Music Trade Review

Issue: 1916 Vol. 62 N. 20

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
57
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
NOW RUNNING!
The Big 1916
Advertising
Campaign
of the
Century Edition
Are You Prepared to
Take Advantage of It ?
CEHIURYMUSICPUBC 0
231-235 Vest4O«!5tNcvYork(ity
NEW IRISH OPERA FOR K. & E.
Victor Herbert has again been at work with
the result that he has completed the music for
a new Irish opera which will be presented next
season under the management of Klaw &
Erlanger. It is declared that Mr. Herbert, who
is of Irish birth, put his whole soul into the
music of the new piece. The books and lyrics
have also been completed.
ORGANIZE TO_PUBLISH MUSIC
LAFAYETTE, IND., May 8.—The Monarch Music
Co. is being organized by a number of musicians
of this city to publish several compositions by
local writers, the first being a high school song
written by Paul L. Specht and entitled "Sons of
Jefferson High."
TO MUSIC DEALERS
WE ARE JOBBERS
OF MUSIC
Popular, Classic, Music
Books and Studies
Our prices on all classes oi music will average the
lowest. Located in the center of the country and
carrying the tremendous stock that we do we are
in a position to supply all your wants at a SAVING
TO YOU OF TIME, MONEY AND EXPRESS
CHARGES.
All orders shipped the day we get them.
GIVE US A TRIAL ORDER
McKINLEY MUSIC CO.
1501-1513 E. 55th S t r e e t
Going Big
CHICAGO
KING'S Beautiful Serenade
A NIGHT IN JUNE
Piano Solo. Are you getting your share?
lished as a solo or duet for all instruments.
Also pub-
C. L. BARNHOtSE, Oskaloosa, Iowa, U. S. A.
We Publish an Excellent Line of Teaching Music
CUliurrli, fJaxiunt nub
1367-1369 BROADWAY, NEW YORK
ROBERT TELLER SONS & DORNER
Maslc Engravers and Printers
SEND MANUSCRIPT AND IDEA OF TITLE
FOR ESTIMATE
SU W«at 43d StrMt, M«w T«rK City
MREVIEWHEARS
THAT in conversation the other day, Frank
Taylor, of the Chappell offices, stated in refer-
ence to the travel-exploration fever, which runs
in some men's veins, that if he knew absolutely
there was ten thousand a year waiting for him,
he wouldn't take a job in Africa, Arabia, or any
other distant aggregation of sand and hot
weather. The real reason for this attitude'may
be heard any night in the Taylor domicile, ex-
erting the full-musical power of a pair of healthy
lungs.
THAT George Graff and Jack Glogau, the well-
known hit-producing team, delight in kidding
each other about the relative values of words
or music in "Wake Up, America," whereas if
the truth were known, and is, you can't sing
much of a song without music and you can't be
intelligent without words. Fifty-fifty, as Joe
Miller or somebody used to say.
THAT the Remick Professional Official Waiting
Room at 12 o'clock noon looks like the Coney
Island board-walk at its best. There are many
people there.
THAT Earl Carroll, whose "So Long, Letty"
has proven such a big success, has completed a
new musical show called "Canary Cottage."
THAT L- G. Batten, manager of the Century
Publishing Co., is back at his desk after several
days at home with one of those spring colds.
THAT Jeff Branen, of the Joe Morris Co., re-
turns to-morrow from his long trip through
the West.
HOWARD JOHNSON'S NEW SONG
"A Story of Everyday Life" to Be Featured in
Vaudeville by Mae Francis—Johnson Has
Other Promising Numbers up His Sleeve
The story has it. that wandering into the
Feist professional rooms the other day, Mae
Francis, the well-known vaudeville singer,
heard some one playing and singing the new
Howard Johnson song "A Story of Everyday
Life," and declared it a sure winner; and the
story has it right. Miss Francis is so favorably
impressed with the song, that she has decided
to feature it, having already given it a very sat-
isfactory trial at one of the Broadway theatres.
Incidentally, it is rumored on a basis of sub-
stantial fact that Johnson has several more
highly original songs us his sleeve. Some of
these, he declares, are still up about as high as
the shoulder, but others have come down and
started on the way to the printer. They will
be heard shortly.
