Music Trade Review

Issue: 1918 Vol. 67 N. 22

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
12
THE
MUSIC TRADE
REVIEW
PADEREWSKI RECORDS FOR DUO-ART
Signs Contract to Make Rolls Exclusively for
the Aeolian Duo-Art Library
The Aeolian Co., New York, carried this week
in the leading New York newspapers an effec-
tive full-page, advertisement announcing the
fact that I. J. Paderewski, the world's greatest
pianist, had signed a contract to produce music
rolls for the Duo-Art exclusively in the future.
This advertising carried an artistic photograph
There Is An In-
creasingDemand
For Better Music
Be prepared to supply
this new demand with
the
SEEBURG
"X"
PRESSION
Electric
Player-Piano
which plays with per-
fection , 'of expressive-
ness, leaving nothing
to be desired.
A
WINNER
The Piano for
Dry Territory
for you and for your cus-
tomers
Pays for Itself"
We want you to be our
representative.
Write Us At Once
J. P. S e e b u r g
Piano Company
Leaders in the Automatic Field
NEW UDELL CABINET CATALOG SOON
The Udell Works, Indianapolis, the .noted
makers of music roll and talking machine record
cabinets, have now in preparation a new catalog
covering their complete line of cabinets, includ-
ing some new styles which will be issued in the
near future.
1918
SELECTIVE MANUFACTURING
The Best Is
None Too Good
Ignace Jan Paderewski
of Mr. Paderewski, accompanied by a reproduc-
tion of the following letter which he wrote to
H. B. Tremaine, president of the Aeolian Co.
This letter reads as follows: "My dear Mr. Tre-
maine: I am sending you herewith my signed
contract under the terms of which I agree to
produce music rolls for the Duo-Art exclusively
in the future.
"I avail myself of this opportunity to con-
gratulate you again on your splendid achieve-
ment in the production of the Duo-Art piano.
This instrument is without question greatly su-
perior to any other of its kind, and I shall be
glad indeed to have my playing reproduced with
such manifest fidelity. Very sincerely (signed)
I. J. Paderewski."
Underneath this letter there were published
some interesting facts regarding the Duo-Art
piano; this text calling attention to the fact that
the Duo-Art piano reproduces the actual playing
of the greatest pianists and does it with absolute
fidelity. Accompanying this section of the ad-
vertisement were extracts from letters received
from famous pianists, among these being Ru-
dolf Ganz, Harold Bauer and others.
The announcement that I. J. Paderewski will
record exclusively for the Duo-Art library in the
future is a significant and remarkable tribute to
the musical qualities of this instrument, as Mr.
Paderewski has won international recognition
as the world's greatest pianist. The Aeolian Co.
deserves to be congratulated upon receiving Mr.
Paderewski's exclusive contract, and the Duo-
Art library will be greatly enriched by Mr. Pad-
erewski's Duo-Art records.
It is interesting to note that the following fa-
mous pianists record for the Duo-Art library at
the present time:
Adriano Ariani, Harold
Bauer, Ferruccio Busoni, Winifred Byrd, Charles
Wakefield Cadman, Teresa Carreno, Walter
Damrosch, Carl Friedberg, Ossip Gabrilowitsch,
Rudolf Ganz, Leopold Godowsky, Catherine
Goodson, Percy Grainger, Enrique Grandos,
Mark Hambourg, Ethel Leginska, Tina Lerner,
Guiomar Novaes, Ignace Jan Paderewski, John
Powell, Rosita Renard, Camille Saint-Saens,
Xaver Scharwenka, Ernest Schelling and many
others.
NOVEMBER 30,
Republic Building
209 S. State Street
New Plan of U. S. Music Co. by Which They
Insure Instant Service on Best Sellers
CHICAGO, I I I . , November 26.—The United States
Music Co. have just inaugurated a "Hit Service"
on their music rolls, which is of especial impor-
tance, as it tends to solve some difficult prob-
lems with which both the manufacturers and
dealers have to contend. To-day frequently an
order for rolls is held up because one or two
of the numbers ordered are out. The U. S.
plan provides for the immediate shipment of the
big sellers and exceedingly popular numbers.
By the middle of the month the company know
what numbers of that month's bulletin are in
greatest demand. Therefore, they can get them
in such quantities as to make immediate ship-
ments. About the middle of each month, there-
fore, they will send but notices of the four or
five numbers which are proving big sellers.
They, of course, have facilities which the music
dealer has not for gauging the big ones.
