Music Trade Review

Issue: 1919 Vol. 69 N. 16

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
60
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
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OCTOBER 18, 1919
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AUTO DE LUXE WELTE-MIGNON
PLAYER ACTION
AUTO PNEUMATIC ACTION CO.
PLAVEH ACTIONS
fclTOOf f l i t
- * , •
\

CHRISTMAN PIANOS STERLING
PIANOS
The Most Artistic made to- the Price.
"The First Touch Tells"
Exceptional In TONE and FINISH
Write lor details
It's what is inside of the Sterling that has made iU rcpu
tation. Every detail of its construction receives thorough
attention from expert workmen—every material used in its
construction is the best—absolutely. That means a piano
of permanent excellence in every particular in which a
piano should excel. The dealer sees the connection be-
tween these facts and the universal popularity of the
Sterling.
597 E. 137th Street, NEW YORK
THE STERLING COMPANY
DERBY, CONN.
DECKER
mJ
KURTZMANN 7t
PI AN
Dealer
Friends
for
thi
C. KURTZMANN & CO.
: FACTORY:
526-536 Niagara St., Buffalo, N. Y.
JAMES & HOLMSTROM PIANO CO., Inc.
SMALL GRANDS PLAYER-PIANOS
Prices and terms will interest you. Write us.
Office: 23 E. 14th St., N.Y. Factory: 305 to 323 E. 132d St., N.Y.
BAUS PIANOS
BAUS PIANO CO. f Inc.
Have been before
the trade for a
third of a century
Factory, Southern Boulevard and Cypress A?e.
497-701 East 135th Street. New York
Keep Posted!
A talking machine department Is a profit-
maker for any piano dealer, provided the de-
partment is handled in a progressive, up-to-
the-minute manner. To keep posted on the
very 'latest developments In the talking ma-
chine industry you must read
The Talking
Machine World
the recognized authority in the talking
machine trade. Latest selling aide, novel ad-
vertising ideas, authoritative articles by ex-
perts in every branch of the talking machine
industry, and all of the news happenings In
the entire trade are combined in the Talking
Machine World and delivered to your desk the
fifteenth of each month for only two dollars
per year. Send in your subscription NOW.
EDWARD LYMAN BILL, Inc., Publisher,
373 Fourth Avenue, New York City.
STRICH&ZEIDLER
Grand, Upright and Player and
HOMER PIANOS
N E W YORK
740-742 East 136th St.,
Becker Bros.
& SON
PIANOS and PLAYER-PIANOS
KEYBOARD PIANOS
Eminent am an art product for ovmr SO ymar*
EST. 1856
New York
Factory and
Warerooms:
767-769
High Grade Pianos and Player-Pianos NEW YORK
IANO
452-456 Tenth Ave., New York
flaKj^BB^
The Weser Piano and Player is
conceded by the trade as being
the best proposition for the
money.
JV WESER BROS
You may be convinced of this
fact by ordering a sample for
inspection.
NEWTORK
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
OCTOBER 18, 1919
61
FLTURE OF NATIVE INSTRUMENTS
BURDWISE RETURNS FROM EUROPE
CARL FISCHER BUYS PROPERTY
Americanized Oriental Stringed Instruments Will
Be Musical Fad of the Future, Say Southern
Dealers—American Jazz Essential
Baltimore Musical Merchandise Jobber Returns
From Trip Through Europe With Large Con-
signment of Musical Merchandise
Prominent Musical Instrument Manufacturer
Purchases Adjoining Property—Plans for Ex-
pansion Involve Approximately $1,000,000
OKUCANS, LA., October
13.—Musical instru-
ments, like human beings, become bores if lack-
ing in spicy qualities, according to local music
dealers, who say if Oriental stringed instruments
are to enjoy permanent success in this country,
a bit of American jazz must be instituted into
their dreamy tones.
Americanized Oriental stringed instruments,
the music dealers say, will be the musical fad of
the future. The ukulele-banjo, first instrument
born of the Americanization idea, has, according
to the dealers, captivated Americans with its
Oriental plaintiveness combined with the crisp,
snappy tone of the American banjo, and it is ex-
pected other foreign stringed instruments will be
adapted to American tastes.
'The Hawaiian ukulele," said a prominent
mus"ic dealer, "quickly fell into disfavor in this
country because it didn't have enough pep in it.
We Americans liked the sweet, Oriental tones
which tended to create for us a few moments of
dreamy bliss, but we are so constituted that we
cannot long enjoy dreamy sensations, as do the
Orientals.
"The Hawaiian ukulele," baid a prominent
dreamy, aesthetic folk, who seem to live in a
