Table of Contents

Stephen Foster's Versatility and Industry; Talking Too Much; Some Musical Signposts; Personal Recollections of the Last Days of Stephen Foster; Intimate View of Stephen Foster; Sense of Rhythm; Intelligent Training of the Thumb; Find the Shortest, Quickest and Easiest Way to Do Things; Spurring Up a Slow Pupil; Stephen C. Foster's Romantic Career; Music's Written Language; How to Show Pupils the Advantages of Slow Practice; Compounded Measures; Popularizing Good Music; Some Curious Musical Instruments Used by Savage Tribes; Beauty and Originality in Haydn's Pianoforte Sonatas; Generosity of Franz Liszt; Two Great Musical Innovators, Liszt and Paganini; Are You a Solomaniac?. Forcing Children to Study; Burns and Schubert—A Parallel; Those Old Pieces; Waste Motion in Finger Practice; Music Study as an Investment and Robert Schumann's Wedding Anniversary Gift.

The Etude was an American print magazine dedicated to music founded by Theodore Presser (1848–1925) at Lynchburg, Virginia, and first published in October 1883. Presser, who had also founded the Music Teachers National Association, moved his publishing headquarters to Philadelphia, Pennsylvania in 1884, and his Theodore Presser Company continued the magazine until 1957.

Aimed at all musicians, from the novice through the serious student to the professional, The Etude printed articles about both basic (or "popular") and more-involved musical subjects (including history, literature, gossip, and politics), contained write-in advice columns about musical pedagogy, and piano sheet music, of all performer ability levels, totaling over 10,000 works. Helen Tretbar edited the magazine in the late 1880s. James Francis Cooke, editor-in-chief from 1909 to 1949, added the phrase "Music Exalts Life!" to the magazine's masthead, and The Etude became a platform for Cooke's somewhat polemical and militantly optimistic editorials. The sometimes, conservative outlook and contents of the magazine may have contributed to a decline in circulation in the 1930s and '40s, but in many respects it moved with the times, unequivocally supporting the phonograph, radio, and eventually television, and, by the late 1930s, fully embracing jazz. By the end, George Rochberg was an editor of The Etude under Guy McCoy, who had succeeded Cooke as editor-in-chief after over two decades as an assistant, and the magazine's musical content had come more closely in-step with the contemporary world.