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If I ask, “How do you get to Carnegie Hall?” you say, “Practice!” (Of course!) But back in 1891, Peter Tchaikovsky would have probably answered, “by ship” – since he had, in fact, sailed from Europe to conduct several of his pieces at the hall’s gala opening concerts.
The first concert in Carnegie Hall, or as they called it then, “The Music Hall,” occurred on today’s date in 1891, and included a performance of Tchaikovsky’s “Marche solennelle” or “Coronation March,” conducted by the composer.
The review in the New York Herald offered these comments: “Tchaikovsky’s Marche solennelle is simple, strong and sober, but not surprisingly original. The leading theme recalls the Hallelujah chorus, and the treatment of the first part is Handelian… Of the deep passion, the complexity and poetry which mark some other works of the composer’s, there is no sign in this march.”
Oh well, in the days that followed, Tchaikovsky would conduct other works of “complexity and poetry,” including his Third Orchestral Suite and First Piano Concerto.
During his American visit, Tchaikovsky kept a travel diary, and recorded these impressions of New York: "It is a huge city, not beautiful, but very original. In Chicago, I’m told, they have gone even further – one of the houses there has 21 floors!" |