Music Trade Review

Issue: 1924 Vol. 79 N. 3

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE
JULY 19, 1924
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MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
and 1922 was not given full consideration by
officials. They, therefore, request the introduc-
tion of a new bill into Parliament containing
various stipulations, the object of amending the
present Act by prescribing proper recourses and
penalties not heretofore enacted with a view
to restraining any counterfeiting or unlawful
reproduction of their work and to afford them
full protection of their rights. It also sets forth
the adoption of most of the Amendments sug-
gested by the Canadian authors in memoranda
of 1921 and 1922. All of this, if acted upon,
would supplement the Canadian Copyright Law
now in force.
"Mother" by Wyrick
Published by Forster
New Number by Well-known Composer and
Recording Artist Gives Every Sign of Being
a Good Seller
CHICAGO, I I I . , July 12.—One of the latest num-
bers of the Forster Music Publisher, Inc., 235
South Wabash avenue, is the "Mother" song
written by Ambrose Wyrick, head of the Wyrick
Music Publishers, and well-known tenor.
Century Music Pub. Co.
The number is distinctly original and has been
recorded by Mr. Wyrick himself on Gennett
records. Mr. Wyrick has written a number of
songs which are now popular. It is interesting
to learn the manner in which he wrote this
Canadian Conference
number. The song is truly inspired and is filled
Discusses Copyrights with the very soul of the writer.
It was while sitting alone in his room at the
Canadian Author's Association Submits Reso- Westcott Hotel in Richmond, Ind., after a hard
lution to Dominion Government Objecting to day's work in the recording laboratories of the
Not Being Consulted
Starr Piano Co., making vocal record tests, and
with the exhaustion and weariness of the day's
OTTAWA, ONT., July 10.—The Copyright question,
efforts, that he felt the longing for the con-
after being thoroughly discussed at the last an- soling sympathy of his dear old mother, who
nual convention of the Canadian Authors' Asso- two years before had taken the forward step in
ciation, which gathered at Quebec in May last, life which ofttimes is erroneously called death.
has been submitted to the Federal administra- When Mr. Wyrick aroused himself from his
tion in the form of a resolution adopted by the reverie he discovered he had written this
convention and ratified by the new National number.
Executive, which held its first meeting on July 21
last.
The Association, wishing to place its opinion
on record, has sent the resolution to several
The Oliver Ditson Co. has issued a handbook
ministers of the Cabinet and other parliamen-
covering "Music Theory for Piano Students,"
tarians.
It sets forth the fact that the amendment to described as a manual of fundamentals and key-
the Canadian Copyright Act which has come board harmony as presented in "The Music
into free force on the first day of January, 1924,
was drafted by the officials of the Department of
Trade and Commerce without the Canadian
THE WORLD OVER KNOW
authors having an opportunity to state their
particular needs. This, they say, should have
been provided for in order to give them full pro-
tection. Also memoranda submitted in 1921
New Ditson Handbook
SONG LOVERS
This TRADE MARK
The most beautiful Irish waltz in years
'THE DREAMS OF MY IRISH COLLEEN"
'THE OLD HOMESTEAD in the VALLEY"
BOURDON DKUTY MUSIC CO.
P. O. Box 103, 8ta. A.
Hartford, Conn.
ROSES OF PICARDY
THEWORLDISWAmNG^SUNRISE
IN THE GARDEN OF TO-MORROW
THE SONG OF SONGS
LOVE'S FIRST KISS
SMILETHRU YOUR TEARS
IF WINTER COMES
CHAPPELL-HARMS.INC.
185 MADISON AVE
NEW YORK
TRADE MARK REGISTERED
It Represents
the BEST there is in.
ABCADI
MAVTIME
I LOVE YOU
JUNE NIGHT
SONG OF LOVE
LINGER AWHILE
WONDERFUL ONE
DOODLE DOO DOO
PARADISE ALLEY
MOONLIGHT MEMORIES
SING A LITTLE SONG
DON'T MIND THE RAIN
WHEN LIGHTS ARE LOW
TONIGHT'S THE NIGHT
SOMEWHERE IN THE WORLD
WAIT'LL YOU SEE MY GAL
I'M ALL BROKEN UP OVER YOU
SOMEONE LOVES YOU AFTER ALL
WHERE THE DREAMY WABASH
FLOWS
WORRIED (I'M WORRIED OVER YOU)
DON'T BLAME IT ALL ON ME
Write for Dealer »' Prices
LEO. FEIST, Inc., FEIST BIdg., New York
Student's Piano Course." The copy in hand is
Book One, covering the years one and two
of music study. It has been prepared by Clar-
ence G. Hamilton, Dr. Percy Goetschius, John
P. Marshall and Will Earhart. The manual
opens with an introduction covering the pur-
poses of the series which, in complete form,
covers the first four years of "The Music Stu-
dent's Piano Course." These manuals, how-
ever, are not confined to the course, as they will
be found equally available for use with any other
type of piano instruction. The contents are brief,
clear and well illustrated. The book is of
handy size, which should add to its availability.
