Music Trade Review

Issue: 1918 Vol. 66 N. 25

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
50
THE MUSIC TRADE
REVIEW
JUNE 22, 1918
POPULAR PIANTADOSI NUMBER BEING FEATURED STRONGLY
NEW GUITAR AND UKULELE FOLIO
Herewith is shown a photograph of the win- song, and it is becoming one of the best-known
dow of the F. W. Woolworth store, State and of popular songs in that section of the country.
M a d i s o n streets,
C h i c a g o , 111., in
which a fine display-
is given to the Al
Piaiitadosi & C o . ,
Inc., song "Belgium.
Dry ; Y o u r . Tears."
The display attracted
a great deal of at-
tention and was one
of the biggest song
plugs put over by
the above publishers
during the past sea-
son. Among those
seen in the picture
a r e Scotty Middle-
ton, one of the big-
gest buyers of sheet
music in the city of
C h i c a g o ; Frank
Clark, of the Water-
son, Berlin & Snyder
staff, a n d George
Piaiitadosi, of t h e
Chicago branch of
Al Piaiitadosi & Co.,
Inc. T h e Chicago
s a l e s of "Belgium,
Dry Y o u r Tears"
have been q u i t e
large d u r i n g the
p a s t few months,
Display of "Belgium, Dry Yours Tears" in Woolworth Store in Chicago
due no doubt to the publicity the branch at Window displays are always means of making
that city has given the number. The, Western sales and the Woolworth store is at an especial-
vaudeville acts have also taken kindly to the ly advantageous corner for such publicity.
New Volume, Edited and Compiled by Frank L.
Littig, Published by W. A. Quincke & Co.
A REAL WAR-TIME SONG WRITER
The Songs of the Front by Lieutenant Gitz Rice
Among the Best That Have Been Offered by
Active Participants in the Big War
One of the most promising song writers de-
veloped by the war has been Lieutenant Gitz
Rice, who, before entering the Canadian service,
was a photographer in Canada and interested in
amateur theatricals. Lieutenant Rice was an
able amateur entertainer, and found that his
talents played a great part in keeping his com-
rades cheerful during the voyage across and in
the line at the front. It was in the battle of
Neuve Chapelle, however, in March of 1915 that
Rice first started writing songs of the trenches.
In relating his experience he said in part:
"One thing worth noting was a song I wrote
called 'Are We Going to Be Here for the Win-
ter?' I personally wrote and told my brothers
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
White-Smith Music Pub. Co.
PUBLISHERS, PRINTERS AND ENGRAVERS OF MUSIC
"SEND ME A CURL"
"CARRY ON"
Consult the universal Want Directory of
The Review. In it advertisements are inserted
free of charge for men who desire positions.
Moiic Engraver* and Printers
SEND MANUSCRIPT AND IDEA OF
TITLE FOR ESTIMATE
311 Wast 4 3 d S t r . e t
New York City
I
I.;..; I:U;:I ISKIIA n \ \ A V
M w
HiKh
Arrigo Boito, Author of "Mefistofele," Dies in
His Seventy-sixth Year in Italy
"KEEP THE HOME-
FIRES BURNING"
ROBERT TELLER SONS & DORNER
ant)
NOTED COMPOSER PASSES AWAY
Senator Arrigo Boito, the musical composer
and poet, died suddenly on June 10, according
to advices from Milan, Italy. His most noted
work was the opera "Mefistofele."
Arrigo Boito was born in Padua, Italy, Feb-
ruary 24, 1842, of Italian and Polish parentage.
He got his musical education at the Milan Con-
servatory and with Alberto Ma'zucato. At an
early age his genius was recognized and he re-
ceived an award from the Italian Government
which enabled him to go abroad to study for
not to bother about volunteering, because we two years.
He served under Garibaldi in the war of 1866
would be in Berlin by the fall. And this was
the spring of 1915. In those early days, as I and had been Inspector General of Public In-
went through the Ypres, Festubert, Givenchy, struction in the conservatories of Italy since 1892.
