Music Trade Review

Issue: 1928 Vol. 86 N. 14

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
IN THE WORLD OF MUSIC PUBLISHING
Conducted by Fred B. Diehl
"Lift Ev'ry Voice and
Sing" Praised by Wise
Prominent Rabbi Pays Tribute to James Wel-
don Johnson's Anthem Published by Marks
Music Co.
An interesting letter from Rabbi Stephen S.
Wise, of New York, was received recently by
James Weldon Johnson, secretary of the Na-
tional Association for the Advancement of
Colored People, the communication being in
praise of Mr. Johnson's composition, "Lift
F.v'ry Voice and Sing." This selection, pub-
lished by the Ed. B. Marks Music Co., New
York, has often been called the official Negro
national anthem, and has been a steady standard
seller since it was published a few years ago
Rabbi Wise's letter, which was forwarded
by the author to the Marks firm, read as
follows:
"Your national anthem, text and music alike,
is the noblest anthem I have ever heard. It is
a great upwelling of prayer from the soul of a
race long wronged, but with faith unbroken. I
wish that 'Lift Ev'ry Voice and Sing' might be
substituted for some of the purely martial and
unspiritual so-called national anthems which are
sung by the people. It is a rare combination
to have a text as fine as this set with great
beauty to song. I have never been more touched
by a song. It is a noble text. There is a strong
Old Testament turn to it. It is sturdy and
ES-X2B
Announcement
We Are Now the Exclusive
Publishers of
Harold Dixon's Four
Fast Selling Folios
"Rain" Featured in Los
Angeles Store Window
Triangle March Sales
Set Record Volume
Retail Price 5Oc
Regular Dealers' Discounts

799 Seventh Avenue. New York
Los ANGELES, CAL., March 30.—An effective
show window display of the fox-trot, "Rain,"
was used by Johnston's Harmony Shoppe of
Joe Davis, head of the Triangle Music Co.,
New York, stated this week that the firm's sheet
music sales for March exceeded by far the total
sales for any previous month since he has been
in business. This new record volume was due
in part to the business trip taken by Mr. Davis
through the Middle West early in the month,
on which he made many valuable new connec-
tions. The leading sheet music sellers in the
Triangle catalog now include "My Blue Ridge
Mountain Home," "You'd Rather Forget,"
"Little Marion Parker," "Now I Won't Be Blue,"
"My Carolina Rose," "A Good Man Is Hard to
Find," "In My Sweetheart's Arms" and Rube
Bloom's piano solo, "Serenata."
Special "Romona" Blank
A special order blank on the waltz hit, "Ro-
mona," was sent out to the trade recently by
I.eo Feist, Inc., New York, announcing a
powerful radio plug for the song by Paul
Whiteman and his orchestra on Thursday eve-
ning, March 29, in connection with the Dodge
Bros, coast-to-coast broadcast. Many dealers
have followed the "tip" and have stocked up
with sheet copies of "Romona," which is dupli-
cating the earlier success of "In a Little Span-
ish Town," by the same writers. The song is
used as the musical theme of the photoplay of
the same name, featuring Dolores Del Rio, who
will sing "Romona," with the Whiteman orches-
tra accompanying in the radio program.
Music Men Meet
SONGS THE PEOPLE SING
MUSIC THE PEOPLE PLAY
FOLK SONGS FOLK SING
PIANO PIECES CHILDREN PLAY
ROBBINS Music CORPORATION
bracing, and what a national anthem should be
—a collective prayer, and the music is mag-
nificent. I imagine, without knowing, that it
derives from the treasury of the 'spirituals.' I
cannot think at this moment of any national Robbins Music Corp. Fox-Trot Featured by
anthem that I like as well."
Johnston's Harmony Shoppe in That City
The regular meeting of the Association of
Music Men, a New York trade body, was held
on Tuesday evening, March 27. It was decided
to hold the annual outing of the association on
Saturday, June 30, at the Elks' Club, Staten
Island, the charge for tickets being $3. The
entertainment committee is working up some
specialties for this occasion, and will announce
final details at a later date, but every one at-
tending will have a good time.
