Music Trade Review

Issue: 1921 Vol. 73 N. 2

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
J I I . Y 9,
THE
1921
MUSIC TRADE
41
REVIEW
NEW REM1CK NUMBER ON COAST
"Emmaline" to Be Featured in Big Way—
Working on New Sherman, Clay & Co. Hit
Forecast
Twelve year
prediction:
"KVENTIALLV THE ENTIRK
WORM) WILL KNOW AND AP-
•RECIATE THE GREATNESS
OF
'CENTURY EDITION 1 ."
Two ywirN later we began telling
the world about "(EN-
TI BY" through AnierU-a's
Best MaRazineN and ten
years of this consistent
judicioiiN advertising,
plus dealers' loyal <•()-
operation, Is bringing
us within sight of our
goal.
Our Big Fall Cam-
paign is now in preparation.
With your help as usual it van be
put across with tremendous suc-
We are again hanking on your
support.
Century Music Pub. Co.
235 West 40th St.
New York
FIORITO GOING TO ST. LOUIS
Ted Fiorito, writer of "Love Bird" and "Isle
of Paradise," who recently signed a two-year
contract to write exclusively for Shapiro, Bern-
stein & Co., Inc., will leave shortly for St.
Louis, where he has accepted a position as
manager of a large dance hall in that city. He
will be associated with John M. McCardle, the
well-known St. Louis musical director.
The executive offices of Van Alstyne & Cur-
tis have been moved from Toledo, O., to new
and elaborate quarters at 1658 Broadway, New
York City.
SAN FRANCISCO, CAL., July 2.—"Emmaline,"
a new Remick number liked by many orchestra
leaders and said generally to have a very sing-
able fox-trot chorus, will be started on a brisk
campaign of popularization in San Francisco
and vicinity about the first week in July, by
B. E. Adkins, professional representative of the
publishers.
Two other Remick numbers are meeting with
considerable success in the same territory,
"Ain't We Got Fun?" and "Now 1 Lay Me
Down to Sleep."
Herbert Marple, of Sherman, Clay & Co., has
started a lively campaign on that firm's new
hit, "I'll Keep on Loving You," in Los Angeles.
Phil Furman, for some time professional rep-
resentative of Irving Berlin in San Francisco,
has been superseded by Harry Hume, formerly
of Los Angeles.
CHARLES 0 . DAWES A COMPOSER
CHICAGO, July 1.—Charles G. Dawes, chairman
of the board of the Central Trust Co., brigadier
general in the A. E. F. and now in Washington
organizing the Government's budget system, ap-
peared in a new role to-day—that of a musical
composer.
General Dawes, it was announced, is the author
of a violin composition, "Melody in A Major,"
which is being played by Fritz Kreisler, who, it
was said, selected it without knowing the identity
of the composer.
General Dawes plays a violin and is known to
have written several compositions, but this was
the first to be published.
HANDY BROS., INC., MOVE
"SWEETIE PLEASES?
Handy Bros., Inc., successor to the Pace &
Handy Music Co., formerly occupying the build-
ing at 232 West Forty-sixth street, opposite
the National Vaudeville Artists' Club House,
has moved into larger quarters at 165 West
Forty-seventh street, New York City.
Sound* like the Summer'* Waltz Song Hit-
Order from Your Jobber or
MISS RALE ON VACATION
MCDOWCH
P u b . CO., PROVIDENCE. R. I
STOCK U
ON
9LB
FASHIiNEi
HIT
MELODY
Miss Rose Rale, of the auditing department
of Shapiro, Bernstein & Co., Inc , left late this
week on a two weeks' vacation. Miss Rale will
spend her time in Tannersville, N. Y., and At-
lantic City, N. J.
BIG SELLERS
\bu can't $p
wrong with
any'Feist
Songs You Should Have on Your
Counter
CHERIE
I'M NOBODY'S BABY
MAMMY'S LITTLE SUNNY
HONEY BOY
NESTLE IN YOUR DADDY'S
ARMS
WANG WANG BLUES
TWO SWEET LIPS
UNDERNEATH HAWAIIAN
SKIES
VAMPING ROSE
ABSENCE
PEGGY O'NEIL
SNUGGLE
NOBODY'S ROSE
MON HOMME (My Man)
The New French Hit
Write for Dealers' Prices
LEO. FEIST, Inc., FEIST Bldg., New York
TWO NEW BELW1N NUMBERS
Vaudeville Artists Using Two New Releases
From Belwin Catalog
Belwin, Inc., recently released two new songs,
"1 Want My Mammy," a fox-trot, and "When
Sweethearts Waltz," a very original waltz mel-
ody. • Among the vaudeville and musical comedy
artists using "1 Want My Mammy" are Eddie
Cantor, the Creole Fashion Plate, Sybil Vane,
McFarland Sisters, Bartram & Saxton, and the
Watson Sisters.
