Music Trade Review

Issue: 1896 Vol. 23 N. 13

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
elapses between the sale and the time when
the first cost of the piano is covered.
We say emphatically that history repudi-
ates Mr. Fisher's statement, and we ques-
tion if he himself believes it. He is too
keen a man, a man of too great intelligence,
to believe that the profits on the sale of
pianos are abnormal, or even more than
commensurate with the capital and energy
involved in their sale. If the music busi-
ness is so profitable, why is it the trade is
not more prolific in wealthy members.
What percentage of the whole in the music
trade of this country can be termed wealthy,
or even modeiately wealthy men?
The '"Courier" asks for a list of more than
one hundred piano dealers constituting
firms that purchase more than thirty-six
pianos a year whose credit is unimpeach-
able. If the "Courier" is correct in this,
then is it not wrong for Mr. Fisher to give
the public the impression that the music
dealers make enormous profits?
The
"Courier" says that it hasn't the slightest
compassion for the dealers or the manu-
facturers involved in this trade battle. It
is possible that the members of the trade
alluded to will not become prostrated with
sorrow even if the "Courier" does entertain
such feelings towards them. In our opinion,
the "Courier" has carried this matter to an
extreme which the situation did not war-
rant. It has printed the entire article,
quoting the prices of the various pianos
offered by Mr, Fisher in his article in the
"Detroit Free Press."
Discredit Upon the Trade.
This, in our opinion, is a most glaring
journalistic error. Whatever the "Cou-
rier's" opinion may have been in this mat-
ter, it is entitled to, and as such should be
respected. But we maintain that it had no
right, morally at least, to publish before
the entire trade the prices at which the
various makes of instruments handled by
Mr. Schwankovsky, in Detroit, were offered
for sale by Mr. Fisher. By publishing this
list the "Courier" has placed an instrument
in the hands of unscrupulous agents all over
America, which they can use when brought
into competition with any of the makes
named, to the disadvantage of the instru-
ment in competition.
The "Courier" has gone too far, and we
will quote a portion of a personal letter
written to us by Mr. Fisher after we had
visited him at Ft. Wayne in 1894, where
he was engaged in a sale similar to that
which he is now carrying on in Detroit.
He wrote: " I consider the fight a local
one, and so far as I am concerned, these
^published figures shall not pass out of the
ts of Ft. Wayne."
ISi
Through the mediumship of the "Cou-
rier" every dealer in the United States who
reads the paper has an argument, if he
wishes to use it, against any of the pianos
named by Mr. Fisher in his Detroit article.
It seems hard, no doubt, for resident
dealers to have a temporary piano sale in
their town, the manager of which is secur-
ing all the ripe plums which otherwise
would have dropped into the local mer-
chants' lap. They attack him, but then
simply the fact that he is incensed does not
give Mr. Fisher license to retaliate upon
the local trade in an unfair way, and in
a manner which reflects, to a large extent,
discredit upon the entire piano trade of
America.
The action of the "Courier" in printing
the prices cannot be recorded as a correct
journalistic stroke, and should meet with
strong condemnation.
The Cheapening Process.
The "Courier" then introduces the cheap
and stencil piano matter into the fight,
where it has no proper place. Cheap
pianos have been sold in larger quantities
during the past two or three years than ever
before for good and valid reasons. The
inactivity of money, through lack of confi-
dence, has caused a general depression pro-
ducing the era of cheapness. If that cheap-
ness alone existed in the piano trade then
we would gladly admit the fairness of the
"Courier's" argument. But it does not, it
extends to every branch of manufacture in
this country.
Talk with the wholesale clothiers, and
see what percentage of their business has
been carried on during the past two or three
years in cheaper suitings. Talk with the
boot and shoe manufacturers and they will
willingly tell you that their sales in higher
priced goods have undergone tremendous
shrinkages, the volume of their business
being conducted on cheaper lines. Take
the dry goods trade, and the merchants
will inform you that the high priced silks
have not been in as great demand as for-
merly. In fact, the people want bargains.
They want something for a little money,
because their purchasing power has been
tremendously contracted during this ex-
tended period of depression. It has had its
effect upon the piano business and every
other trade, and the result has been a strife
among the cheaper piano manufacturers as
to who should supply, at the lowest figure,
the immediate demand for a piano that
would sell.
The "Courier" knows full well that the
cheap piano has advanced in quality, and
