Music Trade Review

Issue: 1921 Vol. 73 N. 7

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE
AUGUST 13, 1-921
MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
13
OuiTECHNICAL DEPARTMENT
CONDUCTED BY WILLIAM BRAID WHITE
MESSIG TELLS THE TEACHERS
Being Some Observations From an Eastern
Gentleman on the Genus Music Teacher and
the Habits Thereof—Dedicated to Long-suffer-
ing Tuners Whose Patience Merits Reward
The gentleman from Brooklyn who sets forth
the trenchant observations which follow might
be supposed by some to be a little hypercritical.
As for that, the judicious reader must do his
own judging. I shall content myself with put-
ting the matter forward. After all, this is Sum-
mertime, and for ten months at least in every
twelve I am feeding the most serious of serious
matter to my readers. Now for the present
week let us have a little comic relief. It will do
us all lots of good. Here goes :
"Dear Mr. White:—You run the Technical
page in order to get tuners together and keep
them busy among themselves. Now, all our lec-
tures and experience do not alone get us business
when we see a piano in need of tuning, and we
find that the people themselves do not under-
stand when it is out of tune. I wish to empha-
size the fact that in order to get a thing done
there must be a right beginning, or a desire
created. It is all right enough that a tuner has
to be a salesman to get a job of tuning, but when
he has to explain his head off and get a sore
throat trying to make people understand that a
piano is out of tune when the teacher says it
isn't, I think that tuner might just as well sit
down.
"But from another point of view: A tuner
ought not to be obliged to appear as if looking
for a job. So I think that the following idea is
wonth your consideration.
"We all want to boost tuning. To do this we
shall have to teach the music teachers how to
test tuning, and show them (with the dead
ears they all have) how to realize that when one
or two octaves are out of tune the piano itself
is actually getting out of tune.
"The music teachers will be believed by the
people when they say that a piano is in tune.
DEAGAN TUNING FORKS
even after they have 'tuned it' themselves or
sent some '50-50' tuner. But that is not doing
the piano any good.
"I should think that the tuners would be
glad to contribute to a fund to spread better
knowledge. If you, Mr. White, would get up a
small but effective note to the teachers and in-
sert this in the magazines which are read by
music teachers that would do some good. It is
no good talking about these things just in our
magazines. You must put it up to the teachers,
even if you only get a sign put up in every
music publisher's store.
"You know, I think there is not a music
teacher's piano in the country right now that is
in good tune. Most of them are rotten, even the
action.
"It may be all right for a good mechanic to
work with rusty or broken tools, but with music
it is different. You cannot eat bum food, and
how can you listen to bum music? There is
something about out-of-tune music that makes
you wonder what is the matter; but if the
teacher says that it is all right, why, of course,
say the people, it must be so.
"The teachers are afraid that if the people
spend money on the piano they will lose a lesson
or two, so they are not at present a great help in
bettering the condition of music. If a teacher
really loved music instead of something else he
or she could not sit right next to a piano out of
tune and listen to it. How can any one say
whether it is the fault of the pupil or not when
things go wrong in an out-of-tune piano? But
let it go at that, say they, the child only wants
to be a teacher and not a musician. Please print
all of this article, as it does us tuners good to get
wise. We ought to work together, like doctors,
not like peddlers. Your brother tuner, George
Messig, Brooklyn, N. Y."
Mr. Messig Is Severe
Mr. Messig is severe. In fact, he is really too
severe, and I am not sure that his letter would
merit quotation in full, despite his anxiety lest
1 mutilate it, if there were no other interest
attached to the matter. But when he says that
tuners need waking up to the fact that public
apathy is induced largely by the ignorance of
those who ought to know better, then he tells the
VIBRATIONS GUARANTEED
YOU CAN INSTALL
Series "One Seventy"
A-440, Bk-466.2 and C-523.3
(A-435 If desired)
PRICE, 75c. EACH
J
f
.
L.
T
nCtftU
I
Deagan Building
Building
Ueagan
D L A b A N , l n C M 1786 Berte.n Arenae. Chic.f
URN YOUR STRAIGHT
PIANOS INTO PLAYERS
Individual pneumatic stacks, roll
boxes, bellows, pedal actions,
expression boxes.
Manufacturers, dealers, tuners
and repair men supplied with
player actions for straight pianos.
JENKINSON PLAYER ACTION CO., Inc.
912-914 Elm St.
Cincinnati, O.
FAUST SCHOOL
OF TUNING
Standard of America
Alumni of 2000
Piano Train*, Pipe and Reed Orran
aid Player Piaae. Tear B««k Free,
27-29 Gainsboro Street
BOSTON, MASS.
Artrola Player Actions
Easily and At Small Expense
Treble the Value of your trade-ins
and 65-note players
For details and exclusive territory write
ARTROLA PLAYER CO.
224 N. Sheldon St.
f U W hj K. O
truth. The subject is important and interesting
to us, and I shall be forgiven for saying some-
thing more about it here.
Professional music in the United States is
