Carmen 5
Carmen 5
Carmen 5
AulIov|s) B. C. FavIev
Bevieved vovI|s)
Souvce TIe MusicaI QuavlevI, VoI. 3, No. 1 |Jan., 1917), pp. 134-161
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EXOTICISM IN MUSIC IN RETROSPECT
By
D. C. PARKER
T
HE
dictionary
tells us that the word "exotic"
signifies
something foreign
and that it is the
opposite
of
indigenous.
The definition is
important,
for the student of the arts
cannot fail to be struck
by
the
strange
manner in which customs
and ideas are carried from one scene to another.
People
who
travel or
emigrate
take with them not
only
their
worldly goods,
but their habits and
religions,
and,
in
many
cases,
these latter
are
preserved
more
jealously by
the exile than
by
him who moves
among
his own folk. But there is another
aspect
of exoticism
which,
if less
generally recognised,
is
equally important.
It deals
with the
adoption
of
foreign
terms on the
part
of the artist.
It is difficult to account for the
presence
of the desire which has
so often manifested
itself,
to write about
people
and describe
sights
which are far removed from us
by
time and
space;
but
it
may,
I
think,
be
partly
attributed to the fact that the
mobility
of the
imagination
far exceeds the
mobility
of the
body,
and that,
while
outwardly
the creator often leads the most uneventful of
lives and
spends
his
years
in a
study
or
studio,
his mental existence
is full of adventure and
surprise,
for he
fights
the battles of his
characters and beholds the
landscape
towards which his
pilgrims
have turned their
eyes.'
Or it
may
arise from a
consuming
desire
to fashion a universe of
beauty,
an artistic
Utopia
or El
Dorado,
a world in which heroes and heroines
possess
all the virtues and
graces.
And,
as the
conquistadores
came back to the old world
with wonderful tales of the
glory
and richness of far-off
provinces,
the recital of such
exploits may possibly
have
given
birth to the
belief that distance lends
enchantment,
and have
tempted
artists
to
portray
the life and manners of
semi-legendary
states in which
Nature enthralls man
by
her endless blandishments.
A
proper appreciation
of the value of exoticism in music
depends upon
that artistic
cosmopolitanism, upon
that
urbanity
of
mind which alone can
give
us a
perception
of
striking
and unusual
features. The men who were first attracted
by
new
sights
and
'Compare
the remark of Anatole France's Monsieur
Bergeret:
"If
Napoleon
had
been as
intelligent
as
Spinoza,
he would have written four books in a
garret."
184
Exoticism in Music in
Retrospect
135
unfamiliar modes of
expression
were those who inhabited that
area over which the
polyglot
life of the
Mediterranean,
the mother
of a
hybrid
culture,
exercised a
deep
and
abiding
influence.
From the East came merchants with their
caravans, bringing
along
with their silks and
spices something
of the ancient
poetry
and
picturesqueness
of the Orient. In
Greece,
from which
country
the beautiful
myths
of
Orpheus
and Arion
emanated,
the
power
of music over mind and
body
was
early recognized
and,
as the
love of culture
spread
westward,
great activity
manifested itself
in
Italy
and
Spain.
In
treating
this
question
it is
necessary
to
say
a word about
the South. There is a
Capri
and
Sorrento,
a Florence and Athens
in the heart of
every
artist. Like Goethe's
heroine,
he
sighs
for
the land where the
orange
trees
grow
and we
cannot, therefore,
test the value of exoticism or measure its extent if we do not
carefully
examine the influence of the South and Southern charac-
teristics
upon
the sensibilities of the
poet.
The
relationship
between music and the South is more real than
apparent.
The
words orchestra and chorus are of Greek
origin,
and the mention
of the term
opera
at once reminds us of Florence. In music the
difference between the North and the South is
largely
the difference
between intensive and extensive culture. In the North men
are
by
nature
introspective
and the
song
of the Northern races
comes from
within;
in the South
people
are little
given
to self-
examination. Where Nature wooes and the sun shines in all its
radiance men
sing
because
they
must and with little
thought
of
the morrow. The
song
of the South is before all else
emotional;
it is an
expression
of the
joy
which animates man in beautiful
surroundings,
a contrast to that of the North which so often
provides
a
refuge
from the
tempest
which
rages
without. When
Nietzsche declared that it was
necessary
to "mediterraneanise"
music he meant that it was
necessary
to restore to it
something
of the
"gay
science" of the
laughing
and volatile South.
It
is,
perhaps, surprising
that the
cosmopolitan
life to which
I have referred did not reveal itself to
any great
extent in the
older
composers.
The Modes are,
certainly,
of Greek
origin.
But there exists little music which could be described as exotic
until a
comparatively
recent date. The reason for this is to be
found in the fact that the vast resources of the orchestra have
been available
only
in modern times. The music of Bach and
Handel owes
nothing
to
colour,
for it has none in the
present-day
sense. In Handel we see an
example
of a man who treated a
wide
variety
of
subjects,
sacred and
secular,
classical and
topical,
136 The Musical
Quarterly
elaborate and
slight.
But there is
not,
so far as I
know,
a bar
which is
tinged
with exoticism. The influence of the
singing
schools of the seventeenth
century
is
discernible,
no
doubt,
but
apart
from the
easy
flow of the voice
parts,
the art of
writing
which he
acquired
when
studying
in
Italy,
there is
nothing
to
remark in this connection. As a matter of
fact,
it was better
for music that its
grammar
and
syntax,
as it
were,
should have
been
firmly
established
by
Bach and Handel than that these
composers
should have
indulged
in what must have been colour
experiments. For,
by
constant
allegiance
to one
style,
whether
dictated
by
force of circumstances
(e.g.,
lack of instrumental
means)
or
not,
they
did a
greater
service. In the wide sense
they
raised music from a
patois
to a
language,
and men from the ends
of the earth who loved the works of these two
giants
had,
at
least,
something
in common.
Gluck
passed
from "Le Cinesi" to "Don
Juan,"
from "Ales-
sandro nell' Indie" and "Orfeo ed Euridice" to "Les Pelerins de
la
Mecque,"
but commentators have not found that
change
of
locality
was
responsible
for the
temporary
introduction of new
features. There is little difference between his
Scythians
and his
Greeks.
Speaking generally,
the
composers
of the classic
age
were restricted to one or two
very primitive
effects,
such as a
few strokes of the
triangle
or of the
cymbals,
when
they
wished
to
give
their works a
picturesque
touch. We find this in Mozart's
"II
Seraglio"
and Beethoven's "Ruins of Athens." The music of
"Don Giovanni" and
"Figaro"
does not differ in its essentials
from that of "La Clemenza di Tito" or "The
Magic
Flute."
It is
interesting
to
note, however,
that Gluck and Mozart showed
a desire to
give appropriate piquancy
to their scores when
they
introduced a
fandango
into them.
The more one studies this
question
of exoticism the more one
feels that it is an accretion. When a
great composer
writes at
the
top
of his form he reveals himself to
us,
and he can do us
no
greater
service. The action of "Fidelio" takes
place
in
Spain,
but it is the
playbill,
not the
music,
which tells us so. In this
sense all art is
autobiographical. Henry
James
rightly
holds that
the most valuable
thing
in Balzac is Balzae himself. He has been
called the novel itself as Moliere was called the
comedy
itself.
Such a view is not inconsistent with a
recognition
of the value
of an extensive use of local colour. "The
style
is the
man,"
said Buffon in a memorable address to the French
Academy,
and
the most vital writers have the
power
of
giving
us themselves in
copious
measure in all their works.
Exoticism in Music in
Retrospect
137
It is
impossible
to
ignore
the fact that an
over-indulgence
in
local
colour,
an excessive
flirting
with exotic effects sometimes
leads to curious results. We see a fair
example
of this in "Samson
and Delilah." Lest I should be misunderstood I hasten to
say
that I am an admirer of Saint-Sains's music and that I have on
many
occasions had the honour of
paying
him that
homage
which is his due. But what do we find in his dramatic master-
piece?
The
opening
choruses of Hebrews derive their idiom from
Bach and Handel. The entrance of Delilah and her flower-
maidens is full of a
grace
that is
typically
Parisian. The celebrated
Mon coeur s'ouvre a ta voix is French in its
inspiration.
The
"Dance of the Priestesses of
Dagon"
and the "Bacchanale"
carry
us off to Palestine. The chorus of
aged
Hebrews reminds
us of the music of the
synagogue.
In his
art,
as in his
life,
Saint-
Saens has been a
great
traveller,
but
despite
the cleverness and
beauty
of his
score,
and both are
great,
the
opera
as a whole
suffers from a lack of
homogeneity.
It is
unnecessary
to dwell
upon
the absurdities which abound in the
pages
of dramatic
music,
such as the mazurka in Gounod's
"Polyeucte";
suffice
it to
say
that in men of the first rank we find a
consistency
of
style
which is not
destroyed by
the introduction of
picturesque
traits and lavish
colouring.
Out of two
ingredients, laughter
and
tears,
must the artist fashion his art.
