Music Trade Review

Issue: 1920 Vol. 70 N. 1

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE
JANUARY 3, 1920
WAR DEPARTMENT FAVORS MUSIC
Announces to Effect That Special Attention Will
be Given to the Organization of Army Bands
in Future—War Proves Value of Music
WASHINGTON, D. C, December 29.—Among the
definite lessons which the war taught is the
vital necessity and unquestioned value of music
in the field in creating and sustaining morale.
As a builder and maintainer of stanch morale,
as.a- relief for tired nerves and as a tonic for
flagging spirits music was found indispensable
and its development was encouraged to the ut-
most by all the great military leaders, accord-
ing to an announcement of the War Depart-
ment.
The American army, late in the field, had a
splendid chance to study the methods and or-
ganizations of its Allies, and full advantage
was taken of this opportunity. The result was
that American bands in the A. E. F. combined
the best points which were found in the Allied
armies.
With demobilization the splendid army musi-
cal organizations were disbanded. Nevertheless,
the War Department—determined to maintain
a high standard of music as a military essential
—set about to devise a method by which the re-
maining army bands could be brought back to
a high standard of proficiency and kept per-
manently at concert pitch.
As a result of a special study of conditions
surrounding the enlistment of bandsmen by the
Recruiting Section of the Adjutant General's
Office, certain definite conclusions have been
reached.
The enlistment of trained musicians is becom-
ing increasingly difficult because of the great
demand for them in civil life, and the unusual
large salaries and short hours. Much canvass-
ing has been done among army bandsmen dur-
ing demobilization by commercial bands.
Since this condition is apparent and shows
no sign of immediate change, it has been deter-
mined by the War Department that the only
certain source of musicians lies in the training
by the Army in all authorized bands of as many
men as possible who have musical talent or
aspirations. In furtherance of this policy or-
ders have been issued which make it incumbent
upon commanding officers of all authorized
bands to promote and encourage in every way
the study of music and to furnish band leaders
every facility to offer a complete musical educa-
tion.
Although it is as yet too early to observe
the effects of this order, indirect reports indi-
cate that its provisions are being faithfully car-
ried out and will prove productive of beneficial
results.
MUSIC
TRADE
$1,000,000 CARILLON COMPLETED
• Trenton, N. J., piano dealers cooperated gen-
erously in the health campaign conducted by
the Mercer County Tuberculosis League, among
them being the F. A. North Piano Co., the Lau-
ter Piano Co., Belly Bros., G. A. Barlow's Sons'
Co., the Music Shop and Elmer Fouratt.
An unusual feature of the concert of the
Symphony Society in Aeolian Hall on Sunday,
under the direction of Walter Damrosch, was
the introduction of a chromatic harp which Mme.
Wurmser-Delcourt, a French artist, used with
remarkable success. This chromatic harp was
invented a little more than twenty years ago
by Gustavc Lyon, head of the old pianoforte
manufacturing house established by Pleyel, the
friend and colleague of Haydn. The mechani-
cal feature which distinguishes this instrument
is that it is strung to give an individual string
to each of the half-tones throughout its com-
pass, whereas in the ordinary harp the chromatic
tones are produced by shortening the strings by
means of pedal action. It has not come into
extensive use because of a conviction that it is
deficient in sonority when compared with the
pedal-harp.
Critics seem to agree, however, that the utility
of the chromatic harp is in some respects incon-
testable. The harp some time ago lost its place
in popular admiration as a solo instrument,
though its position as a valued member of the
NEW SYNCHRONIZING DEVICE
orchestra is assured. The chromatic harp may
WASHINGTON, D. C, December 29.—Patent No. do much to revive the popularity of this instru-
1,322,795 was last week granted to Reese B. ment as a soloist, if we. may judge from the re-
Kent, Wheeling, W. Va., for a musical instru- ception given Mme. Wurmser-Delcourt.
ment.
Greatness is never thrust upon a man who
This invention relates broadly to playing
mechanism for stringed instruments, and more leads an aimless life.
particularly to a mechanical player for stringed
instruments, associated with a player-piano and
actuated in conjunction with the latter by a
traveling perforated music-sheet.
