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St James's Hall

St. James's Hall was a concert hall in London that opened on 25 March 1858, designed by architect and artist Owen Jones, who had decorated the interior of the Crystal Palace.[1] It was situated between the Quadrant in Regent Street and Piccadilly, and Vine Street and George Court. There was a frontage on Regent Street, and another in Piccadilly. Taking the orchestra into account, the main hall had seating for slightly over 2,000 persons.[2] It had a grand hall 140 feet (43 m) long and 60 feet (18 m) broad, the seating was distributed between ground floor, balcony, gallery and platform and it had excellent acoustics.[3] On the ground floor were two smaller halls, one 60 feet (18 m) square; the other 60 feet (18 m) by 55 feet (17 m).[4] The Hall was decorated in the 'Florentine' style, with features imitating the great Moorish Palace of the Alhambra. The Piccadilly facade was given a Gothic design, and the complex of two restaurants and three halls was hidden behind Nash's Quadrant.[5] Sir George Henschel recalled its 'dear old, uncomfortable, long, narrow, green-upholstered benches (pale-green horse-hair) with the numbers of the seats tied over the straight backs with bright pink tape, like office files.'[6]

Interior of St. James's Hall, 1858

The Hall was built jointly by two music publishing firms, Chappell & Co. and Cramer & Co., in the hope of attracting the growing audiences for fine musical performances that attended the Crystal Palace and the halls being built in the provinces.[5] It stood empty for nearly a year after its opening.[7] For almost half a century thereafter, the Hall was London's principal concert hall,[8] to be succeeded by Queen's Hall in the 1900s and later by Wigmore Hall, the Royal Albert Hall and Royal Festival Hall. It became famous for its 'Monday Pops' concerts and Ballad Concerts, as the home of the Philharmonic Society and the Christy Minstrels and for the many famous conductors and performers who gave important performances there.

Opening

The first performance at the hall was The Hymn of Praise, sung by the Vocal Association, under Julius Benedict.[9] Sims Reeves sang Beethoven's 'Adelaide' there (the first of many successes), accompanied by Arabella Goddard, in a concert at the end of May 1858. According to Reeves' biographer, 'The hall itself met with general approval, but the arrangements for chorus and orchestra were severely condemned.'[9] In the same year, one of the first complete performances of J.S. Bach's St Matthew Passion to be heard in England was given there under William Sterndale Bennett, with Sims Reeves, Helen Lemmens-Sherrington, Charlotte Sainton-Dolby and Willoughby Weiss.[10]

The Christy Minstrels

 
1874 Advertisement

The hall became known for its continuous production of blackface minstrelsy from 1862 until 1904.[11][12] Known as the Christy Minstrels and later the Moore and Burgess Minstrels, the Hall's resident minstrel troupe performed in one of the smaller halls located on the ground floor near the restaurant, below the main hall.[13] Gilbert and Sullivan's 1893 comic opera, Utopia, Limited, contains a joke in which the Court of St. James's is purposely confused with St. James's Hall and its minstrel shows, and a parody of a minstrel number is included in the same scene.[14]

In residence for the whole active life of the hall, the Minstrels had their permanent home there, but their interests often conflicted with those of the main hall. In January 1890, for instance, George Bernard Shaw wrote:

At the Hallé orchestral concert... I was inhumanly tormented by a quadrille band which the proprietors of St James's Hall (who really ought to be examined by two doctors) had stationed within earshot of the concert-hall. The heavy tum-tum of the basses throbbed obscurely against the rhythms of Spohr and Berlioz all the evening, like a toothache through a troubled dream; and occasionally, during a pianissimo, or in one of Lady Hallé's eloquent pauses, the cornet would burst into vulgar melody in a remote key, and set us all flinching, squirming, shuddering, and grimacing hideously.'[15]

Only a fortnight later, the band, at first subdued, broke out in a 'wild strain of brazen minstrelsy' during the final bars of the funeral march in the Eroica Symphony. After the movement was applauded a member of the audience began calling out that a complaint should be lodged, and won general approval, hear, hear, and people standing up to look at him.[16] On one occasion Lady Henschel and her daughter went to hear Joseph Joachim play at a Saturday 'Pop', but were so aware of the 'rhythmic gay sounds, thumping and shimmering away in a most enlivening manner', that they decided to go and hear Moore and Burgess instead.[17]

Monday and Saturday 'Pops' and Ballad Concerts

Samuel Arthur Chappell, one of the brothers in the Chappell & Co. firm of Bond Street music publishers, who concentrated on selling brass and woodwind instruments, together with his brother Thomas, devised the idea of the Monday Popular Concerts, which established the fame and popularity of the hall.[18] George Bernard Shaw reported that the concerts at the hall contributed greatly to the spread and enlightenment of musical taste in England.[19] Monday 'Pops' were held in the evening, and Saturday 'Pops' on Saturday afternoons. These were chamber-concerts. Their programmes were almost exclusively 'classical', and consisted of piano and organ recital, singers, violinists, string quartets and other chamber ensemble.[20] They were managed by John Boosey, and later by William Boosey, together with Chappell. In 1861 the Musical World observed: 'classical chamber music of the highest order is brought week after week within the reach of the shilling paying masses as it has now been no less than fifty-two times at St James's Hall.... swelling the total of the Monday Popular Concerts to no less than sixty-three within two years of their foundation.... Such a result is unparalleled in the history of musical entertainments.'[21]

