Music Trade Review

Issue: 1898 Vol. 27 N. 5

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
• >. ^EDWARD LYMAN BILL-*—?
Editor and Proprietor
PUBLISHED EVERY SATURDAY
r
3 East 14th St., New York
SUBSCRIPTION (Including postage), United States,
Mexico and Canada, f a-oo per year ; all other countries,
$3.00.
ADVERTISEnENTS, $2.00 per inch, single 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 Class Matter.
NEW YORK, JULY 30, 1898.
TELEPHONE NUMBER, 174S--E1QHTEENTH SIREET.
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.
WILL SUPPLY THE WORLD WITH
MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS.
T H E American people have given added
expression to the confidence which
they have in the Government through their
subscriptions for bonds for the war loan,
and the confidence of our people expressed
in times of war will be even greater when
the cessation of hostilities occurs.
America has given evidence to the world
of her wealth and of the patriotism of her
people, and wealth plus confidence equal
prosperity. One without the other would
mean business stagnation, as it is not alone
wealth that produces confidence. The
widely spread condition of the monetary
resources is an assurance of national
stability, and it will give an impetus to the
industrial conquests of America. For,
having proven her prowess on land and
sea, industrial America will sweep on to
greater bloodless conquests.
Time was when this country was termed
the granary of the world. That was when
it was in a large sense a purely agricultural
country. That time, however, has passed,
and the country's remarkable advance into
the markets of the world, is one of the
greatest phenomena the century has
produced. Our exports of agricultural
products have increased tremendously dur-
ing the past year, but more than that, our
sales of manufactured goods abroad have
continued to extend with facility and
promptitude and with results which have
excited the serious concern of countries
that for. generations have not only con-
trolled their home markets, but have prac-
tically monopolized certain lines of trade
in other lands.
America has invaded the markets of the
world with her manufactured products,
and it is almost daily that we see re-
ports of large orders placed in this country
by European Governments for contracts
for special lines which were entirely lacking
within a few years, and still this country
is comparatively in its infancy as far as in-
dustrial development is concerned.
The energy of our people, however, is
aroused, and in all lines there is a stimu-
lating atmosphere which portends greater
accomplishments.
The young Colossus
of the West is not only reaching out for
colonial conquests, but industrial con-
quests as well.
America will dominate the world in
manufactures as well as agriculture. The
restless energy of our people is becoming
aroused to a greater degree every day, and
each day augments our triumphs—our
peaceful triumphs as well as triumphs of
war.
The gigantic strides which have been
made in the piano industry are only a reflex
of what has occurred in other lines. There
are facts at hand which,,to our mind, form
a strong chain of evidence that America
within the next decade will control the
music trade markets of the world.
How can the smaller factories of Europe
with their machinery which is practically
obsolete, compete with the gigantic and
perfectly systematized musico-industrial
establishments of the new world ? The
cheap labor of Europe cannot compete
with the scientific and mechanical advance-
ment which is so largely in evidence
throughout America.
American organs are now sold through-
out the world. They have a strong foot-
hold in London, in the very heart of the
British industry, and on the Continent as
well. American pianos, too, are being ex-
ported in great numbers which wiH be
largely augmented When our manufactur-
ers build pianos specially for the European
markets. When we cultivate more closely
the wishes of other countries as to their
likes and dislikes regarding the tonal and
architectural qualities of pianos, we shall
then largely increase our export trade.
To-day in Europe the great mass of the
people prefer the thin tone of the Euro-
pean pianos to the heavy, sonorous tones
of the American instruments. Their
senses have been cultivated in this direc-
tion, and they prefer the architecture and
tonal qualities of their own instruments to
those of American manufacture.
As soon, however, as the American
manufacturers build instruments which
conform more closely to those of European
make, and to the particular styles to which
the people of those countries are educated,
then we shall have a largely increased
trade, for we shall certainly be able to
undersell European makers on the same
grade of goods in their home markets. All
of these changes will come within a few
years. America must dominate the world
in musical instruments.