It
may
be well to
point
out at this
juncture
that local colour
is often confused with characterisation. Reference to the
stage
works of Mozart will at once demonstrate the difference between
them. Characterisation is an
integral part
of a dramatic work.
I
hardly imagine
that
anyone
intimate with Mozart's
operas
would
seriously
contend that the
composer
was deficient in
characterisation, but,
as I have tried to
show,
there is little local
colour in his scores. To take another
example,
in "Tristan and
Isolde,"
while the
personality
of
Wagner
is evident in
every
bar,
the characters
preserve
their individualities
throughout.
To insist
too
emphatically upon
the use and value of local colour is to
dislodge
characterisation from its
legitimate place
in the artistic
scheme.
Turning
to later masters we find evidence of an
increasing
disposition
to dabble in the
picturesque.
There
is,
perhaps,
little to detain us in the ballet of
"
William Tell" or the "Bohemian
Dance" of "Les
Huguenots,"
but the
point
to note is that com-
posers
showed a readiness to treat
subjects which,
in modern
hands,
would have
given ample opportunity
for the introduction
of
exquisite
shades of orchestral
colouring.
Cherubini's "Les
138 The Musical
Quarterly
Abencerages"
is an
example
of this. In Boieldieu's "La Dame
Blanche,"
described
by
a critic as "un
op&ra tyrolien
dont l'action
se
passe
en
Ecosse,"
we meet with the familiar air of "Robin
Adair,"
the chant ordinaire de la tribu d'Avenal. The
melody
of Auber
is derived from the French
chanson,
but the
composer
of "La
Circassienne" and "Le Dieu et la
Bayadere,"
if I mistake
not,
introduced a
negro
dance and creole
melody
into his "Manon."
FRANCE
Coming
to the French music of the nineteenth
century
we
meet a remarkable
exploitation
of the exotic. Those familiar
with the artistic
history
of the French
people
will
hardly
be
astonished at this. In his beautiful
story,
"Honorine,"
Balzac
contrasts the
English
and the French. If the
French,
he
remarks,
have an aversion for
travelling
and the
English
a love for it,
both nations have a
good
excuse.
Something
better than
England
is
everywhere
to be
found,
but it is difficult to find the charms
of France elsewhere.
If, however,
the Frenchman love to live
at home his
delight
in the
good things
of the outer world is
great.
Seventeenth-century
France,
for
example,
was
deeply
interested
in Chinese ceramics.' The
porcelain
which Dutch and
Portuguese
seamen
brought
from the Celestial
Empire
to
Europe
were more
appreciated
in France than elsewhere. In the
pages
of literature
we discover the same. That
typical
Balzacian
character,
the
Marquis d'Espard
of
"L'Interdiction",
worked at "A
picturesque
history
of China." And did not Gambara become excited at the
mere mention of his
great opera
"Mahomet"? Voltaire
gave
us
"Zadig,"
and the remark that the
English
were a
people
with
seventy religions
and
only
one sauce is characteristic of the man
to whom dullness was a
great
artistic vice. Le
Sage
started on
his career with two
plays
in imitation of
Lope
de
Vega.
The
influence
upon
him of Calderon has been
noted,
but he
was,
nevertheless, among
the earliest to realize the
possibilities
of the
picturesque
novel.
Chateaubriand,
Anatole France tells
us,
"was
the first to infuse exoticism into
poetry
and make it ferment there."
A
sojourn
in the East
inspired
Lamartine to his "Souvenirs
d'Orient." De Musset attracted notice as the author of a volume
of "Contes
d'Espagne
et d'Italie." "Local
colour,"
Ferdinand
Brunetiere
holds,
"is a
literary acquisition
of romanticism."
From the
forbidding landscapes
of the North Stendhal shrank as
from a
ghost.
Gautier,
who amused himself with the fantastic
'Compare
Auber's "Cheval de Bronze"
(a
Chinese
Subject.)
Exoticism in Music in
Retrospect
notion that he was an
Oriental,
wrote of his travels in
Spain
and
Russia,
Italy
and
Turkey
with immense
gusto.
The de
Goncourts
gave encouragement
to
Japanese
art. Flaubert's
greatest
achievement deals with the
struggle
between Rome and
Carthage.
Merimee's debut was made in
strange literary disguise.
His first
products
were
supposed
to be translations from the
Spanish
and
Illyrian.
"Carmen,"
the masterwork of the man
who felt at home in an Andalusian
venta,
is
appropriately
laid in
Spain,
and
yet
Merim6e was
typically
French.
(The point
is
curious. The
epigrammatic
Nietzsche,
student of
philology,
who
claimed that he and Heine were the
only
men who could make
the German
language
dance,
recorded the fact that the
stylists
of the old and new
worlds,
the Greeks and the
French,
opposed
the introduction of
foreignisms
and
guarded
the
purity
of their
tongues.)
In Renan the fascination of the East is once more
prominent.
Daudet,
"the
bouillabaisse,"
prided
himself on
being
a Southern troubadour.
Through
the
pages
of Pierre Loti we
find
exquisite
word
pictures
of
Japan
and
Turkey.
And Anatole
France, to whom we owe the "Noces
Corinthiennes,"
has shown
in "ThaYs" what a
great
effect is
produced upon
the mind of a
Latin artist when he
contemplates
the life of a far
country
in a
remote
period.
Add to all this the
vogue enjoyed by
Lafcadio
Hearn and
you
have abundant evidence that the
French,
while
animated
by
a
deeply
rooted love of
country, quickly
become
willing
captives
to the
powers
of the
picturesque.
I have made this
digression upon
the literature of
France,
"a
country
where
every
man has a natural turn for the
part
of
a
sultan,
and
every
woman is no less minded to become a
sultana,"
because one can
point
to times
during
which the French
regarded
the words of a
song
as of
primary,
the music as of
secondary
importance-a
reflection of the
glory
to which her literature had
attained while
yet
her music
lagged sadly
behind. The music
of France has been
mainly
dramatic,
as that of
Italy
has been
melodic and that of
Germany symphonic,
and the influence of
the
literary
movements is often discernible in the sister art.
Indeed,
it is
interesting
to note that some of the
outstanding
characteristics of French literature are to be found in the music
of the
country.
The wide use of the
many adjectives
of the
language
and the constant
employment
of its rich
vocabulary
find their musical
counterpart
in
picturesque scoring
and resource-
ful
harmony.
The manifestos of
freedom,
so often launched at
the
government
of the
day,
have their
equivalent
in Berlioz's
music of revolt. The choice of words for their
atmospheric
value
139
140 The Musical
Quarterly
reminds us of the methods of the
impressionist
musicians. In
France we behold an artistic
phenomenon, namely,
a keen
appre-
ciation of exoticism and a
widespread exploitation
of its
capa-
bilities which are for the most
part freely indulged
without the
sacrifice of the traditional merits of
conciseness,
polish
and
clarity.
An
untidy
mind is an abomination to the Frenchman.
For the
purposes
of this brief
survey
it is convenient to take
Felicien David's "Le Desert" as a
starting point.
David recorded
his
impressions
of the Orient in the
only
work of his which is
now
widely
known.
Something
of its success
is, doubtless,
due to
the
variety
which
pervades
the score. In it we find a
"Prayer
to
Allah,"
a "Call of the
Muezzin,"
and a "Dance of the Almees."
The
importance
of the
composition
is
largely
historical. While
experimental,
the music cannot be
ignored,
for it
must, surely,
have been instrumental in
encouraging many
another musician
to turn his attention to those
captivating
traits which are found
in the East.
Passing
from David we come to
Gounod,
in whom
the
femininity
which is so
prominent
in French music first becomes
apparent.
The heroines of Gounod and Massenet are as
typical
of the Latin mind as the heroines of Ibsen and
Bjirnson
are of
the Scandinavian.
They
have little in common with the muscular
Brunnhildes and
terrifying Valkyries
of the
wind-swept
North.
Unfortunately
Gounod
put
all that he had to
say
in
"Faust,"
which the Germans
wisely
call
"Margarethe,"
for "Romeo and
Juliet,"
which tells us
nothing
new,
should be called "Juliet and
Romeo" if not
simply
"Reminiscences of
Faust,"
and "La Reine
de Saba" was a failure.1 In Ernest
Reyer
there is more to
occupy
the attention. Born in
Marseilles,
he lived for a time in
Algeria.
A
prolonged
visit to the African
province may possibly
have been
responsible
for his choice of "Le
Selam,"
based on
Gautier,
as
the
subject
of his most
important
work.
Following
later came
"Sacuntala,"
a
ballet,
"Le
Statue,"
and at a distance of some
thirty years
a
setting
of "Salammb6."
Camille
Bellaigue speaks
of "la France
historique
et la France
exotique,"
and both of them are found in full measure in the com-
positions
of Saint-Saens. On the one hand he is descended from
the scholars and schoolmen to whom all musicians owe so
much;
on the other he is an
indefatigable
traveller who has
expressed
in his art the
impressions
made
upon
him
by
the life and
poetry
of
many
lands. A
polymath,
he is remarkable alike for the
fecundity
of his ideas and the
versatility displayed
in the
gestation
'One can afford to
disregard
the
Moorish-Spanish
"Le Tribut de
Zamora,"
which
was a fiasco.
