Presto

Issue: 1922 1899

SHEET MUSIC TRADE
tested, and it is to be determined if this
"strangle hold" shall be allowed to endure.
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Three separate complaints have been filed
by
powerful interests. One with the U. S.
THE COMBINED CIRCULATION
Attorney-General,
one with the Department of
OF PRESTO (EST. 1884), AND MUS-
Justice,
and
one
with
the Federal Trades Com-
ICAL TIMES (EST. 1881), ISBYFAR
mission.
THE LARGEST IN THE FIELD OF
And this scribe, who has seen this coming,
THE MUSIC TRADE. COMBINA-
TION RATES OF SPECIAL AT- now wishes to state that either one of two
TRACTIVENESS FOR ADVERTIS- things is going to happen in the music
ING SPACE IN BOTH PAPERS business :
FIRST—The present strangle hold is to be
WILL BE MADE TO MUSIC PUB-
busted wide open, and things are going to be
LISHERS.
arranged so that there will never be another
This department is designed to advance the sales one. Or—
of sheet mnsic, and give any current information in
SECOND—The antis will call to their aid
the Sheet Music Trade.
all
those who are not within the folds of the
This publication believes that Sheet Music will
pay the dealer, just as any other commodity pays present association, and there will be the
those who merchandise it properly.
greatest sheet music war in the history of the
The conductor of this department will review
any numbers that are sent in for the purpose. It is business.
Those who are making this fight are doing
not the intent to criticise, but to review these offer-
ings, giving particular information of the theme and
so on a dollar-and-cents platform. They are
a description of the musical setting of the number
not fighting for the public, nor for the small
discussed.
publisher.
But the public and the small pub-
Address all communications to Conductor Sheet
Music Dept, Presto, 407 S. Dearborn, Chicago, 111.
lisher, or the big publisher who is not in the
association, can watch with interest while
strong hands make the fight that will be of
the most importance to them.
The principle involved in this grand slam is
T. ROGERS LYONS.
well stated by the antis as follows,:
Presto Sheet Music Department has made
it. plain that this department is not in sym-
pathy with the "Strangle Hold" that the pop-
publishers seem to think that they must have
in one way or another, on the sheet music
business.
A Song of the better class. Very pretty
In 1913 this department carried a headline
melody. Will go well anywhere. One
indicating that it was the exponent of THE
of the kind that never grows old.
OPEN DOOR, wherein all could enter and
Orchestrations
now ready
25c
display their wares and bid for public patron-
age. Following this dictum we did not ap-
WM. STERN, Publisher
prove of the strangle hold that the. popular
6219 MAY ST.
CHICAGO, ILL.
American Popular Music Bulletin Service.
publishers had on the singers of the stage.
In those days it was hard to discover whether
this hold was a trust, or whether each one
took his proportion of the whole in the grand
Oriental Fox-trot Ballad,
scramble for the privilege of paying singers
as Catchy as the Flu.
more money to sing certain songs than they
Send for professional copy:
got in their pay envelopes for the act.
Orchestration, 25c.
Later it developed that most of the large
sheet music counters, seemingly operated by
Brinsmade, N. D.
the stores which contained them, were in fact
publisher-owned and operated.
Now we have with us the "Association,"
which at present is anxious to notify all and
JUST OUT!
sundry that they have the sheet music busi-
"Mother, Dear, I'm Sad and Lonely,"
ness in the hollow of their hand, and are ex-
ceedingly anxious to club all into line with the
A New Waltz Song; add this to your Xmas
mandates of its "association."
list. Composed and published by
Of course there have been thousands of
MAY BELL ANDREWS
howls that this was so. There have been many
ELDRED
(McKean Co.)
PENNA.
law-suits. But now it seems that this is to be
TO PUBLISHERS
THAT STRANGLE HOLD
"THE LOVE YOU
FIRST GAVE ME"
TANA
Stewart & Aarrestad Pub. Co.
RINTERS
- 9est
Music Printers
ANY PUBLISHER
\
OUR REFERENCE ^
BAYNER DALHEIM 8 Co!
23
PRESTO
December 16, 1922.
X Estimates
^
'
- WORK DONE B Y
ALL PROCESSES
2054-2060 W.Lake St., Chicago, 111.
"This sheet music tax is an embargo on the
free expression of American Musical Genius,
and its effect is to strangle all effort to suc-
ceed in things musical."
Those behind this movement are pledged to
stop at nothing. It seems that all who have
nerve enough are, with one accord, to refuse
to pay tribute. The association will then be
forced to sue, and each of these suits is to be
vigorously defended, and at least one of each
in time is to be carried to the Federal Supreme
Court.
