Music Trade Review

Issue: 1922 Vol. 74 N. 2

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
JANUARY 14,
THE
1922
NEW MUSIC SHOPJN INDIANAPOLIS
Exclusive Sheet Music Store Opened in That
City by Miss LaRue E. Black
INDIANAPOLIS, TND., January 9.—The Music Shop
at 5 North Meridian street is the newest store
to open its doors in downtown Indianapolis. The
proprietor is Miss LaRue E. Black, who for the
MUSIC
TRADE
balcony. The walls are paneled with brown ma-
hogany set against a plain ivory background.
Half-sheet signs on the walls advertising the
new music may be seen from the sidewalk
through a spacious plate-glass window that com-
prises most of the front of the shop. Particu-
larly effective are twelve such signs along the
front of the balcony.
Miss Black is specializing not only in the best
popular selections, but also in the best-selling
classics and in operatic numbers. The shop has
a piano, but the playing is to be confined to just
such as would be acceptable in the best of homes,
Miss Black says. No player rolls or phono-
graphic records are to be sold, and the store is
the only one in the city devoted exclusively to
the sale of sheet music.
Miss Black has been in the music business
nearly twenty years, most of the time represent-
ing the Jerome H. Remick Co. Before coming
to Indianapolis she was employed in Buffalo,
Pittsburgh, Detroit, Milwaukee and St. Louis.
KREISLER TO MAKE TOUR
Famous Violinist Adds Old Irish Song to His
Concert Programs
Miss LaRue E. Black
last ten years has had charge of the music de-
partment of L. S. Ayres & Co. for the Jerome
H. Remick Co. The new store is devoted ex-
clusively to sheet music.
Miss Black has chosen a location that is in
the heart of the business district. The room
measures 20x30 feet, but the floor space has been
increased 50" per cent by the construction of a
Fritz Kreisler will play on his coming concert
tour for the first time here the music to "Lon-
donderry Air," a song he first heard sung a few
weeks ago by a poor street singer in Glasgow,
outside the hall where Kreisler gave a concert.
"It is just an old Irish song," the singer said
when the violinist sent to find out what the
music was he heard. Kreisler played it for
Lloyd George in his Downing street residence,
and it is said the Prime Minister was moved to
tears.
Part of Kreisler's earnings will go to the sup-
port of five hospitals and an orphan asylum in
Austria, which he and his American-born wife
practically maintain.
ZheTiostZa/kecttboutSonft
39
REVIEW
Shes ~A Sensation!
OLDEASHIONED
GIRL
MRS. OBERNDORFER IN BOSTON
Makes Plea for Wider Interest in Music Before
Women's Organization
BOSTON, MASS., January 9.—Mrs. Marx E.
Oberndorfer, of Chicago, national music chair-
man of the General Federation, has been in
Boston addressing the Massachusetts State
Federation of Women's Clubs on the topic with
which she now is so widely identified and
which has been exploited in the music maga-
zines. In appealing for a love for the better
sort of music Mrs. Oberndorfer pointed out
that music is a force in life and not something
apart. She advised her hearers to familiarize
themselves with the music that is being used
everywhere, in the home, schools, clubs,
churches, theatres, etc., and she advocated a
plan for community co-operation in furthering
a knowledge of good music through the medium
of music memory contests, which she thought
should be undertaken by women's clubs every-
where.
VODERY APPOINTED BANDMASTER
William H. Vodery, well-known arranger and
composer, who wrote the score for "Under the
Bamboo Tree," the new Bert Williams produc-
tion, originally called the "Pink Slip," has been
commissioned second lieutenant in the Fifteenth
Regiment, N. Y. N. G., and has been appointed
bandmaster, succeeding the late Jim Europe.
since"MISSOURI WALTZ"
MISSISSIPPI
CRAOLE
ft
r
'
Rock me in my Mis-sis-sip-pi Cra
L e t me look in - to my mam-mjs eyes;
Published
FORSTER
MUSIC PUBLISHER INC."
2 3 5 SOUTH WABASH AVE.
,*.
CHICAGO _.
by thz publisher of "MISSOURI WALTZj/tlAUGHTY WALTZ^IVEETAHDUW, KI55*A MISS
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
40
THE
MUSIC TRADE
REVIEW
JANUARY 14,
1922
NORTON STAFF INCREASED
"SOUAW MAN^_T0 BE OPERA
BEN KLINE A VISITOR
Changes and Additions to Personnel Will Facili-
tate Sales Campaigns
Henry Hadley Is Dressing Up Play for Musical
Production
Syracuse Dealer Particularly Impressed With
New Berlin Number
Among the new additions to the sales staff of
Robert Norton Co. is F. Larrimore, who is now
covering the principal Southern cities for that
company. Ralph Jacobsen, Western traveling
representative for the above house, is now cov-
ering the Pacific Coast territory, including such
cities as Portland, Seattle, Los Angeles and San
Francisco.
S. Smilow, who has been covering Middle
West territory, will shortly make his headquar-
ters in Chicago, where he will be joined by Leo
Friedman, general manager of the company,
The Robert Norton Co. is at present featuring
"Dixie," a successful one-step, and "Gypsy
Rose," a fox-trot. The former number is among
the few popular one-steps of the present season
and has been featured by Paul Whiteman at the
Palais Royal and Vincent Lopez at the Penn-
