Music Trade Review

Issue: 1913 Vol. 57 N. 3

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
51
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
ARE YOU ?
To keep in line with
the demands of the
times, you must sell
Century Edition
Ten Cent Sheet Music
Century Music Pub. Co.
1178 Broadway
New York City
When it's Apple Blossom Time
In Normandy.
Sunshine and Roses.
You're a Great Big Blue Eyed
Baby.
You Can't Stop Me From Lov-
ing You.
How Could I Know That You
Loved Me?
The Perfume of the Flowers.
I'll Get You.
I'm on the Jury.
That Old Girl of Mine.
That Tango Tokio.
Jerome H. Remick & Co.
219 W. 46th Street
68 Library Avenue
NEW YORK
DETROIT, MICH.
We are the publishers of the
European Success
Un Peu D'Amour
(A Little love, a little kiss)
Song Arrangement (French and
English Words)
Piano Solo Arrangement
Write for Terms
CHAPPELL & CO., Ltd.
41 East 34th St., - NEW YORK
347 Yonge St.,

TORONTO
MREVIOVflEARS
THAT according to the promises made by various
writers regarding their summer work, the woods
.will be full of real hits this fall.
THAT with the cabaret performers lined up and
demanding—and getting—money for singing songs,
and with the price of music still low ebb, the
troubles of the publishers appear to be growing
greater steadily.
THAT we may soon expect the little back yard
German band raising a loud protest for its bit of
the graft.
THAT Leo Feist is spending the summer with
his family at his country place, Belmar, N. J.
THAT a couple of prominent music department
managers in New- York made an agreement to sell
popular music at nine cents regularly, barring
special sales, and what is more are keeping the
agreement.
THAT meanwhile the publishers dodge any price
agreement and express doubts regarding the other
fellow in the event of an agreement being made.
THAT George Evans' Honey Boy Minstrels are
featuring the latest Chas. K. Harris success, "Don't
You Wish You Were Back Home Again."
THAT in order to balance matters, George Evans
has placed two of his new numbers with Chas.
K. Harris for publication, namely, "When the
Roses Bloom in Dixieland" and "Mooney-Mooney
Man," both of which are used by the Evans
Minstrels.
THAT the Government is now regarding the fake
music publishing business of taking easy money
away from amateur song -writers as being akin to
the old gold brick game and is acting accordingly.
THAT the members of the professional staff of
J. H. Remick & Co., are not letting the grass grow
under their feet in capturing the cups offered at
Music Publishers' Nights at the resorts hereabouts
A HONEY LU LU
from Honolulu is Toots Paka!
She can put more dancing on
a square inch of stage space
than an entire St. Vitus
Asylum! More than that—she
sings
THREE OPERAS BY PUCCINI.
Famous Composer Announces That He Is
Working on Music for Three One-act Operas
to Be Produced Simultaneously.
Word comes from Rome that aftej- three years
of continuous search for a libretto which would
awaken his musical inspiration, composer Puccini
states that out of a whole library of plays sent to
him by obscure authors, he has at last selected
three librettos, each consisting of a one-act play,
and will soon begin to set them to music.
Puccini adds that his quest for a three-act play
failed completely.
"The thre operas," Puccini said to the New
York American, "will be given in the same evening
and the public will judge them all at the same
time. As for me, after a long vacation, during
which I have abstained from work of all kinds, I
am glad to go back to work. My vein of music
needs only to be tapped to let out a deluge of
notes."
The librettos are by three separate authors, two
of whom already are famous, d'Annunzio and
Tristan Bernard, the famous French playwright.
The third is by Didier Gold, a young writer whose
powerful drama of the Parisian underworld caught
the composer's fancy as soon as he read the first
few scenes.
ABORN GETS_MINER=TENOR.
Morgan Kingston to Make His Operatic Debut
at the Century.
Milton Aborn, who is on his way to New York
on the "Mauretania," states that he has arranged
with Sir Thomas Beecham to take over the Rus-
sian opera ballet, now at Covent Garden, to the
Century Theater on May 1, following the season
of opera in English. He has also obtained Mr.
Dippel's release of the services of Morgan Kings-
ton, the tenor and former Welsh miner, who has
appeared with great success in London concerts.
He will make his operatic debut at the Century.
Theater. Kingston went to the boat train, and
contracts were signed just before the train started
"CURSE OF AN ACHING HEART"
like a regular, honest-to-
goodness Cup Winner! She's
at Hammerstein's all of the
week!
TABLOID TRUTHS
The Bigger the Dream—the Bigger the
Disappointment!
LEO.
FEIST, I n c . ,
- NEW YORK
MUST SAILJTO RAGTIME.
Lamport & Holt Line Gives Up "Auld Lang
Syne" as Departing Tune.
When the big Lamport & Holt liner "Van
Dyck" sailed for Rio Janeiro and Buenos Aires
recently it was the first time a passenger-carrying
ship of this line had left this port without the
ship's bugler playing "Auld Lang Syne."
