Music Trade Review

Issue: 1908 Vol. 46 N. 20

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE:
MREVIDVflEARS
MUSIC
TRADE
THAT we have received excellent account; of
the new Julian Edwards' opera "The Gay Musi-
cian." (M. Witmark & Sons.)
THAT the Great Eastern Publishing Co. are
concentrating all their efforts on pushing one of
the daintiest little novelty numbers of the sea-
son, "If I Build a Nest, Will You Share It With
Me?"
THAT a telephone message from the house of
Remick informs us that 15,000 copies of the
song "Are You Sincere?" were sold on Saturday
last.
THAT this proves conclusively the value of any
matter printed in these columns.
THAT if it took 25 years to compile the Music
Supplement issued with last Sunday's New York
World, how long would it take for a World
reporter to collect some really reliable infor-
mation?
THAT special emphasis was given in this lit-
erary joke to the fact that Victor Herbert, al-
though the possessor of "a foreign accent," is
Irish.
THAT our "Man On The Street," who has some
slight knowledge of both Mr. Herbert and Dublin,
CHANDLER TALKSJ)F CONDITIONS.
has never before heard the accent of the Irish
Returns from Extended Trip and Regrets Uni-
capital described as "foreign."
versal Price Cutting of Popular Music—Some
THAT unquestionably the most interesting as
Comments in This Connection.
well as the most veracious article in the whole
supplement was a zoological item headed "Awful
(.Special to The Review.)
Fate of the Kangaroo."
Chicago, 111., May 8, 1908.
THAT Maurice Shapiro has a most remarkable
H. F. Chandler, of the National Music Co., who
new issue list for this time of year.
recently returned from a trip, in which he not
THAT the Fred Fischer Music Pub. Co. has only visited the principal Southern cities, but
been incorporated with a capital of $500. The also took in Detroit, Cleveland, Pittsburg, Cin-
directors included Jos. Lasky, William Breiten- cinnati and Indianapolis, found the music trade
bach, and Phillip Leichtentritt, none of whom throughout the countiy to be in a deplorable con-
belong to the Ancient Order of Hibernians.
dition owing to the price cutting of popular
THAT GUS Edwards' Summer Song has ar- music. "Never before in all my travels," re-
rived and is called "The Grand Old Sands."
marked Mr. Chandler to your correspondent,
THAT with Victor Herbert's "Algeria" (Charles "have I seen such chaotic conditions. Legitimate
K. Harris) and Leslie Stuart's "Havana" (Chap- music dealers throughout the country are seri-
pell & Co.), it looks as though the autumn crop ously talking of throwing music out of their
of musical plays will have some geographical stores entirely, while others have relegated it
value.
to some dark corner to look out for itself. In
THAT Jerome H. Remick should be cordially one town I interviewed a dealer who showed me
congratulated upon having secured the publica- a card from a New York publisher asking how
tion rights of Miss Clare Rummer's songs for a many copies of a certain 'hit' he could use at
lie. a copy wholesale, while his neighbor, a ten-
period of three years.
THAT Walter Jacobs, of Boston, announces that cent store, had his window filled with the same
his charming little waltz, "The Kiss of Spring," song at 10c. retail. Other dealers that I met
informed me that they were buying all the songs
is published for all instruments.
THAT Charles K. Harris will publish "A Stub- they needed from the 10c. stores thereby dis-
born Cinderella," the new Musical Comedy by pensing with both publisher and jobber."
Speaking of a possible remedy, Mr. Chandler's
Hough, Adams & Howard, shortly to be produced
views could hardly be called optimistic. "Song
in Milwaukee.
THAT the trial of the action brought by Her- hits are not as long lived as they were eight or
bert Hall Winslow against Joseph Weber, the ten or even five years ago," he remarked, and
there is a growing tendency on the part of "popu-
comedian, should make interesting reading if
lar" music publishers to still further reduce
all reports be true.
their prices to dealers, thus enabling them to
THAT Alfred Solman has just completed a high-
compete with the ten-cent stores. Department
class song, entit'ed "If I Had a Thousand Lives to
and ten-cent stores draw crowds of people, it is
Live, I'd Live Them All for You."
true, and will always be strong factors in the
THAT Maurice Shapiro should give a prize for
selling of popular music, but this need not deter
a ballad which does not mention roses in its
or frighten the legitimate dealer in the least,
title, in some form or other.
as all he requires is more efficient sales people,
better posted and more alive to the educating
THE TEACHER'S FAVORITE
of their customers to take a better class of music.
