Music Trade Review

Issue: 1898 Vol. 27 N. 12

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
REVIEW
V O L . XXVII. N o . 12. Published Every Saturday by Edward Lyman Bill at 3 East Fourteenth Street. New York, Sept. 17,1898.
N
$2.00 PER YEAR.
SINGLE COPIES, 10 CENTS.
EYORK
,IC LIBRARY]
Oft, LENOX A N O I N "
FOUNOAT1ON8-J
Henry Spies' Views
M A
j
E S T I C
" POPULARITY—AN INTEREST
ING TALK.
make another tour of the States, in behalf
of the 'Majestic' At present, I must
stay right here. We receive many appli-
cations for catalogues, terms, etc. These
are frequently followed by orders, and
these orders are ofttimes quickly duplicat-
ed. In a general way I would say that
live dealers who are not handling the
' Majestic ' ought to learn more about it,
and we shall be pleased to give them all
the information they desire. "
Henry Spies, vigorous as ever, and
bubbling over with the cheerfulness only
enjoyed by those who are healthy, wealthy
and wise, was seen by The Review on
Wednesday and talked with briefly as to
the fall outlook for the " Majestic."
Asked if he considered the prospects
good, he said: "Certainly I do. Orders
Piano Dealer Hissing.
for ' Majesties ' are coming in steadily and
our shipments are being made to keep pace EDWARD B. WAKEFIELD HAS BEEN ABSENT
FROM HOME SEVERAL DAYS.
with orders. Excellent reports are being
received from all points. Our full force is
[Special to The Review.]
at work. The chances are that, before
Cincinnati, O., Sept. 12, 1898.
long, we shall need even greater facilities
E. B. Wakefield, the well-known piano
than we now enjoy."
dealer of Ashtabula, is missing from home
" T h e success of the 'Majestic,' Mr. and his family are much distressed.
Spies, may justly be termed phenomenal.
Lately he had been living on the farm
Considering the number of worthy com- south of Kingsville village. The last seen
petitors now in the field, how does it of him by his family was Aug. 21st. That
happen that the ' Majestic ' has secured night he went to Conneaut with his son,
and now retains so firm a hold with live Fisk, where he said he was to do some
and reputable dealers ? "
piano tuning the following day, then go
"Because our instruments cause them on to Ancover by train, his son driving
no trouble. They purchase our 'Majesties' the team back home. When he got out of
on a lasting guarantee as to satisfactory the buggy he bade his son good-bye by
tone and perfect construction. They find saying he would see him again in a few
that persons desiring to purchase a piano days. Nothing has been heard from him
frequently choose a ' Majestic' of their own since. Whether some accident has befall-
volition, often from among a number of en him or whether he has wandered away
others on their wareroom floor.
in a state of temporary aberration is not
"Sales of ' Majesties ' by live dealers are known.
easily made. Our styles suit purchasers.
He had a great deal of trouble in a finan-
The tone pleases them. The prices are right. cial way the past few months, which his
Then, after the ' Majestic ' reaches its des- family say has driven him nearly dis-
tination in the home, it gives no cause for tracted. About the time he left he was
anxiety. It remains in tune for a year at wanted in Common Pleas Court on a
least. It retains its finished appearance charge of contempt of court, and it is pos-
right along. There is no cracking, no sible that may have had something to do
breaking, no running backward and for- with his leaving.
ward to the dealer asking why this is so
and why that happened to the piano.
The Doll Picnic.
"That's the sum and substance of our
success. People hate to be bothered mak-
Jacob Doll gives his employees their
ing complaints to dealers. Dealers hate usual annual picnic to-day at Kiefe's As-
to hear complaints. They prefer to do toria Schuetzen Park. There will be mu-
business with firms who are careful about sic and dancing, and all present are guar-
the smallest as well as the largest details. anteed an enjoyable time. Mr. Doll has
We pride ourselves on oiir perfect system entered fully into the spirit of the
of manufacture, which admits of no mis- occasion. Several of his sons are on the
takes or omissions."
committees and they will spare no effort
"Do you intend to make another trip to give the men and their families an en-
joyable afternoon and evening's enter-
in the near future, Mr. Spies? "
"When the proper time comes, I shall tainment
Ludwig Branching Out.
