<h2>XIII</h2>
<h3>A NOTE ON CHAMBER MUSIC</h3></div>
<p>Lovers of chamber music form an extremely
refined and cultured class, and, like all highly
refined and cultured people, are very conservative.
They are the purists among music-lovers, the
last people who would care to see the classical forms
abandoned, and who would be disturbed, not to say
shocked, by any great departure from the sonata form.
For the string quartet is to chamber music what the
symphony is to orchestra and the sonata to the pianoforte—is,
in fact, a sonata for two violins, viola and
violoncello, just as the symphony is a sonata for orchestra.</p>
<p>Oddly enough, a pianoforte solo is more effective in
a large hall than a string quartet, although the latter
employs four times as many instruments; and the same
is true of those pieces of chamber music in which
the pianoforte is used, such as sonatas for pianoforte
and violin or violoncello, pianoforte trios, quartets,
quintets, and so on. A fine soloist on the pianoforte
will be more at home in a large auditorium like Carnegie
Hall or even the Metropolitan Opera House than
would a string quartet or any other combination of
chamber-music players. Paderewski plays in Carnegie
Hall, and, I am sure, would be equally effective in the
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_225' name='page_225'></SPAN>225</span>
Opera House. But an organization of chamber-music
players would be lost in either place. The Kneisel
Quartet plays in New York in Mendelssohn Hall, a
small auditorium which is just about correctly proportioned
for music of this kind.</p>
<p>Indeed, compared with the opera, the orchestra and
even with the pianoforte, chamber music requires a
setting like a jewel. For just as its devotees are the
purists among music-lovers, so chamber music itself
is something very “precious.” It certainly is a most
charming and intimate form of musical entertainment
and the constituency of a well-established string quartet
inevitably consists of the musical �lite.</p>
<p>The same opinions that have been expressed regarding
the sonatas and the symphonies of the great composers
apply in a general way to their chamber music.
Haydn’s is naive; Mozart’s more emotional in expression;
Beethoven’s, among that of classical composers,
the most dramatic. In fact, Beethoven’s last quartets,
in which the instruments are employed quite independently
and in which r�les practically of equal importance
are assigned to each, are regarded by Richard
Strauss as having given the cue to Wagner for his
polyphonic treatment of the orchestra, and Wagner
himself spoke of them as works through which “Music
first raised herself to an equal height with the poetry
and painting of the greatest periods of the past.”
Nevertheless, there are many who hold that in his
last quartets Beethoven sought to accomplish more than
can be expressed with four stringed instruments, and
prefer his earlier works of this class, like the three
“Rasumovski” quartets, Opus 59, dedicated by the composer
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_226' name='page_226'></SPAN>226</span>
to Count Rasumovski, who maintained a private
string quartet in which he played second violin, the
others being professionals.</p>
<p>Schubert’s most famous quartet is the one in D minor
with the lovely slow movement, a theme with
variations, the theme being his own song, “Death and
the Maiden.” One of the greatest works in the whole
range of chamber music is his string quintet with two
violoncellos. His pianoforte trios also are noble contributions
to this branch of musical art. “One glance
at this trio,” writes Schumann of the Schubert trio
in B flat major, “and all the wretchedness of existence
is put to flight and the world seems young
again.... Many and beautiful as are the
things Time brings forth, it will be long ere it produces
another Schubert.”</p>
<p>Mendelssohn’s chamber music is as polished, affable
and gentlemanly as most of his other productions, and
rapidly falling into the same state of unlamented desuetude.
Schumann has given us his lovely pianoforte
quintet in E flat. Brahms has contributed much
that is noteworthy to chamber music, and, as a rule,
it is less complex and more intelligently scored than
his orchestral music. Dvorak in his E flat major quartet
(Opus 51) introduces as the second movement a
Dumka or Bohemian elegy, one of the most exquisite
of his compositions. Fascinating in his national musical
tints, he was genius enough for his music to be
universal in its expression; and he who used the folksongs
of his native Bohemia so skillfully was no less
artistic in the results he accomplished when, during
his residence in New York, he wrote his string quartet
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_227' name='page_227'></SPAN>227</span>
in F (Opus 96) on Negro themes. Tschaikowsky and
neo-Russians like Arensky, and the Frenchmen, C�sar
Franck, Saint-Sa�ns, d’Indy and Debussy, are some
of the modern names that figure on chamber-music
programs.</p>
<hr class='toprule' />
<div class='chsp'>
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_229' name='page_229'></SPAN>229</span>
<SPAN name='HOW_TO_APPRECIATE_VOCAL_MUSIC' id='HOW_TO_APPRECIATE_VOCAL_MUSIC'></SPAN>
<h2>HOW TO APPRECIATE VOCAL MUSIC</h2></div>
<div class='chsp'>
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_231' name='page_231'></SPAN>231</span>
<SPAN name='XIV_SONGS_AND_SONG_COMPOSERS' id='XIV_SONGS_AND_SONG_COMPOSERS'></SPAN>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />