Music Trade Review

Issue: 1899 Vol. 29 N. 14

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
TWENTY-FIRST YEAR.
• I t F P W A P n LYIYIAN BILL-t—s
Editor and Proprietor
PUBLISHED EVERY SATURDAY
3 East 14th St., New York
SUBSCRIPTION (including postage), United States,
Mexico and Canada, $2.00 per year ; all other countries,
$300.
ADVERTISEHENTS, &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 Setmd
Clasi Matter,
NEW YORK, SEPTEMBER 30, 1899.
TELEPHONE NUMBER, t745-«EIGHTEENTH 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.
by some. We take the position that great
celebrations in such a city as New York
are really a source of demoralization to
business raiher than an acceleration. Trade
becomes disorganized—fitful—and it is a
long time before the city assumes its nor-
mal condition. The fever has been high
and it must be reduced before the patient
is in good form. Still there will be bar-
rels of money change hands in our city,
and red lights will be burned galore, yet
to our minds, in a business way, the city
would be infinitely better off without all
this fuss and feathers.
T~\EWEY, Dewey, Dewey everywhere,
and, owing to the fact that we must
join with the procession, The Review is
issued on Thursday morning instead of
Saturday—this in order that we may strain
our necks looking, and hoarsen our voi-
ces shouting, for Dewey.
TRUSTS AND TRADE MARKS.
1VJO man who is familiar with the busi-
TRADE BENEFITS.
ness situation to-day can deny the
'T'HE benefits of the Dewey celebration fact that while the trust craze has subsided
to the piano industry of this city will to a considerable degree, there is still a
be felt, we believe, only in an indirect way. marked inclination on the part of the peo-
The tens of thousands of people who will ple to enter into combinations which we
crowd New York for the next few days modernly term trusts.
will not come here for the purpose of mak-
This is the age of combination or con-
ing such serious purchases as pianos and centration of capital. The cry of the hour
other expensive home accessories. Their is the lessening of expense in every de-
patronage will be immediately felt by the partment of business activity. There is
hotels, the cafes, the theatres and in cer- one line, however, that thus far even the
tain departments of the great dry goods management of trusts have not been suc-
establishments.
cessful in cutting down. That is the legit-
A number of dealers have been postpon- imate advertising expense.
ing their fall visit to New York until the
The argument has been advanced that
city put on its holiday garb to receive as trusts control the market there will be
Dewey, therefore there will be a goodly no necessity thereafter to advertise the
number of orders left at the factories. goods, inasmuch as the people must neces-
Still, these orders would have come any- sarily call for the article.
how, and cannot be credited to the Dewey
Let us see whether this will bear analy-
influx.
sis. To begin with, there are very few
As far as the warerooms go, visitors to commodities, so termed, that are so abso-
the city will be overtaxed too much with lutely essential to mankind that people
excitement to become liberal patrons of cannot enjoy life in a moderate way with-
industrial art. They will rather seek en- out them. We hear the cry made now and
joyment, for that is what they are here for, then that certain individuals both in the
making, perhaps, a few trifling purchases. industrial and political world are indispen-
On the whole, we cannot expect much re- sable, yet when they die or are crushed out,
tail trade during the week. On the con- it is astonishing how this old world swings
trary, in our opinion, the week in local down the grooves of time without their
warerooms will be decidedly off color in presence. Take some of the great men of
every way. Our own people are in too this trade and it was thought that their
much of a state of nervous enthusiasm to loss would be keenly felt. Some how or
think seriously about purchases at present. other the industry swings right along, and
The week following, too, will be dull, for it is so of the necessaries of commerce,
a surfeit of good things always brings and "out of sight out of mind" is largely
about a re-action.
true of most of them.
