Music Trade Review

Issue: 1917 Vol. 65 N. 21

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
THE POINT OF VIEW
(Continued from page 5)
long as we can train our own men, it is not for
us to interfere with other men's methods"; or
words to that effect. But such narrowness, to
put it candidly, is not on the increase. Indeed,
one is led to feel that the renaissance of ac-
tivity, and the consequent renaissance of. retail
interest, in the National Association of Piano
Merchants is bound to bring about an early dis-
cussion of this subject; with results that can-
not be wholly barren. Of course, it is not wise
to shut one's eyes to the fact that the retail
trade have not yet begun to think seriously about
what is really a matter of essential importance
to themselves. One can only continue to ven-
tilate the subject, in the hope that discussion
may be promoted and results finally be brought
about by mutual consent based on a widespread
understanding of a great need.
THE TUNERS' OPINION
To obtain anything like a representative ex-
pression of opinion from tuners is extremely dif-
ficult, not only because they are notoriously
still-tongued, as a class, about themselves, but
because they are so thinly scattered all over the
country, and it is so hard to get at anything
like a consensus. It is useless to talk to city
men only, for their views are not likely to ac-
cord with those of their country brethren. The
latter have individualistic standpoints of the
most various kinds. But the practice of main-
taining correspondence throughout the United
States, with tuners of all sorts and sizes, en-
ables the writer to speak with, he thinks, some
approach to authority on this tangled matter.
The writer's belief, then, is that the tuners
of the country are extremely anxious to obtain
all the information and instruction available.
The subscription list of this paper numbers
hundreds and hundreds of tuners scattered all
over the country, and throughout the countries
contiguous to the United States. The Stand-
ard Player Monthly has a similar large list of
tuner readers. The Danquard School, though
it has been able so far only to touch the outer
edge of the mass of tuners, nevertheless has
constantly from a dozen to two dozen of them
going through its courses. The various schools
and private teachers have students all the time
from among tuners. It is perfectly evident that
the work is wanted. But the following consid-
erations must be kept in mind:
1. Only a very few tuners, relatively, can
travel far from home.
2. Not all can pay a fee even if a long journey
with its expense can be avoided.
3. Many are not good mechanics and need in-
struction in the most elementary branches of
pneumatics as well as in the manipulation of
tools and materials for repairing.
4. The multiplication of pamphlets, technical
catalogs and similar printed instructions can
do much and should be continued; but personal
instruction in practical work is the only way to
give sound knowledge.
5. Lack of sound knowledge is responsible for
loss amounting to thousands of dollars annual-
ly, which loss is borne entirely by manufactur-
ers and dealers.
The above considerations are respectfully sub-
mitted to the attention of all foresighted men in
the player business.
LEABARJAN CO. REPORT BUSY TIMES
The Leabarjan Mfg. Co. of Hamilton, Ohio,
report constantly increasing business in their
line of music roll perforators. Years ago when
their original machine was designed for per-
forating mus'ic rolls, one at a time was the out-
put. Through the ensuing years of experienc-
ing and appreciating the requirements of the
users the latest models will perforate 16 rolls
at a time. Dealers who handle the Leabarjan
perforator report that the cutting of music
rolls for their own use by their customers has
become a sort of pastime for the winter eve-
nings.
GOOD DANQUARD OCTOBER REPORT
HOW THE BALDWIN COLLABORATES
Fourteen New Enrolments and One Gradua-
tion During Month
"Collaborators" is the title of a dignified and
artistic half page advertisement used by the
Baldwin Piano Co. in last week's Saturday Eve-
ning Post. This advertisement featured the
''Manualo," the popular player piano that is
manufactured by the Baldwin Piano Co. in four
standard pianos, the Baldwin, Ellington, Ham-
ilton and Howard. The use of the heading "Col-
laborators" was explained in the following two
paragraphs:
"Artists like Levitzki play the Baldwin piano
not merely because its action is plastic to their
most prodigious feats of technic, but especially
because its tone is responsive to their subtlest
feeling and collaborates with them to produce
every degree of their ever-changing musical
emotion.
"For the same reason, music lovers who de-
mand something more pianistic in a player-pi-
ano than the mere mechanical ability to repro-
duce effects cut into a music roll invariably
choose the Manualo."
The report of the Danquard Player Action
School, New York, for October, shows that
there were seven new students registered in the
day class and seven in the night class. Those
in the day class are: Bernard B. Brown, New
York; Theodore Roettger, New York; Walker
G. Worth, Virginia; Chas. G. Burton, Pennsyl-
vania; E. J. Torrey, New York; William G.
Tracy, Massachusetts, and Mark Haywood, who
hails from Kansas.
Those in the night class are as follows: Jo-
seph C. Wekerle, New Jersey; Chas. Stumpf,
New York; William Gray, New York; Adolph
Schad, New York; Frederick Wm. Knoll, New
York; Alexander Hart, New York; Fred Mis-
sing, New York.
One student was graduated during the month
in the person of J. H.Corson, of Michigan, with
an average of 86% per cent.
