PAOE TWO THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1923 De Pachmann----Chopineer ORLANDO BEEDE If a child prodigy is made to per- the psychology student in discovering form before large audiences, then why the subject of de Pachmann's thoughts, should not a valuable gentleman do and also it is helpful to the student the same? One overlooks little faults of interpretation in realzig the pi- in the child's presentation and inter- anist's totallack of it. pretation of a piece. He is not con- Aside from the lack of virtuoso qual- sidered too seriously, but leniency is ities already mentioned the critic will allowed through mere love or pity. experience difficulty in deciding just And so it ought to be in one's atti- what the trouble is when de Pach- tude toward de Pachmann. Just as masn plays unless he is sitting within you marvel at the technique of the.lhearing distance of his jabber. There child of five years, be astounded with will come a beautiful Chopin melody the seventy-five year old Vladimir so-sdthe little man at the piano will capabilities.remark in broken English that this is Toseiti tako ve dtifuilsthat the next is not so sub- To se-tonsly attack or ryen criticize m ia iebatfll~twl de Pachmann is wicked; toeven sa" that de Pachmann irtrrprets 'a piecec a taro. T'e first be-micilitart one way or tc other is wickeda' that the n e played such as ast ac it is an outright falsehood for he Is never ben played before, as de Pach- e cprs s it.Wen the les no sense of interpretation. Put i x 4psinting out the defects whcich con- cid e1hae stitute this lack of interpretatio -ther e a.? lbocrti r c i - r - is nothing unioty. The third ;iald parent aversoon. But when te bian- was horribly distorted in rhythm at. -i m ly r 'curs.c litte gni, as in the A minor Polonaise all su- "- ciltc r'achd rvana, ior posed climaxes would break ldown bcf - s s tore being reached. The forth Screr a ' c-c smar1, anner. zo is a piece of long form. ThInkcm Ba i-aul of it in sections and playing itiwith o ae t e 'l'Is ". out rhythms as he did, it was impo si c' ' d .Pcmann's wa-ikness. ble to follow. He has but one touch a es.' c conesiecns-, ':ewould and how can one say that de Pach ' ying that this is e mann interprets when -he pla the s 0t ' of t war the nusic, but as Polonaise a la Berceuse, when ce in- i - ci I.heIcondemns h iself-again it variably effects very convenient ritar i-c paete-c. In all seriousness Ie be dandos at difficult spots, and when hlieves that he is the greatest inter- turns to smile at the audience before pr-tec of Chopin, say noticing of his the climaxes are reached? His plan- certainty of being the greatest pianist issimo is exquisite except in fast pas-i the world has produced. Does one for sages as in the F minor Etude. The a oments-.believe that Chopin meant Bercense he did play beautifully, and his I'relicde t-- be chopped into three the B minor Mazurka was 'his great- ,bits? .o, Chopin wrote a Prelude. est feat. Had one heard only that not three bits. This is just where de Mazurka he would have said that it Pachmana fools himself. One feels was a great pianist who was playing ncgry at the man who deceives an- it. When a man is master of only other and sorry for him who is de- one touch he is not an interpreter. ceived; but when a man deceives him- One might as well say that a man who self-what then? Choose to pity the knows o4y the French language is a little, old man rather than to scorn linguist. Another deficiency is de -him. Pachmann's lack of tone. The Polo- naise demands virility of tone, not to GENIUS mention the Polonaise rhythm. It Is (Continued from Page One) as foolish to say that his tong does have none. For they are not his, but not carry as it is to speak of his of his higher self,-a something apart interpretation for the former has no from him. volume whatsoever. He may once All this seems a far cry from those have known how to play things as the geniuses whom history describes as ought to be played, but now he has having caroused, dissipated, and be- forgotten: he does not play Chopin, he come secy gluttons of sensual volupt- merely plays with Chopin and it is uousness It is strangely apart from pathetic, for he does not realize his those who sinking ever lower into the downfall. This business of continual abyss of mental dispair, at last merge side-remarks and entertaining antics, into complete insanity. It is concern- is really objectionable for it distracts ing these so-called geniuses that Dr. one's attention from the music, mak- Nisbet is right. Genius is the most ing it difficult to judge its real worth. cotnple- and delicately balanced hu- But since de Pachmann will insist man machine conceivable. No finer upon talking, it is only genteel AO adjostmert Of all sensibirtis could consider the lecture past of his recital, be created. That is w-y it is so pow- and incidentally it is of great aid t IerUl, and so free from the friction aof his. But a delicate 'achine is Most easilyibroken down. it will whiri F. L. Tilden. i...... ...Editor on steadily, smoothly, almost effort- Donald E. L. Snyder.... .uBook essly hut a groin of sand nitt 'nid Normand Lockwood......Music cwchuanoty in its igorance Robert Bartron Henderson' Ihas often been the trower o this Gordon Wierr....s.'