Music Notes [excerpt]
The English musician who suggested
music as a cure for anarchy, has caused a ripple of laughter to
go all round. Magazines and newspapers make fun of his remarks,
yet much can be said in favor of music in social utility. He writes:
“When all the world has learned to sing, there will no longer be
room in the human breast for rage or terror or murder or anarchy.”
Alas! how far away all this must be. It was only last May 3 that
the New Orleans Chief of Police locked up one James White, a pianist
and song writer, in order to prevent any attempt on the prisoner’s
part to assassinate President McKinley during his visit to that
city. The pianist is known to the police as a crank, and the wild
remark and threats which he made led to his arrest. He said, “The
horoscope of President McKinley is plain. It says he is to fall
by my hands. He comes to New Orleans to-morrow. When the eyes of
James White fall upon him the world will be shocked. The nation,
perhaps, will grieve, but James White will glory in his deed.”
This is the way the “Chicago Record-Herald,”
in an editorial, takes off the remarks quoted above [498][499]
from the English music teacher: “This is merely a return to the
old dictum that ‘music hath charms to soothe the savage breast’
and it may be true that music does possess this magic. The great
trouble, however, is to find out what kind of music will do the
business. We are inclined to believe Wagnerian outbursts, for instance,
will never be likely to keep anarchy down. Indeed a good rip roaring
Wagnerian performance is about as likely as not to make the most
sensible and sedate citizen a wild bomb thrower.
“As for ragtime, we do not believe
there is any reason to hope that it will ever serve the purpose
of removing rage from the catalogue of human passions—certainly
not so long as it is played by little German bands and on street
pianos.
“Church music may be said to have
an elevating influence, and yet we have seen that it has thrown
a Chicago professor into conniptions. We must, therefore, decline
to accept music as a remedy for anarchy. The anarchists themselves
may be satisfied to wait and try its effects, but the public will
have no justification for countenancing any such experiment.
“In treating with the anarchist it
will be necessary to use something more convincing in the way of
a weapon than an ćolian harp or a mere mouth organ.”
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