George Bernard Shaw gives an interesting narrative of the 'Pops' between 1888 and 1894.[22] Shaw admired the Joachim Quartet, led either by Joachim himself or often by Mme Wilma Norman-Neruda (Lady Hallé) (and later still by Eugène Ysaÿe), with ('modest') L. Ries (2nd violin), ('solemn') Herr Strauss (viola) and the ('gentle') cellist Alfredo Piatti. This was certainly the 'star turn' in that period.[23] They frequently played full works, or even groups of works, at the 'Pops': their larger ensemble was often heard in the Beethoven septet. Among soloists heard in 1888-90 (the 31st and 32nd seasons)[24] were Charles Hallé, Alma Haas (Beethoven op. 110), Agnes Zimmerman (Waldstein), Edvard Grieg, Bernhard Stavenhagen (Schumann Papillons), Arthur de Greef (Chopin), pianists; Joseph Joachim (Brahms), Mme Norman Neruda, (Bach concerto for 2 violins), violin; Bertha Moore, Charles Santley (Erlkönig, To Anthea), Marguerite Hall (Schubert, Brahms, Henschel), singers.[25] The concerts were mixed, often consisting of a chamber-work, some songs, and instrumental solos.

The Hall became known for the "London Ballad Concerts", which began in the 1860s and moved in January 1894 to Queen's Hall. They "were started... by Messrs Boosey 'for the performance of the CHOICEST ENGLISH VOCAL MUSIC by the MOST EMINENT ARTISTS'."[26]

The Philharmonic Society

The Philharmonic Society of London, founded 1813, until 1869 gave its concerts in its rooms at Hanover Square, which had seating for only about 800. The Society decided to move permanently to St James's Hall, and a complimentary additional concert, held at St James's Hall, was given to its subscribers at the end of the 1868-69 season. Charles Santley, Charles Hallé, Thérèse Tietjens and Christina Nilsson were the soloists.[27] When the move was made, the Society remodelled its charges to obtain a wider audience and compete with the Crystal Palace and other large venues, and introduced annotated programmes. The Society remained at the hall until 28 February 1894, when it moved to the Queen's Hall.[28]

There were major events in 1870–71, when a Beethoven centenary season was held, with all nine symphonies performed. The bust of Beethoven by Johann Nepomuk Schaller was presented to the Society and collected (in Pest, Hungary) by Sir William Cusins. It was exhibited at the Society's first concert in 1871, and a replica was placed at the front of the platform at every Philharmonic concert thereafter. The Society's Gold Medal incorporated an image of the bust. Another major event of 1871 was the original presentation of medals to ten distinguished musicians.[29]

Notable Philharmonic performers at St James's Hall

In 1871, Charles Gounod conducted a concert of his music. In 1873 Brahms's A German Requiem had its English premiere; Edward Lloyd first sang before the Society; and Hans von Bülow made his London debut, playing Beethoven's "Emperor" concerto and Bach's Chromatic Fantasia and Fugue. In 1874, Pablo de Sarasate and Camille Saint-Saëns played there, and in 1875, August Wilhelmj. Other Philharmonic Society highlights of the next few years included performances by George Henschel, Xaver Scharwenka, Émile Sauret, Joseph Joachim and Edward Dannreuther.[30]

Changes of management were introduced in 1881 following the Society's recovery from a financial crisis. Concerts were moved from Monday to Thursday evenings, to make way for the Monday Night Popular Chamber-Concerts, known as the 'Pops'.[31] The 1881 season included two performances of Berlioz's Roméo et Juliette; Scharwenka gave the British premiere of his Piano Concerto No. 2, and Eugen d'Albert and Emma Albani appeared before the Society. Over the next two years many choral works were given with the Philharmonic Choir, including works by Franz Liszt, Anton Rubinstein, Weber, Beethoven and Brahms.[32]

In 1883, Cusins retired as conductor, and for one season there was a team of honorary conductors. Antonín Dvořák conducted his Sixth Symphony (although it was referred to as "Symphony No. 1") in March 1884. Sir Arthur Sullivan conducted the concerts of 1885–87, and as guest conductors, Dvořák, Moritz Moszkowski and Saint-Saëns were heard in works written for the Society. Among the soloists were Tivadar Nachéz, Fanny Davies, Lillian Nordica, Ella Russell, Emma Nevada, Józef Hofmann and František Ondříček.[33] Most notably Saint-Saëns's Symphony No. 3 (Saint-Saëns) written at the behest of the Society, and premiered there on 19 May 1886.

