Music Trade Review

Issue: 1899 Vol. 29 N. 16

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSiC TRADE REVIEW
ufacturers as they can, then all would be
better. There are many dealers who se-
cure the agency of certain pianos and hold
them, doing little or nothing to make the
territory which they control profitable to
the manufacturer. Now when the manu-
TWENTY-FIRST YEAR.
EDWARD LYMAN BILL.
facturer is approached by a department
Editor and Proprietor
store representative he naturally looks over
PUBLISHED EVERY SATURDAY
the ground and sums up the situation pre-
cisely as it is. He finds that in certain
3 East 14th St., New York
localities where his pianos have been repre-
SUBSCRIPTION (including postage), United States,
Mexico and Canada, $2.00 per year ; all other countries,
$300.
sented for years, there has been business
ADVERTISEHENTS, $2.00 per inch, single column, per
insertion. On quarterly or yearly contracts a special dis- of unsatisfactory proportions carried on.
count is allowed. Advertising Pages $50.00, opposite read'
ing matter $75.00.
He then figures that if the regular dealer
REMITTANCES, in other than currency form, should
be made payable to Edward Lyman Bill.
is not more watchful of his interests it is
Entered at the Neva York Post Office as Second Class Matter.
quite time that he removed his instruments
NEW YORK, OCTOBER 14, 1899.
from a position of almost loss to one of
TELEPHONE NUMBER, 1745-E1QHTEENTH STREET.
profit. He is too practical to disregard
THE KEYNOTE.
money-making opportunities.
The first week of each month, The Review will
contain a supplement embodying the literary
Manufacturers as a whole prefer to do
and musical features which have heretofore
business with regular dealers, but if the
appeared in The Keynote. This amalgamation
will be effected without in any way trespassing
regular dealers will pursue the policy of
on our regular news service. The Review will
continue to remain, as before, essentially a
indifference and inactivity towards their
trade paper.
interests, then naturally he figures about
making a change, and whether that change
FACTS AS WE VIEW THEM.
\ X / E were impressed with the belief that is made to a department store or to an-
the alleged scare of the dealers over other dealer is dependent entirely upon
department stores had subsided to such a how the manufacturer views the situation.
There are some dealers who will em-
point that it was hardly perceptible. Cor-
respondence received during the week blazon their windows with golden signs of
proves that there still exists on the part of the greatest names of the industry. These
some dealers a clearly-defined fear, found- names give character and dignity to their
ed upon the belief that department stores business, as they are familiar to the edu-
would continually poach upon the pre- cated public.
serves of the regular dealer.
And are not these names in many in-
Now, really, there is not the slightest stances used purely and simply as drawing
cause for alarm over the department store cards?
bugaboo. All that is necessary is to take
We know of a number of cases where
a keen, practical, twentieth century view of dealers have held the agencies for some
the business situation, as it now appears. noted makes of pianos and have transacted
There is no use whatsoever in sitting down only a trivial amount of business in those
and sending up an occasional wail over the lines for years. Now the manufacturer
departure of trade from regular lines into is waking up to the idea that that condi-
that of department stores. Merchants in tion of affairs is not beneficial to his busi-
every other line have had this same trou- ness interests, and the quicker the dealer
ble to combat, and they have not met the realizes the full force of this statement the
issue successfully by sitting down and pass- better it will be for him. The stool pig-
ing hours of regretful consideration on the eon idea is played out, and if a dealer in
discouraging outlook for the regular mer- the future proposes to use the great names
chant. It is easy to float with the stream, as drawing cards while he supplies to his
for otherwise much strength is exhausted customers some of the cheapest pianos
in attempting to successfully stem a strong manufactured at prices which should en-
current.
title the purchaser to really good instru-
The trend of the times is towards con- ments, then he may conclude to lose his
centration and consolidation in everything, desirable. makes of instruments, for the
and while the department store has ab- manufacturer surely will make deals with
sorbed and concentrated under one roof department or other stores that he deems
hundreds of regular lines, yet it has not more advantageous to his business.
proven thus far an injurious factor to the
Recently our attention was drawn to an
music trade.