Exoticism in Music in
Retrospect
of them. In all his music there is a
great
deal of the Voltairean
sauce,
a liberal
sprinkling
of the
paprika
which
Wagner
found
in Liszt. He is an
extremely
cultured man who draws his in-
spiration
from the ends of the earth. "Samson and Delilah" I
have
already
mentioned. "La Princesse Jaune" deals with a
Chinese
subject,
and he has written Persian
Songs,
a Suite Al-
gerienne,
"A
Night
in Lisbon," a Jota
Aragonaise,
a
Caprice
on
Danish and Russian
Folk-themes,
a "Souvenir of
Italy,"
a
"Havanaise," "Africa,"
a fantasia for
pianoforte
and
orchestra,
a
"Caprice
arabe,"
and a "Souvenir d'Ismailia."
(In
connection
with the
study
of the local characteristics of such
places
as
Algeria,
Morocco, Corsica,
Madagascar
and
China,
it
may
be
remarked,
in
passing,
that
many
Frenchmen come to an examination of
racial traits untrammelled
by
those
prejudices
which exist else-
where. An
outstanding
instance of this attitude of mind is to be
found, if
memory
serves,
in Jean Finot's
volume,
"Prejuge
des
Races.") Among
the
songs
are some which bear further witness
to the
catholicity
of his
tastes;
for
example
"Alla riva
Tebro,"
"Desir de l'Orient," "El
Desdichado," "Guitare," and "La
Madonna col Bambino." To the critic this chameleon-like
adaptability
so
frequently
exhibited
is,
at
first,
bewildering.
In
which of these pieces do we find the essential Saint-Sains? In
which is he
wearing
a mask and
mystifying
us
by donning
the
costume of a
Spanish grandee
or that of an Arab chief? Whatever
the answers we
give
to these
questions
it cannot be denied that
the
personal
merits of Saint-Sains are
present
in
practically
all
his
productions.
In the "Suite
Algerienne"
there are
points
in
the
rhythm
and
harmony
which could have been conceived
only
by
a man who
possessed
a
great
command of technical resource.
And,
while the
experiments
are not all
equally
successful,
the
cleverness shown in the
manipulation
of external features con-
tributes to that
variety
and freshness which are
among
the master's
most valuable artistic assets. It is not without
good
reason
that he has made the
confession,
"Je suis un
6clectique."
The main difference between the exoticism of Saint-Sains
and that of Massenet lies in the fact
that,
while that of the former
is
spread
over a
large variety
of works in almost
every
conceivable
form,
that of the latter is
mainly
confined to his
operas.
The
"Scenes Alsaciennes" and "Marche de
Szabady"
are not
among
the most characteristic of his achievements. As in the case of
Saint-Sains we are faced with an
apparent problem.
Massenet
was French of the French. His
song
was
personal,
and other
men have felt the influence of the m6lodie
massenetique.
This
141
The Musical
Quarterly
Anacreontic musician consecrated his
gifts
to a
praise
of the
Eternal
Feminine-or,
as some
hold,
that
aspect
of it which is
represented by
modern
France;
a Gallic
trait,
surely,
for
good
critics have observed that the Comedie Humaine is remarkable
chiefly
for its women folk. Take
away
the male characters of
Massenet and
you
do not lose
very
much. Take
away
his heroines
and there is
nothing
left. We are often conscious of the
rose-pink
of the
boudoir,
of the frou-frou and
patchouli
of the
elegant
world.
One cannot
repress
the
feeling
that there is some subtle connection
between this
femininity
and the orientalism so
frequently
dis-
played by
the French. But if Massenet's
harp
had but one
string
it was
capable
of the sweetness of
honey.
His is music born in
a land in which the
worship
of the
Virgin
is a natural
thing,
and
it is curious to note how
many
of his dramatic works are called
after their
heroines-"Manon,"
"Esclarmonde," "Griselidis,"
"La
Navarraise,"
"Sapho,"
"Thais," "Therese,"
"Ariane." It
has been
urged against
him that he was content with the mechani-
cal
exploitation
of a
single
idiom,
but the interest of all the
operas
is
heightened by
the introduction of
passages
full of luscious
colouring
and seductive charm. In the
early
"Le Roi de Lahore"
we have the divertissement in the Paradis d'Indra with its
quaint
variations on a Hindoo theme.
(These
are
preceded by
a waltz-
like measure.
"What,"
you say,
"a waltz in such
surroundings?"
Have
you
not learnt that in the
operatic Spain
and the
legendary
India
anything
is
possible?)
In "Herodiade" there is the clever
dance of the Eastern
girls. Passing "Manon,"
that
captivating
opera
of
powder
and
patches,
we arrive at "Le Cid" in which we
again
have the French
composer indulging
his love of the
pictur-
esque
to the full. "Le Cid" is somewhat bombastic and does
not show Massenet at his
best,
but in the Moorish
rhapsody
and the ballet of the
Spanish provinces
there is much that is
delightful
in
subject
and in treatment.
Again,
in "ThaTs" there
is subtle fascination in the oriental intermezzo and in the ballet.
"Cendrillon" carries us to the old world of Perrault with its
fairies and Prince
Charming,
but when we
open
"Cherubin" we
behold the
composer coquetting
once more with local colour-
see,
especially,
the
opening
of the second act. These
examples
might
be
multiplied,
but
enough
has been said to show that
Massenet's
imagination
was stimulated
by
the
importation
of
phrases
and
rhythms
calculated to lend
piquancy
and interest to
his works. It is a habit with
many
to talk of Massenet as
though
he were a kind of sous-Gounod. While he was a feminist and
wrote in
Paris,
the home of
Paquin
as it was
formerly
the scene
142
Exoticism in Music in
Retrospect
of the
triumphs
of
Palmyre,
his
gift
was
greater
than that of
his
predecessor.
In him we see
proof
of the statement that the
local colour, that the exoticism which he loved so much was an
external
thing.
His
personal
contribution to his art lies in those
sweet and
alluring pages
in which he revealed himself. That his
talent was dramatic and not
symphonic
should not blind us to
the charm of his muse.'
In Edouard Lalo the musician will find much to admire.
Lalo was not a
great
writer,
and
yet
there is
something peculiarly
individual in his methods. The most
prominent
characteristics
of his music,
and
they
are
very prominent,
are a
strong
sense of
colour,
great rhythmical diversity,
and considerable boldness in
the modulations. I cannot understand
why
"Namouna" was
not well received when
given
in Paris in 1881. The valse
may
be
only
a
piece
of refined dance
music,
spiced
here and there with
the unconventional touches native to
Lalo,
but the Scene du
Balcon is a
pure joy,
full of
originality
in idea and the
employment
of it. The well-known
Symphonie Espagnole
is
fascinating
from
the harmonic as well as the
rhythmic standpoint.
Lalo's
harmony
is
worthy
of serious
study,
for he obtains
many
of his best effects
by
means of it-a fact which did not
escape Tschaikowsky.
It is
necessary
to dwell
briefly upon
one or two other com-
posers.
Bizet
thought
of
writing
an
opera
on the "Namouna"
of de Musset and his widow informed me that he
composed
the
music for three acts of "Le Cid" which he had not the time to
write down. He wooed the East in "Les Pecheurs de Perles"
and
"Djamileh."
The
former,
an
early
work,
bears traces of
immaturity,
but to the latter
justice
still remains to be
done,
for
the
score,
in the words of Victorin
Joncieres,
"exhales the
perfume
of the Orient." The
opening
chorus is full of an indolence and
beauty
such as one
expects
to meet with in
Egypt,
and if the
unconventional Ghazel-a word familiar to students of Turkish
and Persian literature-in which
Djamileh
tells a tale of love be
weird and
melancholy,
the Almee is wild and
fierce,
suggesting
the
dancing
dervishes of the Sahara.
"Here,"
said
Reyer,
"is
the true music of the East." There are other features in the
little work which deserve
attention,
but
they hardly
come within
the
scope
of this article. The music as a
whole, nevertheless,
stands as a kind of
prophecy
of "Carmen."
"Djamileh"
is the
bud,
"Carmen" the flower. Little wonder is it that Saint-Saiens
celebrated its beauties in a sonnet and that
Pigot
described it as
'Perhaps
a word
ought
to be said about Dulcinea's
song
with
guitar accompani-
ment in "Don
Quichotte."
143
The Musical
Quarterly
"a little
masterpiece,
a
pearl,
a jewel." In "Carmen" there
is,
of
course,
much of the
sunny
South and it is instructive to observe
the different views of critics as to the
legitimacy
of Bizet's use
of
Spanish
themes. Some tell us that the central
figure
is
merely
an attractive French heroine
masquerading
as a
manolo,
that we
are deceived
by
the
balcony
of the
inn,
the
guitars
and
castanets,
the fans and
mantillas,
the "costumes bariols" which have so
often formed
part
of the stock-in-trade of third-rate
men;
others
write
enthusiastically
about the manner in which Bizet used his
materials. The
opera
as an
opera
is
thoroughly satisfying,
but
I cannot
say
whether the author of it ever studied
Spanish
and
gypsy
music
seriously.