F. H. Cowen succeeded Sullivan as conductor from 1888–92. In his first season Edvard Grieg played his Piano Concerto in A minor and Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky made his first appearance before an English audience, introducing two works. Johan Svendsen and Charles-Marie Widor also conducted in that season, and Clara Schumann made her farewell performance to the Society. Tchaikovsky returned in 1889 to conduct his Piano Concerto No. 1 with Wassily Sapellnikoff making his English debut (who three years later created a furor with the Liszt E flat concerto); and Agathe Backer-Grøndahl and Eugène Ysaÿe also made their English debuts. In 1890, Dvořák conducted his Fourth Symphony. Paderewski, who gave four recitals at St. James's Hall for his début in 1890, returned there for the Society in 1891 to perform the Saint-Saëns' C minor, and the Rubinstein D minor, concerti. Leonard Borwick and Frederic Lamond also performed there for the Society. Cowen gave many concerts of contemporary English composers such as Sullivan, Hubert Parry, Alexander Mackenzie, Charles Villiers Stanford, and of his own works.[34]

In 1892 Alexander Mackenzie succeeded Cowen. In the 1893 season, Tchaikovsky gave the English premiere of his Fourth Symphony, Saint-Saëns conducted his Le Rouet d'Omphale and played his G minor concerto, and Max Bruch conducted his own Second Violin Concerto with Ladislas Gorski as soloist. In November 1893, a presentation was made to the Society's Secretary Francesco Berger in appreciation of ten years service. Soon afterwards, Queen's Hall opened its doors, and the Society moved there in the following February.[35]

Subscription Concerts

Hans Richter often conducted Richard Wagner concerts at St. James's Hall, beginning in 1877.[36] These 'Orchestral Festival Concerts' (established regularly in 1879 by the violinist Hermann Franke[37]), which commenced after Easter, were among the chief rivals to the Philharmonic Society programmes. At the time of Arthur Sullivan's resignation of the Philharmonic conductorship, the Society suggested to Richter that he might become its conductor, and the two series of concerts might be amalgamated under the Society's supervision. Richter did not accept the plan.[38]

In addition to Richter's series, there was also a nine-year winter series of subscription concerts established and conducted by George Henschel, including a full cycle of Beethoven symphonies in one year, and a rare performance of Richard Wagner's Symphony. The content was planned against a 'permanent background' of Beethoven and Brahms. Helen Henschel refers to 'the famous Wagner cat' which inhabited the Hall. It was said to walk onto the stage during rehearsals whenever any work by Wagner was being played, but never otherwise.[39]

Shaw refers to both, noting that Richter's concerts were too expensive, and that Henschel's orchestra was too small.[40]

Readings by Charles Dickens

 
1868 Program book for the series of Dickens readings

In 1868, famed Victorian author Charles Dickens presented a final series of "Farewell Readings," at the hall, which commenced on the evening of October 6, with a program devoted to "Doctor Marigold" (from the Christmas Story) and "The Trial" from Pickwick. He had settled with his tour managers, Chappell & Co., on 100 readings for the princely sum of £8,000 pounds. Attendees would receive printed programs and Chappell's advertisements included the following statement:

It is scarcely necessary for Messrs. CHAPPELL and Co. to add that any announcement made in connexion with these FAREWELL READINGS will be strictly adhered to and considered final; and that on no consideration whatever will Mr. DICKENS be induced to appoint an extra night in any place in which he shall have been once announced to read for the last time.

The stalls were priced at five shillings, balcony seats at three, and general admission at one shilling. A new amenity, sofa stalls ("of which there will be a limited number only"), went for seven shillings.

The following year Dickens would have to cut a provincial tour short after collapsing showing symptoms of a mild stroke in Preston on 22 April 1869. When he had regained sufficient strength, he arranged, with medical approval, for a series of readings to partially make up to Chappell & Co. what they had lost due of his illness. There were to be twelve final performances, running starting on 11 January 1870 back at the hall. Dickens would give his last public reading here at 8:00 pm on the 15 March 1870. He died shortly thereafter on 9 June, having suffered another stroke.[41]

Other uses

The Bach Choir, established in 1875 under a founding committee including Sir George Grove and Sir John Stainer, had as a primary aim the introduction to England of Bach's Mass in B Minor. With a choir of between 200 and 250 voices, including the Swedish Nightingale, Jenny Lind, and under the baton of her husband, conductor Otto Goldschmidt, the Mass came to performance in April 1876 at St James's Hall, and a second performance was given a month later.[42]

Henry J. Wood performed the E minor organ concerto of Ebenezer Prout at the Hall with an orchestra under Joseph Barnby, in the late 1880s. Although the performance earned him much praise, he referred to the instrument as 'that terrible box of whistles at St. James's Hall'.[43] This had not seemed to bother Camille Saint-Saëns when he premiered his third Symphony there (in which two sections make extensive use of the organ) in 1886. Saint-Saëns was a fine organist, and was titulaire of Église de la Madeleine in Paris. If he had any objections to the organ of St. James Hall for the premier of his symphony, they do not appear in his writings.

The Stock Exchange Orchestral Society, founded 1883, originally played in the Prince's Hall Piccadilly, but transferred to St. James's Hall until 1894, when they moved to Queen's Hall.[44] In December 1893 Harry Plunket Greene and Leonard Borwick began their celebrated partnership in lieder recitals at the hall, which continued well into the new century. In 1895, the 16-year-old pianist Mark Hambourg gave a concert there under Henry J. Wood, in which he played three piano concerti.

