Music Trade Review

Issue: 1918 Vol. 67 N. 26

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
DECEMBER 28,
THE
1918
MUSIC TRADE
9
REVIEW
uisa
fiRFfiM^fif^^
Start the New Year
with
CONNORIZED
MUSIC ROLLS
Popular Numbers for
January Now Ready
6397 La Marseillaise Hymn—National Hymn of France.
With Bugle, Drums and other Orchestral
Effects
Rouget de Lisle
Arranged and played by S. A. Perry.
6398 Farewell—Ballad—'Cello, Guitar and Ukulele
Efforts
I. L. Weile
Played by S. A. Perry.
6399 Oh! What a Time for the Girlies When the
Boys Come Marching Home—Fox-trot,
Lewis, Young & Ruby
Played by Herbert Claar, assisted by H. S.
6400 Good-Bye France—One-step
Irving Berlin
Played by Claar & Shipman.
6401 Only a Rose in No Man's Land—Song. Ballad.
Ukulele Effects
Lamb & Marr
Played by S. A. Perry.
6402 The Navy Will Bring Them Back—March Song.
Johnson & Schuster
Played by 8. A. Perry, assisted by H. K.
6403 When You Look in the Heart of a Rose—Bal-
lad.
Ukulele Effects
Gillespie & Methven
Played by S. A. Perry.
6404 Mother. Here's Your Boy—One-step. Jazz Ef-
fects
Mitchell. Gottler & Morse
Played by Herbert Claar, assisted by H. S.
6406 Kisses (The Sweetest Kisses of All)—Ballad.
Jazz Effects
Sullivan & Cowan
Played by Claar & Shipman.
6407 Beautiful Ohio—Waltz Song. 'Cello and Uku-
lele Effects
MacDonald & Mary Earl
Played by S. A. Perry.
6414 Have a Smile for Everyone You Meet, and
They Will Have a Smile for You—Fox-trot.
Brennan. Cunningham & Rule
Played by Herbert Claar, assisted by H. S.
6415 When the Sun Goes Down in France—March
and One-step. Orchestral Effects..G. C. Tennant
Played by S. A. Perry, assisted by H. C.
6416 Beautiful Isle of Somewhere
Pounds A. Fearis
Played by C. Herman Kornbau.
Hand-Played Record Rolls
They are different—You will like them
20727 The Rose of No Man's Land—Fox-trot.
Caddigan & Brennan
Played by A. Hyland.
20728 I Want a Doll—Baggy One-step.
Moran, Bryan & Von Tilzer
Played by Herbert Claar.
20729 Tell That to the Marines—A new Al Jolson
"Slnbad H i t " . . .After Id ge, Schwartz & Al Jolson
Played by S. A. Perry, assisted by E. 8.
20730 It's Never Too Late to Be Sorry—Ballad. Uku-
lele and Marimba Effects
Dempsey &. Burke
Played by 8. A. Perry, assisted by E a
20731 Oh! What a Time for the Girlies When the
Boys Come Marching Home—Fox-trot.
Lewis. Young & Ruby
Played by Herbert Claar, assisted by H. 8.
20732 Good -Bye, France—One-step
Irving Berlin
Played by Claar & Shipman.
20733 Mother, Here's Your Boy—One-step. Jazz Ef-
fects
Mitchell. Gottler & Morse
Played by Herbert Claar, assisted by H. 8.
20734 Beautiful Ohio—Waltz Song. 'Cello and Uku-
lele Effects
MacDonald & Mary Earl
Played by 8. A. Perry.
Slff^glff^SiySffffflfffflff^lff^^^
The razzle-dazzle of events since last we wrote
has been so dazzling, not to say razzling, that
one still feels a little breathless. Still, now that
we are at the end of another year, it is worth
while just saying a word or two about some of
the things which have happened to us since said
year began what was destined to be its com-
pletely amazing career.
After all, we came
through with it in better shape than most of us
would have been willing to bet on this time last
Christmas. The player roll business had its
dark days all right, and there were times when
it looked as if, between the shortage of paper
and the terrific cost of everything in the way
of labor and supplies, the whole shooting-match
would shortly blow up with a loud bang. But
the native ingenuity of the men who are making
the game what it is, combined with the oppor-
tune discovery that the material situation would
not be as bad this fall as at first we had reason
to think it would be, kept us going somehow;
and now all of a sudden we find ourselves out
of the war and able to think once more about
normal production and normal profits. True,
neither of these objects of our thought has been
realized just yet; but both are within sight.
Meanwhile we have the satisfaction of knowing
that the demand for all our goods exceeds the
supply by goodness knows what percentage.
