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Marie Lachenal: Concertinist1 FAYE DEBENHAM AND RANDALL C. MERRIS I. Introduction: Marie Lachenal (1848-1937) had three claims to fame and social prominence: one by birth, one by marriage, and one acquired as an accomplished performer of classical music on the English concertina. Born to the concertina by virtue of the family businessLouis Lachenal, Concertina Manufacturer, the firm established by her father in 18582Marie learned to play the concertina and applied her talents to the promotion of Lachenal concertinas long after her fathers death in 1861 and her mothers divestiture of the business in the early 1870s. In 1868, Marie married Edwin A. Debenham (1844-1925), a member of a family of photographers who specialized in portraits of royalty, statesmen, and artists, as well as somewhat less illustrious clientele. Founded by Edwins father near the very dawn of photography, the family photography business bridged the nineteenth and twentieth centuries and eventually produced three generations of Debenham photographers. Edwin and Maries family was large by modern standards, with nine children of whom eight survived infancy. And though Maries maternal responsibilities took a toll on her career as performer and teacher, she still managed to maintain high standards of performance throughout her absence from the stage for maternity and child rearing. In fact, the advent of what might be called her second career in the 1880s saw her garner the same high praise from the critics that she had received in 1865-1866, when The Mesdemoiselles Lachenalthe teenagers Marie, Eugenie, and Josephinefirst took to the stage in London and Edinburgh. II. The Performer: Marie Lachenal and sisters Eugenie and Josephine made their debut at Myddelton Hall, in Islington, on 14 June 1865,3 at the ages of sixteen, fifteen, and thirteen, respectively, perhaps while still studying with Richard Blagrove (1826-1895), already a prominent concertina impresario by the 1860s and eventually the preeminent classical concertinist after the death of Giulio Regondi in 1872.4 The sisters Islington performance drew a glowing review in the Islington Times of 17 June 1865:5
And not only did Richard Blagrove attend the concert in order to lend support and enjoy the accomplishments of his students, but he was one of the concertinists who joined the sisters in the quintet that drew comment in the Islington Times review. The fifth member of the quintet was Blagroves sister, Ellen Attwater.6 In a letter to the editor of the South Hackney Correspondent for 27 July 1865, an enthusiastic admirer of the English concertina paid the Lachenal sisters the ultimate compliment, placing them in the company of the finest concertinists of the day: Giulio Regondi, Richard Blagrove, and George Case.7 Following the Islington performance in the summer of 1865, the Lachenal sisters headed to Edinburgh for an October 1865 performance at The Saturday Evening Concerts at the George Street Music Hall.8 Billed as The Celebrated Performers on the ENGLISH CONCERTINA, the act consisted of Marie, Eugenie, Josephine, and their piano accompanist Frederick William Bridgman (1833-1892), an Edinburgh musician who also played the concertina and joined the sisters for a concertina quartet.9 What appears to have begun as a limited engagement lengthened into an October-January stay, prompted by highly favorable reviews of their performance:
The successful performance on 21 October was followed by a Saturday Evening Concert at the Music Hall on 11 November; this performance received a round of accolades and an announcement of the sisters extended stay in Edinburgh:
The Lachenals next performance at the Music Halls Saturday Night Concerts took place on 16 December and, like the earlier ones, was loudly applauded:
Between their major performances, the sisters contributed their talents to charity events, including a 13 December concert for the benefit of the Edinburgh Lifeboat Fund. The concert organizers were disappointed by the low turnout, but certainly not by the quality of the sisters performance:
