Music Trade Review

Issue: 1908 Vol. 47 N. 26

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE
MU3IC
TRADE
REVIEW
EDWARD LYMAN BILL - Editor and Proprietor
J. B. SPILLANE, Managing Editor
Executive and Reportortal Stall:
GBO. B. KBLUOR, W. H. DYKES,
L. BJ. BowBns,
B. BRITTAIN WILSON,
F. H. THOMPSON,
A. J. NICKLIN.
J. EUTDBN CLABBNDOX,
AUGUST J. TIM*B.
BOSTON OFFICE:
CHICAGO OFFICE
KUNEST L. WAFTT, Oi-phcum lildg. E. P. VAN HARLINGBN, Room 806, 156 Wabash Aye.
Telephone, Central 414.
PHILADELPHIA:
MINNEAPOLIS and ST. PAUL:
ST. LOUIS:
R. W. KAUFFMAN.
ADOLF EDSTBN.
CHAS. N. VAW BURIN
SAN FRANCISCO: S. II. GRAY, 2407 Sacramento St.
CINCINNATI, O . : BERNARD C. BOWBN.
BALTIMORE, MD.: A. ROBERT FRENCH.
LONDON, ENGLAND: 69 Basinghall St., B. C.
W. LIONEL STURDY, Manager.
Published Every Saturday at 1 Madison Avenue, New York
' "
Entered at the New York Post Office as Second Class Matter.
SUBSCRIPTION, (Including postage), United State* and Mexico, $2.00 per year;
Cannrla. .$.'{.50: all other countries, $4.00.
ADVERTISEMENTS, $2,00 per Inch, single column, per Insertion. On quarterly or
yearly contracts a special discount Is allowed. Advertising Pages, $60.00; opposite
reading matter, $75.00.
REMITTANCES, In other than currency form, should be made payable to Edward
Lyman Hill.
Music P u b l i s h e r s '
An Interesting feature of this publication is a special depart-
Department V> V ment devoted exclusively to the world of music publishing.
Exposition Honors Won by The Review
Grand Prix
Paris Exposition, 1900 Silver Medal.Charleston Exposition, 1902
Diploma.Pan-American Exposition, 1901 Gold Medal. ...St. Louis Exposition, 1904
Gold Medal. .. .Lewis-Clark Exposition, 1905.
REVIEW
the workmen of this country would resent such action, yet it had to
be tested, and it was with the results known to all of us.
T
HE tendency of every business man was to go a trifle slow. In
fact, we had been taught that conservatism is a good policy
to adopt, and men moved cautiously. They only bought for present
requirements. They did not anticipate the future to any large ex-
tent, and as a result of a curtailment of buying, there was a slowing
up of the factory wheels. The purchasing power of the people was
reduced, and, of course, every business dealing in luxuries, neces-
sarily suffered. There could be no way out of it, and the music
trade, in common with affiliated industries, has suffered. Of course,
there are some concerns which have been fortunate enough to hold
well up to the business record of past years. There are exceptions
to any general rule, but 1908, as compared with 1906 or 1907, will
be rated about a 60 per cent. year.
There is, however, a brighter side to the business picture.
Stocks in all lines have been exhausted. Factories are starting up,
and we are gradually swinging back to normal conditions. We
have been through the fire, and we have been tested, and there is a
greater confidence existing to-day in American business and
financial institutions than ever before.
The music trade is to be congratulated on the strength which
it has demonstrated under the most trying conditions, and it is in
better shape financially to-day than ever before. Collections have
been looked after more closely. Greater care is being displayed in
the granting of credits, and the retail piano merchants are using a
quality test in their sales, where formerly the strongest kind of
emphasis was placed upon quantity sales, and quality was almost
forgotten.
I
N making piano sales, the liability of the purchaser is investi-
gated, and the belief exists everywhere that a piano sold to a
person not in position to meet the payments is poorly sold, and it
is a mighty sight better to have that instrument on the floor.
NEW YORK, DECEMBER 26, 1908
All of these matters to-day are considered and weighed more
carefully than ever before, and it is because rigid tests are being
applied that the music trade industry is now in better shape than
ever before.
EDITORIAL
Repossessions, which, for the first half of the year, reduced the
sales of new pianos enormously, have now become normal, and deal-
ALE 1908, for the curtain will have fallen upon the old year
ers are compelled to look to the factories for their supplies, rather
before The Review ag-ain makes its regular appearance.
than to their own warerooms for piano stock, which has been taken
And what of 1908?
back from customers who were unable to meet their obligations.
