Music Trade Review

Issue: 1921 Vol. 72 N. 4

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
43
THE MUSIC TRADE KEVIEW
JANUARY 22, 1921
E. B. MARKS TELLS OF NEW YORK AS A MUSICAL CENTER
President of the Edward B. Marks Music Co. Describes the Place the Metropolis Occupies in the
Realm of Music and the Many Mediums Through Which I t Dispenses Music to the Multitude
The following very interesting article on the
music of New York, and particularly on the
plans for the second Music Week to be held
in New York in May, was written by Edward
B. Marks, presi-
dent of the Edward
B. Marks Music
Co., and appears in
the current issue of
the new magazine,
"The Metropolis":
Everyone should
bear in mind New
York's great music
week to be cele-
brated here next
E. B. Marks
May. One has pnly
to follow the trend of events in recent years
to realize the immeasurable value of music not
only to New York but to the vast area of these
United States. In a highly interesting volume
compiled recently through the efforts of the
Music Chamber of Commerce, upon the subject
of "New York's First Music Week," there is
this foreword by C. M. Schwab:
"Whatever is beneficial to New York
is beneficial in a proportionate degree to
every community, large or small, in the
United States. This is so in business.
It is so in art. It is so in music."
We can take it for granted, therefore, that
the Music Week, the Metropolitan Opera, the
People's Concerts, the Community Sings in Cen-
tral Park, the Band Concerts in the Lewisohn
Stadium at the City College (so ably conducted
by Edwin Franko Goldman), the Philharmonic,
Symphony and Artists' Concerts at Carnegie and
Aeolian Halls and many other institutions of
similar character, bestow upon New York the
proud distinction and privilege of leadership
in events musical, not only in this hemisphere
but perhaps the world.
In the Spring of 1921 (May 1 to May 7), under
the chairmanship of Otto H. Kahn, New Yc -k's
Second Music Week will be celebrated. That
it will by far surpass the Music Week of 1920
is a foregone conclusion, although the records
show that 1,700 different organizations partici-
pated in the initial effort, and that 1,000,000 pub-
lic school children and perhaps 400,000 adult
churchgoers were reached, and untold joy and
comfort were brought to thousands of unfor-
tunates in hospitals, jails and asylums for or-
phans, the aged and the blind.
The press in New York and outside of New
York City carried the news of the city's co-
operation and achievement in this wonderful
field to millions of readers, with the result that
The Big Hit of the Season
INTHEDl/IC
iiNTHEC'JSKIWAITFORYOU)
By FRANK H. GREY
THE FOXTROT BEAUTIFUL
NOW
Released on the following
Records and Rolls
RECORDS
ROLLS
Arto
Aeolian
Brunswick
Ediaon
Gennett
Emerion
OKeh
Grey Gull
Paramount
Pathe
Victor
Artempo
Columbia
Connorized
Imperial
Kimball
Mel-O-Dee
Orient
Pianoatyle
Q R S
Republic
Rote Valley Rythmodik
Standard
Vocalstyle
u. s.
M. WITMARK & SONS
Publishers
New York City
thirteen governors of other States endorsed its
altruistic feature and planned similar Music
Weeks in their own States.
Let us take another angle. Do the magnifi-
cent edifices of the film along Broadway, where
millions of New Yorkers and strangers find
amusement at reasonable outlay, exist because
of the pictures only? Ask any one of the nightly
audiences whether he or she is not there partly
because of the lure of the music. You will find
that it is Maestro Riesenfeld who draws tens
of thousands into the Rialto and Rivoli regu-
larly week after week because of his picked,
well-directed orchestra of sixty men. I knew a
French gardener who commuted regularly for
years with his entire family from Great Neck,
Long Island, to hear Dr. Riesenfeld's musical
selections at the Rialto, because he considered
it a liberal musical education, and he found the
music alone worth the cost of the trip. The
magnificent Capitol, on Broadway, with its
sumptuous surroundings and enormous seating
capacity—isn't it the wonderful orchestra of
seventy-five men, masterfully conducted by Mr.
