Show T. T I-GI I G Is ls perhaps the form torm of or music music music mu mu- S SINGING sic which gives the most real pleasure pleasure pleas- pleas ure tire that Is Is If It It Is well lone done A voice olce of ot beautiful quality full tull of ot spirit and feeling will stir and life lite the soul soulas as nothing else can While wind Ind reed and stringed Instruments instrument have an apPeal appeal appeal ap ap- ap- ap peal all their own and their wall wail their JO Joy their tenderness are not to bo be re resisted re- re FIsted it takes the human voice to clutch the heart strings s and play pIa upon them the tho true life melodies that depict the everyday emotions the peoples people's constant companions Most 1 of the songs song that are sung and certainly tho the very best ones have music music mu mu- sic Ic and words so well adapted to each other that either given alone though It be a gem in Itself loses Its charm Tho The more mere fact tact that a per person on possesses pos fe ses a voice oice of or exceptional quality Is Isby isby b by no mean means an ln Indication that his warbling Is the most pleasing There here are arc a number of ot component elements that must be he taken Into consideration before a singer er Is an artist A voice ma may be untrained yet ret clear enunciation tion and soul will go AO far tar toward maltIng malt malt- Ing that voice one that thal multitudes will vill listen n to with bated breath Just as aR uncho unschooled un un- schooled cho led orators often orten win throngs of oC people b by their Indomitable t force and fearless tearless speech According to some authorities an an analysis analysis an- an of the tile artl artist t places soul first firt lr t en enunciation u n C I a t I 0 n i d ca careful ue to I training third stage presence fourth and Intelligent Intel Intel- use of them all fifth It Is not c exaggerating to say a that a majority of those tho-lc who sing In public excluding vaudeville lIle performers are not eligible performers speaking from the tIle strictly artistic point of or view be because because because be- be cause 11 1 they enunciate so poorly that th the audiences are In many Instances unable even ven to to discover el In what ton tongue ue their songs are ar being sung Iun Sometimes the facial expression will give Jhc a hint as to the meaning which U the composer In Intended int In- In t tended to convey cone but hut more often orten the singer stands tand-l stolidly as If It he wore were a CI figure ure placed on t the he stage ta o to move automatically while the music Is being b sent front from behind the scones or orthe orthe orthe the facial contortions arc aue so pronounced that ono one ml might ht easily be be- led 10 to think that the Hie artist 11 Is being put through tho the third cl degree Most Io t have ha seen to It that their melodies es arc are attractive e but they ther have ha also put IUt much thought u ht the wor words s and It I l Itt- but ju just jUHt t that both re receive re- re equal attention In the rendition otherwise c the songs au s become h tiresome Jumbles that weary j the lIst listener nci nei The Thc presentation of lI new Ol opera ra of or Don In LonIon London London Lon Lon- don Ion last month was an utter litter failure a and o have been merciless In their Judgment of or It The rite fa fat talt t that It Is a plagiarism ma may be excused e because c It ItIs Itis itis Is natural t. t to portray similar sitUations situations sit sit- It- It with the tho same style t of or music but there Is no excuse to offer ocr for tho the lack of clearness and an enunciation which spoiled Its production A few tew of ot tho criticisms what whar ext extent nt the j public b lc Is s' s affected d by such shortcomings In ings Observer says RaS The opera Is In no sense British Lord Lor do Walden's gods gols are arc British h. h hut but their spirit I If i Teutonic and their language almost as difficult to tn understand as Wagner's Wagners text I