The
Habanera,
it will be
remembered,
was a
glorious afterthought,
the
melody having
been
suggested,
if not
actually
derived
("imitge
d'une chanson
espagnole"
is Bizet's
description
of the
process)
from a
song
of Yradier lent to Bizet
by
Madame
Bemberg,
mother of the
composer.
The
piece
would never have been written had it not been for a dissatisfied
prima
donna,
a circumstance which calls to mind the
origin
of
Rossini's Di tanti
palpiti,
than which no solo was ever received
with more frenzied enthusiasm. A
Spanish authority
informs me
that,
while the merits of the music are
recognized by Spanish
musicians,
these men do not
regard
it as
really Spanish,
as faith-
fully representing
the
popular
idiom of the
people.
When all is
said, however,
one must admit that Bizet showed remarkable
cleverness in
handling
exotic themes and in
lending
a dash of
colour to his canvas.
There remains much of
interest,
but this must be
merely
mentioned. Bruneau's "Kerim" owes not a little to the researches
of that tireless student
Bourgault-Ducoudray.
In Chabrier and
Charpentier, Debussy,
Roussel and Ravel there are
pages
which
yield
much to
patient
examination. And we discover a
great
deal that is
wonderfully refreshing
in the march of Cesar Franck's
camel drivers and the czardas and mazurka to which the
corphyees
and nimble rustics of Delibes dance and
pose.
To
Gevaiert,
to
Louis
Laloy (who
has made a
profound study
of Chinese
music)
and to
Jaques-Dalcroze (a
commentator
upon
Arabic
rhythms)'
the French are
deeply
indebted. While the reader
may protest
that this
survey
has
hardly brought
him into contact with the
greater aspects
of
France,
with the
society
which walked abroad
in the fair fields of Touraine and dined in the chateaux which
flank the
Loire,
with the rich and bountiful life of the
eighteenth
'See also the Arab influence in
Rimsky-Korsakoff's
"Antar."
144
Exoticism in Music in
Retrospect
century,
with the
thickly populated
world of Moliere and
Dumas,
he
will,
perhaps,
admit that it has served to show how remarkable
has been the French
activity
in this direction.
GERMANY
The Germans have not
exploited
exoticism to
any very great
extent. His love of self-culture
impelled
the Hellenic Goethe to
a serious
study
of the art of Greece and
Italy,
a task which bore
fruit in the
extraordinary
"Gott und die
Bajadere,"
a title which
recalls
Auber,
and the "Westostliche
Divan,"
wherein the
Olympic figure
of the
poet
is to be observed dressed out in the
loose trousers and fez of a Turkish
pasha. Heine, too,
had his
Southern
aspect,
and so it is true to
say
that there was a
Drang
nach Osten in an artistic before a
political
sense.
Apart
from
such
compositions
as Mendelssohn's "Scotch"
symphony,
Bruch's
"Kol Nidrei" and Scottish
Fantasia,
the Bohemian Dvorak's
"Nigger" quartet,
"New World"
symphony,
Biblical
Songs,
Gypsy Songs
(one
of
which,
"Als die alte
Mutter,"
is an
exquisite
jewel,
and shows what can be done in a small
compass)
and
Slavonic
Dances,
and D'Albert's
"Tiefland,"
a curious
congery
of
styles,
all of which can be traced to their
sources,
there is
little to scrutinise.
The
exception
which
proves
the
rule,
and a brilliant
exception
it
is, may
be found in "The Barber of
Bagdad" by
Cornelius.
This work has a
great
historical
significance
as those who know
the inner
history
of Liszt's break with Weimar are aware. On
its debut Cornelius's little effort met with a
hostility
which is
capable
of
misinterpretation,
for it was
really
directed
against
Liszt and did not reflect
upon
the value of the music. It
may
be
that the circumstances in which the
opera
was introduced have
mitigated against
its wide
popularity.
In
any
case,
it is not so
well known as it
ought
to be. Cornelius was
obviously inspired
by
his
subject. Although
he was a
prominent
member of the
New German School and had
sympathies
with the
Wagnerian
movement,
there is much in his music which cannot be traced
to Liszt or
Wagner.
The
Bagdad
of the
composer
is an attractive
place,
and the score with its call of the
muezzin, comic sallies
and
lyrical episodes
so
deftly
handled holds an
unique place
among
the modern
operatic
works of
Germany.
Paradoxically enough,
the first man in whom we find exoticism
freely
used is the national Weber. Weber was influenced
by
the
trend of his time. The literature for which he showed the
greatest
145
The Musical
Quarterly
fondness was
largely preoccupied
with the
baroque
and the
fantastic,
and there is little doubt
that,
as he
possessed
a consider-
able
literary gift,
he was moved to
adopt
a somewhat similar
attitute towards his own art. For the
writings
of Tieck he nursed
a
profound
affection. In
"Preciosa,"
taken from
Cervantes,
there
are effective
passages
which
portray Spanish
and
Gypsy
life.
He considered Columbus and the Cid as
subjects
for dramatic
treatment,
and sketched some music for "Die drei Pintos."' The
score of the Gozzi-Schiller "Turandot"
gives
us an
interesting
attempt
at local
colouring
in the use to which he
puts
a Chinese
theme. In
"Oberon,"
Arabic and Turkish melodies are incor-
porated,
and there are one or two scenes full of the cachet of the
Orient.
Liszt, by
birth a
Hungarian,
was
by
nature
responsive
to
outward
impressions.
To name the
compositions
in which he
displayed
a
sympathy
with the
poets
of the
past
and an
appreciation
of
scenery
and architecture would be to name
practically
all his
works. An examination of the music of Liszt in all its
aspects
would demand more
space
than can be allowed
here,
and this is
not the
place
to debate the
legitimacy,
or
otherwise,
of his in-
cursions into the
fascinating
realm of
Hungarian
music. It is
necessary only
to
point
out that no
composer
has been more
easily
touched
by
the artistic monuments
bequeathed by
the
ages.
The literature of
France,
the
paintings
and frescoes of
Italy,
the
ritual of the
church,
the music of the German classicists moved
him
profoundly
and went far to
shape
that halo of enchantment
which surrounds his works. It is
permissible
to assume that the
objects
of a man's admiration
provide
an index to his character
and,
as is the case with
Carlyle,
so with Liszt, the heroes whose
praises
he
sang give
us an
insight
into the man's nature. His
view of life was
essentially heroic;
to him most human endeavour
was to be
fitly expressed
in musical terms as a lamento and
trionfo,
even when the latter was
posthumous.
To
Dante,
Petrarch and
Tasso,
great figures
born in the cradle of the New
Spirit,
he
looked with veneration. The famous
episode
of
Mazeppa,
which
is
variously
told
by
the
historians,
ends
confidently
with the
victorious strains of a Cossack march. He
passed
from one
subject
to another with
astonishing
ease,
and in
every
case there
is evidence of the breadth of his
intellect,
the bountiful
generosity
of his
nature,
the
extraordinary catholicity
of his
tastes,
and the
whole-hearted
delight
which he took in
gorgeous pageantry
and
'This was dressed out
by
Gustav Mahler and
produced
at
Leipzig.
146
Exoticism in Music in
Retrospect
effective decoration. After him
Goldmark,
a
Hungarian Jew,
has shown the most decided
tendency
to
lay
on thick colours.
"Sapho"
and
"Sakuntala,"
to mention
representative pieces,
are
the children of that
opulent imagination
to which we are indebted
for several notable
excerpts
in "Die
Konigin
von
Saba";
though
many
will
agree
that the vivid hues are less
cunningly
handled
here than
they
are in
many
French works and in "Aida."
Strauss has a Southern
aspect.
He has declared that sunshine
is
necessary
for his
inspiration. Early
in his career he
paid
hand-
some tribute to the land of Dante in a
suite,
and
subsequently
devoted two of his most elaborate
tone-poems
to
outstanding
figures
of Southern
imagination,
"Don Juan" and "Don
Quixote."
But the exotic Strauss is almost
wholly unsatisfactory,
as witness
"The
Legend
of
Joseph."
Nowhere,
I
think,
has Strauss so
signally
failed as in the "Dance of the Seven Veils" in "Salome."
Here was an
opportunity
at which most of the French
composers
would have
put
all the colour and
perfume
of the East in their
strains. Strauss's dance is neither Eastern nor
particularly
dis-
tinguished.
The technical
ability
is
squandered,
for the effect is
out of all
proportion
to the means
employed.
I am not
discussing
the value of the
opera,
which is
quite
another
question.
All I
say
is that the German master has not taken full
advantage
of
the situation from the exotic
point
of view. In this connection
it is instructive to
compare
the treatment of the
subject
as shown
here and in Massenet's "Herodiade." But if
you
wish to realize
the wide
divergence
between the French and the German
methods,
you
have
only
to think what the French would have done with
"Parsifal." To
begin
with
they
would
probably
have called it
"Kundry,"
and it needs but little effort to
imagine
how
Massenet,
say,
would have treated the scene of the flower-maidens. In his
art
Wagner
maintained a
unity
of
style
which was
little,
if at
all,
disturbed
by change
of locale. Like
Balzac,
he
gave
us himself
and we have little reason to
complain. But,
while the
paprika
which he found in Liszt is
lacking
in his own
music,
it is
possible
to create a
picture
of
Wagner,
the Eastern
poet,
to which
Velasquez
or
Munkacsy might
well have
put
his
signature.