The result of all this "Auld Lang Syne" has
been that the departure of the Lamport & Holt
ships had not always been marked with that joyous,
enthusiasm that is a feature of most transatlantic
sailings. It was to make the departures of the
ships a somewhat happier event that the order was
issued to substitute ragtime for the beautiful
Scotch music.
The "Van Dyck" is the newest and biggest ves-
sel in the Lamport & Holt fleet, and so *he honor
of instituting the new musical program was ac-
corded the musicians of that ship. The bugler was
missing when the "Van Dyck" backed out of her
pier recently. Instead there was an orchestra, and
just as the ship began to move the orchestra struck
up a lively march and followed it with a well-
know ragtime selection. Passengers cheered and
the crowd ashore yelled in delight.
The "Van Dyck" had 150 saloon, 250 second
cabin and 400» steerage passengers. Among the
saloon passengers are eighteen missionaries. The
liner makes her fi.OOO-mile voyage in about twenty-
four days.
THE TALK OF NEW YORK
CH
K. HARRIS' TWO FAILED HITS
;"Don't You Wish You Were Back Home Again?"
AND
"Not Till Then Will I Cease To Love You"
You can order them from your nearest
jobber, or direct from the Publisher
CHAS. K. HARRIS
Broadway and 47th Street
N e w York
MEYER COHEN, Mgr.
ROBERT TELLER SONS & DORNER
Music Engravers and Printers
SEND MANUSCRIPT AND IDEA OF TITLE
FOR ESTIMATE
226 West 26th Street, New York City
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
SAINT=SAENS' VIRILITY
MUSIC AND 2 H E "MOVIES."
SUPPORT FOR MUSIC IN ENGLAND.
As a Composer a Wonder—Latest Opera from
His Fertile Brain Keeping All Europe on the
Qui Vive—-His Activity as Composer and
Conductor.
Viennese Composer Opens New Field by Com-
posing Operetta Especially for Presentation
Through the Medium of Motion Pictures—
Specially Arranged Score.
Writer Suggests That Government Should Take
Earnest Steps in Support of the Musician and
Composer and Cites the Example of Germany
in That Particular.
Saint-Saens at the age of eigtity is a world's
wonder in the realm of music. Just now he has
all of Europe on the qui vive. He will shortly
present his latest opera, and composers both here
and abroad wonder how it is possible that a man
of his age still possesses such a fertile brain.
It must be remembered that at the age of eighty-
five Verdi was still a virile master of harmony.
It was between the ages of seventy and eighty that
his best operas were written. The great composer
if. born, not made. His genius burns until it is
finally quenched by death. Tt is a God-given gift,
which can not be acquired by methods of men.
Saint-Siiens personally supervised tbe rehearsals
of "Proserpine" in Brussels, and it was this aston-
ishing fact which caused the eyes of the country to
concentrate upon the veteran composer. The
opera was previously produced in Paris in 1887
and has intermittently been presented in various
cities of France. It has never been regarded as a
success, and the people of the United States have
never witnessed the opera unless it was seen
abroad. But now that Saint-Siiens has come so
conspicuously into the limelight and the rivalry
'between American opera companies has become so
intense, a production of "Proserpine" may 'be an-
ticipated during the coming winter.
It is said tlinit during the rehearsals Saint-Siiens
more than once occupied the director's chair and
told the members of the orchestra just what he
meant in certain musical expressions.
The fact that with whitened hair and a long
lapse of years behind him this man of music
should show the activity of youth is remarkable.
It is undeniable proof that age has but little effect
in stopping the march of genius. Great things may
yet be expected from the French composer. He
was for many years denied recognition. His early
operas met with failure. It is only of recent years
that the general public has begun to appreciate his
.operas. "Samson :ind Delila'' paved the way to his
permanent success, and since the great furore it
cieated in Paris his other operas have been pro-
duced and appreciated.
It is well that this recognition should come to
Saint-Siiens before it is too late. More than one
genius has died unthanked for what he has done
and unrecognized until after his body has turned
tc dust again. Such recognition falling upon silent
ears is regrettable.
Ever since they became a regular torm of enter-
tainment there has been music incidental to the
revelation of the moving pictures. Now a Vien-
nese composer has written an operetta intended
for use in the films only. The characters in it
will not be heard. They will be seen, while an
orchestra plays the music intended to illustrate
their story. The wise composer has prepared his
orchestra for a version of his work to be per-
formed in the expensive moving picture theaters,
while a piano accompaniment to the varying scenes
will serve for more economical impressarios.
This is the first instance of an operetta com-
posed exclusively for the film playhouse. When
there is more complete accord between voice and
action in the picture than there is at present it
may be that the scores written for these theaters
will be sung by- the actors or seem to be sung by
them. Synchronization has not yet reached a
sufficient degree of finish for such a result. It is
not regretted, perhaps, so " much as it might be
were not the sense of sight in me theater much
more important to-day than the sense of hearing.
Stranger still in the history of the advance of
the "movies" into the realm of music is the con-
sent of Cosima Wagner to have the sacrosanct
"Parsifal" presented to the public in this form.
