A Record Find
How The Phantom of the Opera led me to a long-lost musical treasure in Paris
- By Michael Walsh
- Smithsonian magazine, March 2008, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 3)
The Garnier, now used largely for ballet, is one of the world's great buildings. Yes, the composer Debussy famously likened it to a cross between a railway station and a Turkish bath, but it remains one of the most daring, elegant representations of a now-lost Western European confidence in the power of its art. As a secular temple, it might be likened to the cathedral of Notre Dame, not far away; if the great Gothic cathedrals are "symphonies in stone," then the Garnier is nothing less than Faust by Gounod.
More to the point, it is as described by Leroux in his novel, from the rooftop graffiti of the frolicsome "rats" (apprentice ballet dancers) right down to the subterranean body of water, five stories below the street, that figures so prominently in Phantom. Which is why, when I spied that metal door, I knew at once what it was. Having just reread the novel, I instantly linked Leroux's buried phonographic records to the plaque's inscription.
Later, in the opera company's library in the Rotonde de l'Empereur, I asked Martine Kahane, then head librarian, if she knew about the room. She did not. She could tell me only that Clark (1873-1950) was an American pioneer in the transition from wax cylinders to discs who ran the Gramophone Company's offices in Paris. And so I reported my find in several places, including the Vanity Fair article, which appeared in February 1988, and in my biography of Lloyd Webber, published in 1989. "No one is exactly sure what is in this room," I wrote in Andrew Lloyd Webber: His Life and Works, "but it seems that the spot where [the Phantom] died...is a time capsule, not to be opened until 2007" that likely "contains a representative sample of [Clark's] company's wares of the period."
With several other music critics, I petitioned the opera company to unseal the room, in case the gramophone records, or whatever was in it, were in urgent need of preservation. Kahane told us that Clark's gift had come with conditions—one of which was that the room not be opened until 2007—and that the conditions would be observed.
And so the Garnier ghosts were left undisturbed for two more years, when workmen installing air conditioning in the building's basement stumbled across the room once more. At that point, Jean-Jacques Beclier, the opera company's technical supervisor, had the room opened. What he found were four urns containing recordings, two buried in 1907 and two more in 1912. Sure enough, one of the newer urns had been damaged, so all four were removed and transferred without fanfare to the custody of the Bibliothèque Nationale de France until their 100-year interments were up.
Opening the 1907 urns, each of which contains 12 discs, is going to be tricky. According to Elizabeth Giuliani, assistant to the director of the audio-visual department at the Bibliothèque Nationale, the shellac discs were separated by glass plaques, which themselves were kept from touching the surface of the discs by small glass cubes. The whole assemblage was then wrapped in cloth treated with asbestos, then placed inside copper urns, which were then put in urns made of lead. At least one of the urns is to be opened this month in a laboratory under strictly controlled conditions. Eventually the recordings will be transferred digitally and made commercially available by EMI, the successor to the Gramophone Company. Music lovers will once again hear the voices of the long dead singing the music of their time.
But in the meantime, the episode stands as a testament to Gaston Leroux's literary achievement—and raises an issue that has concerned me ever since I left music criticism to write novels and movies a decade ago: To what extent must fact be blended with fancy to create the willing suspension of disbelief? For me, a novel that is not about place is not much of a novel. It is instead a memoir of thinly veiled or nonexistent people wandering through a desolate and unreal landscape.
For why, after all, does The Phantom of the Opera still resonate? Surely not for its creaky plot, its standard-issue heroine, its wooden swain, its Svengali-like villain. Not even for its romance, although that is surely part of its charm. The love story between the beautiful soprano and the disfigured composer has been exploited by everyone from Lon Chaney in 1925 to Joel Schumacher in his 2004 movie version of the Lloyd Webber interpretation.
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Comments (11)
I actually have one of the letters that the phantom of the opera supposedly wrote, it is deathly old and signed "O.G." it written in red ink.
Posted by Joshua Potts on May 14,2010 | 03:08 PM
Patti was my Great Great Grand Aunt. I would be very interested in all information regarding her recordings that have been recently uncovered. I would greatly appreciate knowing more.
