Music Trade Review

Issue: 1910 Vol. 51 N. 9

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE
WITH THE CHICAGO PUBLISHERS.
New "Croon ,Song"'Arouses Remarkable Dem-
onstration Which Includes Congratulations
Sent Over Footlights for the Composer—The
Witmarks Enlarge Offices to Meet Increas-
ing Business—Shapiro Men "Rushing" That
Publishers' Numbers—Leo. Feist Has Pub-
lishing Rights to New Musical Comedy.
(Special to The Review.)
Chicago, 111., Aug. 19, 1910.
Seldom has a song received such an auspicious
and even tumultuous introduction to the 11 'public as
that "Little Puff of Smoke, Good Night," the new
"croon song,"' by "Doc" White, the famous "White
Sox" pitcher, words by R. W. Lardner, of the Chi-
cago Tribune, and published by Victor Kremer Co.,
of this city.
It was sung for the first time last Monday night
by Stella Mayhew, who was compelled to repeat the
chorus five times. There was a capacity audience,
the team-mates of the composer occupying the boxes
on one side of the theater. The New York High-
landers were on the opposite side, and the body of
the house was filled mostly with "fans." The tune-
ful little lullaby made a tremendous hit and there
were repeated calls for White. When the spotlight
was thrown on him he rose in his seat and bowed,
but hedged on speechmaking. Miss Mayhew, how-
ever, walked down the aisle to the composers' box,
gave him a congratulatory handshake and said that
she would use the song regularly. "Doc" is re-
ported as saying he thought that showed "excellent
control," and that ended the dramatic launching of
a new song that'will undoubtedly have a big run.
Joe Harris, manager of the Chicago office of the
house of Charles K. Harris, is in Milwaukee, where
he will witness to-morrow (Sunday) night the
premiere performance at the Pabst Theater of the
new musical comedy, "The Sweetest Girl in Paris,"
the music of which is published by Harris. After a
week in the Wisconsin metropolis it comes to Chi-
EDITORIAL
The following epigrammatic edi-
torial appeared in one of our
great weeklies:
"The high cost of living is
coming down. Beethoven's
Sonatas, in excellent edition,
now can be bought for ten
cents a copy."
MUSIC
TRADE
cago to open the remodeled La Salle Theater,
where, it is believed, it is destined for a long and
happy career.
The business of the Chicago offices of M. Wit-
mark & Sons has increased to such an extent that
another piano room has been added, making a suite
of H rooms occupied on the eighth floor of the Gar-
rick Theater building.
Louise Dresser will be at the Majestic next week
for a single week of vaudeville during her transition
from one musical comedy to another. She will fea-
ture '"Take Me Back to Babyland," the Witmark
number with which she has so long been identified.
"Good Bye, Betty Brown," Theodore Morse's
latest march song hit, is getting a big hold in the
West. It has a verve and go that make it a big
favorite with audiences wherever sung, and every-
one will be surprised if it does not develop into
a stayer. It has been sung for several weeks by
different acts at the Majestic, and is being featured
by some of the best acts traveling the Western cir-
cuits.
Billy Thompson, manager of the Chicago Remick
offices, is spending his vacation at Lauderdale
Lakes, Elkhorn, Wis.
"The Broken Idol," now running in this city, is
enjoying its old-time popularity. The music is pub-
lished by Remick,^the only interpolation being the
new song, "That's .What They All Say," by J. Wal-
ter Leopold. Sung by Don McMillan, it is receiving
nightly encores.
Ted. Snyder's ' : Call Me Up Some Rainy After-
noon," has developed into a veritable hit out here.
One hears it whistled everywhere.
"The Girl of My Dreams" is playing to good
houses afc the Illinois, and the local offices of Wit-
mark are having a splendid demand for the prin-
cipal numbers.
Harry Scott's show, "My Girl of the U. S. A.,"
will go on the road with entirely new song num-
bers, using publications of the Victor Kremer Co.
exclusively. Among the songs will be, "Why Don't
the Band 'Play Dixie," "Mother," "Let's Pretend,"
"I Never Missed a Miss Like I Miss You," and
"Imam."
Ben Huntley, of the Huntley Shows, has written
the "Myrtle Waltzes," named in honor of his wife,
Myrtle Huntley, whose photograph decorates the
title page, which, like all of the publications of the
Miller Music Publishing Co., is extremely artistic.
The "Myrtle Waltzes" are of a character enabling
them to be played by young pianists and yet their
musical content is such as to make them popular
with music lovers of all ages.