And those who read this column are not so
much interested in which shall conquer in this
titanic struggle of resistance of the music tax.
But the point is here made that, no matter
which way it goes, the readers of Presto are
mightily and vitally interested in the outcome,
because, with all the resulting publicity, the
goose which has laid the golden eggs will be
smothered, and you and I may then have a
chance to write, publish and sell sheet music.
NEW SHEET MUSIC SHOP.
The American Song Shop to be opened this week
at 215-217 Upper Fourth street, Evansville, Ind., by
Miss Ethel Martin will specialize in sheet music,
playerpiano rolls and talking machine records. Miss
Martin is well known to musical folk in the Indiana
city and for the past four years has been in charge
of the music department of the Metropolitan Store
there. Miss Martin will employ good vocalists to
feature the popular songs.
"Buddy," the Jerome H. Remick & Co.'s popular
song, makes appropriate music for incidents in the
thrilling film, "Skin Deep," now filling houses every-
where it is shown.
FORE!
MAKE WAY
FOR THE
Four Foremost Sellers
"LOVE OF THE AGES"
Endorsed and Sung by Cyrena Van Gordon
"DREAMING OF LOVE'S OLD DREAM"
The Song You Have Been Waiting For
"You're the One Little Girl for Me"
A Ballad You Will Never Forget
"When I Dream that Auld Erin is Free"
A Tribute to Ireland's Independence
HERBERT J. GOTT
Successors to
GOTT ® HENDERSON
166 W. JACKSON BLVD.
CHICAGO
REMICK SONG HITS
Nobody Lied
Sweet Indiana Home
My Buddy
California
Tomorrow Will Be Brighter
Than Today
Carolina in the Morning
Silver Swanee
Childhood Days
When Shall We Meet Again
Lovable Eyes
Out of the Shadows
Your Eyes Have Told Me So
Dixie Highway
Just a Little Blue
Polly
J. H. REMICK & CO.
New York
Chicago
Detroit
Enhanced content © 2008-2009 and presented by MBSI - The Musical Box Society International (www.mbsi.org) and the International Arcade Museum (www.arcade-museum.com).
All Rights Reserved. Digitized from the archives of the MBSI with support from NAMM - The International Music Products Association (www.namm.org).
Additional enhancement, optimization, and distribution by the International Arcade Museum. An extensive collection of Presto can be found online at http://www.arcade-museum.com/library/
24
PRESTO
MUSIC IN CHAIN STORES
The S. S. Kresge Co. Asks Price Reductions Which
the Publishers Firmly Refuse.
you a tumble, and after you've spent a whole day
fruitlessly, sit down and" write the lyrics. By that
time you'll be unconscious, which is how most suc-
cessful song writers pen their ditties.
RECALLING PATTI.
Not many in the audience which listened to the
The S. S. Kresge Co. sells sheet music in 120 of its opera of "Madame Butterfly" in the Auditorium,
string of stores which extends across the country and Chicago, last Saturday night, December 9, were pres-
now it is possible the sheet music department may be ent on the same date thirty-three years ago when
discontinued in all the stores. If the company so de- the theater was opened and dedicated. It is safe
cides it will be because the sheet music publishers to say that few in the house who enjoyed Edith Ma-
persist in refusing to grant a cut in the wholesale son in the title roll of the opera had a similar pleas-
prices.
ure in listening to Adelina Patti on the memorial
. The music problem in the 5 and 10 cent stores and night thirty-three years ago. On that night there
the 25 cent stores has always been an aggravating one were gathered on the stage the President of the
for the publishers of music and the jobbers, too. United States, the Vice-President, governors of four-
They have been considered a source of demoralization teen states, officials of Canada, including the Premier,
in the retail sheet music business and dissatisfaction at a portion of the President's cabinet and Madame
conditions has frequently been expressed by promi- Patti, who sang "Home Sweet Home." It is the only
nent dealers at the conventions of the sheet music time in the history of the United States, as far as is
trade. The stores of the S. S. Kresge Co. had been known, where the President left Washington to dedi-
selling the popular 30 cent numbers at 25 cents until cate a private enterprise.
recently, when, owing to the exigencies of a price
war, the price of the music has been cut to 20 cents.
PAY TRIBUTE TO DRESSER.