Music selected from "the sacred dedicational play"
is to be performed as the pictures of the music
drama are shown. The rights of Bayreuth to the
exclusive possession of "Parsifal" lapse with the
close of 1913. Then it will doubtless be heard in
many theaters. Three productions are already an-
nounced in Paris for next year. The German
cities will not be likely to respect the wishes of
the chatelaine of Wahnfried once they are by law
entitled to produce "Parsifal" in their theaters.
So it may be, says an editorial writer in The Sun,
that there is method in the liberality of Mme.
Wagner when she allows the scenes from "Parsi-
fal" to be shown broadcast in "the people's thea-
ter."
The British Government helps along music, so
far as bands in the parks are concerned; but, asks
the London Musical Record, "why should not the
powers that me, if they wish to support the musi-
cal art, do so in a broader and more general
sense? Germany subsidizes her opera houses, and
the French Government encourages her artists, na-
tional and local, in many ways unknown to Eng-
lish people. Why not a musical 'Burlington House'
and a 'Hanging Day' (no jokes) 'for British com-
posers just as for British artists? Some will urge
that the Royal Academy this year is less fruitful
than ever. But, if so, is not that the fault of the
constitution of the selection committee, not of the
system ?"
Another Ballad by Ernest R. Ball
I'll Change The Shadows
To Sunshine
Lyric by
George Graff, Jr.
Writers of "Till
the Sands'of the
D e s e r t Grow
Cold," "Goodbye,
My Love, Good-
bye," " H e r e ' s
Love and Suc-
cess to You," "Let Us Have Peace,"' "Call-
ing of the Sea," "When Irish Eyes Are
Smiling," "Lost Melody," "Where Is the
Love of Yesterday?" etc.
The demand for this beautiful song is
growing steadily.
M. W1TMARK & SONS
Witmark BIdg., 144-146 Weat 37th St,
NEW YORK CITY
Chicago
SanFrueUco
London
Paris
Melbourne
SONGS THAT HAVEJUADE HISTORY.
CARROLL LEADSJTHE SIMPLE LIFE.
Earl Carroll, who has spent some time in East
Aurora, N. Y., conferring with Elbert Hubbard
regarding the plans for a musical play for which
Mr. Hubbard will supply the book, Enrico Caruso,
the famous tenor, the music, and Mr. Carroll the
lyrics. The latter was much impressed with the
ability and keenness of the Fra and with the simple
life followed in the community. He stated that
pitching hay in the afternoon reminded him greatly
of Broadway owing to the difference.
JOHN HEINZMAN PARALYZED.
John Heinzman,' a well-known pianist for music
publishing houses, and most recently connected
with the Broadway Music Corporation, who was
suddenly seized with an attack of paralysis re-
cently, is still in a serious condition and doubt is
expressed by physicians as to his chances of recov-
ering completely from the stroke, which has para-
lyzed his entire right side.
J. ROSAMOND JOHNSON MARRIED.
J. Rosamond Johnson, the well-known colored
composer of popular music, with a number of hits
to his credit, was married in London last week,
to Nora Floyd, a colored musician of Florida,
who arrived in England for the ceremony recently.
Most of the songs that have made history were
written by men who had no other claim to im-
RICHARD STRAUSS' NEW MOTETTE.
mortality. The "'Marseillaise" is the only produc-
tion of Rouget de Lisle which has survived, and
Richard Strauss has just finished a new com-
"The Wearing of the Green" was the work of an position, entitled "Eine deutsche Motette," writ-
anonymous purveyor of ballads for the street ten for four solo voices and an orchestra and
hawkers of Dublin. Max Schneckenburger, an ob- chorus of sixteen parts.
scure Swabian merchant, who never published any-
thing else, composed in 1840 some verses of which
the burden was thus translated:
"Dear Fatherland, no danger thine,
Firm stand thy sons to watch the Rhine "
Little was heard of these until thirty years later,
when the Franco-Germany war gave them an enor-
mous vogue. They were then adopted as the na-
tional anthem of United Germany, and a yearly
pension of 3,000 marks was conferred on the com-
You or I, Love?
poser of the tune to which they were set.
Don't fail to order these Songs
My Dixie Rose
Who shall Wear them
Gasoline
My Old Girl
My Caroline
r one Story the
WALTER JACOBS
Roses Tell
107 Tremont S t ,
BOSTON, MASS.
,,v
, r.
Publisher of
Kiss of Spring" "Son* Day When Dreams Com* Trut"
And Same Othen World Famous.
'Mid the Purple Tint-
OLIVER
You Can't Repay the
DITSON
COMPANY
BOSTON
NEW YORK
Anticipate and Supply Every Requirement of Muiic De
WHITE-SMITH MUSIC PUB. CO.
ed Hills of Tennessee
Debt You Owe your Mother
Meet Me in the Twilight
MCKINLEY MUSIC CO.
CHICAGO
Branch Homer Hew Yorfc — d '
NEW YORK

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