"The Kind of Player
the Dealer Likes"
That phrase would be a good one to describe the kind of player-piano
we have been making for seven successful years; the kind of player
that just fits in with the requirements of the successful dealer. Just
how the wonderful
M. Schulz Company
Player-Piano
fills the dealer's requirements so perfectly may be seen from the fol-
lowing statement of its mechanical and commercial features:
Mechanical Points!
Single-valve system.
Positively air-tight action.
Positive sure-seating valve, bal-
anced, working by gravity.
Perfected automatic roll-centering
device.
Light-running ten-point motor.
Most powerful and economical bel-
lows-system.
Commercial Points!
Exclusive, made by ourselves; not
an imitation of any other.
Lightest Pumping.
Easiest to Play with Expression.
Most reliable under usage.
Lowest maintenance cost.
125,000 pianos and player-pianos
of our make made and sold.
High grade and moderate price.
Let us send you THE SCHULZ PLAYER BOOK to tell you more
about this great player! Also other player literature; and informa-
tion that will help you to know more about player values!
We Have a Good Proposition for Good Dealers
M. SCHULZ COMPANY
Established 1869
General Offices
711 Milwaukee Ave.
CHICAGO
3 Factories in
CHICAGO
Southern Wholesale Branch
1530 Candler Bldg.
ATLANTA, GA.
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE
MUSIC
TRADE
REVIEW
lftmm^^
The Student of Classical Music Will Find the Player-Piano an Invaluable
Help in Obtaining a Knowledge of the Works of Franz Liszt and His Genius,
as Shown By the Widely Diversified Range Covered By His Compositions
Just how long the artistic reputation a mu- slight. The cause must be found in some other Countess d'Agoult through Switzerland and
sician has carved out for himself from the fact altogether. That fact, without much doubt, Italy, produced three sets of what he called
rock of public appreciation may be expected is that the nineteen Hungarian Rhapsodies, and "Annals of a Pilgrimage" (Annees de Perler-
to withstand the erosive influences of time is a especially two or three out of these, have been inage). These short pieces are musical sketches,
question which may be answered plausibly, but played to death; and the name of their composer as it were, of various places and scenes visited
cannot be answered infallibly. It is all very has become popularly associated with them, to by the pilgrims. The titles are various: The
well to talk about immortal works, and to say the almost complete exclusion of all his other Chapel of William Tell, By the Lake of Wallen-
glibly that he who sings from the heart sings works. Similar remarks might be made regard- stadt, At the Fountain's Side (after Schiller's
an immortal song. But the blunt facts of his- ing Beethoven, who is known to the popular poem), The 47th Sonnet of Petrarch, The Cy-
tory do not back up so nice and simple a solu- mind mainly through his Moonlight Sonata, press Trees at the Villa D'Este, and others. Sev-
tion. Besides, who is to be the arbiter? And which is not even one of his strongest works; eral of them have been published in music rolls,
how is it that some obviously bad things sur- and regarding Chopin, too, who is known to notably the first four of the above list. They are
thousands who call themselves music lovers, lovely things and represent Liszt at his very
vive, while some obviously good ones die?
It is often assumed that a musician who is almost entirely through a few nocturnes and best, showing him to be a true poet of nature
and a man who looked on the world with rever-
not recognized during his life will become en- half a dozen etudes and preludes.
ent and seeing eyes.
Paganini
shrined in the hearts of the world after he is
The
works
of
Liszt
which
the
player-pianist
safely planted six feet underground. But be-
The little set of pieces called Venice and Na-
cause Schubert died neglected and Hugo Wolf should first study, after he feels himself ready ples (Venezia e Napoli) is especially famous for
was driven to insanity by artistic indifference, to shake off the hypnotic influences of the Hun- the Tarantelle, which forms the third in the set.
this does not mean that every neglected musi- garian Rhapsodies, are the Paganini studies. Sev- This wonderful dance is something that must be
cian is another Beethoven; any more than be- eral of these are listed in music-roll catalogs. seen to be appreciated. It is peculiar to Italy
cause men of genius are usually absent-minded, They were based on the wonderful Caprices for and Spain and is reputed to have arisen from
all absent-minded men must be hailed as men solo violin, devised by the wizard violinist Pa- the peculiar music once commonly played to
ganini, and heard by young Liszt upon the oc- cause persons who had been bitten by a taran-
of genius.
Contrariwise it is assumed that a man who ob- casion of the visit made by the former to Paris tula to dance furiously, in order to shake off
tains great and potent success during his life in 1831. Liszt seized upon several of these as- the poison. Liszt's treatment of this rhythm
necessarily possesses only an ephemeral genius tonishing compositions, in which Paganini had is dazzlingly brilliant.
The two "legends," of St. Francis preaching
which will die when his influence no longer produced effects hitherto wholly unknown to the
keeps it warmed into fitful existence. Yet while violin, and made them over into great technical to the birds, and St. Francis walking on the
one may instance Buononcini, Field, Steibelt and studies for piano, illumining them with his gen- waves, are also interesting specimens of the
Ariosti, one may, with equal propriety, range on ius and rendering them even more brilliant and religious side of Liszt. The first one is the
the other side Handel, Haydn, Mendelssohn and fascinating than they had been in their original more charming to the writer, who finds the sec-
shape. They should be studied assiduously by ond somewhat turgidly dramatic.
