Music Trade Review

Issue: 1916 Vol. 63 N. 25

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Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE
KEVIFW
PUBLISHED BY EDWARD LYMAN BILL, Inc.
President, C. L. Bill, 373 Fourth Ave., New York; Vice-President, J. B. Spillane,
373 Fourth Ave., New York; Second Vice-President, J. Raymond Bill, 373 Fourth Ave.,
New York; Secretary and Treasurer, August J. Timpe, 373 Fourth Ave., New York.
J. B. SPILLANE, Editor
J. RAYMOND BILL, Associate Editor
. ,
AUGUST J. TIMPE
Business Manager
Executive and Reportorlal Staff:
B. BRITTAIN WILSON, CARLETON CHACE, L. M.ROBINSON, WILSON D. BUSH, V. D. WALSH,
WM. BRAJD WHITE (Technical Editor), E. B. MUNCH, A. J. NICKLIN, L. E. BOWERS
BOSTON
OFFICE i
JOHN H. WILSON, 824 Washington St.
Telephone, Main 6950.
CHICAGO OFFICE«
E. P. VAN HARLINGEN, Consumers' Building,
220 So. State Street. Telephone, Wabash 5774.
HENRY S. KINGWILL, Associate.
I.OXDON, ENGLAND! l Gresham Buildings, Basinghall St., C. C.
N E W S 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. On quarterly or
yearly contracts a special discount is allowed. Advertising pages, $110.
REMITTANCES, in other than currency forms, should be made payable to Edward
Lyman Bill, Inc.
inA Unit
Departments conducted by an expert wherein all ques-
allV aUU
,
tions of a technical nature relating to the tuning, vegu-
Honnpfmonte
lating and repairing
of pianos and player-pianos ave
V t : » d l I l l i e i l l b . d e a l t w i t h i w i l l b ? s f o u n d i n another 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.
SZSTAHCX TBMPHOWES—VmiBSBS
6988—8*83 XADIBON SQ.
Connecting 1 all Departments
Cable addreMi "Blbifi, New York."
NEW YORK. DECEMBER 16, 1916
EDITORIAL
REVIEW
their copy and consequently contains more total advertising" than
any other daily in the metropolis of the United States.
In the December fifth issue of the New York Journal, The
Review measured the column inches of advertising, classifying
the different ads along general lines. The very startling results
of this investigation run as follows: Clothes, over 600 column
inches; musical instruments, over 500 column inches; food, over
200 inches ; furniture and house fittings, over 100 inches ; chemical
preparations, over 100 inches; automobiles, over 50 inches; the-
atres, over 50 inches and miscellaneous 65 inches.
Considering that clothes include everything from collars to
shoes and that their appeal is divided among women, men, and
children, in the approximate ratio of women 50 per cent., men
40 per cent., and boys, girls and infants, 10 per cent., the real
facts of the case were that from the publicity side music was a
healthy LEADER. The revised table should read:
Over 500 inches—Music.
Over 300 inches—Women's clothes.
Over 200 inches—Food, men's clothes.
Over 100 inches—Furniture, medicine.
Over 50 inches—Autos, children's clothes, theatres, mis-
cellaneous.
In view of the fact that food and clothes represent what may
be termed the necessities of life, and in further view of the fact that
musical instruments are primarily a luxury, the lead assumed by
music as an advertised commodity becomes still more significant.
E World Do Move" and in the realm of mechanical musical
instruments moves fast. Here we have the musical critic of
a daily paper, one of the class that has spent weary hours thinking
up new sarcasm to pour on "canned music" actually growing en-
thusiastic over the capabilities of the Duo-Art Pianola and the
Aeolian-Yocalion. In his review of a recital held in St. Louis re-
cently, Homer Moore, musical critic of The Republic, said in part:
""A roll of paper, perforated at the right point, has been made to
take the place of the weary hours of piano practice except for those
who wish to make themselves into pianists." Surely this marks a
new understanding of what the player-piano is intended to do and
what it does. When this understanding becomes general, the stand-
ing of the player-piano and the talking machine will be unassailable,
and their future unlimited.
