, the digestion bettered, the heart promoted
to healthy action in fact, everything is
bettered. Singers as a rule are notoriously healthy
and often very long lived. The new movement for
community singing in the open air is a magnificent
one. Let everybody sing!
A great singing teacher with a reputation
as big as Napoleon’s or George Washington’s
is not needed. There are thousands and thousands
of unknown teachers who are most excellent. Often
the advice or the instruction is very much the same.
What difference does it make whether I buy Castile
soap in a huge Broadway store or a little country store,
if the soap is the same? Many people hesitate
to study because they can not study with a great teacher.
Nonsense! Pick out some sensible, well-drilled
teacher and then use your own good judgment to guide
yourself. Remember that Schumann-Heink did not
study with a world-famed teacher. Whoever hears
of Marietta von Leclair in these days? Yet I do
not think that I could have done any more with my
voice if I had had every famous teacher from Niccolo
Antonio Porpora down to the present
day. The individual singer must have ideals,
and then leave nothing undone to attain those ideals.
One of my ideals was to be able to sing pianissimo
with the kind of resonance that makes it carry up
to the farthest gallery. That is one of the most
difficult things I had to learn, and I attained it
only after years of faithful practice.
THE SINGER’S DAILY ROUTINE
To keep the voice in prime condition
the singer’s first consideration is physical
and mental health. If the body or the mind is
over-taxed singing becomes an impossibility.
It is amazing what the healthy body and the busy mind
can really stand. I take but three weeks’
vacation during the year and find that I am a great
deal better for it. Long terms of enforced indolence
do not mean rest. The real artist is happiest
when at work, and I want to work. Fortunately
I am never at loss for opportunity. The ambitious
vocal student can benefit as much by studying a good
book on hygiene or the conservation of the health as
from a book on the art of singing.
First of all comes diet. Americans
as a rule eat far too much. Why do some of the
good churchgoing people raise such an incessant row
about over-drinking when they constantly injure themselves
quite as much by over-eating? What difference
does it make whether you ruin your stomach, liver
or kidneys by too much alcohol or too much roast beef?
One vice is as bad as another. The singer must
live upon a light diet. A heavy diet is by no
means necessary to keep up a robust physique.
I am rarely ill, am exceedingly strong in every way,
and yet eat very little indeed. I find that my
voice is in the best of condition when I eat very
moderately. My digestion is a serious matter with
me, and I take every precaution to see that it is
not congested in any way. This is most important
to the singer. Here is an average menu for my
days when I am on tour:
BREAKFAST
Two or more glasses of Cold Water
(not ice water)
Ham and Eggs
Coffee
Toast.
MID-DAY DINNER
Soup
Some Meat Order
A Vegetable
Plenty of Salad
Fruit.
SUPPER
A Sandwich
Fruit.
Such a menu I find ample for the heaviest
kind of professional work. If I eat more, my
work may deteriorate, and I know it.
Fresh air, sunshine, sufficient rest
and daily baths in tepid water night and morning are
a part of my regular routine. I lay special stress
upon the baths. Nothing invigorates the singer
as much as this. Avoid very cold baths, but see
to it that you have a good reaction after each bath.
There is nothing like such a routine as this to avoid
colds. If you have a cold try the same remedies
to try to get rid of it. To me, one day at Atlantic
City is better for a cold than all the medicine I
can take. I call Atlantic City my cold doctor.
Of course, there are many other shore resorts that
may be just as helpful, but when I can do so I always
make a bee line for Atlantic City the moment I feel
a serious cold on the way.
Sensible singers know now that they
must avoid alcohol, even in limited quantities, if
they desire to be in the prime of condition and keep
the voice for a long, long time. Champagne particularly
is poison to the singer just before singing.
It seems to irritate the throat and make good vocal
work impossible. I am sorry for the singer who
feels that some spur like champagne or a cup of strong
coffee is desirable before going upon the stage.
It amuses me to hear girls say, “I
would give anything to be a great singer”; and
then go and lace themselves until they look like Jersey
mosquitoes. The breath is the motive power of
the voice. Without it under intelligent control
nothing can be accomplished. One might as well
try to run an automobile without gasoline as sing without
breath. How can a girl breathe when she has squeezed
her lungs to one-half their normal size?
PREPARATION FOR HEAVY ROLES
The voice can never be kept in prime
condition if it is obliged to carry a load that it
has not been prepared to carry. Most voices that
wear out are voices that have been overburdened.
Either the singer does not know how to sing or the
rôle is too heavy. I think that I may be forgiven
for pointing out that I have repeatedly sung the heaviest
and most exacting roles in opera. My voice would
have been shattered years ago if I had not prepared
myself for these roles and sung them properly.
A man may be able to carry a load of fifty pounds
for miles if he carries it on his back, but he will
not be able to carry it a quarter of a mile if he
holds it out at arm’s length from the body, with
one arm. Does this not make the point clear?
Some roles demand maturity. It
is suicidal for the young singer to attempt them.
