Research Catalog

American popular songs, 1895-1973 reel 13.

Title
American popular songs, 1895-1973 [microform] : reel 13.
Publication
[Various places] : [various publishers], ©1913-1914.

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StatusContainerFormatAccessCall NumberItem Location
reel 13: 1913-1914Notated musicUse in library *ZB-2491 reel 13: 1913-1914Performing Arts Research Collections - Music

Details

Description
1 microfilm reel.
Subject
Note
  • Popular songs chiefly for voice and piano.
  • Titles in order of apperance on microfilm.
  • Some items in poor condition.
Reproduction (note)
  • Microfilm.
Contents
  • P.S. 1913, series 3: ‘Cross the great divide I’ll wait for you / words by Sam M. Lewis, music by Geo. W. Meyer -- Bells of Killarney / words and music by Earl Carroll, Bob Miller & Jack Richmond -- Down by the old garden gate / words by Wm. R. Clay, music by Chas. L. Johnson -- Down by the farm in harvest time / words by Andrew K. Allison, music by Dick Richards -- He wants someone to call him papa (She wants someone to call her ma) / words by L. Wolfe Gilbert, music by Lewis F. Muir -- Hold your hand out, naughty boy / written & composed by C.W. Murphy & Worton David -- I ask, sweetheart, for you / words by John Ingleton, music by Len Fleming -- I’m goin’ to steal right into your heart / words by Ray Sherwood, music by Bert Rule -- In autumn time (I love you so) / words by Artur E. Bucknam, music by Jacob Henry Ellis -- Just like the rose you gave / words by J. Willi Callahan, music by E. Clinton Keithley -- The minstrel show parade / words and music by W.R. Williams -- My Mississippi Rose / words by James F. Langan, music by Thomas Rennie Jr. -- My old girl / words by J. Will Callahan, music by Paul Pratt -- On the banks of Lovelight Bay / words and music by WR. Williams -- The Parisian ball / words by Lew Brown, music by Herman Paley -- The Pullman porters on parade / words by Ren. G. May, music by Maurice Abrahams -- The queen of home sweet home / words by Theodore R. Lyons, music by C.G. Love, arr. by L.A. Love -- Richard the Third / words by L. Wolfe Gilbert, music by Lewis F. Muir -- Sailing down the Chesapeake Bay / words by Jean C. Havez, music by George Botsford -- Sit down you’re rocking the boat / words by Wm. Jerome and Grant Clarke, music by Jean Schwartz -- A tango dream / words and music by Elsa Maxwell -- The international rag / by Irving Berlin -- That little German band / words by Joe McCarthy and Joe Goodwin, composed by Fred Fischer -- That moaning saxophone rag / words by Roger Lewis, music by Tom Brown and Harry Cook -- That naughty melody / words by Sam M. Lewis, music by Geo. W. Meyer [partially mutilated] -- They’ve got me doin’ it now / words and music by Irving Berlin -- Underneath the cotton moon / words by Sam M. Lewis, music by Geo. W. Meyer -- When a lovable girl loves you / words by Martin Swauger, music by W.C. Powell -- When it’s springtime in Virginia / words by J. Brandon Walsh, music by Ernie Erdman -- When the roses bloom in Dixie Land / words and music by Geo. Evans -- Who will be with you when I’m far away / [by] William H. Farrell and Jimmy Durante -- Would you take me back again? / words by Arthur J. Lamb, music by Alfred Solman -- You’re a great big blue eyed baby / words and music by A. Seymour Brown -- You’re my girl / words and music by Bobby Heath.
