Music Trade Review

Issue: 1910 Vol. 50 N. 5

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE
48
MUSIC TRADE
REVIEW
prising that .several concerns air now negotiating
EDWARD LYMAN BILL - Editor and Proprietor
J. B. SPILLANE, Managing Editor
Fnbliihed Every Saturday at 1 Madlsra Avenue, New Y«rk
SUBSCRIPTION, (Including postage), United State* and
Mexico, $2.00 per year; Canada, $S.6O; all ether coun-
tries, 14.00.
Telephones—Numbers 4677 and 4678 Gramercy
Connectlna «11 Departments
NEW YORK, JANUARY 29, 1910
All news matter, music or mail, in-
tended for this department should be
addressed The Editor Music Section
Music Trade Review, 1 Madison Avenue,
New York, and Not to individuals.
COMMENTS B Y -
Modern merchandising, with its keen competi-
tion and the tendency to shave prices to a figure
that to many seem near the danger line, require
the services of able men—men strong in mental
as well as financial resources in order to cope
with the situation. In no branch of the music
trade industry is this so evident as in that of
music publishing. The smaller concerns are hav-
ing a hard time of it to cope with the bigger pub-
lishing houses which have ample capital, and,
what is so essential, brainy men at the helm to
direct their affairs. It takes quite some time,
patience and money to sift out the many failures
from the few successes in the line -of songs.
Hence it is not surprising that many publishers
who start out with great expectations fall by the
wayside, or become disheartened.
The larger
organizations in the publishing field have such
a perfected system of distribution that the new-
comers, or small concerns, find it hard pulling
to make progress. In view of this it is not sur-
published, and attempts are made to popularize
them all. It is no wonder that singers of any
standing are getting to demand, and do demand,
that they be paid for featuring a given song.
Out of a mass of offerings come a few "hils."
The public gets confused, for one number after
another is tumbled out upon it in so ftipid a
It all means, of course, that under present con- succession that only a superhuman memory could
ditions those of the publishers who are troubled keep track of even all the songs that are
cannot make business pay. The conditions them- "plugged" as actual successes. The greater the
selves may vary as between one firm and another, number on the market, the less the chance of
but certainly they are too onerous. With one one worthy song for large sales. "Hits" have
house it may be that prices at which they must been comparatively scarce this season, but never-
now sell miuic are too low. With another it may theless there have been "hits." With a few suc-
be that they have no hits. In the former case cessful songs and the wider field for distribution
the trouble is due to the fact that the publishers that now obtains, music publishers have abun-
have not the business ability, or else they lacked dant opportunity for profitable operations. An
the foresight, to meet the trade situation. Others avalanche of mediocre offerings only makes the
have found the price level hard but unchange- public skeptical and causes expense to pub-
able, and have satisfactorily met it. Some of lishers. The profits are there, but only for those
the publishers are even content to have wholesale who know how to get them.
prices for music remain right where they are.
AS to the firms which lacked successful songs,
SHAPIRO FINDS BUSINESS BRISK.
dearth of business was, of course, for them in-
evitable. Music publishers must needs have Music Publisher Returns to New York after
"hits" nowadays, as never before. No "plugging"
Successful Trip to Chicago and Other Cities
nor work by headliners will make a song sell
—May Open More Retail Stores Soon.
unless it has actual merit. The offerings to the
public are too many a thousand times over for
Maurice Shapiro, the music publisher, returned
any "dead" numbers to have a chance for life. to New York last Monday after a very successful
But where there exists a combination of business business trip to Washington, Buffalo, Cincinnati,
blindness and lack of hits the quicker such Detroit and Chicago. He tells The Review that
plague spots are removed from the publishing in each of these cities he found music publish-
field the better for all concerned. Poor songs ing conditions most prosperous.
glut the market. They are of no value to anyone,
"Business is big," he said. "It seemed to be
but they do tend to keep down the average price good all along the line, and as to our own busi-
of publications, although dear at any price. ness I can say that it is bigger than it ever was
The Review regrets to see any firm "lose out," before."
but we maintain that the music publishing busi-
The question of a location for the retail music
ness itself cannot be blamed for lack of individ- store which Shapiro contemplates establishing in
ual success. If it could be, then there would be Chicago is not yet settled. There are now ten
no prosperous firms to act as selling agents or Shapiro music stores in various cities, and the
furnish the cash that is needed more than the head of the firm intimates that two or three more
hit. It is a matter of having fewer songs and will be opened in the near future. He says, how-
better ones.
ever, that he is not yet ready to announce the
Real Hits Are Scarce This Season.
locations, these not having been definitely deter-
If the number of songs published were smaller, mined.