The end of the Hall

 
The Philharmonic Hall (originally the new St James's Hall) in Great Portland Street as it appeared in 1917.

The Chappell ballad concerts were being managed by William Boosey in 1902, when the hall was owned by a private company. The controlling share was held by T. P. Chappell, chairman of Chappell's: he turned down a good offer to buy the hall because Boosey felt strongly about its old connection with the Saturday and Monday 'Pops' and the Chappell ballad concerts. But Chappell died in June 1902, and the other shareholders accepted a new offer without consulting Boosey, who was badly put out. Then Queen's Hall came into the market, and a friend of Boosey's acting in that interest pointed out that Queen's Hall would be worth much more if St James's Hall ceased to operate. Boosey realised that Messrs Chappell could benefit most by becoming lessors of Queen's Hall, and it was immediately arranged with the result that Chappell's controlled Queen's Hall from 1902 down to 1944.[45] The 11-year-old violinist Franz von Vecsey made his English debut at St James's Hall in April or early May 1904.[46] It continued in use until February 1905 when it was demolished.[8] The Piccadilly Hotel was afterwards built on the site.[47]

1907 building

A new St. James's Hall at Great Portland Street, (on a site previously occupied by St Paul's Church[47]) had its foundation stone laid by the Lord Mayor and Sherriffs on 20 April 1907.[48] It opened on 25 April 1908 with a series of promenade concerts performed by the newly formed St. James's Hall Orchestra under the musical directorship of Mr. Lyell Taylor.[49]

References

  1. ^ R. Elkin, Queen's Hall 1893-1941 (Ryder, London 1944), p. 16, note, says 1858.
  2. ^ Elkin 1944, 16.
  3. ^ R. Elkin, Royal Philharmonic - The Annals of the Royal Philharmonic Society (Ryder 1946), 67.
  4. ^ "Victorian London - Buildings, Monuments and Museums - St James's Hall" in the Victorian Dictionary
  5. ^ a b Hobhouse, Hermione. History of Regent Street (Macdonald and Jane's, London, 1975), p. 84 ISBN 0-362-00234-7
  6. ^ H. Henschel, When Soft Voices Die (Methuen, London 1949).
  7. ^ R. Pound, Sir Henry Wood (Cassell, London 1969), 34-35.
  8. ^ a b Survey of London: volumes 31 and 32, Chapter IV
  9. ^ a b C. Pearce, Sims Reeves - Fifty Years of Music in England (Stanley Paul, London 1924), pp. 205-07.
  10. ^ Reeves, Sims. My Jubilee: or, Fifty Years of Artistic Life (Simpkin, Marshall, London 1889), pp. 178-79. cf W. Sterndale Bennett (Ed.), Grosse Passions-Musik composed by John Sebastian Bach (Lamborn Cock, Hutchings, London 1862).
  11. ^ According to The Encyclopædia Britannica, eleventh edition, Vol. XXI, p. 726, the Christy Minstrels played at the theatre beginning in 1862 and later evolved into the Moore and Burgess Minstrels, which continued at the hall through 1904. See also this article.
  12. ^ Notes to "Ray Andrews Classic English Banjo," citing Reynolds, Harry: Minstrel Memories: The Story of Burnt Cork Minstrelsy in Great Britain 1836-1927 (London, 1928)
  13. ^ Elkin 1946, 67.
  14. ^ Utopia, Limited scene
  15. ^ G. B. Shaw, London Music in 1888-89 as heard by Corno di Bassetto, etc (Constable, London 1937), 299-300.
  16. ^ Shaw 1937, 305-306.
  17. ^ H. Henschel, When Soft Voices Die (Methuen, London 1949), 66-67.
  18. ^ Boosey, William. Fifty years of music, London: Ernest Benn Limited (1931)
  19. ^ Shaw 1937, 297.
  20. ^ Henschel 1949, 66-67.
  21. ^ C. Pearce 1924, pp. 231-32.
  22. ^ Shaw 1937, passim: G.B. Shaw, Musical Life in London 1890-1894 (Constable, London 1932), passim.
  23. ^ Henschel 1949, 66. (The epithets are George Henschel's.)
  24. ^ Monday 27 January 1890 was the 1105th Pop
  25. ^ Shaw 1937, 40-42, 59-61, 68, 297-99, 318, 336-338.
  26. ^ Elkin 1944, 91.
  27. ^ Elkin 1946, 65.
  28. ^ Elkin 1944, 52.
  29. ^ Elkin 1946, 67-71.
  30. ^ Elkin 1946, 72-73.
  31. ^ Elkin 1946, 76.
  32. ^ Elkin 1946, 77-78.
  33. ^ Elkin 1946, 79-80.
  34. ^ Elkin 1946, 82-85.
  35. ^ Elkin 1944, 52; Elkin 1946, 87-88.
  36. ^ Elkin 1944, 23.
  37. ^ Henschel 1949, 61.
  38. ^ Elkin 1946, 82.
  39. ^ H. Henschel, When Soft Voices Die (Methuen, London 1949), 69.
  40. ^ Shaw 1937, 59.
  41. ^ NYPL, Berg Collection
  42. ^ Elkin 1944, 62.
  43. ^ H. Wood, My Life of Music (Gollancz, London 1946 edition), 31.
  44. ^ Elkin 1944, 104.
  45. ^ Elkin 1944, 20-21.
  46. ^ Elkin 1944, 30.
  47. ^ a b Elkin 1944, 16, n.
  48. ^ "Court Circular", The Times, 6 April 1907, p. 7
  49. ^ "Concerts", The Times, 6 April 1908, p. 8

