Herman Klein

Herman Klein

Herman Klein (born Hermann Klein; 23 July 1856 – 10 March 1934) was an English music critic, author and teacher of singing. Klein's famous brothers included Charles and Manuel Klein. His second wife was the writer Kathleen Clarice Louise Cornwell, and one of their children was the writer Denise Robins.

For thirteen years, Klein was a vocal teacher at the Guildhall School of Music in London, becoming a lifelong proponent of the methods of Manuel Garcia and helping to edit Garcia's book on the subject. In 1876 he took up musical journalism, writing for The Sunday Times from 1881–1901, among other publications. He also contributed prolifically to The Musical Times. From 1901 to 1909, Klein lived and taught singing in New York City, where he wrote for The New York Herald. He was one of the first critics to take notice of the gramophone and was appointed "musical adviser" to Columbia Records in 1906 in New York. He returned to England in 1909.

Klein wrote over half a dozen books about music and singers, as well as English translations of operas and art songs. He was a noted authority on Gilbert and Sullivan. In 1924 he began writing for The Gramophone and was in charge of operatic reviews, as well as contributing a monthly article on singing, from then until his death.

Biography

Personal life

Klein was born in Norwich, Norfolk, East Anglia, England the son of Hermann Klein senior and his wife Adelaide (née Soman). Apparently, the elder Klein emigrated from Riga, Latvia,[1] then part of the Russian Empire, and home to a large community of Baltic German Jews such as the Kleins. Once in Norwich, his father became a professor of foreign languages at the King Edward VI Grammar School, and his mother taught dance.[2] The younger Klein's five brothers were Max, a violinist, Charles, a dramatist; Manuel, a composer; Alfred, an actor; and Philip. They had a sister, Adelaide.[3] He was the uncle of producer Philip Klein (1888–1935).

Although his forename was frequently spelled as "Hermann" until World War I, he "deprecated any foreign pronunciation of it and was proud of his British citizenship and upbringing".[4] The musical activities of Norwich, particularly its Festival and the Cathedral services, impressed him as a boy.[4] He was educated in Norwich and later in London.[5]

Klein was married three times. His first wife was Emily May Brown, a ballerina, with whom he had a daughter, Sibyl Klein, who became an actress;[6] they divorced.[7] On 19 February 1890, he married a 17-year-old Australian-born heiress Kathleen Clarice Louise Cornwell, later a popular writer, at the West London Synagogue.[8] Their children included two writers: Adrian Bernard L. Klein (1892–1969), who changed his name to Adrian Cornwell-Clyne and wrote books on photography and cinematography, and Denise Naomi Klein (1897–1985), who under her first married name, Denise Robins, became a best-selling romantic novelist[9] and was the first president of the Romantic Novelists' Association (1960–1966). Her daughter, Patricia Robins, is also a popular romance writer under the name Claire Lorrimer. Klein and Kathleen Clarice had another son, Daryl Kleyn (b. 1894).[10] During their marriage, Kathleen Clarice began an affair with a young man, Herbert Arthur Berkeley Dealtry (b. 1878), who was a Worcestershire Regiment officer. When Klein became aware of it, he filed a petition for divorce, which was granted in December 1901. He was still affiliated with the West London Synagogue in 1901, the year of his divorce and his departure for New York.[9][11] Klein's third wife was Helene Fox, a Christian Science practitioner of Boston, Massachusetts, whom he married in 1905.[7]

Klein died in London, aged 77.[1]

Career

For thirteen years, Klein was a vocal teacher at the Guildhall School of Music in London, and also trained many professional singers privately.[12] He also wrote songs and short works for piano. In 1874, Klein returned to Norwich temporarily to help his ailing mother. That year Manuel Garcia also moved into the same house as Klein in London, and Klein became his student for four years[13] and was closely associated with him for another six years.[14] The friendship became a transformative experience for Klein, who would recall Garcia and his singing principles in many of his writings throughout his life. He helped edit Garcia's book on his singing method, published in English in 1872 (later revised by Klein and published as Hints on Singing in 1894).[5]

In 1876 he took up musical journalism. He began writing for The Examiner in 1879, and then for The Sunday Times (1881–1901), The Illustrated London News, The Citizen, and the Lady's Pictorial. He was for many years a musical correspondent of The Manchester Guardian and The Scotsman and also contributed prolifically to The Musical Times.[5]

