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Lucy Isabelle Marsh (April 10, 1878 – January 20, 1956) was an American lyric soprano who made her career as a professional recording artist for the Victor Talking Machine Company. She was an anonymous mainstay of the regular recording program of the company from 1909 into the late 1920s. At the same time, she quickly won popular and critical recognition under her own name as a major artist on Victor recordings.

Training

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Marsh obtained training in Paris under Trabadelo, who also taught Mary Garden, and Baldelli [1]. She studied under John Walter Hall in New York [2].

Career

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Marsh sang in church choirs, and became lead soprano in important churches in New York City. As a Flower Maiden in the opera “Parsifal” she is known to have given nine performances at the Metropolitan Opera between November of 1904 and March of 1905 [3]. In 1908 she recorded three sides for Columbia Records.

In 1909 Marsh was engaged by The Victor Talking Machine Company, beginning a dual career as a “recording artist” and as a technically and artistically accomplished singer. Although she occasionally appeared on stage, she was known mostly through her recordings.

The “recording artist” was essential to the commercial success of recording companies such as Victor in the days of acoustic recording technology, roughly from 1903 through 1924.[4] Singers were required whose sound quality registered well through a mechanical diaphragm, who were reliable workers, and who were quick studies at mastering the latest song or an arrangement prepared for a recording. Such singers had to master the techniques of singing into a horn, which included knowing the best distance from the horn to stand for their voice, how to back off to avoid blasting and move forward for soft passages, how to adopt a position to blend with a partner or change positions to maintain the best balance when alternating lead passages with a partner or accompanist. Marsh herself left a description of the situation. [5]

The Victor Talking Machine Company employed several fine singers as recording artists in the two decades preceding the introduction of electrical recording in 1925. The Encyclopedic Discography of Victor Records, a project of researchers based at the University of California, Santa Barbara, has now made available the information in the session ledgers of Victor through 1922, supplemented with other sources [6]. Examination of the database, made available on line, shows that Victor used these singers as anonymous members of ensembles such as the Trinity Choir, and the Lyric Quartet, to produce recordings of “standards” and selections from current shows. Victor also afforded these artists occasional solo and ensemble recordings under their own names, some more and some less.

A popular specialty of the Victor company was the production of “Gems from” operas, operettas and shows. These were attributed not to individual singers but to the Victor Opera Company, or Victor Light Opera Company. “Gems” were arrangements of fragments of selected numbers. A purchaser could expect to hear snatches of the most popular tunes and choruses, usually ending with an upbeat number. Production required seven or 8 singers to collaborate by stepping forward at the proper time to sing solos into the horn and back for choral numbers. “Gems” averaged 4.5 minutes, with the exception of those shows or operas containing enough material to merit two sides of a 12” 78rpm record. Over twenty-five percent of the Marsh matrixes made between 1909 and 1922 were “Gems”. Another thirty-eight percent (38%) of the matrixes in the recording of which Marsh participated were as a member of the Trinity Choir or Lyric Quartet, performing religious numbers or standards, and were also unattributed.

Marsh did stand out, however, in the number and quality of her solo recordings. About a quarter of the matrixes, in the production of which Marsh participated, were solo recordings attributed to her on the label. At her first session for Victor, Marsh recorded a solo aria which is a test for the most accomplished soprano, “Angels ever bright and fair” from Handel’s Theodora. Soon thereafter, Marsh solo recordings were moved from the Victor black label series, to the purple label series, an exclusive position mid-way between black labels and the highly promoted “Red Label” series. She also recorded a few titles for Victor under the name of Anna Howard [1].

Artistic Legacy

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Collectors of recordings of vocal music who handle 78 rpm shellac records, particularly those made before 1925, can not escape repeated contact with the plentiful products of Lucy Isabelle Marsh. In particular, aficionados of the classical repertory find that her recordings of classical standards often compare very favorably to those made by singers who had substantial stage careers. In 1957 Aida Favia-Artsay, a perceptive critic of classical singing, gave this assessment [7].

After a few turns of a Marsh disc, it becomes apparent that…she could have had a brilliant operatic career. As far as voice goes, hers had all the requisites; and as for its production – a little more work in the chest register would have brought it up to par. Otherwise, she was musical, intelligent, resourceful, and obviously had a sound knowledge of the vocal technicalities. A pity that while her French was passable, her Italian left much to be desired [7].

Favia-Artsay’s evaluation of several of her acoustic records provides detail for this assessment. A few selected quotations follow: Nightingale (Alabieff) “Exquisite timbre, individual voice – of virginal purity, round and equal. Precise chromatic scale, also the trill. Judicious phrasing and breath distribution.” Spring’s Awakening (Sanderson) “…Flowing, smooth coloratura. Phrasing fine:” O for the wings of a dove (Mendelssohn) “sings with subtle feeling. Not showy, but very artistic. Really an amazingly polished singer. Can hold her own with some of our best recording artists; and even top a few in some cases.” Italian street song (Herbert) “Indeed, a brilliant piece of vocalization.” [7]


A generation later Michael Scott opined, “she was a particularly fine duet singer; with McCormack in ‘Parle-moi de ma mère’ from Carmen, she contrives a ravishing effect with her sweet and steady tones.” [8] Some of her later records made with a microphone were also held in high regard. Kutsch-Riemens speaks of “…masterly conceived recordings of arias from the Messiah and the oratorios of Mendelssohn and Rossini.” [9].


Personal Life

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Marsh married Walter Colwell Gordon, a medical doctor, in 1910, and moved to Providence, Rhode Island. She had two sons, Calvin and Walter, who also became doctors, and there were grandchildren. She died at age seventy-seven.[1]

References

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Books

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Tim Gracyk, with Frank Hoffmann, Popular American Recording Pioneers, 1895-1925 (Haworth Press, Binghamton, New York, 2000) (ISBN 1-56024-993-5), pp. 230-233.


Notes

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  1. ^ a b c Tim Gracyk, with Frank Hoffman, Popular American Recording Pioneers, 1895-1925, 2000, pp.230-233 (Haworth Press: Binghamton, N.Y.) ISBN 1-56024-993-5.
  2. ^ ”Victor Records, November, 1916” (Catalog issued by the Victor Talking Machine Company, copyright 1916), no page numbers.
  3. ^ “Annals of the Metropolitan Opera 1883-1985”, Gerald Fitzgerald, Editor in Chief, 1989 (G.K. Hall & Co., Boston) p. 157.
  4. ^ Gracyk, pp. 11-26.
  5. ^ Gracyk (pp.15-16, 23-24) quotes the interview in the Providence Journal, March 23, 1913.
  6. ^ Encyclopedic Discography of Victor Records (EDVR) http://victor.library.ucsb.edu/index.php/talent/detail/29393/Marsh_Lucy_Isabelle_vocalist_soprano_vocal (downloaded 1/4/2010).
  7. ^ a b c Aida Favia-Artsay, "Lucy Isabelle Marsh," Hobbies - The Magazine for Collectors", (June 1957), pp. 27-28. Cite error: The named reference "AFA" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
  8. ^ Michael Scott, The Record of Singing, Volume Two: 1914-1925 (Gerald Duckworth & Co., Ltd., London, 1979) (ISBN 0 7156 1341 3), pp. 139-140.
  9. ^ K.J.Kutsch and Leo Riemens (translated and annoted by Harry Earl Jones) A Concise Biographical Dictionary of Singers (Chilton Book Company: Philadelphia, 1969, p. 274.