Posted by Patti Barili Kelly on August 14,2008 | 05:39 PM
According to the newspaper article from when the recordings were entombed, some of the recordings include: Tamagno, "The Death of Othello" (Verdi); Caruso and Scott, "The Power of Destiny," Duo by Verdi; Plancon, "Serenade from Faust" (Gounod); Battistini and the choruses of the Scala in "Ernani" (Verdi); Mme Patti in "Don Juan" (Mozart); Mme. Melba, Caro Nome from "Rigoletto" (Verdi); Mme. Schumann-Heink in "Samson and Dalila" (Saint-Saens); Mme Calve, the "Habanera," from "Carmen" (Bizet); orchestral passage march in the "Prophete" of Meyerbeer; Miss Lindsay, waltz song in "Romeo and Juliet" (Gounod) Hope this helps those of you curious about some of the recordings. I have this information, because I am the great-niece of Alfred Clark, Gramaphone Company.
Posted by Susan Conklin on May 10,2008 | 10:28 AM
I would really like the name of the EMI Cd that contains all the records so i can look it up on iTunes please..i'm a french and opera lover
Posted by Jilla on May 2,2008 | 06:02 PM
In which chapter of which edition of "The Phantom of the Opera" does Leroux describe "the rooftop graffiti of the frolicsome "rats" (apprentice ballet dancers)"? Posted by Emerson on March 26, 2008
Posted by Emerson on March 26,2008 | 12:42 AM
There was a Paris Opera House that existed before the "Garnier" which burned to the ground. It was called Le Peletier. Perhaps the "body" came from there, and was moved several times? http://www.hberlioz.com/Paris/BPOpera.html
Posted by Leatha b. on March 14,2008 | 11:01 AM
I would like very much to see a list of the records that they put in the time Capsule over 100 years ago. It would be interesting to see what sides they considered significant enough to be worthy of this Historic act. Also I was wondering whether the Caruso's were the center start Pathe Discs, or Caruso's Gramophone & Typewriter Company Gaisberg recordings. Since Alfred Clark was involved in the original capsule, then one would assume they would be the G&T reocordings. Is the list posted anywhere?
Posted by Bruce on March 6,2008 | 07:20 PM
If you would like an inside view of the events that took place in Paris in 1907, you may read about it in a publication I made in May, 2007: "150 Years of Time-Base in Acoustic Measurement and 100 Years of Audio's Best Publicity Stunt - 2007 as a Commemorative Year", Audio Engineering Society Convention Preprint No. 7007. I have translated important documents and give Alfred Clark's personal reports to his head office, the Gramophone Company in London. Enjoy!
Posted by George Brock-Nannestad on March 3,2008 | 03:08 PM
I would like to know the titles of the records! I put in the address you recommend (Smithsonian.com/presence)but nothing. I used to collect opera records and still have maybe 1000 and would like to hear the specific records. I have and love many Caruso's, Melba's, incl. some mauve, and several Patti's. All hers were in the 95000 series as I remember. If 1907 that is after thay had made the better recorded Caruso records but did his voice decline from the 1902 G&T ones? They are much rarer and expensive but the 1902 and 1904 records tend to blast. Dean Howe
Posted by Dean Howe on March 2,2008 | 03:14 PM
I don't understand all the hooplah. As the article above states, "what records?" Does anyone intend to release the list? Are they so rare as to be kept in a locked vault? What's the big deal? We all have records that are 100 years old or more, and are rare, and are expensive.
Posted by Dr H S Friedman on March 2,2008 | 01:04 PM
What a marvelous treasure. I was in love with Enrico Caruso the first time I hear his voice. I have no trouble discounting scratches, pop, hisses, and ignorance of the language. At 17 he made my heart soar and he'll always be my first love. I admit I'm not always faithful but I always go back to him!
Posted by jeanine t. farris on March 1,2008 | 06:03 PM
What a wonderful History of a still mistyfying Opera. The "Phantom" and the"Garnier" will always be magical to me
Posted by Nanci on February 29,2008 | 08:05 PM
I have those 78rpm records in my collection. Regards A J Hanekom Cape Town South Africa
Posted by Andre Hanekom on February 26,2008 | 07:24 PM