Music Trade Review

Issue: 1916 Vol. 63 N. 21

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE
PUBLISHED BY THE ESTATE OF EDWARD LYMAN BILL
(C. L. BILL, Executrix.)
J. B, SPILLANE, Editor
J. RAYMOND BILL, Associate Editor
AUGUST J. TIMPE
Business Manager
Executive and Reportorial Stafl:
B. BBITTAIN WILSON. CARLETON CHACE, L. M. ROBINSON, WILSON D. RUSH, V. D. WALSH,
WM. KRAID WIIITK (Technical Kditor), A. J. NICKLIN, L. E. BOVVERS
BOSTON OFFICE:
JOHN H. WILSON, 324 Washington St.
Telephone, Main 6950.
CHICAGO OFFICE:
E. P. VAN HARLINGEN, Consumers' Building,
230 So. State Street. Telephone, Wabash 5774.
HENRY S. KINGWILL, Associate.
LONDON, ENGLAND: 1 Gresham Buildings, Basinghall St., L\ C.
NEWS SERVICE IS SUPPLIED W E E K L Y BY OUR CORRESPONDENTS
LOCATED IN T H E LEADING CITIES THROUGHOUT AMERICA.
Published Every Saturday at 373 Fourth Avenue, New York
Entered at the New York Post Office as Second Class Matter
SUBSCRIPTION (including postage), United States and Mexico, $2.00 per year;
Canada, $3.50; all other countries, $5.00.
ADVERTISEMENTS, $3.50 per inch, single column, per insertion. Or. quarterly or
yearly contracts a special discount is allowed. Advertising pages, $IIO.
REMITTANCES, in other than currency forms, should be made payable to the Estate of
Edward Lyman Bill.
911(1
Departments conducted by an expert wherein all ques-
OllU
t ; o n s o f a technical nature relating to the tuning, regu-
lW>n91*tni0ntc
lating and repairing of pianos and player-pianos are
U e p d l l l l l t U t S . d e a l t w i t h i w i l l b e 6 f o u n 5 i n a n o t her section of this
paper. We also publish a number of reliable technical works, information concerning
which will be cheerfully given upon request.
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.
KOVG DISTANCE TELEPHONES—NUMBERS
5982—5983 MADISON SQ.
Connecting 1 all Departments
Cable address: "Elbill, New York."
NEW YORK, NOVEMBER 18, 1916
EDITORIAL
HE plans which have been made for a chain of "Piano Men's
Hotels" throughout the country through the efforts of Alex-
ander S. Shoninger, secretary of the National Piano Travelers'
Association, is a movement that should have the hearty support
of the traveling fraternity. There have been "hotel committees '
of the Travelers' Association for several years, but little was
accomplished until Mr. Shoninger took up the matter and put it
through.
The piano travelers, as a rule, are a friendly lot. They know
and like one another. There is a sort of brotherhood existing
among them that is hard to find in many other professions. The
piano men should, therefore, welcome any move that would serve
to make their days on the road less lonesome, and that will serve
to bring them together at other times than at the annual con-
ventions.
Many a traveler spends an evening by himself in a strange
town simply because he doesn't know that there are several other
travelers in the same line of business stopping in that town.
With a special hotel to go to and a piano travelers' register to
refer to in that hotel, the traveler should feel that he can keep
in constant touch with the fellow members of the craft, and,
therefore, with the trade in general. In case of illness or in an
emergency, the new arrangement should prove most helpful, and
possibly there are a lot of little pointers that one traveler may
give another on trade matters that will help the recipient without
in any way interfering with the business of the informer or
working against his interests. May the chain of "Piano Men's
Hotels" continue to grow !
T
HAT the music trade of the country is interested in piano
T
salesmanship and sees the importance of developing new
salesmanship ideas is indicated by the interest taken in the big
salesmanship congress recently held in Detroit, and in the organi-
zations being formed in various sections for the development of
salesmanship. In the lists of those who have taken the lead in
REVIEW
promoting salesmanship organizations in various states, the
names of many piano and talking machine men are to be found.