"WE'RE ALL FOR UNCLE SAM"
H. A. Gordon, of the Hamilton S. Gordon
Publishing Co., is getting fine results on his
patriotic song "We're All For Uncle Sam," by
James Wells and Walter Pond. Particularly
in regard to its enthusiastic reception by schools,
public and private, this stirring march song
appears to be gaining rapidly, and the near
future should see it well established as an ex-
pression of the prevailing patriotic feeling.
;:;;;;;;;;;;•;;•»;»}
!»••?»:•!:::•:•;••;
CantGo
Wrong
With
Feist So
Hawaiian Songs are the Graze
Here is a new one by
those clever writers
Jimmie Monaco and
Grant Clarke
"THE HONOLULU
BLUES"
FOR DEALERS ONLY
^Jf
a copy if you attach this
§ C
Advt. to your order
!::::: LEO FEIST, Inc.. FEIST Bldg., New York 33-Kii
The Song of the Moment
"KEEP THE HOME-
FIRES BURNING"
('Till the Boys Come Home)
CHAPPELL & CO., Ltd.
41 East 34th St.
NEW YORK
Two Sensational English Ballad
Successes
"Somewhere a Voice is Calling"
"The Sunshine of Your Smile"
T. B. Harms & Francis, Day & Hunter
62 West 45th Street
NEW YOBK
• We Guarantee Our Music To Sell. You Lose Noth-
I ing by Dealing With Us. Special Prices to Dealers.
G. M. T1DD, Music Publisher, Lancaster, 0.
BUY YOUR MUSIC
FROM
BOSTON
WALTER JACOBS
8 Boiworth S t ,
Publisher
<<
of
Merry Madness*
OLIVER
DITSON
COMPANY
BOSTON
NEW YORK
aticipmte *Md supply Eyery Requirement of Mctic Dealers
LYRIC
BY
J.KEIBN BRENNAN
MUSIC
BY
ERNEST R
BALL
WHITE-SMITH MUSIC PUB. CO.
•UBLISHERS, PRINTERS & ENGRAVERS OF MUSIC
Main Offices: 62-64 Stanhope St., Boston.
Branch Houses: New York a n j Chicago.
M . W l T M A R K £ SONS.WiTMARK BUILDING, NEW YtHMC
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE
58
MUSIC TRADE
REVIEW
HAWAIIAN MUSIC IN THE WEST
NEW FEISTJDANCE FOLIO
HE HAD A LOT OF SENSE
Wonderful Demand for That Class of Music
Still Continues, Declares Edward P. Little,
Who Is on a Trip Through the East
Leo Feist, Inc., has prepared a new dance
folio which contains a numb.er.of the recent
Feist hits, carefully arranged as dance music.
The list of selections in the new volume is as
follows: One-step, "Mother"; waltz, "When
You're in Love with Someone"; fox-trot, "You'd
Never Know That Old Home Town of Mine";
one-step, "Come Back Dixie"; fox-trot, "Those
Good Old Days Back Home"; march, two-step,
"In the Glory of the Moonlight"; one-step, "Nor-
way*'; one-step, "Beatrice Fairfax"; fox-trot,
"You Can't Get Along With 'Em or Without
Em"; one-step, "Sweet Cider Time"; one-step,
"Don't Bite the Hand That's Feeding You"; one-
step, "Siam"; one-step, "There's a Broken Heart
for Every Light on Broadway"; waltz, "Valse
Celestia"; one-step, "Wake Up, America."
By E. F. Mclntyre
There was an old geezer and he had a lot of
sense. He started up a business on a dollar-
Edward P. Little, manager of the sheet music
eighty cents. The dollar for stock, and the
department of Sherman, Clay Co., San Fran-
eighty for an ad brought him three lovely dol-
cisco, struck New York the other day on an ex-
lars in a day, by dad!
tensive business trip, and reports big doings
Well, he bought more goods and a little more
in the West on Hawaiian music. Sherman, Clay
space, and he played that system with a smile
are pushing this increasingly popular vogue in
on his face.
music, and indications are that the Hawaiian
The customers flocked to his two-by-four and
craze is backed up by a genuine public appre-
soon he had to hustle for a regular store. Up
ciation. The two biggest sellers now are "On
on the square, where the people pass, he gobbled
the Beach at Waikiki," and "Aloha Oe," the lat-
up a corner that was all plate glass. He fixed
ter written by Queen Liliuokalani, but several
up the windows with the best that he had and
newer songs are coming along very fast, among
told them all about in a half page ad.