"When Sweethearts Waltz," while in manu-
script form, was accepted for interpolation in
five productions and it promises, with the ac-
tivities of the professional department of Bel-
win, Inc., to he one of the prominent Fall
numbers.
NOTICE TO THE TRADE!!
Thinking oi You is ™,
Special Prices to Dealers
FRED HELTMAN CO., Cleveland, 0.
(Established 1908)
Society's Sensational Fox-trot
•elected from the
Popular Standard
Pictorial Catalog of
M. Witmark & Sons
All 30 cent numbers
EDITION BEAUTIFUL
No music store is complete without
EDITION
BEAUTIFUL
1500 live dealers will testify to its
success.
It is carefully edited.
It is the most beautiful edition pub-
lished.
The Investment is insignificant.
The results are tremendous.
Write for particulars today.
C C CHURCH AND COMPANY
HARTFORl), CONNECTICUT
Hartford—New York—London—Paris—Sydney
I.ITTI.E CRUMBS OF HAPPINESS
CROONING
MOL.I/Y ON A TROLLEY, BY GOLLY, WITH
YOU
DOWN THE TRAIL TO HOME, SWEET HOME
MOTHER'S EVENING PRAYER
TRIPOLI (On the Shores of Tripoli)
LET THE REST OF THE WORLD GO BY
I WANT YOU MORNING, NOON AND NIGHT
JABBERWOCKY
KENTUCKY BLUES (I've Got the Blues for My
Kentucky Home)
I WAS BORN IN MICHIGAN
BECKY FROM BABYLON
STAND UP AND SING FOR YOUR FATHER AN
OLD-TIME TUNE
JUST A WEEK FROM TODAY
ON A FAR ALONE ISLE
MY HOME TOWN IS A ONE-HORSE TOWN
WHO'LL TAKE THE PLACE OF MARY?
DEENAH (My Argentina Rose)
JUST LOVE
LILAH (Sugar Baby of Mine)
COTTON (Cotton Was a Little Dixie Rose)
I'M DOUBLIN* BACK TO DUBLIN
FANCIES
IN THE DUSK
Robert Norton Co.
226 West 46th Street, New York
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
42
'UNJAZZING" THE JAZZ MUSIC
A New Conservative Era Is Announced for This
Popular Syncopated Form of Melody—Signs
Point to Its Settling Down
"Much has been said about jazz," observes
Harry E. Farnham in April's "Melody." "It has
been turned inside out, dissected and examined
by many and the results of these examinations
have been published broadcast for our music-
loving nation to digest. Arguments for and
against it have found their more or less instruc-
tive way across printed pages with one unani-
mous result—that there is such a thing as jazz.
Every article printed reiterates it and makes its
position stronger, and, though its form is
changed, jazz is still with us.
"Dance music played by professional orches-
tras is interpreted by the public at large as
'jazz.' The word jazz has been so dinned into
their ears through voice and press that music
played differently or deviating in any way from
the written score is irrevocably jazz. It is called
jazz for the same reason that any phonograph
is called a Victrola. The public has been so
educated through advertising that to think of a
phonograph the word Victrola at once leaps to
mind. And who can say that jazz has not been
advertised? The 1921 jazz, although it may not
be performed in concert style or played in the
same way dance music has been played in years
gone by, is not jazz as jazz has been formerly
interpreted. There is a line of demarcation be-
tween them. It may be fine and even bend in
places, but none the less the line is there.
"Jazz, as the word first came into being, is a
radical interpretation of music, violating the
canons of musical thought and expression—-and
delighting in it, thriving on it, in fact. That was
a few years ago. To-day radical jazz has run
its barbaric race and its place is' being filled
with, let us say, a conservative jazz—a type
more fitting this period when the nation is slow-
ly settling down from the turmoil of war con-
ditions. This conservative jazz lacks the heavy,
monotonous style of music of twenty years ago,
but links it with the style faintly left by radical
jazz, and the two combined produce a distinctly
new type, full of tunefulness and sprightliness."
Joe Goodwin, the well-known songwriter, has
joined the professional department of Stark &
Cowan.
Now 15c Retail!
(Formerly 10c Music)
JULY 9, 1921
P U N MEMORIAL TO FOSTER
KUHN'S SONG SHOP ENLARGED
Kansas City, Mo., Music Store Now Has a Mail $50,000 to Be Raised for Bowery Breadline in
Order Department
Honor of Author of "Old Kentucky Home"
Eddie Kuhn, the well-known orchestra leader
and proprietor of Eddie Kuhn's Song Shop,
Twelfth and Main streets, Kansas City, Mo.,
recently enlarged his distributing activities by
the addition of a mail order department. Mr.
Kuhn has a list of over 35,000 names which is
constantly being added to. In a recent letter
to The Review he stated that he is very much
gratified with the returns from that direction.
In commenting upon the present retail price
of sheet music, Mr. Kuhn said: "It is very
important that the retail price of sheet music
remain at thirty cents. Any reduction to a
lower or twenty-five-cent figure will only serve
to temporarily please the syndicate stores and
it eventually will cause a reduction to a retail
price of twenty cents and lower."