The dealer who canies a high class stock and
GRADED
understands his business, will not suffer because
some "popular" publishers are selling their music
EDITION
for whatever they can get. Music departments
U 5
U S
in ten-cent stores and department stores have
LEO FEIST, Feist Building, 134 W. 37th St., N. Y.
surely come to stay, but they cater only to the
class of people who want cheap music. Natur-
ally, therefoie, this class of store secures the
J
cheapest kind of help obtainable, a class who
E
generally speaking know nothing whatsoever of
From "THE DAIRYMAIDS"
R
the music business and are only capable of hand-
( W o r d s b y M . E. ROURKE)
O
"MARY McGES." "I'D LIKE TO MEET YOUR
ing out music as a butcher hands out meat or a
M
FATHER." "CHEER UP GIRLS," "I'VE A MILLION
grocer hands out tea. A change is shortly in
REASONS WHY I LOVE YOU." "NEVER MARRY
E
A GIRL WITH COLO COLD FEET."
order, mark my words."
BEC
PAT
OF*.
BBO
PAT. OFF.
SUCCESSFUL SONGS
D.
From "THE LITTLE CHERUB"
K
E
R
N
'8
"MEET ME AT TWILIGHT." (W.rdi by F. Clifford
Harris). "UNDER THE LINDEN TREE," (Words
by M. E. Ronrke).
From "THE MORALS OF MARCUS"
"EASTERN MOON." (Words by M. E. Rourke).
T .
R
0 . , U31-143C
Broadway
D . HARM*?
n / t n i n a f t w
N E W YORK
ROBERT TELLER SONS & DORNER
Music Engravers and Printers
SEND MANUSCRIPT AND IDEA OF TITLE
FOR ESTIMATE
H I WEST l l t h ST1EET, NEW Y O U CITY
47
REVIEW
Alice Lloyd, the English comedienne, known
to fame as the sister of Marie, has signed a con-
tract with Florenz Ziegfeld whereby she is to
star this coming autumn in a new musical play
entitled "The Belle of Scotland," to be written
by J. J. McNally, with lyrics and music by
Geo. M. Cohan. If Miss Lloyd can acquire a
Scotch accent anyway as good as her natural
Cockney dialect, her starring venture is a fore-
ordained success. By the way, she has very
wisely reserved the right to interpolate a num-
ber of successful songs which Maurice Shapiro
has provided for her. The remainder of the
score will be published by Cohan & Harris.
The many friends of Herbert Ingraham, the
well-known song writer, will be glad to hear
that his improvement in health is so pronounced
that he can now do his composing at the piano.
He has rented a cottage at 32 Helen street, Sara-
nac Lake, N. Y., where he will of course be
glad to hear from his friends. His numerous
songs published by Shapiro are doing remark-
ably well.
7 T H E Name That
Stands At The
Top Of All Ten Cent
Sheet Music Editions Is
"CENTURY!"
Even the Greatest
Artists Admire it.
Century Music Publishing Co.
19 West 28th Street, New York
CONSERVATORY EDITION
EVEN if you'd like to think so, there
are no other editions of
Kphler,
Heller
and
Czerny
that are nearly so good as the jusi
published
Conservatory
Edition
of these standard works, and best of all,
they cost less than any other edition—
none nearly so good.
Conservatory
Publication
Society
Cor. BROADWAY and 28th ST., NEW YORK
CONSERVATORY EDITION
The Biggest Song Hit of to-day is
By CHAS. K. HARRIS
"I'M STARVING FOR
ONE SIGHT OF YOU"
Another "After the Ball"
Sold by your music jobber or direct from
CHAS. K. HARRIS,
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
48
THE
MUSIC TRADE
REVIEW
Doodle" at the Battle of Lexington, and it be-
came the first national song of the United States.