One reason why we have not devoted
more attention to the trade of other coun-
tries in musical instruments is, that our
home market has never yet been supplied,
and America to-day is the best market on
earth for pianos and organs. But as com-
petition becomes keener here and profits
become materially reduced, the wide-awake
American manufacturer will seek other
fields which shall be productive of greater
profits. All this will come in time.
T H E thieving, throttling clutch of Spain
will be swept forever from the West-
ern world and likewise will the blackmail-
er's power be broken in this trade.
The wonder grows how we should have
tolerated both so long.
RAPID ACTION.
a business there will be next
fall. With peace near at hand,
everything points to an enormous trade in
all lines," said Wm. R. Gratz, the well-
known manufacturer and importer, last
Wednesday.
"And," continued Mr.
Gratz, " we propose to be ready for it.
We shall take rapid action. "
" Rapid action."
There's a mine of meaning in these two
words.
The advantages that lie in rapid action
are obvious. This is particularly the case
when the thing done is competitive, and
therefore peculiarly applicable to business
methods, for business is indissolnbly con-
nected with rivalry. The thing is to get
there first. The Confederate general,
Forrest, used to say that success in war
meant getting there first with the most
men, which is substantially another form
of the saying that " success lies in the legs
of an army." Though the actual conflict
of rivalry may be, and generally must be,
open and above board—the preparations
for the conflict are not. The preliminaries
of every act are secret. The beginning of
every scheme that begets competition is in
the inner thoughts of the originator, and
much of the work of preparation and de-
velopment must be secret, or there can be
no expectation of final success. When the
actual, open conflict begins, rapid action
takes the place of secrecy and contributes
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
to success, in the affairs of every day life
as much as in the movements of an army.
In the prize ring, he who can, other things
being equal, strike the quickest blow gets
there and gets there very quickly, because
the quick blow is the unexpected one.
Ample resources and well directed skill
may avail but little unless speed is called
to their aid. The most startling achieve-
ments of the magician's art depend very
largely on celerity of action. Rob it of
this and the feats of skill so hard to be
detected become at once patent to the keen
eye of the wondering beholder. And in
the realm of thought, too, the rapid thinker
is enabled to seize the flying opportunity.
The nimble mind is as valuable as the
nimble nickel. It is the quick, ready
wit that is adapted to the adjustment of
the small every-day problems of life. The
game is r wary and there is often no time to
draw the bead fine, one must shoot off-
hand. As in social life, so in business, the
small talk passes current most rapidly and
effectively, rapidity of thought and celerity
of speech and of action win the day, while
the man whose thoughts are so weighty
that they must be collected is handicapped
and does not win a place in the race.
And in the mass of business that is done
every day on change, or over the counter,
it is an axiom '' that quick sales and small
profits" lead in the end to larger gains.
It is true of money as it is of the mind,
that it pays better to wear it out than to
rust it out. The shilling that passes from
hand to hand is kept bright by use just as
is the mind, and both bring the largest
profits to those that use them most freely.
Rapid action, gentlemen. Rapid action
if you propose to keep up with the business
procession next fall.
Rapid action—a regular 71st New York,
Roosevelt's Rough
Riders, Admiral
Dewey, Commodore Schley action rolled
in one.

Rapid action.
T H E wave of indignation which swept
over the trade upon the publication
of the obscene and profane poetry in the
Courier Annex of the 16th inst., has been
succeeded by a feeling of resentment.
Men who have been passive and seemingly
indifferent to the pernicious influence at
work in this trade are now outspoken and
emphatic in the condemnation of a paper
which so far prostitutes public morals as
to be a vendor of filth.
Search the annals of journalism and no
similar case can be brought to light, when
an editor, seeking to calumniate a contem-
porary, has insulted his readers by such a
mixture of obscenity and filth. Some
years ago the Mail and Express printed an
acrostic which was atrociously vulgar.