INCE the Holiday Issue of The Review reached the trade last
HE unusual number of authoritative special articles in The
S
week, this office has been in receipt of numerous letters of com-
T
Review
last week left hardly a corner of the trade uncovered.
mendation, as well as personal tributes regarding the unusual char-
Piano trade conditions; problems of the player-piano and the
acter of the paper. One local piano man said: "The Holiday
number of The Review reflects most impressively the prosperous
conditions that exist in the trade to-day. It is full of articles on
valuable trade subjects by men whose opinions are to be accepted as
authoritative." "The classiest trade paper we have ever seen,''
writes another manufacturer. It is work such as this that bespeaks
organization, and the appreciation that has been accorded our efforts
•makes the weeks of work worth while.
We of The Review are not inclined to blow our own horn
noisily and it is highly gratifying to have our friends in the trade
so willing and anxious to blow it for us.
l 1 EN the retail piano trade is compared with other lines of
W
business—whenever there is a discussion of the opportuni-
ties that lie before it, or ways and means for increasing distribu-
tion—it is generally pointed out that the reason the piano trade
does not enjoy a greater prominence is because the piano is not
advertised efficiently. Continuous harping on this fact would
lead the occasional listener to assume that the music trade was
far behind other lines, both in the quantity and character of its
advertising. Anyone who is sufficiently interested, however, will
soon find upon perusal of the leading newspapers, especially in
the larger cities, that the quantity of music trade advertising is
oftentimes far in excess of that of any other line—even products
that rank distinctly as the necessities of life, such as clothing
and food. At this time of year musical instrument advertising
so far overshadows that of the automobile that there is hardly
any opportunity for comparison.
The New York Evening Journal has the largest circulation
in New York City—a circulation of over 800,000. It is used
most extensively by advertisers who seek active returns from
music roll; the situation in the supply trade; the developments in
the talking machine and musical merchandise fields, and the pro-
gress that has been made in the publishing and selecting of sheet
music, were all treated by those who may be considered experts
in their lines.
These special articles should serve to dispell any disquieting
fears, and incidentally should prove some excellent rules of prac-
tice for both piano manufacturer and dealer during the coming
year. Without exception the departments of the trade are shown
to be upon a sounder and more substantial basis. We have, of
course, the steady increase in producing costs, but the burden is
being distributed, and while the fundamentals are sound, the
stresses of business need not of necessity prove dangerous. Read
those articles again. They will prove helpful to your business.
HE warning issued to piano manufacturers and retailers by
T
Richard W. Lawrence through The Review last week, that
financial safety lay in a strict adherence to credit reforms instituted
when general conditions were such that extreme caution was neces-
sary to insure weathering a business slump, should be heeded
immediately. Mr. Lawrence says the time to enforce close credits
is when the demand is at its height, and when money is plentiful.
By watching credits under present conditions, even more closely
perhaps than when conditions are normal, the manufacturer and
retailer will find that when there is a change for the worse in the
business situation which must come eventually in the natural course
of events, that his house is in order, that his outstanding accounts
are small in comparison to his cash balance, instead of vice-versa.
Successful business men everywhere are spreading this message,
carefulness in credits, It's a message with a meaning.
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
Pianos at 3V2 Gents and Players at 2 1 2 Gents Each
Some New Ideas on Piano Values, Presented by G. M. Tremaine, That Will Serve
to Give Manufacturers, Retailers and the Public Something to Think About
I'ianos 3]/> cents a piece! Player-pianos 2 l /z
cents a piece, or two for five! This sounds
out of tune with the times. With the price of
everything going up and continuing to go up,
it is a relief to hear of something which sounds
cheap.
We pay from 5 cents to 25 cents for a piece
of pie, so 3^2 cents for a piece of anythirfg ex-
cites incredulity and when this price is ap-
plied to a piano, incredulity changes to con-
viction that some one has his wires crossed;
yet pianos can be bought at the rate of be-
tween 3 and 4 cents a piece.
This is not a humorous article. It is dis-
tinctly serious, and it has a purpose.
This
purpose is to help the manufacturer and the
dealer by the presentation of certain well-
known facts in such a form as to aid them
in securing a proper return for their contribu-
tion to the public's pleasure.
A Condition and a Theory
Grover Cleveland said: "It is a condition and
not a theory which confronts us."
