Bert L. Rule

Bert L. Rule (né Albert Lyman Rule; 12 August 1891 Brooklyn;[1] – 17 August 1978 East Patchogue, New York) was an American composer, arranger, singer, and pianist of popular songs of Tin Pan Alley and the vaudeville genre. Rule composed and published his music, some of which became national hits, from 1913 to 1934. He worked in publishing houses, namely M. Witmark & Sons and performed in vaudeville theaters throughout the country roughly during the same period.

Career highlights

Brennan & Rule (circa 1918–1920)

In 1918 and 1919, while under contract with M. Witmark & Sons, Rule performed vaudeville shows with lyricist J. Keirn Brennan, both signing compositions they wrote together, with Rule accompanying on piano. Their biggest nationwide hit at the time was Have a Smile for Everyone You Meet[2] and Gates of Gladness.[3]

O'Brien & Rule (circa 1923–1925)

In 1924, Rule performed as a singing composer, with John O'Brien, as singing comedian, in a vaudeville show at the Lyceum in Canton, Ohio.[4] There is an article and advertisement in an October 1924 Toronto newspaper stating that Rule and O'Brien was to perform at Shea's Hippodrome in Toronto.[5] There are also advertisements in 1924 issues of The Plain Dealer showing Rule and O'Brien performing at B. F. Keith's Palace in Cleveland.[6] There is a 1926 article in a 1926 issue of The Times, Batavia, New York stating that Rule and O'Brien was performing at Shea's in Buffalo.[7]

Selected compositions

Various publishers
  • Way Down East, Sailors Don't Care, words & music by H. Wallis & G. Feist, Bert Rule (publisher unknown) (1923) OCLC 497250665
Published by A. J. Stasny Music Co.
  • Down Where the Tennessee Flows, words by Ray Sherwood, music by Bert L. Rule (1913) OCLC 165088879
  • I Did It All For You, words by Ray Sherwood, music by Bert L. Rule (1914) OCLC 665047875
  • I'm Goin Back to Old Nebraska, words by Ray Sherwood, music by Bert L. Rule, cover artist Edward Henry Pfeiffer (1868–1932) (1914) OCLC 48497850
  • There's a Girl That's Meant for Me: in the Heart of Tennessee, words by Ray Sherwood, music by Burt L. Rule (1914) OCLC 20120844
  • Why Shouldn't I Love You, words by Ray Sherwood, music by Bert L. Rule (1915) OCLC 657982062
  • Sweetheart - Time, one step, by Milbury Ryder & Bert Rule (1915) OCLC 271531699 (arr. for band) OCLC 70287199
Published by Allan & Co., Melbourne
Published by M. Witmark & Sons
  • I want to see my Ida Hoe in Idaho, words by Alex Sullivan, music by Bert Rule (1918) OCLC 224047101
  • Have a Smile for Everyone You Meet, and They Will Have a Smile for You, words by J. Keirn Brennan & Paul Cunningham, music by Bert Rule (1918) OCLC 20120419 OCLC 449992715 OCLC 726919222
  • If You Don't Stop Making Eyes at Me, I'm Goin' to Make Eyes at You, words and music by J. Keirn Brennan, Paul Cunningham, & Bert Rule (1919) OCLC 20266851 OCLC 498601440
  • Shadows Will Fade Away, ballad fox trot, words by J. Keirn Brennan, music by Bert Rule (1919) OCLC 43869595 OCLC 456555712
  • My Sampan Man, words by J. Keirn Brennan, music by Bert Rule (1919) OCLC 499128174
  • The Gates of Gladness (on the Road to Sunshine Land), by J. Keirn Brennan, Paul Cunningham & Bert Rule (1919) OCLC 10445483 OCLC 456301542 OCLC 726897966
  • Ain't It Grand in New Orleans, words by J. Keirn Brennan, music by Bert Rule (1919) OCLC 499196969
  • Why must we say goodbye? by Sam Ash, J. Keirn Brennan & Bert Rule (1920) OCLC 750251473
  • She's the Heart of Dixieland, words by Ray Sherwood, music by Burt L. Rule (1920) OCLC 26004178
  • Just a week from to-day, novelty fox trot song, words by Paul Cunningham & Al Dubin, music by Bert Rule (1920) OCLC 60586589
  • On a Far Alone Isle, novelty fox trot ballad, words by J. Keirn Brennan, music by Bert Rule (1921) OCLC 265450436
  • I Want To Rock-a-Bye My Mammy, Like She Used To Rock-a-Bye Me, by Al Dubin, Paul Cunningham & Bert Rule (1921) OCLC 224767777
  • That's How I Believe in You, waltz ballad, words by Al Dubin & Paul Cunningham, music by Bert Rule (1921) OCLC 20410406
  • Ireland Must Be a Garden, If You Are a Wild Irish Rose, fox trot song, words by George Graff, music by Bert Rule (1923) OCLC 20597781

Selected arrangements

Published by Santly Bros.
Santly Bros. WFAA Collection

Selected discography

Historic recordings
  • Have a smile Sterling Trio Victor 18518 (4 December 1918)
  • The gates of gladness (on the road to Sunshine Land) Shannon Four, Lewis James, Victor 18590 (28 May 1919)
  • That's how I believe in you Henry Burr, Victor 18848 (27 October 1921)
Cylinder recordings

Family

Albert Lyman Rule was married to Jessie Jack Ellen Laurie (1894-1978). They had a son and a daughter: Donald J. Rule (born 1915–2008) and Edna J. Rule (born 1921-1990).

gollark: Hmm. The problem appears to be that it takes an `AppContext` beeoid.
gollark: ```/home/osmarks/.cache/nim/minoteaur_d/@msqlitesession.nim.c: In function ‘sessionMiddleware__Ko5duWztA4CyOEXplWBQyg’:/home/osmarks/.cache/nim/minoteaur_d/@msqlitesession.nim.c:1640:2: error: conversion to non-scalar type requested 1640 | unsureAsgnRef((void**) (&(*Result).ClE_0), ((tyProc__xbHXomp5MlkV8YhqFoSpIA) (T3_)).ClE_0); | ^~~~~~~~~~~~~/home/osmarks/.cache/nim/minoteaur_d/@msqlitesession.nim.c:1641:2: error: conversion to non-scalar type requested 1641 | (*Result).ClP_0 = ((tyProc__xbHXomp5MlkV8YhqFoSpIA) (T3_)).ClP_0; | ^```Bee density has ascended above φ.
gollark: The bump allocator is just rebranded osmarksmalloc™.
gollark: Slightly unoptimized and buggy hash tables, linked lists even though they're generally awful datastructures because they're easy to implement, actually I can't think of other instances immediately.
gollark: This sort of attitude leads to mildly worse code everywhere.

References

  1. Albert Rule: 1930 United States Federal Census Record, Woodhaven, New York
  2. At Poli's, Wilkes-Barre Times, April 4, 1918
  3. Brennan and Rule in Vaudeville, The Music Trades, pg. 23, June 14, 1919
  4. Act Is Pretentious, The Repository, col. 5 (bottom), pg. 5, January 19, 1924
  5. Shea's, Archived 2012-04-21 at the Wayback Machine Canadian Jewish Review, pg. 18, October 1, 1924
  6. Advertisement, The Plain Dealer, pg. 17, January 5, 1925
  7. "Everbody's Welcome" Heads Bill at Shea's Court Street Theater, The Times, Batavia, New York, col. 2, pg. 3, September 25, 1926
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.