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1 " " ' . lBgMgJ K- THESTANDARD MAGAZINE SECTiON-OGDEN, UTAH, DECEMBER 27, 1913. lifl Grand Opera In the K'ndergarten! Old writers of child music who fii.ve Ions held to the Idea that small : children are Incapable of singing I other than simple little sonRs are as tounded at the Idea Yet grand opera music arranged for children 1s being taught In the primary grades and has invaded the kinder garten In spots where the old kin dergarten system can be broken ' into. In many of the schools or Amer ica singing has made a decided ad vance In recent years. There was a time when net kinds of songs were Written for the schools. In the countries of Europe that system never was In vogue. The German child sings the songs of the ; grown-ups. and when he Is grown he ' fontlnue. to sing mem It Is part of H jklm. That Is why the German na ff tlonal songs arc so universally W known. B In Italy everybody knows the clas 1 1. Slcs. Children sing snatches of "II H t Trovatore" at play and lovo to sing lit In the recent celebration of the H f hundredth anniversary of Verdi, the Y author of "II Trovatore," children - crowded to the public gatherings Rand with song paid tribute to tho writer of Italy's soul-stirring opera. "But the Italian sings naturally." I I argues the child song writer of the I old school. I True, Indeed, so does the Ameri can child, according to the new song . : writers and teachers and their re i suits in teaching children are won derful. In the old song days -when singing , was taught in the Fchoolb In a hap ' hazard fashion and the children ! Bang as a sort of excp-l'-e the !o - of music was not developed That , pitiably shown In a reo r.r session of IBCongTess when the hwm.ikcri of America, rose to sing 'Star Span Bglcd Banner." The band played wonderfully. Half of those playing Bwero of foreign birth. The on gressmen rose to their feet In solemn respect to the great song, but only Bitre and there were men able to Hiing :t They recognized tho tune ss ono !"" recognizes a face of a slight ac- qualntanee, but they didn't know the worciF. 'I 1 1 - v. .v d. 1 l.rv' , them sang a whiie and !! grew difcouraged os their weak voices L grew weaker In the great hall of tl JjJI lent men. 1 AMERICAN'S ARK PI T V rtO SHAME ON LIN EH. M I Again on a great ocean liner was j the Star Spangled Banner put to M phame. On board the ship thero Were passengers of French. German. S English and American citizenship. 1 T The last r.lcht on the ocean tho I band played national a. is A.- j played the citizens of each land sang. England did well at "God ;Save the King. Germany grew he H role with "Der Wacht Am Rhine." H France distinguished himself, with "La Marseille;:.' b it America fell i "f 'down completely with "Star Span H pled Banner" and had to take a try fl M America at which she did only ln j differently well PH When It comes to tho great op j5 ras rew Americans recognize them t2 When they are played. "n account "5 ef tho fl"')ri' lo teach music well '3 Americans have turned to the rag time songs. Following the intredi: -lion of sys jSMtematic singing In the sh-oi- 1 have gone to the other AKxtreme and have spent m-j EKcachln? the technical side of sing lngr. Thera has been a growing op- position to laying stress on the tech nical, however. These dlesenters point out that the majority of children will not make music a profession. They should learn to sing for enjovment and to give vent to their higher emotions. They should sing freely, is tho argu ment Among those who have had won derful results by teaching singing with little reference to the technical side Is Thomas Edwin Spencer, prln elpal of Irving School. His pupils show remarkable ability n singing. They sing with the full joy of mak ing beautiful sounds. From the chart class to the highest grade he has developed a school of wonderful singing. He has proven that the range of ITPPER left. The finale, y Upper right: A young Caruso. Lower left: Thos. E. Spencer, principal of Irv ing School. ower right: The troubadour. voice of a child Is extensive. They sing difficult music easily and lovo the classics. For the younger chil dren snatches from the operas are taken and words children can com prehend are fitted to them When asked about his methods, Mr. Spen cer said: "Wo employ music at the Irving School for Its value In training tho sensibilities. We have many sub jects for training the Intellect and the will, but music, when rightly taught, makes a direct appeal to the sensibilities, that part of the mind that receives so little