<h2>XIV</h2>
<h3>SONGS AND SONG COMPOSERS</h3></div>
<p>Songs either are strophic or “<i>durchcomponirt</i>”
(composed through). In the strophic song the
melody and accompaniment are repeated unchanged
through each stanza or strophe of the poem;
while, when a song is composed through, the music,
although the principal melody may be repeated more
than once, is subjected to changes in accordance with
the moods of the poem.</p>
<p>Schubert is the first song composer who requires serious
consideration. While not strictly the originator
of the <i>Lied</i>, he is universally acknowledged to be the
first great song composer and to have lifted song to
its proper place of importance in music. Gluck set
Klopfstock’s odes to music; Haydn as a song writer is
remembered by “Liebes M�dchen h�r’ mir Zu”; Mozart
by “Das Veilchen”; and Beethoven by “Adelaide”
and one or two other songs. Before Schubert’s day this
form of composition was regarded as something rather
trivial and beneath the dignity of genius. But Haydn,
Mozart and Beethoven at least did one thing through
which they may possibly have contributed to the development
of song-writing. By their freer writing for
the pianoforte they prepared the way for the Schubert
accompaniments.</p>
<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_232' name='page_232'></SPAN>232</span></div>
<p>Where Schubert got his musical genius from is a
mystery. His father was a schoolmaster, whose first
wife, Schubert’s mother, was a cook. The couple had
fourteen children and an income of $175. If this income
is somewhat disproportionate to the size of the
family, it yet is fortunate that they had fourteen children
instead of only thirteen. Otherwise there would
have been one great name less in musical history, for
Schubert was the fourteenth.</p>
<p>He was born in Vienna in January, 1797. His
thirty-one years—for this genius who so enriched
music lived to be only thirty-one—were passed in poverty.
His father was wretchedly poor, and his own
works, when they could be disposed of at all to publishers,
were sold at beggarly prices. Now they are
universally recognized as masterpieces and are worth
many times their weight in gold.</p>
<h4>Too Poor to Buy Music Paper.</h4>
<p>Shortly before he was twelve years old, Schubert,
who had been singing soprano solos and playing violin
in the parish choir, was sent to the so-called Convict,
the Imperial school for training boys for the Court
chapel. During his five years there his progress was
so rapid that even before he was fourteen years old he
was occasionally asked to substitute for the conductor
of the school orchestra. Life, however, was hard. He
had no money with which to buy even a few luxuries
in the way of food to eke out the wretched fare of
the Convict, nor music paper. Had it not been for the
kindness of a fellow pupil and friend, named Spaun, he
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_233' name='page_233'></SPAN>233</span>
would not have been able to write down and work out
his ideas.</p>
<p>When his voice changed, the straitened family circumstances
obliged him to become an assistant in his
father’s school. He was able to bear poverty with
patience, but not the drudgery of teaching, and he is
said often to have lost his temper with the boys. Altogether,
he taught for three years, 1815 to 1818; and
while his work was most distasteful to him, his genius
was so spontaneous that during his three years he composed
many songs, among them his immortal “Erlking.”
Finally a university student, Franz von Schober,
who, having heard some of Schubert’s songs, had
become an enthusiastic admirer of the composer, offered
him one of his rooms as a lodging, whereupon Schubert,
straightway accepting the offer, gave up teaching
and from that time to the end of his brief life led a
Bohemian existence with a clique of friends of varied
accomplishments. In this circle he was known as
“Canevas,” because whenever some new person joined
it, his first question regarding the newcomer was
“<i>Kann er wass?</i>” (Can he do anything?)</p>
<p>Outside a small circle of acquaintances, Schubert remained
practically unknown until he made the acquaintance
of Johann Michael Vogl, an opera singer,
to whom his devoted friend, Von Schober, introduced
him. Vogl was somewhat reserved in his opinion of
the songs which he tried over with Schubert at their
first meeting, but they made an impression. He followed
up the acquaintance and became the first professional
interpreter of Schubert’s lyrics. “The manner
in which Vogl sings and I accompany,” wrote Schubert
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_234' name='page_234'></SPAN>234</span>
to his brother Ferdinand, “so that we appear like
<em>one</em> on such occasions, is something new and unheard
of to our listeners.” Publishers, however, held aloof.