Several traits
in the man's character remind us of the life of
Bagdad.
The
voluptuary, sybarite,
hedonist has been
dragged
into the
light
of
publicity by painstaking
critics. He was the first to write
sex music. He
delighted
in rich colours and
perfumes,
and had
a weakness for
gorgeous surroundings
and fine
personal apparel.
There does not exist
unanimity
of
opinion
as to the extent of his
absorption
in the
philosophical pessimism
of
Schopenhauer,
but
147
148 The Musical
Quarterly
no one can
deny
his interest in
Buddhism,
in the works of
Hafiz,
"the
greatest
and most sublime
philosopher,"
in the
Tattvamasi;
and additional
light
is thrown on this
aspect
of the man in the
sketches for "Die Sarazenin" and "Die
Sieger."
The
portrait,
however,
can be drawn
only
from the man's mental
activity,
from his
prose writings
and his
speech.
His music
gives practically
no hint of this side of him. It was that of one who drew his
strength
from
Gluck,
Beethoven and
Weber,
and it was made
possible by
those brilliant members of the
European
schools who
laid the foundations
upon
which the edifices of the art are built.
Hugo
Wolf heard a
great
deal of Italian music in his
youth,
was
sincerely
attracted
by
the French
masters,
and
encouraged
the
hope that,
perhaps,
some Latin blood coursed
through
his
veins. He
seems,
in this
respect,
to have been one of few. The
average
German intellect often finds it difficult to
adopt
the
externals of other
nations,
and to this we must attribute the
comparative
want of success in the exotic vein. It lacks the
vivacity
and
mobility
of the French
mind;
to it
caprice
is a
stranger.
(This difference in outlook and in method has been
remarked
by many,
but none has
analysed
it better than Matthew
Arnold.)
The
strongest
link between German and French music
seems to me to be that Southern
product,
the Viennese
waltz,
which Marcel Prevost has
aptly designated
as
having
une dme
defemme.
But it stands as a
thing apart.
To how
many
German
scores could we
fitly apply
the
epithet
une
partition parfum6e,
so
frequently employed
to describe French works?
SPAIN.
The music of
Spain
is a music of the
people.
In the Middle
Ages
there were the
trobadores,
a name which
suggests knight-
errantry
and romance. But even more
interesting
is the
story
of the
villancicos,
or
peasants' songs,
which,
if more
vulgar
than
the
romanceros,
were a true
interpretation
of real life. Music in
Spain
has
developed slowly,
a fact which
is,
perhaps, largely
due
to the limited
capacity
of the
guitar
and mandoline.1 And so we
find
that,
whereas with other nations the
perception
of music
has become
keener,
the
singing beggars
of the streets are
to-day
the bards of
Spain very
much as
they
were in olden times.
This
by
no means
implies
that
Spain
is at all
lacking
in
musical interest. The
country
furnishes
many
features which are
without
parallel
in the
history
of other
peoples.
That more is
1There seems to be considerable difference of
opinion
on this
point.
Exoticism in Music in
Retrospect
149
not known about
Spanish
music must be attributed to the facts
that the
country
is cut off
by
the
Pyrenees,
and that the
Basques
who,
like the
adjacent
Gascons,
have
jealously preserved
their
individuality
as a
race,
are
by
nature secretive. As will be
guessed
by
students,
Spain
is a
country
where the
song
is the dance and
the dance is the
song.
Dr. Riemann holds that when music arrives
at a certain
point
of
development
the
gulf
which
separates
it
from
poetry
and
dancing
tends to become wider. This is not
yet
the case in
Spain.
It has
always
been natural for the
Spaniard
to
express
himself in
movement,
and the dances of the
country
tell us much of the
history
and
temperament
of the inhabitants.
In the North the
predominant
influence is
Basque;
in the South
there are traces of the Moorish
occupation. Practically
all this
music can
point
to an ancient
pedigree.
The
very
names resound
with a fine romanticism which
conjures up
in the mind the
proud
Spain
of former
days.
There is the
jota,
a dance
popular
in
Arragon
and
Navarre;
the
rondeia,
originating
at Ronda
(compare
the Scottish
strathspey
which takes its name from that district
and the Serbian
nishevlyanka
which is derived from
Nish);
el
jaleo
is associated with
Xerez;
the ole
gaditano
is danced
by
the
laughing girls
of
Cadiz;
the
pollo
at
Seville;
the
malagueia
del
torero came from
Malaga.
The
chaconne,
a word of uncertain
derivation,
and the
fandango
have now
merely
an historical
significance.
But more
widely
known than
any
of these are the
boleros, habaneras,
and
seguidillas manchegas,
the last of which
are
popular
all over
Spain. Among gypsy
dances are the zarandeo
and the
zorongo.
When we read of these
dances,
some
performed
in the
village squares,
others in the
stifling,
ill-lit cafes of Seville
or
Cadiz,
we feel that
they
are far removed from the
highly-
organised
music of middle
Europe.
And when their attitudes and
accoutrements are
added,
the
accompanying pandero
and the
clinking
castaietas,
the
picture
is rendered more
complete. Spanish
dances are of two
kinds;
the
danzas,
which are executed
by
the
legs only,
and others
(popularly
known as
bayles,
I
believe)
the
evolutions of which necessitate the use of the entire
body.
The
voluptuous grace
of the danse ensoleillee has been made known
by
such artists as La
Tortajada,
La
Guerrero,
and La
Otero,
but
it is said that a
Spanish
measure loses a
great
deal if not set in
its natural
surroundings.
For these dances are often
entirely
an
expression
of the
emotions,
full of
badinage
and
coquetry,
the
effect of which it is
impossible
to
convey
in a
large
theatre. Here
the dance is a kind of love-motif
and, being
never far removed
from the odor
difama,
is
invariably
the
portrayal
of
endearments,
The Musical
Quarterly
jealousies
and conceits, and
is,
in
fact,
a little drama of cloud
and
sunshine,
frown and smile.
To
lay peculiar
stress on all this is not to
deny
that
Spain
can
lay
claim to some
distinguished
musicians. Several
will,
no
doubt,
be familiar to the
reader,
among
them the blind
Cabez6n,
called
by
some "the
Spanish Bach,"
Santa
Maria, Eslava, Morales,
Vittoria and Ribera. We are too
prone
to
imagine
that all that
Spanish
culture stands for in the musical world is the
Argentine
tango
and the Brazilian maxixe. The
folly
of this view is
apparent
to those who know that
Spanish
influence is discernible in Pales-
trina,
and that the
Spanish composers occupied
a
dominating
position
in the sixteenth
century.
In recent times there have
been
signs
of a revival.
Leaving
out of account that Hoffmann-
like
figure,
Sarasate,
who filled our
goblets
with the
Spanish
vintage,
and who,
by
means of the
violin,
the minx of the musical
family
and an instrument which has direct associations with
vagabondage,
won fame as an
exponent
of his
country's
music,
there is much to arrest us. The work of Olmeda of
Burgos
is
well-known. Isaac Albeniz has been faithful to the national
idioms,
as admirers of the celebrated
"Triana,"
wherein he
depicts
this beautiful
quarter
of
Seville,
will
testify.
Granados won fame
mainly
with his
"Goyescas,"
but
he,
like
Albeniz,
paints
the
Spain
of the
Spaniard
in the
alluring
"Danzas." Pedrell is the
critic of the
young
coterie,
and Manuel de
Falla,
whose
opera,
"La Vida
Breve,"
made such a
deep impression
in Paris and
Nice,
shows himself a true
poet
in those
pieces,
now
languish-
ing,
now
passionate,
which have
passed
into the
repertory
of
many pianists.
The difference between his
"Cubana,"
"An-
daluza,"
and "Montanesa" and the "Iberia" of Albeniz
lies,
perhaps,
in a
divergence
of
personality
rather than in
any antag-
onism of artistic creed. To
Joaquin
Turina we are indebted for
a clever suite which
portrays
the life of his native
town,
Seville.
Quite
as remarkable as the
compositions
of these
Spanish
writers is the
foreign
music which has been
inspired by Spain.
It.was
in
Arragon
that
Laparra
collected the local colour for his
"La
Habanera,"
and tributes to the charm of
Spain
have been
paid
in Raff's
"Rhapsodie espagnole"
for the
pianoforte,
Glinka's
"A Summer
night
in Madrid" and "La Jota
Aragonese," Rimsky-
Korsakoff's
"Caprice espagnole,"
Lalo's
"Symphonie espagnole,"
Liszt's
"Spanish Rhapsody,"
Chabrier's
"Espafia,"
Saint-Saens's
"Jota
Aragonese," "Caprice
andalouse" and
"Habanera,"
Ge-
vairt's
"Fantasia sobre motivos
espanoles,"
"Ravel's
"Rhapsodie
espagnole," "Debussy's
"Une soiree en Grenade" and
"Iberia,"
150
Exoticism in Music in
Retrospect
151
and
Hugo
Wolf's
"Spanisches
Liederbuch." All this makes
plain
the irresistible
appeal
which the
song
and dance of the
humble
peasant
of
Biscay
and Navarre have made to
many
men of diverse
temperaments.