Erdo Rappe, that makes its success possible
fully as much as any other contributing factor?
All the chorus girls and ballets tried out at vari-
ous times failed to fill in or draw the honest
applause that greets the conductor at every per-
formance.
To those New Yorkers who love to trip the
"light fantastic," who oppose the much-discussed
"Blue Laws" and enjoy their little supper and
dance after theatre, music means much, espe-
cially when dispensed at our best hotels or lead-
ing amusement resorts by a favorite dance leader
of the day, such as Paul Whiteman, Art Hick-
man, Henri Conrad, Hazay Natzy (of the Bil't-
more), Knecht (of the Waldorf), Joe Smith
(of the Plaza), Leo Erdody (of the Pennsyl-
vania), Max Fells (of the Vanderbilt, Delia
Kobbia Room), Ben Selvin, Nick Orlando, Joe
Samuels, Sam Lenin (Roseland), Al Jockers,
Harry Raderman, Banjo Wallace, Duane Sawyer,
Dave Kaplan, Earl Fuller, Rudy Wiedoft, Saxi
Holtsworth, and many of the other celebrities
in the fields of high-class melody or "jazz."
But it is not alone the aristocrat, or the "plute,"
or the college boy, or the higher classes gen-
erally who derive the main benefit from music
in New York. It is rather the middle classes
and the masses that revel in it. The "Tired
Business Man," for instance, or the professional
man finds in the music of an "Irene," "Mary,"
"Little Miss Charity," or a "Chu Chin Chow," a
very restful tonic^for his nerves, after a strenu-
ous day at the office. And when it comes right
down to the masses in New York, with millions
of clerks, laborers, workers, socialists, idlers,
and its great underworld of crooks, degenerates,
nondescripts, and all kinds gathered from every
corner of the globe and jumbled together in one
heterogeneous mass in the melting pot of the
greatest city, who will deny that it is music as
much as any other element that keeps the seeth-
ing contents from boiling over, and averts the
unrest that might suddenly blow the existing
government into the rule of the Soviet? If you
question this, watch the makeup of the gallery
line on opera nights or study the faces at the
park or pier concerts.
Half the worth-while joy of living to rich and
poor alike is music, because, like art, it is one
of the better things in life and only the better
things are worth living for. There isn't a
single home in the entire metropolis that doesn't
at some season of the year enjoy its bit of music,
even if it is only of the "canned" variety. New
York wouldn't be a fit place to live in without
music, and that's what music has done for New
York.
Early last week Robert Crawford, sales man-
ager of Irving Berlin, Inc., became the proud
daddy of a baby boy.
.:.
THE NEXT WAL'
HIT
I
"WILL B E 2>
Kiss
THE NEXT BR
HIT
WILL B
OMYO
PUBLISHED BY THE
HOUSE THAT PUT OVEE
"MISSOURT\
"HINDUSTAN^
"SWEET AND LOW"
"NAUGHTY WALTZ"
I
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
44
THE
MUSIC
TRADE
REVIEW
JANUARY 22, 1921
QUICKER SERVICE FOR FOX DEALERS
DEALERS: Please remember that
Sam Fox Co. Installs Well-equipped Stockroom
at New York Headquarters
In order to take care promptly of the in-
creasing demand for its publications in the
East, particularly in New York City and vicin-
ity, the Sam Fox Publishing Co. has just com-
pleted the equipment of a new stockroom at the
New York headquarters of the company in the
Cecelia Building, 160 West 45th street, where
dealers may obtain supplies of music and books
on short notice.
Just at the present time the Fox Co. is featur-
ing a number of excellent publications, includ-
ing those found in the Library Edition of Piano
Music, some of which are being programed
by leading concert artists, and also publications
in the Popular Standard and the Operastyle
editions. The company also issues numerous
collections of piano pieces, vocal music, man-
dolin folios, choruses and concert and band
"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 — w e ' r e at your service
BOOSEY & CO.
The House of Song Fame
NEW YORK (9 East 17th Street) and TORONTO (384 Yonge Street)
NEW FOX-TROT SONG ISSUED
The new fox-trot song from the pens of
