Music Trade Review

Issue: 1905 Vol. 40 N. 17

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE
OC3000000000000C
MUSIC TRADE
REVIEW
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In the World of Music Publishing >P
REVIEW OF TRADE CONDITIONS.
Somewhat of a Falling Off in Local Trade Last
Week—Orders By Mail, However, Are Quite
Large This Week, and the Prospects Are
Bright With a Larger Volume of Trade—
Price Cutting Still a Great Menace to a
Stable Business—Legitimate Methods, How-
ever, Will Win Out in the End—This is In-
evitable.
Last week a falling off in trade was quite no-
ticeable in nearly all quarters, much more in
volume than was looked for at. this particular
time. The Lenten period has a curtailing effect,
especially in the leading centers of distribution,
but elsewhere it is not so pronounced. This
week, however, opened up stronger, the mails
were larger and of better quality, though col-
lections run behind. This is usually what hap-
pens at Easter, when funds are diverted in other
directions and for other purposes, but quite easily
explained by observers of current conditions. As
stated before, publishers are now making calcu-
lations for the best season in the history of the
trade. Sales promise to be steady and heavy, but
the net results are not so promising. Prices are
worrying everybody, and the development of
reckless cutting continues unabated. The evil
is spreading in all directions, and the West, which
GREAT SUMMER HIT!!
" M E E T M E DOWN AT LUNA, L E N A "
B i g g e s t S e a s o n S o n g on t h e M a r k e t !
was considered immune, is taking a hand in the
desperate struggle. The only publishing houses
not. entangled are the comparatively few hold-
ing aloof from the demoralizing scramble.
Jobbers are having troubles of their own in
this connection, and unless pretty well fortified,
are meeting the cuts made by publishers more
eager for transitory advantages than the preser-
vation of wholesome business on a paying basis.
As one of them said to The Review: "Our firm
has not felt the price cutting so severely, but we
are bound to eventually. A few weeks back it
seemed as if the department store buyer would
not dominate the sheet music business, but it now
appears as if he were cock of the walk, unless
publishers recover their sanity. Five-cent music
is suicidal. It is killing the goose that lays the
golden eggs. In the end, however, the legitimate
publisher will come out on top. The ultimate set-
tlement of this 'question may be deferred for a
time, but it must come. Now the department
store buyer has taken the stand that he will not
pay more than 8 cents for any music. The re-
£ii!t is a stock of cheap music from second and
third-rate publishers, consequently their line of
customers is invariably of the cheap variety.
They only buy such first-class pieces as the nat-
ural call demands, for publishers in this rank de-
cline to lower the regular price. Outside the dis-
cussion of prices there is very little going on,
excepting that trade promises to be much more
active.'"
LONDON PUBLISHERS TAKE ACTION.
G e l it!
" D O DROP IN AT DEW-DROP I N N "
Charming Waltz Song! A Hit!
" BUSTER B R O W N "
Cartoon Song. Hit in " B u s t e r Brown" Pro-
duction.
"AIN'T ANYBODY EVER COIN' TO B U Y "
Indignant At the Insufficient Protection Ac-
corded Them by the Government—Music
Printers Also Meet.
On the 7th inst.. at a meeting of the Music Pub-
lishers' Association, London, Eng., action was
taken regarding the insufficient protection af-
Latest Coon Song and a Winner!
forded by the existing copyright law, mention of
ADDKKSS ALL ORDERS TO
which was made in The Review of April 15. The
THEATRICAL MUSIC SUPPLY CO.
resolutions adopted follow: 1. No further new
44 West 28th Street, New York
publications shall be issued by any of the firms
in question until further notice. 2. No fresh con-
tracts for payments to artistes and singers of
THE BIG SENSATIONAL SELLING
new publications shall be entered into for the
SONG HIT OF 1905,
present, 3. No further money shall at present
be spent upon newspaper advertisements.
The signatory firms were: E. Ascherberg & Co.,
Also
Edwin Ashdown, Boosey & Co., Chappell & Co.,
Love
in
a
Phonograph,
Kisses,
Ltd., J. B. Cramer & Co., Ltd., Ernest Donajow-
A Bit O' Blarney,
Georgie,
A Mormon Coon,
ski,
Enoch & Sons, Evans & Co., A. Hammond &
A House to Rent.
Co., Hawkes & Son, Hopwood & Crew, Ltd., the
PUBLISHED BY
John Church Co., Metzler & Co... Ltd., Price &
Reynolds, G. Ricordi & Co., Charles Sheard & Co.,
Joseph Williams, Ltd.. M. Witmark & Son and
New Amsterdam Theatre Bldg.,
NEW YORK
Keith, Prowse & Co.
