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Music Trade Review

Issue: 1905 Vol. 41 N. 17 - Page 41

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Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE:
RECORDS FOR NOVEMBER, 1903.
New Edison Gold Moulded Records.
Edison Gold Moulded Records are made only in
.Standard Size. IJoth Standard and Concert Records
may be ordered from this list. Order by number, not
title. It' Concert Records are wanted, give the number
and letter C.
DV22 Hungarian Fantasie
(Tobani)
Edison Concert Band.
01123 Mother u' Mine (Kipling-Tours) Song with
Oreh. Accom
Theo Van Yorx
9124 On the Hanks of the Rhine with a Stein (Von
Tilzer) Comic male duet, by composer of
"Under the Anheuser Bush, Orch. Accom.
Collins and Ilarlan
9125 Friendly Rivals (Godfrey) Cornet duet, Orch.
Accom
11. L. Clarke and John Hazel
9126 Honeymoon Haal (Bratton) Waltz song,
Orch. Accom
Harry Macdonough
9127 In Timbuctoo (Morse) A Monkey ditty, Orch.
Accom
Billy Murray
9128 Jesus, Saviour, Pilot Me (Gould) Orch. Ac-
com
Anthony and Harrison
9120 Bold Front March (Seltzer) .Edison Military Band
9130 Wait 'Till the Sun Shines, Nellie (Von Tilzer)
Orch. Accom
Byron G. Ilarlan
9131 And the World Goes on (Sutton). .Orch. Ac-
com
Bob Roberts
9132 Betty (Taylor) Sentimental male duet, Orch.
Accom
Macdonough and Biehling
9133 Roses and Thorns (Kideugue) Mexican Dance
Edison Symphony Orchestra
9134 We'll be Together When the Clouds Roll By
(Mills) Descriptive Song, Orch. Accom.
Irving Gillette
9135 I'm the Only Star that Twinkles on Broadway
(Von Tilzer) Comic songs, Orch. Accom. .
Ada Jones
9136 Pretty Mary (Mills) Sentimental male duet,
Orch. Accom
Ilarlan and Stanley
9137 Dancing in the Starlight (Ellis)
Edison Concert Band
9138 Sweetest Flower That Blows (Hawley) So-
prano sentimental song, Orch. Accom....
Marie Narelle
9139 Have You Seen My Henry Brown?(Albert von
Tilzer) Coon song, Orch. Accom.Arthur Collins
9140 The Irish Girl I Love (IloffmanJ Tenor senti-
mental song, from "Rogers Brothers in
Ireland," Orch Accom
Edward Barrow
9141 Sweet Little Daisies (Seltzer) Bells solo,
Orch. Accom
Albert Benzler
9142 Fol-the-rol-lol (Limericks) Comic song, Orch.
Accom
Edward M. Favor
1)143 Courtship of Barney and Eileen (Vaudeville)
Comic dialect sketch, Orch. incidental
music
Ada Jones and Len Spencer
9144 When the Evening Breeze is Sighing Home,
Sweet Home (Solman) Descriptive male
quarette, Orch. Accom. .Edison Male Quartette
9145 Everybody Works but Father, Medley, intro-
ducing "Everybody Works but Father,"
'•Leader of the German Band," "Ange-
lina." "In Dear Old Georgia" and "Hiram
Green, Good-Bye."
Edison Military Band
NEW VICTOR RECORDS.
Numbers beginning with 4 and (if are in 10-in. size;
numbers beginning with 31 and 71 are in 12-in. size.
Sousa's Band.
31447 Orpheus in Hades Overture (Orfee aux En-
ters)
Offenbach
31448 Reminiscences of Tosti
Godfrey
31449 Vienna Bon Bons Waltz (Weiner Bon Bons)
Strauss
31450 Blue Danube Waltz
Strauss
31451 Priest's War March—Athalie
Mendelssohn
31452 Ruy Bias Overture
Mendelssohn
31453 Queen of S~heba March
Gounod
31454 Breeze of the Night Waltz (Brise des Nuits)
Lamothe
Arthur Pryor's Band.
4477 Call of the Wild March
Losey
Life Guards Military Band.
61152 Departure of a Man-of-War
Russell Hunting
Pryor's Orchestra.
4476 Song of the Gondolier
Mazzacabo
Mandolin Solo by Valentine Abt, with Orch. Accom.