J. Walter Brown, professional manager in New
York for Shapiro, arrived here last week, and with
Thomas Quigley, manager of the firm's Chicago
offices, is engaged in a whirlwind campaign, which
has for its professed object the making "Any Little
Girl" and "All I Ask of You Is Love" the hits of
the town. They are "making" all the big cafes and
are doing excellent work, als o using "Angel Eyes"
and "Ideal of My Dreams."
Abbie A. Ford, who has written some excellent
numbers, has just issued the "Lily of the Valley"
waltz, which she is publishing under the name of
the Abbie A. Ford Music Co., Hammond, Ind., and
will also bring out a new ballad.
Leo. Feist, it is learned, has landed another mu-
sical comedy by Harold Atteridge and Phil
Schwartz, the composers of "The Girl in the Ki-
mona." It is understood the new piece will receive
its initial performance, probably in Chicago, in a
few weeks. There are fourteen songs in the piece.
"The Girl in the Kimono," whoch has met with ex-
cellent success at the Ziegfeld, is nearjng the end of
its Chicago engagement and will go on the road,
commencing at St. Louis, Sept. 3. "The Winning
Miss," the music of which is also published by
Feist, and which had a big run in Chicago last sea-
son, opens at Indianapolis early next month and is
booked clear through to the Paciific Coast. "The
Girl and the Drummer" opens at the Grand on Sept.
4, and Mr. Feist is expected here for the occasion.
J. Tatian Roache, representing the music de-
partment of Hinds, Noble & Eldridge, was in Chi-
cago last week on his way to the Coast. He had had
a good business all the way out, and the first thing
he did when here was to capture orders for 5,000
copies of Mother Goose songs, although he had only
cover proofs to show. The firm's new violin, dance,
cornet, 'cello and trombone selection books are tak-
ing wonderfully well. Their "Most Popular" series
of music books, to which these are newcomers, is
again opening a season with large sales.
MUSIC CLERK NOT A LINGUIST.
Jones, who is a man of few words, went into a
music store to buy some music for his wife.
"Mikado libretto," he said to the clerk.
The clerk stared. "What's that ?" he asked.
"Mikado libretto," said Jones again.
"Me no spik de Italian," said the clerk.
THAT
ITALIAN
RAG
By AL PIANTADOSI,
It referred of course to
Creator of Italian Character Songs.
CENTURY
EDITION
CENTURY MUSIC PUBLISHING CU.
1 178 BROADWAY, NEW YORK
H E A D HAS HITS
(George W. Head, Jr.)
WORLD'S GREATEST BALLAD
"Without You The World
Don't Seem The Same"
An Endleis Chain of Sales of Thia Song Will Start
From First Purchase.
Best Ballad Since the Time of Jenny Lind
THE HEAD MUSIC PUBLISHING CO.
1416 Broadway, Cor. 39th Street,
48
REVIEW
New York
A DREAM OF SUCCESS
COME TRUE!
CHICAGO DELIGHTED
with
fit
THE GIRL OF MY
DREAMS "
The delightful new musical production now at the
Illinois Theatre with JOHN HYAMS and LEILA
McINTYRE.
The book and lyrics are by Wilbur D. Nesbit and
Otto A. Hauerbach, and the music by Karl L.
Hoschna, composer of those unqualified successes,
"Three Twins," "Bright Eyes," and "Madame
Sherry."
ALL THE MUSICAL NUMBERS NOW READY.
ANTICIPATE THE D E M A N D -
ORDER RIGHT AWAY!
M. WITMARK & SONS
CHICAGO -
NEW YORK - SAN FRANCISCO —
LONDON - PARIS
A POSITIVE HIT!
A PROVED SELLER!
Orders poured in the very day after this
song was first sung at Hammerstein's
Victoria Theater.
GOING STRONGER EVERY DAY!
PUBLISHED BY
LEO. FEIST, NEW YORK
THE MARCH SONG HIT OF THE YEAR
"Why Don't the Band Play Dixie?"
By S. J. Raber,
And Best Seller on the Market.
Ci
IMAM
(A MOHAMMEDAN SERENADE)
By Nathaniel D. Mann.
This is the name of that weird and captivating
melody that you hear being played by all bands and
orchestras, unquestionably the biggest instrumental hit
of the year.
VICTOR KREMER CO.
1 0 8 - 1 1 O Randolph St., Chicago tOpp. Garrick Theatre)
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
NEW HIPPODROME SHOW SOON.
Mammoth Playhouse Will Open on September
3—Trio of Productions Will Be Given as
Formerly—The Witmarks to Publish the
Music, of Which Manuel Klein Will Be the
Composer.