Tt has been stated that ninety per cent, of pianos are dis-
posed of through good salesmanship and only ten per cent, are
bought without previous solicitation. Under such conditions
good selling knowledge is of prime importance to the piano man
and it is thought that he should participate actively in any move-
ment calculated in any way to develop and improve selling ability
and methods.
The close affiliation between salesmanship and advertising
associations is also a point to be commended. In the first place
the advertising men of the country are all well organized and
can, through their efforts, prove of material assistance in develop-
ing organizations for the promotion of salesmanship. Advertis-
ing of itself is simply salesmanship through the medium of type,
and with the direct and indirect systems of selling so closely
allied it is distinctly fitting that those engaged in such work
should make a common cause.
up the newspapers these days there is brought
A S to one the picks attention
numerous advertisements referring to
special features for the holiday trade. At first it was somewhat
of a shock to find that the holiday season has come around once
again, but a look at the calendar as this issue of The Review
reaches the trade will show that Christmas Day itself is only
five weeks off.
The piano and talking machine men who have not already
started a holiday campaign are letting valuable time go to waste.
Even the most generous of Christmas buyers do not make an
investment of one or several hundred dollars on the spur of the
moment, and by impressing upon the general public the desir-
ability of a musical instrument for Christmas a week or so before
the regular schedule, the dealer may land doubtful sales. The
general merchandise people work about a month ahead, but that
is hardly enough margin for the piano man. It is the forehanded
man who wins.
N addition to proving of incalculable benefit to those participat-
I directors
ing, the several conferences of superintendents and technical
of piano manufactories that have been held in Chicago,
have been of great importance and interest to the trade at large.
The conferences have served to give many members of the trade a
new conception of the manner in which the technical man regards
his work.
There has been much said to the effect that the technical men
of the trade for the most part have been at a standstill, that they
were under the impression that they had reached the limit in the
development of the modern piano and were satisfied with thei r
work. The conferences serve to refute this idea. They have
proved that the technical man is not satisfied with the piano as it
is to-day; that he realizes its imperfections; that he has ideaN
in tone and construction that he is endeavoring to meet. The
ideas of all those participating in the conferences, while at times
radically different in basis and conception, nevertheless tend
every one of them toward a new goal in piano perfection, toward,
the production of an instrument that should not only be pleasing
to the eye and the ear but that should be scientifically perfect so
far as the limitations of the piano maker were possible.
At the conferences there came stories of experiments, of new
things attempted, of things accomplished, that prove a revelation
to those outside of the factories, to those who have regarded the
piano simply as an ensemble of wood, metal, felt and ivory. It
has shed a new and exceedingly favorable light on the technical
side of the trade.
RAISE is certainly due the New York Evening Mail for the
P
splendid work which it is doing in spreading a knowledge ot
the best in music among the masses of the people in this city.
Its "Music in the Home" page has been the subject of com-
mendation in these columns before for its wide influence in dis-
seminating a knowledge of the possibilities of the player-piano
and the talking machine among its readers—a work which is en-
tirely in line with the "Music in the Home" idea of the National
Piano Manufacturers' Association.
Under the auspices of The New York Evening Mail a con-
cert was given Wednesday of last week at Carnegie Hall, when
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
THE VALUE OF SPECIALIZED KNOWLEDGE
(Continued from page 3)
much interested in the special functions of the player action, how the instrument should he played, and the
hundred and one other details connected with the player concerning" which the prospective purchaser desires
- enlightenment. The salesman or manager who is able to answer such inquiries intelligently and compre-
hensively is undoubtedly a more valuable man to his house than is the man who quibbles and pretends to know-
that which he does not.
At no time in the history of our country has technical knowledge been so essential to the success of
business as to-day. The leading music trade associations in European countries are strongly advocating a
more active participation, on the part of the sales force, in courses bearing upon the technical or construc-
tional side of the industry. These are excellent suggestions and w r ell worthy of simulation by the leading
trade associations of this country.