On the other hand, the saving in time effected
in the factory by being able to anticipate the
demand on a few numbers will enable them to
give better service on the entire list. The Hit
Service applies only to word and hand-played
rolls. On the November 20 list they sent out
a bulletin announcing twenty-four-hour order
shipments on "Till We Meet Again," "Oh,
Frenchy," "Smiles" and "Oh, How I Hate to
Get Up in the Morning." The circular announc-
ing the plan in its details is, as follows:
"'Absurd! Such inconsistency; to think any
roll company can guarantee twenty-four-hour
shipments when they're all rotten. Nonsense!
I won't bite on that! I'm not crazy, too! They
all preach service, but not one renders it!'
"That's how cordially you'll greet this big
idea of ours, but we'll win you over. 'Salright,
shake your head, but be from Missouri, too, for
the more skeptical you are the harder you'll
fall.
"We must further impress on you that 'Hit
Service' will not only insure twenty-four-hour
shipments of 'Hit Service' orders, but vastly im-
proved handling of your regular orders.
"Selective manufacturing, i. e., creating a dis-
tinction between hits and ordinary sellers, in
other words, shipping the dealer immediately
what most of his customers ask for, is the
panacea of the music roll problem. It doesn't
take salesmanship to sell a hit, while you have
to push what isn't known.
"1. 'Hit Service' requires you to order not less
than five rolls each of such 'Hit Service' num-
bers as interest you.
"2. If you order more than five rolls the quan-
tities must be in multiples of five; viz., ten, fif-
teen, twenty, twenty-five, thirty, thirty-five, etc.
"3. Use 'Hit Service' order forms, or if other-
wise ordered, the order must be plainly marked
'Hit Service' and specify only rolls embraced by
this service.
"4. 'Hit Service' lists will be issued the 15th of
every month, and be subject to the twenty-four-
hour guarantee until the succeeding 'Hit Serv-
ice' list is in your hands.
"5. If you specify less than five rolls of each
number on a 'Hit Service' order, or on any or-
der marked 'Hit Service,' which indicates num-
bers accordingly, you'll be shipped the minimum
quantity of five rolls which 'Hit Service' re-
quires.
"Your customers want what they want when
they want it. Put our 'Hit Service' back of you
and they'll have it. Come on! Let's go!"
TAKES NEW POSITION
Edward Stream, a member of the main office
staff of the Meiklejohn Co., Providence, R. I.,
recently resigned to accept a position with the
Brown & Sharpe Mfg. Co.
G. T. Hornberger, of St. Clair, Mich., has se-
cured a lease on a store in that town, and will
handle musical instruments there.
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
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Automatic
Dealing with the Various Types of Musical Instruments Intended for Public Places, Pneumatically or Electrically Controlled
A NEW FIELD OF OPPORTUNITY FOR THE PIANO MERCHANT
Piano Merchants Who Will Study the Automatic Musical Instrument Field Will Find Therein an
Excellent Opportunity for Broadening Their Business and Increasing Their Profits
It is well known that the regular piano mer-
chants have not taken to the so-called "auto-
matic" or coin-operated type of musical instru-
ment as rapidly or as strongly as could have
been wished. Why this should be so is another
matter, but a matter which very strongly de-
serves attention.
The so-called "automatic" instrument, which
means any kind of piano, organ or combination
of the two with accessories, either coin-oper-
ated or not, suitable for public use, has always
been a sort of specialty, a sort of little branch
set off by itself. The regular piano merchant,
carrying a regular line of player-pianos, has for
various reasons always looked at the automatic
instruments askance, not realizing apparently
how very closely these are connected with the
other pneumatic lines. As a result, the auto-
matic instruments have failed to receive that
general consideration from the main body of
the trade, to which they are so decidedly en-
titled, although they have been extremely suc-
cessful at that. Still, the music industries are
now started upon a new road, the end of which
is not yet in sight, and a great many old ideas
are due to land on the scrap-heap. The idea
of the exclusiveness of the public-place-player-
piano, as it may be called, is one of these.
A Definition
It may be as well to make the distinction per-
fectly clear. The names "automatic player,"
"film player" or "coin-operated player" do not
wholly, in any case, tell the story. The real dis-
tinction is between the instrument primarily in-
tended for private and that which is primarily
intended for public use. Here is the real dis-
tinction, and it is most significant.
It is significant chiefly because the nature of
the public places in which the public instruments
have been installed has been steadily changing
for the better. There will be little disposition,
we think, to quarrel with the statement that
when the so-called automatic instruments first
FOTOPLAYER
for the finest
Motion Picture
Theatres
AMERICAN PHOTO
PLAYER CO.