almost the same thing as the profession of
music teaching. Besides the few orchestral
musicians and quartet players, the few singers
and the few instrumental soloists who prefer,
and are so placed in public esteem that they
can afford to devote their entire time to self-
cultivation and improvement, the musician is
compelled to teach. Even composers have to
do something of the sort if they are not to
starve, unless they are fortunate enough to have
independent means. Nor are the business musi-
cians exempt from this rule. Of course, the
greater number of these men and women are
conscientious souls who work very hard upon
difficult and extremely tough material for a
pecuniary return which is nothing like what it
ought to be in respect of size. That there are a
great many persons teaching piano and other in-
struments who ought not to be doing so is un-
doubtedly true; and the reason is economic.
Competition, unrestrained and extremely fierce,
leads, in the lower ranks, to wickedly low prices.
The music teachers are unorganized, narrow-
minded and without solidarity. Therefore, they
are exploited. Which, in reality, serves them
right.
The Narrow-minded Profession
Hence we find, of course, a low level of pro-
fessional attainment in the rank and file, and
gross ignorance as well in every branch of
knowledge outside the elements of the science
and art which they profess to teach. Seeing
that thousands of children are reluctantly forced
to go through weekly hours of torture because
it is thought right for them to play some instru-
ment, and not at all because there is any genu-
ine love of music in the family, it is easy to see
where the low-grade commercial music-teacher
comes from—mainly from young women who
regard the work as more pleasant than working
in a store or an office, and who know just
enough to "get by," as they would put it. Why,
therefore, should any one expect any recondite
knowledge from them? Is it to be expected
that they should know or care whether a piano
is or is not in tune?
Educated Bad Taste
The truth of the matter is that if all pianos
could in some way have been constantly kept in
good tune from the earliest days till now the
public ear would be so accustomed to perfection
that no deviation from it would be tolerated for
a moment. As it is, of course, the precise oppo-
site has been the case. The public ear has grad-
ually become so accustomed to imperfeetion
that it neither thinks of, nor cares for, anything
else. It has become the sad truth that a spe-
(Continued on page 14)
Chicago
In H's Hfy
Her© are
of
BASS STRINGS
1OOO
SUCCESSFUL
GRADUATES
••eelal atteatlei ilvea to the need* ef the tuner aaa rke • eater
OTTO R. TREFZ, Jr.
2110 Falrmount Avenue
COURTHOUSE SO,
VALPARAISO. IND.
Philadelphia, Pa.
The TUNER'S FRIEND
Old style bridle str«n
New style all leather bridle strap
BRAUNSDORF'S ALL LEATHER BRIDLE STRAPS
Labor Saving; Mouse Proof; Guaranteed all one length
Send for Samples.
Prices on Request
Fell* and Cloth* in any Quantities
Braunsdorf's Other Specialties
Paper,
Felt
and Clotb
Punching*, Fibre Washers
and Bridges for
Pianos, Organs and
Old Style
Player Actions
Tip
Office and Factory:
430 East 53rd St., New York
GEO. W. BRAUNSDORF, Inc.,
IBMCHAK
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
14
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
AUGUST 13, 1921
OUR TECHNICAL DEPARTMENT
this is by clearing up the question of the manu- lecture this afternoon, because I had to go to
facturer's liability, and I am of the opinion that the reception at Mrs. Blank's. And then, you see,
{Continued from page 13)
the trade will do itself a great deal of good by I really don't like the insides of pianos." Eheu!
cial education is now needed to know in-tune- accepting this point of view.
Eilinon!
ness when we hear it; while the various degrees
All of which will, perhaps, give my good
Teachers' Magazines
of out-of-tuneness remain virtually unnoticed by
Mr. Messig is on surer ground when he speaks friends something to think about these days.
the vast majority, until they approach the limits
about attacking the question through the maga-
of the ear's ability to assimilate clashing jangle.
YOUR OWN PET PEEVE
zines which appeal to musicians. The profes-
The music teacher of the ordinary kind is dif-
sional musical journals are of two classes. Those
ferent from the general run of the public only
Please follow Brother Messig's excellent ex-
which belong to the first profess only to give
because he or she has learned to manipulate the
the news of the profession and shun entirely the ample and come forth with your own pet peeve.
keyboard, or scrape the fiddle, more or less skill-
technical or artistic or scientific elements in the Thank you. Send it to William Braid White,
fully. But technique of this sort is so nearly
art. These papers are "news" papers in the cor- The Music Trade Review, 373 Fourth avenue,
mechanical an acquirement that it positively does
rect sense of that term. There is, however, an- New York.
not involve the slightest niceness of ear beyond
other type of magazine which aims to give scien-
the bare ability to know one tone from its adja-
tific, artistic and technical informatiou about the
cent semitone. For ever so long the idea seems
art, leaving purely professional interests of the
