Music Trade Review

Issue: 1900 Vol. 31 N. 25

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
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THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
ods and its instruments, but to subtle in-
nuendos and darkly suggestive hints, and
There are successful pianists who are not have been given the full benefit of elo-
artists, but the successful piano salesman quent shrugs and raisings of the eyebrows.
must bean artist, inasmuch as he is master So they come into the presence of this par-
of that which in itself is an art, and which ticular salesman clad in an armor of dis-
is daily becoming- a more exacting accom- trust and wrapped in a cloud of doubt.
plishment also. The builder may put forth The salesman must find the weak point
his most able and cunning efforts; the in the first and dispel the latter. If he
skilled artisan may embody his best work cannot do both and make a sale, he is un-
in the instrument whose part he labors worthy of his high standing in his busi-
upon; the dealer may fill a gorgeous sales- ness—his art, rather. He does this, and
room with the most perfect specimens of to see him do it is to witness a series of
the pianomaker's calling; but if the tact character sketches and a display of elo-
and patience of the salesman is lacking, quence and ability that can not often
those pianos will not depart from the gor- be enjoyed on or off the stage. The
geous salesroom to the customer's parlor, salesman cannot afford to lose his tem-
and in the fullness of time the red flag of per for an instant; must meet cold disbe-
commercial disaster will flutter from that lief and chill silence with a smile and mien
dealer's door, and some one who knows as full of sunshine as a June morning, and,
how to sell a piano will reign in his while he is swearing at an allegretto rate
place. There is so little difference in the to himself, he is rattling off a Strauss
relative merits of the best pianos ; there is waltz, or holding a fair customer entranced
such fierce competition between dealers in with the "Lohengrin" Wedding March.
the same city, and there are so many He lays bare the viscera of the piano to
causes tending to estrange these rivals, display the workmanship and the beauty
that the modern piano salesman must needs of the "action," and he never fails to talk
be a Talleyrand or a Richelieu for diplo- when he should talk, or to preserve a dis-
macy and a Demosthenes for eloquence in creet and respectful silence when silence is
order to retain supremacy in his art and be necessary to gain his end. The expert,
known to the trade as a first-class man. well-trained salesman can, as it were, say
To specify all of such a man's attainments, more when he is silent than other men can
or to outline all the requisites necessary in say when they talk. He is not a man to
his mental and physical make-up would waste speech, but to make every word and
require a column of fine type. It must glance and gesture do its work. Such men
suffice to outline a few traits that shine are absolutely indispensable in every large
conspicuously in the daily career of the first- piano-selling establishment. They should
class salesmen in a leading establishment have big salaries and liberal commissions,
for they are of the kind that are born, not
of a large city.
made.
In the first place, he must be a good
performer with a repertoire at his finger-
Just Like the Emerson Co.
tips that would startle Adele Aus der Ohe.
He must be a reservoir of piano music
The following clipping from the Chicago
that is ready to flow at an instant's notice, Interocean throws a strong light on the
and which must possess every variety of straight-forward business methods of the
style, from grave to gay, from lively to Emerson Piano Co. and their resident
severe. This storehouse he must utilize partner, John W. Northrop. This action of
with a discretion and tact that dare not be theirs, however, is not surprising to any
at fault.
At a glance he must decide, member of the trade who has had dealings
from the manner and appearance of his with this renowned Boston institution:
customers, whether "The Maiden's Prayer"
"Several insurance men were forcibly
—with a series of pyrotechnics of his own impressed with the fact that there are still
improvising—or the "Dead March" from men who are honest enough to refund
Saul, will best chain the attention and ar- money to an insurance company when
they find that they are not entitled to it.
ouse the interest of the visitor and possi- They received letters, accompanied by
ble purchaser. In the event of a "com- checks for a refund of $3,850 on a total in-
mittee" calling to buy a piano—a half surance of $21,500 paid to the Emerson
dozen of self-important men sent forth to Piano Co. for their fire of March 16, 1898.
choose something which not one of them It was explained that the claim was set-
tled satisfactorily and paid soon after the
knows anything about—then does the tact fire, but some time after the company ac-
and diplomacy of the salesman shine re- cidentally learned that at least one piano
splendent. He sells the half-dozen one of which they had supposed was in stock had
the costliest instruments in the store, and been in the hands of outside parties. All
sends the visitors away with but one re- the books having been destroyed by the
fire, it was very difficult to trace the mat-
gret, and that is that they had not author- ter, but finally it was all cleared up and it
ity to buy six pianos.
was found that stock to the value of $3,-
The first-class sales.nan, every working 850 had been paid for by mistake. The
companies receiving the 18 per cent, re-
day of his life, is brought into contact with fund were the Commonwealth, Pennsyl-
absolute strangers. These have, in all vania, Imperial, Palatine, Thuringia,
probability, made the tour of the rival Phoenix of England, Niagara, and State of
dealers in the same city, and as a conse- Pennsylvania. They said it was like find-
quence they have been filled, above the ing money."
collar-buttons, with doubts and suspicions.
