Music Trade Review

Issue: 1915 Vol. 61 N. 23

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE
REVIEW
53
ffint::::::::::::::::::::::
THE OPPORTUNITY
There is going to be a larger demand than
ever for CENTURY EDITION this Fall and
Winter from regular customers and those who
will buy it for the first time. One of the rea-
sons is that the supply of Qerman Editions
has been cut off by the war and the demand
for most of that music will be filled with
CENTURY EDITION and will continue to be
filled with CENTURY EDITION. It's the great
opportunity for the best in American music,
and CENTURY EDITION fills the bill.
CENIURYMUSICPUBC 0
tt
231-235 Vest4O JtHwYork(itjr
THAT the success of Feist's "M-O-T-l I-K-R"
song throughout the country is hest indicated by
the numerous apparent imitations that are spring-
ing up like mushrooms.
THAT, to the casual observer, the activities of the
Music Publishers' Board of Trade decrease in direct
proportion to the increase in activity in the trade
in general.
THAT in the case of the board, as with the indi-
vidual, the busier the man the less time he has to
think of his troubles.
THAT Sam Fox, the Cleveland publisher, has been
spending the past fortnight cleaning up the trade
in New England with his special publications for
the holidays.
THAT Alfred Bryan, as a song writer, appears to
possess the ability of the expert baseball player to
scatter his hits.
THAT a new building to be erected in New York
will have a special section set aside for the occu-
pancy of musicians, the special features to include
sound-proof rooms.
THAT the idea should make a special appeal to
those popular song writers who claim that rivals
steal their melody ideas before they can be trans-
ferred to paper.
NEW SONG BY LILLIAN RAY ISSUED.
C. WAKEFIELD CADMAN IN NEW YORK.
One of the recent publications of Chappell &
Co., Ltd., is "The Land of Long Ago," a senti-
mental number of high class by Lillian Ray, who
has been very successful as a song writer and com-
poser. Although only listed by Chappel & Co. in
November, some sample copies of the new song
scattered among the dealers have already brought
a very satisfactory demand.
Prominent Composer of Indian Songs Brings
Real Indian Princess with H i m .
You
Can't G o
Wron£
With
Feist So
ill
Yes, It's Another
"MISSISSIPPI" Song
The Title is
"Along the
Mississippi Shore"
Words by Howard Johnson
Music by Walter Donaldson
iii
FOR DEALERS ONLY
^
*
LEO FEIST, Inc., FEIST Bldg., New York !:i
A START°H FE FIRST MAGNITUDE
A visitor to New York is Charles Wakefield
Cadtnan, the noted composer, who has been con-
siderably lionized during his stay here, partly on his
own account and partly owing to the fact that he
brought with him Princess Tsianina Redfeather,
a full-blooded Creek Tndian, and the first of her
race to obtain artistic recognition. Princess Red-
feather has been particularly successful in the in-
terpretation of Mr. Cadman's many Tndian songs.
LITTLE GREY
MOTHER
FEATURING "HONOLULU LOU."
SOME OF OUR SUCCESSES
ONLY YOU (Waltz Ballad)
THERE'S A ROSE IN OLD ERIN THAT'S
BLOOMING FOR ME
ONE WONDERFUL NIGHT
I'M GOING TO BRING A WEDDING RING
TO YOU IN SPRING
THE KISS THAT MADE YOU MINE
WHEN WE GATHERED WILD FLOWERS
SWEETHEART. YOU AND I)
I DIDN'T RAISE MY FORD TO BE A
JITNEY
SING ME THE ROSARY
MOONBEAMS BRING LOVE DREAMS AND
LOVE DREAMS ALWAYS BRING ME YOU
I LOVE THE NAME OF DIXIE
We Publish an Excellent Line of Teaching Music
(Eliitrrli, {taxaon an ft
IJ67-IJ69 BROADWAY, NEW YORK
ROBERT TELLER SONS & DORNER
Mnslc Engravers and Printers
SEND MANUSCRIPT AND IDEA OF TITLE
FOR ESTIMATE
311 W«it 43d StrMt, IUw Tort City
One of the Successful Numbers in the Catalog
of the Regent Music Publishing Co.
One of the songs that is being featured with
particular success by the Regent Music Publishing
Co., of Lake Charles, La., is "Honolulu Lou," a
number of the present popular Hawaiian type that
possesses excellent lyrics and a pleasing melody.