San Francisco
New York
Chicago
came into the market the kind of popular enter-
tainment place which asked for automatic music
was not particularly desirable. Not to be mealy-
mouthed about it, the saloon and the backroom
attachments thereof gave the tone to the whole
line of these places, and the shooting gallery
or penny arcade ran a good second. It was
not a particularly high-class sort of trade, and
particular persons kept away from it.
Prohibition
Now consider the facts to-day. In the first
place, the saloon era is passing, fast. As the
law stands, the U. S. A. will be completely dry
on July 1, 1919, and thence until the period of
demobilization is concluded. The hazy belief
that the war is over and we can all go back to
the selfish pursuit of selfish aims is due for
a rude awakening. European events are rapidly
coming to a head, and it is quite certain that an
Allied army of occupation will have to be re-
tained under arms for quite a time yet. Even
if this were not so, and without the existing law
coming into effect at all, there is the prohibition
amendment, which is certain to be ratified in
time, and which might be ratified within the
next twelve months. One-half of the territory
and one-half of the population of the United
States, or something like them are now under
prohibitory laws directed against the liquor
traffic. The people appear to be making up
their minds strongly against further toleration
of the trade in intoxicating beverages. The sa-
loon, in a word, is doomed.
The Broadening Field
Already, therefore, the automatic player-piano
in its many forms has completely emerged from
its ancient surroundings, which indeed it could
not avoid at the time, but which have now be-
come a burden to it. The field is broadening.
First of all, and in some ways above all, has
come the motion picture theatre. Here the
events of the last few years have been im-
mensely important. The problem of providing
suitable musical accompaniment for the film
drama has been solved only in part, but the
solution undoubtedly is to be found in the per-
fected development of some kind of combined
piano and organ with various mechanical and
percussive accessories, playable both by the key-
boards and by music roll. It does not need
very much acuteness to see that this is the so-
lution towards which the motion picture theatre
is tending. The immensity of the field thus
opened up may plainly be understood by the
most casual thinker.
But the passing of the saloon means the pass-
ing of what has been, in a perverted sense in-
deed, a sort of public neighborhood club. A
substitute for it must and will be found. In
many of our suburban and smaller civic com-
munities the ice cream parlor or drug store with
soda fountain is by degrees obtaining the semi-
public position once occupied by the tavern of
old days, which neither the modern saloon nor
the modern hotel has ever quite been able to
occupy in the same way. Here, too, is a field
for future cultivation in a musical sense.
Similar remarks may be made, of course, about
every known type of legitimate public place of
entertainment. It is obvious that the passing
of the old era means the bringing forth of a
complete new place for the public automatic mu-
sical instrument. It also means the removal
forever of any stigma of opprobrium that may
ever have appeared upon the body of the auto-
matic business through any of its early and
perhaps unfortunate connections.
Now, it is obvious that the piano merchant
who hesitates to get in touch with this big field
of usefulness must have some very good rea-
sons for his hesitation. So far as can be judged
the only assignable reasons may be summed up
as follows:
The belief that the selling of these instruments
requires special expertness.
The belief that special maintenance depart-
ments composed of special experts must be em-
ployed to attend to complaints and keep the
instruments in order.
The belief that prices are so very high as to
take the business entirely out of the hands of
ordinary piano salesmen.
To these objections brief and pointed answers
may at once be given.
Some Selling Points
The automatic piano, organ or piano-organ,
for cafe, restaurant, hotel and other public place
is a good deal easier to sell than an ordinary
player-piano. Firstly, because in most public
places it will pay for itself through the coin-
control feature. Secondly, because it is an ad-
vertising feature in itself to its purchaser.
Thirdly, because to-day the old inartistic cases,
poor workmanship and poor music are replaced
by the finest of designs, the best of material
and workmanship and musical effects worthy of
any one's respectful attention.
The modern automatic instrument is virtually
foolproof. Any trouble it is ever likely to in-
cur will in most cases be traceable to the elec-
tric motor, and that usually means to faults in
the electric service of the city or town where
the instrument is installed. Even so, troubles
are few and very far between. Pneumatic trou-
bles are no more frequent than with the ordinary
player-piano, and any man who can look after
the latter can manage the former. Pipe tuning,
with the small installations which all but the
largest instruments alone require, is easily
learned by any piano tuner. It is not necessary
therefore to have a special maintenance depart-
ment.
Prices are moderate, running from $500 up.
The talking points are many and convincing.
The field is constantly widening and the recent
introduction of the coin-controlled reproducing
piano means that the last shadow of noisy vul-
garity is wiped away forever.
Piano merchants who neglect the automatic
musical instrument field are very foolish.
Edward M. Osborn, piano dealer of East
Hampton, N. Y., was on a visit to New York
last week. He handles the Laffargue and
Strich & Zeidler lines as his leaders.

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