Sheet Music of the Week: Baby Elephant Edition

Next Tuesday the annual DC Elephant Walk comes to town, bringing with it the Ringling Brothers and Barnum & Bailey Circus.  This week we celebrate the mighty pachyderm with F. F. Hagen’s “Baby Elephant March.” For another  example of the dimunitive animal’s terpsichorean versatility,  see Pierre Latour’s “Baby Elephant Waltz,” which also hails from the Historic …

Read more »

Sheet Music of the Week: Modern Technology Edition

On March 10, 1876, Alexander Graham Bell conducted his first successful experiment with the telephone. Today we remember the fateful invention that changed the world with this week’s featured sheet music.  H. W. Durand’s “The Telephone” dates from just nine years after Bell’s celebrated experiment, and already the songwriter declares that “There’s no need of …

Read more »

Sheet Music of the Week: Remember the Alamo Edition

The Battle of the Alamo began on this date in 1836. In the Muse remembers this fight for independence with our Sheet Music of the Week, penned by Percy Wenrich and Ben Deely. The songwriters’ grasp of the actual battle seems tenuous , as Deely’s lyrics appear to riff on “Alamo” simply because, unlike “orange,” …

Read more »

Sheet Music of the Week: Swimsuit Edition

A major national magazine has just published their highly anticipated annual swimsuit edition.  The art blog Modern Art Notes recently put out a call to museums for their first annual swimsuit post. In the Muse offers its own modest suggestions for beach apparel, in the fashion that was all the rage of 1914.  Who knows what the amorous …

Read more »