The composer and the conductor naturally think only
of the effect at the performance. The singer’s
welfare with them is a secondary consideration.
I have sung under the great composers and conductors,
from Richard Wagner to Richard Strauss. Some of
the Strauss roles are even more strenuous than those
of Wagner. They call for great energy as well
as great vocal ability. Young singers essay these
heavy roles and the voices go to pieces. Why
not wait a little while? Why not be patient?
The singer is haunted by the delusion
that success can only come to her if she sings great
roles. If she can not ape Melba in Traviata,
Emma Eames as Elizabeth in Tannhaeuser or Geraldine
Farrar in Butterfly, she pouts and refuses
to do anything. Offer her a small part and she
sneers at it. Ha! Ha! All my earliest
successes were made in the smallest kinds of parts.
I realized that I had only a little to do and only
very little time to do it in. Consequently, I
gave myself heart and soul to that part. It must
be done so artistically, so intelligently, so beautifully
that it would command success. Imagine the roles
of Erda and Norna, and Marie in Flying Dutchman.
They are so small that they can hardly be seen.
Yet these roles were my first door to success and fame.
Wagner did not think of them as little things.
He was a real master and knew that in every art-work
a small part is just as important as a great part.
It is a part of a beautiful whole. Don’t
turn up your nose at little things. Take every
opportunity, and treat it as though it were the greatest
thing in your life. It pays.
Everything that amounts to anything
in my entire career has come through struggle.
At first a horrible struggle with poverty. No
girl student in a hall bedroom to-day (and my heart
goes out to them now) endures more than I went through.
It was work, work, work, from morning to night, with
domestic cares and worries enough all the time to drive
a woman mad. Keep up your spirits, girls.
If you have the right kind of fight in you, success
will surely come. Never think of discouragement,
no matter what happens. Keep working every day
and always hoping. It will come out all right
if you have the gift and the perseverance. Compulsion
is the greatest element in the vocalist’s success.
Poverty has a knout in its hand driving you on.
Well, let it, and remember that under that
knout you will travel twice as fast as the rich girl
possibly can with her fifty-horse-power automobile.
Keep true to the best. Muss “I
MUST,” “I will,” the mere necessity
is a help not a hindrance, if you have the right stuff
in you. Learn to depend upon yourself, and know
that when you have something that the public wants
it will not be slow in running after you. Don’t
ask for help. I never had any help. Tell
that to the aspiring geese who think that I have some
magic power whereby I can help a mediocre singer to
success by the mere twist of the hand.
DAILY EXERCISES OF A PRIMA DONNA
Daily vocal exercises are the daily
bread of the singer. They should be practiced
just as regularly as one sits down to the table to
eat, or as one washes one’s teeth or as one
bathes. As a rule the average professional singer
does not resort to complicated exercises and great
care is taken to avoid strain. It is perfectly
easy for me, a contralto, to sing C in alt but do
you suppose I sing it in my daily exercises? It
is one of the extreme notes in my range and it might
be a strain. Consequently I avoid it. I
also sing most of my exercises mezza voce.
There should always be periods of
intermission between practice. I often go about
my routine work while on tour, walking up and down
the room, packing my trunk, etc., and practicing
gently at the same time. I enjoy it and it makes
my work lighter.
Of course I take great pains to practice carefully. My
exercises are for the most part simple scales, arpeggios or trills.
I always use the Italian vowel ah
in my exercises. It seems best to me. I
know that oo and ue are recommended for
contraltos, but I have long had the firm conviction
that one should first perfect the natural vocal color
through securing good tones by means of the most open
vowel. After this is done the voice may be further
colored by the judicious employment of other vowels.
Sopranos, for instance, can help their head tones
by singing ee (Italian i).
THE SINGER MUST RELAX
Probably more voices are ruined by
strain than through any other cause. The singer
must relax all the time. This does not mean flabbiness.
It does not mean that the singer should collapse before
singing. Relaxation in the singer’s sense
is a delicious condition of buoyancy, of lightness,
of freedom, of ease and entire lack of tightening in
any part. When I relax I feel as though every
atom in my body were floating in space. There
is not one single little nerve on tension. The
singer must be particularly careful when approaching
a climax in a great work of art. Then the tendency
to tighten up is at its greatest. This must be
anticipated.
Take such a case as the following
passage from the famous aria from Saint-Saens’
Samson et Delila, “Mon coeur s’ouvre
a ta voix. The climax is obviously on the words Ah! verse moi.”
The climax is the note marked by a star (f
on the top line).
When I am singing the last notes of
the previous phrase to the word “tendresse,”
anyone who has observed me closely will notice that
I instinctively let my shoulders drop, that
the facial muscles become relaxed as when one is about
to smile or about to yawn. I am then relaxing
to meet the great melodic climax and meet it in such
a manner that I will have abundant reserve force after
it has been sung. When one has to sing before
an audience of five or six thousand people such a
climax is immensely important and it requires great
balance to meet it and triumph in it.