These great celebrations we do not
If a piano is not well advertised and con-
consider a benefit to the local trade in stantly kept before the trade and the pub-
the way that they are generously estimated lic it loses its hold, and consequently its
demand. This holds good in the case of
any particular or unique article, and it is
doubly true where the commodity in itself
is only one of a class where in the usual
course of business there would be brisk
competition. It would be suicidal under
such conditions for any combination, how-
ever long on money it might be, or appa-
rently having control of the market, to
stop advertising.
i
It would be more true in the case of
pianos than in almost any other article
which we may mention, inasmuch as the
trade mark or good name of a piano
figures as an important item in the assets
of the corporation possessing it. To ignore
this and permit it to become lost from
memory is to destroy one of the chief
assets of a business.
There are many ways to advertise
pianos, and some of our great institutions
have been fertile in their resourceful ad-
vertising because they have realized that
certain classes of advertising raise their
wares above ordinary competition, that is
above purely a price competition, and they
know too that to once let the well earned
reputation of an article be forgotten, or let
the idea creep out that such and such a
concern is a back number, it loses valu-
able ground which will cost an immense
amount of money to regain in days to
come.
No, it pays to keep prominently before
the world in which one is transacting busi-
ness. This is the age of keen-cut compe-
tition, and of combinations, but no com-
bination can ever be made which can af-
ford to ignore publicity. In other words,
it is publicity which counts in every enter-
prise, and it is through the medium ship of
the press that publicity is gained. Even
the prowess of Dewey would only have
reached a very ordinary prominence had
it not been through the mediumship of
the papers which have placed him promi-
nently before every people on earth. Dewey
is the most popular and best advertised
man of the day.
DEWEY WEEK.
T^HIS is Dewey week, and New York is
going to do herself proud in receiving
the great Admiral, who will have been
sighted off our shores ere this issue of
The Review reaches its readers. Every
war has had its popular hero, and the
national sentiment to-day is crystallized in
the hero of Manila, who was comparatively
unknown when he sailed away from these
shores, and who upon his return is the
most talked about — the most popular
American of to-day. Probably no face of
the present time is more familiar to the
people throughout America than that of
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
Admiral Dewey. He has been honored in papers, for there has been a radical advance
countless thousands of ways, and has had in the prices of paper, as every publisher
everything on earth named after him, from knows that it costs him more to-day to
shoe strings up to pianos. His face has produce a paper than it did three months
decorated patent medicine and other ads.
ago, if we take the present market price for
No matter where we look, or where we all which enters into the composition of a
turn in the pages of the daily papers or in publication.
the advertising columns of the great maga-
Dealers in turn will have to ask more for
zines, the familiar face of Dewey confronts their instruments, for they may as well
us. And, candidly, we sometimes think make up their minds once for all that they
that we are overdoing this Dewey business will be compelled to pay more than merely
a trifle. Surfeit is always the cause of a five dollar note, for it cannot stop there.
violent indigestion. However, be that as There must be a substantial increase all
it may, the people have concluded to wel- along the line.
come Dewey in close-of-the-century style.
All metals, woods and veneers have ad-
Marching thousands will pass through a vanced. One item alone which seems a
reproduction of the famous arch of Titus, trivial one, yet when we come to analyze
and to reach it they will pass through a it, it is an important item in a year's busi-
canyon of human faces walled by the ness. It is the lumber which enters into
American colors in fanciful display.
the piano box for shipment. Piano boxes
No such reception has ever been ac- to-day cost from seventy to ninety cents
corded to a modern hero as Dewey, the more per box than a year ago, based upon
plain American sailor, will receive after his the cost of the common lumber of which
arrival, which will be announced by the they are constructed.
booming cannon in nearly every state in
the Union. Countless thousands of peo-
Owing to the Dewey festivities The
Review appears this week on Thursday
ple will flock to New York to witness the
instead of its usual publication day—
Dewey celebration, which will be perhaps
Saturday.
one of the most memorable in the annals
of America. All of the railroads have an-
IF A PIANO TRUST?
nounced reduced fares from distant points,
and without doubt, New York will be I F a piano trust ever became an estab-
lished fact, there would be capital enlist-
crowded—filled to the brim and running
ed immediately in a competitive enterprise,
over.