The opening of the fifth season of the New York
Hippodrome and the presentation of the fifth show
given at that abode of marvels will take place
September 3. This season's show promises to
eclipse in vastness, splendor, in the number and
cleverness of its surprises" and effects and the beauty
of its music, the producers declare, every other pro-
duction given in the mammoth playhouse. Follow-
ing the form of construction adopted by the Hippo-
drome management five years ago, the new show
residence of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Isidore
Witmark, of Manhattan, and as it ushered this very
youthful personage into being it also expressed the
fond delight of her parents and of the entire Wit-
mark family and their numerous connections and
friends. Isidore was so hopelessly "choked up"
with pardonable parental pride, when approached
on the subject the other day that all one could get
out of him was that the new baby is a natural born
contralto (the happy father scornfully denies that
she belongs elsewhere in any quartette) ; that he
intends hiring the Madison Square Garden as being
the only available auditorium in which the young
lady's voice can find suitable scope; that she is
named Carolyn Henrietta for her maternal and
paternal grandmamas, and, finally, that she is "just
what the doctor ordered."
CLUBMAN TO WRITE MUSICAL SHOW.
(Special to The Review.)
MANUEL KLEIN.
will be in three parts—two spectacular plays pro-
duced on a prodigious scale and respectively en-
titled "The International Cup" and "The Earth-
quake," and a magnificent ballet to be called
"Niagara." This trio of specialties, as in former
years, have been invented and constructed by
Messrs. Burnside and Voegtlin, and the lyrics and
music which so greatly enhance their charm and
grandeur written and composed by Manuel Klein,
the gifted musical drector of the Hippodrome.
These three wonder workers in their respective
lines have been hard at it all summer, and now con-
fidently pledge themselves to such a stupendous
show and such enchanting music as shall convince
the pleasure seeking world that they have by no
means exhausted their powers and resources, re-
markable as have been the results of their labors
in the past. Mr. Klein's lyrics and music are par-
ticularly delightful this year, we understand, and
those who hear them once will accordingly desire
to do so again, and so purchase copies of the
various numbers for home enjoyment. Here are
the titles of the songs: "Fifty Years Ago," "Lov-
ing," "The Sons of Ev'ry Nation Are Americans
To-day" and "Yachting." Besides these there are
a "Skipping Rope Dance," a waltz not named as
yet and the music of the ballet "Niagara." All are
published by M. Witmark & Sons.
Philadelphia, Pa., Aug. 20, 1910.
Charles Gilpin, the Philadelphia clubman and
composer, has concluded arrangements with
Thomas W. Ryley for the production of a new
musical comedy next November. Mr. Gilpin has
supplied the musical compositions during the past
fifteen years for Philadelphia's amateur theatrical
organization, the Mask and Wig Club, but this is
his first professional attempt.
The play deals with social life in New York and
Narragansett Pier and affords ample opportunity
for elaborate modern dressing. There are two
acts and seven scenes through which twenty-two
musical numbers run, each arranged as a specialty.
The production will require an orchestra of forty
pieces and the cast and chorus call for 125 per-
sons.
The new production, the name for which has
not as yet been selected, will open in Philadelphia
for a brief run, after which it will be presented
in New York.
"SWEETEST GIRL IN PARIS" OPENS.
(Special to The Review.)
Among the people engaged are a number of artists
who are well known in nlusical comedy circles.
The piece in its original form, "Theresa, Sei Nicht
Boese," is schedu'ed to open the season at Philipp's
German theater, in East Eighty-sixth street,
September 1. Mr. Philipp has made arrangements
for the English company which is also to play the
piece to see the German performances. This will
be the first time in the history of American the-
atricals, it is asserted, that an English company
will be enabled to study the original of a piece,
the translaton of which they are already studying.
SHAKESPEARE'S "ART OF SINGING."
Rewritten and Revised Edition of Well-Known
Work Issued by Oliver Ditson Co., Boston.
The Oliver Ditson Co., Boston, Mass., have made
one more important contribution to the art of music
by re-publishing in a re-written, revised and greatly
improved shape William Shakespeare's "Art of
Singing." As is well known, Mr. Shakespeare is
one of the foremost living exponents of the old
Italian singing art—the bel canto—which has pro-
duced so many great artists and so many wonderful
voices. The foundation of bel canto has always
been simple study of natural methods and has con-
cerned itself not at all with the complex physio-
logical problems which modern voice teachers con-
sider so important. It is, of course, a method and
an art little suited to modern dramatic singing.