  • P.S. 1914, series 1: The aba daba honeymoon / [by] Arthur Fields & Walter Donovan -- (You’ll be too late when you knock at my gate) After-‘while / by Carver Benson and Domer Brown -- At the Mississippi cabaret / words by A. Seymour Brown, music by Albert Gumble -- Back to the Carolina you love / words by Grant Clarke, music by Jean Schwartz -- Beautiful eggs / words by Alfred Bryan, music by Herman Paley -- Billy / words by Edgar Malone, music by Ted S. Barron -- Bum diddle-de-um bum, that’s it! / words by Joe McCarthy, music by Jimmie V. Monaco -- Buy a bale of cotton for me / words by L. Wolfe Gilbert, music by Lewis F. Muir -- By the beautiful sea / words by Harold R. Atteridge, music by Harry Carroll -- California and you / words by Edgar Leslie, music by Harry Puck -- Camp meeting band / words by L. Wolfe Gilbert, music by Lewis F. Muir -- Daddy, won’t you buy him for me? / words by Ballard MacDonald, music by Harry Puck -- Danse d’amour / poem by Leila Brett, music by H. Sylvester Krouse -- Do you know / [by] Sam Miceli, arranged by Theo. H. Northrup [partially mutilated] -- Does anyone want a girl / words by Lester Palmer, music by James W. Conrad -- Down at Jasper Johnson’s jamboree / words by Andrew K. Allison, music by Verna Wilkens -- Everybody loves my girl / words by Lew Brown, music by Nat S. Ayer -- Aloha oe = Farewell my love / lyric translation from the original by Charlotte P. Austin, composed by H.M. Queen Lihuokalani, arr. by Chas. H. Roth -- Get up and do it again / words by Bernard Grossman, music by Billy Stone -- Go to sleep, my baby / words by Lettie Gould, music by Jerome Heller -- The good ship Mary Ann / lyrics by Gus Kahn, music by Grace Le Boy -- He’s a devil in his own home town / words by Grant Clarke & Irving Berlin, music by Irving Berlin -- He kept running after the girl / words by John Lowitz and Fred Mierisch, music by Howard Johnson -- He’d push it along / words by Grant Clarke and Edgar Leslie, music by Maurice Abrahams -- The high cost of loving / words by Alfred Bryan, music by George W. Meyer -- Hush-a-bye, ma baby (The Missouri waltz) / lyric by J.R. Shannon, music from an original melody procured by John Valentine Eppel, arr. For piano by Frederic Knight Logan -- I can’ believe you really love me (It’s like a wonderful dream) / words by Grant Clarke, music by Maurice Abrahams -- I cannot live without love / words by Frank Tyler Daniels, music by Raymond Walker -- I can’t stop loving you now / words by Bert Kalmar & Edgar Leslie, music by Ted Snyder -- I had a gal, I had a pal (He stole my gal away) / words by L. Wolfe Gilbert, music by Lewis F. Muir -- I’ve come to take you back home / words by Andrew K. Allison, music by Geo. Botsford -- I’ve got a little sweetheart of my own / words by Richard Faulkner, music by M. Theo. Frain -- I love the ladies / words by Grant Clarke, music by Jean Schwartz -- I want to go to Tokio / words by Joe McCarthy, music by Fred Fischer -- I’ll go fifty-fifty with you / words by Jeff Branen, music by Arthur Lange -- If I had some one like you at home (I wouldn’t want to go out) / words by Joe McCarthy, music by James V. Monaco -- If I were the ocean and you were the shore / by Alfred Bryan and Jack Wells -- If they were all like you / words by William Dillon, music by Abe Olman -- In the garden of home, sweet home / words by Geo. A. Little, music by Jack Stanley -- In the hills of old Kentucky (My mountain Rose) / lyric by J.R. Shannon, music by Chas. L. Johnson -- In the town where I was born, or There were no skyscrapers in my old home town / lyric by Dick Howard and Billy Tracey, music by Al. Harriman -- It’s goin’ to be a cold, cold winter (But I’ll never freeze when you’re around) / by Edgar Leslie, Lew Brown -- It’s too late to forget you now / words by Gladys Dickey and Dave Oppenheim, music by Norah McCabe -- Just as to-day / words and music by Wm. C. Howard -- Just because I ate that lemming pie / lyric by Paul Porter, music by Ernest R. Ball -- Laddie / words by J. Fred Lawton, music by Luella Lockwood Moore -- The land of my best girl / words by Ballard MacDonald, music by Harry Carroll -- Let by-gones be by-gones (and let us be sweethearts again) / words by Harry Williams & Joe Young, music by Bert Grant -- Louise / lyrics by Edward A. Paulton, music by Jean Briquet & Adolf Philipp -- Mary you’re a little bit old fashioned / words by Marion Sunshine, music by Henry I. Marshall [lacking first page] -- Moonbeams on your golden hair / words and music by C.S. Harmon -- Mother o’ mine / words by