Music Trade Review

Issue: 1919 Vol. 68 N. 10

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
MARCH 8, 1919
THE
MUSIC
TRADE
51
REVIEW
CONDUCTED BY V. D. WALSH
MUSIC PUBLISHERS FORM
GENERAL ORGANIZATION
Members of Music Publishers' Protective Asso-
ciation Join Music Publishers' Association of
the U. S. as Result of Conference Held Last
Week—An Important Move in the Trade
The long-pending plan to bring about one
general organization among the music pub-
lishers, to take in all members of that branch of
the trade, was consummated on Wednesday
evening of last week at a meeting held in the
Columbia Theatre Building when the members
of the Music Publishers' Protective Association
agreed to join the Music Publishers' Associa-
tion of the United States as individuals, the name
of the latter organization to be maintained.
At the same meeting there was brought up
the question of joining the Music Industries
Chamber of Commerce. The final action on
that matter was left until a later date to admit
of investigation regarding the benefits that
would come to the publishers through being af-
filiated with that central body. Maurice Good-
man, chairman of the executive board of the
Music Publishers' Protective Association, will
look into the merits of the case and report at a
meeting to be held in March.
A strong drive will be made to bring new
members into the association, the membership
committee consisting of Walter Fischer, Law-
rence B. Ellert and Michael Keane.
The failure of the music publishers to affiliate
at once with the Music Industries Chamber of
Commerce was due apparently largely to the
fact that the self-appointed temporary chairman
was unable to offer any concise information
as to what the general movement for the unity
of the industry presaged for the music pub-
lishers and the latter did not believe in dealing
in generalities.
H..B. Marks, president of the Music Publish-
ers' Protective Association, spoke in favor of
the members of his organization joining both
the National Association and the Music Indus-
tries Chamber of Commerce and a committee
appointed from his organization also favored the
move.
C. A. Woodman, president of the Music Pub-
lishers' Association of the United States, in a
We beg to announce the publication of one of the best descriptive ballads ever
issued. A song that will live forever . . . a wonderful story, beautifully
told by Byron Gay, set to the most exquisite melody Neil Moret has ever written.
MY BUDDY
Probably no song has ever been so unanimously praised and accepted by singers
. . . it will soon be ringing thru the country from every concert and vaude-
ville stage, and the natural selling qualities of the song, coupled to this and other
publicity, will create an instantaneous and continuous demand. Send for a
sample copy "gratis"; we want you to hear it before you order.
"Some day, in a better land,
I will grasp you by the hand,
My Buddy."
Professional Headquarters: 145 West 45th Street, New York City
DANIELS & WILSON, INC., San Francisco, Cal.
speech welcomed the new members into his
organization. He said it would give the work
of the body a decided uplift, and he proposed at
the annual meeting in June that the organiza-
tion elect younger men into some of the most
important offices. He pictured the associa-
tion with its new power and stated that he felt
its- future work would do much for the industry
as well as assist in gaining for music the recog-
nition it deserves.
The temporary chairman of the meeting in-
sisted that at the annual meeting of the body,
when the constitution would undergo necessary
changes, there should be embodied therein
a clause making it necessary for a publisher to
be in business at least two years before he was
eligible to membership. Just what is the object
in excluding young publishing houses will prob-
ably be hard to define other than it has been
suggested that they often flood the market
with goods that are not over salable and fre-
quently carry their offices in their hats. Be
that as it may the fact that a young publisher
is excluded from the organization will not keep
him from entering the publishing field. As a
matter of fact he probably will frequently first
hear of the association after his entry into the
ranks of the publishers.
During the past few years several very esti-
mable young men have started publishing
houses, and in the course of time it is likely
that others will do likewise. If they are mem-
bers of the body they will learn much in the
way of good business practice and they will fol-
low the ideals of the older houses and men
with whom they come in contact.
Much has been done in the past few years
to give music a prominent position in the life of
our people, and the association will be charged
with the responsibility of doing more than their
share of keeping it so and of adding to its rec-
ognition. This can best be done with new
entries in the field as members. The undesir-
ables certainly can be excluded without exclud-
ing publishers because they are young. Being
young in business is not necessarily a crime.