Arras and Somme battles, the lads in France Other libretti of his are Ponchielli's "Gioconda,"
were fighting a twenty-to-one battle, and still Verdi's "Otello" and "FalstafT," Faccio's "Am-
the Germans never got through. So you can lctto" and Coronado's "Un Tramonto."
easily imagine that I'm not afraid of their get-
ting through now.
The Song of the Moment
"But to get back to the songs. I shall never
forget, in one town, stealing a piano out of an
old house that was being shelled. The piano
would have been destroyed anyhow. We got
a wagon, put the piano on the wagon, and
drove down a road where thousands of infantry
(Till the Boys Come Home)
boys were lined along the sides. I couldn't
keep my fingers from the keys, and started to
play as we went along. There were shouts,
cheers and singing, and one English soldier came
CHAPPELL & CO., Ltd.
up to me in all seriousness and said: 'What is
41 East 34th St.
NEW YORK
the idea of the celebration? Has peace been
declared?'
"However, that night we had volunteers sing-
TWO BIG SUCCESSES
ing around our piano. We started at 8 o'clock,
and I was still at the piano at 4 o'clock in the
morning. It was while we had this piano that
By GEOFFREY O'HARA
The camp *ong farorite
T wrote 'I Want to Go Home' and 'Keep Your
Head Down, Fritzie Boy,' and in the lonely still-
ness of the nights to follow I got the idea for
'Dear Old Pal o' Mine.' It was the inspiration
and atmosphere of the whole thing that made
Hifh Voice
By N. F. W00DBURY
Low Voict
these songs possible."
Destined to be the mort popular of war sonfi
Main Offices: 62-64 Stanhope St., Boston.
Branch Houses: New York and Chicago.
(Cfiurcf).
A new book entitled "Combination Steel Gui-
tar and Ukulele Folio " has just been published
by W. A. Quincke & Co., music publishers of
Los Angeles, Cal. The folio is edited and com-
piled by Frank L. Littig, whose methods for
the ukulele, tenor banjo and steel guitar have
become immensely popular with teachers every-
where. The new folio has been published to
meet the popular demand, and it contains new
standard and popular numbers for steel guitar,
for ukulele and guitar accompaniment and also
tor ukulele and steel guitar solos, and songs
with ukulele accompaniment. There are twenty
pages of music and the folio is gotten up in very
attractive form. This new folio is the latest
addition to the Littig collection of books.
Quincke & Co. have just taken over all the
stock and the entire business formerly con-
ducted by Mr. Littig himself.
WILSONIAN'
• F A U S T I N A ' '"<
'"WITH THE COLORS'^ 0
'THE HIGH PRIVATE 1
HAIL TO OLD GLORY
VANGUARD-DEMOCRACY'
KHAKI BILL',
HUNTZ1NGER & DILWORTH
159 West 57th Street
NEW YORK
Two Sensational English
Ballad Successes
"Somewhere a Voice is Calling"
"The Sunshine of Your Smile"
THE GREAT MARCHESOFTHE AGE /
^ BY SORENSEN KING.JEWElt4WATS0H I.
k. BAND-ORCHESTRA-PIANO A.*
ICLBARNHOUSE
OSKAlOOSA.IOWAi
MARKED(X)AS0VfT0
T. B. Harms & Francis, Day & Hunter
62 West 45th Street
NEW YORK
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE
JUNE 22, 1918
REVIEW
"The Maker's Name and Reputation Are the BUSH & GERTS PIANO COMPANY
Real Protection of the Buyer"
General Office, Factory and Display Rooms
r
rK
BUSH * GBKT8 piano bears the u m « of Its MAKERS. For a
•o*rt«r of * century BUSH * GBBTS hare made hlfb-rrad* pianos. Both BUSH
ft OBKTS aro practical piano maker* and have made 60,000 planes under the ONI
KAMI, ONf TRADE-MARK. Dealers wanted In all nnoeenpled territory. Write
for prices and terms.