is infinitely superior to-day to the instru-
ment made years ago by J. P. Hale, who
was really the father of the cheap piano.
Dealers will sell that for which they have a
demand, and of late the purchasing public
has demanded cheap pianos. Therefore the
increase has been in that particular line.
If the intermediate and high priced
pianos had been sought for, the manufac-
turers of that grade of instruments would
have been busy. But in studying the rise
of the cheap piano we must consider the
basic law which regulates supply and de-
mand.
Causes Instrumental.
The "Courier" speaks sneeringly of the
cheapening processes which have been
gradually going on in the piano business.
We affirm that our contemporary has con-
tributed in a considerable degree towards
that cheapening process. If our memory
serves us correctly, that publication was the
first one to quote prices in its columns of
the actual cost to manufacturers of the dif-
ferent parts of the instruments. By pub-
lishing what actions, cases, sets of hammers,
keys, sounding boards, plates and all of the
manufactured parts which enter into the
piano cost, it educated dealers as to the ex-
act cost of the instruments.
The oversharp dealer went at once to
work with his pencil to figure out the real
cost of an instrument. He did not figure
the different grades of material, nor did he
figure that some veneers are worth twenty
times what a cheap veneer is worth—he did
not figure the increased cost of expert labor,
but he at once accused the manufacturer in
many cases of charging him too much.
We know of instances where dealers have
had the nerve to tell a manufacturer the ex-
act cost of his instrument: their figures not
being within fifty per cent, of the real cost,
and that he should sell at a reduced figure.
In this way, through the "Courier" and
through other journals, a campaign of edu-
cation was carried on which acted detri-
mentally to the entire music trades of this
country. It encouraged the cry for cheaper
pianos and soon the cheap piano became a
strong factor in the trade.
It was, we affirm, through the false educa-
tion of certain trade journals that this lower-
ing process was begun. But this, as we have
stated, has been materially accentuated by
the business depression which has entirely
submerged America. The mischief was
done originally by printing the cost of in-
struments when the printed figures in no
case approximated the real cost of the in-
strument to the manufacturer, but it gave
the dealer a cue and he followed it up,
and the result was that the price began to
be lowered, until it reached a point when
there was absolutely no profit in the cheap
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
pianos for those who engaged in their
manufacture.
This is demonstrated by the fact that
many manufacturers of cheap pianos have
failed during the past twelve months. Let
us be once fairly on the road to business
prosperity, and we will predict that the
demand for cheap pianos will become much
curtailed. They will become improved in
quality and prices will be advanced. The
American people, as a whole, wish a good
thing when they have the money to pay
for it, and a cheap piano, that is, a very
cheap piano, in our opinion, may be prop-
erly termed an emergency piano.
The One Grade Matter.
The "Courier" tosses off the one grade
matter as if it was an airy nothing; not
even worthy of argument, but let us see.
There are prosperous manufacturers to-
day who are making two grades of instru-
ments. They affirm that the dealers
would buy a cheap piano elsewhere if they
did not supply them; and they reason
that they may as well get the trade as to
have it directed into other channels.
Again there are men who claim that by
concentration of energy on one particular
make, their labor will receive more gener-
ous returns than if it were divided on two
or three lines.
Personally we are of the opinion that the
concentration of energy and ideas upon a
certain object will be more certain of
achieving success than if that energy was
weakened by division. However, on this
important matter men disagree, according
to their local environments. There are
those who prefer to conduct the piano busi-
ness on a high minded basis, holding
the instruments far above the commercial
plane. They place the piano as a true art
creation, not as a piece of merchandise
made of metal and wood. Others place it
on purely a commercial basis, and conduct
the piano business the same as a manufac-
turer of boots and shoes or clothing con-
ducts his.
We affirm that the matter of making
one grade of pianos is not at all settled,
and in our opinion never will be, because
there will be always a difference of opinion
regulated by the success which crowns the
efforts of the different makers.
Dolge not in the Argument.
The "Courier" brings the name of Alfred
Dolge & Son into its arraignment, where
we claim it has no proper place. Mr.
Dolge is a manufacturer and merchant.
His wares are offered for sale, and he has
no more right to discriminate as to whom