Alexander Dubin, music by Marion Raybould -- My croomy melody / by E. Ray Goetz and Joe Goodwin -- My wife is dancing mad / words by Coleman Goetz and Howard Johnson, music by Archie Gottler -- Oh, how that woman could cook / words by Gus Kahn, music by Grace Le Boy -- Oh, Mister Railroad Man, won’t you take me back to Alabam’ / words by Stanley Murphy, music by Henry I. Marshall -- On the 5:15 / lyric by Stanley Murphy, music by Henry I. Marshall -- On Ranch 101 (The wonderful one is you) / words by Ballard MacDonald, music by Harry Puck -- On the shores of Italy / words by Al Piantadosi, music by Jack Glogau -- On the steps of the great white capitol (stood Martha and George) / words by Grant Clarke and Edgar Leslie, music by Maurice Abrahams -- Poor Pauline / words by Charles McCarron, music by Raymond Walker -- San Francisco town (How I long to be there) / words by Jeff Branen, music by Al. W. Brown and Gertie Moulton -- Tennessee, I hear you calling me / words by Harold A. Robe, music by Jeff Godfrey -- That funny Bunny rag / words by Louis St. Cyr, music by Gene Gardner -- That’s why girls leave home / lyric by Thomas J. Gray, music by Raymond Walker -- There’s a long, long trail / written by Stoddard King, composed by Zo Elliott -- They’re on their way to Mexico / by Irving Berlin -- They didn’t believe me / lyric by Herbert Reynolds, music by Jerome D. Kern -- They had to swim back to the shore / words by Joe McCarthy, music by James V. Monaco -- They start the Victrola (and go dancing around the floor) / words by Grant Clarke, music by Maurice Abrahams -- Tip-top Tipperary Mary / words by Ballard MacDonald, music by Harry Carroll -- The 20th century rag / words by Grant Clarke & Edgar Leslie, music by Maurice Abrahams -- Until the very end / lyric by Ballard MacDonald, music by Nathan Spector -- The war in Snider’s grocery store / by “Hank” Hancock, Ballard MacDonald, and Harry Carroll -- Way down on Tampa Bay / lyric by A. Seymour Brown, music by Egbert Van Alstyne -- What name is sweeter than sweetheart / [by] Thos. S. Allen -- When it’s moonlight on the Alamo / lyric by Alfred Bryan, music by Fred Fischer -- When it’s night time in Dixie Land / words and music by Irving Berlin -- When the June-time brings the roses (Will they bring you back to me) / words by Robert F. Roden, music by Henry W. Petrie -- When the Angelus is ringing / words by Joe Young, music by Bert Grant -- When you’re a long, long way from home / words by Sam M. Lewis, music by Geo. W. Meyer -- The whole world knows I love you / poem by Billy Could, music by Lyons & Yosco -- Why don’t you tell me you love me when you know you do / words and music by Dave Reed -- Why do you leave me? / words by Charles Steinberg, music by A. Melvin Crosby -- Winter nights / lyric by Grant Clarke, music by Jean Schwartz -- You are my flower of love / words and music by Armstrong & Clark -- You are the rose of my heart / words by Andrew K. Allison, music by James Kendis [partially mutilated] -- You great big bashful doll / words by Grant Clarke, music by Maurice Abrahams.
  • P.S. 1914, series 2: After the roses have faded away / lyric by Bessie Buchanan, music by Ernest R. Ball -- At the garbage gentlemen’s ball / words by Thos. S. Allen, music by Joseph M. Daly -- California the golden / words by Mary Bisbee Enquist, music by A.F. Enquist -- Camp meeting band / words by L. Wolfe Gilbert, music by Lewis F. Muir -- Chickens on parade / lyric by Jean C. Havez, music by Gus Edwards -- Come into that dancing crowd with me / words by Jos. H. Hughes, music by Harry Richardson -- Do it with me / words by Darl MacBoyle, music by Harry Armstrong -- Everybody knows I love you / words by J.G. Montgomery, music by Emily Roberts Lewis -- Everybody loves a soldier boy / words and music by J.W. Dick, arr. by Harry Collins -- Everything is different nowadays / lyric by Gene Buck, music by Dave Stamper -- Face to face with the girl of my dreams / words and music by Richard Howard -- Fido is a hot dog now / words by Chas. McCarron and Thos. J. Gray, music by Raymond Walker -- From the pole to Panama / words by Mary Bisbee Enquist, music by A.F. Enquist -- Gone are the days / words by Ballard Mac Donald, music by “Z” -- Good night little girl, good night / words by Al Dubin, music by Rennie Cormack -- He was always fooling around / words by William Jerome, music by Abner Greenberg -- He’s a rag picker / by Irving Berlin -- Hesitate me around, Bill / words by Wm. Jerome, music by Malvin Franklin -- I’m a long way from Tipperary / by Roger