External links

  • Victorian London - St James's Hall (Victorian London)
  • Images of the first hall (British History On-line)

Coordinates: 51°30′34″N 0°8′12″W / 51.50944°N 0.13667°W / 51.50944; -0.13667

james, hall, theatre, sydney, australia, james, hall, sydney, james, hall, concert, hall, london, that, opened, march, 1858, designed, architect, artist, owen, jones, decorated, interior, crystal, palace, situated, between, quadrant, regent, street, piccadilly. For the theatre in Sydney Australia see St James Hall Sydney St James s Hall was a concert hall in London that opened on 25 March 1858 designed by architect and artist Owen Jones who had decorated the interior of the Crystal Palace 1 It was situated between the Quadrant in Regent Street and Piccadilly and Vine Street and George Court There was a frontage on Regent Street and another in Piccadilly Taking the orchestra into account the main hall had seating for slightly over 2 000 persons 2 It had a grand hall 140 feet 43 m long and 60 feet 18 m broad the seating was distributed between ground floor balcony gallery and platform and it had excellent acoustics 3 On the ground floor were two smaller halls one 60 feet 18 m square the other 60 feet 18 m by 55 feet 17 m 4 The Hall was decorated in the Florentine style with features imitating the great Moorish Palace of the Alhambra The Piccadilly facade was given a Gothic design and the complex of two restaurants and three halls was hidden behind Nash s Quadrant 5 Sir George Henschel recalled its dear old uncomfortable long narrow green upholstered benches pale green horse hair with the numbers of the seats tied over the straight backs with bright pink tape like office files 6 Interior of St James s Hall 1858 The Hall was built jointly by two music publishing firms Chappell amp Co and Cramer amp Co in the hope of attracting the growing audiences for fine musical performances that attended the Crystal Palace and the halls being built in the provinces 5 It stood empty for nearly a year after its opening 7 For almost half a century thereafter the Hall was London s principal concert hall 8 to be succeeded by Queen s Hall in the 1900s and later by Wigmore Hall the Royal Albert Hall and Royal Festival Hall It became famous for its Monday Pops concerts and Ballad Concerts as the home of the Philharmonic Society and the Christy Minstrels and for the many famous conductors and performers who gave important performances there Contents 1 Opening 2 The Christy Minstrels 3 Monday and Saturday Pops and Ballad Concerts 4 The Philharmonic Society 4 1 Notable Philharmonic performers at St James s Hall 5 Subscription Concerts 6 Readings by Charles Dickens 7 Other uses 8 The end of the Hall 9 1907 building 10 References 11 External linksOpening EditThe first performance at the hall was The Hymn of Praise sung by the Vocal Association under Julius Benedict 9 Sims Reeves sang Beethoven s Adelaide there the first of many successes accompanied by Arabella Goddard in a concert at the end of May 1858 According to Reeves biographer The hall itself met with general approval but the arrangements for chorus and orchestra were severely condemned 9 In the same year one of the first complete performances of J S Bach s St Matthew Passion to be heard in England was given there under William Sterndale Bennett with Sims Reeves Helen Lemmens Sherrington Charlotte Sainton Dolby and Willoughby Weiss 10 The Christy Minstrels Edit 1874 Advertisement The hall became known for its continuous production of blackface minstrelsy from 1862 until 1904 11 12 Known as the Christy Minstrels and later the Moore and Burgess Minstrels the Hall s resident minstrel troupe performed in one of the smaller halls located on the ground floor near the restaurant below the main hall 13 Gilbert and Sullivan s 1893 comic opera Utopia Limited contains a joke in which the Court of St James s is purposely confused with St James s Hall and its minstrel shows and a parody of a minstrel number is included in the same scene 14 In residence for the whole active life of the hall the Minstrels had their permanent home there but their interests often conflicted with those of the main hall In January 1890 for instance George Bernard Shaw wrote At the Halle orchestral concert I was inhumanly tormented by a quadrille band which the proprietors of St James s Hall who really ought to be examined by two doctors had stationed within earshot of the concert hall The heavy tum tum of the basses throbbed obscurely against the rhythms of Spohr and Berlioz all the evening like a toothache through a troubled dream and occasionally during a pianissimo or in one of Lady Halle s eloquent pauses the cornet would burst into vulgar melody in a remote key and set us all flinching squirming shuddering and grimacing hideously 15 Only a fortnight later the band at first subdued broke out in a wild strain of brazen minstrelsy during the final bars of the funeral march in the Eroica Symphony After the movement was applauded a member of the audience began calling out that a complaint should be lodged and won general approval hear hear and people standing up to look at him 16 On one occasion Lady Henschel and her daughter went to hear Joseph Joachim play at a Saturday Pop but were so aware of the rhythmic gay sounds thumping and shimmering away in a most enlivening