Music Trade Review

Issue: 1920 Vol. 70 N. 9

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
ARRANGING MUSIC FOR THE PLAYER
(Continued from page 5)
We now approach the climax of our re-
searches and I find myself about to touch upon
some of the most controverted of the questions
which perplex arrangers and player pianists. I
shall have to say some things about the general
conception of arranging, about the remarkable
effects which can be had by the rightful treat-
ment of music in respect of speed, and finally
about the extraordinarily interesting possibilities
of player-piano music, which lead naturally into
the as yet hardly explored realm of what I
have chosen to call "plastic" music.
The next article, No. 11, which will open the
last part of this entire research, will be devoted
to speed. From that I shall go on to the dis-
cussion of phrasing and from that to contrast,
color and style. This will lead us to the con-
sideration ot thematic development, whence we
shall be able to pass through a final considera-
tion of certain very general principles in ar-
ranging.
TO DISTRIBUTE MELODEE ROLLS
O. J. DeMoll & Co., Washington, to Act as
Distributors for Melodee Rolls in District of
Columbia and Several Southern States
O. J. DeMoll & Co., the prominent music
merchants of Washington, D. C., and represen-
tatives in that city for the Aeolian Co. line of
Pianolas and pianos, have just been appointed
distributors for the Melodee music rolls for
Virginia, the District of Columbia, North and
South Carolina and Georgia.
DeMoll & Co. have an organization that is
well qualified to build up a strong Melodee roll
business in the territory and to render service
of the right sort. G. Halley is in charge of the
music roll department at DeMoll's and is a man
of wide experience in the field. Under the new
arrangement the department will be enlarged
materially to provide for the keeping on hand
of a complete stock of Melodee rolls from which
dealers' orders may be handled at short notice.
This shipment of orders from the distributor's
FEBRUARY 28, 1920
stock will prove of distinct advantage to re-
tailers, enabling them to save much of the time
that was formerly consumed in getting orders
through and in having goods shipped from the
factory direct.
Distribution plans for Melodee rolls are de-
veloping rapidly, and the plans call for the
establishment of a dealer service in the matter
of mid-month specials, elaborate posters and
hangers and mail matter for the dealer's use.
WM. B. TUNSTALL RESIGNS
WORCESTER, MASS., February 19.—Wright & Sons,
manufacturers of the Wright player action, of
this city, have announced that William B. Tun-
stall, who has been connected with that com-
pany for many years in charge of production,
has resigned to enter into another line of in-
dustry. Henry H. Wright, treasurer of the
company, has absorbed many of Mr. Tunstall's
duties along with his other work. Mr. Tun-
stall states that he expects shortly to be iden-
tified in the field of foreign trade.
THE HAZELTON AT THE MUSIC SHOW
Display of the Hazelton Bros. Line One of the
Most Attractive at the Show
W. M. Plaisted, vice-president of this com-
pany, who was responsible for the Hazelton ex-
hibit, is to be congratulated on the beautiful way
this line of instruments was presented. The
walls of the Hazelton booth were hung with
"SCHULZ"
a wonderful name in the
Player-Piano
world
For nearly eleven years the piano industry
has watched the astonishing progress of the
M. Schulz Co. Player-Piano
Hazelton Exhibit at National Music Show
rich velvet drapery and the furniture, with the
exception of the instruments, followed the colo-
nial style of delicate gold. This, in compari-
son with the rich mahogany finish of the Hazel-
ton pianos, offered a display that was favorably
commented upon by all who visited the booth.
In addition to the regular line of uprights
the Hazelton exhibit contained a model of the
Hazelton reproducing grand (licensed under
Welte-Mignon patents). This instrument, with
its fine library of classic piano music, was a
constant point of interest to all music lovers
attending the show.