Prior to the meeting on Wednesday night the
executive committee of the Music Publishers'
Association of the United States held two ses-
sions, during the course of which they agreed
to take in the members of the Music Publishers'
Protective Association, to increase the dues of
their organization from $10 to $25 per year,
and to hold meetings quarterly instead of an-
nually as has been the rule in the past.
Now that the big, all-encompassing associa-
tion is in active'process of formation, the results
of bringing all classes of the trade into one cen-
tral body will be watched with considerable in-
terest.
The Sensational Song Hit of 1919
(DRY YOUR)
TEARS
A wonderful melody now sweeping the country. Used by hundreds of leading Vaudeville Acts. As a Fox Trot,
Orchestra Leaders say it's the best ever. Order from your jobber or direct from
Sherman,
ay&Go.
SAN FRANCISCO
OTHER BIG HITS—"Mummy Mine," "Rose Room," "Roses at Twilight," "Can't You Love M e ? "
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
52
ONE OF THE POPULAR BALLADS
SEEKING NEWCWYRIGHT LAW
'It's Never Too Late to Be Sorry" One of the
Features of Stasny Catalog
Authors' and Composers' Association of Canada
Carry on Campaign for a Copyright Act That
Will Afford Protection in Mechanical Repro-
duction—Measure Has Long Been Needed
In the advertising campaign inaugurated re-
cently by the A. J. Stasny Music Co. in which
they are featuring four songs, they have included
the ballad "It's Never Too Late to Be Sorry."
The efforts of the music publishers of the
United States covering a period of several years
to bring about changes in the Canadian copy-
right laws, calculated to give protection to the
publishers of this country in the matter of me-
chanical reproduction, will in future apparent-
ly have the support of the Canadian authors and
composers. That the Canadians have taken an
active interest in the demand for a new and more
comprehensive copyright law for the Dominion
is indicated in the following article which ap-
peared in the Toronto Globe recently:
"A movement has been started by a number
of lyric writers and composers, who have or-
ganized the Authors' and Composers' Associa-
tion of Canada, to secure the passage of a new
Copyright Act. This is the result of the new
mechanical means of disseminating ideas, which
have been invented since the present laws are
framed—namely, the phonograph and the mov-
ing picture. The authors and composers whose
ideas are appropriated without compensation
present a good case for protection.
"It may not be generally known that there
are two separate and distinct copyright laws in
force in the Dominion. First, there is the Im-
perial copyright law under the acts of 1842 and
1846, by virtue of which copyright is acquired
by publication anywhere in the British Empire,
and in aid of which the assistance of our Cana-
Title Page of Stasny Ballad
dian courts can be invoked. Secondly, there' is
This song while several months old is still hav- a copyright law of a local character under the
ing a large sale, and the publishers expect it to Dominion Act of 1875 as amended, which con-
go well over the million mark. Herewith is fers copyright in Canada only, and in order to
shown a reproduction of the title page of the obtain this printing and publication must take
number, which is among the best title page place in Canada, and entry must be made at the
works which have been issued this season. It Department of Agriculture.
The only prac-
lends itself readily to both window and counter tical advantage which the local copyright pos-
display and the dealers seem to immediately sesses over the Imperial is that it enables the
sense its value for such purposes because it has proprietor to invoke the aid of the customs au-
been featured prominently by a large number of thorities to stop the importation of piratical re-
music stores.
prints in the customs house. This assistance
is not granted by the Canadian customs author-
"Forever Is a Long, Long Time" is being fea- ities to the proprietor of Imperial copyright,
tured at the Strand Theatre this week by Red- who is left to seek his remedy through the
ferne Hollingshead, the well-known Canadian courts. Canada as part of the British Domin-
tenor. This is one of the successes from the ions was bound by the Berne convention of 1887,
catalog of Artmusic, Inc.
but when this was revised and enlarged by the
Berlin convention of 1908 it was arranged that
the Imperial Government should not ratify it
on behalf of a self-governing Dominion until
the assent of the latter was obtained. The Brit-
ish Parliament then passed the British Copy-
right Act of 1911, but this does not apply to
Canada. Hon. Sydney Fisher introduced into
the House of Commons that year a bill to em-
body the provisions of the British Act of 1911,
hut owing to the change of Government it was
'THERE'S AN ANGEL MISSING FROM
never passed.
