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THE WORLD'S GREAT MEN OF MUSIC
BY
HARRIETTE BROWER
Author of "Piano Mastery, First and Second Series,"
"Home-Help in Music Study," "Self-Help in Piano Study," "Vocal Mastery,"
etc.
Also Published Under the Title of
"Story-Lives of Master Musicians"
922
FREDERICK A. STOKES COMPANY
Printed in the United States of America
The preparation of this volume began with a period of delightful research
work in a great musical library. As a honey-bee flutters from flower to
flower, culling sweetness from many blossoms, so the compiler of such
stories as these must gather facts from many sources—from biography,
letters, journals and musical history. Then, impressed with the personality
and individual achievement of each composer, the author has endeavored to
present his life story.
While the aim has been to make the story-sketches interesting to young
people, the author hopes that they may prove valuable to musical readers of
all ages. Students of piano, violin or other instruments need to know how
the great composers lived their lives. In every musical career described in
this book, from the old masters represented by Bach and Beethoven to the
musical prophets of our own day, there is a wealth of inspiration and
practical guidance for the artist in any field. Through their struggles,
sorrows and triumphs, divine melody and harmony came into being, which will
bless the world for all time to come.
CONTENTS
FOREWORD
I PALESTRINA
II JOHN SEBASTIAN
BACH
III GEORGE
FREDERICK HANDEL
IV CHRISTOPH
WILLIBALD GLUCK
V JOSEF HAYDN
VI WOLFGANG
MOZART
VII LUDWIG VAN
BEETHOVEN
VIII CARL MARIA
VON WEBER
IX FRANZ SCHUBERT
X FELIX
MENDELSSOHN-BARTHOLDY
XI ROBERT
SCHUMANN
XII FREDERIC
CHOPIN
XIII HECTOR
BERLIOZ
XIV FRANZ LISZT
XV GIUSEPPE
VERDI
XVI RICHARD
WAGNER
XVII CÉSAR
FRANCK
XVIII JOHANNES
BRAHMS
XIX EDWARD GRIEG
XX PETER ILYITCH
TSCHAIKOWSKY
XXI EDWARD
MACDOWELL
XXII CLAUDE
ACHILLE DEBUSSY
XXIII ARTURO
TOSCANINI
XXIV LEOPOLD
STOKOWSKY
XXV SERGE
KOUSSEVITZKY
STORY-LIVES OF
MASTER MUSICIANS
To learn something of the life and labors of Palestrina, one of the
earliest as well as one of the greatest musicians, we must go back in the
world's history nearly four hundred years. And even then we may not be able
to discover all the events of his life as some of the records have been
lost. But we have the main facts, and know that Palestrina's name will be
revered for all time as the man who strove to make sacred music the
expression of lofty and spiritual meaning.
Upon a hoary spur of the Apennines stands the crumbling town of
Palestrina. It is very old now; it was old when Rome was young. Four hundred
years ago Palestrina was dominated by the great castle of its lords, the
proud Colonnas. Naturally the town was much more important in those days
than it is to-day.
At that time there lived in Palestrina a peasant pair, Sante Pierluigi
and his wife Maria, who seem to have been an honest couple, and not
grindingly poor, since the will of Sante's mother has lately been found, in
which she bequeathed a house in Palestrina to her two sons. Besides this she
left behind a fine store of bed linen, mattresses and cooking utensils.
Maria Gismondi also had a little property.
To this pair was born, probably in 1526, a boy whom they named Giovanni
Pierluigi, which means John Peter Louis. This boy, from a tiniest child,
loved beauty of sight and sound. And this is not at all surprising, for a
child surrounded from infancy by the natural loveliness and glory of old
Palestrina, would unconsciously breathe in a sense of beauty and grandeur.
It was soon discovered the boy had a voice, and his mother is said to
have sold some land she owned to provide for her son's musical training.
From the rocky heights on which their town was built, the people of
Palestrina could look across the Campagna—the great plain between—and see
the walls and towers of Rome. At the time of our story, Saint Peter's had
withstood the sack of the city, which happened a dozen years before, and
Bramante's vast basilica had already begun to rise. The artistic life of
Rome was still at high tide, for Raphael had passed away but twenty years
before, and Michael Angelo was at work on his Last Judgment.
Though painting and sculpture flourished, music did not keep pace with
advance in other arts. The leading musicians were Belgian, Spanish or
French, and their music did not match the great achievements attained in the
kindred art of the time—architecture, sculpture and painting. There was
needed a new impetus, a vital force. Its rise began when the peasant youth
John Peter Louis descended from the heights of Palestrina to the banks of
the Tiber.
It is said that Tomasso Crinello was the boy's master; whether this is
true or not, he was surely trained in the Netherland manner of composition.
The youth, whom we shall now call Palestrina, as he is known by the name
of his birthplace, returned from Rome at the age of eighteen to his native
town, in 1544, as a practising musician, and took a post at the Cathedral of
Saint Agapitus. Here he engaged himself for life, to be present every day at
mass and vespers, and to teach singing to the canons and choristers. Thus he
spent the early years of his young manhood directing the daily services and
drumming the rudiments of music into the heads of the little choristers. It
may have been dry and wearisome labor; but afterward, when Palestrina began
to reform the music of the church, it must have been of great advantage to
him to know so absolutely the liturgy, not only of Saint Peter's and Saint
John Lateran, but also that in the simple cathedral of his own small
hill-town.