Is to an Englishman who knows a little German Ger Ger- man Nothing has been left leCt undone to tomake tomake tomake make The Tue Children of or Don a success but no singing acting or conducting or mounting could make malco It anything but buta a n dull and pretentious Imitation ol ot Wagner Arthur conducted th the orchestra orchestra or or- chestra so admirably that the greatest g number of curtain calls went deservedly deserved deserved- ly 1 to him The Tho work was of or course sung ung In n J-n English lIsh but It night might as well wll have brer hn Not ot one word In OO was wasU U understandable n 1 C rs t an d abi e. e Except that Mr Ir Holbrooke used groups roUs of oo wood winds 1 In an Individual manner the tho score is h Just an Imitation of Wagner I noticed also that a serpentine ser seT Strauss like figure occasionally occasional occasional- ly h wiggled up UTI and down the tho orchestra The Children of or Don allen already an RU old fashioned opera W was R performed In English but I think I heard henr no more than two complete completo sentences This failure Is of or a graver ra import than tItan at nt first appears because It Is such a R severe blow to the tIme enterprise of ot establishing establishing- English l opera If H. with BO so much at at stake tn leo a man of or Hummer Hummer- steins stein's experience experienc and ability can make e such a failure t what Is to be he expected of or tho the singer of or lesser talent and experience who Is lax ax about principles prin prin- as aR fundamental as Is enunciation enunciation tion t i 0 Ii A thing that Is la worth doing at allIs all allIs allis Is worth doing well and singing certainly certainly comes under this category The singer er Is I to ho blamed less p. p 1 for his deficiencies than titan tho the friends who In their efforts to please flatter him him Into thinking that his faults are few to and unimportant If you ou have a pride In your friends and the standard that thatIs Is 18 to be maintained b by your our town bemore bo he hemore more frank and more kind In iii your our criticism of ot your our friends and their heir musical efforts DE r. r 4 A At t the tIme convention of ot tiu th the American merican Society of or Mechanical Engineers In InCI CI Cleveland land t a n short time u ago UKO o Dr Da Dayton Dayton Day Day- ton C C. Miller of the the- Case CaRe School of Applied Science of or Cleveland CI made a public dc before a largo 1110 au- au of hl his nw now invention the phon- phon which photographs sound waves and by l' an Ingenious system of en enlargement en- en makes them thorn visible With a horn a sensitive c diaphragm a small bit of or mirror a flash of ot lI light ht and ancl magnifying lenses 8 Dr Miller gives heK the picture of or the tone of or a violin a clarinet a n flute a trombone a Idano pi piano Id- Id ano Rno and anti best beRt of all of or the human n voice olee In every over possible variation of or orI I pitch Itch and amid color tint When hen Dr Miller says bays that tha l the sound picture of or tho the voice one sees seon In is 2000 times Its actual size ones one's ideas of or the sound waves In an un auditorium have llave to be ue entirely readjusted from the thou thought of or u vague ue floating things occupying oc oe- oc- oc copying an appreciable space I to a a sense of or nn fineness and 1101 minuteness that l snakes makes s It H oa easy cany Y to comprehend wh why the presence of or large largo hats In audiences not only mars the character of ot the sound Round waves l but obstructs their passage pass age to lo the ears cars of or the listener What Is tho the secret of ot the tone cue of or the oboe What makes a n melancholy unto note In music Why 11 1 II is the tone tones of the tho violin so clear so o l' l resonant 1 And why vh Is the clarinet the most capable or of nil all time the Ye We 1111 sa say It I 18 hec au or of th mid and the thc o l Tue 1110 violin hIS a been said l by I t to teen of these C component tones Di Milici tells ua Uti I 1 14 f tf P 1 1 iI L r 1 iJ f I H- H Ht t 1 i n tl r. r i 1 r j 4 tU d- d u 1 f 1 J kt k r fri II t- t J Jr j f Z 0 ij i L r 3 I 7 TT I Yo 1 e 2 I 1 iros r i i os iQ i F. 1 f It q 1 i g t I r. r i 7 ct f J ii I 11 1 f it i c cb t b il I H i s s- s j s r wi I IT c- c cJ J- J ari TV S rm e L W t p j T f t i I.