Pge Four 'P E R S P EC T 1V E S THE' CONCERT... by James Jackson T UTTA RACCOLTA was to be the first number, and the audience swelled with anticipation. Here, far above the orderly heads of those in the orchestra, legs and arms fretted against close-confining seats. The milky lights blandly spying from the dome in the vaulted ceiling blinked against rising spouts of smoke which had seeped through entrance-wells in- to the great auditorium. People-siany of them-came out of tbe smoke and noise emanating from the corridors outside; they pushed and rubbed against each other, channeling here and there in pursuit of seats. Some drifted aimlessly within the currents, letting themselves be tossed up in one place after another. Others advanced with purpose, striving toward their des- tination, sifting accurately through the throngs. Ushers, with tags over their lapels, frowned and looked worried. This was the second balcony and they hated to be assigned to it. For there was none of the ease and assurance here of the orchestra and first balcony. In those regions, now liquid with animation, evening gowni fluttered into place effortlessly while men lounged about without disturbance. Here, as if the great distance from the sage lent unreality to the entire atmos- ohere, people behaved strangely, swirl- 'ry and settling into bristling mass for- nations. The eighth row in section H was full ?t last, an attendant noticed with re- lef; but the seventh still lacked two nccupants. The hour was eight-thirty-that set or the concert to begin. One could easily notice the solidarity ;f the members of row eight. In large 4nknown to each other heretofore, they 'ow assumed a familiarity which per- '-itted the exchange of banalities. With one eye they looked down at the far- away pates of those in the orchestra; ,cgether, they gazed about their own ealcony, adjusting their coats behind them as they examined the program. Consequently, wnen someone moved into the row'ahead, with its two empty seats, they came to attention as a unit. The intruder was a black man, his skin taut with polished darkness. And. when he turned to sit down, bowing and smil- Ing gracefully at those he ,had incon- venienced on his way in, they could note the sable-tendoned character of his xeck; lengthy powerful muscles of some African gazelle seemed to move there, with fawn-tan highlights playing smcothly over them as they rippled and stretched. Over his onyx skull, black grubs of tasir wriggled in regular intervals. He seated himself, unfolded his pro- gram, and smiled. By this time, the eighth row had lost interest, returning to the perusal of its neighbors and it- self. JTS ATTENTION, however, was again localized cn the preceding row, this time arubity, when a faint gasp rose rom the first of its members and con- tinued down the line. It moved parallel o the passage of a woman. She was the cause of this mutual exclamation, for he formed the perfect day to the night of the one who had preceded her. Her hair was of a platinum, almost dead- white shade-a lack of colour matched exactly in her complexion. On the crest sf her chalky head, a small navy-blue velvet hat bobbed confidently, anchored securely by a deep-wine tie which swept 'up several foamy wavelets of hair in its grasp. Hers was a whiteness artificial iut complete. Eyes followed her. For some reason here was uncertainty, yet inevitability about her destination. There was only one seat vacant, and that one, unde- niably, was immediately adjacent to the black man's. Still it seemed unbelievable-too good to be true. They all waited, breathless, as she neared his knees. Tucking them under the seat with neat obeisance, he smiled as she twisted around before her place. Relieved, the members of row eight sighed and settled back to their gossip. Yet there were some who could not ignore this startling contrast. To them, Three seats further on. another prob- lein was presented. "I thought her accompanist would be the same . . . you know." Someone else spoke up worriedly. "It must put him on the spot . . . about taking her into hotels . . . and the rest." But the black man in the row ahead let these remarks pass without notice. He smiled down on the heads far be- low. This was the world's greatest con- tralto. This was the contralto of his race. feared, yet anticipated with some en- thusiasm, a sneezing fit. In the meantime, the black man's joy had waned from his face. To this second half of the program were as- signed those songs so eagerly awaited, by many admirers of the great contral- to, the negro spirituals. These had made her famous in their minds. These had made her adored in his soul; but tonight they caused dismay in the latter. The girl had appeared again beside him, still frigid, still poised tensely. He could not enjoy the group of songs leading up to the spirituals. Ear- lier, he had thought longingly of her Songs to the Dark Virgin. With uneasi- ness, he let himself slip into the