From
Spain
to Morocco is no far
cry
and the
permanency
of
the Moorish influence on music and ballad are
proof
of the artistic
leanings
of the
Spanish
Moor and
may
well lend colour to the
belief that the native music of Morocco is not without its merits
as a medium of
expression,
in
spite
of the fact that it is
performed
in unison with barbaric
percussion accompaniment.
When the
Mohammedan invaders
conquered Spain they brought
into that
country
a
superior civilisation, and,
while
they
were
mainly
pre-occupied
with science and
philosophy,
it was not in those
spheres
alone that the intellectual
qualities
of the race made
themselves evident. To the excellence of their handiwork we
owe the Alhambra of Granada and
many
a
mosque
of
striking
contour. To the care lavished on musical
study by
the Arab
chiefs in
Spain may
be traced the African note in the
songs
and
dances of the Mediterranean
provinces. Many
of the latter are
held to be almost
entirely
Moorish in
origin,
and measures similar
to the
malaguena
have been heard in Fez
by
travellers. In
South
America,
so
long
associated with
Spain,
there is much
music which lies buried. The
Argentine, pundits
assure
us,
possesses
a vast amount of
untapped
material.
Originally Spanish,
the
native melodies have
gradually
taken on a
slightly
different
complexion
due,
no
doubt,
to the influence of the interminable
plains upon
the mind. We cannot
reproach
musicians who are
not conversant with what is unwritten and
merely passed
from
guitar
to
guitar
in troubadour
style.
But one cannot contem-
plate
the
possible
loss of this treasure to the world at
large
without
a
profound feeling
of
regret, especially
when so
many
artificial
pieces
which
exploit
the familiar
negroid syncopations
are received
with
open
arms. A South American tells me that when the
Argentine
Liszt or
Tschaikowsky appears
the world will behold
the charm of the new-born
song
with amazement.
I have
often,
he
says,
while in the
pampas,
itched for the un-
possessed power
to seize and chronicle all the
beauty
of sound that
sprang up spontaneously
around me. If the
day
come when
Argentine
music is
brought
into the realms of art the
guitar
will have to be incor-
porated
into the orchestra. To realise the infinite
possibilities
of the
guitar
one should hear it in the hands of the
gaucho
minstrels. A few
of them
together
will
give
a
fuller, richer,
more varied effect than a
balalaika orchestra in its most swollen
proportions.
The
vidalitas,
or
folk-songs,
are
among
the most
haunting things
in music.
The Musical
Quarterly
To insist further
upon
the
importance
of
Spanish
music in
an historical
study
would be an
impertinence.
To the humanist
it is valuable because it is
democratic,
and thus
brings
him into
contact with the life and
society
of a
great past.
I have
spoken
of the effect of the Moorish
occupation,
but there are
apparent
traces of orientalism in the wider sense in the South of the
peninsula.
The romance and sensuousness of the East are here blended with
the traditional
austerity
and latent fire. The old houses of
Toledo and of the
villages
of
Andalusia,
with their
single
windows
overlooking
the
street,
speak
of a race which
naturally regards
life
through
the emotions. The furtive
glance
and
passionate
whisper,
the cassia set
coquettishly
in the sefora's
hair,
the
rapturous
strain with which the rustic Romeo serenades his
Juliet-do
they
not all remind us of the time when the
Saracen,
turning
his back
upon Syrian
wastes and
Egyptian
deserts,
rode
across the
Sierra, bringing
with him some of the
mystery
of his
native
landscape
and
thereby adding
a note of
strange
enchant-
ment to the
Spanish Song?
ITALY
It is not until recent times that exoticism has made its
appearance
in Italian
music,
and this is due to the
popular
attitude
towards
opera.
Where music was almost
entirely operatic
and
opera
for so
long merely
a necklace of arias and
duets, composers,
in the
main,
showed little
disposition
to avail themselves of their
relative
proximity
to the artistic oases in which the French have
so often
sought
refreshment. It is a
gross
error to
reproach
an
Italian for
writing
Italian music
and,
while we
may
contend
that in Bellini and Donizetti there is to be found an
allegiance
to conventions which amounts to
weakness,
the Southern nature
of their
melody
cannot be denied. The student
eager
for the
discovery
of exotic traits will
not,
I
fancy,
discover
anything
particularly worthy
of note in Rossini or
Spontini.
It is not
until we come to Verdi that we meet with a sustained effort to
use exoticism in an Italian
opera.
Verdi
probably
took consider-
able
pains
to
paint
his Eastern
pictures
well, for,
it will be re-
membered,
"Aida" was commissioned
by
the Khedive. The
composer
had an
unique opportunity.
The action takes
place
in the time of the
Pharaohs;
the scene is laid in
Memphis
and
Thebes;
there is much
picturesque pageantry.
The chorus in
the
Temple
of
Vulcan, accompanied by
the
harp,
the Dance of
the Priestesses and that of the Moorish Slaves,
the curious theme
which
interrupts
the march of the
Egyptians,
the
tranquil
music
152
Exoticism in Music in
Retrospect
by
the Nile-all these are full of a
beauty
which we find nowhere
else in the master's works. But the orientalism is
spasmodic.
The
disguise
is
swiftly
thrown aside. In Celeste
Aida,
Su del
Nilo,
in the love-motif and in 0 terra addio the mask is thrown
off and the
passionate
Italian bursts forth. I must warn the
reader that I am not
disputing
the value of
"Aida,"
which is a
work of
genius.
I am
merely pointing
out that
here,
once
more,
we have confirmation of the view that
exoticism,
even in the best
of
hands,
is an accretion.
The later men were not slow to emulate Verdi the
experi-
mentalist. Puccini in "Madame
Butterfly," Mascagni
in
"Iris,"
Leoncavallo in "I
Zingari,"
Leoni in "L'Oracolo" have introduced
many
clever effects borrowed from distant
lands, and,
though
the success is
variable,
the remarks
applied
to "Aida" hold
good
in these cases.
HUNGARY
This is no
place
in which to deal with the
origin
of what is
popularly
termed
Hungarian
music,
or to examine the
arguments
which this
subject
has called forth. For the
present
I must
content
myself
with
showing
to what extent
composers
have
plucked
the
Hungarian
blossoms and added them to their
garlands.
I have said that exoticism is an
accretion,
but it seems least so
when the musician is
brought
into close contact with the idiom
which he
adopts;
when,
in other
words,
the act of
borrowing
racial characteristics or local
peculiarities
is a
spontaneous
and
unsophisticated
mental
process.
We find this in
Haydn.
It is
no
disparagement
to
say
that,
apart
from
music,
Haydn
was a
peasant.
And no
operation
of the mind could have been more
natural to him than that of
turning
to
good
account the rustic
material
upon
which his
eye
rested. For this reason it is difficult
to detect where the
popular
themes end and
Haydn
himself
begins.
But it cannot be too
strongly urged
that
Haydn's
music
is valuable because the
personality
of the man
permeates
it.
By
virtue of his merits as a writer not a few of the
folk-songs
and
dances which he used have come to our
notice, which,
had he
ignored them,
would
probably
never have travelled
beyond
their
parochial
boundaries.
Many
a man of third-rate
powers might
have fathered
them,
but it is doubtful
if,
in such
circumstances,
the music would have exhibited
any great vitality. Haydn's
borrowings
from the store-house of the
people's
music were
many.
In him we find Slavonic characteristics and Croatian
melodies,
and there is a Rondo a
l'Hongroise. Hungarian
features are
153
The Musical
Quarterly
also detectable in Beethoven's
"King Stephen,"
in Schubert's
Divertissement a la
Hongroise,
in Weber's
Adagio
and Rondo
Ungarese
for
bassoon,
in Berlioz's
Rackoczy
March,
in Brahms's
Hungarian
Dances,
in Delibes's
"Coppelia,"
in Johann Strauss's
"Fledermaus,"
in Massenet's "Scenes
Hongroises"
and "Marche
de
Szabady."
The musical
history
of South
Germany
and
Austria
constantly brings
us into touch with that of
Hungary,
and I do not doubt that this is due to the
unquenchable
love of
the art which animates the
Hungarian.
There is much to be
said
against
the
system
of
patronage,
but
good
seed was sown
by
those eminent
patrons
the
Apponyis, Szap&rys, Erdodys,
and
Esterh&zys,
whose names we so often find in
dedications,
and to
whom Liszt and others were
frequently
indebted.
RUSSIA
In modern times no
country
has made
greater progress
than
Russia. That the Russians are
only
now
evincing
a sense of
national consciousness is not a matter for astonishment. Indeed,
what has been
accomplished
is little short of miraculous. In the
time of Catherine II the Italian influence was
paramount.
Enthu-
siastic
applause greeted
Paisiello's works,
and in so late a writer
as Glinka we find
passages
which recall the manner of Donizetti.
