
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


April 29th fell on Sunday in 1906, and readers of The New York Times photogravure supplement were able to view scenes of the terrible destruction in San Francisco that followed the great earthquake that struck that city 11 days before. The paper was filled with accounts of the suffering caused by the quake, and undoubtedly, many New Yorkers asked themselves what they could do to help. The New York musical community provided one answer by quickly arranging a number of benefit concerts.
The largest of these occurred on today’s date that year at New York’s Hippodrome, and was organized by popular composer Victor Herbert, who conducted his orchestra with Metropolitan Opera singer Ernestine Schumann-Heink as a featured soloist. The vast Hippodrome was completely sold out, with standing-room-only tickets filling the aisles. Seven thousand dollars were raised, which by today’s standards seems a rather modest sum, but by 1906 standards was impressive enough to make newspaper headlines.
Perhaps New York musicians and their audiences felt a personal affinity with the quake victims, as their own Metropolitan Opera Company, including its star tenor Enrico Caruso, was on tour in San Francisco when the quake struck on April 18th, and, as the Times reported, the Met’s touring orchestral musicians, almost without exception, lost their instruments.
That bit of news must have struck a special chord with Herbert. In 1886, both he and his wife had come to America from Europe to join the Metropolitan Opera — he as an orchestral cellist, and she as a soprano soloist.
Victor Herbert (1859-1924): Cello Concerto No. 1; Lynn Harrell, cello; St. Martin’s Academy; Sir Neville Marriner, conductor; London 417 672
By American Public Media4.7
176176 ratings
April 29th fell on Sunday in 1906, and readers of The New York Times photogravure supplement were able to view scenes of the terrible destruction in San Francisco that followed the great earthquake that struck that city 11 days before. The paper was filled with accounts of the suffering caused by the quake, and undoubtedly, many New Yorkers asked themselves what they could do to help. The New York musical community provided one answer by quickly arranging a number of benefit concerts.
The largest of these occurred on today’s date that year at New York’s Hippodrome, and was organized by popular composer Victor Herbert, who conducted his orchestra with Metropolitan Opera singer Ernestine Schumann-Heink as a featured soloist. The vast Hippodrome was completely sold out, with standing-room-only tickets filling the aisles. Seven thousand dollars were raised, which by today’s standards seems a rather modest sum, but by 1906 standards was impressive enough to make newspaper headlines.
Perhaps New York musicians and their audiences felt a personal affinity with the quake victims, as their own Metropolitan Opera Company, including its star tenor Enrico Caruso, was on tour in San Francisco when the quake struck on April 18th, and, as the Times reported, the Met’s touring orchestral musicians, almost without exception, lost their instruments.
That bit of news must have struck a special chord with Herbert. In 1886, both he and his wife had come to America from Europe to join the Metropolitan Opera — he as an orchestral cellist, and she as a soprano soloist.
Victor Herbert (1859-1924): Cello Concerto No. 1; Lynn Harrell, cello; St. Martin’s Academy; Sir Neville Marriner, conductor; London 417 672

90,957 Listeners

38,507 Listeners

6,790 Listeners

8,760 Listeners

3,999 Listeners

9,197 Listeners

3,628 Listeners

924 Listeners

1,389 Listeners

520 Listeners

182 Listeners

1,226 Listeners

13,700 Listeners

3,086 Listeners

247 Listeners

28,298 Listeners

13,236 Listeners

5,488 Listeners

2,176 Listeners

14,106 Listeners

1,144 Listeners

6,335 Listeners

2,514 Listeners

229 Listeners

634 Listeners