Creamer & Layton entitled "Show Me How,"
published by Chas. K. Harris, is being pro-
gramed by a long list of orchestra leaders. At
present it is leading the Harris catalog in point
of sales. The success of this number has been
so great that Chas. K. Harris has accepted for
publication three other numbers from the pens
of these writers which will be announced at an
earlv date.
*
"MAZIE" PROVING POPULAR
SOME CURRENT SAM FOX FEATURES
DOING WELL WITH ORCHESTRAS
Several Numbers in Present Catalog of Com-
Miss Katheryn Joyce, who recently joined the
pany That Are Making Good
staff of the Sam Fox Publishing Co. as manager
Sam Fox Pub. Co., Cleveland, O., has just of the band and orchestra department, is hav-
issued a new novelty one-step song with music ing good success in placing the series of new
by Mel B. Kaufman and lyric by Dailey R. Pask- orchestrations issued by that company with
man entitled "Pack Me Up In Your Heart." the leaders.
"Biddy" is the title of a new fox-trot, already
This number is a typical musical comedy or
vaudeville song, and in addition is a timely being recognized as a number of much merit, as
dance number. The publishers are making a are "Blue Jeans" and "Na-Jo." "Na-Jo" is an
big campaign on this new number, together with Indian number written by Rudy Wiedoeft and
Geo. Hamilton Green's "Arabia." Green is the Walter Holliday which, while popular as a song,
writer of the success "Alabama Moon," and in is particularly adapted as an instrumental.
"Mazie," the new fox-trot song from the cata- "Arabia," which is also a one-step, he has a
log of Jack Mills, Inc., is proving one of the number written in a most original vein.
NEW HARRIS OFFICE FOR CHICAGO
most popular numbers in orchestra circles this
Apparently the Sam Fox catalog was never
Maxwell Silver, sales manager for Chas. K.
season. Although it was only issued a few richer in material. This is markedly true re-
Harris,
left early this week on a Western trade
weeks ago, it has shown its merit to good ad- garding such songs as are mentioned above
vantage and seemingly will be one of the big which, while original as songs, also lend them- trip. While away he will open a Chicago branch
office for his firm.
popular numbers of the early months of the selves admirably to dance arrangement.
present year.
THREE GOOD SELLING SONGS
"Moline"
"The Four o'clock Blues"
"The Dearest Land on Earth"
JACK MILLS,
1921 SONGS
PRICE 7c PER COPY
Every Song a Positive Melody Hit
M
A
PHINEST
Z
I
PHOXTROT
THE BLUFF CITY MUSIC CO.
E
hltAG
TIME
PHANTASIE
STRUT MISS LIZZIE
•NOCKOUT
NOVELTY
NUMBEK
London's
WELCOME STRANGER
B E S T
B A L L A D
B E A U T I F U L
AND PLAYED
ALL OVER THE WORLD
ANOTHER a GLOW~WO&M"
M A R V E L O U S
IDEAL FO& MOTION
PICTURE LOVE SCENES
M E L O D Y
MY MAMMY'S TEARS
SURE-FIRE
SOUTHERN
A BALLAD OF
EXQUISITE CHARM
SONH
E
He Always f *t™ » Father
KLEVER
MOMEDY
KREATION
CUBAN MOON
—Two Foxy Foxtrot Hits
SWEET MAMMA
JACK MILLS, Inc.
152-4 West 45th Street
NEW
YORK
CITY
E4SHWNE1
m
GARBEN*
ITS
HIT
MELODY
T.B HARMS,
62
WEST
t S ' ^ 5T
MEMPHIS. TENN.
BIG SELLERS
•elected from the
Popular Standard
fa*.
HEART OF MINE
M O S T
324 BEALE AVENUE
Pictorial Catalog of
M. Witmark & Sons
All 30 cent number
DOWN TIIK TRAIL TO IIOMK, SWEET HOME
I,KT TIIK KKST OF THE WORLD GO BY
TRIPOLI (On the Shores of Tripoli)
MY MOTHKK'S EVENING THAYER
KENTUCKY BLUES (I've Got the Bluen for My
Kentucky Home)
IN THE DISK—UIO GRANDE
WYOMING (waltz and lullaby)
JUST A WEEK FROM TO-DAY
MY HOME TOWN 18 A ONE-HORSE TOWN
But It's Big: Enough for Me
WHO'LL TAKE THE PLACE OF MARY?
Bi:< KV FROM BABYLON—THE SWEETEST
MKLODY
THAT'S HOW YOU CAN TELL THEY'RE IRISH
DEKNAH (My Argentina Rose)
JUST LOVE—FANCIES
1,1 LAH (Sugar Baby of Mine)
COTTON (Cotton Was a Little Dixie Rose)
VISION GIRL—HUMMING BIRD
I'M DODBLIN' BACK TO DUBLIN
PARISIOLA—RIVOLI
HUE'S THE HEART OF DIXIELAND

Download Page 43: PDF File | Image

Download Page 44 PDF File | Image

Future scanning projects are planned by the International Arcade Museum Library (IAML).

Pro Tip: You can flip pages on the issue easily by using the left and right arrow keys on your keyboard.