Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
"POLISH WEDDING" READY SOON.
SUPREME
IN ITS FIELD ! ! !
Dealers are satisfied with Cen-
tury Edition Ten Cent Sheet
Music, because the sales tell the
story of the high esteem in which
it is held by those who buy it.
The Best—Because It I s !
Cmtury Music Pub. Co.,
117 8 r
way
N 8 w York
CENTURY EDITION
A Soul Stirring High Class Ballad
At the Gate of the
Palace of Dreams
By SCHM1D & BAER
Since he wrote " The Garden of
Roses" Mr. Schmid has never
equalled this new ballad. It is the
high class BALLAD HIT for the
year.
Jerome H. Remick & Co.
131 W. 41st Street
68 Library Avenue
NEW YORK
DETROIT, MICH.
Will Have Its Premiere in Detroit on Septem-
ber 2—Operetta Has Already Won Great
Success in Europe.
EVERY PUBLISHER CLAIMS
That his song (the one he
"The Polish Wedding," a musical farce, is being
is pushing!) is the world's
groomed for its premiere by Cohan and Harris,
greatest
hit; the sensation
who announce that its initial presentation will oc-
of
sensations;
the biggest
cur at the Detroit Opera House, Detroit Mich.,
seller, etc., etc., until
on Monday, September 2.
Made in Germany, "The Polish Wedding," under he wearies you with his
the title of "Die Polnische Wirtschaft," was pro- high-sounding phrases. His
duced at the Thalia Theater in Berlin, where it
has already passed its 700th performance and is liberal and unlioensed use
still the reigning musical sensation. A second and of glowing adjectives make
third company has presented it for 300 nights at them lose their true mean-
the Carl Schultze Theater in Hamburg and in
ing. You really can't get
more than 20 of the Provincial cities of the Ger- a fair line on any song
man Empire.
advertised in that manner.
The book of "The Polish Wedding," by Curt
Kraatz and Georg Okonkowski, the lyrics by Al- Our method is different.:
"WHEN I GET YOU
bert Schonfeld, and the music by Jean Gilbert, has
been adapted for the American stage by Messrs.
ALONE TO-NIGHT"
George V. Hobart and Jerome D. Kern.
Is just a good, GOOD SONG--
perhaps a trifle above the
RUM=TUM=TIDDLE AS RALLYING SONG average, but its popularity
is ONLY DUPLICATED by ONE
Used, with Appropriate Wording, by Toronto
Kilties at Recent Convention and Makes a
other song on the market
Hit.
to-day! Facts are Faots--
but
Sales are Clinchers!!
The great and ever-growing popularity of Jean
Schwartz's song, "Rum-Tum-Tiddle," is fully testi- LEO. FEIST, Inc., - NEW YORK
fied to by the fact that the Toronto Krties at a
recent convention used the song, with special and
appropriate lyrics, as a rallying song. The special
words were written by E. Jules Brazil, Toronto's
musical director, and were as follows:
"Rum-turn-tum-tum-tum-tum-ti.ddle,
There is just one question we must settle,
That is the convention town where we must go,
Think it well, think it deep, think it low,
Men from the North, South, East, West and
Middle,
There is just one answer to this riddle, and it's
T-O-R-O-N-T-O.'-'
The music and original words of the song are
published by the Jerome & Schwartz Publish-
ing Co.
YOU GOT TO KEEP AGOIN'
I!y Alfred Bryan and Jean Schwartz.
(Featured in the new Ziegfeld J s Follies of 1912
Company )
GOOD RESOLUTIONS
I!y Neil O'Brien and Les Copeland.
LUXURY
By Jean Ilavez and Les Copeland.
(Both songs featured by the Composer in
Vaudeville.)
WATCHER THINK OF 'EM?
WAGNER'S WORKS RELEASED
In February of Next Year and Thirty Years
After His Death—Heirs Making Fight to
Retain Control of Rights to "Parsifal."
Richard Wagner will have been dead thirty
years in February. After then his works can be
played by any opera company. All the scores and
parts of his works may be issued by any house.
]heretofore Wagner's heirs have laid a restrain-
ing business hand on all enterprises to exploit
the genius' work. A movement is on foot now
to have a special law passed in favor of "Par-
sifal."
The music lovers of Germany are specially
interested in the attempts being made by the
Wagner heirs to get a bill passed through the
Reichstag, providing for an extension of the copy-
right, if possible, and preventing its representa-
tion outside of Bayreuth, for a longer period than
the law now permits. Signatures are now being
obtained to the petition to the Reichstag protesting
against the passage of the proposed bill and de-
claring that the Wagner heirs have not complied
with the great composer's wishes in controlling
his operas. It is claimed that the heirs have re-
ceived $25 a year in royalties.
JEROME & SCHWARTZ PUB. CO.
1 446 Broadway, New York City
T. S. Barron, Gen'l Mgr., B'way Theatre Bldg.
Another After The Ball Hit.
"That Swaying Harmony"
By CHAS. K. HARRIS
You can order it from your nearest
jobber or direct from the Publisher.
CHAS. K. HARRIS
Broadway and 47th St., New York
MEYER COHEN, Mgr.
This is without doubt
the first high-grade col-
lection of standard dances
ever published and will
undoubtedly be much ap-
preciated by violinists,
not only because of the
superiority of its con-
tents, but also because
every number has been
especially arranged and
placed in the first posi-
tion, so that it is within
the grasp of the average
player. Price, violin and
piano, 75 cents.
CIRCULATING LIBRARY OF MUSIC.
Played by Leading Orchestras Everywhere.
CHAPPELL & CO., Ltd.
41 East 34th St., New York.
Charlottenburg (a part of Greater Berlin) will
soon have a circulating library at which it will be
possible to take out sheet music and music books
free of charge. It is believed that this institution
will counteract the tendency to buy popular music.
But will it? Persons who like pdpular music
would rather pay for it than be bored by good
music that costs nothing—just the same as with
books.
HINDS. NOBLE ft ELDKEDGE.
S1-S5 West 15th Street. New Y»rfc
ROBERT TELLER SONS & DORNER
Music Engravers and Printers
BEND MANUSCRIPT AND IDEA OP TITLE
FOR ESTIMATE
i n wpr it* m m , mw TMI CITY