Music Trade Review

Issue: 1922 Vol. 75 N. 24

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE
VOL. LXXV. No. 24
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Published Every Satirday by Edward Lyman Bill, Inc., 373 4th Ave., New York, N. Y.
Dec. 9, 1922
Single Copies 10 Cents
«2.00 Per Tear
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Looking Forward to Greater Accomplishments

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IEWING it from every angle 1922 has been a good year for the music industry—a year
during which there has been completed such liquidation as has been necessary in the trade,
and a year that has seen business returned to a near normal basis. The prospects are that
the benefits realized by the industry during the past few months will continue during the
coming year, with business on a sound and steady basis.
There are those who are, and will be, disappointed with the results realized during the
year coming to a close—those who predicted a return to what was considered normal business of the good
old days, but these for the most part are optimists without foresight. The wiser business men have long
ago realized that normal business as it was known prior to 1914 will not be seen again for many years, if
ever, and that the goal at present is a new normal providing for sound, profitable business, carried on
steadily on a basis of new price levels and new methods.
Fixed predictions for the future are dangerous, but every indication points to a condition of business
throughout 1923 that will prove most satisfactory to all members of the industry who take proper cog-
nizance of the new situation and profit by it. Manufacturers, wholesalers and retailers, almost without
exception, as witnessed by the reports from the trade in every section of the country published elsewhere,
view the immediate future with assurance and confidence, and that confidence is emphasized by the move-
ments that have been made by numerous retail houses to expand and improve their establishments with a
view to handling properly a greater volume of business.
One of the unfortunate features of the music trade during the past few months of the year, when a
scarcity of instruments of all kinds was in prospect and in many cases actually existed, was the widespread
reversion to pre-war terms or less, it being no unusual thing to see advertised instalment terms covering
a period of ftfur years or more.
It is very likely that a number of those who have ignored the writing on the wall and done business
on an extraordinarily long-time basis will not find 1923 to their liking for the reason that they will have
much of their capital tied up in long-time leases, and will not be able to realize the necessary rapidity of
turnover that spells profit.
From a financial as well as from the business angle, the year has been a kindly one to the industry
. as a whole, for although there have been a few names added to the business obituary list, the proportion
has been very small and in practically every case disaster has been due to poor and unwise management
rather than to existent conditions.
So far as can be foreseen the problem of the New Year will be that of reorganizing the working-
forces in the piano factories and keeping those forces intact so far as possible throughout the year in an
effort to keep production at a regular and substantial figure. It is generally recognized that the practice
of disorganizing factory staffs during periods of slack demand and then seeking to recruit them again
during busy periods is an unsatisfactory and expensive process.
The problem is a real one and affects every branch of the trade, for when the retailer is unable at
certain seasons to get sufficient instruments to meet local demands he suffers a loss of profit and, through
the intermittent activity of factories, pays his share of an excessive overhead that is excessive because it is
unbalanced.
Not in a number of years have the prospects for the coming twelve months been quite so bright as
(Continued on page 5)
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE
MUSIC
TRADE
REVIEW
(Registered in the U. S. Patent Office)
PUBLISHED BY EDWARD LYMAN BILL, Inc.
President and Treasurer. C. L. Bill. 373 Fourth Ave., New York; Vice-President,
J. B. Spillane, 37J Fourth Ave., New York; Second Vice-President, Raymond Bill, 373
Fourth Ave., New York; Secretary, Edward Lyman Bill, 373 Fourth Ave., New York;
Assistant Treasurer, Win. A. Low.
J. B. SPILLANE, Editor
RAY BILL, B. B. WILSON, BRAID WHITE, Associate Editors
CARLETON CHACE, Business Manager
L. E. BOWERS, Circulation Manager
Executive and Reportorlal Stall
EBWUI VAN HABUNGEM, V. D. WAUH, £. B. MUNCH, LEE ROBINSON, C. R. TIGHI,
EDWAID LYUAM BILL, SCOTT KIHGWILL, THOS. W. BBESNAHAN, A. J. NICKLIH
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Entered as second clatt matter September 10, 1892, at tht Pott office at New York, N. Y..
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Lyman Bill, Inc.
anil
Departments conducted by an expert wherein all ques-
allU
tions of a technical nature relating to the tuning,
a i i h n a i i l f regulating and repairing of pianos and player-pianos
p a r t i n e i l l S are dealt with, wlTl be found in another section of
this paper. We also publish a number of reliable technical works, information concerning
which will be cheerfully given upon request.
Exposition Honors Won by The Review
Grand Prix
Paris Exposition, 1900 Silver Medal
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Diploma
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LONG DISTANCE TELEPHONES—NUMBERS S982—M8S MADISON 8Q.
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Vol. LXXV
NEW YORK, DECEMBER 9, 1922
No. 24
REVIEW
DECEMBER 9, 1922
selected subjects and have been designed to cover many phases of
music trade activity. The opinions expressed and the advice given
should prove of value to those who take advantage of all the infor-