Featuring "Rain"
this city recently. Miss Kate Johnston, proprie-
tor, knowing the history of this song which lit-
erally pulled itself into the big seller class after
more than a year's life on the market, deter-
mined to tie up with the appearance of Leo
Forbstein and his orchestra at the Million Dol-
lar Theatre. The number, which is published
by the Robbins Music Corp., is now growing in
demand here daily. A wholly accidental visit to
the Johnston store by Bernard Frager, traveling
representative for the Robbins house, during
the period of the display was a mutually in-
teresting experience, Mr. Prager seeing the
window at work making sales.
New Feist Agents Are
Appointed in Germany
On and after April 1 the Leo Feist, Inc.,
catalog will be exclusively represented in Ger-
many by Francis, Day & Hunter, G. m. b. H.,
Leipziger Strasse 37, Berlin. This is a German
company recently formed, and it is a branch of
Francis, Day & Hunter, Ltd., of London, and
Publications Francis-Day, of Paris. In the
future all orders for the Feist catalog emanat-
ing from Germany will be handled by the new
company, and also performers traveling in Ger-
many can secure the latest Feist songs through
this firm.
JUST WHISPER
BOBBY SHOEMAKER'S
Latest Melodic Fox-trot
McKINLEY MUSIC
f
20 A Qopy'to Dealers^ 7?\ Copy
McKINLEY MUSIC CO.
<^> CHICAGO,ILL.
20
DREAM
HOURS
NICK CARTER'S
Big Waltz Succeu
7 4 3 SEVENTH AVE
*JUST GDPO SONGS fl
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
APRIL 7, 1928
Leslie Stuart, Well-
Known Composer, Dies
Writer of "Floradora" and "Tipperary" Dies at
Age of Sixty-four in London
Leslie Stuart, British composer, who wrote
"Floradora," "On the Road to Tipperary," and
many other popular works, died last week at
his daughter's home in Richmond, near London,
at the age of sixty-four. Mr. Stuart spent con-
siderable time in the United States at various
periods, and in 1917 wrote the music for the
"Midnight Frolic." He is said to have realized
$100,000 from "Floradora," and net earnings of
about $17,000 from each of the following oper-
ettas: "The Silver Slipper," "The School Girl,"
"The Belle of Mayfair," "Havana," "Peggy" and
"The Slim Princess." Among more than a
score of popular songs written by Mr. Stuart
were "Louisiana Lou," one of his first com-
positions, sung with great success by Ellaline
Terriss in the "Shop Girl"; "Soldiers of the
Queen," "The Little Octoroon," "My Little
Black Pearl," and many others.
New Releases Announced
by Oliver Ditson Go.
Include Glenn Glee Club Book for Boys and
Number of Part Songs for Men, Women and
Mixed Voices
Among the recent releases of the Oliver Dit-
son Co., Boston, is the Glenn Glee Club Book
for Boys, which is edited by Mabelle Glenn and
Virginia French. Miss Glenn is the director of
the department of music of the public schools
in Kansas City, Mo. This collection of fifty
songs comprises three sections—miscellaneous
songs, folk music and sacred songs. The Dit-
son firm has also released an edition of about
twenty part songs for men and women's voices
and mixed voices. The part songs include such
numbers as the following: "Viking Song," by S.
Coleridge-Taylor; "Still as the Night," by Carl
Bohm, with text in English; "The Rose Stood
Bathed in Dew," by Robert Schumann; "The
Sacrifice of the Aryan Rose," by Charles Wake-
field Cadman; "Mother," by E. S. Hosmer, ar-
ranged by C. F. Manney especially for "Moth-
er's Day" ceremonies; "At Father's Door,"
traditional Russian melody transcribed by M.
Moussprgsky and others.
De Sylva, Brown & Hender-
son Issue Three New Folios
De Sylva, Brown & Henderson, Inc., New
York, have met with such success with their
dance folios that they are releasing three new
folios for piano, tenor banjo and saxophone
respectively. The second edition of the Su-
preme Dance Folio contains such songs as
"Among My Souvenirs," "Without You, Sweet-
heart," "Tin Pan Parade," "One More Night,"
and other late hits from the De Sylva, Brown
& Henderson catalog. The tenor banjo folio
No. 3 also contains. "Among My Souvenirs,"
and other popular hits, as does Saxopholio No.
2. In view of the record of "Souvenirs" as a
big seller nationally, the publishers are con-
fident that the three new folios will enjoy a
similar demand..