The usual atmosphere of brisk activity
pervades the Ludwig establishment. It is
a veritable bee-hive. John Ludwig greeted
The Review when a call was made on
Wednesday.
He reported business as
brisk and growing all the time.
Mr. Ludwig also announced that impera-
tive demands for more space had necessi-
tated the construction of an annex of three
floors, each 25 x 60 feet. The contract has
been given out and the work begun. It
calls for completion of the annex within
thirty days.
Good Business Rules.
The president of the London Chamber
of Commerce recommends these twelve
maxims, which he has tested through
years of business experience:
1. Have a definite aim.
2. Go straight for it.
3. Master all details.
4. Always know more than you are ex-
pected to know.
5. Remember the difficulties are only
made to overcome.
6. Treat failures as stepping-stones to
further effort.
7. Never put your hand out further than
you can draw it back.
8. At times be bold; always prudent.
9. The minority often beats the major-
ity in the end.
10. Make good use of other men's
brains.
11. Listen well; answer cautiously; de-
cide promptly.
12. Preserve, by all means in your pow-
er, " a sound mind in a sound body."
Appraisers' Correction.
Among the reappraisements of merchan-
dise filed by the General Appraisers in this
city on Tuesday last, was the following:
Correction—1,085-4,527 O. P.—Musical
instruments and toys, from Robert & Al-
bert Horz, Bochun, Feb. 25, 1898; har-
monicas, etc., entered at a total of 814.60
marks, advanced by addition of 30 marks
for packing charges.
J. K. Raff, who was associated for many
years with Steger & Co., Chicago, died
recently in the South where he located a
couple of years ago hoping that his fast
waning health might be restored.
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
EDWARD LYiVlAN
Editor and Proprietor
PUBLISHED EVERY SATURDAY
3 East 14th St., New York
SUBSCRIPTION (including: postage), United States,
Mexico and Canada, $a.oo per year; all other countries,
$300.
ADVERTISEHENTS, $2.00 per inch.sinpfle column, per
insertion. On quarterly or yearly contracts a special dis-
count is allowed. Advertising Pages $50.00, opposite read-
ing matter $75.00.
REMITTANCES, in other than currency form, should
be made payable to Edward Lyman Bill.
Entered at the New York Post Office as Second Oast Matter.
NEW YORK, SEPTEMBER 17, 1898.
TELEPHONE NUMBER, 1745--EIOHTEENTH STREET.
THE KEYNOTE.
The first week of each month, The Review will
contain a supplement embodying the literary
and musical features which have heretofore
appeared in The Keynote. This amalgamation
will be effected without in any way trespassing
on our regular news service. The Review will
continue to remain, as before, essentially a
trade paper.
CLEARING
THE TRADE ATMOS-
PHERE.
*' V O U have said a great many things in
• The Review which have interested
me of late, but none more than the matter
of commissions to music teachers," re-
marked a well-known member of the trade
this week, while we were engaged in friend-
ly chat.
"There, is no doubt in my mind," he
continued, "that vast sums have been paid
for services which have never been ren-
dered."
This is the piece de resistance of the whole
matter, for vast sums have been paid for
services which have never been rendered.
No manufacturer will refuse to pay—and
liberally for that matter, for services ren-
dered which have proved advantageous in
a business way, but what manufacturers
object to most strenuously to-day is paying
something for an alleged service, proof of
the existence of which never materializes—
at least to any appreciable extent.
There are good and bad rmtsic teachers
like good and bad music trade editors.
Unquestionably in the former case as in the
latter, the good may suffer for the crimes
of the bad, but it is necessary now to use
intelligent discrimination in opening up
dealings with either. Manufacturers have
certainly cast aside the old forms as ap-
plied to the music trade editor, and they
never again will bow their heads in sub-
jection to the impecunious demands of the
man who has stormed and threatened, ex-
torted and bled this trade for years. The
scales have fallen from the manufacturer's
eyes and his very back bone has become
stiffened by reason of the fact that the bet-
ter papers have grown stronger and to-day
form an impelling power which he is forced
to recognize as an advantage to his busi-
ness, while the blackmailer, like poor
Spain, has become impotent and harmless.