rhythmed magic of their notes. "Would that I were a jewel . . . that all my shin- ing brilliance might fall at thy feet thou dark one . . . " His raven-skinned fingers, with their oddly-shaped nails, fumbled at the program. When the ris- ing, throaty triumph of her organ-hued voice glistered through the auditorium to his seat, he trembled. Her shadowy, proudly artistic lips carried a message to him. "Would that I were a garment, a shimmering, silken garment, that all my folds might wrap about thy body, absorb thy body, hold and hide thy body, thou dark one ... . His heart rose with the tremours in his neck and arms. "Would that Iwere a flame, but one sharp, leaping flame .to annihilate thy body, thou dark one!" But his feeling was not selfish. In- stead, a rush of benevolence, of friend- liness, all-inclusive in its scope, swept over him. He loked at the wrist with its white accompanying hand coiling over the arm rest beside him. The time hadhcome for the famous spirituals. His uneasiness returned di- seased with fear. WITH THEIR OPENING TONES, something new came into his body. The lithe neck muscles looped and arched in rhythm primeval. The jungle- eyed gazelle throbbed there, torpid swamp snakes writhed into his arms, and the worms of his hair started. Still, he appreciated hIs surroundings. But they had become distant, familiar yet strange, and choked with cruel re- membrances. He let his coat slip to the floor so that unimpeded he might react to the ancient mystery of the spiritual. When a spurt of applause broke for a moment into his fascination, he felt, as if com- municated by dimly-known currents, a new but meaningful rigidity in the person next to him. Those cottony fing- ers, with their scarlet nails, clung to the arm in nervous fixation, while the arrogant hat trembled on its platinum throne. She had leaned forward. Again, the long, rhythm-rocked ca- dences lulled over his consciousness, and once again that feeling of all-pervading friendliness possessed his neck and tingled into his arms and black-knot- ted hands. The music was approaching its cli- max. The girl's last fit of applause had been hypnotic in its intensity. A woman was sneezing wildly. Again, her fingers gripped the arm rest, this time with renewed tenacity. Perhaps she wished to share it-as he did-as the gazelle lets his mate lean her neck also upon his convenient bough. With the hammered beat of "trampin,' trampin,' trying to make heaven my home," surging against him, he laid his black hands, their ebony glowing transfigured through his finger- nails, upon her smooth, frost-white arms, letting the chastened spirit of his (Continued on Page 11) Illustrated by CLIFFORD GRAHAM something out of the ordinary had hap- pened-something which would bear watching. With the dimming of the opalescent lights overhead, the second balcony ap- peared to shelve forward. All faces, from orchestra to second balcony, leaned in- to fixed positions. Tutta raccolta came to them with rapture. They eyed the piano accompan- ist and the severe page-turner, but chiefly, they concentrated on the form, far-far-distant, of the great contralto. She had walked onto the stage over a white carpet, which now, lying peace- fully under her skirt-hidden feet, marked firm contrast to the rich pur- ple of her dignified gown and the dusky- dark tonality of her voice and racial colouring. Der flote weich gefuhl buoyed over great silent shafts of air to them, then A Bruno vestiti. He first group of selections was fin- ished. She had left the stage with gen- tle, stately bows in their direction. The eighth row whispered. "How much weight do you think she's lost?" asked one woman of her neigh- bor. That one didn't know, but she in turn wondered how much the pearls around her neck must have cost. He grinned around him. The platinum girl was as rigid as frost in the next seat. rTO BURSTS OF APPLAUSE the next songs, several of them by Schubert, were sung. Ever with majestic self-pos- session, the singer received their rec- ognition. The black man was athrob with joy. He had forgotten the "No, no don't hope, hope is dead," the "Weep, O my thoughts," of an earlier song. His neck muscles twitched with refinement to Die Rose, becoming taut with Auf dem Wasser zu singen, and relaxing sveltly under the spell of Der Doppel- ganger. While the last song and the last encore before intermission were in pro- gress, he had settled comfortably into the narrow recesses of his seat. He had given up both arm rests, the one to his right to the minute intrusion of the platinum girl's ivory wrist and .hand, and the one on his left to the besuited forearm of a short man. His frank ap- plause at the end completely obliterated the polite noise created by the one sit- ting so upright and cold beside him. The intermission was over. Under pink hat-feathers, matters had been de- cided. One woman 'loved to hear good music, but tonight she had a cotd you know.' She and her company of friends