Unfortu-
nately it is both a condition and a theory which
confronts the piano trade. The condition is
the unsatisfactory bank account of the average
manufacturer and dealer after years of the
hardest kind of work, close application to
business, physical strain and mental anguish.
The theory is the general but mistaken impres-
sion of the public that pianos are sold at very
high prices, resulting in big profit to dealers
and makers. . Did you ever stop to think of
the effect a theory or public impression has
on a condition? The business world is filled
with examples. Let us consider one instance.
Any one of the prominent New York dailies
would constitute exceptional value at from 3
to 5 cents each if based on the cost of pro-
duction, yet no paper in Xew York could build
up a large circulation at even 2 cents a copy
to-day. The Xew York public has been edu-
cated to pay 1 cent for its newspaper, and the
San Francisco public has been educated to pay
5 cents for its daily, yet the New York paper
probably costs more to produce than the San
Francisco paper.
A man might run his business on so small
a margin as to fail to cover his overhead
charges and still not increase his sales, unless
the public thought his prices were low. The
man sacrifices his legitimate profit and even
the public does not appreciate its benefit.
It is what the public thinks which controls
business. This may be a trite statement, but
the successful man never lets the thought get
far from him.
The Public Idea of Piano Prices ,
There is little doubt that the public believes
that piano prices are high. Yet you and T
know that they are not. We know that un-
fortunately they are too low. I wonder if we
realize the amount of money the entire trade
is losing through this false idea. A small per
cent, of the dealers and manufacturers are really
making money. Anything which will serve to
correct the erroneous impression will be of
direct value to the business. It will aid the
dealer in obtaining a fair price, and it will in-
crease sales.
Every man wants to get his
money's worth and to feel he has made a good
investment. We must make him feel so.
The problem is to convince the public of the
facts. A general statement of facts makes no
impression Upon the man who does not know
whether your statement is correct or not. The
picture you draw must be graphic.
Arthur Germer, a small dealer in Beardstown,
111., hit upon a very effective way of doing
this, which furnishes the basis of this article.
You have probably seen mention of it in the
trade papers. He plans to display in his win-
dow every individual part of a piano, so as to
illustrate the many parts which go to build a
piano.
It shows in a forceful way what the public
is getting for its money.
This information
does not need to be limited to those who can
see the actual pieces.
For a moment, I shall talk to the public,
presenting your facts, Mr. Dealer, in a way you
can present them to the great army of "should
be buyers."
The success in changing "should be buyers"
to "will be buyers" depends upon the manner
in which you present your facts. One essen-
tial in building a business is to know who your
possible buyers are and who your competitors
are—the ones who are getting these buyers'
money before you do.
Do Not Criticize; Emulate
Many dealers consider their fellow dealers
their principal competitors. While they have
been thinking this, the automobile makers
have been getting the public's money. Do not
criticize. Emulate. The piano trade has gone
after the small end of the business—the destruc-
tive price-cutting competition and has suc-
ceeded in getting it.
However, it is profitless to dwell on mistakes.
We must admit the automobile manufacturers
have performed a rather remarkable operation
on the public mind.
In a few short years an extravagant luxury
has gone through a steady and continuous evo-
lution until it has begun to be recognized as
one of the necessities of life, and if there be in-
sufficient funds to go around something else
suffers.
Rather remarkable is it not—this
changed attitude toward the automobile? The
motor car is even being associated with econ-
omy. Think of it. If one must save money it
is by getting a cheaper car—not by going with-
out one.
I have digressed. I mentioned the automo-
bile simply to illustrate the influence of public
opinion in dollars and cents. Let us talk to
the public. Let us tell them what we can give
them for their money—and to help gain their
interest we can approach the subject from dif-
ferent angles. The price per piece is one. The
piano robber may yet sit in the high seats with
the philanthropist.
What Goes to Make Up a Piano
There are 9,500 to 10,000 separate pieces in
every piano built. With a piano selling at $350,
\*. brings the price of each individual piece to
an average of about 3^2 cents, which would
seem reasonable in the extreme in these days
of advancing costs. An analytical study makes
the statement still more impressive. To every
one of these 10,000 separate pieces there is
some labor attached, often a vast amount of
labor—the same piece generally passing through
several processes.