Between their engagements at the Music Hall, the sisters also appeared at a grand musical soirée sponsored by the Total Abstinence Society and the Band of Hope and held at the Corn Exchange Hall, Dalkeith, on 25 December. The sisters shared the instrumental segment of the program with the Band of the Edinburgh Volunteers. It was, however, Christmas Night, and there were no more than eight hundred in attendance, half of whom were children. But the Lachenal sisters played to their full-house standards and, as usual, their talents and efforts were rewarded by the reviewer:
The Lachenal sisters last performance in Edinburgh took place on 20 January 1866, once again as part of The Saturday Evening Concerts. And though they treated the audience to at least some pieces not included in their earlier performances at the Music Hall, they went unnoticed by the press. It appears that their last performance was not reviewed, at least not by The Scotsman, possibly because they were leaving Edinburgh and were therefore less newsworthy than when future performances loomed. Marie and her sisters had little opportunity to capitalize on their successes. In 1868, Marie left the Lachenal household to set up housekeeping of her own with husband Edwin, and the Lachenal sisters trio was disbanded. Not until around 1920, when the Fayre Four SistersInga, Tina, Sylvia, and Lillian Webbtook to the stage,10 would there be another all-sister concertina ensemble of the same high caliber as the Lachenal sisters. The years from 1869 to the early 1880s were devoted to the Debenham children, which left little time for the concertina even in the parlor. Yet the later resurgence of Maries career suggests that she at least found time to maintain (possibly even add to) her technique with regular or occasional practice and through teaching both her own children and perhaps other pupils as well. If Marie performed outside the home at all, it was probably at small, fairly informal venues, somewhat akin to the charity concerts of the mid-1860s. Perhaps an exception to this was an occasional appearance at the series of concerts that Richard Blagrove liked to organize in connection with his Concertina Fund, these sometimes requiring forces of up to eight concertinas.11 We can catch a glimpse of the day-to-day stress of Maries life from an extract drawn from a family diary (now in the possession of the Debenham family) and dating from 1876:
Edwin took months to regain his strength, and, within a few months, Marie gave birth to Frederick (Albert Debenhams father), in Weymouth, on 23 April 1876.12 In 1885, Marie reappeared among the ranks of leading concertinists. The occasion was the International Inventions Exhibition in London, which brought out the flock of high-profile concertinists from the stables of both Wheatstone and Lachenal. The concertina activities at the Exhibition were recorded as follows:
That Marie must have held her own in the midst of this all-star cast is evidenced by the following review:
We can see what Marie looked like at this time from a full-length portrait showing her with concertina in hand; the portrait was made by husband Edwin at the Debenham studio just around the time of the Exhibition (Fig. 1).
The positive response to her performance just a few years after the
birth of her last child, Elsie Linda, in 1882, must have provided a psychological boost.
And Marie began to look forward to a second full-fledged career as a
concertinist. In the next two decades, she earned acclaim from audiences from Huddersfield
and Leeds in the north to Southampton and Torquay in the south, all the while continuing
to take on concertina pupils.
Fig. 2. Maries 'announcement', c. 1900
Dating from the turn of the century is another portrait of Marie with her concertina (Fig. 3). Produced by husband Edwin, it roughly coincided with Maries announcement of her continuing availability for performances and teaching.
