Music Trade Review

Issue: 1895 Vol. 20 N. 1

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
HE 9RG/\N 9H
VOL. XX. No. r
Down East.
Every Saturday.

flew Yoi% January 5, 1895.
Chlckering firm. Mr. C. H. W. Foster,
naturally, is highly gratified at the eloquent
results, of: '94. He has good reason to be,
for the weekly, shipments of this firm, par-
ticularly
during the past two months, have been
A Hummer in the •» Hub"—The Boston
exceedingly
large. I may add, also, that dur-
Trade Well Satisfied with the Results
ing the usually dull months of summer they also
of the Past Year—The 1894 Chick-
maintained a fair degree of activity.
ering has been a Winner—Hal-
" Christmas trade," said E. N. Kimball, Jr.,
let & Davis Encounter a
to me, after I had exchanged pleasant saluta-
Splendid Holiday
tions with him, in the Hallett & Davis ware-
Trade.
rooms, "was superb. We haven't a word of
Victorious Vose Achieve Greater Renown — complaint to make ; on the contrary, we are more
than gratified at'the result of our labors during
Charlie Cummings Still " i n it"—The
the past quarter. In fact it has been clearly a
Bourne Piano and their New Music
surprise to us. We sent out some very hand-
Desk—The Briggs as a Strong
some instruments for holiday purchasers. " It
Factor for 1895—The Pre-
might be incidentally remarked that the whole-
sent " Piano Row "—
sale business of this firm has been in prime con-
" J a c k " Merrill's
dition for some weeks past, particularly have
Success.
their orders been large and frequent from the
Henry F. Miller, Emerson and their West.
When I greeted Mr. Willard A. Vose with the
Branches—flason & Hamlin's
query, "How's trade? " he replied by a state-
Big Holiday Trade.
ment which was at once an answer to my ques-
tion and conveyed a still deeper meaning. "All
AST Thursday, in Boston. Well, it may sold out," said he; "cleaning up in mighty
properly be designated as a hummer. good shape. Just look at the warerooms."
With every sidewalk a freshet, every crossing a The Vose concern have reason for self congratu-
river, every street mighty dangerous for naviga- lation on their achievements during the past
tion ; a conglomeration of snow, hail, rain and year. The Vose piano has a large clientele of
slush, made things not enticing, to say the admirers among the leading dealers all over the
least, for a man who was unfortunate enough to continent.
Charlie Cummings still claims that he is
alight in Boston on such a morning. However,
blue sky, which is our natural heritage, dawned going to retire from the piano business, but I
suddenly upon us, much to the delight of notice that while Charlie says this he keeps
steadily at it just the same.
"peds."
There were strong and heaity plaudits heard
Charles E. Bourne tells me that he has closed
on every hand, regarding the trade carried on in a very satisfactory holiday trade. He makes a
the year just closed. There is no disputing the piano which certainly should attract the atten-
fact that Boston has maintained a fair degree of tion of dealers. It is worthy of the closest in-
activity in the music trade lines. This is appa- vestigation. The Bourne piano has been made
rent from statements which I heard on all sides. in Boston for over fifty years, and has a splendid
Of course I do not mean to be misunderstood in reputation locally, and is an instrument which
the statement that men claim '94 as their banner is worthy of commendation. The patent auto-
yiear. They do not. But there were ominous matic music desk recently invented by Mr.
cljouds which portended serious business dis- Bourne is, without question, one of the clever-
asters when the curtain was rung up on '94. est devices on the market to day. It is more
The storms did not materialize to the extent than a talking point.
wihich many predicted, and although business
Down at the Briggs factory things seem to be
w ns not conducted in a free, untrammelltd man- running along very smoothly. Mr. Furbush
nltr, there being limitations placed upon almost said that the year had closed much better than
«very line of trade, yet when men look over their he had anticipated at the opening, that the class
Transactions for the past twelve months they of agents which the Briggs Piano Company had
Jfiud them as a whole much better than they had established during the year made a strong argu-
looped for at the beginning.
ment to the statement that the Briggs was an
It is generally admitted on all sides that the instrument thoroughly appreciated by the trade,
Whickering piano—to specialize their product for that with the class of agents which had com-
—has created more favorable comment than menced to push their instruments it was only
he instruments turned out during any previous fair to presume, on his part, that 1895 would be
ear since the firm began the manufacture of for them a big year in many resptcts.
lianos. I have heard dealers in every section of
Boylston street is the future " Piano Row " of
he country—and I have traveled a bit during Boston. The first wart room as you pass down
he past year—speak in the warmest, most eulo- Boylston to Tretnont is the new home of ihe
'stic terms of the new pioduct of the Henry F. Miller Piano Company. It is superb
*3 00 PER VBAR.