mation obtainable in reference to their business, its problems and its
development.
It is being realized that the music industry is a real industry
with the sales, advertising and financing problems common to all
lines of business, all of them on the same general basis and varying
only in details. T H E REVIEW presents in this issue practical dis-
cussions of these merchandising and financing questions, particu-
larly as they may develop during the coming year, with a view to
giving to the trade the opinions of those whose experience places
them in a position to talk with authority.
OUR ADVERTISING TAKEN AS A MODEL
the prevalence in certain sections of the country of
D ESPITE
"was-now" and "nothing-down" advertising usually featured in a
sensational manner, it is generally conceded that during the past
few years there has been as a whole a remarkable improvement in
the advertising of musical instruments. More attention is given to
the appeal made in these announcements and to the arrangement of
the copy, with the result that music trade publicity compares most
favorably with that carried on by other lines of business.
Particularly significant is the fact that American musical instru-
ment advertising is receiving much attention from the members of
the music trade in foreign countries, notably in England, where
American ideas of publicity have been accepted as examples and
adopted very successfully.
Only recently a prominent British concern wrote to Charles E.
Byrne, secretary-treasurer of the Steger & Sons Piano Mfg. Co., in
reference to the details of an advertising contest featured by that
house, and mentioned in an article in THE REVIEW, which, by the
way, has a large circulation in the British Empire. This concern
took particular occasion to state that its members watched closely
the advertising of the American trade and considered it most up-to-
date.
Advertising cannot be judged by individual example, but by the
publicity of an industry as a whole, and on this basis the American
music trade has very little of which to be ashamed.
SHEET MUSIC FOR THE MILLIONS
The Music Trade Review extends its hearty greetings
to the entire industry, sincerely hoping that every
member thereof may experience in fullest measure
the genuine happiness of a very Merry Christmas.
KIIS^
SURVEYING THE TRADE SITUATION
HE demand for musical instruments from all sections of the
country—a demand that has taxed the facilities of the manufac-
turers, particularly the makers of pianos and talking machines—
offers proof of the fact that there has been a distinct revival of
business that has been most welcome after some months of slow
trade.
There has been some question, however, as to whether all dis-
tricts enjoy the same degree of demand, and whether there is any
likelihood of it continuing throughout the coming year. With a
view to placing the facts of the situation before its readers THE
REVIEW has conducted an extensive canvass of the manufacturers
of, and dealers in, musical instruments throughout the country,
securing thereby a volume of authentic figures together with many
expressions of opinion that should act as a guide to those who are
planning for next year's business. The survey is calculated to bring
to light the weak spots as well as the strong spots in the country
and the facts presented are interesting from a number of angles.
Taking it all in all, the members of the music industry are look-
ing forward to a good business year and offer good reasons in most
cases for being optimistic. The chief basis of confidence, without
doubt, is the fact that in most cases the concerns in the trade will
enter the New Year with unfilled orders on their books—a fact
calculated to insure stability.
The special articles found in the Holiday Number of THE
REVIEW this week are all by men well qualified to speak on the
T
takes the sale of a good many sheets of music to bring a million
I T dollars
in income to the publisher, and yet according to census
figures covering 1921, issued recently and published in T H E REVIEW
last week, the products of the music publishing trade as a whole
last year had a value in excess of $13,000,000, averaging something
better than a million dollars a month, and even this shows a decline
of a million dollars from the 1919 total.
For those who are inclined to figure the music industry on a
dollars and cents basis, in order to show its financial importance in
the business life of the country, the production of the music pub-
lishers should hold considerable interest. It means, for instance,
that last year approximately 60,000,000 copies of music were sold,
or enough to supply half the population of the country with a copy
apiece. Not a very heavy showing, truly, but a production that
keeps in step with, and perhaps a little ahead of, the piano trade,
with which it is by the nature of things so closely allied, although
the fact is not always recognized.
PUTTING THE EMPLOYE'S MIND AT EASE
practice of business concerns in various lines, in-
T HE cluding growing
those of the music industry, in insuring their employes
under the group insurance plan is thoroughly commendable. It is a
practice that is calculated to help the morale of an organization for
a number of reasons, chief among them being that it gives to the em-
ploye a certain sense of security regarding the future that contributes
to his satisfaction and peace of mind and is therefore calculated to
improve the character of his work.
The practice not only aids the employe directly, but proves of
advantage to the company employing him, which by that means
frees itself of the often recognized obligation of contributing more
or less liberally to the relief of the family of a workman who has
passed away suddenly and left them destitute. Group insurance for
industrial workers represents not paternalism, but good, sound busi-
ness practice.

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