House Committee Reports
New Copyright Bill
D. C, March 28.—The House
Committee on Patents, meeting yesterday,
voted a favorable report on the divisible copy-
right bill (H. R. 8913) designed to amend the
copyright act to permit separate disposal of
the various rights arising under a copyright. In
connection with the separation of the rights and
WASHINGTON,
21
The Music Trade Review
manner of their disposal the section of the bill
states: "The author, or other owner of any
copyright secured under this act or of any copy-
right heretofore secured under any previous
Act of the United States, may (to the extent
of his interest therein), by a written instrument
signed by him or by his agent duly authorized
for such purpose by power of attorney duly
acknowledged and executed after this act goes
into effect, assign, mortgage, license, or other-
wise dispose of the entire copyright or any
right or rights comprised therein, either wholly
or separately, either generally or subject to
limitations, for the entire term of such copy-
right or for a limited time, or for a specified
territory or territories, and he may bequeath
the same by will."
Robbins Campaign on
Fox-Trot "Speedy Boy"
Theme Song of Latest Harold Lloyd Film
Gaining Popularity as Widely Played Dance
Number
A many-sided campaign on the fox-trot,
"Speedy Boy," is being conducted by the Rob-
bins Music Corp., New York, publisher of the
number, which is showing up big as a dance
success with the large Eastern orchestras. This
number, which is the theme song of the new
Harold Lloyd comedy picture, "Speedy," gives
every indication of surpassing the success of
"Freshie," published by the Robbins firm about
two years ago as the theme for Harold Lloyd's
picture, "The Freshman."
The campaign on the number includes the
supplying of special organ copies, symphonic
orchestra arrangements, dance orchestrations
and quartet arrangements to the musical direc-
tors of several thousand large motion picture
houses in cities where the picture, "Speedy," is
to be shown. Most of the first-run houses
throughout the country have arranged to fea-
ture "Speedy Boy" in their prologues to com-
plete the tie-up. Music dealers in various sec-
tions are securing "stills" of the picture from
the theatre owners to use in window displays
of the song.
You CAN'T GO WRONG
WITH A N Y FEIST'SONG,
MY OHIO HOME."
THERE MUST BE
SILVER. LINING"
SHADY T R E E * ;
'BABY YOUR MOTHER"
'CHANGES"
IF I CANT HAVE YOU"
/Uu HEAD OVER HEELS J5/
KISS AND MAKE UP"
MY BLUE HEAVEN"
THAT MELODY OF LOVE"
U
THE SUNRISE
'WHAT'LL YOU DO?
YOU'RE WITH
SOMEBODV ELSE
Feist to Hold Walter
Donaldson Week April 9
In view of the popularity of six of Walter
Donaldson's songs at the present time, Leo
Feist, Inc., New York, his publisher, has an-
nounced a special campaign on these numbers
during the week of April 9, which will be
known as Walter Donaldson Week. The six
numbers, composed by Walter Donaldson, in
the current Feist popular catalog are "My Ohio
Home," "There Must Be a Silver Lining,"
"Changes," "What Are You Waiting For,
Mary?" "If I Can't Have You" and "A Shady
Tree."
The arrangements for the campaign on these
songs will include Donaldson hours by broad-
casting stations and many of the composer's
song hits, both past and present, will be fea-
tured in various parts of the country by orches-
tra leaders, organists, vaudeville artists and
other entertainers. Mr. Donaldson's pen has
been a prolific one in recent years, having writ-
ten such songs as "Mammy," "My Blue
Heaven," "At Sundown," "My Buddy," "Sam,
the Old Accordion Man" and many other popu-
ln.' compositions.
tOQUETTE*
'INDIAN CRADLE SONG
V A L E BLUES"
YOU PLAYED .
THE O R G A N ' '
'DOLOR.ES"
*THERE OUGHT TO BE
/,
1
A LAW AGAINST THAT/
THAT'S MY MAMMY'
*WAITI(\)'FOR KATY"
Chandler-Ebel Moves
The Chandler-Ebel Music Co., one of the
largest exclusive sheet music stores in Brook-
lyn, has just moved from 222 Livingston street
to new quarters at 218 Livingston street. The
firm was located at the former address for the
past twenty-three years.
LEO. FEIST, INC
231
NEW
W.4O T H ST.,
YORK, N.Y.

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