SINGLE COPIES. 10 CENTS.
in equipments throughout. A detailel account
is given these rooms in another section of the
paper.
The genial "Jack " Merrill has snug quarters
a little further on. " J a c k " Merrill is in high
feather over the holiday trade, and has good
teison to be. He has closed up a good year's
business, and in the year now opened the Merrill
piano will become a strong factor in the retail
trade of Boston.
Business with the Emerson Piano Company,
as a matter of fact, has never been in a more
satisfactory state. Three months of the year
just closed have resulted in good business deals
among their agencies, and in their own branches
in New York and Chicago.
"Just a moment, and I'll have this sale
closed," said David McKee to me as I greeted
him shortly after I had entered the warerooms
of the Mason & Hamlin Company. Mr. McKee
was correct in his statement, and in less than
five minutes the sale had been closed and we
were comfortably ensconced chatting over old
times. Mr. McKee has made a mighty good
record since he assumed the management of
the retail business of the Mason & Hamlin
Company. " M a c " is an all-around hustler,
and there is no question as to his success in
Boston. The Mason & Hamlin Company have
transacted the best holiday trade that they have
ever experienced in that city. Taken on the
whole, It seems to me that the deductions
drawn from a hurried call at the various musi-
cal establishments in Boston convince one that
an improvement in business has been encoun-
tered by the trade in that city, and further, the
present appearances certainly justify the con-
clusion that the improvement in business will
be permanent.
A New Piano Case.
T&TR. ALFRED J. NEWBY, of this city, has
i-t^J- patented an invention which relates to
the mechanism for .automatically moving up the
front of the case by the lifting and pushing in of
the keyboard fall. The case has a swinging
front, with fall and movable slide plate hinged
to it, and a lever hinged on the case has its
lower end connected with the slide plate and its
upper end extending opposite the swinging
front, there being also a vertically movable
guide bar parallel with the slide plate, and J
cranks secured to the guide bar and pivoted t fA
the slide pla'e.
Something New in the BramJ
Jgfr VERY effective, and what is
®^> prove valuable device is a]
bodied in the Brambach pianc
at Dolgevllle, N. Y. It is si'
which adds to the carryinj
and also to its prolongation,
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW.
EI/EI^V §f\]U\\bf\Y.
3 EAST 14th STREET, NEW YORK.
SUBSCRIPTION (including postage) United States and
Canada, $3.00 per year, in .^vance; Foreign Countries,
$4 00.
piano manufacturer who wishes to be
termed progressive and who desires to ad-
vance the standing of his wares and enlarge his
trade in the year '95, should not overlook the
special merits of the Dolge blue felt. The piano
trade are realizing more and more each day that
this felt is not alone superior to any other, as
far as wearing quality is concerned, but it
possesses those essentials which aid in the de-
velopment of a superior quality of tone in the
piano. For hammers and dampers it cannot be
surpassed. No better proof can be adduced of
the excellence of the blue felt than the rapidly
increasing and enlarged orders which are coming
to the manufacturers week after week. It is
getting a stronger hold upon the good opinion
of the trade as time progresses, and the manu-
facturer will be indeed slow to his own best in-
terests if he fails to give the Dolge blue felt a
trial.
ADVERTISEMENTS, $2.00 per inch, single column, per
insertion; unless inserted upon rates made by special
contract.
Entered at the New York Post Office as Second Class Matter.
>I ! flE
If OR lift'Cause that lacks'assistance,
For the wro?g that aesds resi&tajf^y/
For lie future in "•- /! -'-- < ^/'-•*'J 1
E Hazelton piano ! This is an instrument
that the wide-awake dealer should keep in
mind during the year 1895. He can pin his
faith to it. Once a customer always a customer,
is the rule with all who have had any experience
with the Hazelton product. Its popularity is
not transient. It has grown with the times, and
it holds its place solely on its intrinsic musical
value.
«
STEP UP, GENTLEMEN.