The attitude of the association, it was declared,
was merely a measure of self-protection, and was
not dictated by any hostile spirit toward any per-
POPULAR SONG and INSTRUMENTAL HITS
son connected with the trade or profession.
POLLY PRIM MARCH
PETER PIPER MARCH
At a meeting of the Master Music Printers held
SHAME ON YOU
EGYPT
1
previous to the above date, an address was formu-
ZEL-ZEL
1 WANT TO BE A SOLDIER 1
lated to the Prime Minister, reciting their griev-
PEGGY BRADY
jTX, BIG INDIAN CHIEF
ances incident to the "widespread piracy of copy-
right music." Adding, "In the event of the gov-
NEW OPERATIcT^"^
ernment finding it impossible to pass such legis-
PUBLICATIONS
ISLE OF SPICE
lation [new copyright law] this session, we beg
LADY TEAZLE
1
SAMBO GIRL
MADCAP PRINCESS
to be allowed to suggest that the law prescribing
MAMA'S PAPA
RED FEATHER
that every publication should bear the imprint of
Published by
the publisher and printer be strictly enforced, and
East
Zlst
St.,
New
York
JOS. W . STERN 6 CO.,
34
that the Home Office should instruct the police
SAN FRANCISCO
CHICAGO
LONDON
authorities to render every assistance in the seiz-
ure, under the present act, of pirated musical
publications."
POPULAR SONG HITS
Commenting on the foregoing, our London
" Lights ol Home," "Just a Piciure of You," " My Sun-
burnt Lily," "They All Spoke Well of You," by the namesake, in its current issue, says: "The Home
noted writers, Al. Trahern and Lee Orean Smith.
Secretary, questioned in the House of Commons,
has said that he does not see his way to bring in
C. L. PARTEE MUSIC CO.
23 East 20th Street
New York City a bill himself to deal with the matter, and that
" EASY STREET"
SOL BLOOM
r
if one be introduced by a private member it must
take its chance with other bills." Under these
circumstances the prospects of the bill being
placed on passage are far from bright.
NATIONAL ASSOCIATION TO MEET
At the Broadway Central Hotel on June 13.
—Important Business To Be Discussed.
According to custom, the Music Publishers' As-
sociation of the United States will hold their
eleventh annual convention June 13, at the
Broadway Central Hotel, New York City, at 10
a. m. The copyright law, with proposed amend-
ments, will be discussed, and other matters of im-
portance disposed of. The officers are: President,
J. P. Bowers; vice-president, H. S. Gordon; sec-
retary, Chas. B. Bayly; treasurer, E. S. Cragin.
Executive Committee.—Walter M. Bacon, G. W.
Purniss, Chas. K. Harris, E. T. Paull, Sol Bloom,
and ex-officio, J. P. Bowers and Chas. B. Bayly.
REVIEWOGRAPHS.
Relative to the post office decision excluding
sheet music as a supplement to newspapers after
September 1, a publisher emphatically declared
it. "was the best thing ever happened. You have
no idea how this scheme interfered with the
sale of music. Receivers of the papers utilizing
sheet music in this way, saved each supplement
carefully, making a portfolio or album. But when
it comes to cutting out the music from the body
of the paper minus the beauty and attractiveness
of title page, etc... the habit, will soon fall into
innocuous desuetude. 1
Fred. Belcher, manager of Jerome H. Remick
& Co., New York, returned Tuesday from a pleas-
ure sojourn of the week end at Atlantic City.
Musicians and music-lovers will be glad to
know that the full piano score of "It Happened
in Nordland" is now ready, M. Witmark & Sons,
the publishers, having announced this fact re-
cently. This is the musical play written by Glen
MacDonough and Victor Herbert, and which re-
ceived its initial performance at Lew Fields'
Theatre, New York, last winter, and soon to tour
the country. It is generally admitted that the
music in " I t Happened in Nordland" ranks
among the best of Mr. Herbert's compositions,
and the various selections will long he remem-
bered, especially "Al Fresco," the beautiful inter-
mezzo written expressly for the play, and the
following numbers, all of which have become
great favorites: "The Jack O'Lantern Girl," "A
Knot of Blue," "Absinthe Frappe" and "The Mati-
nee Maid."
Cbc most Popular College $ O ng$
The Most Popular College Songs
-
-
-
-
-
-
$ .50
50 New College Sengs
.50
Songs o f ALL O>« Colleges
-
Songs of the W i : S T i : K N Colleges
-
Songs c f the EASTERN Colleges
-
-
1. SO
- 1.25
-
-
1.25
S C H O O L Songs with C O L L E G E Flavor
-
- .50
Songs of the Flag and Nation
-
- .SO
-
-
100 N e w Kindergarten Songs
1.00
New
Song? for College Glee Clubs
New
Songs for Male Quartets
.