E. P. LITTLE HONORED
SAN FRANCISCO, CM.., July 2.—E. P. Little,
manager of the sheet music department of
Sherman, Clay & Co., was elected vice-presi-
dent of the Retail Music Dealers' Association
at the last meeting of that organization.
A unique memorial to Stephen Collins Fos-
ter, who wrote "Way Down Upon the Swanee
River," "My Old Kentucky Home" and many
other songs that have been favorites for fifty
years, is being planned for the Bowery, where
he spent the last few years of his life and
whence he was taken to die in Bellevue Hospi-
tal. The memorial will take the form of a
$50,000 fund for the support of the Bowery
breadline.
At a meeting held in the Bowery Mission
recently the plan for the fund was explained
by Mr. Baker, director of the mission. Harold
Vincent Milligan, organist and the biographer
of Foster, played and Olive Nevin, a cousin of
Ethelbert Nevin, the composer, sang some of
Foster's songs to those present at the meeting.
Foster, through the evils of excessive drink-
ing, spent the last few years of his life in a
dingy furnished room on the Bowery. In 1863,
the year before he died, he wrote in that place
forty-eight songs, his greatest production in
any year. This tremendous output was made
necessary through the need for money. Many
of the songs sold for only ten dollars.
Jack Mills, Inc., has secured the publication
A charter of incorporation has been granted
to the Harrison Music Publishing C'orp., New rights for a new song, "I'm the Man That Mr.
York City, with a capital of $25,000. The in- Kipling Wrote About."
corporators are N. H. Harrison, H. Dellon and
W. Hirsh.
A WONDERFUL IRISH MELODY
"When I Dream That
Auld Erin Is Free"
Retail Price, Regular Copies 35c
INTHE AFTERGLOW
By J. Will Callahan and Frank Grey
Programmed by America's Foremost Con-
cert Artists. Featured by
Vaudeville's Greatest Headliners
Played by 15,000 Good Orchestras
Rtfnli
GOTT & HENDERSON
5444 Prairie Avenue, Chicago
fip=
I V V—{ \ J -i-* [Iff p ('
Once.deu.'nitood la U»
Red
The Ballad Success
blurt of • cilm.no
gj, Jl *
In tbe hub
were your cheek! In tin
if. ter flav,
»n tv
Tit
ifttr flow
[- _J
of Uw tvl - llfil
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ri<
There's Sunlight
In Your Eyes
Published by
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«r- tMftow,
That one
lor
u
mo - ment left ID
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there'll be al . wiy» tin
my
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heart..
200 < Profit on
HUNTZINGER & DILWORTH
Copyrighted. 1919. by Hinds, Hayden & Eldredge. Inc.
World Famous
Incorporated
159 West 57th Street
NEW YORK
HINDS, HAYDEN & ELDREDGE, Inc.
MCKINLEY
MUSIC
rile price oi this big-selling edition <>i
teaching and concert music was advanced
one cent to-the dealer on S e p t e m b e r 15th,
I 1 'JO, and tile new retail price is now 15c
per copy.
Send in your stock orders
now and take a d v a n t a g e of our " F R K K
C A T A L O G " offi-r.
50 NEW NUMBERS AND NEW
CATALOGS NOW READY
All of tile best reprints and more big-
selling copyrights than any other low-
priced edition.
Free catalogs with stock orders. We
pay for your advertising. Write for
samples.
McKlnley Music Co.
11 UNION SQUARE
• • • • • • • • • • • » • • • • • • • • •
Remick Song Hits
"ROSE"
"AIN'T WE GOT FUN?"
"NOW I LAY ME DOWN TO SLEEP"
"NIGHTINGALE"
"DEAREST ONE"
"BEAUTIFUL ANNABELL LEE"
"ALL FOR YOU" (New)
"BROKEN MOON" ( " )
"HAPPINESS"
( " )
"WITHOUT YOU" ( " )
J E R O M E H . R E M I C K & CO.
•f NEW YORK
DETROIT t
• • • » • • • • • • • » » » • • » » • • • • • • • • » • • • » • •
NEW YORK CITY
ROBERT TELLER SONS & DORNER
Music Engravers and Printers
SEND MANUSCRIPT AND IDEA OF
TITLE FOR ESTIMATE
SI! West 43d Street
New York City
BUY YOUR MUSIC FROM
BOSTON
PubHshers
WALTER JACOBS B^TMASS
"Peter Gink"£&|"Arabella" t i " '
Oliver Ditson Company
BOSTON
NEW YORK
Anticipate and supply Every Requirement of Music
Dealer*
White-Smith Music Pub. Co.
PUILISHEKS,
PBINTCMS
AND EHGKAVEBI OF
Main Offices: 40-44 Winchester St., Boston.
Branch Houses: New York and CMmsa

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