III. The Musical Repertory: Thanks to the many references to specific pieces in the announcements and reviews of her concerts in the 1860s and in the 1880s through the turn of the century, we can form a fairly good picture of Maries repertory. The Appendix lists all the pieces culled from those announcements and reviews. IV. The Lachenal and Debenham Families: Marie Lachenal was born on 13 August 1848 in the family home at 26 King Street (now part of Shaftesbury Avenue),19 London, and was christened on 11 February 1849 at St. Annes, Soho, London. She was the first of nine children born to Louis (1821-1861) and Elizabeth Lachenal (1825-1904), born Jeanne (or Françoise) Marie Elisabeth Irion.20 Louis and Elizabeth married on 3 November 1847, probably in Elizabeths hometown of Ferney Voltaire (France), but possibly across the border in Geneva (given that Louis was Swiss-born). They departed for London shortly thereafter, arriving there on 10 November 1847. (Louis had originally settled in England in December 1839.) The Lachenals eight other children were: Jane Elizabeth (23 July 1849 2 March 1883), who adopted the stage name Eugenie; Josephine (b. 28 January 1851), the third of the concertina-playing sisters; Louis Jules (b. 16 May 1853); Constance (b. 19 August 1855); François Edouard (b. 27 July 1856), Marie Louise (b. c. 25 October 1857); Alice (b. 27 November 1859); and Alexander (b. 17 October 1861). Louis Lachenal died on 18 December 1861, just three years after beginning to market concertinas under his own name (rather than wholesaling to Wheatstone) and moving his operations to 8, Little James Street, Bedford Row, London, WC, along which street Lachenal concertinas would be manufactured for the next seventy-some-odd years.21 After Louis death, Elizabeth managed the firm until 1873, at which time she sold the business to a group of Lachenal employees, who changed the name to Lachenal & Co.22 Elizabeth then spent three decades in retirement, and died on 10 September 1904 in the home of daughter Marie Louise Waddell in Stout Green, North London. To return to Marie: by 1867 she had met and fallen in love with Edwin
Alfred Debenham, who, having a fine voice, was also something of a performer, and often
sang at public concerts. Marie and Edwin married on 7 April 1868 in St. Peters
Church, Regent Square, London. Edwin was born on 7 June 1844 in Bury St. Edmonds, Suffolk,
where the Debenham family was long established and well known.23 He was the seventh of
eight children born to Samuel and Salome Debenham (born Warren). Recognizing the
opportunities stemming from the recent advances in photography and with something of an
artistic flair of his own, Samuel Debenham had moved his family to London in 1846 to
pursue a career as a photographer. By 1860, he was well established with his own studios,
having learned much about the new art form, which he then taught to his sons. Edwins older brother, William Elliott, preferred to operate mainly from his Regent Street studio, which was an ideal location for attracting such high-profile clients as members of the royal family, prime ministers, poets, and artists. Edwin chose a decentralized approach, expanding his operation around England, especially (but not exclusively) along the southern coast. Among his locations: the early studio in Reigate, Surrey, as well as E. Debenham (later Debenham & Gould), Glen View Studios in Bournemouth,25 E. Debenham (later Debenham & Smith) in Southampton, E. Debenhams Royal Portraits Studio in Weymouth, Debenham & Co. in York, and the Debenham studios in Torquay and Gloucester. The Debenham studios also reached north to Edinburgh, where Edwin had a studio that would later belong to his son and namesake, Edwin Holford Debenham (c. 1872-1936).26 A number of calling cards and cabinet cards produced at the studios of
Edwin, his brothers, and their sons may still be found among collectors.27 A particular passion of
Edwin Debenham was the pleasure of photographing Marie and his children. In addition to
portraits of Marie with her concertina (see Figures 1 and 3), Edwin produced a cameo-mount
portrait of her at age seventy. Shown in Figure 4, it dates from 1919.