HEAVEN"
"KEEP YOUR FACE TO THE SUNSHINE"
" O N THE SIDEWALKS OF BERLIN"
'WHEN AUNT DINAH'S DAUGHTER HANNAH
BANGS ON THAT PIANO "
"YOU CAN HAVE IT, I DON'T WANT IT"
" 0 KIDDO"
"WILL THE ANGELS GUARD MY DADDY
OVER THERE ? "
"OLD GLORY GOES MARCHING ON"
"THERE'S A LITTLE BLUE STAR IN THE
WINDOW"
'I'M HITTING THE TRAIL TO NORMANDY"
1
WHEN THE KAISER DOES THE GOOSE STEP
To a Good Old American Rag"
"WAY DOWN IN MACON, GEORGIA
I'll be Makin' Georgia Mine"
"MOONLIGHT BLUES WALTZ"
"HAWAIIAN MOONLIGHT VALSE"
"LET'S KEEP THE GLOW IN OLD GLORY "
" L E T THE CHIMES OF NORMANDY BE
OUR WEDDING BELLS "
"SWEET HAWAIIAN MOONLIGHT "
Tell H«r of My Love
"Our copyright laws are therefore very much
out of date. The author of a Canadian book
cannot prevent moving picture companies from
reproducing his ideas without payment of roy-
alty. Phonograph companies and player roll
manufacturers are reproducing songs by Cana-
dian writers without the payment of any roy-
alty whatever, whereas the American Act of
1909 calls for the payment of 2 cents per record
or roll to the owner of the copyright, and the
"Back in My
Mother's
Loving Care"
Song by O. J. THARP
A hit when you hear it
O. J. THARP
Kamptville, 111.
Dealers' price 7c
J. H. STAUFFER
Mansfield, Ohio
MARCH 8, 1919
British Act of 1911 the payment of 5 per cent.
oi : the retail price.
Moreover, the United
States music publishers are now refusing to con-
sider a song by a Canadian writer on account
of the fact that they cannot collect any mechan-
ical royalties under their Copyright Act, be-
cause Canada, of course, has no such provision
in her act. It happens that most of the patri-
otic songs popular during the war were written
by Canadians, and they do not altogether sub-
scribe to the belief of a very wise man 'that
if a man were permitted to make all the ballads
he need not care who should make the laws of
a nation.' The association feels that the Gov-
ernment at the coming session should adopt the
British Copyright Act of 1911 in order to pre-
vent the abuses under which they suffer and to
counteract conditions which tend to drive Cana-
dian authors and composers to the United States,
where they can secure protection for their
work."
DENNINGTON WITH ATLANTA CO.
Prof. T. W. Dennington, one of the oldest and
best-known singing teachers in the South, has
joined the staff of the Atlanta Music Printing
Co. He will compile a series of books on the
rudiments of music and aids to the study of
the art at home.
Among the books published by the above com-
pany is a Sunday School song book entitled
"Joy Bells 2," which the company is giving pub-
licity.
"HAVE A SMILE" A BIG SELLER
"Have a Smile" (For Everyone You Meet and
They Will Have a Smile for You) is probably
the biggest selling number in the catalog of M.
Witmark & Sons at the present time. This
number made itself probably as quick as any
popular song in recent seasons, and it is under-
stood it has passed the three-quarter of a million
point in sales. The lyrics are by J. Keirn
Brennan and Paul Cunningham, and the music
is by Bert Rule.
OPEN NEW PROFESSIONAL ROOMS
T. B. Harms & Francis, Day & Hunter have
opened up professional offices on the sixth floor
of the Exchange Building, 145 West Forty-fifth
street. Harold Dillon, who was recently ap-
pointed professional manager, will be in charge,
and it is understood they will immediately fea-
ture "Arabian Nights," which has been quite
popular as an instrumental selection.
"Poor Little Heart Broken Doll" is the name
of a new song by Harry Pease, Ed. G. Nelson
and Fred Mayo, which the Meyer Cohen Music
Co. is placing on the market.
Artmusic Gems
Forever Is A Long,
Long Time"
Oh! You Don't Know
What You're Missin'"
Waters of Venice"
(Instrumental)
"Floating Down the
Sleepy Lagoon"
(Song version "Waters of Venice")
ARTMUSIC, Inc.
145 West 45th St.
NEW YORK

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