attention in our scheme of education. Reading and speaking arc directly con cerned with Ideas. Is It true that, when rightly taught, they are an Interest and delight for their pres ent and future uso and Joy So with singing, love of good singing Is the chief thing aimed at In our school. Now. we hold that thero can be no really good singing un less there Is In tho singing an ex pression of Ideas. There can be no love of good singing unlets the emotions are kindled We find the singing is best where the counte nance and bodily attitudes and movements become the outward signs of Inward thoughts and feel ings. The natural child expresses himself not only with his voice, but with hi countenance and with ges ture and posture Wo carry this Into our children's singing. Wo use It to develop the sense of perfect rl.ythm, as well as to give dramatic -expression to their thoughts and emotions. CHILDREN VTVACTOrS AND SIMP! I "Two attributes characterize all children vivacity and simplicity. Our selection of souks Is based upon those childish attributes, and also upon the Children's appreciation of the humorous. We have regard al so lo tho fact that children's voices aro pitched high, because their vocal organs are small. The piccolo ronges higher than tho flute becauso It Is tmaller and songs for children should not be written In a key too low "For a good many years we havo been selecting tunes and words suitable for children's singing. Tho Mother Goose rhythms set to suit able music are a delight to children they are truo folk songs, but our collection covers a very wide range. "When considering the perma nent benefit that the chlld'9 educa tion Is to derive from his school study of music, wo ask ourselves tho question: What will probably be the relation of our children to music after they havo left the school and are grown? How will they use music In life? Answer; They will sing and they will hear singing and Instrumental music. Our aim, then, should be to lead them to love good music, and. as far as wo able, to teach them to know pood music. And by good mu sic I mean music tht appeals to and expresses the better and high er emotions of the soul appeals to duty, to patriotism to friendship, to reverence, to filial and parental affection, to aspiration towards the spiritual things of life. For music Is a language and most of the pleas ure of singing lies In the expres sion of a state of feeling. To this end the song singing of the upper grades should be much more com prehensive and systematic than the ordinary 'rote singing' that Is u ually done In schools, both as to selection of the songs and the way they should be rendered. We should not spend time upon trivial songs In the upper grades, which after wards older children and adults do not care to sine. We should em phasize folk songs and national songs, and also classic ballads and standard non-sectarlan devotional songs (even sones whose words may be beyond the child's complete com prehension) with the purpose that children are to learn them as Grr mans learn their chorals to last through life. To have a score or more of fine songs so that each child can sing the melody through correctly with the words from mem ory would be no mean musical ed u -j Ion. even though nothing else, were learned. In the thorough learning of these songs there Is laid a rhythmic, melodic and har monic foundation for future music development that Is quite as valu able as tho really technical drill might bo that is forced upon chil dren without their feeling Its value. Tho song3 selected should typify somo external fact of human na ture, or recall some great episode or great personality; songs which should not only be sung, but thought about, so that maidens might be restrained from wayward ness by memories of 'Ye Banks and Braes of Bonnie Doon." and youths be raised to heroism by Forty Years On.' ROUGH STRIDENT VOICES ABSENT AT IRVING. "You do not hear the rough, loud, strident voices in the Irving that are most often heard In public school singing. Tim tone cjuallty Is good, because tho child's atten tion Is not directed to tho mechan ical process of tone production, but upon the thought and feeling he la expressing, thus retaining the nat ural response of the vocal organs. Dramatic Interpretation through tho countenance, and by bodily ac tion contribute to pure tone of voice "Wo havo enjoyed visits from many musicians of national reputa tion who tell us that the singing of our children Is not equaled any where else In this country. Visitors remark upon tho cheerful, even Joyous, behavior of our