.rt rr, ronecsmpletely understands Lisle Rose, Halsey Davdss, clmuccn lee the gris hic- Newell Bebout, Samuel Moore ;eif Quite 5-cticcl" "' s cueer. He Jr. lfadmittedly diffcrent from the aver- The Sunday Magazine solcits age man, else he would be no genius. manuscripts from all peroci a He is eccentric in the very nature inted with the University. Man- of his ability. That which conforms uscripts must be typewritten, to the circle of thought is concentric. triple spaced and written on one That which does not is eccentric. No side only. * * The Sunday Magazine acknowl human being less conforms than the edges The American Secular Un-. genius, therefore he is most ecci ion review service for "The Un- trio. The world of men judges its official Observer" department. * dictates sane. Quite logically, then, he who flirts with those dictations is primarily odd, qu. i 'ossible,--in- sane. With tc t' ug-' the world clothes itst cg- ' en wib It is the policy of this wagaine to publish articles of opinion by both strike out -i cen i tun rate. bThe students and faculty members if, in mind o .e wocld ost cslow. It '- fran- the judgment of the editor, these arts cles are of intrinsic value and interest. tically tenacious of old conceptiote. This does ot mean that c-c oleipts solicited or vountarily offered a-e and does not, can not, will not sec necessarily in accord ith editorial beyord the horizon of today. T here epinion -thar in principeite fo erm.I skirnishrs, then, 'ache dare beyjccs- the horizon and return with strange well written ones, truly, but not indi- stories to tell, are seldom, if ever, cative of the brighter brilliance of understood. Their fellows grin wise- his genius. The instant the fine bal- ly and shake their heads. 'Poor ance is broken, that instant the beauty, things,' they say, 'of course they're order, and harmony of intuitive genius queer.' There is nothing more dis-, is ended. An insane man often pos- heartening to the genius than scorn of his creations. To him they are sesses a facle wit and a brilliance of not to be questioned. They are the perception, but he never knew and, gift of the gods,-vital, real, lovely. according to all experience, science. When the world belittles them he or dogna, he never can know the or ggrows despondent, morose, melan- derliness and pure harmony of echoly. Here is the grain of sand though characteristic of the genius Here the purr- of the. machine is The product of an unbalanced mind changed to an ominous grinding. Gen- uy b, lever, even startlingly-so, but iuses are men living ahead of their it will not be of a real constrctive nine. Years after they are dead and natr,.Te mind rf a genius is the very force of. events has dragged , shblybalanced one. Anc insan: uan to a point where he can see the d is a sadly unbalanced one. Th truth ci ttheir visios, man looks ibck mind of a genius may be marshatted ind glorifies thosep rophetso n a single direction but eery ._ Humanity is ocot the-caa -cauncs held sn intense scspcnsio. he destruction of genius. Too o t _otherwise i wouldI not be rrecet the genius-allot- -his' inelyba dac :1 : ':cis-ite cf geni' aeeitihies to =-weigh this way -or ptcy. The trecc'nduscr p-w a' A _tre ke"'lymvarcof all ' crn 'ay be directed ia 5i . "155' s i'''et'Iive but'ver 'am of tl'c't tle :onyradult r sense. But in e incr .cic i imt'ability, suceptb cam I ,: ,y tat f or sl t ciogct currnt. 1 n de y the mlomcenit pcysi-ccrt tt ., 5 is, sc ceptIc s cal .i_^.m. 'o deneration sets in, tcat e ,sy slightest impulse, but.unilI. mec=.t hisigenascVsan.es: tn'ss Ires t his balance tlIs .ay or r_ zg ove:'ttercreaionsbecame he rons a connecton with tt :- mn, ofhit, 'uental. anguish, si 'wn ': irnf.wiling 6cpply.- Te A New Line of GREETING CA RDS Select Yours Now! Shander'er - Seyfried a JEWELERS 34 SOUT H MAIN STR EET 6I4 lIN 6 -viml WEST HURON STREET ACROSS FROM D. U. R. STATION il I'VE BEEN SERVING THE BEST - FOR YEARS