Five years after the “Erlking” was composed, several
of them refused to print it, although Schubert offered
to forego royalties on it. Finally, some of Schubert’s
friends had the song published at their own expense,
and its success led to the issuing of eleven other songs,
Schubert unwisely accepting eight hundred florins in
lieu of royalty on these and the “Erlking.” Yet from
one of these songs alone, “The Wanderer,” the publishers
received twenty-seven thousand florins between
the years 1822 and 1861.</p>
<h4>How the “Erlking” was Composed.</h4>
<p>Schubert being the greatest of song composers, and
the “Erlking” his greatest song, the circumstances under
which it was written are of especial interest. His
friend Spaun, the same who provided him with music
paper at the Convict, relates that one afternoon toward
the close of the year 1815 he went with the poet Mayrhofer
to visit Schubert. They found the composer all
aglow, reading the “Erlking” aloud to himself. He
walked up and down the room several times, book in
hand, then suddenly sat down and as fast as his pen
could travel put the music on paper. Having no piano,
the three men hurried over to the Convict, where the
“Erlking” was sung the same evening and received
with enthusiasm. The old Court organist, Ruziczka,
afterward played it over himself without the voice,
and when some of those present objected to the dissonance
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_235' name='page_235'></SPAN>235</span>
which occurs three times in the course of the
composition and depicts the child’s terror of the <i>Erlking</i>,
the old organist struck these chords and explained
how perfectly they reflected the spirit of the
poem and how felicitously they were worked out in
their musical resolution.</p>
<p>Schubert’s song is almost Wagnerian in its descriptive
and dramatic quality. The coaxing voice of the
<i>Erlking</i>, the terror of the child, the efforts of the father
to allay his boy’s fears, each has its characteristic expression,
which yet is different from the narrative portions
of the poem, while in the accompaniment the horse
gallops along. Schubert was but eighteen years old
when he set this ballad of Goethe’s to music; yet there
is no more thrilling climax to be found in all song
literature than those dissonances which I have mentioned
and which with each repeat rise to a higher
interval and become each time more shrill with terror.
Whoever has heard Lilli Lehmann sing this song
should be able to appreciate its real greatness, as
Goethe, who had remained utterly indifferent to Schubert’s
music, did when the “Erlking” was sung to him
by Frau Schroeder-Devrient, to whom he exclaimed:
“Thank you a thousand times for this great artistic
achievement. When I heard this song before I did not
like it at all, but sung in your way it becomes a true
picture.”</p>
<h4>Finck on Schubert.</h4>
<p>More than six hundred songs by Schubert have been
published, and when we remember that he wrote symphonies,
sonatas, shorter pianoforte pieces, chamber
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_236' name='page_236'></SPAN>236</span>
music and operas, the fertility of his brief life is astounding.
The rapidity with which he composed, however,
was not due to carelessness, but to the spontaneity
of his genius and the fact that he loved to compose.
“He composed as a bird sings in the spring, or as a
well gushes from a mountain-side, simply because he
could not help it,” says Mr. Finck, in his “Songs and
Song Writers.” We have it on the authority of Schubert’s
friend, Spaun, that when he went to bed he kept
his spectacles on, so that when he woke up he could
go right to the table and compose without wasting time
looking for his glasses. In the two years 1815-16 he
wrote no less than two hundred and fifty-four songs.
Six of the songs in the “Winterreise” cycle were composed
in one morning, and he had eight songs to his
credit in a single day. The charming “Hark, Hark,
the Lark” was written at a tavern where he chanced
to see the poem in a book the leaves of which he was
slowly turning over. “If I only had some music
paper!” he exclaimed, whereupon one of his friends
promptly ruled lines on the back of his <i>Speise Karte</i>,
and Schubert, with the varied noises of the tavern going
on about him, jotted down the song then and there.</p>
<p>Of course, it is impossible to touch on all the aspects
of such a genius as his. In his songs clear and beautiful
melody is, as a rule, combined with a descriptive
accompaniment. Sometimes the description is given
by means of only a few chords, like the preluding ones
in “Am Meer.” At other times the description runs
through the entire accompaniment, like the waves that
flash and dance around the melody of “Auf dem Wasser
zu Singen”; the galloping horse in the “Erlking”;
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_237' name='page_237'></SPAN>237</span>
the veiled mist that seems to hang over the scenes in the
wonderfully dramatic poem, “Die Stadt”; the flutter
of the bird in “Hark, Hark, the Lark”; the brook that
flows like a leitmotif through the “Maid of the Mill”
cycle—these are a few of the examples that with Schubert
could be cited by the dozen.</p>
<p>And the range of his work—here again space forbids
the multiplication of examples. It extends from
the naive “Haiden R�slein” to the tragic “Doppelg�nger”;
from the whispering foliage of the “Linden
Tree” to the pathetic drone of the “Hurdy-Gurdy
Man”; from the “Serenade” to “Todt und das M�dchen.”