he shall sell, provided he considers the sale
a good one, than a dry goods man has the greatly improved, and the atmosphere
right to exclude a man from his store who cleared materially in this trade when
manufacturers come together for a common
comes in to become a customer.
It is true Mr. Dolge is the best known good.
Years ago, when we perfected the
felt-maker on earth, but pray does he not
make different grades of felts? That he machinery for an organization for the
has not been generous in credits to the cheap music trades of this country, we were an-
piano makers is evidenced in the fact that tagonized by every music trade paper in
his firm have been creditors to only moder- the land. They exerted influence, and
ate amounts in the concerns that have the result was a great many men stood
failed. Dolge & vSon have no right to de- aloof from joining the association. • Others
mand what grade of piano a man intends claimed that they could run their affairs in-
to produce. Strictly speaking, if the cus- dependent of any organization, a claim
tomer leaves them an equivalent for the i which was perfectly right and proper; but
wares, that settles the matter as far as they a man in joining an association would not
are concerned. They do not cater to a relinquish any of his rights or indepen-
special class and the Dolge name should dence.
Disorganization Permits Evils,
not have been introduced in the "Courier'
article.
The disorganized condition of the trade
Credits—Unity the Salvation.
to-day enables the continuance of certain
When the "Courier" introduces the mat- evils which render it difficult for the legiti-
ter of credits and dilates at length upon mate trade to overcome. There never has
the irresponsibility of many dealers, we been a time in the history of America, or
think it is correct, and when it attacks, in of the world, for that matter, when the
a comparative way, the Fisher plan at De- people have not arisen in case of an emer-
troit and the Smith & Nixon plan at Cin- gency.
cinnati, we claim that neither one of these
Human slavery existed for many years in
plans would have been possible had the this country, and it was sanctioned by our
piano trade of America organized a Constitution, but it was an evil and it had
National association, which would have to be uprooted. In the uprooting process
regulated the granting of credits and other the Civil War became necessary, but the
matters of similar importance which would dark stain of slavery was wiped forever
have naturally come up for discussion be- from the fair face of America.
fore a business organization.
There are evils existing in the music
A National music trade association was trade—many of them, but there are in-
a pet theory of ours years ago. We have fluences at work which shall uproot them;
held to it, believed in it, and say still that their annihilation is only a matter of time
the time will come in the American music —it will come as sure as fate, and it will
trades when a National music trade asso- take a National music trade association to
ciation will become a necessity. We say do it.
had this organization been perfected
#
#
That
talented
member
of the trade, A.
years ago, the Smith & Nixon matters
Clifford
Cox,
favors
THK
REVIEW readers
would not have been possible; because the
this
week
with
a
"Specialty
Talk." Mr.
men composing that firm could not have
Cox's ability as a salesman at Stein-
obtained such enormous credits.
way Hall is well known, and a perusal of
We say the Fisher plan would have not the interview would show that he is a deep
been possible either, because Mr. Fisher student of the philosophical conditions un-
would have been unable to have procured derlying the trade structure.
the pianos of the various makes which he
NAHUM STETSON returned Monday from
is now offering at cut rates in Detroit.
a flying trip West.
An association organized on broad and
CALVIN WHITNEY is tarrying in our midst.
comprehensive lines, an association which He is enthusiastic over the political outlook
shall uphold the weak and crush the un- in the West.
worthy, will yet solidify and dignify the
A REPORT from Brazil, Ind., says that
music trades of America.
the W. W. Kimball Co. are opening a
branch store in that town.
Association will bring Relief.
C. F. TRETHAR denies the report that
It is absurd, in our opinion, to talk about Paderewski has lost his mind as well as
the piano business as going to perdition. his hair.
The piano business has simply conformed
A DISPATCH from Concord, N. H., says
to the times, and when times are better the new factory of the Prescott Piano Co.
there will be an upward trend of affairs in is now open for inspection.
our musico-industrial field.
CIEOR(;E CLAN- COX, Rochester, N.
In our opinion, however, matters will be came to town yesterday.

Download Page 5: PDF File | Image

Download Page 6 PDF File | Image

Future scanning projects are planned by the International Arcade Museum Library (IAML).

Pro Tip: You can flip pages on the issue easily by using the left and right arrow keys on your keyboard.