The 1871 census shows that Marie and Edwins residence was in Reigate. A decade later, the family was located in Holford, Holdenhurst, near Bournemouth, whereas the 1891 census has the family at 24 Newton Lane, Castlegate District, York, and records Edwin and Marie as Photographer[s]. The 1901 census places Marie, Edwin, and three of the children in Gloucester; by 1920, Marie and Edwin were residing in Nottingham. Though Marie taught the concertina to some of the children, none of them followed her as a profession concertinist. Nonetheless, the 1901 census records both Josephine (then age twenty) and Elsie Linda (age eighteen) as Musical student[s], with Josephine eventually having a career as a music teacher. Finally, retirement took Edwin and Marie to Darlington, in northern England (a few miles south of Durham). This was a time for Edwin, patriarch of a family with deep religious convictions, to direct his energies to the church, where he was a lay reader. Edwin died on 21 February 1925 at their home on Northgate Street; and after a widowhood of twelve years, Marie Lachenal died on 29 May 1937, at age 88. She was buried on 1 June in the Darlington East Cemetery, Geneva Road, Darlington. APPENDIX Marie Lachenals Repertory What follows is a list of pieces that constitute at least part of Marie Lachenals repertory as these may be culled from the Islington Times review of her 1865 concert, the announcements and reviews of the 1865/66 Edinburgh concerts that appeared in The Scotsman, and the reviews that appeared in various newspapers of the concerts that Marie gave in the 1880s and later. The great majority of worksboth for concertina with piano and for concertina ensemblesbelong to the almost-proverbial Fantasia on. . . genre, that is, settings of well-known songs and popular opera arias of the day that were intended to display the performers virtuosity. In some instances, it is not possible to identify the composer with certainty, as more than one concertinist-composer/arranger drew on the same common stock of materials. We have, therefore, attributed pieces as follows: (1) when the composer is named in either an announcement or a review, his name is indicated together with an asterisk; (2) when a title can be assigned to more than one composer (that is, more than one composer wrote a piece with the same title, based on the British Librarys online catalogue or Wheatstones Catalogue of Music for the English Concertina or Aeola, c. 1919), we have favored the piece by Blagrove (as long as it is known to date from before the concert in question) on the grounds of his close relationship with Marie Lachenal. Publication dates follow those in the British Library online catalogue <http://catalogue.bl.uk>. Finally, the list is organized by type of ensemble. A. Treble concertina and pianoforte Concertante Duet on Airs from Le Domino, Fra
Diavolo, and Masaniello, Blagrove and Sydney Smith* (n.d.) B. Concertina ensembles Invitation à la Danse, probably based on the famous piece by Carl
Maria von Weber (two trebles, tenor, and bass) C. Treble concertina and strings Beethoven, Serenade (likely that in D major, Op. 8, 1797, with viola
and cello) NOTES 1. We appreciate the comments of Chris Algar,
Richard Carlin, Stephen Chambers, Geoffrey Crabb, Robert Gaskins, Douglas Rogers, Neil
Wayne, Wes Williams, and the editor of PICA. Stephen Chamberss contribution to the
documentation of Lachenal and Debenham genealogy deserves a special note of thanks. 2. On the firm of Lachenal, see the two important
articles by Stephen Chambers: Louis Lachenal: Engineer and Concertina
Manufacturer, Part I, The Free-Reed Journal, 1 (1999), 7-18; Some Notes
on Lachenal Concertina Production and Serial Numbers, Papers of the International
Concertina Association, 1 (2004), 3-23. 3. Both venue and date are identified in a review
printed in The Musical Times, xii/269 (1 July 1865), 101; the review goes on to say:
The effect [of the concertina quintet] was exceedingly good; and the adaptability of
the instruments to the execution of orchestral music was most successfully shown. 4. On Blagroves concertina-related activities (he was also a violist in the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra and taught that instrument at the Royal Academy of Music), see Allan W. Atlas, The Wheatstone English Concertina in Victorian England, especially Chapters 4-6; on the Blagrove family of musicians, see The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, 2nd ed., ed. Stanley Sadie and John Tyrrell (London: Macmillan, 2001), iii, 670-71. In later years, Marie described herself as a favourite student of Richard Blagrove. A Richard Blagrove photograph in the form of a calling card was produced by the studio of Debenham & Gabell, 158 Regent Street, London; see <http://www.concertina.com/blagrove>. The bibliography on Regondi (1822/23-1872) has grown rapidly in recent