Schubert is the greatest genius among song
composers. Compare the growing reputation of him
who of all musicians was perhaps the most neglected
during his life, with that of Mendelssohn, the most
f�ted of composers, but now rapidly dropping to the
position of a minor tone poet, and who, although he
wrote eighty-three songs, is as a song writer remembered
outside of Germany by barely more than one
<i>Lied</i>, the familiar “On the Wings of Song.”</p>
<h4>Schumann’s Individuality.</h4>
<p>In Schumann’s songs the piano part is more closely
knit and interwoven with the vocal melody than with
Schubert’s, and, as a result, the voice does not stand out
so clearly. While his songs are not what they have been
called by a German critic, “pianoforte pieces with accidental
vocal accompaniments,” at times, in his vocal compositions,
the pianoforte gains too great an ascendancy
over the voice. If asked to draw a distinction between
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_238' name='page_238'></SPAN>238</span>
Schubert and Schumann, I should say that there is a
twofold interest in most of Schubert’s songs. He reproduces
the feeling of the poem in his vocal melody;
then, if the poem contains a descriptive suggestion, he
produces that phase of it in his accompaniment, without,
however, allowing the pianoforte part to encroach
on the vocal melody. The melody gives the feeling,
the accompaniment the description or mood picture.
Schumann, on the other hand, rarely is descriptive.
Nearly always he produces a mood picture in tone,
but requires both voice and pianoforte to effect his purpose.
As this, however, is Schumann’s method of composition,
and as it is better that each composer should
leave the seal of his individuality on everything he
does, and not be an imitator, it is not cause for regret
that while Schubert is Schubert, Schumann is Schumann.</p>
<p>The proportion of fine songs among the two hundred
and forty-five composed by Schumann is, however,
much smaller than in the heritage left us by Schubert;
and while Schubert, from the time he wrote his first
great vocal compositions, added many equally great
ones every year, Schumann’s songs, on the whole, show
a decided falling off after he had wooed and won Clara
Wieck. It was during his courtship that he produced
his best songs. Separated from her by the command
of her stern father, he made love to her in music.</p>
<p>“I am now writing nothing but songs, great and
small,” we find him saying in a letter to a friend in
the summer of 1840. “Hardly can I tell you how delicious
it is to write for voice instead of for instruments,
and what a turmoil and tumult I feel within
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_239' name='page_239'></SPAN>239</span>
me when I sit down to it.” While he was composing
his song cycle, “Die Myrthen,” he wrote to Clara:
“Since yesterday morning I have written twenty-seven
pages of music, all new, concerning which the best I
can tell you is that I laughed and wept for joy while
composing them.” A month later he writes her, in
sending her his first printed songs: “When I composed
them my soul was within yours; without such
a love, indeed, no one could write such music—and this
I intend as a special compliment.” ... “I could
sing myself to death, like a nightingale,” he writes to
her again, on May 15th. Never was there such a
musical wooing, and those who wish to participate in
it can do so by singing or listening to such songs as
“Dedication,” “The Almond Tree,” “The Lotos Flower,”
“In the Forest” (Waldesgespr�ch), “Spring
Night,” “He, the Noblest of the Noble,” “Thou Ring
upon My Finger,” “’Twas in the Lovely Month of
May,” “Where’er My Tears Are Falling,” “I’ll Not
Complain,” and “Nightly in My Dreaming.” Among
his songs not inspired by love should be mentioned the
“Two Grenadiers,” which Plan�on sings so inimitably.</p>
<h4>Phases of Franz’s Genius.</h4>
<p>Robert Franz (1815-1892) had his life embittered
by neglect and physical ills. His family name originally
was Knauth, his father having been Christoph
Knauth. But in order to distinguish him from his
brother, who was engaged in the same business, he
was addressed as Christoph Franz, a name which he
subsequently had legalized. Yet critics insisted that
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_240' name='page_240'></SPAN>240</span>
