Music Trade Review

Issue: 1912 Vol. 54 N. 7

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE!
MUSIC TRADE
REVIEW
for that purpose. One of his most successful num- Wagnerian in character, is considered to interpret
bers has been "Honey Man," the great Feist hit, admirably the morbid horror of the tale.
with which he more than "makes good" on all oc-
casions. "Honey Man" capably played on the ac-
cordion possesses new charms for the audiences.
MREVIEWflEARS
OPERA BASEDJ)N LEPROSY.
THAT the Weber and Fields Jubilee offered prac-
tically an open field for interpolations.
THAT several music publishers succeeded in
A dispatch from Paris states that "La Lepreuse," turning the opportunity to advantage.
THAT "If It Wasn't for the Irish and the Jews,"
an opera by Henry Bataille and Sylvio Lazzari,
produced at the Opera Comique, has made a con- by Jerome & Schwartz, and published by them,
which was sung at the Weber and Fields show by
siderable sensation from the startling character of
John T. Kelly, appears to be the real hit of the
the plot, which has revived the old question of
how far horrible and morbid themes are suitable piece.
THAT general regret has been expressed at the
subjects for dramatic treatment
death of Ted S. Marks, who had many friends in
It is generally agreed that there have been few
the music publishing trade.
more unpleasant plays seen on the Paris stage than
this, which deals with leprosy. From the rise till
THAT Viennese operettas have taken the final
the fall of the curtain the piece calls forth expres-
step. They have entered the vaudeville field in
sions of disgust and admiration in equal force. It
tabloid form.
is recognized as being, at all events, an extremely
THAT one music publisher claims that he lias
brilliant piece of work, and the climax, when the "made" $12,000 or thereabouts during the past sea-
girl resolves to enslave forever the man she loves
son by not securing the publishing rights of a
by infecting him with her own disease, is ac- quartet of musical comedies and operettas that
claimed as one of the most powerful situations ever
were offered to him.
presented.
THAT if dealers handed out orders in the man-
The music of Sylvio Lazzari, which is very
ner that some publishers give away regular sets
of music there would be one long reign of pros-
perity.
THAT Edgar Selden contemplates re-entering the
music publishing field at the head of his own com-
pany. That the Edgar Selden Publishing & Pro-
ducing Co. will be the title of the new concern,
with offices in Times Square.
THAT the wails regarding low prices and small
profits has not deterred a number of daring spirits
from venturing upon the sea of music publishing
recently.
THAT some of them soon discover storm clouds
that they never thought existed.
THAT F. H. Burt should incorporate his letters
to salesmen in a volume of "ginger talks."
THAT "Hitting the Hot Iron by Mail" would be
Thats what the "Evening
a good title.
M a i l , " New York's best
THAT the tailenders, the fellows who take ad-
evening paper, has to say
vantage of the popularity of a song to introduce .".
about the famous
"ringer," are still much in evidence.
THAT a list of recent cases would make interest-
ing reading.
THAT judging from the manner in which vari-
TEN CENT SHEET MUSIC
ous houses are grabbing foreign operettas, the
proper salutation will soon be, "Have you a little
Viennese operetta in your catalog?"
Presented in Paris and the Daring Treatment
of the Subject Startles Even Parisians.
THAT FRENCH SOCIETY AGAIN.
American Composer Exposes Some of the
Methods of That Body—Gets Ninety Cents'
Royalty in Two Months—Shades of Departed
Composers Share in Receipts.
Since the French Society of Authors, Composers
and Publishers of Music settled in our midst and
began to collect royalties, as they found they could,
from singers of single songs which had been writ-
ten by members of the society, protest has been
made from nearly every quarter, and now a com-
plaint has come from a composer who himself is a
member of the society.
Blair Fairchild, an American composer, who has
written many symphonic and chamber works, be-
sides a large .r.imber of songs, most of which have
been published in France, recently told a reporter
for the New York Times some astonishing facts
in regard to the situation. He said that he, finding
that the society worked against the success of his
works rather than for them, had attempted to re-
sign, but had found this impossible, and, as a
lawyer informed him, illegal, the society retaining
his power of attorney. He also communicated the
information that it is not the composer who makes
any money out of his royalties accruing from per-
formances of his works.
"It might naturally be supposed that some
reasonable advantage would accrue to the member
EASILY!
"Easily the best prop-
osition in the musical
world—none better
at any price."
CENTURY EDITION
Century Music Pub. Co.
1178 Broadway
New York City
Mission Bells
The Latest Instrumental
Novelty
BY
NEW HARRIS NUMBERS
Just Placed on the Market—To Be a Good Year
for High Class Ballads.