-
.
-
Songs of the University of Pennsylvania
Songs of the University of Michigan
.
-
-'
-
-
-
New
-
.
.
1.50
-
Songs of Washington and Jefferson College
Songs of Haverford College
.50
- .50
-
.
I 25
1.25
.
1.25
Songs and Anthems for Church Quartets,
(Eleven Numbers)
each .10 to .30
HINDS, NOBLE & ELDREDGE
3 J - 33 - 35 Wcit 15th Street.
New York CKy
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
44
THE IVIUSIC TRADE
VOCAL and
INSTRUMENTAL
Successes That Sell
VOCAL.
TAMMANY—Bryan & Edwards.
PRETTIEST GAL IN BORNEO—McPher-
son & Ball.
STAR OF MY LIFE—Ward & Corliss.
LISTEN TO THE BIG BRASS BAND—
Dave Reed, Jr.
GIRL WHO CARES FOR ME—Cobb & Ed-
wards.
HAPPY JAPPY SOLDIER MAN—West &
Bratton.
GOOD-NIGHT, BELOVED, GOOD-NIGHT—
Fay & Oliver.
IN THE SHADOW OF THE PYRAMID—
McPherson & Ball.
YOU'RE THE FLOWER OF MY HEART,
SWEET ADELINE—Gerard & Arm-
strong.
ALL IS FAIR IN LOVE AND WAR—
Heelan & Brachman.
GOOD-BYE, LITLE GIRL, GOOD-BYE—
Cobb & Edwards.
THERE'S NOTHING NEW TO SAY—
Luther & Robyn.
KATE KEARNEY—Fay & Oliver.
THOSE SONGS MY MOTHER USED TO
SING—H. Wakefield Smith.
IN DREAMLAND, IN DREAMLAND—
Abeles & Francis.
IF I SHOULD—Costello & Friedman.
I LOVE YOU ALL THE TIME—W. R. An-
derson.
IT'S LOVELY TO LOVE A LOVELY GIRL
—Moran & Furth.
JUST IDLE DREAMS—Dennis Mackin.
JUST FOR TO-NIGHT—Frank O. French.
MY SONNY BOY—Chauncey Olcott.
INSTRUMENTAL.
AL FRESCO—Intermezzo, Victor Herbert.
KY-ISSES—Nocturn,
Wm. C. O'Hare.
HOP SCOTCH—Two Step,
Howard Whitney.
BOHEMIAN KNIGHTS—Intermezzo,
Isidor Greenberg.
ROSES' HONEYMOON—Reverie,
J. W. Bratton.
LILLIPUTIA—Intermezzo,
Harry L. Rogers.
THE VICTOR MARCH,
Arthur Pryor.
ROSES,
Theo. Bendix.
LACES AND GRACES—Novelette,
Salzer & Bratton.
YESTERTHOUGHTS,
Victor Herbert.
SECOND FIDDLE WALTZES,
Natt D. Mann.
THE SENTRY—March,
Arthur H. Haskins.
Catalogues and Title Pages on
Application. Send for discounts
and new issue subscription rate.
M.WITMARK & SONS
NEW YORK
CHICAGO
LONDON
REVIEW
Talk of pirated songs has agitated publishing
circles, and reports have it that "Teasing" is be-
ing put on the market by a party very much in
evidence in the "Street," and who at first is said
to have "thrown a scare" by spreading false re-
ports. The same person is said to have been en-
gaged in more than one shady transaction in
years past.
who have secured their services exclusively for
a term of years.
Tascott, the original coon shouter, featured
"Shame On You," and "Hallelujah Sister" at
Pastor's Theatre, New York City, recently, and
took several encores on each song. He declares
the latter song to be one of the cleverest and most
popular he has ever sung.
A special feature of the musical programme of
the forty-seventh anniversary of Atlantic Gar-
den, New York, May 3, will be the march, "Col-
lege Life," by Prantzen, which will be played by
Professor Eschert and his famous band of one
hundred musicians. Mr. Eschert is making elab-
orate plans for this affair, and the profession will
turn out in full force to do honor to his efforts.
Shapiro, Von Tilzer & Roehr Music Co. is
the combination in London, Eng., to exploit
American songs and instrumentals of the popular
order, and for which there appears to be an in-
satiable demand now. In view of the present
trouble with pirated publications in the English
capital, it is said the new firm will meet the
enemy on their own ground with three-cent
music.