Robert Franz was a pseudonym which the composer
had adopted from vanity in order to indicate that he
was as great as <em>Robert</em> Schumann and <em>Franz</em> Schubert
put together.</p>
<p>Franz was strongly influenced by Bach and H�ndel,
many of whose scores he supplied with what are known
as “additional accompaniments,” filling out gaps which
these composers left in their scores according to the
custom of their day. His songs show this influence in
their polyphony, and the German critic, Ambros, said
that Franz’s song, “Der Schwere Abend,” looked as if
Bach had sat down and composed a Franz song out
of thanks for all that Franz was to do for him through
his additional accompaniments. Besides their polyphony
derived from Bach, Franz’s songs are interesting
for their modulations, which are employed not simply
for the sake of showing cleverness or originality, but
for their appropriateness in expressing the mood of the
poem. He also was extremely careful in regard to
the choice of key and decidedly objected to transpositions
of his songs, in order to make them singable for
higher or lower voices than could use the original key.
“When I am dead,” he wrote to his publisher, “I cannot
prevent these transpositions, but so long as I am
alive I shall fight them.”</p>
<p>Franz did not endeavor to reproduce visible things
in his pianoforte parts, and the voice in his songs often
is declamatory, merging into melody only in the more
deeply emotional passages. He is a reflective rather
than a dramatic composer, disliked opera, and himself
said that any one who had penetrated deeply into his
songs well knew that the dramatic element was not to
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_241' name='page_241'></SPAN>241</span>
be found in them, nor was it intended to be. Composers,
however, have many theories regarding their
music which, in practice, come to naught; and whether
Franz thought his songs dramatic or not, the fact remains
that when Lilli Lehmann sang his “Im Herbst”
it was as thrillingly dramatic as anything could be.</p>
<h4>Self-Critical.</h4>
<p>Franz was extremely self-critical. He kept his productions
in his desk for years, working over them again
and again, until in many cases the song in its final
shape bore slight resemblance to what it had been at
first. He declared his Opus 1 to be no worse than his
latest work, because it had been composed with equal
care and had had the benefit of his ripening judgment
and experience. He admired Wagner and dedicated
one of his song volumes to him; but when some critics
fancied that they discovered Wagnerian traits in several
songs in his last collection, Op. 51-52, he was
able to prove that these very songs were among the
first he had written, and were published so late in
his career simply because he had kept them back for
revision.</p>
<p>His physical disabilities were pitiable. When he was
about thirty-three years old and shortly after his marriage,
he was standing in the Halle railway station
when a locomotive close by sounded its shrill whistle.
The effect upon him was like the piercing of his ears.
For several days afterward he heard nothing but confused
buzzing, and from that time on his hearing became
worse and worse, until finally his ears pained
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_242' name='page_242'></SPAN>242</span>
him even when he composed. In 1876 he became
totally deaf, and a few years later his right arm was
paralyzed from shoulder to thumb. He was a poor
man, and right at the worst time in his life, when he
was totally deaf, a small pension which he had received
from the Bach Society was taken away from him. But
his admirers, many of them Americans, came to his
rescue and raised a fund for his support.</p>
<p>Among his finest songs are “Widmung,” “Leise
Zieht durch mein Gemuht,” “Bitte,” “Die Lotos
Blume,” “Es Ragt der Alte Eborus,” “Meerfahrt,”
“Das is ein Brausen und Heulen,” “Ich Hab’ in Deinem
Auge,” “Ich Will meine seele Taugen,” and “Es Hat’
Die Rose sich Beklagt.”</p>
<h4>Brahms a Thinker in Music.</h4>
<p>Brahms was a profound thinker in music—not a philosopher,
but a reflective poet, whose musicianship,
however, was so great that he cared too little for the
practical side of his art as compared with the theoretical.
