Music Trade Review

Issue: 1927 Vol. 85 N. 12

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
IN THE WORLD OF MUSIC PUBLISHING
Using the Window Display to Build
Volume in the Sales of Sheet Music
Detroit Music Merchant Unites Feist Songs and Artists Who Sing or Play Them in At-
tractive and Ingenious Window Display That Makes Sales
"111 7"ITH arrival of Fall and the return of the
The task of the music dealer is to advertise
* people to its homes and the normal course himself and music at the same time in order
of things, the opportunities of the music dealer
to be remembered by his musical public of
for obtaining publicity for his sheet music
previous seasons. The local press does this
counter are definitely increased. The Sum- nicely, of course, but the show window does
it more easily and effectively. In the newspaper
the dealer is limited to the size of the space
and the character of the ideas. In his own
store window he has the freedom of his ideas
and all the space he wants and it is there even
without the asking.
There are window displays and window dis-
plays, some which are admired chiefly by their
designers and others which really attract and
cause interested comment among the passers-
by gathering in front of the store. The mere
displaying of wares is good enough for a ribbon
store or a delicatessen shop, but in obtaining
publicity for such a line as music some sort
of an idea must be expressed. This will con-
stitute an average window display and its
selling power will depend entirely on the im-
portance and handling of the idea or motif.
The most effective windows, however, are those
which achieve not only an original idea, but a
dynamic one, expressing motion or action before
the passersby.
A most ingenious window, built around song
hits, was used recently in the show window
ot an S. S. Kresge Co. store in Detroit. The
Featuring Feist Songs
display, as shown in the accompanying photo-
trier's activity in outdoor sports on the part graph, embodies a highly original idea and has
of both the older and younger generations is a dynamic appeal. It was planned by Bob
supplanted by the more orderly business pur- Miller, Detroit manager for Leo Feist, Inc.,
suits and school, and music again comes into and typified a baseball game in which ten late
its own as a means of diversion.
MORE PROFIT \ l DEALER
SONGS
OUR NEW RETAIL PRICE OF
THAT HIT THE MARK!
TWENTY CENTS PER COPY
" Shows a Profit of
Nearly 2 0 0 % !
OUR LINE GROWS BETTER AND SELLS
BETTER EACH YEAR!
SEND IN YOUR ORDER FOR 50 NEW
Songs that Sell
RUSSIAN LULLABY
WHAT DOES IT MATTER?
ME AND MY SHADOW
BLUE SKIES
IS IT POSSIBLE?
WHAT DO WE DO ON A DEW
DEW DEWY DAY?
SWEET YVETTE
HAVANA
MISS ANNABELLE LEE
IT'S A MILLION TO ONE YOU'RE
IN LOVE
ARE YOU LONESOME TONIGHT?
SOMEBODY AND ME
PRETTY LITTLE BOM BOM
FROM BOMBAY
WHERE THE WILD, WILD
FLOWERS GROW
ROSY CHEEKS
SWEET MARIE
LOVE AND KISSES
C'EST VOUS
YANKEE ROSE
MY SUNDAY GIRL
PUT YOUR ARMS WHERE THEY
BELONG
MY IDEA OF HEAVEN
THAT'S MY HAP, HAP HAPPI-
NESS
BOOKS THAT SELL
NEW UNIVERSAL DANCE FOLIO
No. 13
IRVING BERLIN SAXOPHONE
No. 1
PAUL ASH NOVELTY PIANO
FOLIO
Here Am I—
BROKEN HEARTED
Mix the Lot—What Have You Got?
MAGNOLIA
AL JOLSON SONG HIT FOLIO
SO BLUE
PETERSON'S UKULELE METHOD
IT ALL DEPENDS ON YOU
WORLD'S FAVORITE SONGS
BABY FEET GO FITTER PATTER
TIDDLE DE UKES
STRUMIT WITH CRUMIT
(Comic Ukulele Song Book)
Does She Love Me?
POSITIVELY—ABSOLUTELY 1
I'LL BE LONELY
SOUTH WIND
WHO'S THAT KNOCKIN' AT MY DOOR?
SWEETHEART MEMORIES
MY HAWAIIAN SONG OF LOVE
8one Hits from the Collegiate Musical
Comedy
''GOOD
NEWS 1 '
IRVING BERLIN I,,,
1607 Broadway New York City
GOOD NEWS
THE VAR8ITY DRAG
M'OKY IN LOVE
THE BEST THINGS IN LIFE ARE FREE
HAPPY DAYS
JUST IMAGINE
BIG
SELLERS
IN
FOLIO
SAXOPHOLIO
J'^NOit BANJO FOLIO
(Each containing: fifteen great songs)
9KINLEY

