Music Trade Review

Issue: 1925 Vol. 80 N. 20

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
44
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
The Part Played by the Arranger in
the Composition's Final Popularity
A Letter From Arthur Smith, Head of the Arthur Smith Music Co., Tampa, Fla., Paying Tribute
to These Men Who Are Often Neglected in Recognition of Their Work's Merit
E have often heard expressions of opinion
lhat much of the present day popular mu-
sic was over-arranged and no doubt in instances
there has been basis for such conclusions.
More recently, however, there has been a trend
to give more recognition to the music arranger
and with this movement the arranger is about
to come into his own. Demonstration of this
fact is given by the prices of arrangement on
popular songs which have increased consider-
ably. The work of the best arrangers is in
demand and of course the prices advance ac-
cordingly. That it is good investment is proven
in numerous instances.
That the work of the arranger is discerned in
the final products from generally unlooked-for
sources has been currently demonstrated by a
letter to The Review from Arthur Smith, head
of the Arthur Smith Music Co., of 1107 Franklin
street, Tampa, Fla., one of the most progressive
music merchants in the South. Below are given
some excerpts from his letter:
"Business is quiet down here now and so I
have yielded to the writers' itch. I have won-
dered for years who the unsung geniuses are
who give their time and talents, without public
recognition, to the making of phonographic
and player-roll arrangements. We have artistic
music publications, the more classical compos-
ers and others who frequently make compari-
sons of the better type of music with our worst
jazz hags which strikes me as unfair, and old
stuff. This indoor amusement cut its teeth in
the Garden of Eden and is right now shelling
out powder for the Liberals and the Fundamen-
talists. Even as big a man as Wagner marched
to this goose-step when he conducted a Men-
delssohn concerto with gloves on. (Dirty, low-
down music. Had to yield to a mob request.)
"It seems to me, from behind the counter,
that the shoe pinches the other foot. While the
highbrows bewail the degrading effects of our
popular dance music, dealers everywhere are
alarmed because their customers can't be edu-
cated up to buying it. They all complain our
popular music is becoming too polyphonic, too
elaborate, too symphonic for the average Amer-
ican numbskull. The cash register doesn't ring
as often as it used to. We have to piece out
our stock of records with crude, 'gyp' numbers
to boost sales. Several small companies are
living off this back-alley trade.
"I often wonder how many professional musi-
cians ever hear the best record and roll offer-
ings under favorable conditions. I have found
that those in my immediate circle have not. I
have converted not a few, by pressing them to
hear some of the better dance records, such as
the 'Indian Love Call,' by the Isham Jones
Orchestra, 'The Lady of the Nile,' by Isham
Jones and His Orchestra, and the three ar-
rangements of 'I'll See You In My Dreams,'
about which further.
"Take this last selection. There are at least
three beautiful records of it. First, there is the
wonderfully colored fox-trot arrangement by
the Ray Miller Orchestra, with one softly
played chorus which absolutely beggars words
in trying to describe it. There is also a slow,
sweet vocal accompaniment arrangement with
soft tinklings on the banjo, suggestive of a
Creole lover in ante bellum days. Then there
is a very scholarly orchestration, after the
chamber music style, like Victor Herbert's ar-
ranging, or like Tobani's method of orchestrat-
ing his 'Hearts and Flowers.' Lots of soft,
beautiful string and harp effects.
"I am tired of hearing the old complaint that
our modern songwriters all alike lack ideas. I
have just been playing the Isham Jones record
of Friml's 'Indian Love Call.' I know that the
beautiful, soft, bird-like flute arpeggios are in
MAY
16, 1925
artists as Anna Fitziu, Alice Nielson, Fritzi
Scheff,* Eugene Cowles and others, and taking
turns at conducting the orchestra will be such
famous leaders as John Philip Sousa, Hugo
Riesenfeld, Max Bendix, Henry Hadley and
others.
Paul Whiteman will present his famous or-
chestra; Rudolf Friml, Nahan Franko and many
other famous artists will be heard in instru-
mental selections.
