Woman's Work in Music. Arthur Elson

Woman's Work in Music - Arthur Elson


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       Arthur Elson

      Woman's Work in Music

      Published by Good Press, 2019

       [email protected]

      EAN 4057664641694

       WOMAN'S WORK IN MUSIC

       CHAPTER I.

       ANCIENT AND MYTHICAL

       CHAPTER II.

       MEDIÆVAL

       CHAPTER III.

       WIVES OF THE COMPOSERS

       CHAPTER IV.

       CLARA AND ROBERT SCHUMANN

       CHAPTER V.

       OTHER MUSICAL ROMANCES

       CHAPTER VI.

       ENGLAND

       CHAPTER VII.

       GERMANY

       CHAPTER VIII.

       FRANCE

       CHAPTER IX.

       AMERICA

       CHAPTER X.

       OTHER COUNTRIES

       CHAPTER XI.

       CONCLUSION

       APPENDIX

       INDEX

CHAPTERPAGE
I.ANCIENT AND MYTHICAL11
II.MEDIÆVAL35
III.WIVES OF THE COMPOSERS61
IV.CLARA AND ROBERT SCHUMANN90
V.OTHER MUSICAL ROMANCES111
VI.ENGLAND132
VII.GERMANY154
VIII.FRANCE174
IX.AMERICA195
X.OTHER COUNTRIES211
XI.CONCLUSION234

       Table of Contents

       Table of Contents

       Table of Contents

      The Church of Rome, though admitting no women to a share in performing its services, has yet made a woman the patron saint of music. The religions of antiquity have paid even more homage to the weaker sex in the matter, as the multitude of musical nymphs and fostering goddesses will show.

      Of Saint Cecilia herself little is known accurately. The very apocryphal legend states that about the year 230 a noble Roman lady of that name, who had been converted to Christianity, was forced into an unwilling marriage with a certain Valerian, a pagan. She succeeded in converting her husband and his brother, but all were martyred because of their faith. This it is stated, took place under the Prefect Almacus, but history gives no such name. It is unfortunate, also, that the earliest writer mentioning her, Fortunatus, Bishop of Poitiers, speaks of her as having died in Sicily between the years 176 and 180. It is doubtful whether she would have been known at all, in connection with the art, but for a passing phrase in her story, which relates that she often united instrumental music to that of her voice in sounding the praises of the Lord. Because of these few words, she is famed throughout musical Christendom, half the musical societies in Europe are named after her, and Raphael's picture, Dryden's ode, Stefano Maderno's statue, and a hundred other great art works have come into existence.

      The earliest inferences of woman's influence in music are to be drawn from the Hindoo mythology.[1] According to the tabular schedule of all knowledge, found in the ancient Brahmin records, music as an art belongs in the second chief division of lesser sciences, but on its mathematical and philosophical side it is accorded a much higher position, and is treated of in the oldest and most sacred Hindoo work, the Veda. This authority tells


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