The charm of French music was felt
subsequently-the
"Dance
des Mirlitons" of
Tschaikowsky's
"Casse-Noisette" suite
might
have been written
by
Delibes,
and the
scoring
of "The
Sleeping
Beauty"
owes
something
to Saint-Sains and
Massenet;
in recent
days
the German manner
penetrated
the Tsar's domains. The
emancipation
of Russia
(so
far as that is
possible
in
any country)
is in course of
accomplishment;
that is to
say,
Russian musicians
realise the immense resources of their own land and mean to
draw
upon
them
freely.
The attention which the rest of
Europe
has
given
to this Eurasian art was kindled
by
the
appearance
of
Tschaikowsky, by
the tours of the excellent
corps
de ballet,
of
which
only
travellers had much
previous knowledge,
and
by
the
frequent appearance
on the concert
platform
of innumerable
Sachas and
Mischas,
whose
playing
assured us that music
dwelt
in the
very
heart of the
people.
Within the limits which I have
set
myself
it is
impossible
to do more than indicate the sources
tapped by
the chief
representative
men. Glinka
put
Tartar,
Finnish and Persian airs to
good
use. Rubinstein's
"Persian
Songs" (op. 34.)
are said to have been
inspired by
a
meeting
with
gypsies
in the Caucasus. Cui has written Circassian Dances,
154
Exoticism in Music in
Retrospect
Borodin a remarkable
sketch,
"In the
steppes
of Central
Asia,"
Balakiref
"Islamey,"
an oriental fantasia for the
pianoforte,
(which,
if not
played superlatively
well,
is one of the
ugliest
pieces
of music one could listen
to), Rimsky-Korsakoff
an Indian
Dance in
"Mlada,"
Rebikov a "Danse des
Odalisques"
and a
"Danse
orientale," Glazounoff,
who has a German
aspect,
an
Arab
Melody
for the G
string.
Such
quotations might
be continued
indefinitely,
and other
excerpts,
for
example,
Rebikov's "Hindus-
tani Natch" from "Autour du
monde,"
the Dance of the Chinese
Dolls from his "Der
Christbaum,"
the Hindu
song
from
Rimsky-
Korsakoff's "Sadko" and
Arensky's
ballet "Nuit
d'Egypte"
deserve
study.
In a
place by
itself is the ballet music
incorporated by
Borodin
in his
opera
"Prince
Igor."
These Polovtsian Dances are full of
untamed
energy
and,
unlike the ballet airs of the old
operas,
form
part
of the vivid
picture
which this
singular
creation
presents
to the
eye.
When
listening
to some of these Russian works we realize
that music is often
merely
a kind of
opium
in the East. Western
writers seek harmonic
variety
and
kaleidoscopic changes,
but the
oriental mind is
generally
satisfied with the reiteration of one
idea. Sound is here a kind of fakir's
mesmerism,
a sedative or
opiate
which affects the senses but has little or
nothing
to do
with the intellect. The conflict of Orient and Occident
produces
curious effects. In one human
organism
we
have,
so to
speak,
a
struggle
between the Russian and the Tartar of the
popular
epigram.
We are not concerned with the
authenticity
of the
claim of this or that
composer
to the title of Eastern
singer.
It
may
be well to
point
out, however,
that it oftens
happens
that,
even when the Russian has learnt all that the Western schools
can teach
him,
the result is
bewildering.
Where elaboration is
superimposed upon nalvety,
where themes and
rhythms
associated
with sistrum and
tabrets,
with samisen and tam-tam are trans-
planted
to the modern
orchestra,
we stand in the
presence
of a
new
beauty,
none the less real because it is so often
pagan
and
barbaric. That Chinese
dream,
Stravinsky's "Nightingale,"
would,
certainly,
have
delighted
Tieck,
the dealer in
topsy-turveydom,
who loved to
laugh
with mandarins and watch the
pagodas
of his
imagination
flit
through
the air. Even in
symphonic
works
which owe their structure to the
West,-and
the modern Russians
are much indebted to Berlioz and Liszt-we often
happen upon
passages
which
carry
us
away
from the conservatoire to the
village
Kermesse
by
the banks of the
Volga.
To those accustomed
155
156 The Musical
Quarterly
to
Beethoven,
Schumann and
Wagner
such music must
frequently
appear very inorganic.
The
melody
is sometimes left to tell its
own
tale,
as it
were,
where the
training
of the Western musician
would have
prompted
him to cause the inner
parts
to
move,
and
thereby strengthen
the weak beats of a bar. When some of
these
pieces
are
performed along
with more
polished
utterances
we feel as
though
we were
overhearing
the
halting
talk of a
moujik
in a Rambouillet circle.
But,
when all the ink has been
spilt, you
are bound to admit that the colossal Janus of Russian
music is an
imposing figure.
No
country
has musical
potentialities
greater
than those of
Russia,
and to
say
this is not to
imply
that
the achievement is not
intrinsically
valuable.
A word
ought
to be said about the orchestration of the Russian
composers,
a branch of the art in which
they excel,
for the reason
that, by
their constant
striving
after richness and
brilliance,
these
men show that
they possess something
of the Eastern love of
opulent colouring. Rimsky-Korsakoff's
instrumentation is a
pure
delight.
Even when his ideas lack
originality
he
gives
them a
charm or character
by
the manner in which he scores them. To
mention the works in which the
handling
of the orchestra shows
a
masterly knowledge
of its infinite resources would be to
catalogue
nearly
all the
compositions
of the best musicians.
ENGLAND
Whatever we
may
think of la vie boheme as
portrayed by
Murger,
there is little doubt that the antics
indulged
in
by
the
aesthetes of the Victorian
age
seem a little comical in these
days.
The Bohemianism of the artists who
slept
in attics and
lounged
about the
purlieus
of Montmartre
represented
an
aspect
of the
artistic life of France. Such
jolly
roisterers,
living
what was at
once a
comedy
and a
tragedy,
were descendants of the wild and
fascinating Frangois Villon,
of the
worldly
scholars of Master
Rabelais,
of those adventurous
spirits
who
provide
suitable material
for the romantic
chronicler,
and in whom we find
courage
and
wit,
love of wine and
petticoat hunting. Rapscallion painters
and tatterdemalion laureates are to be met with at
many junctures
in French
history.
But the
only
thing
which can be said in favour
of the movement
anticipated by
Pater and
represented by
Wilde
is that it was a
protest against
Philistinism.
Being
artificial,
it
could not
last,
and before
long
the
drooping
sunflower died.
Such
activity
would
probably
have been
responsible
for the
Exoticism in Music in
Retrospect
157
creation of several
interesting
works in France. The
only
musical
result was "Patience," which derided the modern
exquisites
in
the same
way
as Offenbach's
"Orphee
aux Enfers" held
up
to
ridicule the
pseudo-classical
deities of conventional
opera.
Britain is united to India and
Egypt by
close
ties,
but until
a few
years ago English composers
showed little
disposition
to
leave the beaten track. Their
attempts
to tickle our
palates
were
comparatively
few and timorous. Not one of them bathed
in the Southern sun as
Browning
did. "The Mikado" is
Japanese
only
on the surface.
Among contemporary writers, nevertheless,
there is much
picturesque badinage. Elgar
has a well-defined
style
of his
own,
but in "The
Apostles"
he has been able to
forget
the Handel-Mendelssohn tradition so
completely
as to introduce
the shofar of the Mohammedan world. Delius deserves a whole
chapter
to
himself,
for he is
very original,
and in him we have a
composer
whose
style
is consistent even when he is
gratifying
his love of half-tints and
creating
the
atmosphere
of
twilight.
His
sojourn
in Florida and residence in France
probably
had a
good
deal to do with his mental outlook. A
painter
of rare
charm,
he
occupies
a niche of his own. Here and
there,
Cyril Scott,
an
impressionist,
touches the borderland of the
exotic,
but for a
profitable subject
of
analysis
I should advise the musician to
study
the life and work of
Coleridge-Taylor.
His
position
is
without
parallel.
The son of a West African native and an
Englishwoman,
he received his musical education in London.
As the countless admirers of "Hiawatha" are
aware,
he struck a
new note.
Subsequently
he tested the value of African and
North American
(indigenous)
airs,
and to his
knowledge
of them
we
probably
owe some of his most
arresting pieces. Coleridge-
Taylor
is a
problem.
The famous "Eleanore" is a true
inspiration,
but it
might
have been
penned by
half a dozen other men so
far as the
general style
of the music is concerned. On the other
hand,
in
pieces
like
"Hiawatha,"
"A Tale of Old
Japan"
and the
African dances the African is
prominent,
and I think it a
pity
that he did not
give
a freer rein to his
fancy
and let his natural
impulses
lead him to the
goal.
What is conventional in his
output
could have been
supplied by many
men without a tithe
of his
imagination;
what is African he alone could
give.
That he
learnt much from the Germans is
beyond
doubt-his
procedure
is,
of
course,
European-and
his
scoring
shows a
knowledge
of
the Liszt of "Les Preludes." But the
plaintive
accent is that
which lends distinction to his finer
moments,
and for this
sad,
sweet, yearning song
we must be
grateful.
