Music Trade Review

Issue: 1917 Vol. 65 N. 1

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
49
MREVIEWttEARS
Business Dull?
There is such an extensive variety
of every-day-in-demand numbers in
"CENTURY
EDITION"
that the dealer who features it is kept
busy making sales! All the year
'round!
Make yours a "Century Store"!
Century Music Pub. Co.
231-235 West 40th Street, NEW YORK
MEETING WITH QUICK SUCCESS
Carl Millegram Publishing Co., Inc., Now Fea-
turing Three Excellent Numbers
Chas. Miller, head of the Carl Millegram Pub-
lishing Co., Inc., must feel proud of the activity
his publications are showing in the compara-
tively short time since their release. The three
best sellers in the company's catalog, "The Para-
dise of Your Dear Eyes," "Pass the Butter" and
the novelty fox-trot "Bubbles" are all having a
good demand. The program of this firm for
the fall season is quite extensive, for besides
several new songs and instrumental offerings of
the better class there will be a number of songs
which will probably be heard in productions
during the coming season.
TWO BEST SACRED SONGS
Now In Demand
THE
VOICE IN THE
WILDERNESS
JOHN PRINDLE SCOTT
BLEST ARE THE PURE
IN HEART
F. FLAXINGTON HARKER
These songs are suitable for all church services including
Christian Science. Both issued in two keys
HUNTZINGER & DILWMTM05 Fifth Aw., New York
THAT according to reports from France the
American troops which recently arrived over
there deserted the entire music publishing field
and wrote a patriotic song of their own.
THAT if the above song proves successfui and
the soldier boys fail to copyright it there will
probably be a rush to publish the number.
THAT the reporter in his despatch states the
music is reminiscent of "Tipperary," "A Hot
Time in the Old Town To-night" and the
"Doxology," showing that the writers were
not particular whose song they took a few bars
from.
THAT while the writers seem to have deserted
the music publishers in getting out their own
number the result shows the publishers were
not slighted otherwise.
THAT the lyric itself is on the style of the new
Feist song "Good-bye Broadway, Hello France."
THAT George M. Cohan's "Over There," Wm.
Jerome Publishing Corp., seemed to be the fea-
ture at Plattsburg during the Lambs' Gambol
at that camp.
THAT the coming outing of the Music Pub-
lishers' and Dealers' Association of Greater
New York promises to be the liveliest in the
history of the organization.
Of course, there
will be a jazz band there.
THAT one song writer declares that the only
thing connected with the publishing and selling
of music that has not gone up is the royalty
paid the producer.
And gasoline is getting
close to a dollar a gallon, too.
ou
Can't .Go
Wrong
With TL
eistSo
Now Playing at the Lyric Theatre,
New York City
m a My
Lady's Glove'
The New Operetta
by Oscar Strauss
Critics Predict
"Who Are You
Beautiful Unknown
Send for complete list of songs
LEO. FEIST, Inc., FEIST Bldg., New York
"OVER THERE" WANTED BY SOLDIERS
Nora Bayes Telegraphs for Band Parts of Song
for Soldiers' Use
The Wm. Jerome Publishing Corp. are in re-
ceipt of the following telegram from that well-
known singing comedienne, Nora Bayes:
Among the new songs the professional de-
"Please send, special delivery, band parts and
partment of Jerome H. Remick & Co. will lyrics of 'Over There' to Adjutant of Post, First
work on during the summer season are, "Salin' United States Engineers, Washington Barracks,
Away on the Henry Clay," lyric by Gus Kahn Washington, D. C. They want it for their
and music by Egbert Van Alstyne; "I'll Come marching song."
Sailing Home to You" (A Long Way From
"Over There" is the new patriotic song from
Broadway), by Stanley Murphy and Harry Car- the pen of Geo. M. Cohan and was originally in-
roll; "Southern Gals," by Jack Yellen and Al- troduced by Miss Bayes, who has continued to
bert Gumble, and "China Dreams," by Ray- make it the featured number on her tour.
mond Eagen, Gus Kahn and Egbert Van
Alstyne.
SOME LIVE jtEMICK SONGS
JUST ISSUED
"TWILIGHT LANE"
NEW BALLADJS POPULAR
The new ballad by Theodore Morse and
Dorothy Terriss, "Love's Lullaby," published
by Leo Feist, Inc., is one of the favorite songs
of many of the best vaudeville singers. The
sale of the number "also has been quite prom-
ising in recent weeks, and it is looked upon as
one of the coming fall numbers by the Feist
organization. The number, while popular, is at
the same time a song of the better class.