The old copybook saying, "Knowledge is power," has an added weight for the piano salesman, especially
when that knowledge is technical, for it supplements the talent of ability possessed by the average salesman
in such a manner that it makes him a powerful asset to the business with which he is connected.
the Philharmonic Orchestra, under Conductor Stransky and
noted soloists, gave a concert, the program being selected by
readers of The Mail, which was enjoyed by an audience that
filled Carnegie Hall from pit to dome. The character of the
artists participating, and the intelligence and enthusiasm of the
audience afforded a very pleasing idea of how the people of New
York hunger for good music, and how splendidly their want;-:
were catered to by this enterprising newspaper which enabled
numbers of people to enjoy a concert at ridiculously low prices.
In European countries work of this kind is done by the
municipal or national governments, but strange to say, in this
Republic where the aesthetic desires of the people should be
catered to more fully, there is a complete ignoring of the value
of music as a factor in good citizenship. Our newspapers, how-
ever, are filling this want in a most satisfactory way, and the
symphony concerts, the plans for which have been perfected by
The Mail, are steps forward which should gain the appreciation
and commendation of the music trade industry. For it must be
conceded that the greater the knowledge and appreciation of
music that exists among the masses of the people, the greater the
need for pianos and players and other musical instruments, to
interpret.the desires of the community.
LTHOUGH it was primarily a question of State rights that
A
precipitated the Civil War, the State rights idea has lost
considerable ground during the last quarter of a century among
business men and others whose political ambitions do not de-
pend upon the territorial divisions of the country. The public
has come to realize that, although the United States is osten-
sibly a collection of small and large States as its name indicates,
it is on the other hand one great country with interests in one
section identical with those in another. It has been business
largely which has brought about this cohesion, and the demand
to supplant many of the State rights by Federal authority.
The man who makes goods in New York and sells them in
Illinois, Idaho and California feels that the legal conditions that
exist in his home State should serve as his guide in doing busi-
ness in other sections of the same country. Meanwhile, the
man selling pianos on installments, finds that the personal prop-
erty laws in practically every State are different; that he can
do things legally in one State which would land him in jail in
the next; that effective protective measures in one State are
useless in another. In other words, that, to all intents and pur-
poses, he might as well be doing business with a number of
distinct and separate countries or nations.
On more than one occasion a man who has sold a piano in
one State found later that it had been moved to an adjacent
State, and was practically taken out of his reach, unless he de-
sired to go to the expenditure of time, money and trouble that inter-
state litigation entails.
There is a movement on foot at the present time for the
adoption of uniform State laws, and it is a movement that should
have the endorsement of every business man who has country-
wide interests. Such laws would overcome the opposition of
those who see danger in increased Federal authority, for the
authority of the State would be upheld through the uniformity
of legislation, thus saving the honest business man who wants
to do business above board, but according to law, from the
annoyance and expense of meeting with the conflicting legal
restrictions endorsed by the States at present.
GETTING DOWN TO PLAIN PLAYER FACTS
The education of the public along player lines is a necessity for the expansion of the player business.
There is no doubt of that; and education of the piano merchants and salesmen is also a vital necessity,
because through them will come a powerful force in the education of the public; and right here we wish to
remark that we have produced a line of books upon the player-piano which comprehensively covers the
entire player situation.
In this respect this trade newspaper stands alone, for it has been the principal source from which player
information has been available for piano merchants and salesmen for a period of years. Our latest book,
"The Player-Piano Up to Date"
is the best of the series. It contains upwards of 220 pages of matter bearing directly upon the player.
Every piano merchant and piano salesman should have a copy of this book within easy reach. It
gives to readers a fund of information not obtainable elsewhere.
It contains a series of original drawings and a vast amount of instructive and educational matter, as
well as a detailed description of some of the principal player mechanisms.
It costs $1.50 to have this book delivered to any address in the United States, and your money will be
refunded if you are not satisfied with the book after examination. No one yet has availed himself of this
opportunity. Foreign countries, 15c. to cover extra postage, should be added.
Estate of EDWARD LYMAN BILL, Publisher
373 Fourth Ave., New York

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