Col. Shepard, the, editor, himself a clean
man, was horrified and immediately or-
dered the edition bought up, paying as
high as a dollar a copy for papers con-
taining the obnoxious poetry. It is said
that no less than twenty Mail and Express
employees lost their position as a result of
the publication of that poetry.
The editor of the Courier Annex can not
plead ignorance in the publication of the
filthy poetry. It was written and illus-
trated under the direction and sanction of
the Annex editor. Let him deny it if he
dare. Who else will father that mass of
putridity?
If he could imitate Col. Shepard, in so
far as to buy up the edition containing
the affront to decency, even paying as
high as a dollar a copy, it would be the
wisest move that he could make, because
as long as copy of that issue remains he is
branded with the ineffaceable brand of
shame—a brand that will burn so deep
with popular indignation that it will leave
a scar forever.
Let him travel where he will, from Chi-
cago to Cathay, his reputation will be
close behind him. One only has to bring
out the Annex of July 16th, and point to
page four, third column. If the stream is
so filthy, what must the source be.
PERSISTENT ADVERTISING.
PERSISTENCY in advertising is the
mainspring of business success. To
secure results from advertising a man
must have the nerve to make liberal ex-
penditures. It is not the spasmodic ad-
vertiser who succeeds. Just as continual
dropping wears away the stone, so will
continual advertising wear- away the
granite of indifference and ignorance re-
garding any products. Advertising in
these close of the century days is a science,
and expert advertisers or ad-smiths are
always in demand. Their compensation,
too, in many cases is extremely liberal, as
men of advanced ideas realize that ability
of a high order is necessary to attract the
purchasing public.
Of course, trade advertising forms a
special field by itself, but the same prin-
ciples are operative in trade advertising as
in that class of advertising which appeals
to the general public.
A great deal, too, is in the arrangement
of an advertisement. . People who devote
no special time to the study of the science
of advertising, and who have no particular
taste in that direction, are apt, as a rule,
to crowd too much into the space which
they purchase. People do not stop to
read a voluminous statement in an adver-
tisement now-a-days.
Advertisements
which are catchy and brief are the ones
which attract the eye, whether in trade
papers or in papers which appeal to a gen-
eral class of readers.
JOHN PHILIP SOUSA will become
musical director of the Sixth Army
Corps attached to General Wilson's staff.
Although supposed only to drill the
regimental bands, Mr. Sousa says that if
his duties as staff officer should call him
to the front he will gladly go.
The war is supposed by many, after the
fall of Santiago, to be practically closed.
Mr. Sousa's patriotism has just now found
proper vent, and while he shows his will-
ingness to accept a commission and #11 the
advertising which may result, he has one
request to make of the Government and
that: That he shall give his services without
remuneration and be permitted to come
back to fill his engagements in the fall and
winter.
Sousa may be credited with greater
shrewdness than patriotism. Pat Gilmore,
who stood closer to the hearts of the Ameri-
can people than any bandmaster that we
have ever had, did not wait until the war
was over before he offered his services to
the Union.
]~"\O you prefer to give your support to
an institution which for years has
been distinguished for cowardly, black-
mailing attacks upon reputable members
of this trade? Do you prefer to give your
support to an institution which attacks to-
day the house of Estey ? Do you prefer
to give your support to an institution that
dares insult the decency of men by publish-
ing filthy poetry ? Do you prefer to sup-
port an institution that steals the title of
another paper and then boasts of the theft?
Do you believe that Wrong should triumph
over Right ? Think the matter over, gen-
tlemen of the trade.
The Knabe in Concert.
Emil Sauer's manager, R. E. Johnson,
is inaugurating an active advertising cam-
paign. Already large posters have been
placed in front of the Metropolitan Opera
House informing the public that the great
pianist will give his initial concert at that
place early in January, followed by the
customary announcement that "the Knabe
piano will be used."
Among other distinguished pianists who
will use the Knabe piano in concert during
the season of 1898-9 are Wm. H. Sher-
wood, Leopold Godowsky and Constantin
von Sternberg. Truly, a good showing.

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