Music Trade Review

Issue: 1915 Vol. 60 N. 8

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MtJSiC TRADE REVIEW
ant, Lucker, determined to appeal his case to the
Supreme Court from which this decision has now
Famous Piano House to Open One of the Finest
been announced.
Victor Showrooms in the Country, with G. A.
"We wish particularly to call attention to at
Stanley in Charge—To Have Twenty Booths.
least two important points covered in this deci-
William Knabe & Co. have closed arrangements sion, namely, that it is the privilege of the Vic-
whereby they will handle the complete line of the tor Talking Machine Co. under its agreement to
Victor Talking Machine Co., in their warerooms at suspend its distributers and dealers and place their
names on the Suspended List and avoid any
4-M7 Fifth avenue, New York. Negotiations toward
this end had been pending for some time and the claims for damages for so doing. Perhaps no
consummation of this important deal insures the ex- less important is the conclusion that our business
ploitation of Victor products on Piano Row in a is entirely an interstate one, as we have always
high-grade manner thoroughly in accord with the contended, and that we have not conducted busi-
ness in the State of Minnesota, but have concluded
prestige and standing of the two houses involved.
all transactions at the office in Camden, N. J."
According to present plans, the Victor depart-
ment in the Knabe store will be one of the finest
COLUMBIA RECORDS OF "AIDA."
Victor showrooms in the industry, and will have
Entire Opera Score Ready for Sale February 20
more than twenty booths, tastefully decorated and
—A Notable Achievement—H. A. Yerkes'
furnished, with a large recital hall for conceit
Southern Trip—Columbia Activity in Los
purposes. There will be constructed a number of
Angeles—Some News of the Week.
booths for the Victor department on the main floor
of the Knabe store, which will conform architec-
The foreign record department of the Columbia
turally to the general arrangement of the Knabe
warerooms. From the main floor there will be a Graphophone Co. announced this week that there
grand stairway leading to the lower floor, where would be placed on sale to-day, February 20, the
entire opera score of "Aida," the famous opera.
the greater number of demonstration booths will
be located. The construction and decoration of the The records for this new series were recorded at
the Milan laboratories of the Columbia Co. by
booths will follow the Empire period of design, and
the fact that the plans for the new department are the artists who are singing leading roles in La
in the hands of Cass Gilbert, one of this country's Scala, the celebrated opera house and temple of
music. All of the selections in this opera are
most famous architects indicates the enthusiasm
issued on double-disc records at 75 cents each,
which William Knabe & Co. are evincing in their
and from overture to the final duet the records
new department.
are remarkably pleasing. In addition to the com-
George A. Stanley, a former member of Stanley
plete score of this opera there are other new
& Pearsall, Victor distributers, and one of the best-
popular price Columbia double-disc records, also
known members of the talking machine trade, has
made in Milan, including selections from all of
been appointed manager of the Victor department
the leading operas.
in the Knabe warerooms, and has already assumed
H. A. Yerkes, New England district manager
active charge. Mr. Stanley's lengthy experience in
the Victor field has admirably equipped him for this for the Columbia Co., who also numbers several
large Southern cities in his territory, returned
important post, and as his previous association with
Wednesday from a ten-days trip through the
the merchandising of Victor products has been
South.
Mr. Yerkes noticed a decided improve-
along high-grade lines, the Knabe clientele will af-
ford him a splendid chance for successful develop- ment in the cotton sections, and was particularly-
ment. It may be added that Mr. Stanley is consid- impressed with the feeling of confidence and
ered by many members of the talking machine in- optimism which seems to prevail in the majority
dustry as one of the most successful retail Victor of the large Southern business centers.
The letter-heads of the Columbia Co.'s whole-
men in the country.
sale distributing houses invite Columbia dealers
throughout the country to visit the Columbia
TWO IMPORTANT POINTS
booth at the Panama-Pacific International Exposi-
Set Forth in Victor Co.'s Letter Anent Recent
tion, which opens this month. The Columbia
Decision of Supreme Court of Minnesota.
booth is located in Block 18 of the Liberal Arts
Palace.
Louis F. Geissler, general manager of the Victor
Columbia dealers in and around Los Angeles
Talking Machine Co., has sent out a letter to Vic-
tor distributers in regard to the Supreme Court have sent in to the Columbia executive offices
decision in favor of the Victor Co. against Lau- clippings of newspaper articles and advertise-
rence Lucker, Minneapolis, awarding full amount ments which were used in conjunction with the
of original claim, with costs, and which was printed grand opera season in that city. A.s many of the
in The Review of January 23, 1915. The Victor operatic artists appearing in Los Angeles record
for the Columbia library, the Columbia dealers
Co.'s letter in part reads:
took advantage of the opportunity to advertise
"The action upon the part of the Victor Talking
their record departments.
