Music Trade Review

Issue: 1892 Vol. 16 N. 8

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
VOL. XVI. No. 8.
published Every Saturday.

ffeu; Yor^, October i, 1892.
year. There were about four thousand French
lovers of Wagnerian music, against seven thou-
sand English and American visitors.
That Sir Arthur Sullivan's new Haddon Hall
opera is not entirely serious may be gathered
from the fact that Mr. Denny acts the comic part
of a highlander, who, in the course of the work,
has to dance the " fling." Mr. Denny, who is
nothing if not thorough, also plays the bagpipes
himself, instead of depending upon the talents
of an artist stationed at the wing. The com-
plete cast includes Miss Lucille Hill and Mr.
Pounds as Dorothy Vernon and young Manners,
Miss Brandram as the heroine's mother, Miss
Annie Cole, Miss Dorothy Vane, Messrs. Bar-
rington, Green and Kenningham. The opera is
in three acts and four tableaux, the first being
in the courtyard of Haddon Hall with the home-
coming of the elder Vernon, and the second in
the ballroom, while the last act is divided into
two scenes.
Bar/ds apd (T\usi<;iai}S.
The thirty-fifth annual musical festival began
at Mechanics' Hall, in Worcester, Mass., Tues-
day evening-, September 27th. Mendelssohn's
"Hymn of Praise," and Gade's " Erl King's
Daughter " were given by the chorus of the as-
sociation, a picked orchestra from the Boston
Symphony Society, with Franz Knsizel as con-
cert-meister, the festival organ, and thoroughly
competent solo artists, all under the direction of
Carl Zerrahn, of Boston. The soloists were
Mme. Marie Tavary, Mme. Belle Cole, Mr. W.
H. Rieger, and Mr. Carl Dufft.
Richard Percy, organist, has returned from
Cottage City, and is fully prepared for his fall
and winter work.
The Marcato Banjo, Mandolin and Guitar Or-
chestra is the name of a string orchestra which
was organized at Fargo, N. D , on the 24th ult.
The organization is composed of the following
artists : W. H. West, solo banjo and mandolin ;
A. Hamlin, first banjo; Mrs. Hamlin, banjeu-
rine; O. Guptil, second banjo; A. Burg, tenor
banjo; W. Addison, guitar; Mrs. W. H. West,
guitar ; P. A. Sailing, bass banjo. The cele-
brated Washburn mandolins and guitars, and
the renowned S. S. Stewart banjos are used by
this orchestra.
It is believed that Mrs. P. V. M. Rice-Ray-
mond, director of the Oratorio Society of Lin-
coln, Neb,, is the first woman in this country to
direct an oratorio with orchestra.
Col. Henry L. Higginson, the patron of the
Boston Symphony Orchestra, has added a codi-
cil to his will that leaves an investment of
$1,000,000, as an endowment fund, the interest
of which is to be used for the permanent main-
tenance of the Boston Symphony Orchestra.
The marked increase of the French visitors at
the Wagner festival at Bayreuth is notable this
The fact that, so far as Austria is concerned,
all rights in " Parsifal " will expire on February
13 next has caused some flutterings in Wagner-
ian dovecotes. By the Austrian law it seems
that copyrights last only for ten years after the
decease of the author, and it is generally felt
that if " Parsifal " were allowed to pass into the
reportory of the Imperial Opera House, where
it would be sung by some of the first artists of
the day, and would be conducted by Dr. Richter,
the Bayreuth monopoly would certainly be
broken down, and perhaps the very existence of
the enterprise might be threatened.
Dr. Antonin Dvorak, the distinguished Bo-
hemian composer, arrived in New York, Tues-
day, September 27th, on the steamer Saale. Dr.
Dvorak has come here to assume the position of
director of the National Conservatory of Music,
and will at once commence his duties. The con-
tract between Dr. Dvorak and the National Con-
servatory is for three years at a salary of $15,000.
At the first Philharmonic concert this season,
Dr. Dvorak will conduct his symphony in D
minor. At the concert of October 21st, at Car-
negie Hall, an oration of welcome will be de-
livered by T. W. Higginson, and the program
will contain Dvorak's " Te Deum " and " Triple
Overture." On November 15th a reception will
be tendered Dr. Dvorak, to which all the leading
musicians in this country will be invited.
Victor Kuzdo, the Hungarian violin virtuoso,
has been engaged for the violin department at the
New York Conservatory of Music. Mr. Kuzdo is
an exceptionally fine interpreter of Senor Sara-
sate 's compositions, and in the playing of Gypsy
music he is most happy. His own compositions
are well written, and are full of that subtle
charm which alone exists in the Magyar music.