Philadelphia has considerable interest in "Hail
The "Man on the Street" Gives Some Interest- Columbia." I t was written by Joseph Hopkin-
ing Facts Regarding the Birth of the Songs son, of this city, although the air was one com-
That Move and Inspire Our People.
posed by a German who was conducting an or-
chestra in New York. Hopkinson wrote the
It is a very curious fact that proud as they words at the time when war was threatened with
are of their nation, Americans are not so fa- France in 1798 and for a long while it was the
miliar with their country's patriotic airs as are most popular of our patriotic songs.
the people of foreign lands. Even when they
As for sectional songs there are some which
are stirred up to the point of singing they find have mighty good tunes, a case in point being
it hard to recollect the words. And it is doubt- "Dixie." Although this was the battle hymn of
ful whether many are aware of the bits of his- the Confederacy, Lincoln enjoyed it immensely,
tory attached to some of the land's patriotic and on the day of his assassination asked a band
airs.
to play it for him.
Next as a national song to "The Star Spangled
"Dixie," however, was written long before the
Banner," comes "America," sometimes known Civil War and was not intended for the use of
as "My Country, 'Tis of Thee." Objection is the Confederates. It was written in 1859 by
frequently raised against this because the tune Daniel D. Emmett, who was singing with Bry-
is not original. It is the property of the British ant's minstrels in New York. Bryant's show
Empire as much as it is of the United States, was dragging and as failure seemed imminent
and when it is heard from afar one cannot tell he asked Bmmett to write a negro "walk around"
whether the band wants to feel the inspiration which would stir up some enthusiasm. "Dixie"
that is in the words of "America" or in "God was the result.
Save the King."
Its adaptation nearly two years later as the
The words of the song, "My Country, 'Tis of war song of the South was an accident. Mrs.
Thee," were written by Samuel Francis Smith. John Wood was appearing at the New Orleans
The song was first sung at a Sunday-school cele- Varieties Theatre in "Pocahontas." One account
bration of the Fourth of July at the Park Street of the rising tide of war a zouave drill was in-
Church, in Boston. I t is an interesting fact troduced into the show. The orchestra leader
that one of the little boys who helped to sing tried over several airs for the march, and finally
"America" for the first time is now the chaplain hit upon "Dixie." The war cloud burst the next
of the United States Senate, the venerable and week, and from New Orleans "Dixie" spread all
over the South. At the North Fanny J. Crosby,
reverend Edward Everett Hale.
Then we have "Columbia, the Gem of the the hymn writer, wrote a song for "Dixie,"
Ocean," which has something like an echo of which was strongly Union in sentiment, but the
"Britannia, the Pride of the Ocean." The tune other side had pre-empted the air.
of "Yankee Doodle" is a good one, and we all
Then it was that the North took up "John
like to whistle or hum it, but the words unfor- Brown's Body," which was first put on by a Bos-
tunately are not very good, and, furthermore, it ton company and later Mrs. Julia Ward Howe
has been said did not mean a great deal at the wrote to this tune "The Battle Hymn of the
time they were written. At any rate, it has not Republic."
the solemn grandeur that "The Star Spangled
Another popular Southern air is really an old
Banner" holds.
German one. It had been used in America for
The origin of "Yankee Doodle" is shrouded in many years as a vehicle for the old college song
the mystery of a score of conflicting tales. It is "Lauriger Horatius," but it is now universally
generally agreed, however, that the tune came associated with "Maryland, My Maryland."
from England, and the words were invented by
This song was considered by James Russell
the British soldiers to be sung in derision the Lowell to be the best poem produced by the
the raw American troops who joined them at Civil War, and Mr. Lowell could not have been
camp on the Hudson below Albany in 1755, dur- partial to its sentiments. It was written by
ing the French and Indian War. Twenty years James Ryder Randall, a Marylander, who only
later the rebellious patriots played "Yankee lately passed onward. At the outbreak of hos-
tilities, Mr. Randall was teaching in a small
college in Louisiana. When he heard the news
of the riots in the streets of Baltimore in April,
1861, he was fired by the intelligence and angry
"SEE SAW,"
because his native State did not forsake the
11
Union. Under these circumstances he wrote the
THAT'S WHAT THE ROSE SAID TO ME,"
poem. It was first published in the New Or-
and the greatest ballad in years
leans Delta and copied in all the Southern
papers, and, of course, became very popular
among Maryland secessionists. One of these,
Miss Jennie Cary, suggested adapting it to the
air of the familiar college song. Miss Cary was
Special rates to the trade this month only.
in Virginia just after the first battle of Bull Run.