4495 Angel's Serenade
Braga
Harry Macdonough and Haydn Quartette, with
Orch. Accom.
4501 Two Little Girls Loved One Little Boy. . . .
Bryan and Mullen
Tenor Solo by Harry Macdonough, with
'Orch. Accom.
4499 Honeymoon Hall
Bratton
Ballard by Haydn Quartette, with Orch. Accom.
4500 When the Evening Breeze is Sighing "Home
Swoet Home."
Folman
Tenor Solo by Byron G. Ilarlan, with Orch. Accom.
4494 The Message of the Old Church Bell. .. .Leighton
Contralto So.lo by Miss Corinne Morgan with
Orch. Accom.
4493 Lullaby from Erminie
Jacobowski
Bass Solo by Frank C. Stanley with
Orch. Accom.
4487 Skippers of St. Ives
Roeckel
Songs by Billy Murray with Orch. Accom.
4483 I've Sweethearts in Every Port
Keith
4486 Parody on "In the Shad'e of the Old Apple
Tree"
4488 The Whole Damm Family
Von Tilzer
Comic Song by Bob Roberts, with Orch. Accom.
4492 Dat Ain't Nuthin' but Talk. . . .Brown and Smith
Duets by Collins and I larl-iin with Orch. Accom.
4484 Central, Give Me Back My Dime
Howard
, 4485 Hey, Mr. Joshua !
Keith and Kemble
Vaudeville Specialty by Spencer and Jones, with
Orch. Accom.
4401 Every Little Bit Helps
Favorite Hymns, with Organ Accom.
By Harry Macdonough.
4482 The Lamb is the Light Thereof
Stebbins
By Frank C. Stanley.
4479 Near the Cross
'
Doane
4480 He Lejideth Me
Bradbury
By Stanley and Macdonough.
4481 Let the Lower Lights be Burning
Bliss
Baritone Solos in Spanish by Emilio de
Gogorza, with Orch. Accom.
4406 Josf* Maria
Hernandez
4497 Las dos Prlncesas (Son los bailes de Mas-
cara)
Caballero
4498 El Capitan de Lanceros (Sevillana) . . Hernandez
Soprano Solos by Mme. A. Michailowa.
•i1130 Lullaby—Jocelyn (with violin obligato) . . Godard
lil 140 Oh. Sing to Me
Dlusski
111141 Dearest Name (Caro Nome) Rigoletto. .. .Verdi
01144 Serenade (With flute obligato)
Gounod
Soprano and Contralto Duets by Mmes.
Michailowa and Tugarinoff.
01142 Russian Folk Song
Dorrgomyschki
• >1143 The Sea Gull's Cry
Grodski
MUSIC TRADE
REIVIEZW
Old Sea Chanties
Collected by John Bradford and Arthur Fagge and
sung by the Minster Singers of London.
(J1145 (1) "The Capstan Bar."
01140 (2) "Blow, My Bully Boys" and (3) "Sally
Brown."
(51147 (4) "Whisky Johnny," and (5) "Shenandoah."
61148 (6) "Rio Grande" and (7) "Blow the Man Down."
Four Remarkable Records in German and Italian.
Tenor Solo in Italian by Aristide Rota, with male chorus
and Mandolin Orchestra.
61149 Funicoli Funicola (Canzone Napoletana) Denza
Tenor Solo in German by Erik Schmedes k. k.
Kammersanger (with chorus).
61150 Arie des Dalibor aus "Dalibor."
Baritone Solo in German by Robert Leonhardt
with Orch. Accom.
61151 Die Musik kommt (The Music Comes!)
Soprano Solo in German by Gertrude Itunge with
Orch. Accom.
71027 Arie der Titania aus Mignon (Titania's Song
from "Mignon")
Thomas
NEW PEDAGOGIC WRINKLE.
Chicago Launches Plan of Learning Cornet
Through
the Medium
of the Talking
Machine—Company Formed to Exploit This
Method of Instruction.
(Special to The Review.)
Review Office, 1362 Monadnock Block,
Chicago, 111., October 23, 1905.
Chicago stands sponsor for the very latest in
instruction by mail or express.
No matter
whether you live in Podunkville, Idaho or Free-
zalatska, Alaska, you can now learn to play the
cornet under one of the greatest, if not the
greatest, cornetists in the world, who will be re-
markably patient with you. He will play all the
exercises for you, not only once, but many times,
until you are sure that you have them exactly.
