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  1. B. Harms & Francis, Day & Hunter, Inc. was one of seven defendants named in a 1920 Sherman antitrust suit brought by the U.S. Justice Department for controlling 80% of the music publishing business. [1] The seven defendants were:

    • T. B. Harms & Francis, Day, & Hunter, Inc. renamed to Harms, Inc. on March 31, 1921.
    • Songwriter Jerome Kern purchased a quarter share in the firm
  2. Harms was the largest publisher of popular sheet music in the United States in 1920. This was at the height of the pre-radio, film, and record era, when fortunes could be made from only two sources: live performances (vaudeville and theatrical shows) and printed scores.

    Plate
    Composer
    Work
    Year
    8970
    Noble, Ray
    Say It with Music (2. Love is the ...
    1933
    8349
    Hanley
    The Rainbow Man (1. Sleepy Valley; vocal ...
    1929
    8348
    Hanley
    The Rainbow Man (2. Little Pal; vocal ...
    1929
    8344
    Hanley, James Frederick
    The Rainbow Man (3. Rainbow Man; vocal ...
    1929
  3. US publishing company. Also printed as T. B. Harms, Inc. Founded in 1875 in New York City by brothers Thomas B. Harms and Alexander T. Harms under the name T. B. Harms & Co., this company became one of the largest publishers of popular music in the Unites States.

    • 1.4K
  4. Esplora tutte le pubblicazioni di T.B. Harms su Discogs. Compra vinili, CD e altro di T.B. Harms nel Marketplace di Discogs.

  5. The list below includes all pages in which there are items published by T.B. Harms. Scores in this category have been designated as such via use of the template P and the identification of the publisher as T.B. Harms .

  6. Mostly old favorites such as Haydn's Serenade, but also some rare arrangements such as Vogt's Nocturne, Op.10 No.2, Anton Krause's Romance, and Gounod's Minuet (orig piano 4 hands).

  7. In 1908, Francis, Day & Hunter bought a one-third share in the leading New York music publishing company T.B. Harms, but sold their share in the business in 1920. The firm purchased B. Feldman & Co., one of its main competitors, in 1945.