the total expenses would be less. Then, too, there
White lights and red liquor have sent Hugh
would be time for assurance that the quality of
those published was higher. Thence would come Cannon, once a prosperous song writer, to the
more likelihood of there being some "hits" among poor-house. He was glad to seek such shelter in
those that were finally placed on the market. As Detroit this week. He is remembered for his
it is, there are perhaps ten times too many songs songs, "Ain't Dat a Shame," "Won't You Come
Home, Bill Bailey" and "Good Goo Byes."
w i t h l a r g e r b o u s e s w i t h a v i e w of t h e l a t t e r t a k -
ing o v e r t h e i r p u b l i c a t i o n s a n d a t t e n d i n g t o t h e
s p i l i n g of I h e m . I n d e e d , o n e of t h e s e d e a l s m a y ,
or "may n o ! . li;ive been c o n c l u d e d by t h e t i m e
t h e s e p a g e s reach t h e i r r e a d e r s .
Need for Fewer but Better Songs.
Teachers and students
of the piano will find in
this book an instructor
that not only will replace
the old methods by pre-
senting the elements of
music in a manner to
meet the conditions but
will do so in such a pleas-
ant way as to interest
even the most indifferent
student.
The little compositions
used as exercise* through-
out the book is a new de-
parture that will act as
an incentive to the stu-
dent by making him feel
that he is progressing.
Price, 75 cents.
We are the publishers of the
music of
"The Arcadians"
N o w the season's hit in both
London and N e w York
Chappell&Co.,Ltd.,
THESE ARE POSITIVELY
IRRESISTIBLE!
Henry Lodge's
"Temptation Rag"
which no dancer can hear and keep still
AND
" TEMPTATION "
HINDS, NOBLE & ELDREDGE. 31-35 West 15th Street. New York
the great rag song adapted by Louis Weslyn
This Season's First Real Hits
FROM
"Temptation Rag"
"The
Cubanola
Glide"
(
JEL
k k
Oh, What I Know About You
p i i l l y Southern Rose " «„,,
«„
Sung with Emphatic Success by Bonita
in all leading Vaudeville Theatres.
They tempt the Musician, the Dancer,
the Singer, the Buyer — Everybody.
HARRY VON TILZER MUSIC PUBLISHING CO.
AD
«w S YORK L o™n« TO
New York
Chicago
London
Paris
125 We«t 43d Street, Hew York City
McKINLEY
JOBBERS
SHEET MUSIC
We Guarantee Riling Your Orders Complete
the Same Day Received.at Lowest Prices.
CHICAGO
McKJNLEY MU51C Co
N E W YORK
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE
REVIEW
49
E. T. PAULL TO PUBLISH NEW MARCH. J. H. REMICK OFF ON DETROIT TRIP.
"The Race Course" the Title of New Number
Which Will Be Issued Early in February as
That Publisher's Regular Semi-Annual Pro-
duction.
"The Race Course" is the title given a new
march two-step which will be issued by the E. T.
Paull Music Co. early in February. The new
number will come as the usual semi-annual offer-
ing by that house, whose policy is to produce but.
two new publications each year. "The Race
Course" was written by J. Glogan, but has been
rearranged by E. T. Paull. Mr. Paull's custom
is to be the sole author of the second of the two
marches which he publishes yearly, but to re-
arrange or rewrite for the first one a march sub-
mitted by some other composer. His own last
composition was the "Lincoln Centennial Grand
March," which has had a wide vogue and is still
selling in large volume.
The "Ben-Hur Chariot Race," the first number
issued by the E. T. Paull Co., some fifteen years
ago, is an active seller to-day, as are the "Mid-
night Fire Alarm," "A Signal from Mars," "Paul
Revere's Ride," and "The Burning of Rome."
These have really become standard' sellers, al-
though all the other Paull issues, for that mat-
ter, have gained a regular following throughout
the country, so that the composer-publisher has
become widely known as "the new march king."
NEW AGENTS FOR NOVE CO.'S CATALOG.
The Nove Music Publishing Co., of which Ber-
nard Nove is manager, have closed a deal where-
by the Jos. W. Stern Publishing Co. will act as
selling agents for the catalog of the former firm.
The Nove Co. are agents for the Star Music
Co., of London, and have an extensive list of
songs which are being featured by prominent
singers in various cities.
SUPREME
IN ITS FIELD!!!
Dealers are satisfied with Century
Edition Ten Cent Sheet Music,
because the sales tell the story of
the high esteem in which it is
held by those who buy it.
The Best—Because It I s !
Century Music Pub. Co.,
n
LATEST SONG
HAVILAND STARTSJ^EW YEAR WELL.
Trade Conditions Show Steady Improvement at
Offices of That Publisher—Demand for Song
Leaders Increases.
The offices of the F. B. Haviland Publishing
Co., music publishers, present a busy aspect
these days, with professional singers dropping
in for copies of that firm's song successes and
the clerks and shippers attending to the various
details of music shipments to the trade. The
Review found Mr. Haviland trying to talk to
four men at once the other day, but he paused
long enough to discuss business conditions as
he finds them.