Chas. K. Harris, whose fame as a song writer
and composer lies in his ballads, and who has
stuck to the ballad proposition through thick and
thin w r ith noteworthy success, is of the opinion
that the present year of 1912 is going to prove the
real big year for that class of song, and has re-
cently put on the market three new compositions
of his own of that character which have already
attracted considerable attention and incidentally a
goodly number of orders. The new Harris songs
are "That Swaying Harmony," "Take Me to Your
Heart Again," and "Tell Me a Beautiful Story."
A New Favorite with Teacher and Pupil
Whitney Warner Co.
131 West 41st Street
NEW YORK
!
I
Yes, the real "Caruso"!
Enrico Caruso, the world's
greatest tenor, has composed
a popular song! It is
being featured in Henry W.
Savage's successful produc-
tion "THE MILLION" by Paul
Kerr.
The song is entitled
"DREAMS OF LONG AGO"
The unusual amount of
publicity given this song
has already created a de-
mand for it throughout the
country. Thousands of
copies have already been
sold in the City of New York,
and we anticipate that
hundreds of thousands of
copies will be sold within
a few months!
Known everywhere.
Selling your share?
LEO. F E I S T - - N E W Y O R K
A. H. GOETTING
MARIE LOUKA
A Descriptive Tone Poem for Piano
C A R U S O !
MUSIC
JOBBING SERVICE
Why don't you, Mr. Dealer, buy ALL YOUR
I RUM TUM TIDDLE!!!)
|
(HIT OF HITS)
|
MUSIC FROM ONE SOURCE?
No matter what music is wanted or how many
copies, simply send ONE ORDER to us, and tht
music will be shipped to you on the day your order
is received.
Our prices are guaranteed to be the LOWEST,
as we won't be undersold by anyone. Send for
our Monthly Bargain List (free) and join the
circle of money-making music dealers.
A.
H.
GOETTING
Springfield, Mass.
=
EE
5
JEROME & SCHWARTZ PUB. CO.
=
1 445 Broadway, New York
E
led S. Barron, Gen'l Manager, B'way Theatre Bldg. S
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii?
A. H. Goetting, 358-860 Wabash Avc, Chicago.
New York Music Supply Co., 1868 Broadway,
Broa
N. Y.
Enterprise
Music
149 149
W. 8»t
E i
M Supply
i S Co.,
l C
W 8»tfc St, N. Y.
Coupon Music Co., 611 Washington St, S , Beetoa.
A. H. Goetting, 148 Yonge St., Toront
Toronto, Can.
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
46
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
through having the society protect his work, but
this is not the case. The effect of adhesion to the
articles of the association is to prevent a composer
from authorizing any public performance of his
work. The society, on the other hand, being in-
vested with the right to refuse to allow any such
work to be publicly performed, demands a con-
tribution from every concert at which any work by
any member of the society is performed, and there
exists a complicated system for calculating the rela-
tive importance of every composition.
"In sp'.te of this, however, the financial advan-
tages derived by the ordinary member are an en-
tirely negligible quantity. This may be due either
to the manner in which the money is collected and
distributed, or to the extremely heavy 'general ex-
penses account' of the society. As an illustration
it may be cited that I received an amount equiva-
lent to about 90 cents in American money for my
royalty on several concerts given in Paris during
a period of about two months.
"The society exacts from the manager of every
concert at which a work of any of its members is
executed a certain sum of money for permission to
execute such work, but this sum is not distributed
to the composer or composers whose works are
represented, but the whole pragram is taken as
being covered by such payment, and the member
only gets the proportion of the money which his
work bears to the whole program, although his
work may be the only item on the program which
justifies any collection at all being made from the
manager."
A TALENTED JENGLISH SINGER.
Miss Maggie Teyte Makes Rapid Rise in Field
of Grand Opera and on Concert Stage—Using
Chappell & Co. Publications.
Among the songstresses who have come promi-
nently to the front during the present grand opera
season in the United States is Miss Maggie Teyte,
VIENNA FOR MUSICIANS.
Eugen D'Albert Claims That There Is
Something in the Viennese Air
That a Musician Needs and Will
Reside There Permanently.
Eugen D'Albert is now in Vienna
preparing for the first performance of
his new opera, "The Conceded Wife"
("Die verschenkte Frau"), and also to
prepare for his removal to Vienna,
where he intends permanently to re-
side. "There is something in Vienna
air," according to D'Albert, "that a
musician needs. Here one thinks musi-
cally, one feels music, one lives actually
in its atmosphere. Even the springs run
in rhythm." D'Albert intends to spend
the greater part of the year there. .
TWO PROMISING NUMBERS.