Manufacturers must oftentimes wonder
to-day how they submitted to the con-
ditions of years ago.
While the demand for commissions, fa-
vors, loans, etc., etc., from music teachers
and others, upon manufacturers has been
large and massive, full grown and well
rounded, yet there has never been as a
whole, that real benefit which they claimed
for their efforts. It is by acceding to the
many demands made upon them that man-
ufacturers and dealers have assisted to-
wards creating the idea that there are ab-
normal profits in the piano business.
The idea of one friend bringing in an-
other and getting a large fat commission,
simply for recommending a certain instru-
ment, is ridiculous from a mercantile view.
It is a false position and has injured the
industry rather than benefited it. If one
recommends a particular tailor he does not
go around and demand a percentage for
recommending the man, neither does he in
any other line except in the piano busi-
ness. And this is one of the abuses which
has crept into this trade and has lowered
it materially and taken from its dignity as
well.
Some men to-day pay as high as thirty
per cent, commission on sales. And there
are various kinds of commissions—omis-
sions too. In other words, we know of in-
stances where a dealer has been asked to
pay no less than four commissions on a
single instrument.
Now what state of affairs is this?
It is worse than Baxter street methods.
Again, there are thousands of cases in
the country where musicians have been
furnished the best kind of instruments;
have had them kept in tune year in and
year out at the manufacturer's expense;
all for what? For a certain alleged influ-
ence which the teacher is supposed to turn
in favor of a certain make of piano.
Now, is it not a fact that in many of
these cases where the manufacturers are
being subjected to enormous expenses in
keeping up certain lines of instruments,
that they themselves arc being made vic-
tims by these same teachers, for instead of
turning their influence in the direction
where the permanent favors are being re-
ceived, they were taking around customers
to warerooms where cheaper makes of in-
struments are offered, impelled by the
motive that the cheaper man pays the
largest commission. In other words, the
cheap piano pays a bigger percentage of
profit to the dealer than the high grade
piano, hence the teacher gets a larger com-
mission from the vendor of the cheap than
of the high priced piano.
In this way they have been playing piano
manufacturers false and the latter are begin-
ning to learn it, because to-day there are
less pianos of reputable makes in the stu-
dios of music teachers throughout the land
than ever before, that are unpaid for.
In other words, manufacturers have
been drawing in instruments from certain
studios where they have placed them
at the disposal of teachers for months
and years at no charge, save that
vague and mysterious something which
possibly comes from "influence." Manu-
facturers and dealers do not object to pay-
ing liberally for what they get, but they
do object to pay for a vague something
which is not apparent to the unclothed
eye.
The piano business is resolving itself to
a twentieth century basis.
It is ridding itself of certain excres-
cences. The atmosphere is becoming
clearer.
NO STIRRING SONG.
TN no department of the music trade
affairs of America, has there been
more activity during the Hispano-Ameri-
can war than in the ranks of the music
publishers and composers. A great effort
has been made to put new music upon the
market, but even the soldiers would not
take to it, and the people would not sing
it. It is said that publishers sent " t i p s "
to camp and field to instil their latest pro-
ductions into the hearts of the soldier boys,
but, somehow, it would not work. They
had no heart for new songs.
It may seem singular that out of this
war has not been born a new song which
should give fair vent to the expression of
the people at this time, but it is so.
Of the hundreds and hundreds of songs
from writers not unknown to fame, and
others who hope to chisel their name in the
column high up, there is not a popular
song, or even one that one cares to hear
again.
Is it a fact that the situation has been
such as not to inspire the poet or even the
amateur song writer?
Current Literature says: " The present
unpleasantness with Spain has been
singular in many ways; in none more than
in its dearth of new music. Now that the
South has come clear back to the fold, that
ideal jig, 'Dixie,'has gained a national
acceptance almost above ' The Star-
Spangled Banner.' But these two pieces
have had the monopoly of public interest.

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