world unknown to other races. Their natures
and their tendencies find expression in their mu-
sical instruments, and while we Americans find
enjoyment in the novelty and wistful beauty of
Oriental music, it is simply a temporary mood,
and such instruments can make no permanent ap-
peal to the American mind. The Oriental instru-
ments, like the Orientals themselves, need Amer-
ican 'snap' in their make-up, and American in-
ventive genius is supplying this deficiency as far
as their musical instruments are concerned.
"What the average American likes most is jazz
and plenty of it. Hence the advent of the ukulele-
banjo, or the banjo-ukulele, as some call it. The
alluring charm of this little instrument has capti-
vated them all because it is possessed of the pep
qualities lacking in the dreamy Hawaiian ukulele."
In addition to the banjo-ukulele, two other
Americanized instruments, the Hawaiian guitar
and the ukulele-fiddle, have made their appear-
ance in local music stores. Other new instru-
ments received here include the guitar-banjo,
harp-guitar, mandola and the mando-cello.
D. Frank Smith, well known to the piano trade
of London, Ont., recently joined the Mason &
Risch staff there.
BALTIMORE, MD., October 13.—A. Burdwise, head
of the large musical merchandise jobbing firm of
that name in this city, has just returned from a
two and a half months' trip throughout the Eu-
ropean musical manufacturing centers and mar-
TOLEDO VIOLIN HOUSE REOPENS
Saunders Bros. Resume Business After Two
Years of Inactivity
A. Burdwise
kcts, including Germany and Austria. Mr. Burd-
wise believes that he is the first American musi-
cal merchandise buyer to visit Europe after the
great war, and describes the musical merchandise
situation there as being far from promising. He
reports that the prices are sky high with almost
no raw material on hand, and labor conditions
continually growing worse. In view of these
facts Mr. Burdwise believes that the American
musical merchandise manufacturer has a brilliant
chance for still greater development in these
times.
Despite the exhausted conditions of the mar-
kets, Mr. Burdwise reports that through strenuous
efforts he was able to procure 142 cases of musical
merchandise, which will help materially to take
care of the heavy orders which he is receiving
at present.
T H E OLDEST AND
LAROEST MUSICAL
MERCHANDISE HOUSE
IN AMERICA
Exclusively Whof»sml»
UTASUSHCO ie»4
a51-53 PWKTH Am NEWYORKCCTK
Victor Distributors
BALTIMORE, MD.
Manufacturer*
Importers and J*bb«n ei
MUSICAL
MERCHANDISE
Attractive Specialties
M o d e r n Service
ESTABLISHED ISM
Black Diamond
Strings
THE WORLD'S BEST
National Musical String Co.
New Brunswick, N. J.
Largeat Wholeaale
Musical Merchandise
House in America
Buegeleisen & Jacobson
113 University Place
RONO
A. BURDWISE
BOSTON. MASS.
DURRO
AND
STEWART
TOLEDO, O., October 13.—Saunders Bros., one of
the oldest violin manufacturing houses in this
city, has opened for business again at 506 Adams
street. This firm, which was established thirty
years ago, has not been in active business for the
past two years on account of the ill health of the
senior partner, Alton C. Saunders. In the new
shop there is a large and valuable collection of
violins, bows and many instruments of historic
value.
WHOLESALE MUSICAL MERCHANDISE
OLIVER D1TSON CO.
JOHNFRIEDRKH&BRO
Carl Fischer, manufacturer of musical instru-
ments, has acquired a large site on Cooper
Square, New York, adjoining his present quarters,
and plans in the near future to reimprove the
property with a tall building for his own business,
the operation to involve an outlay of approxi-
mately $1,000,000. The purchase was made from
the Woodbury Langdon estate and the Woodbury
Langdon Co., and involves 56 to 62 Cooper
Square, two two story buildings with stores, and
two four story buildings with stores, the four
properties occupying a site with a frontage of
about 112 feet, with southerly and northerly lines
measuring 98.S and 79.9 feet respectively. The
sale was negotiated by J. H. Mayers and William
M. Cruikshank's Sons.
NEW YORK
WEYMANN
Manufac-
turers of
Superior Quality MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS
Victor Distributors
1108 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia, Pa.
Established over htlf a century
I WILL BUY
FOR CASH
Sheet Music and Small Goods
Peate's Music House
Utica, N. Y.

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