®ftaraERSON,M;
tbliskcrs
MUSIC CO.CZJ
CHICAGO
m HCNKUON BUIUXtft
35
7 4 5 3CVINTH AVCNUC HSV VOUK
Feist song hits and the leading local orchestra
leaders and organists figured prominently.
A miniature baseball diamond stood in the
foreground, on which the Detroit musicians
were represented by dolls in baseball regalia.
Each was tagged by name, as well as the sub-
stitutes sitting on the sidelines. A set of box
scores, containing the names of all the players
and also the "batting average" of the various
Feist songs, was given a prominent position.
The background of the set was papered ex-
clusively with the sheet music of Feist numbers.
{Continued on page 38)
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
36
The Music Trade Review
SEPTEMBER 17, 1927
"Good News" Hits
Featured by Dealers
Philadelphia Engagement Leads to Wide Link-
up—New York Premiere Wins Much Critical
Praise
answerTtMS one
Some ueteran mus/c/ans can recoyn/p?
a/most any Popu/ar composer6(/ A/s
style and rAythm— Can, you te//u/Ao
wrote
T/f/S N£IV COPYfi/Gf/T£D Nl/MB£fi ?
t
H
DOUBLE YOUR MONEY
NO MATTER What You SeU — This Is a 1OO% PROPOSITION!
For Any Piano Dealer, Record Store or Music Shop
A SURE-FIRE CAN'T-MISS MONEYMAKER
A MILE AHEAD OF EVERYTHING AND EVERYBODY
The Biggest
Revelation
the
Music Industry
Has
Ever Had!
Nearly
1,000
Displays
Already
Contracted
For!
Today, when miles are measured in seconds—pushing • button brings instantly two-thirds of our needs—the turning of • dial
bring! muiit seemingly Iron nowhere—SPEED ia everything.
ART SHEFTE, muter musician, Ka» made it possible to learn to play popular music in • few months instead of a few years.
A book for everything—from the beginning of music to the last "Z" in JAZZ: HOT BREAKS — BLUE BREAKS —
JAZZ BREAKS — KEYBOARD HARMONY — JAZZ BASS — etc.
9 2 2 , 0 0 0 . 0 0 Being Spent in Advertising in the Mediums Mentioned 3elowt«
Saturday Evening Post
Liberty
Etude
Musical Leader
Musical Courier
Musical A o m i n
Music Nnra
-
Musical Observer
Music and Musicians
Pacific Coast Musical Review
Musical Advance
Pacific Coast Musician
Musical Digest
The Metronome
Billboard
International Musician
Jacobs Orchestra Monthly
Jacobs Band Monthly
Melody
Musical Enterprise
§
I i
Sheet music dealers in Philadelphia, hearing
the advance reports of the popularity of the
musical production "Good News," when that
show opened in Atlantic City last month pro-
ceeded to load their guns and lay in wait for
it to come to the Quaker City. The prospect
of having a short run of a real all-star musical
comedy in town before the play struck Broad-
way whetted the appetites of most of the local
Wire* Phone or Write for
FORSTER
.MUSIC PUBLISHER. INC.
tia SOUTH w Our Special Proposition!
Display of "Good News" Hits
trade, and when "Good News" opened in the
Chestnut Street Opera House most of the Phila-
delphia music dealers were equipped with full
shelves of the leading song hits from the pro-
duction.
The J. G. McCrory Co. store, No. 63, went
a step further and created a splendid window
display of the sheet music of the production,
published by De Sylva, Brown & Henderson,
Inc., New York. The display was nicely bal-
anced with advance phonograph recordings and
photographs of the principals and chorus of
"Good News" worked into a prominent place
in the window. A large stock of the hit songs
of "Good News" was required to meet the de-
mand from this display, as nearly every pur-
chaser bought five or six of the leading num-
bers.
After its short stay in Philadelphia "Good
News" opened auspiciously at Chanin's Forty-
sixth Street Theatre in New York, and re-
ceived as favorable reviews from the theatrical
critics of the leading papers as has any musical
comedy in recent years. There was not one
who did not praise the tunes of the show,
which were composed by B. G. De Sylva, Lou
Brown and Ray Henderson of the music pub-
lishing firm bearing their names. The indica-
tions are a big hit.
Even the somewhat sedate Percy Hammond,
reviewing the production in the Herald-Tribune
the day following the opening, spread himself
as follows: "The music was canny, the nonsense
clean and the romance as rational as the laws
of extravaganza will allow. No fewer than
four song hits were added to the national an-
thems in the course of the night, breaking
many of the records of minstrelsy. These hits,
according to the farsighted first-night prophets,
were a serenade, 'The Best Things in Life'; a
loud, black-bottom dance, 'The Varsity Drag'; a
dancing ballad, 'Lucky in Love,' and a good
imitation of the 'Hallelujah' song, entitled
'Good News.' "

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