years: to cite only those items that are entirely or mainly concertina-related (he was
also a virtuoso guitarist): Douglas Rogers, Giulio Regondi: Guitarist, Concertinist,
or Melaphonist? A Reconnaissance, The Guitar Review, 91 (Fall 1992), 1-9; 92 (Winter
1993), 14-21; 97 (Spring 1994), 11-17; Tom Lawrence, Giulio Regondi and the
Concertina in Ireland, Concertina World: International Concertina Association
Newsletter, 411 (July 1998), 21-25 (online at <http://
www.ucd.le/pages/99/articles/Lawrence.pdf>); Atlas, The Wheatstone English
Concertina, 48-54; Collins, Count Fosco, and the Concertina, Wilkie Collins
Society Journal, new ser., 2 (1999), 56-60; Giulio Regondi: Two Newly Discovered
Letters, The Free-Reed Journal, 4 (2002), 70-84 (the latter two articles online at
<http://www.concertina.com/atlas>);
Helmut C. Jacobs, Der junge Guitarren- und Concertinavirtuose Giulio Regondi: Eine
kritische Dokumentation seiner Konzertreise durch Europa, 1840 und 1841 (Bochum: Augemus,
2001); two forthcoming articles: Atlas, A 41-Cent Emendation: A Textual Problem in
Wheatstones Publication of Giulio Regondis Serenade for English Concertina and
Pianoforte, to appear in the journal Early Music (2005),33/4; Alessandro Boris
Amisich, Where was Regondi Born?, to appear in Papers of the International
Concertina Association, 3 (2006). 5. Our attempts to find a copy of this newspaper
have come up short. We therefore quote the review as it appears in William Cawdell, A
Short Account of the English Concertina by an Amateur: Its Uses and Capabilities, Faculty
of Acquirement, and Other Advantages (London: W. Cawdell, 1865; reprinted with new title
page, 1866), 15 (both versions online at <http://www.concertina.com/cawdell>). 6. Already a widow, Ellen (born c. 1816) is listed
as living in Richard Blagroves household along with her three sons in the 1861
census. 7. See Cawdell, A Short Account, 22. The letter,
signed TREMELO-NON-TROPPO, was almost certainly written by Cawdell himself.
George Tinkler Case (1823-1892) was a violinist (in the Covent Garden Opera Orchestra),
pianist, and concertinist, who turned out a voluminous amount of music for the concertina;
see Atlas, The Wheatstone English Concertina, Chapters 4-5. 8. On the George Street Music Hall and the
performances held there, see Robert Gaskins, The Lachenal Sisters Visit Edinburgh,
1865-1866, at <http://www.concertina.com/lachenal-sisters>,
which includes all the notices from The Scotsman cited below (and more). 9. On the day of the concert, The Scotsman focused
on the following highlight: The programme for to-night contains a noveltyviz.,
the performance of a movement from Mozarts Quartett in F major, played on four
concertinas. The artistes are the Mdlles. Lachenal, of London celebrity, and Mr.
Bridgman. There are three possibilities for the quartet in question: K. 138 (1772),
which Mozart called a Divertimento, the equally early K. 168 (1772/73) or, most likely,
the late K. 590 (1790), one of the so-called Prussian quartets (our thanks to
Allan Atlas for this information). On Bridgman, who was noted as a child prodigy and
enjoyed a successful career as a teacher in Edinburgh, see James D. Brown and Stephen S.
Stratton, British Musical Biography: A Dictionary of Musical Artists, Authors and
Composers Born in Britain and Its Colonies (London: Reeves, 1897; reprint: New York: Da
Capo Press, 1971), 61. 10. On the Webbs, see Richard Carlin, The
Fayre Four Sisters, The Free-Reed Journal, 3 (2001), 79-88. 11. See Atlas, The Wheatstone English Concertina,
67-68; it was for one of these concerts that the Dutch-born composer Edouard Silas wrote
his now-lost Adagio in E for eight concertinas. 12. The late Albert Debenham was the husband of
Faye Debenham, co-author of this article. 13. John Hill Maccann, The Concertinists
Guide (London: Howard, 1888), 3-4 (online at <http:// www.concertina.com/maccann-duet>).
The initial G. before Blagroves name should probably be R.