to have existed that in some mysterious way
commercial sorts to be dealt with by the others.
George J. Christman, of Christman Sons, West
musical talent is a matter of acquiring manipu-
It is, however, an unfortunate fact that the range Fourteenth street, left Monday for Sullivan
lative ability. Yet no more absurd fallacy can
of their interests is very narrow. Matters con- County, where he will spend part of his vaca-
be imagined. It is in a word pure nonsense.
cerning acoustics, instrument construction, tun- tion. A. H. Mangold, manager, returned Mon-
Music Is Manipulation
ing, etc., are rarely if ever mentioned, and when day from his vacation at Spring Valley, N. J.,
Five-finger exercises do not make anyone they are it is usually plain to see that the writer
musical, though the teachers are almost a unit speaks without authority to readers who do not and Long Beach, N. Y.
in. supposing that they do, basing their senseless know how to discriminate between authority and
The Fargo Music Co., of Fargo, N. D., is
opposition to the player-piano upon those falla- assertion. Here, indeed, one would like to see
cious grounds. Musical ability is derived from reform, and I have no doubt that the publish- planning to open a branch store at Wahpeton,
a combination of sensitiveness to tone and fine- ers of these admirable journals would like to see N. D. Wilfrid Hardy is the proprietor.
ness of pitch perception, with poetic feeling and the same thing. It is, however, unhappily true
an instinctive grasp of harmonic beauty; after that musicians are narrow-minded in their pro-
all of which, if manipulative skill on the key- fessional interests. I have had somewhat dis-
board be acquired, so much the better. But if couraging experiences in striving to bring by lec-
Used Pianos, Players and Grands
that skill be not acquired, then the possessor of tures and writings the fascinating technical mys-
Whole«ale—Any Quantity
all these other elements in the complete mu- teries of sound and the piano to the attention of
Any Crude, Style or Make, All Re paired.
sical equipment may become a musician by the music students and teachers, even when my work
Rebuilt and I'olished
single process of learning the mastery of the was being done (as it always has been) "free,
music roll and the pneumatic playing mechan- gratis and for nothing." I shall never forget that
Ready for Your Wareroom Floor
ism. Music and keyboard are not synonymous dear and rigidly corseted stout lady who came
terms.
to me after one of these lectures given at a con-
HILL'S TRIANGLE BUILDING
What Is Being Done
vention of music teachers (she was an official
1365-75 Myrtle Ave.
Brooklyn, N. Y.
Which is the reason for our tone-deaf teach- of the Association) to say, "Oh, Mr. Braid
/'hour: 227')
ers. But Mr. Messig wants us to advertise to the White, you know I simply couldn't come to your
teachers their deficiencies. Well, there is not
much use in doing that alone. Besides, it is al-
ready being done, in the only effective way that
I can see, by the National Association of Piano
for
th«
Tuners. If Brother Messig and other gentlemen
D«al«r
526-536 Niagara St., Buffalo, N. Y.
in the Eastern part of the country are not ac-
quainted already with the N. A. P. T. and its
work they should inform themselves without
delay. There is something for them to learn,
and I think they are likely to get some pleas-
ant surprises in the process.
They will learn that the music industries are
considering the question of adopting a stand-
ard warranty form for pianos, which has been
drafted by the Tuners' Association and which
makes the liability of the manufacturer for de-
fect contingent upon the owner's using right
care and giving right attention to the condi-
(FELTEN & CUILLEAUME)
tion of the instrument. These terms are then
'C& I S V V> AUS VORZUGUCHSTEM PATENT //Lj
Ui'
-+V
GUSSSTAHLDRAMT
Uj GC
defined to include regular tuning and preserva-
tion from extremes of heat, dampness, etc. I
I FlO-1 •
"
think that this form of warranty will be adopted
generally, and when it is adopted the solution
of the problem will be in sight, although, of
course, the reform of public taste and knowl-
IN BLACK, RED and GREEN
edge will not come about in a day.
LABEL BRANDS
There is no sense in starting with the teach-
THAMMACHER.SCHLEMMER i C
ers alone, for they are only a small and insignifi-
cant element in the community. We must begin
our work by getting the public accustomed to
the truth that a piano has to be kept in good
order and that good order is a phrase which
has among its meanings the primary meaning of
The " F & C " Blue Label Brand is again being
"regular tuning." The easiest way for doing
used by Rudolph C. Koch in the manufacture
VACATIONS AT CHRISTMAN SONS
HILL & SONS
KURTZMANN a
PIANOS
C. KURTZMANN & CO.
THE CELEBRATED
F&G^
F&C
IMPORTED
MUSIC WIRE
IS UNEXCELLED
off the Reinwarth Covered Bass Strings
For TUNERS and REPAIRERS we have the
convenient one quarter pound clamps
HAMMACHER, SCHLEMMER&CO.
PIANO AND PLAYER HARDWARE, FELTS AND TOOLS
NEW YORK SINCE 1848
4th Ave. and 13th St.

Download Page 13: PDF File | Image

Download Page 14 PDF File | Image

Future scanning projects are planned by the International Arcade Museum Library (IAML).

Pro Tip: You can flip pages on the issue easily by using the left and right arrow keys on your keyboard.