To-day, with the desire for fullest investiga-
tion of every statement
We Claim:
The advantage of their location was appre-
ciated more than ever by the Pianostyle Music
Co., manufacturers of the Pianostyle music roll,
during the heavy snow storm which blocked the
city of New York recently. Many manufac-
turers depending upon drays to carry their
merchandise to shipping points were greatly
handicapped, but the location of the Pianostyle
Music Co. in the Bush Terminal Buildings,
Brooklyn, enabled them to load their merchan-
dise directly into the freight cars at their doors
and no inconvenience in out-of-town deliver-
ies was suffered. Pianostyle dealers in all sec-
tions of the country report excellent sales of
Pianostyle rolls and are certifying their reports
by greatly increased orders and reorders for
Pianostyle word and instrumental rolls.
.
Easiest Playing
Highest Vacuum (by test)
Tightest Action (by test)
Smallest Maintenance Cost
Greatest Simplicity
Utmost Responsiveness
ENJOYED SHIPPING ADVANTAGES
Tie-up of New York's Streets by Storm Did Not
Hinder Pianostyle Roll Shipments

Based on our twenty-seven years successful piano-
making this completes an unsurpassed record.
Interested merchants will find information
and profit, too, in writing immediately to
M. SCHULZ COMPANY
Founded 1869
General Offices
Schulz Building
711 Milwaukee Ave.
CHICAGO
Southern Wholesale Branch
1530CandlerBldg.
ATLANTA, GA.
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE
FEBRUARY 28, 1920
REVIEW
Being Poinled and Pertinent Remarks on Timely and More or Less Interest-
ing Topics by the Editor of This Player Section, Who Expatiates on the
Aforesaid Topics in a Manner Quizzical, Philosophical,;Spritely and Otherwise
Pride Goeth Before
The exhibitions of player-pianos at the Music
Show hardly revealed anything specially excit-
ing in the way either of novelty or of improve-
ment. 1 suppose that in fact we are settling
down into the state of standardized construction
which is reached by every industry sooner or
later. But that does not mean that we ought
to feel very happy. On the contrary, there is
one quality or property of the music industries
which renders them quite unique as respects im-
provement and progress. When you are deal-
ing with the performance of music you cannot
set a limit to the course of improvement. You
cannot say: "At this point we have reached
perfection." You always find that as soon as you
have apparently reached the limit in improve-
ment there open up still further vistas of pos-
sibility, and the goal is removed as far away
as ever. The history of the reproducing piano
provides the very text required. That history
has been one of constant improvement; yet it
has only just begun. We must beware of
imagining that any sort of perfection has been
reached in any part of the player business. The
player-piano of to-day is a good, reliable and
pretty well standardized article; but it is not
perfect. It is not even as good as we have a
right to expect it to be. The moment we cease
to realize this truth we are in danger of slipping
backward. Now, we must not slip backward.
No one can afford to pause in progress; we least
of any.
ing, for the time, beyond its wildest dreams.
What is the answer? Shortage in labor, high
wages, disinclination to work hard; what do
these portend? They portend always shortage
of production. And the world cries aloud for
goods. Fools and blind! Is there no way, one
asks, to make the worker understand that he
is cutting his own throat? Did not Dr. C. Wal-
lace Petty put his finger on one truth at any
rate when he spoke at the banquet in New York
a couple of weeks ago? Would you know what
is the matter with labor? If you would, you
must put yourself in the laborer's place. He is
no economist; nor are most of the employers,
if truth were known. The matter with the work-
er is a combination of reaction from war-excite-
ment, recognition of the importance of labor in
the war, crude half-true economic doctrine
preached by extremists; and shameless profiteer-
ing by everybody who has had the chance.
What is the remedy? It is hard but effective.
We must deflate and get down to rock-bottom.