- I. t i f. f r f ar t fL Jr k j r fT J r. r rf w- w wJ J i J J j I i g I f- f k n i fl f Ip I- i L 11 rf t L t c r i.-r o. J J r fn i r L a p T 1 r f S.- S. p a tr f 4 fi ll I 0 f 3 r 1 iii I erA f t b 1 i Jf oSO v i l' l ii i i J J ri u r- r i. i I f nO ti J-ti V r F 1 y lJ r r rf f j o. o oi J 1 fU- fU 8 ji f ff f fl C 1 1 1 I J r f f 1 f r. J Jr r T f j 1 F- F 4 i t l Jf r J. t li li tl j ti r t I r iJ i 1 J r Hi li tW J f ij V W f t i if wt f i l t t tr r i i o i t t k It i 1 J t I tr- tr J i 1 t f I- I r. of i I r r rt i. i ii fJ f.- f. J l b IM 1 r I J i- i iF O. O F t f r 11 1 l lt t 1 r j il r. r f o i l. l J r f. f 0 p 1 j r C MISS IRENE WILDE Who mn made c her Jer first appearance before rc a Sa Salt t Lako Lake audience a af at the Vir fJ rec recital given at ut the First Congregational ional church June 28 She pos pos- ses s- s es s C es a a. soprano voice oice Voice of rare sweetness that hat won tier her instant favor however that In his experiments with Ith wood-wind wood instruments he ie has has' the tho ono resultant tone which we hear henr from 1 the tho clarinet Moreover he shows them to us In a n photo photograph raph In n order to analyze the sound waves wa Dr Miller u uses cs an Jn Instrument of or his own Invention c consisting n of or a combination combination combi combi- nation of or little discs each of ot which r records cords ml measurements while a t device like a pencil draws the wa wavy line before your eVes ees Agreements J or In the curves signify accentuation ac ac- ac- ac of certain qualities In the tone chara characteristic of tho the Instrument Played ed Another machine recomposes lie tho curving lines the lines the simple or partial partial par par- tones tones and recreates the till picture of ot the tIme voice of the flute lute the time bassoon the lie human voice olce or even of ot the time chorus or orchestra The sound of ot an nn orchestra Is If one voice though i we rarely think of or It as such uch and antI each cach of or its component compo compo- nent parts part records Its lino line In th ly analysis sis RIH of or its Ils sounds Its picture Is Its a 1 rou rough h. h fuzz fuzzy thing lung compared with the lie record of or a boys boy's soprano voice ono one of or the simplest and least complicated rated of or sounds n An animals animal's voice olce a screech or a R scream has a wilderness of ot zigzags Mrs IrR Dwight 1 K IL who was Amy Osborne of or Salt Sall Lake Is Just home from Dallas Tex where here she sho found such a cordial welcome awaiting her lieI The news that Mrs Hartman had lund hada lunda a rich contralto voice spread rapidly and she was Immediately tel besieged cd b by hI churches and musical organizations or to sing for tor them While there thero are good tenors and baritones Dallas Is short on contraltos a tact fact that made Mrs Irs Hartman especially welcome Mrs J. J H. H Cas Cassidy ld organist who Is 18 the J. J J. J McClellan of ot Dallas at once asked Mrs Ir Hartman to sing for her and was wasso wasso wasso so Impressed with her voice that she proceeded to place Mrs Hartman Hortman In Inas Inas inas as many positions as aN she cou could till flu Mrs Ir Hartman has signed contracts with tlC the Jewish Temple quartet and the lie Grace Methodist church for tor the coming year and has three more moro offers for tor church singing Mrs Hartman has been particularly appreciated b by tho the Trinity church of Dallas Just before returning home Mrs Hartman took part pan In a benefit concert for tor the Christian n church given b by tho the Dallas Glee club of ot thirty men inca and was vas the tho contralto soloist It will be