The strike at the Harvard piano factory,
They have listened, not perhaps to abso- Dayton, Ky., was this week formally de*
lute denunciation of this firm and its meth- clared off by. the Union,
The Piano Salesman.
A REVIEW
" SPECIAL"
•METIMES, twice a year, we have
special offers to make to our sub-
scribers. This time our ** special ** is
in the form of a match box—out of
the ordinary, of course,—made of
gun metal, so much in vogue in up-to-date
jewelry.
The accompanying illustration gives a com-
prehensive idea of the box. It is of rich dark
blue color, beautifully chased, with burnished
edge, as shown in illustration. A handsome
EXACT SIZE OF BOX.
and useful equipment for the twentieth century
man.
A certificate accompanies each box.
The regular stores sell them as hi6h as a couple
of dollars each.
"We have bought them in large numbers for
a purpose,—that purpose, to provide every
reader of T H E REVIEW who pays for his
paper with a valuable, useful and interesting
souvenir.
"We will agree to send one box, postpaid, to all
subscribers whose check for $2 reaches us by Feb.
1st, 1901. This offer includes old subscribers as
well as new, for we may as well give the old
guard the same opportunity as the newer
element.
If we could send one of these boxes for per-
sonal inspection we are confident that it would
win many subscribers, but we cannot. How-
ever, you may take our word for it that it is a
superb gift to anybody and will come in handy
three hundred and sixty-five days in the year.
Here is an opportunity which should be speedily
embraced.
We will agree to supply them as long as our
present stock remains.
SUBSCRIPTION DEPT.:
THE REVIEW,
3 E. 14th St.,
NEW YORK.
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12
Hugo Sohtner might be content with
his knowledge of the piano maker's art.
And if that was all he knew nobody would
blame him, for there are hundreds of
thousands who know but little outside of
their own particular business and yet they
satisfy both themselves and their neigh-
bors. But Mr. Sohmer—as those who
have the privilege of conversing occasion-
ally have long since learned—is as well
posted, on public affairs and current topics
as the editor of a daily paper. His opin-
ions, too, are always well worth noting
and recording.
* * * * *
Rudolph C. Koch, who succeeded Chas.
Reinwarth .as the maker of the famous
Reinwarth strings, is another of those men
—so plentiful in the music industries, thank
goodness—who are not ashamed or afraid
to take off their coats and roll up their
sleeves when occasion demands. Yes, and
he can strip to some purpose; for there is
no instrument or machine in the Reinwarth
shops concerning which Rudolph C. Koch
does not know as much as the man or men
who made it. He is a thorough master of
his business—and he succeeds.
W. H. Keller, proprietor of Keller's
Music House, Easton, Pa., is one of the
enterprising dealers of the country who
comprehend the value of printers' ink. In
the Easton Free Press of Dec. 12th, he
dominates that issue with a full page
advertisement neatly illustrated and clev-
erly written, devoted to exploiting the
instruments which he handles, namely, the
Steinway, Kranich & Bach, Estey, Ster-
ling, Jacob Bros, and other pianos, and the
Estey, Weaver and other reliable organs.
In the center of the page appears a few of
the many endorsements received from
Easton's well known musicians, many of
whom have purchased and fully tested the
Kranich & Bach pianos.
Holiday advertising of this kind should
be highly effective in results. The pur-
chasing public must appreciate the enter-
prise of a piano dealer just as readily as
that of the great department store, and
The Review predicts for the Keller Music
House a big and profitable volume of trade
as a result of their go-ahead methods.
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
David H. Schmidt, the hammer maker,
of Melrose avenue, is a firm believer in
the wise policy of making his products
known to the trade consistently and per-
sistently through the most direct channels.
His recent "Ad." in The Review, on page
17 of the last issue, is a fair sample of the
method Mr. Schmidt is using to keep the
merits of his hammers before the eyes and
the minds of interested people. "There
is but one opinion concerning Schmidt
hammers" and there can be but one opin-
ion as to the wisdom of Mr. Schmidt's pro-
gressive policy.
George M. Woodford, Weber ambassa-
dor, returned on Monday from a satisfac-
factory five-weeks trip in the South and
West. The Will A. Watkin Music Co.
have been appointed agents for the Weber
products at Dallas, Texas, and will handle
the Weber as their leader.