manner that they decided to go and hear Moore and Burgess instead 17 Monday and Saturday Pops and Ballad Concerts EditSamuel Arthur Chappell one of the brothers in the Chappell amp Co firm of Bond Street music publishers who concentrated on selling brass and woodwind instruments together with his brother Thomas devised the idea of the Monday Popular Concerts which established the fame and popularity of the hall 18 George Bernard Shaw reported that the concerts at the hall contributed greatly to the spread and enlightenment of musical taste in England 19 Monday Pops were held in the evening and Saturday Pops on Saturday afternoons These were chamber concerts Their programmes were almost exclusively classical and consisted of piano and organ recital singers violinists string quartets and other chamber ensemble 20 They were managed by John Boosey and later by William Boosey together with Chappell In 1861 the Musical World observed classical chamber music of the highest order is brought week after week within the reach of the shilling paying masses as it has now been no less than fifty two times at St James s Hall swelling the total of the Monday Popular Concerts to no less than sixty three within two years of their foundation Such a result is unparalleled in the history of musical entertainments 21 George Bernard Shaw gives an interesting narrative of the Pops between 1888 and 1894 22 Shaw admired the Joachim Quartet led either by Joachim himself or often by Mme Wilma Norman Neruda Lady Halle and later still by Eugene Ysaye with modest L Ries 2nd violin solemn Herr Strauss viola and the gentle cellist Alfredo Piatti This was certainly the star turn in that period 23 They frequently played full works or even groups of works at the Pops their larger ensemble was often heard in the Beethoven septet Among soloists heard in 1888 90 the 31st and 32nd seasons 24 were Charles Halle Alma Haas Beethoven op 110 Agnes Zimmerman Waldstein Edvard Grieg Bernhard Stavenhagen Schumann Papillons Arthur de Greef Chopin pianists Joseph Joachim Brahms Mme Norman Neruda Bach concerto for 2 violins violin Bertha Moore Charles Santley Erlkonig To Anthea Marguerite Hall Schubert Brahms Henschel singers 25 The concerts were mixed often consisting of a chamber work some songs and instrumental solos The Hall became known for the London Ballad Concerts which began in the 1860s and moved in January 1894 to Queen s Hall They were started by Messrs Boosey for the performance of the CHOICEST ENGLISH VOCAL MUSIC by the MOST EMINENT ARTISTS 26 The Philharmonic Society EditThe Philharmonic Society of London founded 1813 until 1869 gave its concerts in its rooms at Hanover Square which had seating for only about 800 The Society decided to move permanently to St James s Hall and a complimentary additional concert held at St James s Hall was given to its subscribers at the end of the 1868 69 season Charles Santley Charles Halle Therese Tietjens and Christina Nilsson were the soloists 27 When the move was made the Society remodelled its charges to obtain a wider audience and compete with the Crystal Palace and other large venues and introduced annotated programmes The Society remained at the hall until 28 February 1894 when it moved to the Queen s Hall 28 There were major events in 1870 71 when a Beethoven centenary season was held with all nine symphonies performed The bust of Beethoven by Johann Nepomuk Schaller was presented to the Society and collected in Pest Hungary by Sir William Cusins It was exhibited at the Society s first concert in 1871 and a replica was placed at the front of the platform at every Philharmonic concert thereafter The Society s Gold Medal incorporated an image of the bust Another major event of 1871 was the original presentation of medals to ten distinguished musicians 29 Notable Philharmonic performers at St James s Hall Edit In 1871 Charles Gounod conducted a concert of his music In 1873 Brahms s A German Requiem had its English premiere Edward Lloyd first sang before the Society and Hans von Bulow made his London debut playing Beethoven s Emperor concerto and Bach s Chromatic Fantasia and Fugue In 1874 Pablo de Sarasate and Camille Saint Saens played there and in 1875 August Wilhelmj Other Philharmonic Society highlights of the next few years included performances by George Henschel Xaver Scharwenka Emile Sauret Joseph Joachim and Edward Dannreuther 30 Changes of management were introduced in 1881 following the Society s recovery from a financial crisis Concerts were moved from Monday to Thursday evenings to make way for the Monday Night Popular Chamber Concerts known as the Pops 31 The 1881 season included two performances of Berlioz s Romeo et Juliette Scharwenka gave the British premiere of his Piano Concerto No 2 and Eugen d Albert and Emma Albani appeared before the Society Over the next two years many choral works were given with the Philharmonic Choir including works by Franz Liszt Anton Rubinstein Weber Beethoven and Brahms 32 In 1883 Cusins retired as conductor and for one season there was a team of honorary conductors Antonin Dvorak conducted his Sixth Symphony although it was referred to as Symphony No 1 in March 1884 Sir Arthur Sullivan conducted the concerts of 1885 87 and as guest conductors Dvorak Moritz Moszkowski and Saint Saens were heard in works written for the