Young Palestrina, living his simple, busy life in his home town, never
dreamed he was destined to become a great musician. He married in 1548, when
he was about twenty-two. If he had wished to secure one of the great musical
appointments in Rome, it was a very unwise thing for him to marry, for
single singers were preferred in nine cases out of ten. Palestrina did not
seem to realize this danger to a brilliant career, and took his bride,
Lucrezia, for pure love. She seems to have been a person after his own
heart, besides having a comfortable dowry of her own. They had a happy
union, which lasted for more than thirty years.
Although he had agreed to remain for life at the cathedral church of
Saint Agapitus, it seems that such contracts could be broken without peril.
Thus, after seven years of service, he once more turned his steps toward the
Eternal City.
He returned to Rome as a recognized musician. In 1551 he became master of
the Capella Giulia, at the modest salary of six scudi a month, something
like ten dollars. But the young chapel master seemed satisfied. Hardly three
years after his arrival had elapsed, when he had written and printed a book
containing five masses, which he dedicated to Pope Julius III. This act
pleased the pontiff, who, in January, 1555, appointed Palestrina one of the
singers of the Sistine Chapel, with an increased salary.
It seems however, that the Sistine singers resented the appointment of a
new member, and complained about it. Several changes in the Papal chair
occurred at this time, and when Paul IV, as Pope, came into power, he began
at once with reforms. Finding that Palestrina and two other singers were
married men, he put all three out, though granting an annuity of six scudi a
month for each.
The loss of this post was a great humiliation, which Palestrina found it
hard to endure. He fell ill at this time, and the outlook was dark indeed,
with a wife and three little children to provide for.
But the clouds soon lifted. Within a few weeks after this unfortunate
event, the rejected singer of the Sistine Chapel was created Chapel Master
of Saint John Lateran, the splendid basilica, where the young Orlandus
Lassus had so recently directed the music. As Palestrina could still keep
his six scudi pension, increased with the added salary of the new position,
he was able to establish his family in a pretty villa on the Coelian Hill,
where he could be near his work at the Lateran, but far enough removed from
the turmoil of the city to obtain the quiet he desired, and where he lived
in tranquillity for the next five years.
Palestrina spent forty-four years of his life in Rome. All the eleven
popes who reigned during this long period honored Palestrina as a great
musician. Marcellus II spent a part of his three weeks' reign in showing
kindness to the young Chapel master, which the composer returned by naming
for this pontiff a famous work, "Mass of Pope Marcellus." Pius IV, who was
in power when the mass was performed, praised it eloquently, saying John
Peter Louis of Palestrina was a new John, bringing down to the church
militant the harmonies of that "new song" which John the Apostle heard in
the Holy City. The musician-pope, Gregory XIII, to whom Palestrina dedicated
his grandest motets, entrusted him with the sacred task of revising the
ancient chant. Pope Sixtus V greatly praised his beautiful mass, "Assumpta
est Maria" and promoted him to higher honors.
With this encouragement and patronage, Palestrina labored five years at
the Lateran, ten years at Santa Maria Maggiore and twenty three at Saint
Peter's. At the last named it was his second term, of course, but it
continued from 1571 to his death. He was happy in his work, in his home and
in his friends. He also saved quite a little money and was able to give his
daughter-in-law, in 1577, 1300 scudi; he is known indeed, to have bought
land, vineyards and houses in and about Rome.
All was not a life of sunshine for Palestrina, for he suffered many
domestic sorrows. His three promising sons died one after another. They were
talented young men, who might have followed in the footsteps of their
distinguished father. In 1580 his wife died also. Yet neither poignant
sorrow, worldly glory nor ascetic piety blighted his homely affections. At
the Jubilee of Pope Gregory XIII, in 1575, when 1500 pilgrims from the town
of Palestrina descended the hills on the way to Rome, it was their old
townsman, Giovanni Pierluigi, who led their songs, as they entered the
Eternal City, their maidens clad in white robes, and their young men bearing
olive branches.
It is said of Palestrina that he became the "savior of church music," at
a time when it had almost been decided to banish all music from the service
except the chant, because so many secular subjects had been set to music and
used in church. Things had come to a very difficult pass, until at last the
fathers turned to Palestrina, desiring him to compose a mass in which sacred
words should be heard throughout. Palestrina, deeply realizing his
responsibility, wrote not only one but three, which, on being heard, pleased
greatly by their piety, meekness, and beautiful spirit. Feeling more sure of
himself, Palestrina continued to compose masses, until he had created
ninety-three in all. He also wrote many motets on the Song of Solomon, his
Stabat Mater, which was edited two hundred and fifty years later by Richard
Wagner, and his lamentations, which were composed at the request of Sixtus
V.
Palestrina's end came February 2, 1594. He died in Rome, a devout
Christian, and on his coffin were engraved the simple but splendid words:
"Prince of Music."

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