* * * * *
Charles F. Goepel, now famous as a
reliable supply man, is in position to know
at all times the pulse-beat of the piano
trade. He remembers several periods when
the throbbing was so feeble that a keen
sense of touch was necessary in order to
realize that it throbbed at all. Just
at this time, judging from the steady
run on his regular stock and specialties,
the pulse-beat is considerably above
normal. Still, there are no indications of
fever or other unhealthy disturbance. The
patient is well. Robustness is evidently
the cause of the additional pulsation.
John Ludwig, of Ludwig & Co., re-
turned on Tuesday from an extended West-.
ern trip. Mr. Ludwig visited the princi-
pal cities in every section, made a number
of desirable new connections and secured
many orders. He was well received at all
points, found trade conditions satisfactory
and reports the outlook as being very
bright for the Ludwig firm.
At the piano recital given last week by
Miss Fay Hall, one of the faculty of the
Chicago Auditorium Conservatory, the
Chase Bros, grand piano, made by the
Chase-Hackley Piano Co., Muskegon,
Mich., was used with great success. The
Chase Bros, grand will also be played at
Cedar Rapids, by Miss Cermak, a pupil of
Dvorak, and also of the Conservatory fac-
ulty, with an orchestra of sixty musicians.
The Chase Bros, grand is steadily growing
in favor with critical musicians.
According to the Newark, N. J., Adver-
tiser, many persons in the Oranges, who
have in the last few years purchased pi-
anos from Owen J. Turtle, as agent for
Bush & Gerts, of Chicago, have received
during the week letters from the home of-
fice of the company signed by W. L. Bush,
secretary and manager, directing them to
make no further payments to Turtle.
H. Paul Mehlin, of Paul G. Mehlin &
Sons is one of the busiest men in the trade
these days. Part of his time is devoted
to factory purposes, the remainder to the
retail trade and general correspondence.
This part of the business has grown in
proportion as the demand for Mehlin prod-
ucts has increased. It includes not only
the agencies but a big array of seminaries,
Edwin Milton Boothe and Walter B.
professional musicians and hundreds of
desirable people who are brought to in- Craighead, of the Milton Piano Co., make
quire and finally to purchase Mehlin pi- an excellent running team. In two years
anos through th'e medium of judicious ad- they have, by steady work in harness,
vertising-.
covered a lot of ground and, in spite of
the rocky nature of the said ground, in
places, are now as fit as possible for furth-
er progress at a fairly speedy gait. These
two capable and energetic young men
have hewn out a place for the "Milton"
among many worthy competitors and it
now stands "as firm as a rock."
P. J. Gildemeester, Knabe traveling rep
resentative, is expected home on Monday
from an extended tour in the Knabe in-
terests.
W. B. Tremaine, of the ^Eolian Co.,
started on his trip to the Antipodes on Sat-
urday. He was a passenger on the " Lu-
cania " and his destination is Sydney, New
South Wales, where, as already stated in
The Review, he will establish a branch of
the ^Eolian Co.
Improvement in Retail Trade.
Retail trade in the city which was some-
what slow during the first two weeks of
December, has shown a decided improve-
ment this week and visitors and purchas-
ers are well in evidence. Those who pur-
chase are selecting, in the majority of in-
stances, the handsomer and most costly
styles. Baby grands are in vogue for
Christmas presents. The business-like
"I want to purchase" air of visitors to the
warerooms is very noticeable. "Prosper-
ity" is evidently reaching out in all direc-
tions and those who have retail establish-
ments are proportionately thankful.
Death of John Summers.
It is with regret that we record the
death of John Summers, who for a long
period of years had been identified with
the retail and wholesale departments of
this industry. He was lately connected
with F. G. Smith's establishment. His
death was quite unexpected and was due
to pneumonia. Mr. Summers was a genial,
warm-hearted man with a host of friends
in the trade, who will regret to learn of
his demise. A widow survives him.
Steinertone Used.
The Steinertone concert grand was
played last night by A. Victor Benham at
the Genealogical Hall, 226 West Fifty-
eighth street. The recital was one of a
series of Historical Pianoforte Recitals
given by Mr. Benham in this city and was
extremely interesting. The Steinertone
served admirably to illustrate the lectur-
er's remarks by reason of its peculiar, or
we should say, individual action mechan-
ism. A clever musician can find in the
Steinertone abundant orchestral colors and
possibilities.
G. M. Ackerly, of Geo. M. Ackerly &
Son, Patchogue, N. Y., and John J. Pole,
Geneva, N. Y., both Mason & Hamlin
agents, were in town this week and left
orders.
Henry L. Mason, of the Mason & Hamlin
Co., arrived in time on Tuesday for the
Bauer Recitals. He expects to leave for
Boston to-day.
The Alex Ross Music Co. announce the
discontinuance of the retail branch of their
music business on Jan. 1st.

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