1907 in music

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List of years in music (table)

This is a list of notable events in music that took place in the year 1907.

Specific locations[]

Events[]

  • January 27 – Executives of the Metropolitan Opera removes Richard Strauss's Salome from the repertoire following protests that the opera was indecent.[1]
  • February 3Josef Suk's first performance of Symphony č.2 C moll (Asrael) in the National Theatre in Prague, Karel Kovarovic conducting.
  • April 27 - Igor Stravinski's Symphony No.1 E-flat receives its first private performance in Saint Peterburg
  • May 27Bach House (Eisenach) opens in what is at this time believed to be the birthplace of Johann Sebastian Bach, the first museum devoted to a single composer.
  • June 12Cambridge University awards the honorary degree of Doctor of Music to Alexander Glazunov.[2]
  • June 18Oxford University awards the honorary degree of Doctor of Music to Alexander Glazunov.
  • June 26Cambridge University awards the honorary degree of Doctor of Music to Camille Saint-Saens.
  • September 25Jean Sibelius conducts the world première of his Symphony No. 3 in Helsinki.[3]
  • General Porfirio Díaz orders a mariachi band to wear upper-class clothing (a charro suit) when they play for the visiting United States Secretary of State Elihu Root; this is the beginning of modern mariachi, as well as the traditional dress of future mariachi stars.[citation needed]
  • Publication of Sketch of a New Aesthetic of Music by Ferruccio Busoni.
  • Cosima Wagner steps down from her position as head of the Bayreuth Festival. She is succeeded by her son Siegfried.

Published popular music[]

The cover of Herman Carle's "Down Home Shout"
  • "All She Gets from the Iceman is Ice" w. Arthur J. Lamb m. Alfred Solman
  • "And A Little Bit More" w. Alfred Bryan m. Fred Fisher
  • "Ballooning" w. Paul West m. Jerome Kern
  • "The Bandolero" w. m. Leslie Stuart
  • "Be My Little Teddy Bear" w. Vincent Bryan m. Max Hoffman
  • "Because I'm Married Now" w.m. Herbert Ingraham
  • "Bon Bon Buddy" by
  • "Brother Noah Gave Out Checks For Rain" w.m. Arthur Longbrake
  • "Budweiser's A Friend Of Mine" w. Vincent P. Bryan m. Seymour Furth
  • "Bye Bye Dearie" w. Andrew B. Sterling m. Harry Von Tilzer
  • "The Caissons Go Rolling Along" m. Edmund L. Gruber
  • "Come Along, My Mandy" w.m. Tom Mellor, Alfred J. Lawrence & Harry Gifford New words Nora Bayes & Jack Norworth 1910
  • "Common Sense" w.m. Chris Smith & John Larkins
  • "Don't Worry" w.m. Ed Rose & Ted Snyder
  • "Down Home Shout" Herman Carle
  • "Fairy Queen" m. Percy Wenrich
  • "Fishing For the Moon" David Kilburn Stevens
  • "Gladiolus Rag" by Scott Joplin
  • "Golden Rod" McKinley
  • "The Handsome, Brave Life Saver" Gumble
  • "Harrigan" w.m. George M. Cohan. Introduced by George M. Cohan in the musical
  • "He Goes to Church on Sunday" w. Vincent Bryan m. E. Ray Goetz
  • "He Was One Of The Boys" w.m. T. W. Connor
  • "Heliotrope Bouquet" Louis Chauvin and Scott Joplin
  • "The Homesick Yankee" Clark
  • "Honey Boy" w. Jack Norworth m. Albert Von Tilzer
  • "The Honeybee's Honeymoon" Reed
  • "I Finnish 'em Off!" w.m. T.W. Connor
  • "I Love You So" w. Adrian Ross m. Franz Lehár
  • "I Wish I Had A Girl" w. Gus Kahn m. Grace LeBoy
  • "I'd Rather Be A Lobster Than A Wise Guy" Morse
  • "I'd Rather Two-Step Than Waltz, Bill" w.m. Benjamin Hapgood Burt
  • "I'm Afraid to Come Home in the Dark" w. Harry H. Williams m. Egbert Van Alstyne
  • "I'm Happy When The Band Plays Dixie" Vandeveer
  • "I'm Tying The Leaves So They Won't Come Down" w. E. S. S. Huntingdon m. J. Fred Helf
  • "In A Hammock Built For Two" w. Andrew B. Sterling m. Harry von Tilzer
  • "In the Land of the Buffalo" Williams, Van Alstyne
  • "In The Wildwood Where The Bluebells Grow" w.m. Herbert H. Taylor
  • "In Washington" w. Vincent Bryan m. Gertrude H. Hoffman
  • "It's A Poor Heart That Never Rejoices" w.m. T.W. Connor
  • "It's Delightful To Be Married" w. Anna Held m. Vincent Scotto
  • "It's Great To Be A Soldier Man" Morse
  • "It's Nice To Have A Sweetheart" Kerker
  • "I've Told His Missus All About Him" Tate
  • "Just Because He Couldn't Sing "Love Me And The World Is Mine"" w.m. Bert Fitzgibbon
  • "Kansas City Rag" by James Scott
  • "Keep On Smiling" Paley
  • "The Last Rose Of Summer Is The Sweetest Rose Of All" w. Arthur Gillespie m. Harry Sidney
  • "Lucia" Klein
  • "A Man Without A Woman" Rogers
  • "Marie From Sunny Italy" w. Irving Berlin m. M. Nicholson
  • "Mariutch Down At Coney Island" (aka "Mariutch Dance Da Hootch-A-Ma-Kootch") w. Andrew B. Sterling m. Harry von Tilzer
  • "(You'll Find Me At) Maxim's" w. Adrian Ross m. Franz Lehár
  • "Meet Me Down At The Corner" w. Will D. Cobb m. Harry Hoyt
  • "(The Best I Get Is) Much Obliged To You" w.m. Benjamin Hapgood Burt
  • "'Neath The Old Acorn Tree, Sweet Estelle" w. C. M. Denison m. J. Fred Helf
  • "'Neath The Old Cherry Tree, Sweet Marie" w.m. Harry Williams & Egbert van Alstyne
  • "Nestle By My Side" Luders
  • "No Wedding Bells For Me" w. E. P. Moran & Will A. Heelan m. Seymour Furth
  • "No, No, Positively No" w.m. Chris Smith & Harry Brown
  • "No-One Knows" w.m. Francis Mack
  • "Not For Me" w.m. Bessie Wynn
  • "On The Road To Mandalay" w. Rudyard Kipling m. Oley Speaks
  • "The Peach That Tastes The Sweetest Hangs The Highest On The Tree" w. Will D. Cobb m. Gus Edwards
  • "Pride Of The Prairie" w. Harry Breen m. George Botsford
  • "Put Me Among The Girls" w. C. W. Murphy m. Dan Lipton
RedWingMills1907.jpeg
  • "Rain-in-the-Face" by Benjamin Hapgood Burt
  • "Red Wing" w. Thurland Chattaway m. Kerry Mills
  • "Rum-Tiddley-Um-Tum-Tay Out For The Day Today" w. Fred Leigh m. Orlando Powell
  • "San Antonio" w.m. Harry Williams & Egbert van Alstyne
  • "Sandy, You're A Dandy" w.m. Hector Grant
  • "Searchlight Rag" by Scott Joplin
  • "She's A Lassie From Lancashire" Murphy, Lipton, Neat
  • "Sleepy Sidney" by Archie W Scheu
  • "Smile, Smile, Smile" Hoffman
  • "Somebody's Been Around Here Since I've Been Gone" m. John Walter Bratton
  • "Somebody's Waiting For You" w. Vincent Bryan m.
  • "Take Me Back To New York Town" w. Andrew B. Sterling m. Harry Von Tilzer[4]
  • "Take Me Where There's A Big Brass Band" Morse
  • "The Teddy Bears' Picnic" w. James B. Kennedy m. John Walter Bratton (Words 1932)[5]
  • "That Lovin' Rag" w. Victor H. Smalley m. Bernie Adler
  • "Theodore" w.m. Vincent Bryan
  • "There Never Was A Girl Like You" w. Harry H. Williams m. Egbert Van Alstyne
  • "Tipperary" w. Leo Curley m. James M. Fulton & J. Fred Helf
  • "Tommy, Lad!" w. Edward Teschemacher m. E. J. Margetson
  • "Two Blue Eyes" by Edward Madden
  • "Two Little Baby Shoes" w. Edward Madden m. Theodore F. Morse
  • "Under Any Old Flag At All" Cohan
  • "Vilia" w. Adrian Ross m. Franz Lehár
  • "Wal, I Swan!" (aka "Ebeneezer Frye") w.m.
  • "'Way Down In Colon Town" Hoffman
  • "When A Fellow's On The Level With A Girl That's On The Square" w.m. George M. Cohan from the musical [4]
  • "Who? Me?" Snyder
  • "Will the Circle Be Unbroken?" w. Ada R. Habershon m. Charles H. Gabriel
  • "Won't You Be My Honey?" w. m. Theodore F. Morse
  • "Won't You Waltz Home Sweet Home With Me" w.m. Herbert Ingraham
  • "Wouldn't You Like To Have Me For A Sweetheart?" Robyn
  • "You Splash Me And I'll Splash You" w. Arthur J. Lamb m. Alfred Solman

