Music Trade Review

Issue: 1913 Vol. 56 N. 6

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
50
THE
MUSIC TRADE
REVIEW
Conducted by B. B. Wilson
REASON FOR HIGH COST OF LIVING.
RAGTIME AND ITS EFFECT.
Singing Develops the Appetite and Makes It
Cost Money to Be Blithesome and Gay—
Economical to Be a Songless Grouch.
One Writer Attempts to Describe the Origina-
tion of That Popular Form of Music and an
Ambitious Song Writer Gives a Graphic Illus-
tration of Its Effect.
Singing, it has been discovered, is a great appe-
tizer. No less an authority than Dr. Cyril Hors-
ford, of the Royal Hospital, London, declares that
this is true. Dr. Horsford has made a study of
singers, and also of the effects of singing upon
people who were not, until he began his experi-
ments, in the halbit of singing, and he is certain
that singing is a great aid in increasing the ap-
petite.
The famous old saying, "Laugh and grow fat,"
has a splendid running mate in "Sing and grow
hufigry."
There is the soundest of logic in Dr. Horsford's
claim that singing aids the appetite. One cannot
sing very long if he is despondent, melancholy,
blue or grouchy. Singing will drive away more
gloom in ten minutes than meditation could do in
ten days. Every physician will tell you that the
condition of the mind has a very great effect upon
the appetite.
No one enjoys a meal when all is gloomy and
silent, but let one have pleasant companions or
bright and cheerful conversation, and the food
tas,tes better, and.one eats more and feels better in
every way. Singing, then, makes the mind brighter
and tends to happiness. Happiness means a better
enjoyment of food. This is one of the reasons
why song will make you hungry.
Of course, there is a physical reason as well as a
mental reason. This is mainly in the deep breath-
ing. One cannot sing without taking deep breaths.
Deep breathing, as everyone knows, clears the
lungs and increases the circulation. The proper
increase of the circulation calls for more fuel for
the body. Food, of course, is the "fuel" nature calls
for.
To the layman the argument sounds logical.
When one is stone broke one doesn't care to sing,
and therefore does not develop an appetite \vhich
cannot be satisfied. Live restaurant keepers should
organize singing classes among their customers for
the purpose of increasing business, while the father
of the large family should bar singing as a matter
of economy. Yet we wonder ihow some profes-
sional singers manage to eat regularly.
A NEW SELDEN BALLAD.
"Just Say Again You Love Me" Proving Very
Popular with the Performers.
The new ballad "Just Say Again You Love Me,"
by: Edgar Selden and Emanuel Goldstein, and
which is published by the Edgar Selden Music
Publishing and Production Co., is proving a
strong, factor among the ballads of the day. Both
the lyric and the music are decidedly pleasing
and are attracting considerable attention. Among
those using the song is Orrin Ellsworth, who has
just started to fill bookings of fourteen weeks
over the Loew time in New York and vicinity.
Laddie Cliff's clever song, "Au Revoir, Mr.
Moore," is also published by the Selden Co.
NOW THE JEAN SCHWARTZ CO.
THEREVIEWMEAR5
THAT the song plugger who is a feature of a
stock company playing one-night stands on Long
Ragtime was invented about ten years ago by Island, is our idea of a fellow who has no easy
thing.
somebody who discovered that by taking an old
THAT "Dcr Rosenkavalier," the Strauss oper-
Italian aria and running it through a feed chop-
etta which is promised production in the United
per a very weird effect could be produced. Some
States sometime in the future, has caused some-
of these effects are so weird that people who are
what of a sensation in London, where it was
fond of classical music would just as soon listen
produced recently.
to a duet between an accordion and a bagpipe.
THAT the available supply of pianists gave out
Probably nobody has made more money out of
in
the Feist professional department on Monday
ragtime than a French acrobat named Debussy,
who gathered most of his material by attending and Phil Kornheiser had to go into hiding from
the crowd of impatient performers who were
negro cakewalks. Nobody pretends to understand
,
what Debussy is trying to say, as he writes mostly waiting for attention.
THAT pianists in the various professional depart-
for the black keys and breaks out in a new kind
of tempo every few minutes. No one but the ments are hired solely for the purpose of interest-
critics for the New York, Boston and Chicago ing performers in the songs of their respective
papers can listen to a programme of Debussy mu- houses.
THAT when said pianists play over numbers re-
sic without winding up in a padded cell or calling
quested
in a purely perfunctory manner and then
teebly tor ice water.
fold their arms in token of rest, they're not giv-
Ragtime music is made in several different
styles of body, on one chassis, and is sold in car- ing the proper service.
load lots to department stores, which retail it at THAT Johann C. Schmid declares that "Auction
10 cents per copy to throbbing customers who Pinochle" is a great operetta, even if it is given
are passionately fond of music, says the "Leyhe- in German.
THAT changes in the names and organization
nola." No one who has ever heard the stately
steppings of a ragtime march, torn from the of publishing houses are coming so rapidly the
pardhed throat of a discouraged phonograph, will directories become useless before being issued.