The concert will be privately rendered at the
Ritz-Carlton Hotel, and, by remote control radio
apparatus, will be from there broadcast over
the entire country by W E A F and connected
stations.
At this date there is every indication that,
with the addition of other artists still to be
heard from, the program will prove far and
away the most interesting musical event of the
season, as well as the most comprehensive
thing of the sort that has ever been broadcast.
the score as also the quaint Indian rhythms and
scales, but in places the orchestra seems to lit-
erally sail away into a free sea of daring harmo-
nies, for which the composer is not to receive
credit. It seems to me that not to rank these
beautiful chromatic alterations as 'ideas' is pro-
vincial, pedantic, Main-street intolerance. How
much easier it would be to see it so, if Jones
had only a long Russian name!
"But I sometimes think that our songwriters
are partly to blame. For commercial reasons,
I suppose, they feel it necessary to pin their
arrangements to a 'stuffed shirt.' Some cipher,
some rubber stamp, always gets credit for their
compositions. Let some colored nobody from
Alabam' make a shift at a 'blues,' and all the
metropolitan orchestras take it up, and make it
over into music. It brings great credit to the
orchestra to make something out of a number Written by "Jelly Roll" Morton, Leon Ropolo
that nobody else can see heads or tails to, and
and Paul Mares—The New Composition
no doubt, by comparison, makes their glory
Likely to Be Popular
shine the brighter, but it seems commercialism
in the last degree to do so without acknowledg-
CHICAGO, I I I . , May 9.—Melrose Bros., of 119
ing the arranger. It is like publicly crediting North Clark street, announce as their latest
the Washington Monument to Mike the hod- number a new Dixieland one-step entitled
carrier. There is all the difference in the world "Milenberg Joys," written by the writers of
between pig in the sty and pork on the platter, "Tin Roof Blues" and "Wolverine Blues," who
and that difference is the chef. But the chef are "Jelly Roll" Morton, Leon Ropolo, and
gets credit for it!
Paul Mares.
"Take, for instance, the Oriole Orchestra's
According to Walter Melrose, the new num-
record of Charlie Davis's 'Copenhagen Blues.' ber will be one of the biggest hits the com-
I don't know who Charlie Davis is, and cer- pany has ever brought out. It comprises a
tainly have nothing against him. He can write special orchestra arrangement that will be
a better tune than I can, which isn't saying particularly popular.
much. 'And a hell-of-a-git you've got,' the old,
ragged, starving Confederate soldier exclaimed,
when Sherman's crack regiment got him. I've
got the record in my rack and the sheet music
on my counter all right! Well, anyway, I have
often wondered what genius of a chef cooked No. 9 in Series Issued by This Publisher Con-
this spavined jackass into such a tender joint.
tains Thirty Popular Numbers All With Uku-
With severe pruning one might have expected
lele Arrangements
something like a tune from the first part of
the chorus, and there is an eight-measure in-
Irving Berlin, Inc. who recently issued a new
troduction which sounds pretty fair. On this
"Universal Dance Folio No. 9" has found a
small peg somebody has hung quite a musical
ready sale for this product. Besides the fact
composition. There may be more of Bach's
that there are thirty popular fox-trots, waltzes
'First Prelude' in Gounod's 'Ave Marie,' than of
and novelties in the folio, an added feature that
Davis's 'Copenhagen Blues' in the finished prod-
induces sales are the ukulele arrangements
uct, but it certainly rings up a sale every time
which accompany each piano selection.
it is played.
Owing to the increased interest shown in
"But the pity of it all is that the arranging ukuleles during the summer months, it is
genius gets absolutely no credit for his work- thought this added feature, as well as the merit
manship, and the trained musician has only of the offerings embodied in the folio will serve
heard the original score, from the pages of the to keep the sales for the "Universal Dance
original sheet music edition. He is so disgusted Folio No. 9" above normal.
you can't pry his ears open long enough to
make him hear the finished record."