Constantino, the
Machine Co. was to recover amount due for.
famous tenor, a Columbia artist, scored a tre-
goods received by defendant previous to June 1,
mendous success in his Los Angeles appearance.
1912, the date on which Mr. Lucker was placed
Despite the handicaps occasioned by their re-
upon our suspended list and all relations under
the distributer's agreement with him canceled. cent removal to 83 Chambers street, New York,
Mr. Lucker attempted to defend himself by set- the local wholesale headquarters of the Columbia
ting out that the Victor Talking Machine Co. Co. have closed quite a number of new deals
was not eligible to sue in the State courts of Min- during the past fortnight. Several of these new
nesota inasmuch as it had not complied with a Columbia representatives are located in upper
statute requiring all foreign corporations doing Broadway and other residential sections of New
business in Minnesota to conform to certain stat- York.
utory requirements before such corporation could
VISITING SOUTHERN RESORTS.
resort to the courts of that State.
J. Newcomb Blackmail, president of the
"In addition to this defense, a counterclaim for
damages on account of the suspension was set out Blackman Talking Machine Co., 97 Chambers
amounting to about $250,000. Although it was street, New York, Victor and Edison cylinder dis-
decided in the lower court that the Victor Talk- tributor, accompanied by Mrs. Blackman, Louis
ing Machine Co. was not engaging in business in Buehn, the prominent Victor distributor in Phila-
Minnesota, but on the contrary, conducted inter- delphia, and Mrs. Buehn, left New York Thurs-
state business and also that Mr. Lucker should day for a fortnight's visit to the leading Southern
not maintain his claim for damages, the defend-
winter resorts.
VICTOR=KNABE DEAL IN NEW YORK.
CONCERT AT THE^ EDISON SHOP.
Four Noted Artists Give Recital in Conjunction
with Their Individual Records—Attracts
Enormous Crowd of Music Lovers.
A very interesting concert was given Wednes-
day afternoon at the Edison Shop, 473 Fifth ave-
nue, New York, conducted by the Phonograph
Corporation of Manhattan, when four well-known
artists who record for the Edison disc record
library appeared personally at the warerooms and
gave a recital in conjunction with their individual
records. These four artists were Christine Miller,
the famous contralto, assisted by Elizabeth
Spencer, soprano; John Young, tenor, and Donald
Chalmers, basso.
Owing to the unexpectedly large crowd whcli
appeared Wednesday to hear these popular artists
and their records, it was decided to give the re-
cital on the fourth floor of the building, where
several hundred chairs were provided for visitors,
and in addition it was found necessary to use the
concert hall on the ground floor of the Edison
Shop to accommodate the overflow crowd. The
concert had been advertised in the Wednesday
morning newspapers, and the fact that Miss Miller
gave a very successful recital the preceding day
at Aeolian Hall contributed to the interest evoked
by her appearance at the Edison shop.
The individual artists sang several of the most
popular selections in their respective repertoires,
and their Edison disc records were then repro-
duced on an Edison diamond disc phonograph.
This was followed by the artists' accompanying
their own selections on the phonograph, subse-
quent to which there was ensemble singing. The
concert scored a signal success, and each member
was enthusiastically applauded. In fact, the event
received such an ovation that it is quite likely
that a second recital along similar lines will be
given at the Edison Shop in the near future.
CREDIT CONDITIONS EAST AND WEST.
D. A. Creed Says the Victor Dealer in Middle
West Closes Greater Proportion of Business
in Cash Than His Eastern Associate.
Daniel A. Creed, credit manager of the Talking
Machine So., Chicago, Victor distributer, was a
visitor to New York last week, spending some
time in conference with Arthur D. Geissler, gen-
eral manager of the Talking Machine Co., and
vice-president of the New York Talking Machine
Co. Mr. Creed, who is an acknowledged author-
ity on all matters pertaining to the credit end of
the Victor industry, remarked on the fact that the
average Victor dealer in the Middle West seems
to pay more attention to the matter of favorable
terms on the merchandise he sells than the Victor
dealer in the East. The Victor dealer in the West
closes a greater proportion of his business in cash
than the Eastern dealer, and makes a special effort
to terminate his instalment sales in the shortest
possible period of time.
NOT MAKING 10 CENT RECORDS.