Not altogether pleasing in a business sense truly. In fact, it
There has been a house cleaning, and as a result, the basic
has been a year of disappointments.
foundations of business to-day are firmer than ever before, so that
The first part of the year hope was buoyed up by the belief
in bidding farewell to 1908, we can figure that while it has not
that each week would see bettered business conditions. But the been profitable in a business sense, it has been a year in which we
looked for betterment was side-tracked somewhere, for it was long
have learned many a lesson, which may be profitable in conducting
delayed.
future business. It has been a year of hard struggles, but it has
developed business bone and sinew, so that there is added strength
The American people are by nature optimistic, and they re-
to be shown in the development of trade enterprises at the dawn
fused to believe that we were so ill financially that we would require
of the New Year.
a long convalescing period. They did not wish to believe that, and
there was no such sentence in their business vocabulary. They
Let us keep the lessons of the past well grounded in our minds,
rather held to the belief that business depression would be short-
with the fixed resolve to move ahead, adopting wise conservatism in
lived, and that conditions would improve not steadily, but rapidly.
our plans. Not too much conservatism, however, because there is
just as much danger in that course as there is in over-plunging.
That was false reasoning, and thousands who hugged to their
hearts such delusive thoughts were simply deceiving themselves, for Reasonable, rational conservatism. In other words, good business
judgment. Then the New Year will show results of the right kind.
business did not improve. On the contrary, during the first half
of the year, it languished, and in the great manufacturing centers, it
was in a state of paralysis. In agricultural districts, it was much
HE piano player has been a greater selling force in the indus-
better, and therein lies the benefit of having a country where there
try during the year now closing than ever before, and we esti-
is every variety of climate, of products, of manufactures.
mate that about twelve per cent, of all the pianos put forth during
1908 have contained some kind of player mechanism.
There were some sections of America where the people did not
This may seem a small percentage to some, but when we com-
know that a panic existed. They were doing business, making col-
pare this record with that of former years, we will sec that the player
lections and purchasing along normal lines.
has jumped to a very prominent position within a very brief period
Then, it is useless to deny the fact that a year in which we
of time, and it is advancing rapidly as a factor in the music trade
elect a President has a depressing effect upon business. There is
always a doubt in the minds of thousands of people until up to the industry.
Nearly all of the early opposition to the player has been over-
time when the votes are counted, as to the success of certain policies.
come, and piano manufacturers do not hesitate to concede a great
There was doubt this year, because there were hundreds of thou-
selling strength to the player. If we may judge from the plans
sands of men out of employment, and it was a question which way
which are now under way, it is safe to say that during 1909 the per-
those hundreds of thousands of men would vote.
Also, for the first time in organization history, the head of the centage will reach the point that one piano in every four which
is produced will contain player mechanism.
American Federation of Labor tried to vote that organization of
The field is constantly broadening, and as a result of the con-
labor as a unit, and while the. majority of Americans believed, that
LONG DISTANCE TELEPHONES—NUMBERS 4«77 and 4678 GRAMERCY
Connecting all Departments.
Cable address: "Elblll, New York."
V
T
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE
MUSIC
TRADE!
centration of inventive minds upon this product, it is but natural
that its cost should be lessened, and with a lessening cost will come
a corresponding widening of the trade horizon.
When piano players were first put forth, the price naturally
brought about certain limitations. They could only appeal to a cer-
tain class, but with a lowering price, the avenues of distribution are
widened, and to those who have watched the development of the
player, its future seems indeed bright.
O
UR special reports indicate a lively demand for pianos during
the past ten days. This is reflected in the telegraphic orders
which manufacturers have received from dealers urging hurried
shipments. This condition of affairs shows that the stock of the
dealers is extremely low, and that the year will open with ware-
rooms in a more depleted condition than has been noticeable during
any January for many years.
Compare the opening of 1909 with 1908. A year ago the deal-
ers, in anticipation of a large holiday trade, had stocked up heavily.
The looked-for trade did not materialize, and they carried over big
stock accumulation to the present year.
The condition of the piano warerooms a year ago was wholly
different from to-day, and as a result of the depleted stocks every-
where, orders must come in frequently to manufacturers, for pianos
will be sold in goodly numbers. There is no question as to that, for
the dealers will bend every energy upon salesmaking, and where
there is energy there is also results.
The outlook for business for the next twelve months is certainly
most encouraging and a survey of the trade field should be stimu-
lating to every piano merchant, no matter where located.
I
N reviewing the trade newspaper business for the year, it must
be conceded by all fair-minded critics, that while the actual
number of papers dealing with music trade affairs has not decreased
the number which are worthy of support by reasons of values put
forth, has materially decreased. Piano men have recognized this
condition and have more than ever before concentrated their patron-
age upon papers which have standing and influence.
There is no denying the fact that there are papers which secure
patronage from the piano and allied industries, which do not render
a fair equivalent for the money invested.
Now, if piano men, through personal leanings, desire to
patronize vapid, colorless, attenuated sheets, that is their affair.
