three evenings in the representation, which is almost
as bad as a Chinese play. The present director
of the conservatoire and opera, a Prussian, Herr von
Bulow, is a friend of Wagner. There are formed
here in town two parties: the Wagner and the conservative,
the new and the old, the modern and classical; only
the Wagnerites do not admit that their admiration
of Beethoven and the older composers is less than
that of the others, and so for this reason Bulow has
given us more music of Beethoven than of any other
composer. One thing is certain, that the royal
orchestra is trained to a high state of perfection:
its rendition of the grand operas and its weekly concerts
in the Odeon cannot easily be surpassed. The singers
are not equal to the orchestra, for Berlin and Vienna
offer greater inducements; but there are people here
who regard this orchestra as superlative. They
say that the best orchestras in the world are in Germany;
that the best in Germany is in Munich; and, therefore,
you can see the inevitable deduction. We have
another parallel syllogism. The greatest pianist
in the world is Liszt; but then Herr Bulow is actually
a better performer than Liszt; therefore you see again
to what you must come. At any rate, we are quite
satisfied in this provincial capital; and, if there
is anywhere better music, we don’t know it.
Bulow’s orchestra is not very large,—there
are less than eighty pieces, but it is so handled
and drilled, that when we hear it give one of the
symphonies of Beethoven or Mendelssohn, there is little
left to be desired. Bulow is a wonderful conductor,
a little man, all nerve and fire, and he seems to
inspire every instrument. It is worth something
to see him lead an orchestra: his baton is magical;
head, arms, and the whole body are in motion; he knows
every note of the compositions; and the precision with
which he evokes a solitary note out of a distant instrument
with a jerk of his rod, or brings a wail from the
concurring violins, like the moaning of a pine forest
in winter, with a sweep of his arm, is most masterly.
About the platform of the Odeon are the marble busts
of the great composers; and while the orchestra is
giving some of Beethoven’s masterpieces, I like
to fix my eyes on his serious and genius-full face,
which seems cognizant of all that is passing, and
believe that he has a posthumous satisfaction in the
interpretation of his great thoughts.
The managers of the conservatoire also give vocal concerts, and there are, besides, quartette soiries; so that there are few evenings without some attraction. The opera alternates with the theater two or three times a week. The singers are, perhaps, not known in Paris and London, but some of them are not unworthy to be. There is the baritone, Herr Kindermann, who now, at the age of sixty-five, has a superb voice and manner, and has had few superiors in his time on the German stage. There is Frau Dietz, at forty-five, the best of actresses, and with a still fresh and