A PATRIOTIC HYMN THAT WILL LAST
A Dainty Song by Greene and Solman
OUR THREE STEADY SELLERS
(1) "The Paradise of Your Dear Eyes
A Ballad by Greene and Novelty
Miller Fox-Trot
by H. Stanley Haskins
\L)
(3)
I aSS
Entr'acte by Silvio Hein
CARL MILLEGRAM PUBLISHING CO.,Inc.
25 West 45th Street
NEW YORK CITY
The American National Hymn
Another Hit?
GEO. L. WEITZ, 753 6th Ave., New York
"Over There"
TO MUSIC DEALERS
By Geo. M. Cohan
WE ARE JOBBERS
OF MUSIC
Get in at this price.
7c per copy
HAVE YOU GOT THESE?
"Sometime"
18c per copy
"M-i-s-s-I-s-s-I-p-p-I"
18c per copy
"There's Only One Little Girl."
By Geo. M. Cohan
7c per copy
Wm. Jerome Publishing Corporation
Strand Theatre Building,
NEW YORK CITY
m
will be as big a hit as
"My Hero"
WITH PRELUDE
Word* by Rev. S. E. SMITH
Music by GEO. L. WEITZ
"If I Catch the Guy Who Wrote
Poor Butterfly"
99
Popular, Classic, Music
Books and Studies
Our prices on all classes of 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.
AL.DUBIN
WON p E R
THE MUSIC BY
ERNEST R.
GIVE US A TRIAL ORDER
McKINLEY MUSIC CO.
1501-1513 E. 55th Street
CHICAGO
776252
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
50
THE
A VERY PROMISING NUMBER
MUSIC TRADE
REVIEW
CHAS. K. HARRIS' STRONG CATALOG
"Good-Bye Broadway, Hello France," the New
Feist Patriotic Song, Be'ng Strongly and
Successfully Featured All Over the Country
Is
"Good-bye Broadway, Hello France," will be
heard from coast to coast if the predictions of
the Feist organization are fulfilled. This new
patriotic song has a melody from the pen of
Billy Baskette, who was responsible for the
song hit, "Hawaiian Butterfly," and has words
by Chuck Reisner and Benny Davis, two Chi-
cago boys. The song on its initial tryout in
Chicago was received with enthusiasm rarely ac-
corded a new song, and this, too, by song buy-
ers who are prone to look at patriotic numbers
at this- season as far too numerous for encour-
agement.
When the publicity staff of Leo
Feist, Inc., get behind a song the great majority
of the public are bound to hear about the song
and consequently to have a desire for it. The
Feist publicity staff are certainly behind
"Good-bye Broadway, Hello France."
Chas. K. Harris, who through long experi-
ence is fully awake to the sort of songs that sell
both summer and winter, has at present a cata-
log of catchy ballads and novelty numbers that
seem to meet all demands especially well. His
revival of his former great success of Spanish
War days, "Break the News to Mother," has
been particularly appropriate, as is evidenced
by the volume of orders being received from
music dealers throughout the United States.
Other successes in the present Harris catalog
include: "Thou Shalt Not Steal (a Heart Away),
"Come Back, Let's Be Sweethearts Once More,"
"A Study in Black and White," "You Came, You
Saw, You Conquered," "Let Him Miss You Just
a Little Bit," "Love Me All the Time," as well
as the novelty song hits: "My Little China
Doll," "It's a Long, Long Time Since I've Been
Home," "At the Hula Hula Ball" and the suc-
cess, "Lelia"—Pasillo
waltzes—now
being
played by all the largest orchestras in the mov-
ing picture theatres throughout the country.
McCORMACK^ON SINGING
Declares the American Singers Do Not Receive
Proper Appreciation
John McCormack has this to say about Amer-
ican singers:
"I am inclined to speak favorably, indeed, of
American singers, since I've set about being an
American myself. You know I took out my
first papers the 16th of January. Please remem-
ber, too, that when I speak as I do I have no
operatic aspirations in mind, for I do not want
such a career at all, and could not accept it if
it ever were offered me.
"The fact is, that the American singer is no-
where.
He is a pariah in his own country.
Look at the many fine names among our own
vocalists. Every one with discrimination knows
that they are far superior to the foreigners who
have their rightful places. Yet, they are out
in the cold. Here we are, the greatest organ-
izers in business, putting our most important
musical organization into the hands of foreign-
ers. It is pure tradition and is all wrong."
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 YORK
BUY YOUR MUSIC FROM
BOSTON
Publishers
WALTER JACOBS
8 Bosworth St.,
Publisher
of
BOSTON, MASS.