"Milenberg Joys," New
Melrose Bros. Number
New Berlin Dance
Folio Selling Well
Memorial Concert Plan-
ned for Victor Herbert
Leading Composers, Orchestral Leaders and
Artists to Take Part in Event at Ritz-Carlton
Hotel on May 24
Under the auspices of the American Society
of Composers, Authors and Publishers a con-
cert in memory of the late Victor Herbert will
be broadcast through station W E A F of the
American Telephone and Telegraph Co., and
connected stations, on the night of Sunday,
May 24.
Tribute to Herbert's memory will be voiced
by Augustus Thomas; Gene Buck will act as
master of ceremonies, and the program, which
is being arranged by Silvio Hein, will include
a concert of Herbert's compositions rendered
by his own former orchestra of more than a
hundred musicians.
There will also be heard in the program such
Features Western Numbers
W. A. Quincke & Co. the music publishing
house of Los Angeles, Cal., is featuring numer-
ous publications by Western composers. In a
recent trip to Portland, Ore., Mr. Quincke an-
nounced the publication of works of four Ore-
gon composers, including Dr. Emil Enna, Perry
B. Arant, Cecil Teague, organist at the Majestic
Theatre, Portland, who has written a text book
on the organ, and Miss Opal McDevitt, com-
poser of a number of songs the latest of which
is "Thine and Mine Alone," the words of which
are by Dean Collins, staff writer on the Port-
land Telegram.
Summy Go. Chartered
CHICAGO, I I I . , May 9.—The Clayton F. Summy
Co., 429 South Wabash avenue, has enlarged
the business and incorporated with a capital of
$75,000 to publish and deal in sheet music, mu-
sical instruments and accessories.
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
MAY
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
16, 1925
Mail Orders!
Century's ads do not solicit mail
orders but urge millions of readers
to go to their dealer—(THAT'S
YOU!)
In spite of this we
receive quite a num-
ber of requests, but
all of them are im-
mediately s e n t
the
CENTURY dealer.
C E N T U R Y EDITION de-
serves your hearty co-operation
because of its tremendous value.
Its wholesome profit and Its
National Advertising:.
Century Music Pub. Co.
23S Wot 40th St.
N.w York
A. V. Broadhurst Visits
Enoch American Offices
John McCprmack and other American concert
and recital artists.
In a chat with a representative of The Re-
view, Mr. Broadhurst stated that the firm would
shortly inaugurate a campaign on the orchestral
catalog of the company. This is a most com-
prehensive collection comprising orchestral
work of every description from the pens of
composers of international repute.
HARMS, INC.
6ZW.4-5TMST.,N.Y.C
DEAR ONK
YOU AND I
0 KATHARINA
LOVELY LADY
SONG OF LOVE
I'M SO ASHAMED
DOODLE DOO DOO
HAUNTING MELODY
HONEST AND TRULY
THE MIDNIGHT WALTZ
WHEN I THINK OF YOU
THE PAL THAT I LOVED
PAL OF MY CRADLE DAYS
BOCK-A-BYK-BVE-BADV DAYS
WILL YOU REMEMItKR ME
LET IT RAIN, LET IT POUR
I'LL SEE YOU IN MY DREAMS
NO WONDER (THAT I LOVE YOU)
HONEY, I'M IN LOVE WITH YOU
LET ME LINGER LONGER .IN YOUR
ARMS
Cincinnati Post Carries Story on Famous Or-
chestra Leader and the Girl Who Imperson-
ates the Heroine
CINCINNATI, O., May 8.—Paul Whiteman, who
returned East with his orchestra, gave a con-
cert here recently, which besides attracting
large crowds induced the local players to give
him some unusual publicity.
The Cincinnati Post, which is running "The
Flapper Wife" serial story and co-operating in
every way in giving publicity to the Sam Fox
Publishing Co.'s song of the same name, ex-
tended itself by hooking up Whiteman's appear-
ance with "The Flapper Wife" campaign.