Society Among the soloists were Tivadar Nachez Fanny Davies Lillian Nordica Ella Russell Emma Nevada Jozef Hofmann and Frantisek Ondricek 33 Most notably Saint Saens s Symphony No 3 Saint Saens written at the behest of the Society and premiered there on 19 May 1886 F H Cowen succeeded Sullivan as conductor from 1888 92 In his first season Edvard Grieg played his Piano Concerto in A minor and Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky made his first appearance before an English audience introducing two works Johan Svendsen and Charles Marie Widor also conducted in that season and Clara Schumann made her farewell performance to the Society Tchaikovsky returned in 1889 to conduct his Piano Concerto No 1 with Wassily Sapellnikoff making his English debut who three years later created a furor with the Liszt E flat concerto and Agathe Backer Grondahl and Eugene Ysaye also made their English debuts In 1890 Dvorak conducted his Fourth Symphony Paderewski who gave four recitals at St James s Hall for his debut in 1890 returned there for the Society in 1891 to perform the Saint Saens C minor and the Rubinstein D minor concerti Leonard Borwick and Frederic Lamond also performed there for the Society Cowen gave many concerts of contemporary English composers such as Sullivan Hubert Parry Alexander Mackenzie Charles Villiers Stanford and of his own works 34 In 1892 Alexander Mackenzie succeeded Cowen In the 1893 season Tchaikovsky gave the English premiere of his Fourth Symphony Saint Saens conducted his Le Rouet d Omphale and played his G minor concerto and Max Bruch conducted his own Second Violin Concerto with Ladislas Gorski as soloist In November 1893 a presentation was made to the Society s Secretary Francesco Berger in appreciation of ten years service Soon afterwards Queen s Hall opened its doors and the Society moved there in the following February 35 Subscription Concerts EditHans Richter often conducted Richard Wagner concerts at St James s Hall beginning in 1877 36 These Orchestral Festival Concerts established regularly in 1879 by the violinist Hermann Franke 37 which commenced after Easter were among the chief rivals to the Philharmonic Society programmes At the time of Arthur Sullivan s resignation of the Philharmonic conductorship the Society suggested to Richter that he might become its conductor and the two series of concerts might be amalgamated under the Society s supervision Richter did not accept the plan 38 In addition to Richter s series there was also a nine year winter series of subscription concerts established and conducted by George Henschel including a full cycle of Beethoven symphonies in one year and a rare performance of Richard Wagner s Symphony The content was planned against a permanent background of Beethoven and Brahms Helen Henschel refers to the famous Wagner cat which inhabited the Hall It was said to walk onto the stage during rehearsals whenever any work by Wagner was being played but never otherwise 39 Shaw refers to both noting that Richter s concerts were too expensive and that Henschel s orchestra was too small 40 Readings by Charles Dickens Edit 1868 Program book for the series of Dickens readingsIn 1868 famed Victorian author Charles Dickens presented a final series of Farewell Readings at the hall which commenced on the evening of October 6 with a program devoted to Doctor Marigold from the Christmas Story and The Trial from Pickwick He had settled with his tour managers Chappell amp Co on 100 readings for the princely sum of 8 000 pounds Attendees would receive printed programs and Chappell s advertisements included the following statement It is scarcely necessary for Messrs CHAPPELL and Co to add that any announcement made in connexion with these FAREWELL READINGS will be strictly adhered to and considered final and that on no consideration whatever will Mr DICKENS be induced to appoint an extra night in any place in which he shall have been once announced to read for the last time The stalls were priced at five shillings balcony seats at three and general admission at one shilling A new amenity sofa stalls of which there will be a limited number only went for seven shillings The following year Dickens would have to cut a provincial tour short after collapsing showing symptoms of a mild stroke in Preston on 22 April 1869 When he had regained sufficient strength he arranged with medical approval for a series of readings to partially make up to Chappell amp Co what they had lost due of his illness There were to be twelve final performances running starting on 11 January 1870 back at the hall Dickens would give his last public reading here at 8 00 pm on the 15 March 1870 He died shortly thereafter on 9 June having suffered another stroke 41 Other uses EditThe Bach Choir established in 1875 under a founding committee including Sir George Grove and Sir John Stainer had as a primary aim the introduction to England of Bach s Mass in B Minor With a choir of between 200 and 250 voices including the Swedish Nightingale Jenny Lind and under the baton of her husband conductor Otto Goldschmidt the Mass came to performance in April 1876 at St James s Hall and a second performance was given a month later 42 Henry J Wood performed the E minor organ concerto of Ebenezer Prout at the Hall with an orchestra under Joseph Barnby in the late 