The Harry Von Tilzer Music Publishing Co.
reports that the two numbers that are developing
rapidly are "Oh, Mr. Dream Man" and "The Rag-
time Goblin Man," both of which numbers have
won success for many professionals and have found
favor with the public. "I Want a Girl" and the
other recognized hits of the strong Von Tilzer
catalog continue to be well in the running.
INCORPORATED.
The United Music Publishers' Protective Asso-
ciation, Inc., New York, music publishers, etc., has
MISS MAGGIE TEYTE.
been chartered with capital stock of $10,000. The
a
lyrical
soprano
of
mixed
Scotch, Irish and Eng-
incorporators are Anna Boorstein, Herman Marks
lish extraction, who was born in England and at
and Max Sobel.
the age of fifteen years began the study of music
under the capable direction of Jean de Reszke in
Paris. Two years later Miss Teyte made her debut
WORLD WIDE HIT
in opera at Monte Carlo and after a short time
went to the Opera Comique in Paris. After
triumphs in Berlin and London she came to
Every dealer should have it; also,
Down By The Old Millslream
"DAVY JONES AND HIS MONOPLANE"
"WHEN WE WERE SWEETHEARTS"
"BUCKWHEAT CAKES"
"FARE-THEE-WELL"
Order from your Jobber, or,
TELL TAYLOR, MUSIC PUBLISHER
EVERYBODY'S
SINGING IT
Grand Opera House Bldg., CHICAGO, ILL.
The Great Novelty Song
Victor Kremer Co., 1 " 0 S3B& ir
Publishers of
"LITTLE PUFF OF SM0KE,600D NIGHT"
"HONEY SAL"
"SING ME AN IRISH COME-ALL-YE"
"RAGGED EDGES"
"MOTHER"
"WHY DON'T THE BAND PLAY DIXIE"
Victor Kremer Co., 732 C S HTA A GV T
"Lady Angeline"
Words by DAVE REED
Music by GEORGE CHRISTIE
Composer of "P.A15Y ROSE."
Live Dealers will have a good supply
of this number on hand.
III
Ittk STint, NUT YftlE OUT
IMPRESSED THE IMPERIAL.
The man with the bushy head and
the foreign appearance in dress and manner seemed
to be making himself so much at home about the
Imperial that everybody from the manager down
was set to wondering who he was. He went into
the red room and sang, to the great delight of the
crowd that gathered, and then he went into the
restaurant and walked about and lighted a cigarette
and smoked it with such a grand manner that the
manager decided he must be a person of im-
portance and asked his name.
Nobody knew it, and when the watch changed it
BUY YOUR IVUJSIC FROM
p b!ishers
BOSTON "
WALTER JACOBS
167 Tremont St.,
BOSTON. MASS.
Publisher of
"Kiss of Spring." "Some Day When Dreams Come True."
And Some Others World Famous
B. F. WOOD MUSIC CO.
"EDITION WOOD"
BOSTON
NEW YORK
240 Summer St.
28 East 80th St
Also at London and Leipzig
JOS. M. DALY
Gaiety Theatre Bldg., 665 Washington St., Boston. Mass.
Publisher of
"CHICKEN REEL." "SCENTED ROSES" WALTZES.
And Many Others
OLIVER
ROBERT TELLER SONS & DORNER
Mask Engravers and Printers
SBND MANUSCRIPT AND IDEA OP TITLE
FOR ESTIMATE
America last November and first appeared at the
Philadelphia Opera House, singing the music of
Cherubino. She went later to Chicago and then
returned east to New York in January, singing
here on several occasions before sailing for Europe
to sing in Humperdinck's opera in Cannes in
February.
In her repertoire for concert and recital work
Miss Teyte has included and is featuring a large
number of English songs published by
Chappell & Co., and which have been
found to be specially adapted to her
voice and mode of singing. 'Among the
songs may be included "You, Dear, and
I," by Robert Coningsby Clarke;
"Mifanwy,"
by Dorothy
Forster;
"Come," by Guy D'Hardelot; "The
Birth of Morn," by Franco Leoni; ''Rose
of My Heart," by Hermann Lohr;
"Never," by Paolo Tosti; six serious
songs, by Paul A. Rubens; songs of
summer, by Robert Coningsby Clarke,
and other numbers of equally high char-
acter.
P u b l i s h e d by
M. WITMARK & SONS
New York
Chicago
San Francisco
DITSON
COMPANY
BOSTON
NEW YORK
Anticipate and Supply Every Requirement of Music Dealers
London Paris
WHITE-SMITH MUSIC PUB. CO.
PUBLISHERS, PRINTERS & ENGRAVERS OF MUSIC
Main Offices: 02-64 Stanhope St., Boston
Branch Houses: New York and Chicago

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