Music Trade Review

Issue: 1927 Vol. 84 N. 5

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
42
The Music Trade Review
JANUARY 29, 1927
The Technical and Supply Department—(Continued from page 41)
local veneer manufacturers in this section. Ac- that the leading foresters and conservationists
Nicaragua Revolution
cording to J. C. Dornan, of the Mengel Co., this will be present and address the meeting. Cabi-
Injures Mahogany Supply city, activities of the company in Nicaragua net members, scientists, educators and forest ad-
State Department Called Upon to Intervene in
Order That Shipments May Come Through
LOUISVILLE, KY., January 22.—The fear that the
supply of mahogany available to the United
States from Nicaragua may be threatened by
the present revolution and unstable political sit-
uation there lias boen expressed by a number of
DavidH.SchmidtCo.
Piano Hammers
of Quality
have been seriously hampered of late. "Since
the uprising in Nicaragua," Mr. Dornan said,
"the rebels have plundered the logging camps
and have greatly interfered with our work. They
have drafted the native laborers into the rebel
service, confiscated food supplies and killed for
their own use most of the livestock kept in the
camps."
Senator Frederic M. Sackett, at the company's
request, called at the State Department in
Washington and asked that the United States
intervene in the company's behalf. A Wash-
ington dispatch said that the State Department
had promised to render whatever assistance it
could.
ministrators will be present and there will be
authoritative addresses on forestry questions.
Plans have been made to have American For-
estry Week observed by the whole North
American continent, including closer co-opera-
tion with Canada, and Mexico, which has just
adopted a forest code, will be asked to join, so
that all three countries will adopt the same
time. The committee recommended April 24
to 30 as American Forest Week for 1927 to at-
tract public interest.
Consult the Universal Want D'rectory of
The Review. In it advertisements are inserted
free of charge for men who desire positions.
Forestry Ass'n Meeting
Leather Specially
Tanned for Player
Pianos and Organs
Also Chamois
Sheepskins, Indias
and Skivers
January 22.—Plans arc shap-
ing up for the annual meeting of the American
Forestry Association to be held here on Janu-
ary 28 and 29. Although the details of the pro-
gram have not been worked out, it is known
NEW HAVEN, CONN.,
POUGHKEEPSIE
NEW YORK
A Specialty of
WESSELL, NICKEL & GROSS
Pneumatic and
Pouch Skin Leather*
MANUFACTURERS OF
T.L.LUTKINSLu
P I A N O A l X ACTIONS
4 0 SPRUCE ST.. NEW YORK.N.Y.
VYESSElL.KiCKEL^QROSSi
PHILIP W. OETTING & SON, Inc.
HIGHEST GRADE
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OFFICE
457 WEST FORTY-FIFTH ST.
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Tenth Avenue and West Forty-Sixth Street
NEW YORK
WEICKERT
Hammer and Damper Felts
JULIUS BRECKWOLDT & SON, Inc.,
Worcester Wind Motor Co.
n. Y.
Manvfactvrers of Somding Boards, Bars, Backs, Bridges, Mandolin and Gaitar Tops, Etc.
WOKGE8TBK, MASS.
Makers of Absolutely Satisfactory
WIND MOTORS for PLAYER PIANOS
213 East SOLE
19th AGENTS
Street, FOR
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Alao all kind* of Pneumatics and Supplies
REWINDS — PUMPS
ELECTRIC-PIANO-HARDWARE
Consult the Universal Want Directory of
The Review. In it advertisements are inserted
free of charge for men who desire positions.
Special Equipment forCoinOperatedlnttrumentt
Monarch Tool & Mfg. Co.
120 Opera Place
Cincinnati, O.
F. RAMACCI0TT1, Inc. PIANO ACTION MACHINERY
Designers and Builders of
PIANO BASS STRINGS
Special Machines for Special Purposes
421-423 W. 28th St. near Ninth A«e.
NEW YORK
THE A. H. NILSON MACHINE CO.
BRIDGEPORT
CONN.
THE OHIO VENEER
COMPANY
Quality Selections in
Foreign and Domestic Veneers