Not only this, but every once in a while, even
while you are in the elementary stage, he will
play you a solo just so you can have an ideal al-
ways before you. Steve Crean, he of interna-
posing Steve Crean, president; J. J. Voss and
A. E. Clark, under the name of the Steve Crean
System. Ultimately they expect to teach the
flute, piccolo, clarionet, oboe, French horn, alto
horn, baritone and trombone in a similar man-
ner, employing expert performers on the different
instruments to make the records. The office of
the company is at 94 Dearborn street. The com-
pany use on all their literature the illustration
produced herewith, "The Spirit of the Teacher,"
the phantom figure in the background being the
astral body of Mr. Crean, who is anything but a
phantom in real life. In his hand he holds the
instrument, with which he makes the records,
a Conn-Conqueror cornet, and that's no phantom,
either.
TRADE NOTES FROM ST. LOUIS.
(Special to The Review.)
St. Louis, Mo., October 28, 1905.
Trade for the month of October in talking
machines is reported to have been quite good, al-
though some dealers state that the last two weeks
of the month showed a falling off. All are optim-
istic and look for a fine fall and winter trade.
Large orders are now being plated for holiday
goods.
D. S. Ramsdell, vice-president and manager of
the St. Louis Talking Machine Co., returned on
Monday, Sept. 2, from his wedding trip.
George Ornstein, manager of the travelers' de-
partment of the Victor Talking Machine Co.,
spent one day here recently.
Geo. M. Nisbett, Western Manager of the Na-
tional Phonograph Co., with headquarters in
Chicago, was a visitor here last week.
Mr. Mitchell, special traveling salesman of
the Talk-o-phone Co., spent last Saturday here.
F. E. Miles, manager of the talking machine
department of the O. K. Houck Piano Co., Mem-
phis, Tenn., was here recently to witness the
annual visitation of the Veiled Prophet.
Frank Madison, traveling representative of the
National Phonograph Co., was a recent visitor
here.
Walter A.. Eckhardt, wholesale sales manager
of the Columbia Phonograph Co., arrived here
yesterday on a business visit.
THAT " DOG FIGHT " RECORD.
Causes Quite Some Trouble and Discussion
During Indian Summer.
A correspondent of a daily paper, writing of
his impressions of a phonographic performance
as heard in his neighborhood, in a complaining
tone, expresses himself a s follows:
"Half a dozen, a dozen times a day a dog
NEW SCHEME OF TEACHING CORNET.
fight in its most realistic form is performed, ap-
tional reputation, is the teacher. The medium
parently to the unalloyed delight of my neigh-
through which he expects to giVe personal
bors. A hoarse voiced tough announces the
instruction to hundreds of pupils located all over
terms of the fight in tones only possessed by
the country, is the graphophone. The student uses
the variety of mankind of which he is a repre-
a standard cornet instruction book, and receives
sentative. 'Stop that dog, plase!' he calls out
at the outset a Columbia graphophone and a set
again and again, as his eloquence is interrupted
of ten cylinder records, each record reproducing
by the barking and yelping of the dogs, and the
one lesson. A solo record is given with each
crowd he is addressing yells in impatience for
course. After the lessons have been mastered and
the fight to begin. At last the fight is on, and
the records returned the second course, consist-
if you were actually assisting at it, in defiance
ing of ten lessons, is sent. At the end of the
of the penal code, you could hardly get a more
third course the graphophone becomes the prop-
realizing sense of the elevating amusement.
erty of the student.
A company has been
The talking machine tells the whole story. If
formed to exploit this method of instruction, com-
the dog fight was actually taking place on the
lawn and the refuse of humanity had gathered
there to see it, the proceedings would hardly
be more real than they seem in this machine
reproduction. I have never had tne privilege of
&nd
witnessing a dog fight, but from repeated hearing
of that phonograph's report I feel as if I had
now subjected myself to criminal, arrest for
in
violating the law by sneaking into that sort of
ring."
As is well known in the trade this is the "dog
fight" record which was a great seller at one
time. It is not the reproduction of an actual
Wholesale
canine scrap, only imitations by a human voice.
w m E v N UREN
Its vogue has fallen off greatly, but is still in
c H
some demand.
Anything'
Everything'
TALKING
MACHINES
J a m e s I . L y o n s , - - fc Aco
"•

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