The primary object of the invention is to pro-
vide in association with a player-piano a mech-
anism whereby the strings of a stringed in-
T H E OLDEST AND
strument, as a violin, are sounded and fingered
ir. synchronism with the playing of the player-
LAROEST MUSICAL
piano during the same time that such piano is
MERCHANDISE HOUSE
played as ordinarily, such mechanism being op-
IN AMERICA
erated under the control of the same music-
sheet by which the piano is played. In other
sfwfp' Wholesml*
UTABUSHCO 183*
words, it is aimed to so combine or connect
a player-piano and a violin-playing mechanism
that both are adapted to be played in synchro-
nism by the use of a single specially cut note-
Yictor Distributors
sheet.
The recently completed cathedral that domi-
nates the town and harbor at Queenstown, Ire-
land—completed after fifty years' work at a cost
of $1,000,000—can boast the finest and largest
carillon in the United Kingdom and the best-
adjusted set of bells in the world tuned to equal
temperament.
It is a carillon of forty-two bells, with clavier,
the compass extending through three and a half
octaves. The great bell weighs 3,755 pounds and
the smallest only thirteen pounds.
One of the programs played by Anthony Neu-
velaerts, the city carillonneur of Bruges, at the
formal inauguration of the completed cathedral,
affords a fair idea of the possibilities of a caril-
lon such as can now be heard across the Queens-
town harbor.
It embraced a sonata by Van Hoey, the Schu-
bert "Ave Maria," one of Bach's organ preludes,
the Adagio from Beethoven's Sonata Pathetique,
a march by Menoit and a Neapolitan Song by
Alfred Casella, the Italian futurist.
RUNQ
A. BURDWISE
WHOLESALE MUSICAL
JOHNFRIEDRICH&BRO.
> 279 r\H HAVE
SEND FOR
OUR
NEW YORK
tST. IS83
, Largest Wholesale
Musical Merchandise
House in America
Buegeleisen & Jacobson
NSW YOMK
WEYMAHN
Superior Quality MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS
Victor Distributors
1108 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia, Pa.
Established over hilf a century
Manufacturer*
I m p o r t m and Jobb«r» m*
STEWART
it 3 University Place
"(jRAUD PRIZES^
VIOLINS
\ BEST STRING?"""**
BOSTON, MASS.
AND
MERCHANDISE
BALTIMORE, MD.
OLIVER DITSON GO.
DURRO
CHROMATIC HARP AT AEOLIAN HALL
Remarkable Set of Chimes Has Range of Three Is Chief Feature of Sunday Concert of Sym-
phony Society—This Harp a Distinct De-
and One-half Octaves—Carillonneur of Bruges
parture From Ordinary Instrument in Design
Plays Sonata at Opening Ceremony
FOLD & NEW
AIDING HEALTH CAMPAIGN
41
REVIEW
MUSICAL
MERCHANDISE
Attractive Specialties
M o d e r n Service
ESTABLISHED IBM
Black Diamond
Strings
THE WORLD'S BEST
National Musical String Co.
New Brunswick, N. J.
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
42
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
JANUARY 3, 1920
CONDUCTED BY V. D. WALSH
MAIL MATTER NOW RETURNABLE
New Post Office Ruling Will Facilitate Delivery
to Publishers of Sheet Music for Which Ad-
dressee Cannot Be Found
Of much interest to music publishers is a
recent act of Congress which makes provision
for returning to the sender or forwarding to a
new address undelivered mail matter of the
second, third and fourth classes. Heretofore,
publishers, when sending out sample copies and
other material, placed a memo on the wrappers
requesting the postmaster to notify them if the
parcel was undelivered, in which case they for-
warded the necessary stamps for its return.
Under the new law this delay will be avoided,
and an undelivered package, with the proper
instructions to the postmaster on the outside,
will be automatically returned to the addresser.
The full text of the law is as follows:
"That hereafter, under such regulations as
the Postmaster General may prescribe, fourth-
class matter of obvious value which is of a per-
ishable nature may be forwarded to the ad-
dressee at another post office charged with the
amount of the forwarding postage, and when
such matter of a perishable nature is undeliver-
able to the addressee it may be returned to the
sender charged with the return postage: Pro-
vided, That other undeliverable matter of the
second, third and fourth classes may be for-
warded to the addressee or to such other person
as the sender may direct, at another post office,
charged with the amount of the forwarding
postage, or it may be returned to sender charged
with the return postage, when it bears the send
er's pledge that the postage for forwarding and
return will be paid, such postage to be collected
on delivery: Provided further, That when the
sender refuses to furnish such postage in ac-
cordance with his pledge the acceptance from
him of further matter bearing such pledge may
be refused."