A feature of the Indiana Society's banquet in Chi-
cago, last Sunday night, was a tribute to Paul Dres-
ser, author of "On the Banks of the Wabash." While
moving pictures of the dedication of Dresser's grave
So Says Daily Newspaper Humorist, Who Tells Just were exhibited, Tsianina, a real Cherokee-Creek In-
dian princess, who has made Cadman's songs popu-
How to Do It.
lar, sang the solo, while the entire assemblage joined
How easy it is to write a song of the popular kind in the chorus. Dresser's grave is marked by a stone,
is told by a supposedly funny man in the Chicago which for centuries was washed by the waters of
Evening American. "Anybody can write a popular the Wabash and which was removed from the bed
song, but it takes a genius to sell it," he says as a of the river by Harry R. Kurrie, president of the
Monon railroad.
preface to telling just how to do it:
All you need to write a song is some writing paper,
COLLECTING COPYRIGHT FEES.
a pencil, a map of the United States and a lot of nerve.
The Globe theater in Brooklyn, N. Y., was seized
The
more
nerve
you
have
the
greater
are
your
r
chances for success. Place the map on a table, close last week by U. S. Marshal William Mobus on two
your eyes and blindly pick a state to rhyme about. judgments amounting to $700 procured by the Amer-
If you've picked an easy state like Iowa, Alabama or ican Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers.
Carolina, you're in luck.
The judgments were returned on complaints by the
If- you've stumbled on New York, Utah, Texas or society that the Fifteenth Street Amusement Com-
New Jersey, you're out of luck. It's as hard to find a pany, owners of the theater, had ignored the de-
rhyme for these latter states as it is to buy anything mand for performing right fees on copyrighted com-
for a ruble. However, do not be discouraged. Close
"your eyes again and repeat the process until you hit positions. The box-office receipts were seized and
enough collected to pay the judgments.
the state you'd like to write about and then do it.
In writing the lyrics be sure to make them as
SPECIALIZES IN SHEET MUSIC.
senseless as you can. If you try to indite an intelli-
The sheet music department is a prominent one
gent message in your song you'll fail just as grand
juries do which try to indict profiteers. Never try in the store of the Ferguson Music House, San
to uplift humanity in your songs. Let 'em be there. Jose, Calif., and the firm has a large clientele through-
A good way to get a running start on a theme is out the Santa Clara Valley. It is really an old busi-
to enter a telephone booth, try to get Central to give ness with a new name. The Ferguson Music House,
a few years ago succeeded the Christy Music House
which dated back thirty years in the music trade
history of the city. Pianos, Starr phonographs, and
musical merchandise are included in the stock of the
Ferguson Music House.
POPULAR SONG=WRITING EASY
DON CLARK'S SAXOPHONE SOLOS.
Don Clark, famous saxophone player with Paul
Whiteman's Orchestra, has completed a set of saxo-
phone solos for Richmond-Robbins, Inc. The solos
are of unusual quality, and bid fair to be very popular
with saxophone players throughout the country.
OPENS SHEET MUSIC STORE.
The Song Shoppe is the name of a new firm opened
recently at 1726 Third avenue North, Birmingham,
Ala. E. Tunkle, a prominent young musician, is
owner of the shop, which will specialize in sheet
music and standard music books.
In Three Parts:
1. Instruments of Established
Names and Character.
2. Instruments that bear Spe-
cial Names or Trade Marks.
3. Manufacturers of Pianos
and Player-Pianos with Chap-
ters on Piano Building and Buy-
ing designed for the guidance
of prospective purchasers.
A NEW CORPORATION.
Tom Brown Music Company, 17 W. Lake street,
Chicago, has been incorporated, with $100,000 capital,
to manufacture and deal in musical merchandise.
The incorporators are George M. Bundy, William H.
Lyons and Howard J. Wallace.
Facsimile Fall'
board Names of Leading Pianos
and Player-Pianos in Colors
Revised Annually
A FEW NOTES.
Attractive window displays help sell the popular
sheet music for The Charles E. Wells Music Co.,
Denver, Colo.
Miss Viola Cox is the new manager of the Taylor
Music Co., Columbia, Mo.
The I. Wolfe Gilbert Music Company was recently
incorporated in Dover, Dela., with a capital of $1,-
000,000 to publish sheet music.
NO PIANO DEALER OR SALESMAN
CAN AFFORD TO BE WITHOUT HPT
TF YOU DON'T CONSULT "PRESTO
BUYERS' GUIDE" YOU ARE MISSING
OPPORTUNITIES. GET IT NOW.
Give a copy to each of your salesmen.,
Price 50 cents per copy.
PRESTO PUBLISHING CO.
A NEW YORK FAILURE.
Judge A. N. Hand, in New York City, on Monday,
appointed Mark Hymen and E. C. Mills receivers for
the Broadway Music Corporation of 723 Seventh ave-
nue, under $10,000 bond. Liabilities and assets not
stated.