and
Hardwood Lumber
Jtl AMD M AN UfACT U««»i
Mills and Main Ofict:
Cincinnati, Ohio
0. S. KELLY CO.
PIANO
PLATES
The Highest Grade of Workmanship
Foundries: SPRINGFIELD, OHIO
Continuous Hinges
Service
Grand Hinges
Price
in
Pedals and Rods
For Quality
Bearing Bars
Reliability
Casters, etc., etc.
CHAS. RAMSEY
CORP.
KINGSTON, N. Y.
Eastern Ofiet: 405 Lexington
Are., at 42d St., New York
FAIRBANKS
PIANO
PL A TES
A QUALITY PRODUCT
THE FAIRBANKS CO
T H E C 0 M S T 0 C K , C H E N E Y & CO.
SPRINGFIELD, O.
IV0RYT0N C0NN
-
Cuttara sine* 1834.
MANUFACTURERS OF GRAND KEYS, ACTIONS AND HAMMERS, UPRIGHT KEYS,
ACTIONS AND HAMMERS, PIPE ORGAN KEYS, PIANOFORTE IVORY FOR THE TRADE
-
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
IN THE WORLD OF MUSIC PUBLISHING
Conducted By V. D. Walsh
J. Fischer & Bro. Has
Published "King's Henchman"
New Opera by Deems Taylor to Have Pre-
miere at Metropolitan, February 17, in That
Publisher's Catalog
ropolitan had put me in. She responded with a
scenario. After that was approved she sent me
the first act.
"Writing the score is just as simple. All you
have to do to write music is to remember a
tune that's never been written.''
Miss Millay (Mrs. Eugen Jan Boissevain) be
came ill while working on the book and there
was some delay, but the opera was completed
in about a year. Her work is described as metric
prose, with here and there blank and rhymed
verse. J. Fischer & Bro. will publish the vocal
score.
Written by Americans but without an Ameri-
can locale, the coming premiere of "The King's
Henchman," by the Metropolitan Opera Com-
pany, on February 17, has received more ad-
vance publicity than any new production in
years. There are several reasons for this, of
course, the most important being the fact that Flammer to Publish
the score is by Deems Taylor, one of America's
Swanson Film Song
outstanding composers, and the libretto by
Edna St. Vincent Millay.
In an interview with the Associated Press, "The Love Waltz," by Jacquet and Brennan,
to Be Used With New Photoplay, "The Love
Mr. Taylor recently said: "No one but an
of Sunya"
American could have written it, whether it is
good, bad or indifferent. The principals selected
Harold Flammer, Inc., has just completed
for the premiere will be, in the majority, Anglo-
Saxons. Lawrence Tibbets, American; Edward negotiations for a theme melody inspired by
Johnson, Canadian, and Florence Easton, an Gloria Swanson entitled "The Love Waltz,"
English woman will sing the three chief roles."
"The King's Henchman" will be the twelfth
American piece produced at the Metropolitan
under Gatti-Casazza's directorship. Only one of
these is in the repertory at present. It is John
Alden Carpenter's "Skyscrapers," a one-act bal-
let. In 1910 Gatti-Casazza produced "Pipe of
Desire," poem by George Edwards Barton and
score by F. S. 'Converse. It had two perfor-
mances. Next came "Mona," in 1912. This
opera, with score by Professor H. W. Parker, of
Yale, and book by Brian Hooker, won for its
authors a $10,000 prize offered for the best
American opera. It had four performances.
Followed Walter Damrosch's "Cyrano," with Gloria Swanson, H. M. Jacquet and Harold
book by W. J. Henderson. It was withdrawn
Flammer
after being presented five times. Victor Her-
bert's "Madeleine" was presented four times, in composed by H. Maurice Jacquet. The lyric is
1914. "The Canterbury Pilgrims," book by Percy by J. Keirn Brennan.
"The Love Waltz" will be used as a musical
MacKaye and score by Reginald de Koven, had
six performances in 1917. "Dance in Place theme for Miss Swanson's new photoplay, "The
Congo," H. I-". Gilbert's pantomime ballet, was Love of Sunya," which is the screen version of
presented four times in 1918, the same year'that the drama, "Eyes of Youth," in which Marjorie
Charles Wakefield Cadman's "Shanewis" had Rambeau achieved success several years ago.