IRVING BERLIN'S LATEST SONGS
Irving Berlin, Inc., are now featuring the fol-
lowing numbers from the pen of Irving Berlin:
"Since Katy, the Waitress, Became an Avia-
tress," "Was There Ever a Pal Like You,"
"You'd Be Surprised," "I'll Always Be Wait-
ing for You." "Nobody Knows," "Only," "I
Left My Door Open and My Daddy Walked
Out" and "What a Day That'll Be."
H. L. Dupont is again with the sales depart-
ment of the J. W. Jenkins' Sons Music Co,
Kansas City, Mo.
Another Big One
t

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|
On
Llfl Shore
1
Words by
WILLIAM LE BARON
Music by
VICTOR JACOBI
CHAPPELL & CO., LTD., New York, London, Toronto, Melbourne
THIRTY CENT SHEET MUSIC AND ITS DISTRIBUTION
The Rapidly Increasing Number of Publications Listed at Thirty Cents Have Brought to the
Fore Some Problems Connected With Their Distribution Which Publishers Must Now Solve
The publishers who up to about a year ago
confined themselves to the publication of popu-
lar, or 10-cent music, but who are at the pres-
ent time featuring one or more numbers re-
tailing at thirty cents, have, of course, some
problems in distribution that were not apparent
when publishing at the more popular price.
While these problems are new to many pub-
lishers, they are not, however, questions that
have not already been solved. Some of the pub-
lishers seem to think that they have never be-
fore arisen, that they themselves are blazing the
way, and that they are coping with situations
entirely new. In this they are no doubt labor-
ing under a false impression of the real status
of the 30-cent numbers as published by p*opu-
lar houses formerly concentrating their efforts
on 10-cent music.
Some publishers assume because a number
retails successfully at 30 cents that it is what
is accepted by the trade as a standard work.
This, of course, is not true. It is true, however,
that most of the numbers selling in a big way
for thirty cents retail are works far above the
merits of some of our biggest hits in the popu-
lar field some years ago. This is because the
public's taste for popular numbers has greatly
improved and because . the writers themselves
have developed so that they are able to write
higher class works with popular appeal. This
latter is conclusively proved by the many popu-
lar writers who have in recent years developed
A Sure Tip to
into successful musical comedy and operetta
composers.
There have been cases of publishers who, un-
der the new conditions, have had successful num-
bers selling close to two million copies at the
thirty cent rate, and who felt that they were
dealing with an entirely different music-buying
public than was the case when they published
exclusively 10-cent works. This may be hard to
believe, but it is so.
Some have felt that they were catering to
music buyers of exclusive tastes, music buyers
who could appreciate only works of the better
sort, when as a matter of fact any number
that sells close to two million copies, or even
a million copies, is purchased by the general
public—music lovers, it is true, but the same sort
of music lover that purchased the popular hits
at 10 cents.
They are, after all, the same people that were
reached in the old days, and they can be reached
and invariably are reached by practically the
same methods that were used to present publica-
tions before them in days past. What, then, is
the changed condition? Only in distribution,
and as a matter of fact the distribution is not
changed to the extent that one would have pre-
sumed would be the case a year or two ago. In
the old days, the average retail sheet music
dealer either could not or would not compete
with the syndicate store, because the syndicate
siore was a better merchandiser, and therefore
Music Dealers and Jobbers:
Record Manufacturers and Dealers
Roll Manufacturers and Dealers:
The Trade in General:
ALREADY FEATURED BY
15,000 PROMINENT ORCHESTRAS OF THE COUNTRY
"SOMEBODY
SONG—ONE-STEP OF THE BETTER STYLE
RICHMOND
INTRODUCTORY PRICE 15c PER COPY
-PUBLISHER
14 5 West 4 5'!: st ff
HARRY COLLINS, Sales Manager

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