If what he wrote looked all right on paper he
was indifferent as to whether it sounded right or not;
consequently, if he started out with a certain rhythmical
figuration or a certain scheme of harmonic progression,
he carried it through rigidly to its logical conclusion,
utterly oblivious to, or at least utterly regardless
of, any tonal blemishes that might result, although
by slightly altering his scheme here and there
he might have obviated these. This is the reason why
some people find passages in his music which to them
sound repellant. But those who have not allowed this
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_243' name='page_243'></SPAN>243</span>
aspect of Brahms’s work to prejudice them and have
familiarized themselves with his music, well know that
he is one of the loftiest souls that ever put pen to
staff. He never is drastic, never sensational, never
superficial; and the climaxes of his songs, as in his
other music, are produced not by great outbursts of
sound, but by sudden modulations or change of rhythm,
which give a wonderful “lift” to voice and accompaniment.</p>
<p>Among his best known songs (and each of these is
a masterpiece) are: “Wie Bist du meine K�nigin,”
“Ruhe, S�ss Liebschen,” “Von ewiger Liebe,”
“Wiegenlied,” “Minnelied,” “Feldeinsamkeit,” “Wie
Melodien zeiht es mir,” “Immer leiser wird mein
Schlummer,” “Meine Lieder,” “Wir wandelten, wir
Swei, zusammen.”</p>
<hr class='tb' />
<p>One of the most impassioned modern lyrical outbursts
is Jensen’s setting of Heine’s “Lehn deine Wang’
an Meine Wang’,” and his “Fr�hlingsnacht” also is a
very beautiful song, although the popularity of Schumann’s
setting of the same poem has cast it unduly into
the shade. Rubinstein will be found considerably less
prolix in his songs than in his music in other branches,
and those which he wrote to the Persian poems of
Von Bodenstedt (“Mirza Schaffy”) are fascinating
in their Oriental coloring. The “Asra,” and “Yellow
Rolls at my Feet,” (Gold Rollt mir zu F�ssen) are
among the best known of these; while “Es blink’t der
Thau,” “Du Bist wie eine Blume,” and “Der Traum”
are among Rubinstein’s songs which are or should be
in the repertoire of every singer. Tschaikowsky and
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_244' name='page_244'></SPAN>244</span>
Dvorak are not noteworthy as song writers, but the
former’s setting of “Nur wer die Sehnsucht kennt”
and the latter’s “Gypsy Songs” are highly successful.</p>
<h4>Grieg’s Originality.</h4>
<p>One of the most fascinating among modern song
writers is the Norwegian, Grieg. He has been unusually
fortunate in having a fine singer as a wife.
Mr. Finck relates that Ibsen, after hearing her sing
his poems as set to music by Grieg, whispered as he
shook the hands of this musical couple, the one word,
“Understood.”</p>
<p>Grieg’s originality has not been thoroughly appreciated,
because much of the beauty of his music has
been attributed to what is supposed to be its Norwegian
origin. Grieg is national, it is true, but not in a
cramped or narrow sense. His music is the product
of his individual genius, and his genius has made him
so popular that what is his has come to be wrongly
considered Norwegian, whereas it is Norway interpreted
through the genius of Grieg. His music is not
a dialect, but music of universal significance, fortunately
tinged with his individuality. “I Love You,”
Ibsen’s “The Swan,” “By the Riverside,” “Springtide,”
“Wounded Heart,” “The Mother Sings” (a
mother mourning her dead child), “At the Bier of a
Young Woman,” and “From Monte Pincio,” are
among his finest <i>Lieder</i>.</p>
<p>Chopin is much too little known as a song writer.
His genius as a composer for the pianoforte has overshadowed
his songs, and the public is familiar with
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_245' name='page_245'></SPAN>245</span>
little else save “The Maiden’s Wish,” which is one
of Madame Sembrich’s favorite encores and to which
she plays her own accompaniment so delightfully. But
there is plenty of national color in the “Lithuanina”
song, plenty of pathos in “Poland’s Dirge,” and plenty
of lyrical passion in “My Delights.” Finck says that
in all music, lyric or dramatic, the thrill of a kiss has
never been expressed so ecstatically as in the twelve
bars of this song marked “<i>crescendo sempre piu accellerando</i>.”