Classical music[]

Opera[]

Musical theater[]

Births[]

Deaths[]

References[]

  1. ^ Nicolas Slonimsky (1949). Music Since 1900. Coleman-Ross Company. p. xxxii.
  2. ^ Nicolas Slonimsky (1994). Nicolas Slonimsky: The First Hundred Years. Schirmer Books. p. 155. ISBN 978-0-02-871845-3.
  3. ^ New York Philharmonic (1947). Program. Philharmonic-Symphony Society of New York.
  4. ^ Jump up to: a b (1952). Variety Music Cavalcade, 1620-1950: A Chronology of Vocal and Instrumental Music Popular in the United States. Prentice-Hall. p. 280.
  5. ^ Philippa Waring (1980). In Praise of Teddy Bears. Pictorial Presentations/Souvenir Press. p. 22. ISBN 978-0-285-62455-9.
  6. ^ The Gay Gordons in The Play Pictorial, No. 63, Vol. 10, October 1907
  7. ^ Ann Labounsky (2000). Jean Langlais: The Man and His Music. Amadeus Press. p. 23. ISBN 978-1-57467-054-7.
  8. ^ American Council of Learned Societies (1999). American National Biography. Oxford University Press. p. 894. ISBN 978-0-19-520635-7.
  9. ^ Martin, Douglas (July 3, 2007). "Hy Zaret, 99, Tin Pan Alley Lyricist, Is Dead". New York Times. Retrieved July 3, 2007.
  10. ^ Bruce Kellner (1984). The Harlem Renaissance: A Historical Dictionary for the Era. Greenwood Press. p. 65. ISBN 978-0-313-23232-9.
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