remembered that last spring Mrs Ils Hartman was one of ot the time soloists of or the Dallas Ma Slay festival and was given several places on tho the pro pro- grim gram 01 An added point of ot Interest connected with the May Ia t festival sll Is that Carl the conductor of ot the tho Dallas Is the original orchestra Music Master whom David Jilts has made so O famous Mrs Irs Hartman says that the lie studio la hi on one 1 of the most beautiful and interesting that lint sho ho hc bus Ims ever cr Dallas I Is li a a. musical center anti and has many mu musicians s of superlative quality t Tho rho musical program given givon during the lit luncheon hour at the Commercial club on Saturday wax waN especially pleas pleas- ing The trio of young oung artists artist t. t Miss lIss White Miss Helen Hartley and Miss Marion Marlon Matthews gave guve th the fol- fol numbers number with their characteristic character character- fine fino technique and In Interpretation Spring Selection electron Spring Maid My 1 Heart at nt Thy Sweet Voice aint Swing Swine Song Barnes Selection Alma t Iora Dvorak The TIme Swan Saint Sack nolt Selection Selection Balkan Princess s Schumann ul c J Miss Irene Wilde Ii who recently came caine cameto to Salt from Detroit Mich 1 has haK been beon quite an un acquisition to local musical mu mu- musical I steal circles While hll heard at nt several solices ees Miss Wilde lIde did not appear to tho the public until tho of or Juno when sho she won a tI host of admirers almir- almir ers erR with her beautiful sympathetic V 0 I c e. e Miss lIss lIdo studied under Professor SOl Marshall Peas of or the Detroit Conservatory Conservatory Con Con- of Music and Hul two years con I prior to her hel lieu lieu- coming to Salt Satt Lake Lako sang ong 4 I with the tho quartet of ot the Cass Case Avenue Methodist Episcopal church Miss Wilde u will be bo l Identified with the choir of of St. St Marks Mark's cathedral where where she she wI will sing a n. solo today at atlie atthe atthe the lie mornIng service Beside J possessing oss a rich soprano voice of ot great sweetness and a personality per per- of rare charm Miss Iss Wilde Is fond of or athletics and is 11 an oarsman ability of at no ito mean One thing which distinguishes and shows the calibre of ot Miss Wildes Wilde's at at- Is that she sho loves byes and sings the simple soul melodies th that that only t only the truly great can sing with success X The tc following program will be give gi el c cat at Liberty Libert park today loday from 3 to 5 G p. p m. m by b the Klenke Mollerup-Klenke band C. C Mollerup conductor March March Alhambra Alhambra ParIs Chamber Chambers Overture Jolly Joly Jolly Robbers F suppa Selection The Selection The Wizard of ot the thus Nile NUo Victor Herbert Harbert Carmen Carmon ut ii Toreadors Song Song- from front G. G Waltz Waltz Sweet Sweet Reflections Carl F Fisher her Selection from Chocolate Soldier Soldier- Oscar Straus Quartet tro front from n RIgoletto G G. G Verdi The Thie The Girl of ot M My Dreams Dreama Karl arl Hoschna Bits from Alma Where Do You Live Jean March March Buffalo Buffalo News Sews J. J Finale Star Spangled Star Spangled Banner I The program lor tor the concert at Pioneer Plo Pio neer park from 6 to 8 p. p m. m todAY fol I lows vs o March Moving March Moving Plumes F 11 F F. Miner Overture Overture Belle Belle of or the Village P. P Bouillon American Patrol F F. W W. Meacham Medley Overture Overture Bits Bits of ot POI Popular ular jilts II R. R Rocker Bocker Potpourri Worlds potpourri Worlds World's Peace Jubilee E. E Boy Boyr Boyt r Toreadors Song from Carmen by request Bizot BIzot Selection Southern Selection Southern Plantation Songs Take e Mo Back to the Garden of ot Love Popular March Frat March Frat John Barth Banner Danner Finale Star Star Spangled 4 jc A baseball team of ot concert artists is Js isa isa a project upon which Is expending expending expend expend- ing more thOU thought lt th than n upon his autumn tour under |