pupils, and the mutual sympathy existing be tween teachers and pupils Wo at tribute this largely to the Influent o of our singing. " 'But what about the technical tS 'JBXBBSBBSSSSSSSBSSSSBsSB-' Children in the Primary 1 1 Grades Have Wider I Range in Voice Than I Those Ten Years I Older, Says Principal of School Who Gets Wonderful Results in Singing. I such thing as playing in parts All sang the air. Harmony was developed by the Northern peoples Colncldcntally with the church practice of con structing unrhythmical melody and singing in an unnatural mode, the Poplc of Northern nations began singing with accompaniment of dif ferent voices In harmony, but sing ing different parts. So devoted were the people In England to their tuTioa that churchmen wrote re ligious words to their tunes so sit. to attract men to church. For a long time opera was con fined to the courts of Europe. In Italy, however, "the people declared " their Independence and took what was theirs by right. Opera became popular first In Italy in the seven teenth century. It spread over the Alps Into France and Northern Eu rope, f Tnrdinnl Mazarln first Introduced opera Into France when he brought a troupe of Italian singers and it waa received with favor. In France the ballet became a part of the opera and remains so even yet. In Germany opera was not well received until the close of the Sev enteenth Century. Germans allowed Italians to come across the Alps and ple performances, but they did not care much for opera themelvcs. When they did take it up they went In for opera with the zest of youth and German writers as a result have produced some of the most wonder ful pieces of opera. In England the lyrical drama was their first opera, It was first Iniro du e,i i.y men of Italian parentage or birth. The Puritans gained the leadership In English affairs about at that time and their Influence on the opera of that time Is shown In the religious element Injected. Grand opera reached Its height one hundred years ago. Sine then there have been many Inspiring operas written, but musical critics .H say that In recent years there have been none equal to those of more H than a generation ago. 'H Sciential have taken music to pieces and given It thorough t analysis, They know all about the beats, measures, half tones and causes of different effects. They can tell to a mathematical certainty bbbbb! what causes a discord, although the 'H particular scientist working out the problem would be unable to strike 'M two notes In harmony on the piano. That is why the dl&senterg In music do not wish empharls to be laid on 'M the technique. Let the child be free, they say, and the music will come out of him, for music is nat to the child Way to Get Results. I Some clerks sell a man a necktie. then as they reach for the money, they repeat a slng-snng formula; "Any collars, shirts, handkerchiefs suspenders,'' and t-o on, like a waiter In a chophouse. That's not sugges (Ion. Here's a way to produce bet results: "There's .i new collar that seems to be tho present fad and we've received the first ones here." iJM Usually you can find something H like that without fabricating. If your tore Is a progressive one, and you can reach for the collar nhlle say- lng It. Tho words interest the cua- ;H tomer for a moment the new shape collar Interests him a mo- H ment 'M Tht's the difference between a clerk and a salesman. But don't H think the man who forces sales on a customer and worries him into H buying is making good. There's a H difference between celling a man something he wants and some thing he has no use for. 'M 2bS. STRAOSS PORTRAIT, BBS drill?' you ask We do something of that, but we hold It in to be kept subordinate In the small time that can be given to the public school music In tho curricula. We know that song preceded the science of volco production and the theory of music by thousands of years. Ws know that whoever loves to slur will probably, sooner or later, wish to burn what the music teachers have to teach. If young people do not wish to barn It. they had bet ter not be worried with It at all. We think that. In the grammar school, ear tests, tune tests, scale, clefs, and all the rest of the para phanalla of music teachers should be put In the proper and very mod est place Music, like other forms of artic ulate speech, Is primarily a matter for the ear and voice, and not for the eye. It Is. then, of V ry great Importance that tho old-fashioned singing by ear should not be pushed out of tho schools by instruction in musical technique. "We have used many operettas In our work, for these give play to tho imagination, and to tho dramatic Instinct of pupils. We have found 'Sylvia.' The Belle of Bnrnsta poole.' 