The crowds in the retail stores—and there are
really crowds in them—are howling for rolls,
while perplexed dealers rack their brains for ex-
cuses. It is all very different from our an-
ticipations, and we ought to be most grateful.
Another cause for gratitude is that the war
conditions forced us to cut down the excessive
bulk of our monthly publication lists. For a
long time past the mania had been for quantity,
with quality somewhat in the background, as it
were. To-day, however, we are beginning to
approach the end of the quantity-production
epoch and are wondering just how we shall make
the transition to the coming epoch of quality
and refinement. The action taken by manu-
facturers during the present year, which resulted
in cutting down the number of rolls issued each
month, marked a very long step in the right di-
rection. There has been far too much reaching
out for variety and far too little choice between
good and bad. The public, moreover, are rapid-
ly coming to see that the player-piano is capable
of producing quite good music, even in the hands
of men and women who have had no musical
training whatever, given a little good-will and
perseverance. From the moment the owner of
a player-piano finds he can get decent music out
of it he begins to reach out for something bet-
ter and to have a hankering for some of the
lighter classics, the operatic airs and the other
nicer pieces he has heard or heard of. As the
player-piano becomes better known, the taste of
the people in music is bound, even if slowly, to
rise in a fairly steady progress towards the
definitely good. Roll manufacturers are begin-
ning to see, also slowly, but also definitely, that
they must do whatever lies in their power to
cultivate better musical feeling and desire
among the masses of the people. The task will
not be light or easy, but every step taken in
the direction of improving public taste means
a step taken in the direction of cutting down
production costs and increasing profits. When
we are all thoroughly committed to a policy of
small monthly lists of new publications and with
a choice of only the very best and most certainly
permanent popular numbers, together with a
good admixture of the standards, we shall have
accomplished something worth while, and shall
have forever abolished any reproach concerning
the faddy and uncertain nature of the roll busi-
ness.
Whilst we are considering all these matters
there is no reason why we should not begin
to think about getting out a special edition of
the classics of Allied Music, as it might be called.
The small but ever-growing army of player-
pianists who like good music would welcome
with great joy a nice well-arranged edition of
British, French, Italian, Russian and American
high-class music. The French would include
Rameau, Berlioz, Chopin, Massenet, Gounod,
Debussy, Saint-Saens. The Italians might be
Verdi, Rossini, Mascagni, Boito and Scarlatti.
The Russians would number Tschaikowski,
Rachmaninov, Moussourgski, Glinka, Cui and
Rubinstein. The British would certainly have
Arne, Purcell, Handel, Sullivan, Sterndale, Ben-
nett, Elgar, Holbrooke, Coleridge, Taylor, Grain-
ger and Bantock. The Americans would not
(Continued on page 10)
PLAYER--ORGAN--PIANO
Connorized Music Co.
E. 144th St. and Austin PI.
New York
1234 Olive St., St. Louis, Mo.
LEATHERS
A Specialty of Pneumatic Leathers
'
AJUL+JU,*
Hand Played
Rolls
With Words
Hand Played
Rolls
Without Words
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
10
THE MUSIC TRADE
REVIEW
MUSIC OF THE MONTH—(Continued from page 9)
forget MacDowell, Paine, Foster, Mason, Par-
ker, Hadley, DeLamarter, Sowerby and Nevin,
besides others who might be mentioned if this
list were intended to be exhaustive. Such an
edition would be not only extremely valuable,
but undoubtedly would sell steadily, though not,
of course, sensationally. The point to be re-
membered is that the time is coming, and is here,
in fact, when the future demands of the people
for better music must be provided for. Now is
the time to begin. All the work done hitherto
in this direction, admirable as it is, has been too
Germanic in its tendency and too spasmodic in
its method. We must get on to better methods
and more systematic understanding of the needs
of the new generation.
AEOLIAN CO.
THEMODIST-METROSTYLE
Arabian Nights—Intermezzo—One-step
, . . David-Hewitt
Head Over Heels—Selection..
Kern
Repasz Band March
'.
Sweeley
WHITE, SON CO.
Manufacturers of
ORGAN AND PLAYER-PIANO
Kukacka Valcik—Waltz (Bohemian)
Za Ctyrak—Polka (Bohemian)
In Areoplano—Valcer cantato
Soukap
Rybnieek
Albin-Granozio
IMPERIAL PLAYER ROLL CO.
