Music Trade Review

Issue: 1921 Vol. 72 N. 3

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE
50
REVIEW
JANUARY 15, 1921
DISCOVER OLD ENGLISH MUSIC
Old Manuscripts Recently Brought to Light
Prove the Existence of Musical Knowledge
and Composition in England Centuries Ago
LONDON, ENG., January 6.—Recent large dis-
coveries of fifteenth, sixteenth and seventeenth
century English music are expected .to revolu-
tionize the English musical tradition. It has
been the accepted supposition that the English
are not a musical people, that their achieve-
ments in literature far transcend their achieve-
ments in music and that for the greatest music
one must look to the Italians or the Germans.
The works of England's Shakespeare of music
have been discovered. As a result not only is
English music infinitely the richer but a price-
less contribution has been made to the world's
musical wealth. The lowly English musical
tradition has suddenly taken its place alongside
the great musical traditions of Italy and Ger-
many.
How this change has been brought about is
one of the most astonishing stories which the
world of aesthetics has ever heard.
The story is told by Dr. Richard Runciman
Terry, who is chairman of an editorial commit-
tee which is preparing for publication the vast
wealth of forgotten English music which has
now been brought to light. With him are Dr.
E. H. Fellowes, a minor canon at the Chapel
Royal at Windsor; Dr. P. C. Buck, professor of
music at Dublin University and musical director
at Harrow, and the Rev. A. Ramsbottom, M. A.,
of the famous Charterhouse School.
This committee is engaged in deciphering the
quaint musical notation of the old manuscripts
it has discovered and in completing the scores
for publication by the Oxford University Press.
Two edition^ are to be published, one a quarto
edition, giving the newly discovered masses,
magnificats, anthems and madrigals without
abridgment, and a popular edition embodying
selections from the old music of the largest pop-
ular interest.
The series of publications is expected to cover
MCKINLEY MUSIC CO.'S
New Hit Ballad
DEALERS: Please remember that
"The Barefoot Trail"
Song Success
is now on the broad highway of
SINGERS, TEACHERS AND PUBLIC PROCLAIM IT!
Supplying the demand is up to you—
Co-operation spells O R D E R S—we're at your service
BOOSEY & CO.
several years, beginning early next year, and
in order to make publication possible the Ox-
ford University Press has been guaranteed
against loss during the first five years of publi-
cation by the Carnegie United Kingdom Trust.
This endowment, which is duplicating in the
United Kingdom the vast philanthropy of the
late Andrew Carnegie in the United States, has
its seat at Dunfermline, Scotland, near Skibo
Castle, the Carnegie home.
Convinced that before Palestrina, the great
Italian master of the sixteenth century, began
to write, there existed a flourishing musical tra-
dition in Kngland, Dr. Terry and his co-work-
ers set about to continue the work which Dr.
Arkwright had begun in 1891 and had been com-
pelled to discontinue for lack of funds. They
knew that Tallis, Byrd, Tye and Merbecke, early
Two Real Sellers
"Since I Lost You"
(I FEEL SO BLUE)
Fox Trot Song
A Sure Hit
"My Old Home of Yesterday"
A Waltz Ballad of the Better Class
M E L R O S E B R O S . Publishers
63rd and Cottage Grove Ave.,
«.
MUJ.U1 llLLf
*7Y- xJ
WaHz Lullaby
HAROLD G FRCMT
•••»••
CHICAGO, ILL.
••••••••••••••••••
RemickSongHits
"ROSE"
"AVALON"
"SPRINGTIME"
"DEAREST ONE"
"NIGHTINGALE"
"CAN YOU TELL"
"JAPANESE SANDMAN"
"BEAUTIFUL ANNABELL LEE"
"NOW I LAY ME DOWN TO SLEEP" \
"WITH THE COMING OF TO-
MORROW"
- HENRI KUCKHAHK
\1< KINI.KY MusicGi
Fame
NEW YORK (9 East 17th Street) and TORONTO (384 Yonge Street)
Dealer*, write for tpecial introductory price*
18 Cents
•^ •>
The House of Song
JEROME H. REMICK & CO. ;:
N E W YORK
DETROIT '.'.
••»••»•••••••••••••»»•••••»»•»•<
RIO NIGHTS
The Fastest Selling Waltz Song on the Market
English musicians about whom little has been
known until recently, had produced a great
amount of music and that far more pf it must
have escaped the cataclysm of the Reformation
than was generally supposed. They began a
systematic ransacking of certain old libraries,
cathedrals and colleges in England looking for
old musical manuscripts.
They found their greatest results in the
British Museum, in the Bodleian Library at Ox-
ford, and those of Christ Church, Oxford, Peter-
house and Magdalene Colleges at Cambridge