'Blbl.' 'The Comedy of Toys.' The Land of Pie.' and one of our own composition, entitled Joyland," admirably adapted to our needs Parents attend the rendition of these musical plays, and llnd pleas ure In the performances given by their children, and their pride In their school la augmented." Wo owe much of .our musical knowledge to the Greeks, but they In turn go to Egypt for their learn ing. Music In tho earliest times went thronch threi stages of devel opment Instruments of percussion are the oldest kinds of music pro ducers. Ind instruments arc next In order, and stringed Instruments are the latest form of development. The clapping of hands and stamp ing of feet mark tho first era In musical development. Drums then came Into Irf-lng- Among barbarous nations today, wherw thero Is- no other musical Instrument, there is a drum. Then bells and cymbals vvci" developed Somo savage wan dering along the banks of the Nile picked up a hollow reed and blew In one end. A shrill note was sounded, and so we have the begin ning of wind Instruments. He found that by cutting a se ries of holes In tho reed he could blow different notes He made high and low pitched tones and soon ho had a flute. Then came the clario net and finally the reed organ. BTBANOE! HARP FOUND IN AFRICA. But long beforo the reed organ was developed stringed music came Into being. In Africa we find a strange harp made of ebony with long steel spikes driven into It and held In place These steel spikes ore struck with the linger and 1 1 ol a weird sort can be pro duced. With the growth of tho nations the harp has developed. It must be taken Into considera tion that music came long before It was learned there was any such thing as technique, Bavnsje men played by ear and produced won derfully beautiful songs. The music, however, was simple. Thero was no NEW CLEW TO CRIME FOUND The science of deduction as ac credited to detectives may receive a setback as a result of a discover In medical science Just made known by Dr. John B. Murphy, the noted Chicago physician and surgeon, on his return from the International Congress of Medicine In London. It is a process by which it may be determined positively whether a bloodstain I human or from one of the lower animals. "Tho old way of determining whether bloodstains were human was by an examination of the stain under a ulcroscope." Dr. Murphy explained, "and It was more or less gus?vvork Analysis of the stain In the new way would establish the fact beyond a doubt by the preclp itauts In the blood. "In the rase now of the chimpan zee, the precipitant would come within 10 per cent of tho human while In the case of an ordinary monkey the percentage would be much less." In the opinion of Dr. Murphy, the most important matter before tho congress had to do with the cancer problem. "Or rather, I will r wee pc-rhups the most Im port int. The problem was liseussed by un Italian, a German and a French man," he aaid. "Let It be under- stood that is Is purely a scientific re- H search into the cancer of mice, and H has nothing to do with the cancer H of humans as yet, at any rate, ex- J cept by analogy. "It was shown that cancer In tho H Japanese waltzing mouse is cap- H ble of transplanting in others of the H same breed In nearly 100 per cent of the cases used In experiments. H in tiie caes of the Jensen mouse it Ll was shown that tho cancer could F& be transplanted In about 85 per ifcijH 'Then they crossbred the Japan- ILLifl ese and Jensen mle. and they ftl could not infect a single one of the gnl resulting mice with the disease, ill "That," asserted the doctor, vlg- H orously. "Is the first Instance of H cancer Immunity as a result of H crocs-breeding, or. for that matter. Plll as a result of anv thing. And It H lends a great hope In connection J with the solution of the cancer H problem of humans." ilLfl Dr. Murphy spoke enthuslastlcal- 'ffLiiv Ij of the discussions of disease re- suiting from vice and of the wld H prominence given the discussion by H tho English press. As a result of this phase of the aflsl congress ?ir Malcolm Morris at a 'LnLiV tlnal dinner to the members stated. 'ffilH according to tho Chicago surgeon. J that In an Interview he had with Premier Asqulth the Premier prac- ruBLUfl llcally had promised tii.it a commi?- ffl sloii would le appointed undr the ByB British government to investigate (I yfc;sBBBM such diseases, for the benefit, chief- 'BLtH ly, of innocent ictlms. JSviaasv