There has been appearing in this city and will
later appear in others a young lady who imper-
sonates "Gloria," the heroine of "The Flapper
Wife," Whiteman and Gloria were brought to-
MY GAL DON'T LOV K ME ANY MORE
WHEN THE ONE YOU LOVE LOVES
YOU
1 HAD SOMEONE ELSE BEFORE I
HAD YOU
IF IT WASN'T FOR YOU I WOULDN'T
BK TRYING NOW
Write for Dealers' Prices
made a gift of his "Portland Rose March" to
the Rose Festival Association. His Rose
Festival waltz song, "A Rose for Every Heart,"
has a decided popular appeal, and all who have
heard it predict for it great popularity. The
melody will run all the way through "Rosaria."
Mr. Cadman will return to Portland a week be-
fore the pageant to supervise the music and
witness the final rehearsals. The music, which
was written for the pageant by Mr. Cadman,
is being published by Sherman, Clay & Co. and
Carl Fischer, Inc.
A. V. Broadhurst, head of Enoch & Sons, the
well-known English publishing house, has spent
the last two weeks at the American branch of
the company, 9 West Forty-fifth street, New
York City. Mr. Broadhurst will take a short
trip into Canada and will return to New York
in time to attend the annual gatherings of the
National Association of Sheet Music Dealers
and the Music Publishers' Association of the
United States.
The Enoch & Sons catalog has made great
strides in this country in recent years. Its
ballads are popular in all parts of the United
States, and many of them are programmed by
une Brought Mose
"C'VjSVJi-
Whiteman Linked Up
With "The Flapper Wife"
Announces Firm Will Shortly Begin Extensive
Campaign on Orchestral Material in Catalog
Sequel to
' 'Iwe Sends a little Gift of Roses'
45
New Ditson Book Price List
"Gloria" and Paul Whiteman
gether and the photograph of the pair looking
over a piano copy of "The Flapper Wife" ap-
peared in The Post accompanied by the follow-
ing story: "No, Paul Whiteman, the famous
'jazz king, 1 and Gloria, the Cincinnati girl, who
is impersonating the heroine in 'The Flapper
Wife,' were not singing when this was snapped.
Whiteman, leader of the orchestra which has
made of syncopation an art, is looking over
Gloria's song, 'The Flapper Wife.' He says it
is a very tuneful melody, as the thousands in
Cincinnati who have heard it sung or have sung
it themselves know."
The Oliver Ditson Co. has just issued in book
form a new price list on music books. This
book is indexed in alphabetical form and com-
prises the entire collection of Ditson's piano
methods, studies, collections, catechisms and
primers, dictionaries, musical literature, etc.
The book carries the net selling prices of the
publications.
ff
BEAUTIFUL, BALLAD
ARTHUR A.
Portland Gadman Festival
AMERICAS POPULAR
BALLAD SUCCESSES
ROSES OF PICARDY
THtWORLDISWAHING^SUNRISt
INTHE GARDEN OFTD-MORROW
THE SONG OF SONGS
LOVE'S FIRST KISS
SMILETHRU YOUR TEARS
IF WINTER COMES
CHAPPELL-HARMS.INC
*•
185 MADISON AVE
NEW YORK
^
PORTLAND, ORE., May 10. — Charles Wakcfield
Cadman, American composer, spent several
days in Portland the latter part of April con-
ferring with the directors of the Portland Rose
Festival. June 9 to 15 are the Festival dates,
at which time a stupendous pageant is to be
staged, in which 10,000 persons will take part,
with all Cadman music to be used, many of
the numbers having been composed by Mr.
Cadman for the occasion. A chorus of over
2,000 voices is at present rehearsing under the
direction of Montgomery Lynch. Mr. Cadman
"On the Breast of the
Silvery Yellowstone Lake"
Fox-trot Ballad
Colored picture of Yellowstone Lake on title page. Arranged
by Harry Alford who hai arranged to many "hits."
GOOD MARGIN FOR PROFIT
M. CHRISTIANSEN, PublUher
Wise River. Mont.
M M R K S SONS NEWYOIJ

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