University and Lambeth Palace. Some of these
manuscripts, notably those in the British Mt|-
seum, had been admirably cared for, but in tlie
lack of any effort to decipher their mediaevil
musical notation they had been virtually lost.
NEW "GYPSY" FOX-TROT
Ahlheim Music Co. Meeting With Success in
Popularizing Latest Number
j
The Walter C. Ahlheim Music Co., Decatur,
III., has just released a new song entitled
"Gypsy Lady, I Love You." It has been
arranged in fox-trot form and has already
achieved some success. Professor Cox's Novelty
Orchestra, which has been popular in the Middle
West, is featuring it in all programs.
"Gypsy Lady, I Love You" is also particu-
larly adapted for quartet. The Winona Harmony
Four are using it in their public appearances,
ROBERT TELLER SONS & DORNER
Music Eflgravers and Printers
SEND MANUSCRIPT AND IDEA OF
TITLE FOR ESTIMATE
311 West 43d Street
New York City.,
BUY YOUR MUSIC FROM
BOSTON
Publisher
s
WALTER JACOBS BOS^OT^S
"Peter Gink" JBSPI "Arabella" F 5j*'
Oliver Ditson Company
BOSTON
NEW YORK
Anticipate and supply Ererjr Requirement of Music
Datler*
White-Smith Music Pul?. Co.
PUILISHMS, PlINTXlS AND EllGIAVUI OF MvtlC
Main Offices: <2-«4 StanhoM St., fettoa.
Branch HOUMS: New York an4 Chicaf*
HAVE YOU
"I've Been A-Lonfin' For You"
"Just A Rose"
"After It's Over, Dear" and "Alpine Blue*"?
THEY'RE WINNERS
Order direct or through your jobber
FISHER THOMPSON MUSIC PUB. CO.
Gaiety Theatre Building, NEW YORK CITY
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE
JANUARY 15, 1921
MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
"The Maker's Name and Reputation Are the BUSH & GERTS PIANO COMPANY
Real Protection of the Buyer"
General Office, Factory and Display Rooms
ffmMU BUSH * GBBTB plane b«Hf the MOM of Ha MAKJBM. F«* a
ef a ceatary BUSH * OBBT8 hay» wade kl(k-(nd« »lan««. Beth BUSH
• OBBT1 a n praeUeal plan* maker* and have nade M.000 piano* nader the OMB
H i m , OWB TBADB-HABK. Dealer* w u M la all unoccupied territory. Write
few prteaa aad term*.
Weed and Dayton Streets
Chicago, 111.
A LEADER THROUGHOUT THE WORLD
POPULAR
Manufactured by
BEHNING PIANO CO.
East 133rd Street and Alexander Avenue
NEW YORK
Retail WararooDU, 22 East 40th Street at M adit on Avenue. New York 364 Livingston Street, Brooklyn. N Y.
PIANOS
STULTZ & BAUER
Wareroonts: 128 West 42nd Street
Factory: Legget Ave. and Barry St.
Manufacturers of Exclusive
NEW YORK
HIGH-GRADE-GRAND-UPRIGHT-PUYER-PIANOS
For more than THIRTY-FIVE •ncceeitlve y*ars thU eempany hat.
been owned and controlled aolelj by members of the Raaer family. WIMW
personal supervision is given to every Instrument built by this compaay c
Factories and WareroonM
A World's Choice Piano
338-340 E. 31st St, New Ya*
Write for Open Territory
SHONINGER PIANOS AND PLAYERS
F. RADLE
FACTORY AND OFFICES, NEW HAVEN. CONN.
MALLORY AND PHELPS PIANOS AND PLAYERS
ESSENTIALLY A HIGH GRADE PRODUCT
Manufactured by F . R A D L E , w«..%2 l s\r..i N e w Y o r k C i t y
DE RIVAS & HARRIS
Manufacturer* »f
HIGH GRADE UPRIGHT AND PLAYER-PIANOS
135th St. and Willow Ave.,
New York
RICHARD B. ALDCROFTT, PrMltfMt
WMttra R«»r«M»tatlv» M. J. KCNNIOY. Mfe
FlMr, Rwukll* BM|.. CblM««. III.
i^
1
I
The house of Kroeger was established in 1852, but we do not offer that fact as the |
'
r
chief reason why the
1
KROEGER IS THE BEST PIANO
H The success of the Kroeger business is the result of combining the best teachings of m
I
the past and the most progressive ideas of the present
1
j "To have been first is K R O E G E R P I A N O C O . "To have become first^ |
I proof only of antiquity" STAMFORD
CONN, is proof
of merit"
|
DECKER
M a # EST. 1856
Warde Piano Co.
INC
& SON
Best Value for the Money
"Made by a Decker Since 1856"
496 498 East 134th Street
NEW YORK
PIANOS and PLAYERS
MEHLIISJ
RIAiMOS
"A LEADER
AMONG
LEADERS 1 1
PAUL Q. MEHLIN & SONS
Faotoriesi
Broadway from 20th to 21si Streets
WEST IMLW YORK. N. J.
THE CORDON PIANO CO.
ifalafell*'..* IMS)
BRINKERHOFF
Pianos and Player-Pianos
The details are vitally interesting to you
BRINKERHOFF PIANO CO.
209 South State Street, Chicago
697-701 East 135th Street. New York
Main Office and Wareroom:
f East 43d Street. NEW YORK
"A NAME TO REMEMBER"
WHITLOCK a a d LES6ETT AVES.. NEW VC«K
WHITMAN
PIANOS — PLAYERS
The Grmatmmt Value at Moderate Coat
WHITMAN PIANO MFG. CO., Inc.
402-410 West 14th
fetreet
NEW YORK
Manfrs. of The Gordon & Son Pianos
and Player-Piano*

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