"Honolulu Lou" is by Aubrey Gittleman and Ray
Egan. Another good song in the Regent Co.'s list
is "Wish T Knew Just What You Think of Me," a
number of the semi-ballad type, written and com-
posed by Richard R. Hanch.
WIRE ORDERS FOR "M=O=T=H=E=R."
The popularity of Johnson and Morse's song,
"M-O-T-H-E-R" is indicated by the fact that on
Monday of this week Leo Feist, Tnc, received a
telegraph order from a Pacific Coast dealer for
5,000 copies of the song in a hurry. The fact
that Miss Bertha D'Aubigny recently sane
"M-O-T-H-E-R" before an audience of 15.000
people at the exposition in San Francisco probably
had something to do with the demand.
BUY YOUR MUSIC FROM
BOSTON *••"«••"
WALTER JACOBS
8 Bosworth St.,
Publisher
'Merry
of
BOSTON, MASS
Madness
9
OLIVER DITSON COMPANY
BOSTON
NEW YORK
*.nricit»mte aad aupply Every Requirement of Maaic DeaJert
WHITE-SMITH MUSIC PUB. CO.
PUBLISHERS, PRINTERS, ft ENGRAVERS OF MUSK
Maim Offices: M-M Stamhope St., Bottom.
Brsaek Woauem: New Yorh tn4 Ckleaco
cents a copy if you attach this
Advt. to your order
WHO WAITS
ALL ALONE
WORDS BY
MUSIC By
MARRY
J)E CO5TA I
BERNARD
ICftOWMAN
NOW AT
- •
THE ZENITH OF ITS POPULARITY
M.WITMARK £. SONS
' •
NEW YORK

CHICAGO
5 A N FRANCISCO
LONDON
p«blisk«rs t>f
THE SONG OF SONGS
(Chauea du eaear brio)
Muic by M«ya
Three Key* : Ab, Bb and D
Send 12 Centi for Sample Copy
CHAPPELL & CO., Ltd.
41 E. 34th St., NEW YORK
Canadian Branch
S47 Tome St., TORONTO
A REAL HARRIS BALLAD
"Can You Pay For
A Broken Heart?"
By CHAS. K. HARRIS
SOLD WHEREVER MUSIC IS SOLO
CHAS. K. HARRIS
Broadway and 47th Street
MEYER C O H E N , Mgr.
New York
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
ADDITIONS TO "HALF DOLLAR SERIES"
RAGTIME MUSIC USEFUL
Four Interesting and Valuable New Volumes
Added to Popular Ditson Edition.
In Restoring Sad and Despondent Persons to
Normal Condition—Chopin's Music for Over-
strung Nerves—Use of Music in Therapeu-
tics Being Studied by Physicians.
A quartet of notable and interesting additions
have just been made to the valuable and justly
popular "Half Dollar Music Series" published by
the Oliver Ditson Co., Boston, Mass. Included in
the four new volumes is a series of "Forty Favorite
Airs in Easy Piano Arrangement," among which
are to be found such standard selections as "Alice,
Where Art Thou?" "America," "Annie Laurie,"
"The Campbells Are Comin'," "Darling Nellie
Gray," "Home, Sweet Home," "La Paloma," "The
Mocking Bird," "Tenting on the Old Camp
Ground," and other selections of similar character.
The remaining three volumes are entitled "Fofty-
first Year Piano Pieces," "Thirty-second Year
Piano Pieces" and "Twenty-third Year Piano
Pieces," respectively, all of them made up of thor-
oughly suitable selections from the works of rec-
ognized comp.osers. AH four volumes should
prove distinctly interesting to the trade, the teacher
and the student.
The simplified arrangements have been made'by
Carl Wilhelm Kern, James IT. Rogers and others
well qualified for the task.
The effects of music upon the health—well
known ever since David harped to Saul, but hith-
erto illy understood—are being looked into more
deeply by the group of prominent physicians who
formed the National Society of Musical Therapeu-
tics a year ago.
"No matter to what extent music may restore a
person to the normal," says the New York Medical
Journal, "there can be no question that it may help
other influences to incline the person from the nor-
mal. There are many compositions, notably among
those by Chopin, which are the outcome of more or
less melancholy moods', and while they are beauti-
ful and harmless to the healthy, when made a
steady diet of self-consolation by those suffering
from depression from mental or bodily causes their
effect is undoubtedly pernicious, just as a too ex-
clusive diet of olives or meringues would depress
TURN ABOUT.