Then, if we have a year or two of readjustment,
no one will mind. When extravagance and
profiteering are abandoned by some of those
who like to preach to the workers, then perhaps
we shall have a general return to sanity. This
great country of ours is big enough to stand a
lot of punishment, and we in the music indus-
tries, after all, can say that we have not been
profiteers, or else the others have been high-
binders.
in ten of the player-piano performances of the
same man's hand-played roll of the same music
to see that there is. a whole lot to be said for
demonstration even in these days. The trouble
with the whole matter is that the hand-played
roll will not alone make up for gratuitous abuse
of the sustaining device, of the pedals and of the
whole scheme of contrast which the most noisy
of music must utilize, if it is to be intelligible.
So long as the big mass of the player-pianos are
of the foot-driven type—and I believe that this
will be so always—we shall need good demon-
strators. We shall need them to make the peo-
ple know the meaning of the player-piano. They
don't know it yet. I am aware that the people
are buying player-pianos by the tens of thou-
sands. But I want to see them buy them in
still greater quantities, when production has
returned to something like the normal. And I
am much of the opinion that the progress we all
want to see will not materialize if our retailers
continue to disregard the rules of salesmanship.
What Is Demonstration?
You cannot sell a car unless you can demon-
strate its strong points conclusively. Those
points in the end have nothing to do with engi-
neering details but everything to do with per-
formance. You cannot sell a vacuum cleaner
unless you can demonstrate it. That means, in
the end, next to nothing in the way of technical
description, but everything in the way of per-
formance. The housewife really does not mind
Demonstrators
a bit whether the Blimp vacuum cleaner has a
Hand-played rolls and reproducing pianos are rotating plano-convex rinkumtoodle or not. The
Labor Vincit
very fine; in fact, they are very fine indeed. We salesman may astound her with talk of that
could scarcely do without them now. But at sort, but if he wants to sell he must demon-
The Western Electric Co., in its Hawthorne the same time we could even less do without strate. He must be able to make the machine
plant on the South-West side of Chicago, em- the good old everyday foot-driven player. do things which no other machine of the kind
ploys normally 20,000 men when it is running
will do, or at least do the same things more
full blast. To-day it would like to be employ- Wherefore one is led to the inquiry: "Why, easily, with less effort on the user's part, or
ing that number and even more; but it has been oh! why, is there so little good demonstration more efficiently. That is the nature and end of
for months in a chronic state of shortage to the theso days?" After all, if one does not expect a all specialty salesmanship—demonstration. Dem-
tune of between 4,000 and 5,000 workers. The performance worthy of a virtuoso, one at least onstrate and you sell. It is no different with
skilled trades throughout the country in the might get something tolerable. Of course I the player-piano, save in the respect that the
industrial districts are reported to be running know that the music most wanted is popular people who buy the latter are satisfied with a
generally on reduced forces; and the reductions dance and ballad music. But that does not much lower standard of achievement. Some
are due to inability to obtain the necessary help. alter the case a bit. One only has to listen to fellow will say that it is a good thing the folks
The player factories and the piano shops are as the work of a first-class jazz pianist in a don't know any more than they do about music,
badly off as ever apparently. Labor is prosper- theatre or restaurant and compare it with nine that if they did things would be still worse for
us. But that is poor stuff and not even funny.
The player-piano is a wonderful influence for
good, and not half appreciated by the trade at
INTRODUCED IN
that. Let us at least treat it with respect. As
an old-timer in a sort of way, I remember the
great work done by such pioneers as Harcourt,
Parkyn, Heaton, Hunter and Longwell. Those
men are with us yet and flourishing in their
several ways. They will not mind my saying
Made by the pioneers and
that it was their work which grounded the player
Have wonderful patented
leaders in the playerpiano
devices and exclusive
firmly in the market of steadily demanded goods.
industry
features
And I think that none of them would differ with
me if I said that an injection of the same treat-
e WILCOX ® WHITE Co.
Agencies all over the Wortd
ment into the retail trade would do no harm.
Business Established 1877
MERIDEN CONN.
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STANDARD PLAYER ACTIONS
STANDARD PNEUMATIC ACTFON C O .
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NEW YORK CITY
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