Certainly <i>sempre</i> (always) and <i>accellerando</i>
(faster) are capital words when applied to a
kiss!</p>
<p>Richard Wagner, when twenty-six years old, in
Paris, tried to relieve his poverty by composing a few
songs, among which is a very charming setting of
Ronsard’s “Dors mon enfant.” He also set Heine’s
“The Two Grenadiers” to music, utilizing the “Marsellaise”
in the accompaniment; but, as a whole, the Wagner
version of this poem is not as effective as Schumann’s.
In 1862 he composed music to five poems
written by Mathilde Wesendonck, among which is the
famous “Tr�ume,” which utilizes the theme of the love
duet that later on appeared in “Tristan.”</p>
<h4>Liszt’s Genius for Song.</h4>
<p>Liszt’s songs are a complete musical exposition of
the poems to which they are composed. Thus while,
by way of comparison, Rubinstein’s setting of “Du
Bist wie eine Blume” gives through its simplicity a
rare impression of purity, Liszt in his setting of the
same poem adds to that purity the sense of sacredness
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_246' name='page_246'></SPAN>246</span>
with which the contemplation of a pure woman fills a
man’s heart and causes him to worship her. His “Lorelei”
is a beautiful lyric scene. We view the flowing
river, seem to hear the seductive voice of the temptress,
and watch the treacherous and stormy current that
hurries the ensnared boatman to his doom. And what
song has more of that valuable quality we call “atmosphere”
than Liszt’s version of “Kennst du das Land?”
As will be the case with Liszt in other branches of
music, he will be recognized some day as one of the
greatest of song composers.</p>
<p>Richard Strauss’s songs, from having been regarded
as so bristling with difficulties as to be impossible, have
become favorites in the song repertoire. When it is
a genius who creates difficulties these are sure to be
overcome by ambitious players and singers, and music
advances technically by just so much. Strauss’s
“St�ndchen,” with its deliciously delicate accompaniment,
so difficult to play with the requisite grace, was
the first of Strauss’s songs to become popular here, and
it was the art of our great singer, Madame Nordica,
that made it so. Now we hear “Die Nacht,” “Traum
durch die D�mmerung,” “Heimliche Aufforderung,”
“Allerseelem,” “Breit �ber mein Haupt Dein schwarzes
Haar,” and many of his other songs with growing frequency.
There are few song composers with whom
the pianoforte accompaniment is so entirely distinct
from the melody (or so difficult to play), as often is
the case with Strauss. As with Schubert, every descriptive
suggestion contained in the poem is carried
into the accompaniment, but the vocal part is more
declamatory and more varied. Even now it seems certain
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_247' name='page_247'></SPAN>247</span>
that Strauss’s songs are permanent acquisitions
to the repertoire. It still is too soon, however, to affirm
the same thing of the unfortunate Hugo Wolf’s songs,
although I find myself strongly attracted by “Er ists,”
“Fr�hling �bers Jahr,” “Fussteise,” “Der K�nig bei
der Kr�ning,” “Gesang Weyla’s,” “Elfenlied” and
“Der Tambour.”</p>
<p>Saint-Sa�ns, Delibes, Godard, Massenet, Chaminade
and the late Augusta Holm�s are among French song
writers whose work is clever, but who seem to me
more concerned with manner than with matter. Gounod’s
rank as a song composer is much below his reputation
as the composer of “Faust” and “Romeo et
Juliette.” Oddly enough, however, the idea that came
to him of placing a melody above a prelude from Bach’s
“Well Tempered Clavichord” did more than anything
he had accomplished up to that time to make him
famous. Originally he scored it for violin with a small
female chorus off stage. Then he replaced the chorus
with a harmonium. Finally he seems to have been
struck with the fact that the melody fitted the words
of the “Ave Maria,” substituted a single voice for the
violin, which, however, still can supplement the vocal
melody with an obbligato, did away with the harmonium,
and the result was the Gounod-Bach “Ave
Maria.” The Bach prelude, of course, sinks to the
level of a mere accompaniment, for it has to be taken
much slower than Bach intended.</p>
<p>American composers who have produced noteworthy
songs are Edward A. MacDowell, G. W. Chadwick,
Arthur Foote, Clayton Johns, Homer N. Bartlett, Margaret
Ruthven Lang, and the late Ethelbert Nevin.</p>
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