Maccann likely refers to Marie as Madame Debenham because of the lengthy
period that had elapsed since Marie had performed under her own name. On John Charles
Ward, see Atlas, The Wheatstone English Concertina, passim; Alsepti is treated in some
detail in Atlas, Signor Alsepti and Regondis Golden
Exercise, Concertina World: Newsletter of the International Concertina
Association, No. 426, supplement (July 2003); on the brothers Roe, see Atlas, The
Victorian Concertina: Some Issues of Performance Practice, forthcoming in The
Nineteenth-Century Music Review; finally, the Chidleys took over the firm of Wheatstone
& Co. c. 1870 (see Chambers, Some Notes on Lachenal Concertina Production,
20, n. 18). 14. Illustrated London News, 1885. (We have not
been able to determine the exact date of this review, which was preserved as a press
clipping by Marie herself.) 15. Though Marie identified the newspapers from
which the clippings were cut, she did not provide dates, which have yet to be determined. 16. The Winter Garden in Torquay, an iron and
glass structure located behind the post office on Brandons Hill, was built in 1881 with
about a 3,000-seat capacity. The structure was relocated to Wellington Pier in Great
Yarmouth in 1904. 17. The Devon County Standard, founded on 1 April
1882, changed its name to the Torquay Observer and District News after 29 April 1898,
which is therefore the terminus ante quem for the review; see Devon Newspaper
Bibliography at <http://www.devon.gov.uk/library/locstudy/newsbib.html>. 18. Opened by the Prince and Princess of Wales in
July 1885, the 3,000-seat Coliseum Theatre became Leeds first full-time cinema in
1905. 19. This was a busy year for the Lachenal family,
as it was in 1848 that Louis began large-scale production of concertinas to be sold by
Wheatstones. 20. She changed her name from Jeanne to Françoise
on the birth certificates of her children. In his last will and testament, dated 8 May
1856, Louis referred to his dear wife Françoise Marie Elizabeth Lachenal
(Chambers, Some Notes on Lachenal Concertina Production, n. 12). After her
husbands death (or even possibly before it), she became known as
Elizabeth (altering the French Elisabeth). 21. See Chambers, Louis Lachenal, 16. 22. See Chambers, Some Notes on Lachenal
Concertina Production, 8-9. 23. In fact, there is a town called Debenham in
Suffolk. 24. Arthurs studios on the Isle of Wight
included those at Arcade and 28 Union Street in Ryde and a studio in Cowes. Arthur (later
Debenham & Sons) also had studios in Brighton, Newport, Sandown, and Seaview. 25. The most famous client of Debenham & Gould
at the Glen View Studios may have been Oscar Wilde, who posed for the photographers in
1887. Two photographs from that session are owned by the Clark Library at the University
of California, Los Angeles. 26. The Debenham studios had various ownership and
operating structures: sole ownership and management by a Debenham brother or nephew;
partnership with a brother, son, or unrelated party; and studio sub-contracting under a
lease or franchise-type arrangement. Competition was strong, but the demand for portrait
photography kept pace withand even outpacedthe proliferation of studios.
During the period of Edwin and his brothers, the popularity and affordability of studio
photography filtered down from royalty and celebrities to the upper and middle classes,
and finally to the more prosperous members of the working class. Most upscale Victorian
parlors had wedding and other large portraits, and collecting small cardboard-backed
portraitscalling cards (2½ x 3½ prints) and cabinet cards (about 4 x
5)was all the rage from the royals on down. The popularity of the studios
would only wane with the rise of amateur photography and the advent of George Eastman and
the Kodak. 27. The Roger Vaughan Collection of images of
calling cards, some made at the Debenham studios and some two thousand others produced at
several hundred other Victorian studios, appears online at <http://victorian.fortunecity.com/carroll/642/pixs/carte.htm>.
Many original photographs by the Debenhams are preserved in museum collections in England
and elsewhere. 28. He died on 15 July 1874, just fifteen days
old. 29. Frederick William, father of Faye
Debenhams late husband, was born on 23 April 1876 in Weymouth, Dorset. He and
Margaret Pottar Guthrie-Russell were married in Alberta, Canada, on 19 April 1916. He died
16 May 1956 in Vancouver, British Columbia. 30. There is a recording of the piece by Douglas
Rogers, English concertina, and Julie Lustman, piano, on The Great Regondi: Original
Compositions by the 19th Centurys Unparalleled Guitarist and Concertinist, The
Regondi Guild, Bridge Records BCB 9039 (1993). For a discussion of a textual problem in
the Serenade, see Atlas, A 41-Cent Emendation (see note 4).
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