—Franz Liszt.
the player-pianist.
Mephisto
A Neglected Composer
But the Etudes of this and other sets which
The extraordinary Mephisto Valses, which are
To what extent Liszt's once overpowering
reputation has been dimmed by time would be Liszt composed should not take up too much obtainable in roll form, should be in every
hard to compute. To what extent there is pres- of one's time. He has done work more im- player-pianist's library. They are simply amaz-
ent reason to revere him as composer and as portant. Fascinating as are the Chasse-Neige, ing exhibitions of the composer's brilliant mas-
man may be guessed at plausibly. To what the Gnomen-reigen, the Eroica and the Mazeppa, tery over every sort and kind of pianistic ex-
extent his brilliant musical genius is interesting they are, after all, mainly interesting because pression. They are waltzes gone mad, dance
to player-pianists may be stated quite definitely. of their brilliancy. And brilliancy in piano rhythms turned by magic into tragedies and—
It is no exaggeration to say that, although the playing is something that should receive as lit- just as much Mephistophelian comedies. They
rhapsodies of Liszt are only too well known tle, not as much, of our attention as we can are the devil at the keyboard; and then some.
to player-pianists, the astonishing variety of his give. It is so easy for the player-pianist to be If you have not got them, get them—TO-
DAY! as the advertising men say.
other works, save only in respect of a few etudes brilliant.
like La Campanella, is scarcely known. Yet, in
Liszt, the Religious
This is not the place to speak of the number-
truth, the greatest pianist of all time left be-
Far more interesting is the great Ballade in less arrangements for the piano of symphonic
hind him a mass of composition which at one D flat, based upon Liszt's idea of the legend of and operatic works made by the indefatigable
time was the reigning attraction of the musical the Prisoner of Chillon, that unfortunate Bonni- Liszt. Suffice it to remark that he made the
world, and which ill deserves the partial neglect vard, who remained chained to a pillar in the Beethoven symphonies and the organ works of
of the present day.
dungeon of the Castle of Chillon, with its floor J. S. Bach accessible to the piano student and
For, indeed, it is no more than fair to assume beneath the level of Lake Geneva, and whose that, by making the most fascinating arrange-
that the extraordinary enthusiasm aroused by story has been so well told by Lord Byron. ments of excerpts from Wagner's music-dramas,
Liszt's playing of the piano did more than any- Even more lovely are the Poetic and Religious he did a splendid and much-needed pioneer work
thing else to obscure his genius as a composer. Harmonies which Liszt composed during his in bringing the world to understand a great
The man who could write the Dante Symphony, religious retirement and before he took minor genius. In nothing more was Liszt greater than
the Tasso, the Mazeppa, who could compose orders in the Roman Church. These have not in his wonderful modesty and his unselfish rec-
the "Poetic and Religious Harmonies" and the often been heard of in connection with the ognition of other men's work and worth. But
Sonata in B minor, was not to be measured by player-piano, but one of them, "The Benediction for him Wagner would have had to wait much
his feats at the keyboard or by his nineteen of God in the Solitude," has been published by longer for recognition. But for him, music
the Q R S Co. It is a wonderful piece of would have been far behind its present posi-
done-to-death Hungarian Rhapsodies.
work. Those who have known Liszt only through tion. Aye, but for him, piano making would never
Liszt Rolls
In the catalog of the Universal Music Co., not the Hungarian Rhapsodies will scarcely recog- have become what it now is; for it was he and
counting hand-played records, there are thirty- nize the master of fireworks here. The piece his disciples who first showed what the piano
seven classifications under the name Liszt, many justifies its name. It breathes a spirit of deepest might be made to be and sound. The possibil-
of them containing several items.
In the religious sincerity. It is the communion of the ities they thus showed have been realized by
straight-cut Q R S lists there is also a large soul with its God. The central section rises to piano makers in ever greater technical and mu-
showing. The Aeolian Thcmodist-Metfostyle an intensity of subdued feeling which is at once sical perfection. Liszt was the king of the
and the Angelus Melodant-Artistyle catalogs are musically superb and emotionally thrilling, piano; verily a king of kings.
also strong on Liszt. In none of these have the while yet the whole tone of the work is re-
growing collections of Liszt records made by strained to the utmost and what one experiences
WEYDIG - HENKELMAN
various p'anists and published by the above and in listening to it is profound, rather than excit-
ing.
To
all
who
would
like
to
gain
a
better
idea
other companies been mentioned at all. The
WHITMAN
of what the real Liszt is we recommend the care-
above information is therefore only partial.
ful study of this lovely piece.
The Greatest Value at Moderate Cost
It is not therefore through lack of available
WEYDIG . HENKELMAN PIANO MFG. CO., INC.
The tours which Liszt made during his earlier
material that the knowledge of Liszt's composi-
402-410 West 14th Street
NEW YORK
tions is, among player-pianists, so generally manhood, in the company of the beautiful
131A N O S
A LAYERS

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