The Victor Talking Machine Co., through Louis
F. Geissler, general manager, has sent out a letter
in which it states in part: "The Victor Co. has
been erroneously quoted in the Chicago Musical
Times, the Boston News Bureau and, as a con-
sequence, in a few other papers as manufacturing
ten cent records. We have not yet been reduced
to the necessity of manufacturing goods for the
ten-cent stores. Our capacity is not sufficient to
supply the demand for our regular catalog line."
W. A. and Clayton Bower have arranged to
open a store in Galva, Til., for the display and sale
of Edison diamond disc phonographs.
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
THE VALUE OF TALKING MACHINES IN SCHOOLS.
By FREDERIC GOODWIN, Director Educational Department, Columbia Graphophone Co.
In no way is the old saying, "Seeing is believ-
ing," more strongly emphasized than in the fact
that four years ago there was hardly a single
talking machine in
any one of the 500,000
schoolrooms of the
United States and its
dependencies; and to-
day, speaking of one
company's p r o d u c t
alone, there are over
200 Grafonolas in the
New Y o r k City
schools — t h e r e are
Columbia machines in
Alaskan schools, Phil-
ippine schools, Ha-
waiian schools, and
in the schools of
every large American city.
Four years ago, remember, hardly a single ma-
chine within the walls of a schoolhouse, and to-
day, with all that has been accomplished by the
large talking machine companies maintaining edu-
cational departments, the gross results are mar-
velous, yet the threshold of the school business is
but scratched.
Schools that have purchased talking machines
have for the most part purchased single machines
for a building. In a few more years a single ma-
chine in a school building will be superseded by a
machine in each room as an aid to the individual
About one in ten thousand can. Teachers aim to
the material value of a school appliance when
that appliance can do things the teacher cannot do,
and help the teacher in the things she can do.
How the Teacher Is Helped.
Can a teacher play a march correctly, or a folk
dance, an overture or a symphonic selection?
About one in ten thousand can. Teachers are to
make use of anything that helps them become more
efficient in their profession. Some teachers can
sing. Some! But a Nordica, a Gliick, a Metzger or
a Homer sings daily in some schools! To be per-
sonal, Mr. Dealer, if you have children, do you
wish some children to enjoy such a daily privilege
and your children not? These little, simple
thoughts glimpse the fundamental facts why talk-
ing machines are going into schoolrooms. Nothing
can keep them without.
The talking machine is the most amazing art
product of our time. Its impress upon our life is
almost beyond realization, for no statistics have
been collected, no research articles have been
printed. Here and there a great mind makes the
statement, or rather generalizes upon the modern
progress of music as an art and the part the talk-
ing machine is playing in its development, simply
because he or she has come in touch with some
salient demonstration near at hand; but the prod-
uct committees and the record committees of the
great producing companies are computing records
in millions, not hundreds, not even thousands.
These great pioneers, artisans, humans, have been
taught deep things of import by the insistent de-
mands made by the great public for this selection,
or that artist, till they themselves have become
artists through administering their trust.
The wisdom of John Ruskin has been forced,
literally forced, into their minds by the over-
whelming combination of business and art com-
bined. "Life without industry is Guilt; industry
without Art is brutality." A few thoughts of
master minds about the educational value of the
talking machine are not out of place at this point.
Will Earhart, director of music, Pittsburgh public
schools, in his excellent bulletin, "Music in the
Public Schools," issued by the United States Bu-
reau of Education, writes: "The order of popu-
larity with school authorities is, first, music his-
tory; second, harmony; third, appreciation. There
is manifest desire to make high school music
something more than the chorus singing. No
report of the use of player-pianos and talking ma-
chines has been asked for by the national com-
mittee, but the place given them in schools is so
important that their number was voluntarily re-
ported. The value of these instruments in musical
history is not to be overestimated. The operas
should not be studied less, but the great instru-
mental forms should without question ibe studied
more."
Thomas Tapper, Litt. D., lecturer in the Institute
of Music, city of New York, in his book just pub-
lished ("The Education of the Music Teacher"),
writes of mechanical musical instruments as fol-
lows :
"The advent of the mechanism capable of re-
producing music with some degree of merit im-
mediately raised the question, 'Will they decrease
the study of music?' We have had these various
mechanisms with us long enough to know, first,
if they have come to stay; second, if some of them
are capable of artistic reproduction of music;
third, that they are carrying the message of music
to thousands of homes that before were entirely
without it; fourth, that the music propaganda be-
ing accomplished by this means is actually increas-
ing our national interest in music, and is therefore
to a certain music study favorable; that is, to in-
crease it. Many companies maintain expensive
laboratories in which nothing else is attempted ex-
cept the improvement of the product. These
mechanisms are not enemies or serious rivals of
music teachers. They are allies in many ways.