THE Columbian Quartet, of Biddeford, Me.,
has been organized. Among the leading mem-
bers are David Warren Manahon, Howard W.
Knight, Mrs. Ada Kennard Fenderson.
$3.00 PER YBAR.
SINGLE COPIES, 10 CENTS..
THE: Keller Bros. & Blight Co. has been in-
corporated at Stamford, Conn., with a capital of
$50,000, for the purpose of manufacturing and
dealing in pianos. Wm. M. Blight, Chas.
Keller and others interested.
I. S. FARMER, of Braddock, Pa., died at New-
ark, O., at the age of 35 years. He was a music
dealer in Braddock and McKeesport, and was
visiting Newark, O., at the time of his death.
THE Rice-Macy Piano Co. have moved into
their new piano factory at Columbia Heights,
and it will soon be running at its full capacity,
which is fifteen pianos per week.
MRS. JEANNETTE THURBER, President of
the
National Conservatory of Music of America,
states that the examination for admission to Dr.
Antonin Dvorak's composition class will be
held at the Conservatory, 126-128 East 17th
street, New York, on October 3d.
A. BI,AKE, music dealer, of Olean, N. Y., has
disposed of his business to Messrs. Anderson &
Conklin, who will enlarge the business hereto-
fore conducted by their predecessor.
CHARLIE SISSON was in town this week, and
reported one of the most successful trips during
his long career. This, of course, means extra
pressure on the F. & V. organ factory in Detroit.
JOHN F. PETRI, who died in New York on Sep-
tember 25th, was born in Borsum, Hanover,
18 r 1. He was connected with the firm of Stein-
way & Sons from 1861 to 1877, as salesman,
when he retired from active business. His body
will be removed to Baltimore. He leaves a wife
and one son. Mr. Petri composed some popular
music.
THE bursting of a water-pipe in the stock rooms
of Hallet-Davis piano factory, on Harrison av-
enue, Boston, Mass., did damage to the extent
of $300.
Jos. P. SKELLY, music composer, of New
York city, was held in Jefferson Market Court,
September 27th, charged with obtaining $10
from Music Publisher Louis Berge, of 525^ Sixth
avenue, under false pretenses. Berge paid
Skelly $10 last February for the exclusive right
to publish the song '' Safe to My Heart Again,''
and since then he has learned that Skelly has
sold the song to two other publishers.
MR. NAHUM STETSON, of Steinway & Sons,
stated in a recent interview, that the factory at
Hamburg, Germany, has not been closed a single
day on account of the cholera, as has been re-
ported.
MR. HENRY BACKENSTO opened up a music
store at Dallas, Ore., on September 15th. He
will keep a full line of musical instruments.
MR. BROWN, of Brown & Patterson, manufac-
turers of piano plates, Marcy avenue and Hope
streets, Brooklyn, N. Y., is quite ill at his resi-
dence. Business continues good with this firm.
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW.
170
A MUSICAL COMBINATION.
f
H E following, in substance, has been going
the rounds of the daily press :
CINCINNATI, September 23d.—A great combi-
nation of music publishing and musical instru-
ment manufacturers has just been consummated
by a syndicate of Cincinnatians, which will
make this city the great center of that business
for the whole country. The capital of the inte-
rests involved will reach five million dollars.
The interests involved are the John Church
Company, of this city ; a New York house at 16
East 14th street; t h e Everett Piano Company,
of Boston; Root & Sons'Music Company, of
Chicago; the Harvard Piano Company, of Bos-
ton, and the Royal Manufacturing Company, of
3 EAST 14th STREET, NEW YORK.
this city. These are to be combined under one
management. The men in the new venture are
SUBSCRIPTION (including postage) United States and
Canada, $3.00 per year, in advance; Foreign Countries, William N. Hobart, Edward Rawson, A. Howard
$4 00.
Hinkle, Frank A. Lee and William Hooper.
ADVERTISEMENTS, $2.00 per inch, single column, per The last named gentleman is a capitalist. Mr.
insertion; unless inserted upon rates made by special
Lee is vice-president of the John Church Com-
contract.
pany
; Mr. Hobart and Mr. Rawson have been
Entered at the New York Post Office as Second Class Matter.
active in the May Musical Festival Association,
and Mr. Hinkle is a retired member of the great
school book publishing house of Van Antwerp,
Bragg & Co. Mr. Hooper will probably be
president of the new company, with Mr. Lee as
general manager.
th cause tfeit [s
For % srosg fut mli rmskv^
For [\i feiare in
Europe we receive the following
communication :
" LONDON, Sept. 21st, 1892.