Lewis & Ernie Erdman -- I’m not ashamed of you, Molly! (I want you just as you are) / by Edgar Leslie, Joe Young, Jack Stern -- I am sorry I ever loved you / words by Jack Cutler, music by Morris Spivack, arr. by L.A. Clark -- I long to hear the old church choir again / lyric by J. Will Callahan, music by F. Henri Klickmann -- I love no one but you / words by M. Underhill, music by J.H. Andino -- I love to quarrel with you / words and music by Irving Berlin -- I want to go back to Michigan (Down on the farm) / words and music by Irving Berlin -- I want to go to Mexico / lyric by Edward Madden, music by Gus Edwards -- I want to linger / words by Stanley Murphy, music by Henry I. Marshall -- I wonder where my lovin’ man has gone / words by Earle C. Jones, music by Richard A. Whiting & Chas. L. Cooke -- In my old town canoe (I am waiting for you) / words by Geo. E. Andrews, music by Edward McCoy, arr. by Bert L. Fulton -- In spite of all I still love you / words by Bartley Costello, music by Alfred Solman -- In the palace of dreams / words by Frank Tyler Daniels, music by Leo Friedman -- Just for tonight / words and music by George L. Cobb -- Kitty MacKay / words by Stanley Murphy, music by Henry I. Marshall -- Knit, knit, knit Sister Sue / words by Chas. McCarron, music by Raymond Walker -- The little Ford rambled right along / words by C.R. Foster & Byron Gay, music by Byron Gay -- Lonesomeness / words and music by Max Friedman -- Mandalay / words and music by Mabel Besthoff -- Mexi-tango / by W.L. Beardsley and David S. Lindeman -- Hush-a-bye, ma baby (The Missouri waltz) / lyric by J.R. Shannon, music from an original melody procured by John Valentine Eppel arr. For piano by Frederic Knight Logan -- My tango man / words by Billy Tracey, music by Al. Harriman -- Oh! My love / words by Joe McCarthy, music by James V. Monaco -- On a summer night / words by Jack Yellen, music by George L. Cobb -- One wonderful night / lyric by Joe Lyons & E. Clinton Keithley, music by Clarence M. Jones -- A real moving picture from life / words by Andrew B. Sterling, music by Harry Von Tilzer -- Romanoff caviar / words by Charles Bradley, music by W. Stephens -- Roses remind me of someone (someone I cannot forget) / lyric by J.E. Dempsey, music by Johann C. Schmid -- She used to be the slowest girl in town / words by Chas. McCarron, music by Raymond Walker -- Simple melody / words and music by Irving Berlin -- Sweet Kentucky lady (Dry your eyes) / words by William Jerome, music by Louis A. Hirsch -- Sweetheart of mine! / words by Frank Tyler Daniels, music by Leo Friedman -- Too-ra-loo-ra-loo-ral : That’s an Irish lullaby / lyric and music by J.R. Shannon -- Oh you little China doll / words by Ray Sherwood, music by Bert L. Rule -- There’s a little spark of love still burning / lyrics by Joe McCarthy, music by Fred Fischer -- They all had a finger in the pie / words by Vincent Bryan, music by Harry Von Tilzer -- They don’t hesitate any more / words by Bert Kalmar, Edgar Leslie, music by Harry Puck -- This is the life / [by] Irving Berlin -- ‘Twixt daylight and dark / words by Florence Pitt-Hyke, music by E.R. Kroeger -- We take our hats off to you, Mr. Wilson! / words and music by Blanche Merrill -- When a feller needs a friend / lyric by Bernie Grossman, music by Jos. W. Stern Jr. and Billy Frisch -- When I was a dreamer (and you were my dream) / words by Roger Lewis and Geo. A. Little, music by Egbert Van Alstyne -- When it’s night time down in Burgundy / words by Alfred Bryan, music by Herman Paley -- When you wore a tulip and I wore a big red rose / words by Jack Mahoney, music by Percy Wenrich -- Where can I meet you to-night? / words by Edgar Farran, music by Arthur Lange -- Who is your dearie now / words by C. Berenda Weinberg, music by Alfred Solman -- Why waste your love? (When you can give it to me) / words by Harry Williams & Joe Young, music by Bert Grant -- (Won’t you play a) Simple melody / words and music by Irving Berlin -- A wonderful thing / [by] Clare Kummer -- You’re more than the world to me / words by Jeff Branen, music by Alfred Solman -- You planted a rose in the garden of love / lyric by J. Will Callahan, music by Ernest R. Ball.
Call Number
*ZB-2491 reel 13
Title
American popular songs, 1895-1973 [microform] : reel 13.
Imprint
[Various places] : [various publishers], ©1913-1914.
Reproduction
Microfilm. New York : New York Public Library, 1991. 1 microfilm reel ; 35 mm. (MN *ZZ-31921)
Research Call Number
*ZB-2491 reel 13
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