Monday 12 October 2009

From the Australian Outback to Covent Garden


One of my earliest memories - perhaps round 4 or 5 - was listening to the records of Dame Nellie Melba (1861-1931), played to me by my loving and beloved grandmother ...


I was fascinated and a bit disconcerted by the unfamiliar the high-pitched quality of an opera singer's voice. But my grandmother talked me into what understanding I could have at that age. And I am forever grateful for her introduction.

So yesterday I decided to put together two small videos about the great Australian soprano Dame Nellie Melba (1861-1931) - partly because I know she'd have absolutely loved to watch them.

But also for two other reasons.

A number of masters of Melba's first recordings were recently discovered in a vault in Hamburg and then, more recently, re-released (Article Sydney Morning Herald, 2 December 2008 and interview with Australian soprano Yvonne Kenny).

And I've long wanted to gather up all the tiny extant fragments of film footage I've found of the great diva.


In 1904, Melba had finally been persuaded by The Gramophone Company to commit a number of arias to disc. She required that a recording studio be set up at her home at Great Cumberland Place in London.


Her voice passed down a great horn through a diaphram to a needle which recorded the vibrations on a wax disc. The disc was then electroplated to give a 'metal master' from which shellac copies for sale were made in Germany. And it was these original masters that were found.


My first video is in two parts.

The first is the footage - of various tour arrivals and departures, scenes at home in Australia after retirement, cake-making as part of the civilian First World War effort, singing 'God Save the King' at the opening of the new Parliament House in Canberra in 1927 and being presented with a bouquet of flowers at some kind of civic reception, probably in London by the policemen's helmets.


Moments seem to reveal the singer's indomitable down-to-earth character, such as in the second sequence where Melba momentarily breaks in the filming to give firm and not-to-be-disobeyed orders to an at that point out-of-frame dog.

Portrait By Baron Adolf de Meyer

The audio for the first section of this first video is the spiritual 'Swing low, sweet chariot', which was recorded privately at home for her father and not heard until recently. Here the diva seems very up close and intimate to the microphone - she is so clear and 'present' that you can hear subtleties and qualities in her voice not previously accessible. This sound quality may also be due to the lesser dynamics of such a song which do not require the singer to step or be away from the trumpet to prevent the recording distortions involved with the often larger volume and higher notes of operatic arias.


The second section of this first video shows images of Melba through her career, including one of Philippe, duc d'Orleans ...

Philippe, duc d'Orleans

... with whom she had a potentially career-wrecking affair - but which eventuated only in a scandal which precipitated the divorce from her estranged husband, Charles Armstrong.


This section is accompanied by an audio of the initial part of Melba's Farewell Speech at Covent Garden in 1926.


She seems a strong and confident public speaker, quite in control of the proceedings.


It also gives a sense of her speaking voice.

Speaking to character, John Hetherington tells in his 1968 biography, that at one point during the speech the singer broke down into tears, resulting in the curtain being drawn. Melba instantly reacted ... yelling at the stage hands 'Open the bloody curtains!' And proceeded to gently sob again.




The second video has an audio from 1910 of Melba singing the lament 'Chant Hindou' by Herman Bemberg.

There was a discussion in 1967 between P.G. Hurst and Jack Freestone in which they agreed that this recording showed the emotional and expressive power the singer could produce 'when she chose'. They had both heard the great singer many times.



I really enjoyed putting this post and these two videos together ...



... because, as much as anything, it's been a specific focus with which to think about my selfless and adoring grandmother.

9 comments:

  1. My "also" wonderful paternal grandmother taught me to whistle. Although my family is very musical and my paternal Uncle became a famous singer, I later found out that I cannot carry a tune. At age 4, Grandma also taught me all about gardening. I was her assistant in a real sense. I continue to be an amazing gardener.
    Since she didn't speak English - she also taught me Norwegian - and to this day I can get along in that language. I studied German at University and excelled because of my linguistic background.
    Thank you for your remembrance about your Grandmother - brings back incredibly fond memories of my Grandmother.

