Connections 
                with the Phonograph  
                 
                
             
           
           
            
              
            By Doug Boilesen, 2020 
            The Song of the Lark by Willa 
              Cather has only one phonograph in its story, however, there are 
              multiple phonograph connections because the prototype for Cather's 
              heroine, Thea Kronborg, was opera star Olive Fremstad and because 
              other songs of the period are referenced that were made into phonograph 
              records.  
              
            The Phonograph 
            The following text from The Song 
              of the Lark identifies the phonograph in the parlor which could 
              "let Thea speak for herself." 
             
              There, in her parlor, was the 
                phonograph that had come from Mr. Ottenburg last June, on Thea's 
                birthday; she had only to go in there and turn it on, and let 
                Thea speak for herself.  
             
              
            Olive Fremstad, 
              Prototype for Thea Kronborg in Song of the Lark 
            Willa Cather interviewed Olive Fremstad 
              in 1915 for her McClure's Magazine article "Three American 
              Singers" and the two became friends and exchanged letters for 
              nearly a decade. (1) 
            Besides starring on the opera stage 
              Fremstad made phonograph records and appeared in phonograph advertisements 
              which added her celebrity status, artistic reputation, and the prestige 
              of opera to promote the early phonograph and its records.  
            As the prototype for Thea Kronborg 
              in The Song of the Lark Fremstad provides phonograph connections 
              that can be made in Cather's story (even if some are two-degrees 
              of separation connections). 
             A 1911 Columbia advertisement exemplifies 
              what the phonograph industry was saying about recorded music of 
              the time, comparing an opera star's voice like Fremstad's and the 
              quality of the phonograph's recorded sound. Phonograph advertising 
              was consistent in its intent and conclusions, as seen in the following: 
              Fremstad's records are "a revelation of the amazing manner 
              in which the perfected Columbia process of recording reflects the 
              individual powers of the singer." 
              
           
            
          First records of Fremstad's 
            voice ever made exclusively for Columbia, Scientific American, 
            1911 (PM-1830). 
          
  
             In contrast to Columbia's 
              1911 promotion of Fremstad's recorded voice and "the amazing 
              manner in which the perfected Columbia process of recording" 
              was reflecting "the individual powers of the singer," 
              Fremstad herself apparently was not happy with her recordings. The 
              Cather Scholarly Edition for The Song of the Lark includes 
              in Explanatory Note 1006 a brief history of the phonograph and Fremstad's 
              disappointment in the quality of recorded sound according to her 
              long-time secretary Mary Watkins Cushing.  
             
              1006. phonograph . . . lines on 
                metal disks: Invented by Thomas A. Edison in 1877, the first phonograph 
                employed cylinders covered in tinfoil on which indentations had 
                been made with a stylus. In the late 1880s Emile Berliner patented 
                a process by which sound grooves, or lines, were traced by a stylus 
                onto a flat disc. In early recordings the original soft wax master 
                disc was electroplated with metal to produce a negative master 
                that could be used to produce more copies, or records, which were 
                then played on a Gramophone. These commercial discs, initially 
                made of hard rubber and later of shellac resin and cotton or other 
                fiber, were turned by hand or a spring, and sound was increased 
                by flared horns. Fremstad made fifteen recordings for Columbia 
                in 1911 and 1912 but was so disappointed by the quality of the 
                reproductions that she refused to make additional recordings even 
                after techniques improved (Cushing 259-62). (2) 
             
              
            The Discography of American Recordings 
              (DAHR) identifies 23 recordings made by Fremstad for Columbia Records 
              between January 21,1911 and October 1, 1915. (3) 
              
              
            "Die Walkure," 
              Sung by Olive Fremstad, Columbia Record No. A-1451 Recorded October 
              28, 1913. 
              
              
              
            "Stille Nacht, 
              Heilige Nacht" Sung by Olive Fremstad, Columbia Record No. 
              A-876, Recorded April 1912. 
              
            For examples of Olive Fremstad as 
              a phonograph recording artist as seen in phonograph advertisements 
              and other popular culture ephemera see Olive 
              Fremstad - Recording Artist and Willa Cather Prototype. 
              
            Other Phonograph 
              Connections 
            Most of the other phonograph connections 
              in The Song of the Lark are referenced music. Music wasn't 
              being played by phonographs in the story but some of those referenced 
              songs were at the time being made into phonograph records (which 
              can be heard on this page by clicking LISTEN).  
            At the end of this page a Spotify 
              Playlist of "Music in Willa Cather's The Song of the 
              Lark" created by the National 
              Willa Cather Center can be used to hear contemporary recordings 
              of the book's referenced music. 
              