illustration where a certain dealer was
If the dealers themselves would figure highly indignant because an agency had
that they are to a large extent custodians been withdrawn from him. He felt he
of valuable merchandise, and that it is had held it so long, that he was really
their business to make their custody of entitled to hold it in perpetuity. The
_certain instruments as profitable for man- manufacturer had an excellent opportunity
to divide up the territory and make several
deals each one of which would be more ad-
vantageous than the one which he had
been continuing for a term of years. He
wrote to the dealer urging him to buy
more stock. This the dealer did not do
and the manufacturer transferred his
agency. The dealer thought that he was
treated unjustly, when the facts in the case
were that he had sold less than ten pianos
per year for this manufacturer and had
held a large amount of territory in which
he had the exclusive sales rights. In three
months this manufacturer had disposed of
more pianos than the former dealer han
died in three years.
Now, it is just such illustrations that
should bring the dealer to his senses with
a round turn. To Liptonize—A manufac-
turer will not lift an agency that is profit-
able to him. But he does not propose to
be at the mercy of the dealer, leaving in
his possession valuable territory from
which he is getting meagre returns.
Whether this territory is redistributed
among regular dealers or whether it will
go to department stores rests entirely with
the dealer himself. If he is progressive,
alert, and watchful, making the manufac-
turer's interests and his own identical he
need entertain no fear of department store
annihilation.
That is about the way we view the situ-
ation to-day.
FOR FOREIGN TRADE.
A CCORDING to some of our prominent
manufacturers the Export Exposition
at Philadelphia will have the direct effect
of encouraging trade with foreign coun-
tries. Immediate results are already being
felt. That America will ultimately domi-
nate the world in all kinds of manufactures
cannot be doubted, and all the American
piano manufacturer desirous of capturing
a large amount of foreign trade needs to
do is to study the requirements of the
country to whose people he especially de-
sires to cater. In other words not to
build American pianos for England and
the Continent, but to introduce a counter-
part of the English and German piano as
made abroad, and make them in America.
The Review policy for years has been to
counsel American manufacturers to build
instruments specially designed for export
trade. When they do this there can be no
doubt that the same qualities which have
enabled the manufacturers and merchants
of the United States to develop the enor-
mous trade which exists in that country
to-day would crown their efforts with like
success in any other market having a large
consuming capacity.
In the music trade the dominant idea
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
has been for years that American trade
paid better than foreign trade. That the
trade which lay within easy reach of our
doors was more beneficial, more profitable
in every way than that which lay in far
away countries.
If the present demand for musical in-
struments continues unabated there would
be no necessity for planning largely for an
export trade, but the present rate of de-
mand for musical instruments,as well as in
other lines of manufactures, is abnormal,
and if producers would retain permanently
anything like the present degree of activ-
ity they must be prepared to cover a wider
field than exists at home.
This will require special effort, special
ability, special methods. That part of our
present foreign trade that is, so to speak,
accidental, will probably continue prac-
tically as it is until there is a determined
effort to reach out and capture much larger
slices.
The question of an export trade in man-
ufactured products thus far appeals to
many minds of this country absolutely as a
means of now and then disposing of a
chance surplus of goods. Hitherto the
manufacturer able to keep his plant rea-
sonably well employed and maintain fair
selling prices in supplying the home mar-
ket generally has given little thought to
any other, and until lately the United
States has occupied a rank as an export
nation incommensurate with its resources
in material, productive skill and capacity,
and our energy as a people.
ARE THEY MAKING MONEY?
there is unpre-
N OTWITHSTANDING
cedented activity in all departments
of manufacture, it is not as yet clear
whether the fall will prove a money-mak-
ing one in the sense that the volume of
business would seem to warrant.
Many manufacturers are still holding
back the advance of prices, while every
part which enters into their instruments
costs them materially more than a few
months ago.
It is indeed a strange condition that man-
ufacturers of musical instruments should
pay more for every part and still charge
the same for the finished product. It is an
inconsistency which only exists through a
willingness on the part of the manufac-
turer to benefit the dealer, accentuated
somewhat by fear on his part that the
dealer will make strenuous objections to
paying the market price for the finished
product.