THAT there still appears to be no reason why
confuse it with the knee action of the Kneisel
performers should not pay at least the actual cost
Quartet.
People stick up their noses at ragtime in pub- of professional copies of music if the music is
lic, but have to give up when it attacks them in worth bothering with at all.
THAT Charles K. Harris is dashing off special
the soles of their feet, where the musical faculty
articles for various papers these days at a tre-
is located in most of us.
Just to illustrate how ragtime gets one in the mendous rate and is telling some truths about
end the head of a manuscript department of a song composing and publishing.
THAT Abe Holzmann is still composing marches
local publishing 'house 'handed the following ef-
iusion to The Review, the title being "That just to keep his hand in and that his latest effort
in that direction is "The Whip" march, named
Fiendish Rag:"
after the successful melodrama.
A maiden long upon the stage
THAT J. H. Remick & Co. will, of course, be
Once called on an M, D.
the publishers of the new piece.
You're syncopated through and through,
The cause is plain, said 'he.
DISPOSAL OF MASSENET'S SCORES.
The rags you wear don't keep you warm;
Massenet left • all his manuscript opera scores
All your rags are sung.
to the library of the Paris Opera. Mme. Masse-
You get so much of Ragtime
net, who during the lifetime of the composer was
Your intellect is sprung.
guardian
of these scores, has asked Antoine Banes,
CHORUS.
who is in charge of the library, to come and ex-
Oh, if drugs would only cure syncopation,
amine them. The collection consists of twenty-
How very happy every one would be.
five scores, including "Ariane," <( Esclarmonde,"
The antidote would sell throughout creation,
"Sapho," "Herodiade," "Le Jongleur de Notre
J
Twould be a boon to all humanity;
Dame," etc. All that is lacking of 'his dramatic
Harmony has been chopped to little pieces,
w
orks are two youthful operas, which are sup-
Melody has got an awful jag;
Then set to words of neither rhyme nor reason, posed to have been burned in the Opera-Comique
fire of 1887.
"
The result is torn off and called "A Rag."
THEODORE R. LYONS,
Lansing, Mich.
MASCAGNFSJSEW OPERA.
It is reported that the principal number in Mas-
cagni's new opera, "Parisina," is a duet which
lasts twenty-five minutes. The score calls for a
chorus of 280. The first performance is to be
given at Milan.
The Jean Schwartz Co., Inc., has been incor-
The late Sir Frederick Gore-Ouseley, professor
porated with capital stock of $10,000 for the pur- of music at Oxford, was once going to call on a
pose of taking over the business of the Jerome & friend in London, and asked a fellow musician
Schwartz Publishing Co. The incorporators are the number of the house in which he lived in a
Jean Schwartz, Max Dreyfus and Louis Dreyfus. certain street. "I don't know his number," an-
swered the other, "but the note of his door
scraper is C-sharp. Sir Frederick went off, con-
If you desire a man for any department of
your service, either for your factory or for your tentedly kicking the door scrapers all down the
selling department, forward your advertisement street until he came to the right one, when he
rang the bell and went in.
to us and it will be inserted free of charge.
"Who is the luckiest guy in the world?"
"A deaf guy at grand opera."
Why doesn't some librettist write a musical
comedy and call it "The Straphanger?" • It will
play to standing room only, we predict.
Ain't Yo* Comin' Back To
Me, Ma Dinah Lee ?
The greatest Southern song written since
"Down Upon the Suwan^e River." A
quaint, pathetic song with beautiful har-
mony of real Southern character,, sweet
and melodious. The Southern song "hit,"
of the season. Get this qne quick.
METROPOLITAN MUSIC PUB. CO.
1520 Broadway, New York City
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE
MUSIC TRADE
REVIEW
51
"THE SUNSHINE GIRL" A SUCCESS.
Reason Known!
ORDERS FOR
CENTURY EDITION
are greater each week by
many thousands than ever
before. Everybody knows
the reason.
Hows your
stock ?
Century Music Pub. Go.
1178 Broadway
New York City
That
Old Girl of Mine
By JONES & VAN ALSTYNE
New Musical Comedy with Score by Paul A.
Rubens Makes Instant Hit—Some of the
Musical Numbers That Made a Strong Im-
pression on the First Night Audience.
Ever hear of 'em?
MOID 0 1 Of MI
One of those
appealing
ballads.
Jerome H. Remick & Co.
219 W. 46th Street
68 Library Avenue
NEW YORK
DETROIT, MICH.
The Season's Biggest Waltz-Song Hit
"That Old Girl of Mine" Getting Into the Hit
Class—Another Live Number.
J. H. Remick & Co. are finding "That Old Girl
of Mine" by Jones and Van Alstyne to be one of
the most successful numbers that has had a place
in the catalog of the company for some time past.
The character of the song is out of the ordinary
run and it appears to be just about what the
doctor ordered from the point of view of the pub-
lic. Anyhow, the orders are coming in for the
song in great volume and that is the most inter-
esting test of its popularity. Incidentally another
Remick song, "Be My Little Baby Bumble Bee," is
proving a strong attraction with performers and
the sting is being felt by the public.