From 1901 to 1909, Klein lived in New York City,[15] where he wrote for The New York Herald, taught singing,[16] and was a founder and first chairman of the National Association of Teachers of Singing.[17][18] He was one of the first critics to take notice of the gramophone. He was appointed "musical adviser" to Columbia Records in 1906 in New York and was responsible for introducing David Bispham, Anton van Rooy, Lillian Blauvelt and Ruth Vincent and others to the recording studio.[1] Klein eventually came to hold an unfavourable view of American musical life and returned to Britain in May 1909, continuing to teach and write.[4] He wrote over half a dozen books about music and singers, as well as English translations of operas and art songs. In 1924 he began writing for The Gramophone and was in charge of operatic reviews, as well as contributing a monthly article on singing, from then until his death.[7]

Among his other activities, Klein listed "Inventor of the Phono-Vocal Method of learning singing with the aid of a gramophone" and "Past Grand Organist of Grand Lodge of Freemasons".[5] He was a member of the Critics' Circle, of which he was President and also Chairman of its musical committee.[4]

Publications

In addition to publishing several books containing his criticism or music commentary, in which he left "vivid pictures of the great singers whose art he studied in the opera house",[4] Klein translated several operas, including Carmen, and poems of over seventy songs by Schubert, Schumann and Brahms.[5] He was an authority on Gilbert and Sullivan, having, as a young man, known Arthur Sullivan well and worked with him on musical committees. Klein arranged for Sullivan to provide incidental music for Henry Irving's 1889 production of Macbeth.[19] He later contributed articles on Gilbert and Sullivan to The Gramophone.[20][21][22] For The Musical Times, he wrote on subjects including Music Festivals, the Royal Albert Hall, the Royal Choral Society, Camille Saint-Saëns, Richard Wagner and Nellie Melba.[23]

Books

Notes

  1. 1 2 3 Stone, Christopher. "Herman Klein, July 23, 1856 – March 10, 1934", reprinted in Moran, p. 603
  2. Who's Who in New York (City and State). Lewis Historical Publ. Co., 1909, p. 787. A petition from the Jews of Norwich, Norwich Petition For the Removal of the Disabilities of the Jews, 24 January 1848, includes the signature of a David Soman, boot and shoemaker, who may have been the father of Adelaide. Transcription in the archives of JewishGen.
  3. 1871 and 1881 England Census, available on Ancestry.com.
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 "Mr. Herman Klein: Music critic, teacher, and writer", The Times, 12 March 1934, p. 19
  5. 1 2 3 4 5 "Klein, Herman", Who Was Who, A & C Black, 1920–2008; online edn, Oxford University Press, December 2007, accessed 3 January 2009
  6. "News of the Playhouses", The New York Times, 12 January 1903, p. 9
  7. 1 2 3 Wimbush, Roger. "Here and There", The Gramophone, July 1973, p. 32
  8. United Kingdom Marriages, 1838–1972 at JewishGen.org
  9. 1 2 Kathleen Clarisa Cronwell, bearalley online at bearalley.blogspot.com (accessed 13 February 2009)
  10. Lorrimer, Claire. You Never Know, autobiography
  11. Who's Who in British Jewry, p. 280
  12. The Manchester Guardian, 12 March 1934, p. 2
  13. Musical Courier, 15 March 1905, p. 18
  14. The house was located at 1 Bentinck Street. See 1881 England Census, available on Ancestry.com.
  15. His brothers Charles and Manuel lived and worked in New York. Klein lived at 154 West 77th St. NYC. See Musical Courier, 5 November 1902, p. 6.
  16. Klein's teacher Manuel Garcia wrote: "It is gratifying to me to know that the great American people appreciate the sound theories of the old school, and they will assuredly find in you one among its few capable exponents." See Musical Courier, 11 December 1901, p. 13.
  17. Musical Courier, 13 November 1907, p. 33
  18. Papers and Proceedings of the Music Teachers' National Association, pp. 172–76, Music Teachers National Association (1927)
  19. Jacobs, p. 277
  20. Klein, Herman. "The H.M.V. Pinafore Album", The Gramophone, August 1930, Vol. VIII, p. 130
  21. Klein, Herman. Review of Patience, The Gramophone, January 1931, Vol. VIII, p. 391
  22. Klein, Herman. "Ruddigore in Retrospect", The Gramophone, January 1932, Vol. IX, p. 321
  23. The Musical Times, Vol. 60, No. 912 (1 February 1919), pp. 63–67; Vol. 62, No. 940 (1 June 1921), pp. 393–400; Vol. 57, No. 883 (1 September 1916), pp. 400–02; Vol. 72, No. 1058 (1 April 1931), pp. 305–08.

References

External links

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