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THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
JANUARY 7, 1922
11
WINNERS OF CHICKERING ESSAY CONTEST—(Continued from page 10)
Grieg's "Peer Gynt Suite" and Tschaikowsky's
"Fifth Symphony" were there represented for
the first time in New York.
The great artists of the day favored Chick-
ering Hall not only because it afforded them
a most agreeable atmosphere in which to display
their art, but because they recognized the su-
perior qualities of the grand piano which the
house of Chickering produced. Indeed, many
of the artists carried with them on their con-
cert tours a Chickering grand. What finer trib-
ute could be given than the artist's own recogni-
tion that upon the piano depended to a large
degree his own success?
There is a peculiar charm, a certain fascination,
about things that have a history. Old countries,
old compositions, old books, anything that goes
back to another day and is rich in memories,
enthralls our interest, captivates our fancy, com-
pels a sort of awed gentleness. So it is with
a Chickering grand. Had we never heard one
of its sweet-toned notes we would love it for
the memories which crowd about it. We would
remember that Liszt's fingers wandered, maybe
idly, over its ivory keys and he was inspired to
compose upon it his exquisite "Liebestraum."
We would recall that lovely and dainty Jenny
Lind sang with such infinite sweetness to its ac-
companiment. Pictures of our beloved Long-
fellow we would find lurking near its polished
beauty.
It has always been a custom of the world to
give some tangible sign of its approval, and so
the house of Chickering has been the recipient
of one hundred and thirty-one first medals and
awards. Among them we find the Imperial Cross
of the Legion of Honor, First Prize Medal at
Crystal Palace Exhibition in London and High-
est Award at the World's Columbian Exposi-
tion, Chicago.
In 1909 the house of Chickering & Sons af-
filiated itself with the American Piano Co. By
this affiliation the Chickering people in no way
have lost their identity. They continue to manu-
facture in accordance with their own methods
and ideas. However, they reap the benefit of
being in a very large combination and are there-
by enabled to purchase their raw materials at a
great advantage. Experts of the highest quali-
fications are their buyers and assure them of the
best materials at the most conservative figure
on the market.
Not only from a financial viewpoint is the
affiliation a happy one, but it broadens the field
of artistic endeavor.
The Ampico mechanism, its crowning glory,
has been added to the Chickering piano. Until
recent years an artist played and his audience
heard music mournful as a brook buried beneath
a sheet of ice, aerial and happy as sun-flecked,
woodland shadows, soft and low as a mother's
good-night croon, or like the distant rumble of
mountain thunder or the plunge of a frantic sea.
Now untamed humans danced and shouted or
tormented souls cried out their anguish. Now
carefree childhood gamboled and laughed, now
savages performed weird, midnight rites.
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The artist played and his music went echoing
on through eternity, perhaps, but the human ear
had forever lost its exquisite vibrations. With
the invention of that mechanism which when
added to a piano makes it an Ampico one can
hear over and over, as long as he lives, the in-
terpretation of the world's classics by the great-
est pianists. The reproduction is made by means
of music rolls on an electrically operated Ampico.
Man could give no greater gift to mankind
than the sweet-voiced Chickering with the Am-
pico—the means whereby he may find complete
self-expression, without which the spirit dies.
By it artists bring to him Spring's flower-
sprinkled fields, Autumnal lights or Winter's
dying moon. No mood of his but can find ex-
pression in recordings of a genius—shade for
shade as the master would himself play them.
Second Prize Essay, by George F. Cressey
Standing before a famous painting in an art
gallery, we pay tribute to the Raphael who
painted it. We behold a famous statue and we
marvel at the genius of the Michelangelo who
created it. We read a passage from "Paradise
Lost" and wonder at the spirit of Milton. We
hear a Hofmann play one of Chopin's nocturnes
and our feelings are more complex. One master
alone does not receive all our admiration. We
listen in awe to the beautiful melodies and in-
tricate harmonies of the composer, to the
technique and interpretation of the artist, and
we delight in the rich tone of the instrument—
the medium of expression for the genius of the
composer and for the skill of the pianist. Then,
if we are of the few who know, we pay high
tribute also to those men, no less inspired, who
have devoted their lives and talents to the de-
velopment and perfection of this medium of ex-
pression, and whose efforts have evolved the
present perfected concert grand piano, without
which this artistic performance would not have
been possible.