The Musical
Quarterly
Another
composer
on whom attention
may profitably
be
concentrated is
Percy Grainger. Grainger
is
temperamentally
antagonistic
to
pedagogy.
To all that he does he
brings
a whole-
some freshness which is rare in these
days.
It is ominous that
this
"Siegfried
of the
piano"
is an
eloquent
advocate for
Albeniz,
Delius and
Grieg,
the cause of whose "Sliitter" he has
pleaded
with a
persistence
which commands
respect.
In
composing
he is
not fettered
by
the shackles of
convention,
but his unconven-
tionality
is that of the
musician,
not that of the novice.
Many
a
conservative
will, doubtless,
regard
his harmonic methods with
disgust
and frown
upon
his
part-writing.
But,
ultimately,
this
clever musician wins
you
to his side. A
large
freedom stalks
across his
pages.
His vision extends over the whole musical
universe,
and in
many unfrequented places
he discovers
objects
which move him to
expression.
Little
escapes
him,
for he is
quick
to
perceive
the value of music as it is found
among primitive
races. The "Colonial
Song"
was
inspired by
Australia,
his native
country;
the "Mock Morris" Dance is a
study
in the folk
style
written round the motto
"always merry
and
bright";
the "Dance
Song
from the Faroe Islands" carries us to the far North. But
perhaps
his
pre-occupation
with the
possibilities
of various in-
struments is that
part
of his
activity
which bears most
directly
upon
the
present subject.
He is interested in the
percussion
department
and thinks that its
capabilities
have not
yet
been
realised. He has turned his attention to the bass
xylophone,
the bass
glockenspiel,
to
gongs
and bells and advocates their
use in chamber music. The "Random Round" is scored for
voices,
guitars,
mandolines, mandola,
piano, xylophone,
celesta,
glockenspiel, resonaphone, strings
and wind. One version of the
popular "Shepherd's Hey"
contains a
part
for the
English
con-
certina,
and in the "Zanzibar
Boat-Song"
he
employs
the
celesta,
glockenspiel
and
resonaphone.
Elsewhere he has utilised the
American
organ.
It is characteristic of him
that,
when a
student,
he
thought
of
going
to China in order to
study
the music of that
country;
it is
equally
characteristic of him that he has written
of the chants of the Maoris with zest. He is
continually sweeping
away
the cobwebs of obscurantism and,
on account of his searches
for new colour effects and
striking
harmonic combinations,
is
entitled to rank as one of the most successful
opponents
of Doctor
Dry-as-dust.
The most
persistent upholder
of exoticism which
England
has
ever
produced
is Granville Bantock who is
something
of a wild
pagan
in his art. In all he touches there is much of the
grotesque
and
158
Exoticism in Music in
Retrospect
159
baroque,
and he is not afraid of the bizarre. His best-known
work is "Omar
Khayyam,"
which
opens
with the call of the
muezzin from the minaret, Allahu Akbar! and
which,
apart
from
its
exquisite colouring,
is remarkable for such unconventional
passages
as the
passing
of the caravan. Here we have the music
of a modern wizard. A Turkomani
melody
is
sung,
at first a bocca
chiusa,
while the orchestra confines itself to the
persistent repetition
of chords. Bantock's
reputation
rests
upon
a
large
number of
works,
for he has been
prolific
and successful. His fondness for
subjects
which offer wide
scope
for his whimsical
fancy
and
imaginative gifts
showed itself
early
in his career. He
planned
a series of
symphonic poems
on
Southey's
"Kehama,"
but of this
huge Egyptian
edifice
only
one
part-"Rameses
II"-was built.
Then there are "The Fire
Worshippers,"
"The Pearl of
Iran,"
Songs
of the East in six
groups-India, Japan, Persia, Egypt,
China and
Arabia,
and "Christ in the
Wilderness,"
which contains
a
page
or so of Eastern
landscape painting.
"Thalaba the Des-
troyer,"
a
tone-poem, occupies
an
important place among
his
compositions,
but where the
pen
of the creator has been so
busy
it is difficult to
play
the cicerone to the curious reader. I must
refer him to the "Ghazals of
Hafiz,"
"Ferishtah's
Fancies,"
the
Sappho Songs,
the
"Song
of the Genie"
(a
remarkable
fragment),
the "Eastern
Love-Song,"
the two Chinese
Songs,
"On
Himalaya"
and the Dramatic dances for orchestra. Bantock's success as
an
exponent
of exotic
subjects
owes
something
to his
prodigious
technique.
He handles the orchestra with
great
ease;
there is
no shade of which it is
capable
that he cannot obtain if he wish.
In him I seem to discern the inevitable
protestant against
the
conventional
subject
and the conventional treatment. In choice
of theme he stands
apart
from his
confreres.
He reminds us of a
gypsy
who,
despising
the
high-roads
of
commerce,
seeks in hill
path
and
rustic
lane that freedom which is
necessary
to his
happiness. Technically
and
temperamentally
he is a man of
to-day,
or, rather,
of to-morrow. And this musical Suleiman the
Magnificent
is never so
pleased
as when
walking
abroad in the
caftan of a sultan or
smoking
a chibouk in the
fairy palace
of
his dreams.
* *
Much more could be said on this
subject,
so I ask the reader
to
pardon
me if I have
provided
escort
only
for a
hasty promenade
The Musical
Quarterly
through
these musical
galleries.1
A hundred
points
here untouched
upon
will
suggest
themselves to the
imaginative
mind. It is
easy
to discover
pages
which throw fresh
light
on the
topic,
or which
threaten the destruction of our theoretical
scaffoldings.
On Mac-
Dowell's "Indian"
suite,
Stillman-Kelley's
"Aladdin"
suite,
on
Karg-Elert's
"Sonatina
exotique,"
on
Georges
Hue's
"Croquis
d'Orient,"
on Paderewski's
"Manru,"
on Moszkowski's
superficial
Spanish Dances,
the
foreignism
of which is
only skin-deep,
on
"Les Filles de Cadix" of
Delibes,
on his
"Lakme,"
wherein we
see the 6cole des
flonflons
in
Hindustani,
on
Grieg's
dance for
Anitra,
the Bedouin chief's
daughter,
so effective after the northern
lament for
Ase,
the student will have
many things
to remark.
He
might,
further,
reproach
me for not
discussing
the romantic
and the realistic methods of
treating
exotic
themes,
and for
having
neglected
to mention the music of Albania and Armenia which
such a
piece
as
Ippolitov-Ivanow's "Rhapsodie
armenienne" calls
to our attention. But I shall leave the matter with the statement
that the
popularity
of exotic
subjects
is to be found in the
simple
explanation
that
they
furnish a
legitimate
reason for the utilisation
of all those
variegated
effects obtainable in the modern orchestra.
While the trait
adopted,
a
peculiar
scale or an unusual
rhythmic
singularity, may
be
foreign,
the colours in which it is set out
are now an
indispensable part
of the modernist's
equipment,
and
they
are drawn
upon
even when the local characteristics are
discarded. It is not
enough
for the
composer
that the lines of
the
figure
are beautiful. He is fastidious as to the hues in which
it is to be clothed. This fact is of vital
moment,
for we have
arrived at a time in which it is
necessary
to consider the
scoring
of a work not as a
thing apart
from its harmonic
dressing,
but as
something intimately
related to it. Most
present-day
writers
think in terms of the orchestra. This makes
plain why many
a
passage
which seems to be little removed from nonsense when
played
on the
piano
is not
only significant,
but
eloquent
when
performed
on the instruments for which it was written. As has
been
shown,
the net results
vary according
to the methods of
the artist. We cannot
always say
with
Taine,
"Oriental
poetry
has
nothing
more
dazzling
or
magnificent."
The
pilgrimages
of this man lead to success,
of that to failure. In
many
cases
the
picture
is not
v6cu,
but it is a
question
whether we should
'For
example,
one
might point
to the
growing popularity
of Muscovite and Oriental
subjects-the
latter
apparent
in the chocolate coloured nudes of the Paris Salon,
a re-
minder of the influence of
Gaugin.
This
popularity
is
responsible
for a
change
in the
conception
of
beauty,
which is
always
a relative
thing.
160
Exoticism in Music in
Retrospect
161
expect
a
composer
to be an
expert archaeologist
and
antiquarian.
Gautier and others doubtless often offended
history
and science
while
giving
us
literature,
and
many painters
have
depicted
biblical characters
arrayed
as
gentlemen
of their own
period.
The artistic
temperament
and the
capacity
for historical research
are seldom found in the same man and all we can demand is
that the
composer
should use his materials with discretion.
The
study
of exoticism
transports
us to
strange
scenes and
new
pastures.
It shows us the
gay
science and morbidezza of the
South. It
tempts
us to follow the track of the musical Borrovian
who often shuns the
spacious
avenues laid out
by
the Haussmanns
of the art. It
compels
us to set sail with Vanderdecken
upon
angry
seas,
for the man of ideas is never
completely
at rest.
But such
voyages,
if
fraught
with
dangers, put
us in
possession
of a store of
knowledge
which we
may
seek in vain elsewhere.