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  2. hey anon

    my family is also musical! my mother was a violinist tho she finally turned to economics (not exactly a related field!) and gave up her parallel career

    what a lovely thing to be able to look back on and remember, being taught how to whistle - the very same thing happened to me. my grandmother lived in the bush and her mother needed to call the men in from the fields for lunch and dinner - and she too learned to whistle with huge volume. which she loved to demonstrate

    our family has a french background but it was my father who practised with me, reinforcing what i was learning at school. i've lived in france for various periods over the years and try to keep my skills going - but i'm not really good - to my disappointment

    i'm glad we've both had such loving experiences with grandmas!

    good to hear from you

    best

    nick

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  3. Dear Nick:

    What a wonderful thing that your blog feeds all my enthusiasms! In this case, Dame Nellie is one of my idols. I sing and teach singing -- and she is perfection. Thank you so much for the video material. One quibble: Swing Low is an electric recording which she made in 1926 after her Covent Garden Farewell and long after her Father's death. The wonderful sound quality is due to the new electrical recording process.

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  4. dear richard

    she is perfection - and great to share enthusiasms

    thanks for the correction for 'swing low sweet chariot' - my reading let me down - but i did wonder that it was so much better acoustically than would be expected by the false period i gave it - much more like the electric recordings of 1926

    best

    nick

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  5. A quibble on the first one. Have you considered it might work better with the Covent Garden speech at the start and then the song which is about angels coming to take her away. I think if the clip ended on that it would be more resonant.

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  6. hi alan

    i must say i thought about the ordering of the two items for a quite bit

    i take your point about the content as a decider in the way you describe but in the end it seemed to work better, in a vaguely psychological and intuitive way, to have the singing/performance followed by the goodbye

    but as always you make an interesting point

    chat soon

    nick

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  7. dear richard, me again

    the australian music centre lists 'swing low, sweet chariot' as one of 17 recordings of 1904 (#17), in their introduction to present CD release of re-discovered metal masters of that year in hamburg:

    http://www.australianmusiccentre.com.au/product/dame-nellie-melba-the-first-recordings

    and this is perpetuated in the announcement in the 'sydney morning herald' of the new CD re-release - with the accompanying audio at the URL ...

    http://www.smh.com.au/interactive/2008/entertainment/dame-nellie-melba-recordings/index.html

    ... which gives 'swing low, sweet chariot' as recorded at great cumberland place in 1904.

    though the 'nellie melba museum' list it, as you say, as recorded at queens hall on 17 december 1926 with harold caxton accompanying - http://www.nelliemelbamuseum.com.au/welcome.html

    perhaps it was recorded twice?

    what do you think?

    good to have heard from you

    best

    nick

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  8. Nick,
    Another great post!! A couple quotes from Osbert Sitwell's autobiography, speaking of opera at Covent Garden: "Melba and Caruso, when, fat as two elderly thrushes, they trilled at each other over the hedges of tiaras, summed up in themselves the age, no less than Sargent netted it for others."

    He goes on to say that Caruso was "as natural a singer as the thrush he resembled" (etcetcetc), but "Of Melba...her magnificent voice was not invariably true, having about it something of the disproportion of the Australian continent from which she had emerged."

    Is that an Edwardian sniff I sense lurking in his last crack? Perhaps all the more Edwardian because I have no idea what he actually means, though it sounds...well, not nice.

    Keep up the great work!

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  9. hey paul

    laughed out loud at the image of melba and caruso as 'elderly thrushes'! trilling 'over over the hedges of tiaras'

    i think the last crack is typical of a british view of australia as 'the antipodes' - something i encountered there quite a lot - no judgment

    apparently caruso was a great joker and one evening at covent garden and just as he began the aria which contains the words something like 'your tiny hand is frozen' he pressed a hot sausage into hers.

    it's not recorded how melba responded - with expletives i imagine!

    best

    nick

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