Features Stasny Numbers
Ted Welcher and His Virginians, a musical
combination with _eleven men and four singers,
under the direction of Charlie Storm, now ap-
pearing at the Dance Palace, Rye Beach, N. Y.,
is featuring two songs from the catalog of the
A. J. Stasny Music Co., Inc., "Heart-broken
Rose" and "Play Me Slow." Welcher's Orches-
tra has won much prominence since its appear-
ance in the East. It is composed of a versatile
collection of musicians none of whom are over
Iwenty-one years old. Previous to its Eastern
engagements it played traveling engagements
in Southern States.
The book, "World's Favorite Songs," pub-
lished by Irving Berlin, Inc., makes a timely
item for the Summer season. This book con-
tains a selected list of college songs, home songs,
folk songs, children's songs, love songs, South-
ern songs, and other titles, which appeal in
warm weather at outings, picnics, and other
gathering places.
BEAUTIFUL BALLADS
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SOLOS - DUETS — TRIOS — QUARTETS
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ACKNOWLEDGED By LEADING SHEET MUSIC DEALERS ATID JOBBERS
THE GREATEST CATALOG OF STANDARD SONGS IN THE WORLD
If YOU are n o t a c q u a i n t e d w i t h O u r Extraordinary
Proposition and Special O f f e r in c o n n e c t i o n with.
THE W I T M A R K
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which includes SONGLAND Catalogs - GRATIS
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A most wonderful fox-trot
AMERICAS POPULAR
BALLAD SUCCESSES
41
M. WITMARK 6 SONS • NEW YORK
THE
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
42
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
Police Judges Deny
Jazz Causes Grime
Psychiatrist Also Plays Decisive Role in Music
Controversy at Los Angeles Which Finally
Acquits Jazz of This Charge
Not even the legal and medical professions
have been immune from contact with a musical
controversy that has lately been raging in Los
Angeles on the subject of jazz. A contributory
cause was an announcement from Antoinette
Sabel, executive secretary of the Los Angeles
Music Federation, to the effect that the band
concerts in the park this Summer would be
supervised by the federation to the total elimina-
tion of jazz. This ban was endorsed by the
music committee of the Park Board, it was an-
nounced.
More food for discussion was the considera-
tion of jazz at the biennial convention of the
General Federation of Women's Clubs, held in
Los Angeles. Local musical and civic circles
buzzed with talk about the arraignment of jazz
by the music chairman of the federation, Mrs.
Anne Faulkner Oberndorfer. Aftex watching
the trying of juvenile cases in a Los Angeles
court, Mrs. Oberndorfer declared: "Boys and
girls are going wrong in alarming numbers be-
cause they get drunk on jazz-intoxicants." On
the other hand, a prominent psychiatrist, Dr.
Aaron J. Rosanoff, gave this opinion: "Not only
is jazz not a cause of crime and criminality but
it is an excellent stimulus and often serves to
clear up a brain that has become immured in
deadening problems. Jazz is a release, a vent,
an outlet. Most juvenile criminals, and all crim-
inals for that matter, are inhibited in some way.
Jazz music should tend to socialize them, if
anything."
This clinical estimate of jazz was supported
by three police judges of Los Angeles, one of
whom, Judge James Pope, remarked: "I cannot
connect jazz with crime. Jazz is, in my opinion,
a healthy stimulant." Juvenile Judge Harry R.
Archibald weighed the case, pro and con, as fol-
lows: "Jazzmania is not a direct cause for
HEARST HITS
You Can Take Me Away From Dixie
Forget Me Not
moral degeneracy. It is just one expression
of the speed age. Wild music has its part in
fast living, no doubt, but I have had no cases
where jazz was wholly responsible."
A hostess at a Los Angeles dance hall gave
her testimony by pointing out a young couple
on the floor. Said she: "They met here and
were married here. Soon after' their baby was
born they were back here dancing. Twice every
week, regularly, they come up here to dance
while the mother takes care of the infant. She
says that one way to make her baby stop crying
is to put a jazz record on their phonograph."
"There is jazz and jazz," was the opinion of
one progressive musician, Alexander Stewart,
executive director of the Civic Music and Art
Association of Southern California. Other musi-
cians pointed out that jazz was undergoing a
change and that the old raucous style of play-
ing was giving way to a mellifluous performance
marked by sparkling harmonic coloring and
piquant rhythms. As testifying to this fact,
they cited the keen interest in jazz evidenced by
such famous musicians as Heifetz, Stokowski,
Godowsky and Schelling. They also called at-
tention to the fact that one of the famous jazz
orchestras had completed a tour of crowded
houses in the regular concert halls and with
serious critical comment from music editors in
the various cities.
eighty-five-year-old precedent established by the
British boat owners, who have heretofore em-
ployed only English musicians. However, Paul
Specht himself with his own original orchestra,
as well as three bands of his, had already ap-
peared at the foremost British amusement places
a year ago, under the management of Lyons &
Co., Ltd., caterers to the King by special ap-
pointment. Despite the effort of English labor
to bar Specht, the reception accorded the Amer-
ican musicians was so great that it resulted in
the present invitation to Specht from the Cunard
officials.