One of the biggest instrumental hits of the sea-
son has turned out to be "Love and Kisses," a
caprice, by Chas. K. Harris. It is heard every-
where. And mention of the "House of Ballads"
is a reminder that Meyer Cohen (originator of
illustrated songs), the manager of the Harris es-
tablishment, sang most acceptably and feelingly
the following, at the annual testimonial given
Harry S. Sanderson, of Tony Pastor's Theatre,
New York, Sunday: "Shenandoah," "Why Don't
They Play With Me," "I'm Trying So Hard to
Forget You/' "Farewell, Sweetheart May." Wed-
nesday evening Mr. Cohen repeated these selec-
tions and other Harris songs at a concert, given in
Wanamaker's store as a benefit.
SAM BERNARD.
Sam Bernard is probably one of the most fa-
mous, as well as the most popular, comedians on
Albert & Son, of Sydney, Australia, who in- the American stage. The amusement-loving pub-
tended establishing a branch in London, Eng., lic will be glad to learn that Mr. Bernard is to
have abandoned the project on account of the have a new musical play written expressly for
weakness of the British copyright law. They him by William T. Frances and Sydney Rosenfeld,
claim it would be absurd to enter the field against the title of which is "The Rollicking Girl." It.
the wholesale piracy now prevalent in Great will be produced on May 1 at the Herald Square
Britain.
Theatre, New York, on a collossal scale by
Charles Frohman, who never does anything by
Justice MacLean, of the New York Supreme halves, and the public will again have an oppor-
Court, special term, Part I, Wednesday week, tunity of enjoying an entertainment that will
ruled that Grace Cameron might, sing "Dolly equal in every respect that enormous success,
Dimple Made a Hit" as much as she liked, and he "The Girl From Kay's," in which Mr. Bernard
vacated the injunction granted temporarily on the was so great a hit and in which he rendered that
petition of Fred. C. Whitney, the producer of
famous song, "Sufficiency," with suoh originality
"Piff, Paff, Pouf," of which the "Dolly Dimple" and refreshing humor. He will have in his sup-
song is a part, and in which Miss Cameron made port the ever-welcome Hattie Williams,. Joseph
a hit. Justice MacLean decided that as the L-oyne, Amy Angelus and other clever perform-
song had been published separately and sold ers.
That "The Rollicking Girl' will be a big
broadcast, anybody might use it and it was no go there is every evidence, and that the star will
longer the exclusive property of Mr. Whitney.
receive a royal welcome on the 1st is, of course,
a foregone conclusion.
"When the Sun Sinks in the Golden West," by
Walter J. Crawford, published by Willis Wood-
WM. H. PENN'S LATEST MARCH.
ward & Co., is considered a beautiful ballad by
That "cute couple," The Healey Sisters, who
professionals and laymen. The melody is sweet,
and the lyric in harmony. The refrain follows: are touring in vaudeville, have made arrange-
ments with Sol Bloom to furnish all the music
When the sun sinks in the golden west.
And its rays have kissed the mountain's crest;
that they require in their work, and are already
When the stars begin to beam,
using his issues, "Georgie" and "Easy Street."
And the waters are agleatn,
Is tlie hour, sweetheart, that we love best.
Not content with writing song hits, such as
In my dreaming there's but one I see,
"Easy Street," "There's Nobody Just Like You,"
"Pis a face forever dear to me ;
etc., William H. Penn makes a frequent ten-
Something tells my aching heart,
We will never meet to part,
strike with an instrumental number, such as, for
When the sun sinks in the golden west.
instance, "The Foxhunter's March." His latest
bit of writing in this line is "The Matador
NEW PRODUCTIONS UNDER WAY.
March," which for simplicity, catchiness and yet
Cole & Johnson ,the clever song writers, who musicianly method is by far the best of this gen-
have just completed a highly successful tour over tleman's productions. That this is so, is proved
the western vaudeville houses, are back once by the way that orders for it are coming in to
again in New York, and will remain in the city his publisher.
several weeks filling return dates. They are feat-
uring several of their own recent song composi-
Fred Ranken has signed a five-years' contract,
tions, including "Lindy," "Zel Zel," "Pretty Lit- with Mr. DeKoven whereby they will collaborate
tle Squaw From Utah," and "Gimme The Leav- in opera. The first work of the two will be
in's," but will close their season shortly in order "Elysia." The Shuberts pledge themselves to
that they may devote all the time possible to pre- produce one opera a year by DeKoven and Ranken
paring the musical numbers for several new pro- at the Lyric Theatre. Witmark will have the
ductions to be presented by Klaw & Erlanger, publishing rights.

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