But it pays the business man, if he is going to spend his money on
a business basis, to apply the same logic in selecting trade papers
that he uses in any other business proposition. In other words, to
use reasonable intelligence in selecting such mediums as appeal to
him as business getters and concentrate upon these papers which are
fairly representative of trade interests.
A representative trade publication, in any industry serves that
industry broadly and no trade paper voicing important interests can
fine adequate excuse for asking patronage, when it can offer noth-
ing of interest to the advertiser.
There are many advertisers in various industries who have not
as yet grasped the great opportunities that exist in trade paper pub-
licity. In some lines, a single publication reaches practically every
buyer in the field, every man who can influence an order, and yet
there are some advertisers who are content merely to play with the
trade paper advertising proposition.
This indifference can only exist because these men have not
been taught to respect trade journalism. On the contrary, the
memory of stand-and-deliver trade journalism still lingers with
them, and, to a certain extent, poisons their mind and lessens their
respect for the profession.
There are many who do not give the care and attention to trade
journalism which the subject deserves. They are content to spend
a few thousand dollars in advertising and let it go at that. They
think enough in other directions about making sales, but no single
force in the trade paper field has yet grappled with them and made
them sit up and take notice that a great selling force is at their
door, a wonderful force and factor that could be utilized in increas-
ing their sales.
Because of the multitude of their duties the heads of many
manufacturing organizations omit any serious consideration of ad-
vertising, but will the publishers of the legitimate trade press be
content to maintain the position allotted to them ?
REVIEW
I
T is easy enough for anyone to record the fact that trade paper
advertising has made material advances during the past ten
years, and has made specially marked improvement during the past
five, but notwithstanding all that has been accomplished, there is
still a larger field for development ahead. The day of the house
organ and the sheet that will print whatever patrons desire is gone;
by, but notwithstanding this wonderful advance, it cannot be de-
nied that thus far scant attention has been given to the question of
trade paper advertising. A proof of this—compare the enormous
sums which have been expended for general advertising with the
sums which have been used for trade newspaper work. That tells
the story.
Enormous fortunes have been made by publications in the
field of general publicity, while comparatively small ones are earned
by publications in the specialized or trade newspaper field.
Now, why is this? Why should the monthly or weekly,
created to amuse people, be a wonderful newspaper, while mainly it'
advertises cheap and inconsequential things, while the trade news-
paper, the serious exponent of manufacturing and financial inter-
ests, is relegated to an obscure corner in the congregation of publi-
cations ?
It is true, the popular magazine reaches hundreds of thousands
of people, where the trade newspaper reaches tens of thousands,
but the trade newspaper reaches the people who sell the goods;
therefore, the influence of a trade newspaper is a tremendous vitaliz-
ing force.
It must be conceded that the piano manufacturers who have
viewed the trade newspaper as a helpful adjunct and have patron 1
ized it liberally, are counted among the most successful in the in-
dustry.
;
IN LIGHTER VEIN
Happy New Year everybody!
One price, and make it the right price.
The clouds of depression are lifting all the time.
And so the trust promoter is again in our midst.
Step softly please, something is going to happen.
Combinations and combinations.
Well, why not?
This is the time when the tongue of the rumor monger wags merrily.
That report about a music trade newspaper trust is a trifle premature.
But, Lord bless you, wouldn't the fur fly about that time! Well, rather.
Would-be Passenger—Hi! there, mate, is the ark full up?
Conductor—No; we've just got room for the jackass. (Pulls bell.) —
Pick-Me-Up.
Looks as if there would be plenty of good business sunlight in the
land to sort, of warm us up a bit. We are willing to have the chill taken.
off, thank you.
BEATS ANY COW AROUND HERE.—An Oklahoma newspaper ad-
vertises as follows: "Full-blooded cow for sale, giving milk, three tons of
hay and a lot of chickens and several stoves."
OLD-FASHIONED HAND PRESS.—Nobody else around the news-
paper office appreciates the power of the press so much as the green office
boy does when he gets his fingers squeezed in one.
ATTRACTIVE SIGN.—This notice was posted in a pleasure-boat be-
longing to a certain steamship company:
'
"The chairs in the cabin are for the ladies. Gentlemen are requested,
not to make use of them until the ladies are seated."
EVOLUTION IN LITERATURE.—Friend: How did you come to
write that "best seller?"
The Modern Literary Gent: First I was struck by a thought. I
epigramized the thought, sketched the epigram, playized the sketch, noveli
ized the play and advertised the novel.
WIDELY ADVERTISED BRAND.—-Hicks—What do you suppose my
wife has been doing now?
Wicks—I don't know.
Hicks—Why, she told me last night that she went all over town the
week before my birthday, trying to buy me some post-prandlal cigars,
said she had read about them in the newspapers.

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