XXI
EDWARD MACDOWELL
Edward MacDowell has been acclaimed America's greatest composer. If we
try to substitute another name in its place, one of equal potency cannot be
found.
Our composer's ancestors were Irish and Scotch, though his father was
born in New York City and his mother was an American girl. Edward was their
third son, and appeared December 18, 1861; this event happened at the home
of his parents, 220 Clinton Street, New York.
The father was a man of artistic instincts, and as a youth, fond of
drawing and painting. His parents had been Quakers of a rather severe sort
and had discouraged all such artistic efforts. Little Edward seems to have
inherited his father's artistic gifts, added to his own inclination toward
music.
The boy had his first piano lessons when he was about eight years old,
from a family friend, Mr. Juan Buitrago, a native of Bogota, South America.
Mr. Buitrago became greatly interested in Edward and asked permission to
teach him his notes. At that time the boy was not considered a prodigy, or
even precocious, though he seemed to have various gifts. He was fond of
covering his music and exercise books with little drawings, which showed he
had the innate skill of a born artist. Then he liked to scribble bits of
verses and stories and invent fairy tales. He could improvise little themes
at the piano, but was not fond of technical drudgery at the instrument in
those early days.
The lessons with Mr. Buitrago continued for several years, and then he
was taken to a professional piano teacher, Paul Desvernine, with whom he
remained till he was fifteen. During this time he received occasional
lessons from the brilliant Venezuelan pianist, Teresa Carreño, who admired
his gifts and later played his piano concertos.
Edward was now fifteen, and his family considered he was to become a
musician. In those days and for long after, even to the present moment, it
was thought necessary for Americans to go to Europe for serious study and
artistic finish. It was therefore determined the boy should go to Paris for
a course in piano and theory at the Conservatoire. In April, 1876,
accompanied by his mother, he left America for France.
He passed the examinations and began the autumn term as a pupil of
Marmontel in piano and of Savard in theory and composition.
Edward's knowledge of French was very uncertain, and while he could get
along fairly well in the piano class, he had considerable trouble in
following the lessons in theory. He determined to make a special study of
the language, and a teacher was engaged to give him private lessons.
His passion for drawing was liable to break out at any moment. During one
of the lesson hours he was varying the monotony by drawing, behind his book,
a picture of his teacher, whose special facial characteristic was a very
large nose. Just as the sketch was finished he was detected and was asked to
show the result. The professor, instead of being angry, considered it a
remarkable likeness and asked to keep it. Shortly after this the professor
called on Mrs. MacDowell, telling her he had shown the drawing to an eminent
painter, also an instructor at the école des Beaux Arts. The painter had
been so greatly impressed with the boy's talent that he offered him a three
years' course of free instruction, under his own supervision. He also
promised to be responsible for Edward's support during that time.
This was a vital question to decide; the boy's whole future hung in the
balance. Mrs. MacDowell, in her perplexity, laid the whole matter before
Marmontel, who strongly advised against diverting her son from a musical
career. The decision was finally left to Edward himself, and he chose to
remain at the Conservatoire.
Conditions there, however, were not just to his liking, and after two
years he began to think the school was not the place for him. It was the
summer of 1878, the year of the Exposition. Edward and his mother attended a
festival concert and heard Nicholas Rubinstein play the Tschaikowsky B flat
minor piano Concerto. His performance was a revelation. "I can never learn
to play the piano like that if I stay here," exclaimed Edward, as they left
the hall.
They began to consider the merits of the different European schools of
music, and finally chose Stuttgart. Mrs. MacDowell and her son went there in
November hoping that in this famous Conservatory could be found the right
kind of instruction.
But alas, MacDowell soon found out his mistake. He discovered that he
would have to unlearn all he had acquired and begin from the beginning. And
even then the instruction was not very thorough.
They now thought of Frankfort, where the composer Joachim Raff was the
director and Carl Heymann, a very brilliant pianist, was one of the
instructors.
After months of delay, during which young MacDowell worked under the
guidance of Ehlert, he at last entered the Frankfort Conservatory, studying
composition with Raff, and piano with Heymann. Both proved very inspiring
teachers. For Heymann he had the greatest admiration, calling him a marvel,
whose technic was equal to anything. "In hearing him practise and play, I
learned more in a week than I ever knew before."