them, "My Honolulu Tomboy," by "Sonny"
He soon had 'em coming and he never, never
Cumha; "Drowsy Waltzes," by Jack Ailau; "She
quit, and he wouldn't cut down on his ads, one
Sang 'Aloha Oe' to Me," by Joseph B. Carey,
jit. And he's kept things humping in the town
NEW CHAPPELL SONG SUCCESS
and "Fair Hawaii," by J. F. Kuntz. Henry
ever since, and everybody calls him the Mer-
Kailimai, who wrote the music of "On the Report has it that the comparatively new chant Prince.
Beach," has turned out three more excellent Chappell song, "Laddie in Khaki," is proving so
Some say it's luck, but that's all bunk—why
popular that there is danger of not one, but sev- he was doing business when the times were
Hawaiian songs.
Sherman, Clay have seized the opportunity eral additional printings. This number rouses punk!
to publish three books of practical, authorita- a patriotic sentiment, not so much by a sudden
People have to purchase and Geezer was wise
tive instruction on the playing and singing of stirring appeal to the surface emotions, as by a —for he knew the way to get 'em was to adver-
Hawaiian music. These are "A Practical Method more substantial appeal of good music.
tise.—Associated Advertising.
of Self-Instruction on the Ukulele," by N. B.
Bailey; "Ukulele Solos," edited by Bailey and
Keoki E. Awai, and "The Peterson System of
Playing the Guitar with Steel," edited by Bailey.
WARERO0MS, 6 0 5 FIFTH AVENUE, NEW YORK
A circumstance which aids materially in selling FACTORY AND OFFICES, NEW HAVEN. CONN.
these books is the association of the name
Bailey, with "Old Bill Bailey," who played the
Progressive dealers have
ukulele in the recent popular song. It's not the
found them to be most
same man.
profitable.
Mr. Little says that James Casey, who wrote
FACTORY, Southern Boulevard and Trinity Avenue, NEW YORK
the one-time big success, "Sing Me a Song of the
Sunny South," is selling thousands of copies of
the Hawaiian songs in his Echo Music Store,
Established 1151
San Francisco.
SHONINGER PIANOS
AND
PLAYERS
STODART PIANO CO.
Consult the universal Want Directory of
The Review. In it advertisements are inserted
free of charge for men who desire positions
of any kind.
DECKER & SON
THE
FAVORITE
Pianos and Player-Pianos
(97-711 EAST 135th STREET, NEW YORK
FREDERICK
AGENTS WANTED
Exclusive Territory
•flfllee aad Factory:
117-UI Cypress Avesac
PIANO
Mamotaetared b y
FREDERICK PIANO CO.
New York
" T H E P I A N O with the Weather Defying
Action." Artistic in design and tone quality.
MUND,
PIANO CO.
FACTORY:
Elerenth and Wlnnebago Streets
JBecher
JStm
Grade Pianos aid Player Piaio$
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 Soatk 21»t St., - PhiI»4«h>kU, Pa.
Instruments of Merit
MILWAUKEE, WIS.
Factory and
Wareroomt t
767-769
10th Are.,
NEW YORK.
UNIFORMLY QOOD
"SoeryihrnaTCnown inJKusje'
ALWAYS RELIABLE
BOGART
PIANOS
IANO
BOG.ART PIANO CO.
452-456 Tenth Ave., New York
S-11 Canal Piao.
JT #
NEW YORK
PIANO
ESSENTIALLY A HIGH GRADE PRODUCT
CHICAGO
—UAMWVA919UU*
M
BY
F. R A D L E , w.«"S8S -,r... N e w Y o r k City
foritttest Catafocis
DE RIVAS & HARRIS
FISCHER
J. & C Fischer
Established la 1840
New Tort
MANUFACTURERS OF
HUH GRADE UPRIGHT lid PUYER PUNK
New Fiotory, 1 84th to 1 SSIhSta. and Willow Av«.
(CaMiltr 6IM Tlmun ni • • • • • )
H I W YORK CITY
Stands for the best In
Player, Upright and Grand
Piano

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