St
The Heine. Piano Co., San Francisco, will open a
branch in Oakland this month.
December 16, 1922.
NEW YORK PLANS TO
LICENSE MUSIC TEACHERS
Mayor Hylan Appoints Committee to Consider
Best Way by Which to Regulate Pro-
fession and Lessen Incompetence.
Any important movement designed to regulate
music, in a broad sense, must be of direct concern to
the musical instrument industries and trades. And
the innovation by which New York City proposes to
license music teaching is of great importance to every
department of the business. Last week Mayor
Hylan, of New York, appointed an advisory commit-
tee which is considering a plan to register or license
teachers of vocal and instrumental music. The Chair-
man of the new committee is Dr. William C. Carl,
the famous organist, and the Vice Chairman is Dr.
Frank Damrosch.
Other members of the committee are George H.
Gartlan, Herbert Witherspoon, George F. Chea,
Gardner Lamson, Oscar Saenger, Dr. T. Tertius
Noble, Edwin Franko Goldman, Karl Schoiing,
Gustav L. Becker, and Allan Robinson. The com-
mittee is authorized to appoint from twelve to twenty
other members.
Willis Holly, secretary of the Park Board, is the
secretary of the advisory committee, with headquar-
ters at Room 1007 Municipal Building, and Catherine
Bolger of Room 863 Municipal Building is assistant
secretary. The Mayor's reception room will be used
for meetings.
The purpose of the appointment of the advisory
committee, according to the Chamberlain's statement,
is "to further the inquiry, ordered by the Mayor, into
the advisability of adopting any plan to license, reg-
ister or examine music teachers, whether vocal or in-
strumental." "It is also," says the statement, "to
consider and report upon any method or methods to
protect those who wish to cultivate their musical tal-
ent from being defrauded by humbugs, who pretend
to teach singing or the playing of musical instruments
and make all sorts of promises, even holding out
expectations of speedy proficiency and of prompt en-
gagement on the stage."
The Mayor's committee will make the report of
the advisory committee a part of its own report to
the Mayor. Efforts will be made to have a subcom-
mittee's work concluded by January, so that the
report may be ready "for any action on the part of
the Legislature that may be found to be desirable."
Several of the persons appointed on the advisory
committee were among the persons who protested
against the suggestion to license the teachers during
a public hearing on Nov. 16. Mr. Gartlan, who is
director of music for the Board of Education, took
the position that any reformation must come from
within the ranks of the teachers themselves rather
than from without. Mr. Robinson, who is of the
Mendelssohn Glee Club, declared that if teacherj of
music were compelled to be licensed it would show
discrimination against teachers of other arts. Dr.
Saenger took issue with the Chamberlain for his in-
timation that music teachers were not on as high a
plane as physicians and lawyers. Dr. Noble, who is
the organist of St. Thomas's Church, spoke against
the licensing plan and declared that the National As-
sociation of Organists had voiced its disapproval.
PLAY BY RADIO.
For the first time in theatrical history, a play was
broadcasted to radio fans throughout the country,
with the applause of the audience a part of the show,
when the Westinghouse Electric Company this week
recorded a performance of "The Fool" in the Times
Square Theater in New York. Announcement of the
radio innovation was made by Walter S. Duggan, in
the Chicago office of the Selwyns. Invitations to
"listen in" were extended Chicago drama critics. The
broadcasting started at 7:45 Chicago time, with intro-
ductory remarks by Channing Pollock, author.
AIR RIGHTS TO MUSIC.
Whether copyrighted music, including grand opera,
can be transmitted by radio without payment of fees
to owners of the copyright, will be one of the ques-
tions discussed
at the meeting of the National Broad-
casters 7 League in Chicago, January 16, it was an-
nounced this week. This meeting will be the first
gathering of the members of the league since its or-
ganization in October. Several sessions will be held
during the second National Radio Show, which is to
be held in Chicago the week of January 13.
OUTLOOK ABROAD BRIGHTER.
Department of Commerce officials in Washington
expressed optimistic views regarding world business
conditions, as a result of reports showing increased
domestic production and distribution and ah "im-
provement in the general outlook abroad."
Enhanced content © 2008-2009 and presented by MBSI - The Musical Box Society International (www.mbsi.org) and the International Arcade Museum (www.arcade-museum.com).
All Rights Reserved. Digitized from the archives of the MBSI with support from NAMM - The International Music Products Association (www.namm.org).
Additional enhancement, optimization, and distribution by the International Arcade Museum. An extensive collection of Presto can be found online at http://www.arcade-museum.com/library/
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