" See Dixie First"
Oliver Ditson Company
BOSTON
NEW YORK
Anticipate and supply Every Requirement of Music
Dealers
Full of Excellent Numbers—Revival of
"Break the News to Mother" Proves Most
Timely, as Is Shown by Volume of Orders
IGNORANCE IN SONG WRITING
Music Editor Has Some Sharp Comments to
Make Regarding the Abilities of Some of
Those Who Are Turning Out Patriotic Songs
Lucien G. Chappin, a local musical editor,
recently sent to the New York Sun an interest-
ing but caustic letter regarding the prevalent
patriotic song mania and its results, following
an editorial on the same subject appearing in the
Sun. In describing the technical knowledge dis-
played by many writers of patriotic songs, Mr.
Chappin said in part:—
"Give a fifteen-year-old child of ordinary in-
telligence a bushel basketful of carefully assorted
words and phrases and tell him to make up out
of this material an essay on Shakespeare or any
abstruse subject. You know what the result
would be. Yet musical children (just a little
beyond infancy) are engaged all over the land
in much the same sort of occupation. At the
moment they are turning out 'patriotic' stuff
in appalling quantities, mostly songs, with
words by themselves in nearly every case. No
one would believe me if I were to attempt to
tell of the crass ignorance dumped into many
of these 'compositions'—ignorance of the first
and simplest rules of poetry and song structure.
The Sun's editor is to be congratulated if
'nearly all the compositions with which we have
lately been favored have merit in a considerable
degree.' Other editors have not been so for-
tunate.
Music Engraver* and Printers
SEND MANUSCRIPT AND IDEA OF
TITLE FOR ESTIMATE
311 West 4 3 d Street
New York City
We Publish an Excellent Line of Teaching Mu«lc
Clturrl), IfaxBOtt anil (On my a tuj
IJ*7-IJ*» BROADWAY, NEW YORK
WHEN SHADOWS
T^ I
M J\
^ jfj^
f
f
I
I
Jj Jj
At featured in the Opera "Martha," by
Elaine DeSellem, leadinc contralto with
the Boston Engliih Opera Co., now en tour
'*•£•« "DARLIN"
15 CENTS FOR A LIMITED TIME
one*™ McKINLEY MUSIC CO.
"This avalanche of patriotic compositions had
its start in a widespread fiction that there is a
demand for such things. Perhaps there may be,
but it is not found in song publishing quarters.
The publishers did imagine such a demand ex-
isted something over a year ago, and literally
fell over themselves in the rush to put patriotic
songs on the market. Now they know better,
because hardly one of these songs ever paid for
the expense of its publication, and the publishers
are naturally rather reluctant to add to the piles
of dead stock mouldering into dust on their
shelves. The self-starter never did and never
could work in a car, however splendid, filled
with 'composers' steeped to the ears in igno-
rance of the primary principles of musical com-
position. Pardon this corruption of your stun-
ningly pungent metaphor."
MRS. A. J. STASNV^ON BUSINESS TRIP
Mrs. A. J. Stasny, wife of A. J. Stasny, of
the A. J. Stasny Music Co., left early this week
on a trip through the Middle West and Canada.
Mrs. Stasny will be gone about four weeks,
and will divide her time while away between
business and pleasure. Among other cities in
her itinerary are Cleveland and Detroit, and
St. Thomas, London and other points in
Canada.
Two Wonderful Ballads
"ATEAR,AKISS,ASMILE"
"THAT'S WHY MY
HEART IS CALLING YOU"
Music b y OTTO MOTZAN
KARCZAG PUB. CO., Inc.
62-64 W. 45th St., 7th Floor, New York
i^^
America's Biggest Hit
"KEEP THE HOME-
FIRES BURNING"
('Till the Boys Come Home)
By CHAS. K. HARRIS
CHAPPELL & CO., Ltd.
41 East 34th St.
NEW YORK
PUBLISHERS, PRINTERS AND ENGRAVERS OF MUSIC
ROBERT TELLER SONS & DORNER
"
"Break the News
To Mother"
The Song of the Moment
White-Smith Music Pub. Co.
Main Offices: 62-64 Stanhope St., Boston.
Branch Houses: New York and Chicago.
TWO CONCERT BALLAD SUCCESSES
O R D E R
Red, White, Blues
Mister Buzz Saw
Alpine Sunset, Valse Romantlque
Valse Egyptian
The Jubllator March
Visions of Madrid, Spanish Serenade
The Isle of Palms
A Night In June, Serenade
FROM ANY JOBBER OR
C. L BARN H O U S E ,
OSKA
£° 8 °\ A1A •
For ninety days, only
7c
This song has never sold under
12 l / 2 c per copy. The same song that
created a furore during the Spanish-
American war and repeating the
same today.
Dealers: Here's your chance to
get in on the ground floor. Don't be
afraid to order. The song sells at
sight.
PUBLISHED BY
CHAS. K. HARRIS
Broadway and 47th St.,
New York Citv

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