1880s Although the performance earned him much praise he referred to the instrument as that terrible box of whistles at St James s Hall 43 This had not seemed to bother Camille Saint Saens when he premiered his third Symphony there in which two sections make extensive use of the organ in 1886 Saint Saens was a fine organist and was titulaire of Eglise de la Madeleine in Paris If he had any objections to the organ of St James Hall for the premier of his symphony they do not appear in his writings The Stock Exchange Orchestral Society founded 1883 originally played in the Prince s Hall Piccadilly but transferred to St James s Hall until 1894 when they moved to Queen s Hall 44 In December 1893 Harry Plunket Greene and Leonard Borwick began their celebrated partnership in lieder recitals at the hall which continued well into the new century In 1895 the 16 year old pianist Mark Hambourg gave a concert there under Henry J Wood in which he played three piano concerti The end of the Hall Edit The Philharmonic Hall originally the new St James s Hall in Great Portland Street as it appeared in 1917 The Chappell ballad concerts were being managed by William Boosey in 1902 when the hall was owned by a private company The controlling share was held by T P Chappell chairman of Chappell s he turned down a good offer to buy the hall because Boosey felt strongly about its old connection with the Saturday and Monday Pops and the Chappell ballad concerts But Chappell died in June 1902 and the other shareholders accepted a new offer without consulting Boosey who was badly put out Then Queen s Hall came into the market and a friend of Boosey s acting in that interest pointed out that Queen s Hall would be worth much more if St James s Hall ceased to operate Boosey realised that Messrs Chappell could benefit most by becoming lessors of Queen s Hall and it was immediately arranged with the result that Chappell s controlled Queen s Hall from 1902 down to 1944 45 The 11 year old violinist Franz von Vecsey made his English debut at St James s Hall in April or early May 1904 46 It continued in use until February 1905 when it was demolished 8 The Piccadilly Hotel was afterwards built on the site 47 1907 building EditA new St James s Hall at Great Portland Street on a site previously occupied by St Paul s Church 47 had its foundation stone laid by the Lord Mayor and Sherriffs on 20 April 1907 48 It opened on 25 April 1908 with a series of promenade concerts performed by the newly formed St James s Hall Orchestra under the musical directorship of Mr Lyell Taylor 49 References Edit R Elkin Queen s Hall 1893 1941 Ryder London 1944 p 16 note says 1858 Elkin 1944 16 R Elkin Royal Philharmonic The Annals of the Royal Philharmonic Society Ryder 1946 67 Victorian London Buildings Monuments and Museums St James s Hall in the Victorian Dictionary a b Hobhouse Hermione History of Regent Street Macdonald and Jane s London 1975 p 84 ISBN 0 362 00234 7 H Henschel When Soft Voices Die Methuen London 1949 R Pound Sir Henry Wood Cassell London 1969 34 35 a b Survey of London volumes 31 and 32 Chapter IV a b C Pearce Sims Reeves Fifty Years of Music in England Stanley Paul London 1924 pp 205 07 Reeves Sims My Jubilee or Fifty Years of Artistic Life Simpkin Marshall London 1889 pp 178 79 cf W Sterndale Bennett Ed Grosse Passions Musik composed by John Sebastian Bach Lamborn Cock Hutchings London 1862 According to The Encyclopaedia Britannica eleventh edition Vol XXI p 726 the Christy Minstrels played at the theatre beginning in 1862 and later evolved into the Moore and Burgess Minstrels which continued at the hall through 1904 See also this article Notes to Ray Andrews Classic English Banjo citing Reynolds Harry Minstrel Memories The Story of Burnt Cork Minstrelsy in Great Britain 1836 1927 London 1928 Elkin 1946 67 Utopia Limited scene G B Shaw London Music in 1888 89 as heard by Corno di Bassetto etc Constable London 1937 299 300 Shaw 1937 305 306 H Henschel When Soft Voices Die Methuen London 1949 66 67 Boosey William Fifty years of music London Ernest Benn Limited 1931 Shaw 1937 297 Henschel 1949 66 67 C Pearce 1924 pp 231 32 Shaw 1937 passim G B Shaw Musical Life in London 1890 1894 Constable London 1932 passim Henschel 1949 66 The epithets are George Henschel s Monday 27 January 1890 was the 1105th Pop Shaw 1937 40 42 59 61 68 297 99 318 336 338 Elkin 1944 91 Elkin 1946 65 Elkin 1944 52 Elkin 1946 67 71 Elkin 1946 72 73 Elkin 1946 76 Elkin 1946 77 78 Elkin 1946 79 80 Elkin 1946 82 85 Elkin 1944 52 Elkin 1946 87 88 Elkin 1944 23 Henschel 1949 61 Elkin 1946 82 H Henschel When Soft Voices Die Methuen London 1949 69 Shaw 1937 59 NYPL Berg Collection Elkin 1944 62 H Wood My Life of Music Gollancz London 1946 edition 31 Elkin 1944 104 Elkin 1944 20 21 Elkin 1944 30 a b Elkin 1944 16 n Court Circular The Times 6 April 1907 p 7 Concerts The Times 6 April 1908 p 8External links EditVictorian London St James s Hall Victorian London Images of the first hall British History On line The St James s Hall Christy Minstrels Illustrated Christmas Annual 1868 Coordinates 51 30 34 N 0 8 12 W 51 50944 N 0 13667 W 51 50944 0 13667 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title St James 27s Hall amp oldid 1083508030, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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