This situation of affairs is almost univer-
sal, and while pianos are costing from
$8.00 to $25.00 more per instrument to
produce than a few months ago, the
price, with few exceptions, remains practi-
cally the same, and manufacturers, instead
of reaping a golden harvest from the present
active market, are figuring whether they
are coming out very much ahead after all.
With lumber problems, and advancing sup-
plies, the path of the American piano man-
ufacturer is not entirely free from thorns.
We question if such a condition could
exist in any other trade but this. The
hardware man is not specially considerate
of the feelings of his customer when he
marks up the price in hardware, neither is
the lumber or veneer man. Everything
has advanced, but still pianos remain prac-
tically the same.
This is not as it should be, and we have
suggested before that if individual manu-
facturers hesitate to act there should be
concerted action on the part of the Asso-
ciation. The situation demands it, and the
prompter the action, the better it will be
for the manufacturing interests of the trade.
As a whole, manufacturers have been
altogether too considerate of the dealers'
interests, being desirous of giving them
the advantage of low prices as long as pos-
sible. Now it is not right that the manu-
facturer should pay the high-water mark
for all that enters into his pianos, and
send them out at the low-tide price.
TRADE FOR THE WEEK*
D E T A I L trade in the East during the
week has not been up to expectations.
No doubt the Dewey festivities have had
the effect to reduce the volume of business
transacted in what we term serious pur-
chases of life. The manufacturing de-
partments show undiminished activity.
Reports from the central and far West
show a most encouraging condition of the
retail trade, and there seems to be no
reason for believing that there will be even
the slightest interruption. On the con-
trary, things point to an incieasing volume
of business. There is a little tightness in
the money market, but at the present time
the outlook for trade is most encouraging.
T H E piano broker, nee the Annex editor,
has returned and he is now prepared
to give inside points to those firms who are
interested in European trade, and who are
willing to pay for the friendly (?) advice of
the piano broker, nee the Annex editor,
who announces in his usual modest style,
"We exhibit an unusual neglect in our at-
titude towards the possible trade prospects
presented by the trade conditions in Europe,
and we must substitute for it our usual
keen business judgment and methods, for
the opportunity is worth grasping, and the
trade is worth holding, if we can get it—
and we can."
All of which translated means that the
piano broker, nee the Annex editor, has a
choice lot of European schemes which he
is willing to disclose to those who will pay
his price. Possibly the brokerage business
may prove successful—to the piano broker.
DOSTON is getting to-day that of which
New York has already enjoyed a
surfeit. To-day the "Hub" is gay with
bunting in honor of the great Admiral.
Most of the music houses have been royal-
ly decorated, and for two or three days
Boston has felt the effects of this celebra-
tion in a decline of retail trade.
These gala times have a depressing effect
upon the sale of serious articles of manu-
facture. They tend to increase the sale in
liquid and solid refreshment, but they are
demoralizing in a large degree to other
lines of commodities.
M OW that the sturdy burghers of Oom
Paul have thrown down the gauntlet
to England, we have to consider what ef-
fect this war will have upon music trade
interests in South Africa. There is no
doubt whatever but that American organ
manufacturers, who have a thriving South
African trade, will immediately feel the
result of the Boers' brush with the Britons.
There must be an immediate diminution
in the shipments of musical instruments to
the Cape. There will be a demand for the
kind of wares that make the stern music of
war and a consequent dropping off of the
music of peace.
waste a moment! Turn imme-
diately to page 16. The information
contained there will interest you, because
everyone is interested in useful war relics.
It will tell you, too, how we have secured
almost five hundred new subscribers to The
Review.
\ 1 7 H A T kind of journalism is it that de-
mands a percentage for locating
salesmen ?
What kind of journalism is it that con-
ducts " deals ? "
What kind of journalism is it which asks
a firm a couple of thousand for offering to
place its agency with a certain department
store ?
Well, it is the kind of journalism which
is in its decadence. It now belongs with
the brokerage and " old clo' " trade.
F\EWEY'S press agent is the best on
earth—public popularity. Difficult
to gain, but when once fairly in line at-
tafhs seemingly impossible height,

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