HE income tax regulations have been ap-
proved by Secretary Carlisle. Every
citizen of the United States, whether residing
at home or abroad, and every perion residing
doing business in the United States who has
annual income of more than $3,500, is re-
to make return, under oath, before the
[onday of March of each year. The first
to include all income received in the
Persons having less than $3,500
are not required to make return,
and over are taxable 2 per
incomes for the year 1894
fable on or before the first
the music trade, as in every other industry,
a number of manufacturer can always be
found who possess the idea that the spirit of
enterprise is not essential to success—that their
own personal reputation, or the reputation of their
wares, will enable them to hold their own with
their progressive brother manufacturer. And the
most singular thing in this connectihn is the
inability or indifference of these individuals to
see where their misguided policy is leading
them. Take the last year for instance, and the
most superficial observer will admit that the
piano or manufacturer best known to-day are
those kept before the public by broad minded
enterprise and skillful management. While
merit is absolutely essential to the success of
the modern piano, it is a foolish policy to ima-
gine that this alone will insure success com-
mercially. This is not the day when a high
class piano is one among the few, but one among
the many—hence conservatism should be shelved
with the old }eir, and a new, a progressive
policy should be ushered in with the new.
IT DEPENDS.
all lines of special industries there are cer-
tain names which have become the embodi-
ment of all that is highest and best in those
trades. They represent a degree—a standard of
value. The piano industry does not in this
particular differ from other industrial fields.
Those names which are known the continent
over have reached a point of eminence for special
reasons. In those instruments were incorpo-
rated ideas which were recognized from a me-
chanical and an acoustical standpoint as perfect.
Investigation, research, and the practical de-
velopment of advanced and theoretical ideas had
clearly proven the results ot human skill and
human brains—bad emphasized their practical
use by years of successful manufacture.
The highest experts, musical and scientific,
had pronounced them as nearly approaching
perfection as it was possible to hope during the
present development of the pianoforte. These
instruments have grown with the years, their
very names have acted as an impelling force.
The new salesman, frequently referring to them
in the way of comparison, saying, by way of
argument, that his piano was as good as so and
so's—admitting their value as a standard.
\
The structure has taken years to build. It
has been built not upsn sensationalism, not upon
false foundation. It has been built upon prin-
ciples as solid and enduring as the trade itself,
because the causes which evolved these names
1
from the mist of obscurity and caused them tjo
shine in the light of public esteem, are princji-
plee upon which rests the very essentials which
support the citadel of our business and our com-
merce. Can the structure that has taken a life-
time to build be toppled over in a minute?
No, assuredly not; you may believe, con-
fidently, that any article which represents a
standard of value is not easily depreciated.
Attacks which are inspired by mercenary mo-
tives oftentimes fall short of gaining their object.
Oftentimes, particularly in the music trade, they
do not. But the injury resulting from these
attacks is often overestimated. One thing is
certain, a piano that has stood the ever changing
conditions of trade currents for a half century
and haB held its place, cannot be removed from
its position and stripped of its rank just because
some particular individual desires it relegated to
the rear for reasons which are apparent to the
onlookers.
If these things were possible what a funny
condition of things there would be. We say
what a funny condition of things there would be
roundabout.
Take the Knabe piano for instance. Suppose
any well-meaning, kindly disposed journalist,
should attack it, or suppose just for the sake of
argument that he was not so gentle and lamb-
like. Suppose he should exhaust himself in
labyranthine rhetoric and pyrotechnical attacks
until the very skies reflected the effulgence of
his mouthings ?
Suppose he should twist himself into all kinds
of tortuous paths in trying to belittle the Knabe
piano.
Of course we will presume this for the sake
of argument; would it effect the status of that
instrument ?
j
Would not the individual who was insincere
enough to make the attack rebound from the
encounter of the stonewall of public opinion (
with a force which would shake the barnacles off'
an iron-clad ?
Would he be shaken ?
Well, that depends.
Just a little on the man, doesn't it ?
f
HE year 1894 was a good one for the Brad-
bury piano, notwithstanding the general
depression. Mr. F. G. Smith is well pleased
with the excellent business transacted by the
different concerns in which he has an active in-
terest. Apart from the increase in business, the
Bradbury piano has gained in prestige and
popularity, and the year just opened bids fair to
add still further to its sale and growth in appre-
ciation.

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