No child of coming generations will be without
fairly definite evidence of the reproductive art of
Caruso, Bond, Ysaye, Kreisler, Hofmann, Sem-
brich and all the great company of the present-day
artists. No one can deny the estimable value of
this. ' The day will come when a teacher will say,
'Let us see how great artists have interpreted this
selection.' The advent of music mechanism in
schools is already proving of practical utility. They
are being used for listening lessons, studies in ap-
preciation and interpretation, for marching and
for folk dancing."
One fact should be noted before we leave this
subject: Practically no great artist has ever re-
fused one or another of these instruments to per-
petuate his art. We have pointed out the great
historical value of this to future generations. To
the present generation it is a testimony of the
comparative excellence of the means.
Can't Pass by the Truth.
Truly, as we say in our booklet, "School Room
Music," "the tuning fork has gone, and the grapho-
phone has taken its place." The live talking ma-
chine dealer is not passing by the truth. He is
recognizing that the strenuous endeavors made to
put the work of the educational department
strongly before the dealer and the public school
teachers is not an advertising scheme, but spells
permanency for the business and higher artistic
values in the product. He realizes that attention
to the subject and attention to the musical quality
of records must be pronounced in educational
records.
He is fully alive to the effect of this upon the
general trade. We who are on the inside know
how difficult it is to find artists who meet re-
quirements. When you stop to think of the diffi-
culties encountered it is obvious that only the best
of artists must make school records in the future.
Those, having greater vocal control, more refined
expression, better articulation and diction, more
careful phrasing, a keener appreciation for the
subtleties of rhythm, and so on. The teachers de-
mand this, are disappointed that they cannot al-
ways obtain it, and we must not forget that they
are the leaders in culture in our country. The
pupils of to-day are the home-makers of to-
morrow. Thus it is evident why we are doing
elaborate work and careful planning in our edu-
cational department.
"Show me how" is one of the most human de-
sires, expressed by children even. Yet, if we study
men and their successes, we are impressed that
those persons who frankly say, "Show me how,"
are just the ones who become authorities on a
subject, and we can refer to many humble minds
that have become leading merchants because they
were not ashamed to ask the "how." These are
the ones who study and ponder over problems
until they master them; until the knowledge be-
comes theirs, to be used for their advantage and
their profit.
A study of the principles of school teaching
shows how the minds of the young are led, step
upon step, line upon line, in the pathway of knowl-
edge. Business men realize this fundamental need
as much as teachers need business knowledge. In
"School Room Music" we definitely show how the
Grafonola is essential to the well-being of chil-
dren. We accomplish this by showing how teach-
ers arc using the Grafonola in their schools, ex-
plaining its value and demonstrating that it does
contribute to the physical, mental and cultural up-
lift of boys and girls.
The talking machine dealer, after reading this
book carefully, knows for the first time how to
go after the business, and how to get it. One of
the great commercial institutions of this great
country of ours, the Chase National Bank of New
York, recently sent abroad a patriotic creed. We
quote the first paragraph:
"We believe in our country—United States of
America. We believe in her Constitution, her
laws, her institutions and the principles for which
she stands—the past is secure. We believe in her
vast resources; her great possibilities—yes, more,
her wonderful certainties."
The talking machine is one of the commercial
certainties of the United States. It is going into
her institutions. Some of the principles for which
out great country stands have been etched on the
surfaces of educational talking machine records.
Lucky the dealer (yea, far-sighted) who be-
comes the talking machine trading center of the
schools of his territory. The teachers belong to
him; the pupils belong to him; and, if he is alive
to the possibilities, it is a direct avenue into the
homes of the pupils' parents.
BEtfJ. SWITKY SELLS OUT.
Victor Distributor Disposes of Entire Stock on
Thusday of Last Week and Will Retire from
the Talking Machine Business Permanently.
Renj. Switky, Victor distributer, of 19-23 East
Twenty-fourth street, New York, sold out his en-
tire stock on Thursday of last week, and it is
understood that the entire line of machines and
records will ultimately find a place in a prominent
local department store. Mr. Switky will retire
permanently from the talking machine business and
will engage in another line of trade not yet an-
nounced publicly. He had been handling talking
machines as a dealer and jobber for about twelve
years.
INCORPORATED.
The Master Talking Machine Corporation was
incorporated at Albany on Monday with a capital
stock of $25,000 as distributing agent and manu-
facturer.
The interested parties are Preston
Walsh, J. Robert Rubin and H. B. Danziger.
Jir,
For Best Service, write to
LYON & HEALY
Largest Distributors
CHICAGO

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