            Referenced Songs that were made 
              into phonograph records 
            'La Golondrina' 
               
             
              As Thea and the doctor approached 
                the 'dobe houses, they heard a guitar, and a rich barytone voice—that 
                of Famos Serreños—singing "La Golondrina."  
             
            Recording history of "La Golondrina." 
               
             “The earliest known recording is 
              probably that made by the U.S. Marine Band in either 1896 or 1897 
              on a two-minute brown wax cylinder for the Columbia Phonograph Company, 
              cylinder number 407,” according to a blog devoted to a history of 
              the song. The earliest vocal recording, the author asserts, was 
              made in 1898 by Arturo Adamini on Edison cylinder 4234. Adamini, 
              an Italian tenor, later recorded the song as a 7-inch, 78-rpm disc 
              for the Berliner label. (4).  
            For an interesting 100-year history 
              of recording this song see Strachwitz 
              Frontera Collection 'La Golondrina': A Song that Soars Across 
              Centuries and Crosses Cultures. 
              
              
            LISTEN 
              to 1926 HMV Record "La Golondrina" sung by bartione Emilio 
              de Gogorza (Courtesy Internet Archive). 
              
            'Just 
              Before the Battle, Mother' 
            This popular song was a "popular 
              song during the American Civil War, particularly among troops 
              in the Union Army."  
             
              Upping, the trainer, talked to 
                one and another: "Lily's all right for girl parts," he insisted, 
                "but you've got to get a girl with some ginger in her for this. 
                Thea's got the voice, too. When she sings, 'Just Before the Battle, 
                Mother,' she'll bring down the house." 
                
             
           
            
          Just before the Battle, 
            Mother by Geo. F. Root, Published by Root & Cady, Chicago, 
            1868 (Courtesy Giovannoni-Sheram Collection). 
            
            
           LISTEN 
            to Just Before the Battle, Mother sung by Macdonough and Bieling, 
            Victor Record 16418-A, circa 1909. 
            
            
           
            'Come, Ye Disconsolate' and 
              'The Ninety and Nine' 
            Thea sings "Come, Ye Disconsolate" 
              and "The Ninety and Nine." 
             
              When the clock struck nine, Thea 
                said she must be going home.  
              Harsanyi rose and flung away his 
                cigarette. "Not yet. We have just begun the evening. Now you are 
                going to sing for us. I have been waiting for you to recover from 
                dinner. Come, what shall it be?" he crossed to the piano.  
              Thea laughed and shook her head, 
                locking her elbows still tighter about her knees. "Thank you, 
                Mr. Harsanyi, but if you really make me sing, I'll accompany myself. 
                You could n't stand it to play the sort of things I have to sing." 
                 
              As Harsanyi still pointed to the 
                chair at the piano, she left her stool and went to it, while he 
                returned to his chaise longue. Thea looked at the keyboard uneasily 
                for a moment, then she began "Come, Ye Disconsolate," the hymn 
                Wunsch had always liked to hear her sing. Mrs. Harsanyi glanced 
                questioningly at her husband, but he was looking intently at the 
                toes of his boots, shading his forehead with his long white hand. 
                When Thea finished the hymn she did not turn around, but immediately 
                began "The Ninety and Nine."  
             
           
          
            
          LISTEN 
            'Come, Ye Disconsolate,' 
            Choir Record, Victor Record A-719, Recorded March 11, 1901 (Courtesy 
            i78s.org).  
            
            
           
            LISTEN 
              'The Ninety and Nine,' Edison Royal Purple 4-minute cylinder 
              record 29016 sung by Christine Miller, Recorded November 3, 1916 
              (Courtesy i78s.org).  
           
            
            
           
            Rock of Ages,  Composed by 
              George W. Warren, Published by Firth, Pond & Co., New York, 
              1851. (Courtesy The 
              Lester S. Levy Collection of Sheet Music, The Sheridan Libraries, 
              Johns Hopkins University). 
              
           
            
           
            Rock 
              of Ages,  Edison Mixed Quartet, 4-minute Edison Blue Amberol 
              Record No. 1633, recorded September 23, 1912 (Courtesy i78s.org). 
                
              
            Music 
              in Willa Cather's The Song of the Lark 
            National Willa Cather 
              Center - Search on Spotify Playlist 
             
               
              
             
              
             
                
             
             "The Song of the Lark," 
              oil on canvas by Jules Adophe Breton, 1884 (Courtesy The Art Institute 
              of Chicago and Henry Field Memorial Collection). 
              
            For an overview of six Cather prototypes 
              who made phonograph records visit Willa 
              Cather’s Prototypes Who Were Recording Artists. 
              
              
              
              
            Phonographia  
           
         |