"Climb a Tree With Me"
By CHAS. K. HARRIS
You can order it from your nearest
jobber or direct from the Publisher.
CHAS. K. HARRIS
Broadway and 47th St., New York
MEYER COHEN, Mgr.
Without exception the
most complete collection of
the most popular selections
from the best-known comic
operas ever published. The
book contains several se-
lections from each opera,—
in every case the most
popular ones. All have
been especially arranged
for the piano by the cele-
brated pianist, Paolo Gal-
lico. This is the companion
volume to the "Most Popu-
lar Selections from the
M o s t Popular Operas,"
which has had a tremend-
ous sale. Price, 75 cents.
MUSIC FOR HIS MEALS.
We are the publishers off the
New York successes
THE MAN WITH THREE
WIVES
Music by Franz Lehar
(Now playing at Weber & Fields' New
.
Music Hall)
f .
THE SUNSHINE GIRL
Music by Paul A. Rubens
(Now • playing at Knickerbocker Theatre)
Samples Settled Question of Eating for Young
Salesman.
A young city salesman with a certain New York
music publishing house caused some comment be-
cause ! he got rid of his samples at a surprising
rate. That little sample case of his would be al-
most empty each night and he explained carefully
that he had left so and so piece with tJhat dealer,
another song with another dealer and so on.
There was nothing suspicious about the matter
and all would 'have passed off without comment
if the chief hadn't dropped into a restaurant near
Times Square and observed the salesman give a
goodly portion of his sample stock in settlement
for his meal check. Now that particular sales-
man must pay cash for his meals and no one is
aware where he is getting the cash.
Chappell & Co., Ltd.
DEATH OF WELL=KNOWN MUSICIAN.
41 East 34th Street
NEW YORK
William Armstrong Atwell, one of the best
known concert and orchestra musicians of Provi-
dence, R. I., died at his home in the city last week
at the age of fifty-two years. The deceased was
for many years the conductor of Atwell's orches-
tra and gained considerable prominence as a cor-
net soloist.


Canadian Branch:
3 4 7 Yonge Street, Toronto
No?
There was another English musical comedy pre-
sented to New Yorkers for the first time on Mon- Well, Doc Baker is the
day in "The Sunshine Girl," the latest success
from the Gaiety Theater, London, and which bids original distributor! He
fair to prove one of the hits of the season in this
country, for besides having delightful music, the incubates and oozes them out
book, by Paul Rubens and Cecil Raleigh, is lively to the audience every time
and quite an improvement over what we have been
led to expect from abroad. The music is by Paul he yiddles that yoddling
A. Rubens, who already has a number of musical
comedy successes to his credit, and without ex- success--
ception was praised by the local critics as being
about the best that has come to these shores this
"AT THE YIDDISHER BALL"
season.
The story is of Vernon Blundell, who inherits He quarantined the American
his millionaire uncle's fortune and soap factory on
condition that he does not marry nor become en- Music Hall all of last week.
gaged within five years. Blundell is in love with
Dora Dale, of the perfumery department, whom
TABLOID TRUTHS
he has met while disguised as a workman. To
be able to make love to Dora, he induces his
Think twice before you speak—
friend, Lord Bicester, to impersonate him and
And then don't speak!
take charge of the inheritance. The course of
true love is rather rough, but finally the will is
L E O . F E I S T , I n c . , - NEW YORK
abrogated and all ends happily.
Among the musical numbers that brought forth
special comment were "Take Me For," sung by
Julia Sanderson, as Dora; "Here's to Love," sung
by Ruth Thorpe; "You Can't Play Every Instru-
ment in the Band," sung by Joseph Cawthorne,
and "Little Girl, Mind How You Go." The play
is handsomely staged and well cast. Chappell &
Co., Ltd., publish the music.
PROMISING REMICK SONGS.
The
BEST BET
of the season.
RIOT GERMS!
HINDS. NOBLE * ELOREDGE.
31-35 West 15th Street. New Y«rk
ROBERT TELLER SONS & DORNER
Music Engravers and Printers
SEND MANUSCRIPT AND IDEA OF TITLE
FOR ESTIMATE
226 West 26th Street, New TorK City
DANCES BY BEETHOVEN.
Eugen d'Albert, who, after a lapse of nearly
ten years, has once more emerged as a pianist,
and whose recitals in Germany and Austria have
evoked much the same interest and enthusiasm
fhat used to be bestowed on Rubinstein some
thirty or forty years ago, has arranged a series
of dances by Beethoven, "Ecossaises," Which he
has played to the evident delight of his audiences
and which are greeted as a valuable addition to
that piano literature that of recent years has so
little to show of sterling worth.
If you are a salesman, tuner or traveler, and
desire a position, forward your wants in an ad-
vertisement to The Review in space not to ex-
ceed four lines and it will be inserted free of
harge and replies sent to you.

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