The title page will contain one of Gloria
five performances. In 1919 "The Legend,"
Swanson's
latest photographs, and an unusual
score by J. Breil and book by Jacques Bryne,
and John A. Hugo's "The Temple Dancer" were program of co-operation with the music trade,
photoplay exhibitors and tttfe producers has
each presented three times.
been arranged. Copies are to be forwarded to
In 1920 "Cleopatra's Night," by Herbert Had
the trade shortly.
ley, had four performances.
Taylor Summons Miss Millay
Despite these efforts the cry of favoritism for Many Artists Using
foreign operas continued. ^ To silence this the
"A Brown Bird Singing"
Metropolitan summoned Deems Taylor, then
music critic of the New York World, and com-
Chappell-Harms Number in Programs of Allen
rnissior ed him to write an American opera.
McQuhae, Johnj McCormack, Reinald Werren-
The Metropolitan was controlled in its selec-
rath and Othefjs v
tion by Taylor's "Through the Looking Glass,"
suite and his symphonic poem "Jurgen," both
Chappell-Hariris, Inc., has a long list of
performed by symphony orchestras here.
"For me, writing the libretto was simple," prominent artists singing Haydn Wood's "A
Taylor said. "All I did was drop a note to Miss Brown Bird Singing." Among these are Alien
Millay, telling her what a predicament the Met- McQuhae, John McCormack, Ecinald -Werren-
rath, Colin O'More, and others.
• •
The same catalog has two popular successes
which coincidentally were written by women
writers. "In the Garden of To-morrow," by
Jessie L. Deppen, and "I Found You," by Lillian
Rosedale Goodman, composer, of "Cherie, I
Love You." Both of these numbers are proving
unusually successful, and probably set a new
precedent by having two successes in one cata-
log in a single season contributed by women
writers.
Consult the Universal Want Directory of
The Review.
43
SONGS THAT SELL
Bine 8kies (New) (Irving Berlin)
Because 1 Love You (living Berlin)
(I'm Tellin' the Birds—Tellin' the Bees)
How I Love Y'ou
Put Your Arm* Where They Belong
•Ins) ;• Little Longer (Irving Berlin)
I Never See Maggie Alone
Here or There as Long as I'm With You
My Baby Knows How
How Many Times (Irving Berlin)
Rags
Some Day
I'm on My Way Home (Irving Berlin)
When the Red. Red Robin Comes Bob. Bob,
Bobbin' Along
Wait'll We're Married
Carolina Mine
That's What I Call a Pal
Song of Shanghai
Yankee Rose
I Never Knew What the Moonlight Could Do
That's a Good Girl (Irving Berlin)
At Peace With the World
Oh! How She Could Play a Ikulele
Susie's Feller
\\ hen I'm in Your Arms
Klsie Shultz-en-Hcim
So Will I
I'd Climb the Highettt Mountain (If I Knew
I'd Find You)
I'd Love to Meet That Old Sweetheart of
Mine
Remember
Always
Let's Make l"p
In the Middle of the Night
Itoses Remind Me of You
Tonight's My Night With Baby
Pretty Cinderella






BOOKS THAT SELL
X

New Universal Dance Folio No. 12
Special Edition for 1027
Petemon'n Ikulele Method
World's Favorite Songs
Tiddle De 1 km
Strum It With Crumlt
Irving Berlin's Song Gems
From the Musical Comedy Sensation
"THE COCOANUTS"
Tiiig-uling the Bell'll Ring
Why Do You Want to Know Why?
Florida By the Sea
The Monkey Doodle Doo
Lucky Boy
We Should Care
IRVING BERLIN, Inc.
1607 Broadway, New York
New Curtis, Inc., Song
L. 15. Curtis, Inc., 1595 Broadway, New York
City, publisher of "Drifting and Dreaming,"
"San,' and other successes, recently introduced
a new song called "Roses for Remembrance."
Loyal B. Curtis, head of the above form, intro-
duced this offering several weeks ago and since
that time it has shown indications of being as
popular, if not more popular, than anything this
company has heretofore presented. The melody
is by Loyal B. Curtis and the lyric by Gus Kahn,
a combination that assures it a wide reception.

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