sylvania Hotel.
Evelyn Rose, of the publicity department, and
Rose Abrams, of the professional department,
have just returned from a trip to Atlantic City
and Philadelphia, where they report "Gypsy
Rose" is having much popularity.
.:. ." ;
"The Squaw Man" is going to be made into
an opera. Henry Hadley is dressing up Edwin
Milton Royle's play with music. The work has
been in progress for some time, and will be
completed, it is expected, in the early Spring.
Mr. Hadley, who is the composer of "Cleo-
patra's Night," which is now in the repertory
of the Metropolitan, has long considered "The
Squaw Man," in which William Faversham is
playing at the Astor, an ideal subject for grand
opera. "Its theme," he says, "which relates the
tragedy of parenthood, against a background of
picturesque and primitive America, lends itself
easily to a musical interpretation based upon
American traditions."
The libretto is being written by Grant Stewart.
Although better known as an actor, Mr. Stewart
wrote "Arms and the Girl," "Caught in the
Rain," in collaboration with William Collier, and
"A Little Water on the Side," also with Mr.
Collier. He has more than thirty one-act plays
to his credit.
Ben Kline, of the Phoenix-Kline Music Co.,
Syracuse, N. Y., was a visitor in New York City
the early part of last week. After placing orders
with several of the musical instrument manu-
facturers he made the rounds of the publishing
houses, where, as usual, he was a welcome visi-
tor.
Mr. Kline has taken a particular fancy to
"Granny, You're My Mammy's Mammy," one
of the newest ballads in the Irving Berlin, Inc.,
catalog and made it a point to visit the Palace
Theatre, where he heard Sophie Tucker render
this song. He is under the impression that
"Granny" will be the biggest thing that the
Berlin organization ever published.
The retail warerooms of the Phoenix-Kline
Music Co. recently underwent alterations and
the new quarters are among the most attrac-
tive in the Eastern part of the country. The
front of the store, with two attractive windows,
is being used most advantageously for display
purposes.
BIG BUSINESS LAST MONTH
NEW FOX-TROT
POSTPONES DRIVE ON BERLIN HIT
Irving Berlin, Inc., Reports Sales for December
Reached High Totals
Goodman & Rose Number Interpolated
"Greenwich Village Follies"
"Say It With Music" Week Postponed From
February 4 to February 11—Big Drive Planned
According to the sales reports compiled by
Irving Berlin, Inc., the month of December was
one of the biggest months in the history of that
organization. This is most surprising when the
holiday period is considered and, to say the least,
is unusual. The whole Irving Berlin catalog is
quite active at present, but particularly is this
true of "Tuck Me to Sleep" (In My Old 'Tucky
Home) and "Say It With Music." The former
number, despite its large sale, has evidently not
reached its height in point of popularity, as indi-
cations show it is increasing in favor.
Goodman & Rose, Inc., are the publishers of
a new novelty fox-trot number, entitled "I've
Got My Habits On," which was recently inter-
polated in this season's "Greenwich Village
Follies," now playing at the Shubert Theatre,
New York City, where it is featured with suc-
cess by Donald Kerr, the juvenile dancer.
Irving Berlin, Inc., New York, publisher of
the phenomenal song hit, "Say It With Music,"
announced on Tuesday that it had been decided
to change the date of the "Say It With Music"
week from February 4 to February 11. Begin-
ning on February 11 and ending on February 18,
"Say It With Music" will be featured in one of
the most intensive publicity and sales campaigns
that has been introduced in the trade in recent
years.
THREE REAL BEAUTIFUL SONGS!
THE VERY LATEST
"DREAM MAN"
Fox Trot Ballad Supreme
The Coining Sensation of 1922
"LOVE ROSE"
Another Pretty Fox-trot Song
"TEARS OF OUR
LAST GOOD-BYE"
The Talked-about Waltz Ballad of the Day
Berardi - Coccia Music Pub. Co.
92 Grape Street
ROCHESTER, N. Y.
START ON TRADE TRIP
Sam Tarrant and Jack Harden to Visit Dealers
in U. S. and Canada
Sam Tarrant and Jack Harden, the traveling
representatives for the Chappell and Harms
catalogs, left recently on a three months' trade
trip, in which they will cover the whole of the
United States and Canada. Among the numbers
they will feature during their present activities
are: "April Showers," "Ka-Lu-A," "The World
Is Waiting for the Sunrise," "Where the Lazy
Mississippi Flows" and "The Mill by the Sea."
i ^ T V J T j 1 / ^ 1 ! " fk 99
1^1 M L j ^ / J L / m
THOMPSON SONGS IN AUSTRALIA
Fisher Thompson, head of the Fisher Thomp-
son Music Co., of New York and Butte, Mont.,
has just received word from his Australian rep-
resentatives, L. T. Collin, Pty., Ltd., of Mel-
bourne, announcing that his new songs, "Rio
Nights," "Mammy's Loving Lullaby" and
"Brown Eyes" were among the most popular
songs of the present season in that country.
She's -A Sensation*
OLD EASHIONED
GIRL
The distinctive waltz success. The song of
lights and shadows, of mystery and romance.
Dealers and jobbers, don't fail to stock up on this wonderful
MILLER MUSIC PUB. CO.
in
seller
BLACKDUCK, MINN.

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