The public knows only the externals and the
results. It touches the key and the tone comes
forth, yet there are seventy-nine separate
pieces utilized in the mechanism between the
key which is pressed down by the finger and the
hammer which strikes the string. As there are
eighty-eight notes in the piano it means that
6,852 pieces are needed to complete this part
of the mechanism. There are many delicate
hair springs.
There are back checks and
dampers and lost motion absorbers, all of which
require the most delicate adjustment.
There
is necessity for the greatest care in securing
the proper balance between key and action,
so as to provide both delicacy and power to the
"touch," which makes the pianist and the piano
one, and allows his soul to flow through his
fingers to the tones themselves.
The ham-
mers are made of different felts of the finest
quality, forced into shape under tons of pres-
sure. They must be hard as boards, yet re-
tain the natural elasticity of the felt.
The Importance of Strength
Scales differ but there are 228 strings in the
average piano, many of them wound with a
separate wire, some wound twice. The thick-
ness and length of the string and the pres-
sure are regulated to produce the different notes
of the scale. It would probably surprise many
to know that there is an average pull on each
string of 175 to 200 pounds. This means that
on the 228 strings there is a combined tension
or pull of 40,000 pounds or twenty tons. The
piano must be built to withstand this terrific
strain which is continuous, day in and day out,
year in and year out, for it is because of the
strain that the piano in time drops out of tune
—a string stretches or something gives an in-
finitesimal fraction of an inch—the pitch drops
and that string is out of unison.
So the piano combines power and delicacy
and minute detail, science, and infinite care.
There are many layers' of the hardest well-sea-
soned woods into which are driven the tuning
pins. These layers are placed with grains run-
ning in different directions so as to prevent
splitting and to hold the tuning pins fast and
thus keep the piano in tune.
A New Angle on Piano Value
Many of these parts are small, but many are
large, such as the plate which weighs between
175 and 200 pounds, and the few parts of the
case and back, all of which represent high cost.
In addition to these 10,000 separate pieces, there
are six or seven coats of varnish, a large amount
of glue and many incidentals, tuning and reg-
ulating and adjusting the many and infinite
variety of parts.
And it takes six months'
time to build a piano, while the wood used in
the sounding board and some of the parts is sea-
soned in the open air from three to five years.
And all for an average cost of about 3 ] /j cents
a piece.
In computing the cost per individual piece
in a player-piano the figures are even more sur-
prising. One manufacturer whose player action
is noted for its simplicity stated that there
were at least 20,000 component parts in his
player action alone. Add to this number the
10,000 parts in the balance of the piano and the
total is increased to 30,000 pieces.
Player-
pianos selling for $750 would thus cost 2 x /i cents
for each piece.
Exclamations are often heard about the
human-like effects produced by the modern
player-piano, the wonderful control over the
air pressure so as to obtain the delicacy of
touch and the minute variations in tempo which
permit the player to do his own phrasing and
thus interpret the music according to his own
taste. Surely man must be a patient creature
to put 30,000 pieces together to accomplish
this result, and he should be given credit for
being modest in his demands to give the pub-
lic these 30,000 pieces so combined and ar-
ranged for an average of 2Yi cents each. The
present time offers few other opportunities to
obtain so much for so little.
On the facts of the case a piano would look
to be a very good investment at from $350 to
$500, and a player-piano at from $500 to $1,000.
KIHTOK'S NOTK:—The Bureau for the Advancement of
Music aims to helj) the trade in every way when oppor-
tunity presents itself either through suggestion or direct
action, and likewise influence public opinion both in and
out of the trade in favor of the piano.
The foregoing article, while written to the trade with
ai, idea of impressing upon both dealers and manufacturers
the necessity for obtaining satisfactory prices for their
instruments, is also of interest to the general public, and
was so designed by Mr. Tremaine that it might be used
as a basis for a number of interesting articles, as well
as for selling arguments and advertising copy.
The items of interest to the general public are grouped
so that excerpts can be talen out whole and repub-
lished in the local papers, and it is strongly suggested
that the dealers urse their local papers to reproduce such
excerpts.
The heading of the article, together with the first two
paragraphs, and the last part of the article beginning with
"There are 9,300 or 10,000 separate pieces in every piano
built" straight through to the end, is well adapted to news-
paper use. and will readily be appreciated as interesting
and live matter.

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