At the time of his death, December 8, 1853,
Jonas Chickering had reached a very high place
in the esteem of his fellow citizens and country-
men. The latter knew him largely by his work
in the development of the piano industry; the
former knew him for himself. Having lived
near him, his fellow citizens realized what a
high-minded and noble-hearted man he had been.
His charitable and sympathetic nature, as well
as his interest in all things civic, patriotic and
religious, made men love and respect him. Mod-
est in the extreme, he made light of his kindly
and charitable deeds and strove to conceal them
whenever possible. The love of the doing was
his reward. His death came suddenly while
he was still active and planning for great things
in his business. It caused widespread regret and
called from all sides expressions of deep feel-
ing at his loss. Numerous were the editorials
published and resolutions passed by prominent
organizations in respect to his memory. To
quote from Dwight's Journal of Music one of
the many notices: "Jonas Chickering is dead.
Sad news indeed to every musical circle here,
or in our whole wide land. For no man was
so much and so beneficently identified with music
in America. The most successful of his craft,
and yet without an enemy! A mechanic of en-
terprising genius, a public-spirited citizen, a
charitable, warm-hearted, open-handed neighbor,
his death is a blow not only to those nearest
and dearest to him, but to this whole com-
munity."
In addition to the many tributes in the form
of notices and resolutions, and the large and
solemn throng present at the funeral, a crown-
ing tribute to Jonas Chickering's life and work
came in the selection of his name, with nine
others, for a special honor at the St. Louis
World's Fair held in 1904. Ten heroic statues
were placed in the Colonnade of the Industrial
Building, representing the great inventors of
the world. Those chosen were Jonas Chicker-
ing, Howe, Fulton, Bessemer, Ericsson, Watts,
Clark, Hoe, Colt and Goodyear. This honor,
better than any words, shows Jonas Chickering's
place not only in the piano industry, but among
the inventive geniuses of his time. Justly was
he called the father of American pianoforte
making.
Looking back over the life of Jonas Chicker-
ing we notice qualities and influences which are
so often found in the lives of great men. Born
in June, 1796, and living in the first half of the
century that marks the greatest strides in the
advancement of civilization, he was given the
opportunity to be one of the pioneers of this
period. We notice his early apprenticeship as
a cabinetmaker and the thoroughness with which
he went through his training. We note his
habit of dreaming of the future and the seeking
in his mind for something yet unknown. We
notice his love of music. Then we see oppor-
tunity presenting itself in the form of an old
piano (a rarity in those days) and the interest
and carefulness he displays in restoring it to
life. We behold the inspiration which seized him
and we imagine the hours of unrest and uncer-
tainty, the experimenting, the doubts and the
final decision. We see him journeying alone at
the age of 20 to Boston to seek his fortune.
There followed his five years in the employ of
John Osborne, as piano maker, during which
he learned all the details of his profession and
gained the knowledge and experience that were
to be the foundation of his future work. This
period of apprenticeship being finished, he
opened a shop of his own, and by so doing
gave birth to the House of Chickering on April
15, 1823. Following him the next few years
we see his first* piano completed and sold, other
pianos following, his business increasing, his
fame spreading and purchasers coming from
other large cities seeking his instruments. He
constantly strove to improve the square pianos,
enlarging and amplifying them. In 1830 he com-
pleted his first upright in the form of a high
bookcase. This instrument had a fine tone and
appearance and instantly became popular.
After years of dreaming and experimenting
came the realization of his great hope—a prac-
tical grand piano. For although grand pianos
had been made since 1706, they were impractical
in that they would not stay in tune. So in 1837
we find Jonas Chickering perfecting and record-
ing his full iron plate for grand pianos and, in
1840, completing his first grand piano made with
this full iron plate. It is impossible to describe
the importance of this invention. Up to that
time nothing had been found to hold the great
strain of the strings, and pianos had to be tuned
constantly. The iron plate in one casting solved
the problem, thus starting a new page in the
*This first Chickering piano, a square, was sold to James
H. Bingham, Esq., for his niece, Miss Thankful C. Hutchin-
son. This square, with the first Chickering upright and the
first Chickering grand, is now in the possession of Chicker-
ing & Sons, and can be seen in their warerooras in Boston.
{Continued on page 12)
Awarded first prize in many world compe-
titions during the past sixty years, the
Schomacker Piano is now daily receiving
first prizes of preference won by its superb
tone, wonderful breadth of expression and
structural beauty.
SCHOMACKER PIANO CO.
23d and Chestnut Sts.
Philadelphia, Pa.