In accordance with his theories, Mr. Shakespeare
naturally places great reliance upon breath man-
agement, and devotes a large part of the first sec-
tion of his book to chapters on "Management of the
Breath," "The Vocal Organs," "Placing the Voice,"
"The Voice on the Breath" and so on. He also
provides an abundance of exercises for the guidance
of the pupil in pronouncing various vowel sounds,
for acquiring facility of pronunciation and for the
various appoggiaturas, turns and grace-notes used
in singing.
Mr. Shakespeare's method is to-day especially
valuable for students who desire to obtain a correct
understanding of the principles of singing as shown
in the oratorios of Handel, which need to-day a
style quite distinct from either that which is taught
by devotees of the Lied or of the musico-dramatic-
Wagnerian declamation. The book thus. fills a
wide gap and is eminently desirable in every way.
Milwaukee, Wis., Aug. 21, 1910.
Trixie Friganza played the title role in the "Sweet-
est Girl in Paris," presented for the first time here
to-night. The new offering is the work of Addison
Burkhart. Collin Davis wrote the lyrics, and Joe
Howard the music. John E. Young has the leading
male role, that of a rich American who starts out NEW MUSICAL COMEDY FOR WOODRUFF.
to show Paris how to have a good time, and how
(Special to The Review.)
life there should be lived. The music is published
by Chas. K. Harris.
Chicago, 111., Aug. 22, 1910.
Mort H. Singer has engaged Henry Woodruff
to appear under his management again this sea-
KEEP PEN AND INK OUT OF HIS REACH.
son. Mr. Singer will present Mr. Woodruff in a
A short letter to the editor of a New York daily new musical comedy written especially for the
is reprinted herewith with the object of letting mu- star by Frank Adams and Will M. Hough, authors
of "The Prince of To-night," in which Woodruff
sical experts guess at what it is all about:
"To the Editor of the Sun—Sir: The opera is a proved one of the biggest drawing cards on the
combination of music and drama. It is too expen- road last year. Joseph E. Howard, presumably,
:
sive for poor people. I would suggest a combina- will write the music.
The name of the new piece is still undecided.
tion of music and bartending. Bartenders could
sing while serving drinks. This species of opera The authors are putting the finishing touches to it
"IT'S A GIRL," HEARD RECENTLY.
could be heard for five cents.
at their summer home in Michigan. Woodruff is
enjoying
the summer months at his country place
"New
York,
August
18.
W.
T.
G."
This is not the title of the very latest song pub-
outside New York, where he is golfing and yacht-
lished by the enterprising Witmark contingent. It
ing to his heart's content. Woodruff was on the
"TERESA" NOW IN REHEARSAL.
is simply the echo of the cry of joy which at
road from August until July last season and has
9.30 a. m. on Sunday, August 14, went up to the
Rehearsals for Adolf Philipp's new lyric comedy, asked Manager Singer to let him enjoy as long a
blissful abode where babies come from. The joyful
exclamation was born simultaneously with the ad- "Teresa, Be Mine," which will be published by rest as possible before calling rehearsals for the
vent of little Carolyn Henrietta Witmark at the J. H. Remick & Co., were begun August 25. new production. The music of this will be pub-
lished bv Chas. K. Harris.
FOUR BIG SELLERS BY VVM. MARX
" Don't Forget That We Were Playmates "
" When The Evening Turns To Cray "
"Where The Brazos River Flows"
" A Peacefnl Country Home"
WM. MARX, Music Publisher
251 Ida Ave., Wichita, Kan.
Sample copies free to Dealers interested
HAVILAND'S HITS!
IT IS RAINING HITS IN CHICAGO.
" I'm Awfully Glad I Met You."
" I Want a Girl From Yankee Doodle
Town."
" Under The Irish Moon."
"Monkey Doodle Dandy." (jungle Song)
Leo. Feist's forces in Chjcago are now inclined
to believe in the truth of the old adage, "It never
rain*, but it pours." The reason for this feeling is
that hardly had '"That Dublin Rag" joined the
ranks of popular hits, as sung by Elizabeth Murray
in "Madame Sherry," when along came "That
Possum Rag," also written by Harold Atteridge
and Phil Schwartz, and sung by Will Philbrick in
Richard Carle's new show, "Jumping Jupiter,"
which, according to Chicago critics, will become a
greater sucess than "The Irish Oddity."
Our new-issue proposition is of interest to every dealer.
Send for it.
THE F. B. HAVILAND PUBLISHING CO.
1 2 5 Wast 37th Street, New York.

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