Edward MacDowell remained in close study at the Frankfort Conservatory
for two years, his mother having in the meantime returned to America. He had
hoped to obtain a place as professor on the teaching staff of the
institution. Failing to do this he took private pupils. One of these, Miss
Marian Nevins, he afterwards married. He must have been a rather striking
looking youth at this time. He was nineteen. Tall and vigorous, with blue
eyes, fair skin, rosy cheeks, very dark hair and reddish mustache, he was
called "the handsome American." He seemed from the start, to have success in
teaching, though he was painfully shy, and always remained so.
In 1881, when he was twenty, he applied for the position of head piano
teacher in the Darmstadt Conservatory, and was accepted. It meant forty
hours a week of drudgery, and as he preferred to live in Frankfort, he made
the trip each day between the two towns. Besides this he went once a week to
a castle about three hours away, and taught some little counts and
countesses, really dull and sleepy children, who cared but little if
anything for music. However the twelve hours spent in the train each week,
were not lost, as he composed the greater part of his Second Modern Suite
for piano, Op. 14; the First Modern Suite had been written in Frankfort the
year before. He was reading at this period a great deal of poetry, both
German and English, and delving into the folk and fairy lore of romantic
Germany. All these imaginative studies exerted great influence on his
subsequent compositions, both as to subject and content.
MacDowell found that the confining labors at Darmstadt were telling on
his strength, so he gave up the position and remained in Frankfort, dividing
his time between private teaching and composing. He hoped to secure a few
paying concert engagements, as those he had already filled had brought in no
money.
One day, as he sat dreaming before his piano, some one knocked at the
door, and the next instant in walked his master Raff, of whom the young
American stood in great awe. In the course of a few moments, Raff suddenly
asked what he had been writing. In his confusion the boy stammered he had
been working on a concerto. When Raff started to go, he turned back and told
the boy to bring the concerto to him the next Sunday. As even the first
movement was not finished, its author set to work with vigor. When Sunday
came only the first movement was ready. Postponing the visit a week or two,
he had time to complete the work, which stands today, as he wrote it then,
with scarcely a correction.
At Raff's suggestion, MacDowell visited Liszt in the spring of 1882. The
dreaded encounter with the master proved to be a delightful surprise, as
Liszt treated him with much kindness and courtesy. Eugen D'Albert, who was
present, was asked to accompany the orchestral part of the concerto on a
second piano. Liszt commended the work in warm terms: "You must bestir
yourself," he warned D'Albert, "if you do not wish to be outdone by our
young American." Liszt praised his piano playing too, and MacDowell returned
to Frankfort in a happy frame of mind.
At a music Convention, held that year in Zurich, in July, MacDowell
played his First Piano Suite, and won a good success. The following year,
upon Liszt's recommendation, both the First and Second Modern Suites were
brought out by Breitkopf and Haertel. "Your two Piano Suites are admirable,"
wrote Liszt from Budapest, in February, 1883, "and I accept with sincere
pleasure and thanks the dedication of your piano Concerto."
The passing of Raff, on June 25, 1882, was a severe blow to MacDowell. It
was in memory of his revered teacher that he composed the "Sonata Tragica,"
the first of the four great sonatas he has left us. The slow movement of
this Sonata especially embodies his sorrow at the loss of the teacher who
once said to him: "Your music will be played when mine is forgotten."
For the next two years MacDowell did much composing. Then in June 1884 he
returned to America, and in July was married to his former pupil, Miss
Marian Nevins, a union which proved to be ideal for both. Shortly after this
event the young couple returned to Europe.
The next winter was spent in Frankfort, instructing a few private pupils,
but mostly in composing, with much reading of the literature of various
countries, and, in the spring, with long walks in the beautiful woods about
Frankfort. Wiesbaden became their home during the winter of 1885-6. The same
year saw the completion of the second. Piano Concerto, in D minor.
In the spring of 1887, MacDowell, in one of his walks about the town,
discovered a deserted cottage on the edge of the woods. It overlooked the
town, with the Rhine beyond, and woods on the other side of the river.
Templeton Strong, an American composer, was with him at the time, and both
thought the little cottage an ideal spot for a home. It was soon purchased,
and the young husband and wife lived an idyllic life for the next year. A
small garden gave them exercise out of doors, the woods were always enticing
and best of all, MacDowell was able to give his entire time to composition.