While abroad Specht is also to supply orches-
tras for the Stoll and Moss Empire Music Hall
Circuits in England, at the Claridge Hotel in
Paris and at the Winter Garden in Berlin. Paul
Specht at present has some two score orches-
tras which supply the music at the Alamac Hotel
in New York and other hostelries, for Columbia
Phonograph Co. and other recording companies,
musical productions and other amusement en-
terprises.
Singing "Just for To-night"
Emmetl O'Mara, who is now appearing as a
headliner over the Keith Circuit, is continuing
to feature "Just for To-night," the waltz song
which he sang in France during the World War,
and which has not yet lost its popularity. Mr.
O'Mara recently called at the offices of the
Edward B. Marks Music Co., New York, for
the purpose of securing a new vocal copy
and orchestration of the number, having worn
out his first copies through constant usage in
liis many engagements.
Paul Specht to Supply
Orchestras for Cunarders
Well-known American Orchestra Leader Sails
for England to Arrange for Placing Orches-
tras on Fifty British Ships of Cunard Line
New Sacred Songs
Paul Specht, popular dance orchestra impre-
sario and radio broadcaster, sailed last Satur-
day, July 12, on the "Berengaria" for London,
England, at the invitation of Cunard officials,
with whom he is to sign a contract for the
supplying of American jazz orchestras for the
entire fleet of fifty English steamships belonging
to that company.
With Specht will be the Carolina Club Orches-
tra, a band of young college students who are
the first unit to play for the English steamship
line under Specht's ma/iagement. This orches-
tra will supply the music for the representatives
for the American Law Association aboard the
"Berengaria," who are sailing for the exposition
at Wembley.
The employment of Paul Specht American
Orchestras aboard the Cunard boats breaks an
(Means Remember Me)
ROBERT TELLER SONS & DORNER
Bringin' Home the Bacon
Music Engravers and Printers
My Dream Moon
SEND MANUSCRIPT AND IDEA OF
TITLE FOR ESTIMATE
New York City
311 West 43rd Street
JULY 19, 1924
Hinds, Hayden & Eldredge, Inc., have issued
the following new sacred songs, "Mary Sings
at Bethlehem," "The Lord My Shepherd Is,"
"The Perfect Love," "The Homeland," "O Day
of Rest and Gladness," "The Winds of God,"
"Faith, Hope and Charity," "Light," "Bow Down
Thine Ear," "Love Immortal," "Take No
Thought for Your Life," "Immortality," "O Cast
Thy Burden Upon the Lord," and others.
Jenkins'
Outstanding Sellers
POPULAR
JdoratioMValtz
COME AND WHISPER, DEAR
12th STREET RAG—MEAN BLUES
Waiting for the Rainbow
June
Broken Dreams
Lovers Lane Is a Lonesome Trail
BOSTON
Just a Lullaby
Oliver Ditson Company
TRUSTING
High, Medium, Low
Duet (or Soprano and Tenor or Soprano and Alto
BOSTON
NEW YORK
Anticipate and supply Every Requirement of Music
Dealers
Someone Else
PUBLISHERS, PRINTERS AND ENGRAVERS OF MUSIC
TRAIL-MATE
High, Medium, Low
Duet for Soprano and Alto or Tenor and Batt
White-Smith Music Pub. Co.
J.W.JENKINS SONS MUSIC COMPANY
Kansas City, Mo.
Main Offices: 40-44 Winchester St., Boston.
Branch Houses: New York and Chicago.
HEARST MUSIC PUBLISHERS
New York - Chicago - Vancouver - Toronto
High, Medium, Low
Duet
A Complete Library for Photo-Play Pianists
In a Wonderful World of Our Own
HEAD OFFICE—WINNIPEG, Canada
High, Medium, Low
Duet for Soprano and Alto or Contralto and Ban
MY FAITH IN THEE
I'm Falling in Love With a Shadow
of Canada, Limited
MEMORY'S GARDEN
Publishers
Walter Jacobs, Inc. BO^OTSASS.
JACOBS' PIANO FOUOS (VO 3 L%.)
(Took Your Place in My Heart)
STANDARD
BUY YOUR MUSIC FROM
You can't go wrong with this number
_
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MV
V
/•
^T
99
Sweet, tender word*—mel
"Moonlight Makes Me Long for You ^
FRANK H. GILLESPIE
Music Pubiuher
r
1112 Forbes Street, Pittsburgh, Pa.

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