Oneil dannie (3 resultados)

Idioma: Inglés
Editorial: Leo Feist Inc., New York 1919
- Tapa blanda
- Partitura
Librería: Turtle Creek Books and Sheet Music, Mississauga, ON, CanadaTurtle Creek Books and Sheet Music
Contactar con el vendedorVendedor de 5 estrellasCondición: Usado - Bueno
EUR 35,55
Envío por EUR 9,49Se envía de Canada a Estados Unidos de AmericaCantidad disponible: 1 disponibles
Soft cover. Condición: Very Good. Original vintage sheet music with a great cover photograph of a man playing a Roscelli accordion. Piano and lyrics. Very minor edgewear otherwise fine.

Editorial: New York: Leo Feist
- Partitura
Librería: Auldfarran Books, IOBA, Decatur, GA, Estados Unidos de AmericaAuldfarran Books, IOBA
Contactar con el vendedorVendedor de 5 estrellasCondición: Usado - Bueno
EUR 39,98
Envío por EUR 5,17Se envía dentro de Estados Unidos de AmericaCantidad disponible: 1 disponibles
No Binding. Condición: Very Good. 1919. sheet music. 4pp. paper sm 4to: Very Good condition. Cover photo of singers Clark & Bergman. The Tin Pan Alley composer Baskette (1884-1949) wrote the classic period song "Good Bye Broadway, Hello France.".
Más imágenesEditorial: M. Witmark & Sons, New York 1919
- Partitura
Librería: Auger Down Books, ABAA/ILAB, Marlboro, VT, Estados Unidos de AmericaAuger Down Books, ABAA/ILAB
Contactar con el vendedorVendedor de 5 estrellasCondición: Usado
EUR 88,86
Envío por EUR 3,45Se envía dentro de Estados Unidos de AmericaCantidad disponible: 1 disponibles
A lively Tin Pan Alley novelty song written and performed by the vaudeville duo Dannie O'Neil and Jimmie Foley, whose studio portraits appear prominently on the cover. The design places their photograph against a decorative field of bold red flowers and deep blue foliage, a bright, poster-like arrangement characteristic of Witma…rk's visually striking sheet music covers of the late 1910s. The cover explicitly advertises the piece as "written and sung by" O'Neil and Foley, reflecting the common Tin Pan Alley practice of promoting songs through the touring stage performers who introduced them. The comic title plays on contemporary slang. In early twentieth-century usage a "regular feller" suggested a dependable or easygoing companion; applied to a woman, the phrase humorously casts the girlfriend as "one of the boys," a playful nod to the companionate style of modern courtship emerging in the years just after World War I. The balancing phrase "and I'm her regular beau" restores the expected romantic pairing, a typical vaudeville comic device that briefly toys with gender expectations before settling back into familiar roles. Three copies in OCLC, with a fourth mistitled at Mississippi State, none in commerce at the time of writing. Near fine with light general wear and minor handling marks. Folio sheet music, 3 pp. plus pictorial cover (4 pp. total).