The baby doll stuff is back in, the limelight,
and no wonder. Everybody is feeling sort of
happy this Christmas and the returned soldier
Patriotic numbers are well represented in the bulks quite large in the day's news and on the
hand-played records with song words issued by street. Hence, the Imperial January list is girly
the Connorized Music Co. of New York for Jan- and joyous, which is as it should be. But note
uary. France's national hymn, "La Marseillaise,"
among the less frivolous pieces the very clever
is arranged and played by S. A. Perry with
left-hand waltz composed and played by that
bugles, drums and other orchestral effects. The
clever chap Ilgenfritz. It is good stuff. Here
latter has also made an excellent arrangement
is the list in full:
of "Farewell," "Only a Rose in No Man's Land," Composer
Title
Played by
"When You Look in the Heart of a Rose," "Jim, Williams-Straight—I Never Had the Blues (Until I
Left Old Dixieland)—Fox-trot
Straight-Clyde
Jim, I Always Knew You'd Win," "Beautiful Dempsey-Schmid—Roses Remind Me.of Someone—^BaJ-
' lad
u
Anderson
Ohio" and "When the Sun Goes Down in Gilbert-Friedlarid—Singapore—Pox-trot
.•
Straight
France." Messrs. Claar and Shipman have an McCarron-Morgan—I'm Glad I Can Make You Cry—
Ballad
-
. . . . . . ' . Anderson
excellent representation on this list, including Frost-Hartmari—My Love's Delight—Waltz, '•
Straight-Franklin
"Good-bye, France," "Mother, Here's Your
Brennan-Cunningham-Rule—Have
a Smile—Fox-trot,
1
Boy," "Kisses," "You'll Be There to Meet
, Anderson
the Ragtime Stroller's Ball—Fox-
Them" (When the Boys Come Home). Some Kohler-Williams—At
trot
'
."
Straight-Johnson
Berlin—Good-bye, France—One-step
Straight-Johnson
other numbers from this list follow:
CONNORIZED MUSIC CO.
The list for January includes, song rolls in fair
number, and a few Metro-Arts and Themodist-
Metrostyles. January is understood usually not
to be an exciting month. It is interesting to ob- Composer
Title
Played by
serve how the war song has suddenly taken a Branen-Heinrich—You'll be There to Meet Them
(When the Boys Come Home)—Fox-trot,
back seat and in its place the sentimental "Home
Shipman-Hyland
the Sun Goes Down in Sleepy
and Girl" ballad is coming to the fore. But Davis-Burke—When
Hollow (That's the Time I Think of Home, Sweet
Home)—One-step
Shipman
the change is not unwelcome after all. Next Creamer-Layton—Sweet
'n Pretty, Gee! I Wish You
month things will be more exciting again, no
Were Mine—Fox-trot jazz effects
Claar
Donohue-Ball—'Till I'm Called by the Master Above—
doubt. Here is the list complete:
Ballad
Perry
AEOLIAN SONG ROLLS
Title
Composer
Christian Science Hymn
Toulon
For Love ("Fiddlers Three")—Fox-trot
Johnstone
Holy City
Adams
I'm Crazy About My Daddy—Fox-trot
McCarron
It's Never Too Late to Be Sorry
Burke
Kisses—Fox-trot
Cowan
Laddies Who Fought and Won—One-step
Lauder
My Dreams
Tosti
Now You Know the World Is Free
Harcourt
Oh, Susie, Behave!—One-step
Olman
O Sole Mio—Neapolitan song
.de Capua
Some Day Waiting Will End—Fox-trot
Caryll
Thousands of Years Ago
Caryll
When You Look in the Heart of a Rose—Saxo-Fox-
trot
Methven
You Can Tell That He's an American
Wendrich
You're the Very Girl ("Everything")
Daly
METRO-ART HAND-PLAYED
Title
Composer
Dancer of Navarre
Zamecnik
Mazurka
Zerkowitz
Wilson Themes
Wilson
DECEMBER 28, 1918
Porter—I Love Her (Oo, La-La-La)—One-step
Shipman
Rose-Jacobs—Won't You Come Back to Me—Ballad,
violin and 'cello effects
Perry
Brennan-Cunnimgham-Rule—Have a Smile for Every-
one You Meet, and They Will Have a Smile for
You—Fox-trot
Claar
Tennant—When the Sun Goes Down in France—March
and one-step, orchestral effects
Perry
Pounds-Fearis—-Beautiful Isle of Somewhere
Kornbau
HAND-PLAYED RECORD ROLLS
Caddigan-Brennan—The Rose of No Man's Land—Fox-
trot
Hy land
Moran-Bryan-Von Tilzer—I Want a Doll—-Raggy one-
step
Claar
Atteridge-Schwartz-Jolson—Tell That to the Marines—
A new Al Jolson "Sinbad" hit. Perry, assisted by E. S.