"Affairs here are getting better and better
every day," he said. "Business has improved
steadily since the first of the year, so that al-
though we noted a little of the duiness which
publishers generally had to contend with in
December, we now have good reason to be sat-
isfied with the situation, looking at it from
every point of view. Our song leaders continue
to grow in popularity. Some of these, indeed,
are now firmly established as the kind that
make successes for professional acts and cus-
tomers for the music trade. Those of our songs
whose merit has been thus proved include 'I'm
Awfully Glad I Met You,' novelty song; 'You'll
Come Back,' coon song; 'Monkey Doodle Dandy,'
jungle song, and 'Society Swing,' march and
two-step, by Henry Frantzen, which promises
to be even more of a success than his famous
'College Life' march. The same composer's
inarch song, 'I want a Girl From Yankee Doodle
Town,' and Drislane and Meyer's 'Under the
Irish Moon,' love ballad, also continue among
our successful features."
BOSTON POLICE NOTE SUNDAY SONGS.
CENTURY EDITION
THE
York, where the acts themselves are booked—
two facts which the Ray State officials must have
Music Publisher Will Return to New York,
overlooked. It is a rule that, all houses giving
However, in Few Days—Fred E. Belcher
Sunday concerts must submit in advance the
Seeking Store Site in Los Angeles.
titles of all songs to be sung on (lie Sunday bills.
The bills to be presented must be submitted to
Jerome H. Remick, head of the music publish- the State Police Department on the preceding
ing firm bearing his name, left New York last Wednesdays. The singers will in but few cases
Wednesday for his home offices in Detroit, where be in Boston, say, on such days, so that the
he had business affairs which required his per- managers must learn by 'phone or letter what
sonal attention. He is expected to return to this are to be the song titles. Managers of the pro-
city next Monday, making his headquarters here fessional departments of local publishing firms
during the absence in the West of Fred E. Bel- might save their proteges some disappointments
chei-, his Eastern manager.
by warning them of the new rule, if the singers
Mr. Belcher has been in Los Angeles this week, intend to work Sundays, although the Massachu-
sizing up the situation and locations there with setts theatrical managers ought to attend to the
a view to opening a Remick retail music store matter.
in that city. The San Francisco store, for which
Mr. Beleher has already arranged, is to be One reads that on November 24, 1909, Mme.
located at 106a Market street. The new Harlem Adelina Patti celebrated her fiftieth anni-
store will not be opened until after Mr. Belcher's versary as an artist. This does not mean that
her age is fifty years, nor that she has been
return to New York.
Jerome & Schwartz, the authors of a number making farewell appearances for fifty years. Its
of Remick song successes, have just completed a meaning, pure and simple, is that fifty years ago
new song. One of the leading theatrical man- at the Academy of Music, right here in this music
agers and producers has already opened negotia- bepestered city of New York, Patti first sang
tions for the song, although it is not yet pub- professionally. The opera was "Lucia dl Lam-
mermoor."
lished.
HITS!
" C-H-l-C-A-G-O."
"Way Out In Utah."
" O h ! You Tease."
"Do You? Don't You? Will You? Won't You?"
" Sometime, Sweetheart Mine, Somewhere."
"Mary Jane, She's Got Another Sister."
"Airy Fairy Castle Land."
"Red Fern."
"Happy Rag."
ORDER THESE FROM YOUR JOBBER.
The House of Christopher
Grand Opera House Building, Chicago
A rule which Massachusetts authorities have
just put into effect as applied to theatrical per-
formances in that State is of interest to music
publishers of this city. It applies to songs, and
most of these, of course, are published in New
CANNON BALL RAG
Is making more noise than any
other rag ever published. It Is
hard.
CHERRYLEAF RAG
Is also selling fine.
It Is easy.
VICTOR KREMER CO.
CHICAGO
152 LAKE STREET
NEW YORK
1367 BROADWAY
BEING HEARD
ALL 'ROUND!!
JOLLY
March Song Hit Of
The Season
LEO.
FEIST, Publisher
NEW
YORK
T. B. Harms & Francis, Day
& Hunter
HARRY LADDER'S
SONG HITS
Successful SonsfB in
"KITTY GREY." "FLUFFY RUFFLES"
"GIRLS OF GOTTENBERG." Ac.
Eastern Representatives ol
Clayton Summy Publications
Complete Stock of Bote A Bock
and N. Slmrock of Berlin
1431 BROADWAY, NEW YORK
Thompson's Late Hits
" There's Something Fascin-
ating About the Moon"
"June, July, and August"
"Are You Lonesome?"
" Black Eyes "
and a lot of other*.
Ask your Jobber lor them
THE THOMPSON MUSIC CO.
3 4 6 Wabafth Avonue, CHICAGO

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