FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   115   116   117   118   119   120   121   122   123   124   125   126   127   128   129   130   131   132   133   134   135   136   137   138   >>  
nch girl had just sung a group of songs in her own language and had won acclaim from the distinguished company present. They admired the rich quality of her voice, her easy, spontaneous tone production and clear diction. A brilliant future was predicted for the young singer. One critic of renown remarked: "It is a long time since I have heard a voice so well placed and trained." "And who is your teacher?" she was asked. "It is Mr. Duval; I owe everything to him. He has really made my voice; I have never had another teacher and all my success will be due to him," she answered. We at once expressed a desire to meet Mr. Duval and hear from his own lips how such results were attained. A meeting was easily arranged and we arrived at the appointed hour, just in time to hear one of the brilliant students of this American-French singing master. Mr. Duval is young, slim and lithe of figure, with sensitive, refined features, which grow very animated as he speaks. He has a rich fund of humor and an intensity of utterance that at once arrests the listener. He came forward to greet the visitor with simple cordiality, saying he was pleased we could hear one of his latest "finds." The young tenor was at work on an air from _Tosca_. His rich, vibrant voice, of large power and range and of real Caruso-like quality, poured forth with free and natural emission. With what painstaking care this wise teacher aided him to mold each tone, each phrase, till it attained the desired effect. Being a singer himself, Mr. Duval is able to show and demonstrate as well as explain. He does both with the utmost clearness and with unfailing interest and enthusiasm. Indeed his interest in each pupil in his charge is unstinted. The lesson over, Mr. Duval came over to us. "There is a singer I shall be proud of," he said. "Several years ago I taught him for a few months, giving him the principles of voice placement and tone production. This was in Europe. I had not seen him since then till recently, when circumstances led him to New York. He never forgot what he had previously learned with me. He now has a lesson every day and is a most industrious worker. I believe he has a fortune in that voice. Next season will see him launched, and he will surely make a sensation." "Will you give some idea of the means by which you accomplish such results?" "The means are very simple and natural. So many students are set on the wrong track by being tol
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   115   116   117   118   119   120   121   122   123   124   125   126   127   128   129   130   131   132   133   134   135   136   137   138   >>  



Top keywords:
teacher
 

singer

 

interest

 
lesson
 
students
 
simple
 

attained

 

results

 

natural

 

quality


brilliant
 
production
 

unstinted

 

giving

 

principles

 

charge

 

months

 

Indeed

 

taught

 

Several


clearness
 

phrase

 

language

 
desired
 

painstaking

 
effect
 
utmost
 

placement

 

unfailing

 

explain


demonstrate

 

enthusiasm

 
sensation
 
season
 

launched

 
surely
 

accomplish

 

fortune

 

circumstances

 

recently


Europe

 

acclaim

 
forgot
 

previously

 
industrious
 
worker
 

learned

 

poured

 
easily
 

arranged