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Music Trade Review

Issue: 1921 Vol. 73 N. 3 - Page 39

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Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
JUUY 16, 1921
39
The Waltz Sensation of To-day
"YOU'LL NEVER KNOW, NOR CARE"
"DEAR ONE"
The Most Beautiful Waltz-Ballad. By the Writer of "Rose."
"WHEN THE SUNBEAMS KISS THE DEWDROPS FROM THE ROSE"
Sensational Fox-Trot
Write for Introductory Price
MAX E. HASENBEIN & CO., Inc.
230-232 Baker Building
MUSIC COCKTAILS VERSUS BOOZE
Tonal Effects Wonderfully Exhilarating and
Trouble Banishing, Says Wise Writer
"Music," says an eminent scientist, "will take
the place of intoxicating beverages with the
men. Music is wonderfully exhilarating and
causes one to forget one's troubles. Men in
time will learn to crave it."
That simplifies matters and will take a load
off many an anxious man's mind. Many a will-
ing host has wondered how to entertain his
friends and make them stay later than nine
o'clock. It has been difficult up to now, but the
professor has solved the problem. The host can
load up the trusty old player with music rolls
and, within ten minutes, the gang will be sing-
ing: "We Won't Go Home Until Morning."
"What do you say to a couple of rounds of
Beethoven before we start playing cards?" the
host will ask.
"Bully," everybody will reply.
"Mumm's
never had a thing on Beethoven and Oscar Pep-
per never had the kick of Chopin."
"Give us a little Schubert Serenade," somebody
will ask and somebody else will say: "Naw. I
had a couple of etudes down town off'n a street
piano player and I never mix my music. Give
me another etude."
Music Publishers
RACINE, WISCONSIN
During the evening: "Give me anuzzer shym-
phony, George. I promised the wife I would
take only two shymphonies to-night and now
look at me. Great stuff to take, shymphonies—
no head in the morning."
"I stopped in the movies and had a couple
of arias before I got here. Ain't you got no
arias? I gotta stick to the same thing. I got
some important work to do to-morrow."
"I took a couple of Sousa's marches yester-
day. Some punch. I couldn't see straight all
the afternoon. I'll just take something light to-
night. Gimme a short etude, George."
"Did you hear about Jim? He was goin'
straight and hadn't taken any music for a
month, but yesterday he got sore at his wife
and went and bought a player-piano and has
been soused ever since. He's takin' all the
hard stuff."
"Let's have another andante, George 1"
"This is a private house, not a saloon. You've
had enough. Go home to your wife and when
she smells that Lohengrin on you don't tell her
where you got it."
"Hain't you got no Puccini in the house,
George?"
"Naw, somebody got tangled up in the music
roll and broke it."—The Baldwin Keynote.
SINGING BENEFICIAL FOR CHILDREN
"CHERIE" GAINS QUICK POPULARITY
Wonderful "Mother" Song
Talking Machine Records and Player Rolls
Help to Popularize Feist Number
Starting Splendidly
An item we think well worthy of comment is
the unusual success attained in a short space of
time by the Leo Feist, Inc., number, "Cherie."
No number in recent years, not even "Dar-
danella," obtained a national recognition in so
short a period. Much of this general publicity
can be credited to the support and co-opera-
tion obtained by the Feist organization from
the sales departments of the various talking ma-
chine record and music roll manufacturers, their
jobbers and dealers.
15 cents per copy
McKinley Music Co.
New York
French Physician Describes Remarkable Health-
giving Results of Singing
M. Frossart, a French physician of the Sor-
bonne, in an address at the Academy of Sciences
in Paris, recently, described the wonderful re-
sults of singing on patients suffering from all
sorts of nervous ailments, such as insomnia,
heart, stomach and lung troubles.
M. Frossart declared that some time ago when
acting as a children's doctor he noticed that
singing not only had a great effect on the general
health and development of children by making
them breathe deeply, but it seemed also to soothe
their nerves. He declares that singing, which
entails deep breathing, has the effect of regular-
izing the function of the sympathetic nerves.
His cures for various troubles took several weeks
and included singing at frequent intervals.
MEMORIAL TO STRAUSS
Monument to Viennese Waltz King Unveiled
With Appropriate Ceremonies
VIENNA, July 6.—A monument to the waltz
king, Johann Strauss, was unveiled recently in
Vienna Stadt Park in the presence of thousands
of spectators.
There were speeches by President Heinrich
and others, as well as a recital by the Philhar-
monic Orchestra, which played "The Blue
Danube" and "Artists' Life" waltzes, conducted
by Arthur Nikisch.
The statue, of gilt bronze, is the creation of
the Vienna sculptor Hellmer.
Fears that Caruso, who sailed some weeks ago
to his home in Italy to recuperate from his long
illness, would not be able to sing again have
been dispelled by a cable message from Gatti-
Casazza, general manager of the Metropolitan
Opera Co., to the office of the company here.
A Small-town Song with a World-wide Appeal
MAIN
STREET
The Book Sell* Big
The Song it Better than the Book
New York McKINLEY MUSIC CO. ^ . . o
49878A

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