"I think I'll go into baseball next year," re-
marked the actor who was out of a job.
"But you don't know anything about baseball,"
objected his friend.
"What's that got to do with it? Look at all the
baseball players that are drawing big salaries on
the stage. They don't know anything about acting,
do they?"
HARDMAN, PECK
& COMPANY
The
The HARDMAN drand Piano
HARDMAN Autotone
HARDMAN Upright Piano
The
The Parlor Grand, The Baby Grand,
-phe Perfect Plaver-Piano
Made in three sizes and a variety of
The Small Grand.
' artistic cases.
Owning and Controlling E. G. Harrington &• Co., Est., 1872, makers of
The HARRINGTON Piano
and
The HENSEL Piano
Supreme among moderately priced instruments
An admirable instrument at a price all can afford
and also owning and controlling the Autotone Co., makers of
The AUTOTONE
The only Player-Piano of reputation made throughout "Player" as well as "Piano" by Piano makers of acknowl-
edged reputation. The Autotone has only two Basic Pianos, the Hardman and the Harrington.
433 FIFTH AVENUE, NEW YORK
Founded 1842
724-730 REPUBLIC BUILDINQ, CHICAGO, ILL.
PLAN TO PRODUCE "FULLY THAT."
Miss Elizabeth Marbury announces that she will
produce during the Christmas holidays "Fully
That." Guy Bolton wrote the book, P. G. Wode-
house the lyrics and Jerome Kern the music. Mau-
rice and Florence Walton, Melville Ellis and other
prominent players will be in the cast. T. B. Harms
& Francis, Day & Hunter will publish the score of
the piece.
" T H E P I A N O with the Weather Defying
Action." Artistic in design and tone quality.
SPECIALIZEjN MUSIC.
The W. H. Hammack Co., Hagerstown, Md., al-
though handling pianos and other musical instru-
ments, specializes particularly on sheet music and
books, both as publisher and retailer, with much
success.
the general bodily condition and mental atmosphere
of a person so indulging a sickly appetite."
On the other hand, ragtime music, "being in no
wise serious," is the reverse of depressing. "The
African jingles of the present day create an emo-
tional atmosphere of restlessness and excitement
which is typically American, and which is opposed
to health only so far as our national restlessness
and lack of poise tend to make us a people whose
national disease is nervous exhaustion."
Roughly speaking, lively music, such as ragtime,
is likely to rouse depressed persons from their
melancholy; sad and pathetic music will soothe the
excitable and hyper-nervous.
PIANO CO.
FACTORY:
Eleventh and Winnebago Streets
JSecker JBros.
MEHLIN
MILWAUKEE, WIS.
Factory and
Wareroomt t
767-769
Grade Piaioi aid Player Piaios
Awarded first prize in many world compe-
titions during the past sixty years, the
Schomacker Piano is now daily receiving
first prizes of preference won by its superb
tone, wonderful breadth of expression and
structural beauty.
SCHOMACKER PIANO CO.,
1020 South 21st St., - Philadelphia, Pa.
"A LEADER
AMONG
LEADERS"
PAUL Q. MEHLIN & SONS
Faotorlaa:
Main Offjo* and Warworn:
Broadway from 2 0 t h to 2 1 s t Streets
2 7 Union Square, NEW YORK
WEST NEW YORK, N . J .
JOHN H. LUDDEN, Western Traveling Representative
etOt KIWIBARK AVENUE, CHICAGO, ILL.
ALWAYS RELIABLE
UNIFORMLY flOOD
ROGART
PIANOS
PIANOS PLAYER
IANO
452-456 Tenth Ave., New YorK
BOQART PIANO CO.
9.1 1 Canal Plaoe
THE F^ R A D L E
ESSENTIALLY
F. RADLE,
A
HIGH
GRADE
m BY
NEW YORK
PIANO
PRODUCT
., New York City
DE RIVAS & HARRIS
MANUFACTURERS OF
HIGH GRADE UPRIGHT and PLAYER PIANOS
N«w Factory, 1 34th U 1 SSth Sta. and Willow Av«.
(CatmtWv MM P I . . . . *»r ••••«•>
N ( w VO»K CITY
FISCHER
J. & C. Fischer
btablbhtdln 1840
New York
Stands for the best in
Player, Upright and Grand
P ianos

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