" E D W A R D LYMAN BILL, ESQ.,
To simmer the whole report down, it means
merely this : A re-organization of the separated
interests controlled by the John Church Co., to
be unified under one general head, the center of
which will be located in the city of Cincinnati,
and will be directed by that distinguished and
intelligent factor of the music trades, Mr. Frank
A. Lee. It is only one of those moves which
show the tendency of the times toward central-
ization, and in that one word may be summed
up the entire move which has gained such wide-
spread notoriety under the head of'' Piano Com-
bines, " " Musical Combinations," " Piano
T r u s t s , " etc. The separated interests of the
John Church Co., and its various branches, will
be classified under one general head, controlled
from the principal offices, which will be located
in Cincinnati.
" Editor T H E MUSIC T R A D E R E V I E W .
1
' Her Imperial and Royal Highness the Em-
press of Germany has appointed Mr. C. Bech-
stein to be pianoforte manufacturer to Her
Majesty by special warrant of appointment, Mr.
Bechstein having supplied Her Majesty with
his instruments ever since her marriage to the
Emperor William I I . "
J. HAINES, SR., accompanied
by his youngest son, Albert N., left for a
Western trip last Wednesday evening. His
route will include the principal Western cities
as far as Detroit. He will visit Chicago, and
return by the Southern route, including Cin-
cinnati.
jLBERT KRELL, of the Krell Piano Co.,
Cincinnati, O., was in the metropolis
this week. During an interview Mr. Krell re-
ported business with his firm in splendid con-
dition.
Stevens & Klock Organ Co., Marietta,
O., inform us that they are now comforta-
bly situated, and in a short time will be ready
to supply the trade '' with the best goods money
and skill can produce." This firm is composed
of enterprising men, and we have no doubt of
their future success. Keep your eye on the
Stevens & Klock organs.
jELLER BROS. & BLIGHT, piano manu-
facturers, Bridgeport, Conn., are now
an incorporated concern under the title of the
Keller Bros. & Blight Company. The capital
stock of the concern is $50,000. The officers
and directors of the company are, Joseph Keller,
president ; Charles Keller, vice-president;
William M. Blight, secretary and treasurer ; F.
W. Marsh, of Marsh, Merwin & Lemmon, bank-
ers; Geo. O. Lines, manager of East End Rail-
way Company.
PATRICK S A R S F I E L D GILMORE.
§
Y the death of this renowned musician the
cause of musical progress has lost one of
its ablest promoters, the people have lost a
favorite whom they not only ^admired, b u t
loved, and t h e bereaved wife and daughter of
the deceased have lost a husband and father,
ever devoted, affectionate and tender.
The reputation that Patrick Sarsfield Gilmore
gained by his abilities and his worth, is nation-
al and international. H e needs no extended
eulogy. The people knew him, and they revere
his memory. He delighted them, but he also
instructed them. His band played in rapturous
strains the melodies that were dear to the people's
hearts, and it also revealed to them the glow-
ing treasures of the sublimest music of the past
and present, and gave them the richest melodic
jewels of the harmonic art.
Mr. Gilmore was born a musician, and his
life was given to making humanity happier and
better by ministering to its love of melody.
He trained his band with scrupulous care and
consummate skill, and all the accumulated re-
sources of his thoroughly cultivated musical
nature, of his comprehensive experience, and of
his masterful energies, were devoted to perfect-
ing the great institution—for Gilmore's Band
was a national institution—which he directed
until it became a power capable of fascinating,
developing and uplifting the musical taste of
the American people. He has accomplished a
great work, and the good that he has done will
not die with him, but will keep his memory
green in the national heart forever.
Patrick Sarsfield Gilmore was a patriot, and a
man. His love for Ireland, the land of his
nativity, ever glowed within him, but his love
for America, his adopted country, was also deep,
ardent, and sincere. The high honors that he
won at home and abroad never made him super-
cilious or arrogant, he was always affable, unas-
suming and modest. He was a faithful friend,
a loving husband and father, a benefactor of
humanity, and his death is more than a private
sorrow, it is a public calamity.
A P E C U L I A R CONDITION.
POLITICAL mares' nest of alarming pro-
portions has been discovered in Vermont.
It came out in a letter written to National Head-
quarters. Both national committees have held
that directors of national banks are officials
holding " positions of profit and trust " under
the Federal Government, and as such are in-
eligible as presidential electors, and in New
York and several other States candidates for
election who were national bank directors have
been compelled to resign. If the courts hold as
the committees have, that national bank direc-
tors are Federal officials, it will complicate mat-
ters in Vermont, which has this clause in its
Constitution :
'' Nor shall any person holding any office of
profit or trust under the authority of Congress
be eligible to any appointment in the Legisla-
ture or of holding any executive or judiciary
office under the State.''
Col. Levi K. Fuller, Governor-elect of Ver-

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