THE
POPULAR
PEASE
PIANOS
Weed and Dayton Streets
Chicago. 111.
BEHNING
!| STULTZ & BAUER
| |
I |
For more tlian THIRTY-VIVE successive years this company has
|1 p been owned and controlled solely by members at the Bauer family, whose
§ H personal supervision is given to every instrument built by this company.
PIANOS
Ton*
Quality
EXQUISITE CASES OF ORIGINAL DESIGN
Superior Workmanship
Used and Endorsed
By leading conservatories of music, whose testimonials are
printed in catalogue.
H. LEHR & CO., Easton, Pa.
55 YEARS IN
BUSINESS
We have passed the half century
mark in our business life, and today
we are producing a line of pianos
and player-pianos which more than
ever meet with the varied demand of
piano merchants in every section.
Chase Bros, is the pioneer piano of
the West and with our complete line
the dealer has a piano strength which
is unbeatable.
Chase-Hackley Piano Company
MUSKEGON
- - - MICHIGAN
Founded 1863
"A NAME TO REMEMBER"
BRINKERHOFF
Pianos and Player-Pianos
The details are vitally interesting to you
BRINKERHOFF PIANO CO.
209 South State Street, Chicago
TECHNICAL
Manufacturers of Exclusive
I) HIGH-GRADE-GRAND-UPRIGHT-PLAYER-PIANOS
NEW YORK
Charming
BOOKS
Authoritative and TJp-to-Date Works on
Pianoforte Building, Piano Tuning, and Player
Construction. Practical Text-Books for the piano
manufacturer, dealer and tuner.
Published by
EDWARD LYMAN BILL, Inc.,
373 Fourth Avenue
New York City
Factories and Warerooms
A World's Choice Piano
338-340 E. 31st St., New York
Write for Open Territory
A. B. CHASE PIANOS
In tone, tench, action, durability, and oYery requisite that goes
to ntf ke up an artistic instrument, there are none superior.
Factory and Principal Office: NORWALK, OHIO
iKatlmahrk
Grand. Upright
and Player
PIANOS
NEW HAVEN and NEW YORK
MATHUSHEK PIANO MANUFACTURING C0., 1 3 2 n d *— *- d A1
SHONINGER PIANOS ™ PLAYERS
FACTORY AND OFFICES. NEW HAVEN. CONN.
WAREROOMS. 508 FIFTH AVENUE. NEW Y O U
F. RADLE PIANO
ESSENTIALLY A HICH GRADE PRODUCT
Manufactured by F. R A D L E , ny/m'stM N e w Y o r k C i t y
DE RIVAS & HARRIS
CABLE & SONS
Pianos and Player-Pianos
SUPERIOR IN EVERY WAY
Old Established House. Production Limited to
Quality. Our Players Are Perfected to
the Limit of InTention.
CABLE ft SONS, 55* W. 38th St.. N. Y.
THE CORDON PIANO CO.
(Established IMS)
BEHNING PIANO CO.
East 133d Street and Alexander Avenne
NEW YORK
New York Retail Warerooms. 425 Filth Avenae
Warerooms: 128 West 42nd Street
Factory: Legget Ave. and Barry St.
LEHR
Manufactured by
OLD ESTABLISHED
WHITLOCK a a d LEGGETT AVES.. NEW YORK
MANUFACTURERS OF
High Grade Upright and Player-Piano*
Ntw Factory, lMtk to 135th Sti. t i d WIlUw A*«.
(CaoacKr 6000 Piano* per annum)
NEW YORK
The
IANO
452-456 Tenth Ave., New York
Manfrs. of The Gordon & Son Pianoi
and Mellotona Player-Pianos
"Che K o h l e r £ C a m p b e l l ^PianoVs the Best Piano in the World for the Money
Everybody says sot Why ? Because their enormous output permits the manufacture of\
*n instrument it is impossible to equal for the money on any lesser'scale of production!
{
Kohler CCampbell. 30th. Street fill th.Avenue.New\brkCity^

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