QUS EDWARDS MUSIC PUB. CO.
She and a party of friends were serenaded at
1512 BROADWAY,
-
NEW YORK
Fairfax Court House by the Washington Light
OUR NATIONAL SONGS.
Artillery of New Orleans. Miss Cary responded
by singing "Maryland, My Maryland."
In this column all queries relating to music and the
music trade will be gladly answered. Address Editor,
Music Publishing Department, Music Trade Review, 1
Madison Avenue. New York.
W. E. Evans.—Our special Music Publishers'
number, published on March 14, is now out of
print.
Tomaz F. Deuther, Chicago.—We use your let-
ter with pleasure. It is one of many received on
the same subject.
E. N. Engle.—Mascagni was born at Livorno
in 1863. He is therefore only forty-five years old.
Walter Frank, Bloomington.—The numbers
are all published by F. B. Haviland, West 37th
street, New York. Any music store will pro-
cure them for you.
W. R. M., Montgomery, Ala.—The question is
a very hard one to decide. It dates back about
seven years, but has only lately reached its pres-
ent stage.
J. E. Rainey.—An excellent article on Hun-
garian music appeared in the Music Lovers' Cal-
endar for 1908, which can be obtained from
Bretkopf & Hartel, 24 West 20th street, New
York. Price, 50c.
GUS EDWARD'S NEW SONG SUCCESS.
Miss Dorothy Stone, a most attractive young
lady, who has attracted great attention in the
rendition of the song, "Everybody Loves Me but
the One I Love" (Gus Edwards Publishing Co.),
promises to sing this number at the Steel Pier,
Atlantic City, throughout the summer.
Our enterprising contemporary, the New York
Morning Telegraph, has a somewhat negative
method of paying compliments. Last Sunday's
issue contained the following paragraph which
was no doubt meant kindly: "Felix Feist is
busy at work with a lot of new material for
next season ana will shortly prove his ability
as an up-to-date author." Now, Felix, get busy.
Jerome H. Remick & Co. are shortly publish-
ing a new song by Kendis & Paley, entitled "I
Like to See You Get Along."
Gus Edwards' 1908 Hits
" I AH WAITING FORTHE
SUMMERTIME AND YOU."
OUR LATEST ENGLISH
BALLAD SUCCESS
WILLIS WOODWARD & CO., Inc.
Music by
TO THE TRADE
DOROTHY FORSTER
that they are now located at
Four Keys, B&, C, D&, E&
CHAPPELL & CO., Ltd.
37 West 17th Street, New York
MR. DEALER: Have you heard a song
entitled
"If I Build a Nest,
Will You Share It With Me?"
(By Mignon Ziegfeld)
Perhaps Not. But You Will
Because it is a song that everyone will sing.
beg to announce
"ROSE IN THE BUD"
are just new enough to
be novel.
1193 Broadway
NEW YORK
Keith and Proctor Theatre Building
NAT'L MUSIC CO.S
Our song-successes from Sam Bernard's
"NEARLY A HERO"
" A SINGER SANG A SONG "
(Heelan-Furth)
and
" I Get A Lonesome Feeling When
Tbe Band Plays Home Sweet Home"
(Ziegfeld-Furth)
The Great Eastern Music Publishers
1431 Broadway, New York
(Corner 40th Street)
of 600 Standard IOc
NEW
SHEET
CATALOG
Sellers, every one a
live number and, barring about 15 pieces, are not to OO
found in any other publisher's IOc catalog. It's a trade
builder.
Write to-day for samples and special offer.
Stat* and Quiney Sts., Chicago.
National Music Co.
World's largest publishers of 10c music.

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