To people who enjoy the music, the for there is always enough idle capital in
marching, the toasting and the excitement, this country to insure competition. Then
it will be a glorious feast, for the painters, again, if it were inherently weak by reck-
sculptors and decorators have all united in less over-capitalization it would have to
producing that which will lend charm to succumb in a hurry. The Standard Oil, by
the occasion. The arch at Twenty-third securing special privileges from railroads,
street is a magnificent testimonial to their and other almost dishonest railway discrim-
skill and patriotism. The whole scheme inations, has succeeded in a way which no
by day will be a glorious symphony, and other trust has.
The sugar trust tried to follow the ex-
the nights will be tinged with carmine.
ample
of the Standard Oil, but has signally
New York will give herself up to a sea-
son of festivities which have probably failed. One batch of rival plants after
never been equalled since the days when another has been bought in at high prices,
Hendrik Hudson held his first pow-wow only to be followed by the erection of still
other refineries which remain to compete
with the early citizens of Manhattan.
Well, all honor to Dewey and his gallant on a cash basis, or like their predecessors,
fighters. They have added new lustre to be secured at the expense of a further in-
flation of the trust capital. Production
American fame.
and distribution on a large scale is the un-
deniable tendency of the times, but what a
GROWING PRICES.
'"P HE RE are a number of manufacturers corporation, or combination, or trust, as
who have thus far refrained from we commonly term it, may do for common
raising prices for their instruments until benefit and what it does do are oftentimes
they determine, as they state, whether the at variance.
have always endeavored to develop, as far
as it lay within our power, an increased
distribution of The Review. To this end
we have offered premiums from time to
time, including the technical work, "The
Piano," which has obtained a widespread
distribution; also a number of excellent
literary works, which we have handled
successfully. The latest offer, however,
as one decidedly opportune at this time," is
the Dewey watch, full particulars of which
are given on page 17.
Perhaps no premium has been more
popular than this, and those who have
sent in their new subscriptions have ex-
pressed themselves in terms of delight and
praise concerning the premium which we
offer. We do not know where, for a simi-
lar amount invested, as much pleasure and
profit can be derived as from the invest-
ment referred to.
We may say of The Review, without be-
ing liable to the charge of egotism, that it
is a publication upon which the members
of the trade have learned to look with con-
fidence, as to the reliability and truthful-
ness of its utterances. It can be made a
weekly companion during the year together
with a handsome premium for a modest
sum.
advanced prices have come to stay, or
whether they are due purely to a temporary
fluctuation of the market.
In our opinion they may as well conclude
that high prices have come to stay and
govern their prices accordingly, for the ad-
vance has reached almost everything, and is
still going up. It affects even the news-
Q T R I K E S have not ceased, and there
will be more to follow. One occurred
in New York this week at the Kroeger fac-
tory, and was settled quicker almost than
it takes time to record it.
A DEWEY OFFER.
A TRADE publication is necessarily
limited in circulation. Its areas of
distribution are circumscribed largely by
its own industrial environments. There
are, however, legitimate ways in which
circulation may be augmented, and we
PIANO ADVERTISING.
DIANO advertising is improving. An
examination of the papers throughout
the land in which the local trade advertise
will disclose this. There is more attention
and care given to the display and arrange-
ment of the matter.
Piano merchants are beginning to real-
ize that advertising is a serious investment
to begin with, and should be looked in-
to as carefully as the buying of goods
for the warerooms. The merchant will
not buy ordinary articles without knowing
something about them, and in buying ad-
vertising space it should be used in an ef-
fective manner. Display work should be
plain, terse, directly to the point and at-
tractive in its setting beyond anything
else. Nine men out of ten refuse to read
any display ad that does not in some way
attract and catch the eye, either with a cut,
with the price, or with a decided setting.
The great trouble lies in overcrowding
advertising, in making the effort to cover
everything instead of one good thing a't a
time. Simplicity and price carry all be-
fore them in advertising.
Dewey has arrived! If you want a sou-
venir of the event, read page 17.

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