Dempsey-Burke—It's Never Too Late to be Sorry—
Ballad, ukulele and marimba effects
Perry
Lewis-Young-Ruby—Oh! What a Time for the Girlies
When the Boys Come Marching Home—Fox-trot. .Claar
Berlin—Good-bye, France—One-step
Claar-Shipman
Mitchell-Gottler-Morse—Mother, Here's Your Boy—
One-step, jazz effects
Claar
MacDonald-Earl—Beautiful Ohio—Waltz song, 'cello
and ukulele effects
Perry
Rose-Jacobs—Won't You Come Back to Me?—Ballad,
violin and 'cello effects
Perry
Tennant—When the Sun Goes Down in France—March
and one-step, orchestral effects
Perry
REGULAR EDITION
Title
Composer
Doppo Quinnece Anne
Marchetti-Cataldo
'Mbraccia A Me!
Barbieri-di Vincenzo di Chiara
Nuttata'e Sentimento
Cassese-Capolongo
Santa Lucia—Barcarola.
Melville
Clark's
LEATHERS
APOLLO E :
Established Retail Price
Consistent with Qi
$700 to $2,400
MELVILLE CLARK PIANO CO.
530-540 Atlaitic Ave., BOSTON, MASS.
FINE ARTS BUILDING, CHICAGO
Williams—You're Some Pretty Doll—Fox-trot,
Straight-Clyde
Dempsey-Burke—It's. Never Too Late to Be Sorry—-Bal-
lad
Anderson
Shannon-Logan—Ships That Pass in the Night—Waltz,
Stanley-Alden
Moran-Bryan-Von Tilzer—I Want a Doll—One-step,
Straight
HAND-PLAYED RECORDS—INSTRUMENTAL
Title
Played by
Swanee River (Old Folks at Home)
Himmelreich
Composer
Title
Played by
Platzmann—Golden Buttercups—Idyl
McNair-llgenfritz
Ilgenfritz—Valse No. 2 for the Left Hand—Classic,
Ilgenfritz
Rosas—Over the Waves—Waltz
Hartman
Ragas—Bluin' the Blues
Straight-Clyde
Q R S CO.
"You'll Have to Put Him to Sleep With the
Marseillaise."
Quite so! The soldier back
home longing for a sight of his own home girl
and her laces and ribbons, while retaining his
memories of beautiful France, dominates the
thought of all; not less of the music roll publish-
ers. Hence, the list of the present month. The
Q R S bulletin is big and good. Here it is:
JANUARY WORD ROLL BULLETIN
Composer
Title
Played by
Callahan-Roberts—There's a Time in Each Day—Bal-
lad
Roberts
Lewis-Young-Grant—The Worst Is Yet to Come—One-
step
Scott-Walters
Skidmore-Walker—I'm Tryin' to Teach My Sweet Papa
Right From Wrong—Fox-trot
Wendling
Sullivan-Cowen—Kisses—Fox-trot
Wendling
Sterling-Von Tilzer—You'll Have to Put Him to Sleep
With the Marseillaise—One-step
Wendling
Bousquet-Roberts (English version Bryan)—Madelon—
One-step
Baxter-Kortlander
Fuller—When the Old Boat Heads for Home—One-
step
Osborne-Howe
Gillespie-Methven—When You Look in the Heart of
a Rose—Ballad
Roberts
Creamer-Layton—Look What You've Done—Fox-trot,
Baxter-Kortlander
Mitchell-Gottler-Morse—Mother, Here's Your Boy—
One-step
Kortlander
Gilbert-Anatol—Singapore—Fox-trot
Scott-Walters
Mason-Cooke-Whiting—I've Got the Blue Ridge Blues—
Fox-trot
Sizamore
PIIIIIIIIIIIH
INTRODUCED IN 1898
WORLD
FAMOUS
ANGELUS
WHITE
A TWW^1-?F ¥ T O PLAYER
PIANOS
AND
THE
POPULAR
PLAYER
PIANOS
Have wonderful patented devices) aad exclusive features
Made by the pioneers) and
leaders) la the player-piano Industry
""*
THE WILCOX
& WHITE CO.,
MERIDEN, CONN.
Business Established 1877
Agencies All Over the World
wiy=
Worcester Wind Motor Co.
WORCBSTBR. MASS.
Makers of Absolutely Satisfactory
WIND MOTORS for PLAYER-PIANOS
Also all kinds of Pneumatics and Supplies
Illlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll
SCHENCKE
PIANO AND
PLAYER-PIANOS
Built to a Standard and not to a Pricm
SCHENCKE PIANO CO., 245-249 E. 137thSt., N.Y.
STANDS y ^ ^ l i y AMONG
7Ae AUTOPIANO COMPANY
P A U L 13 K L U G H <-/V?£T'£i'A'7'• •
ON THE HUOJON AT fl't 5TREET
NEW YORK•
(
LIFE'S NECESSITIES

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