Many beautiful songs and piano pieces were the result, besides the symphonic
poem "Lamia," "Hamlet and Ophelia," the "Lovely Aida," "Lancelot and
Elaine," and other orchestral works.
In September, 1888, the MacDowells sold their Wiesbaden cottage and
returned to America, settling in Boston. Here MacDowell made himself felt as
a pianist and teacher. He took many pupils, and made a conspicuous number of
public appearances. He also created some of his best work, among which were
the two great Sonatas, the "Tragica" and "Eroica." One of the important
appearances was his playing of the Second Concerto with the Philharmonic
Orchestra of New York, under Anton Seidl, in December, 1894.
In the spring of 1896 a Department of Music was founded at Columbia
University, of New York, the professorship of which was offered to
MacDowell. He had now been living eight years in Boston; his fame as a
pianist and teacher was constantly growing; indeed more pupils came to him
than he could accept. The prospect of organizing a new department from the
very beginning was a difficult task to undertake. At first he hesitated; he
was in truth in no hurry to accept the offer, and wished to weigh both sides
carefully. But the idea of having an assured income finally caused him to
decide in favor of Columbia, and he moved from Boston to New York the
following autumn.
He threw himself into this new work with great ardor and entire devotion.
With the founding of the department there were two distinct ideas to be
carried out. First, to train musicians who would be able to teach and
compose. Second, to teach musical history and aesthetics.
All this involved five courses, with many lectures each week, taking up
form, harmony, counterpoint, fugue, composition, vocal and instrumental
music, both from the technical and interpretative side. It was a tremendous
labor to organize and keep all this going, unaided. After two years he was
granted an assistant, who took over the elementary classes. But even with
this help, MacDowell's labors were increasingly arduous. He now had six
courses instead of five, which meant more classes and lectures each week.
Perhaps the most severe drain on his time and strength was the continual
correction of exercise books and examination papers, a task which he
performed with great patience and thoroughness. Added to all this, he
devoted every Sunday morning to his advanced students, giving them help and
advice in their piano work and in composition.
Amid all this labor his public playing had to be given up, but
composition went steadily on. During the eight years of the Columbia
professorship, some of the most important works of his life were produced;
among them were, Sea Pieces the two later Sonatas, the Norse and the Keltic,
Fireside Tales, and New England Idyls. The Woodland Sketches had already
been published and some of his finest songs. Indeed nearly one quarter of
all his compositions were the fruit of those eight years while he held the
post at Columbia.
In 1896 he bought some property near Peterboro, New Hampshire—fifteen
acres with a small farmhouse and other buildings, and fifty acres of forest.
The buildings were remodeled into a rambling but comfortable dwelling, and
here, amid woods and hills he loved, he spent the summer of each year. He
built a little log cabin in the woods near by, and here he wrote some of his
best music.
In 1904 MacDowell left Columbia, but continued his private piano classes,
and sometimes admitted free such students as were unable to pay. After his
arduous labors at Columbia, which had been a great drain on his vitality, he
should have had a complete rest and change. Had he done so, the collapse
which was imminent might have been averted. But he took no rest though in
the spring of 1905 he began to show signs of nervous breakdown. The
following summer was spent, as usual, in Peterboro but it seemed to bring no
relief to the exhausted composer. In the fall of that year his ailment
appeared worse. Although he seemed perfectly well in body, his mind
gradually became like that of a child. The writer was privileged to see him
on one occasion, and retains an ineffaceable memory of the composer in his
white flannels, seated in a large easy chair, taking little notice of what
was passing about him, seldom recognizing his friends or visitors, but
giving the hand of his devoted wife a devoted squeeze when she moved to his
side to speak to him.
This state continued for over two years, until his final release, January
23, 1908, as he had just entered his forty-seventh year. The old Westminster
Hotel had been the MacDowell home through the long illness. From here is but
a step to St. George's Episcopal Church, where a simple service was held. On
the following day the composer was taken to Peterboro, his summer home, a
spot destined to play its part, due to the untiring efforts of Mrs.
MacDowell, in the development of music in America.
Mr. Gilman tells us:
"His grave is on an open hill-top, commanding one of the spacious and
beautiful views he had loved. On a bronze tablet are these lines of his own,
used as a motto for his 'From a Log Cabin,' the last music he ever wrote:
'A house of dreams untold
It looks out over the whispering tree-tops
And faces the setting sun.'"