Music Trade Review

Issue: 1922 Vol. 75 N. 9

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE
AUGUST 26, 1922
REVIEW
Being the Monthly Outpouring of Wit and Wisdom by the Editor of This
Player Section on Topics of Interest and Import to the Trade Generally,
Written in the Hope That It Will Prove Acceptable as Mid-Summer Reading
the tuners and practical men at every conveni-
ent opportunity. Nothing is more certain than
that, whoever may sell the players, it is the
The player trade is certainly waking up. tuner who keeps them sold or who, through his
Down at Indianapolis the Auto-Pneumatic Ac- ignorance or misunderstanding of technical
tion Co., the Standard Pneumatic Action Co., points, is the innocent cause of dissatisfaction
the United Piano Corporation, the Sigler and ultimate repossessions. I t is the best kind
Player Action Co. and Pratt-Read & Co. of business strategy to go direct to the tuner
thought well enough of the tuners' annual and tell him one's strong points. He will ap-
gathering to make excellent and instructive ex- preciate, readily grasp and quickly apply.
hibits for the benefit of the visiting delegates. Moreover, he will be grateful for the informa-
These exhibits were primarily made for the tion and will act accordingly.
purpose of instructing the practical men who
viewed them in the peculiarities of the mechan-
Congratulations, Q R S
isms themselves and were therefore eminently
Before allowing the Indianapolis affair to pass
sincere, outspoken and above-board.
There
was no nonsense, no camouflage. The tuners into history, however, we must pause to con-
could see everything inside and out. They gratulate the Q R S Music Co. upon Presi-
could ask all the questions they liked and make dent Pletcher's good sense and strategic wis-
any needed number of criticisms, certain that dom in offering a prize to tuners for the best
the answers they should receive would be essay on how to maintain the interest of player
equally sincere, and so far as possible accurate. owners after the player-piano has been sold to
Messrs. Jamison, Duncan Allen, Sigler, Strub them and installed in their homes. Those who
and Leiser have every reason to feel pleased know what the Q R S Co. lias been doing in
with what they accomplished. Indeed, we are national advertising, what wisdom this com-
unable to see how the trade can fail to obtain pany has shown in boosting the general sub-
ject of player-piano ownership while talking
the utmost in advantage and the minimum of
waste in exhibits of mechanism made direct to about the Q R S music—and who does, not
Exhibits at the Convention
know the facts?—must realize also that no
one sees the behavior of the player owner to-
wards the instrument he or she has bought half
so well as the tuner. It is this last who, going
into the home when the family is, as it were,
in undress uniform, hears the candid opinion,
the kicks and the criticisms. He knows the
truth, and he realizes that the trouble with the
player business is that the people are not
taught to play, and that therefore they lose in-
terest in music and cease to buy new rolls
after a month or so. No reproducing piano
invention will solve this difficulty. Education
alone will do it. Merely giving the unmusical
a piano that plays all by itself won't help a
bit. The taste must exist first, and the task of
the trade is to learn this fact and then take
measures to bring music and the player owner
together. The winner of the first Q R S prize
is a blind tuner of Indianapolis, William Edgar
Medcalf, who joins to his tuning activities
those of a writer on musical matters and a lec-
turer before women's clubs and similar insti-
tutions upon music in the home, the care of
musical instruments, etc. The presentation
was made by Earl Holland, of the Q R S Mu-
sic Co., who was present at Indianapolis for
that purpose. This is an excellent idea and
should be followed up by others in the trade.
Essential and Immediate
The article which appears in the present is-
sue of the Player Section advocating a con-
ference or similar intra-trade action to accom-
plish a reform in the present condition of mu-
sic-roll manufacturing, especially in reference
to the roll which is built for automatic ex-
pression, presents the important subject in so-
ber but emphatic language. The fact is that,
just as Mr. Miller, of the Vocalstyle Music Co.,
so aptly says, the player-piano business never
really got on its feet until the manufacturers
had agreed in Buffalo, in 1908, to standardize
an 88-note roll and sec that thereafter all
trackers and all rolls should correspond and
agree. From the moment that it could be said
by a merchant "any music roll will fit this
player-piano" the player business began to ex-
pand and prosper. A similar condition of inter-
changeability is rapidly coming to exist in the
phonograph business, where the present divi-
sion into hill-and-dale and lateral cut alone re-
mains in a region of otherwise complete uni-
versality. Just as a universal talking machine
record is a certainty of the future, so a univer-
sal expression roll is a positive essential to the
prosperity of the player business. The ques-
tion is not half so complicated as it seems, and
demands principally that makers should cease
to deceive themselves or attempt to deceive
their trade brethren. Sincerity and candor will
soon show that there is no real reason for at-
tempting any longer to mention fictitious dif-
ferences and unmeaning distinctions.
You need this beautiful, dignified, worth-while mer-
chandise, because your customers want it, and there
is good profit for you. The Renaissance style is es-
pecially popular now. No. 619, Renaissance Console
player-piano roll cabinet. Finished with mahogany
or burl walnut top and front. Height 39 inches, in-
side depth 14y 2 inches. Capacity 104 player-piano
rolls.
77K>UDELLWORKS
Music, Not Mechanism
28th Street and Barnes Avenue, INDIANAPOLIS
Write
for the Udell
f-OR TONE, BEAUTY
AN.: LASTING
A
•XCCOMPLISHMENT
'
Blue
Book
and Console
Cabinet
Catalog
—AUTO"PLAYER
The more one ponders upon the problems of
merchandising the player-piano in any of its
forms, the more one realizes that the grava-
men of the whole matter resides, not in me-
(Continued on page 8)
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
a
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
AUGUST 26,
1922
wsBBBi
Proved Instantly Popular in Vaudeville
—A Great Favorite with Dancers.
THE POINT OF VIEW
(Continued from
page 7)
chanism, but in music. The whole question, in
a word, rests upon the great fact that there is
no use in giving people a key to the land of
music unless they have the inclination to enter
in. The automatic expression player is boosted
on the ground that it plays better than the
loot-power instrument. Now, granting that-it
does—though no musician would for a moment
prefer it to the other when he had once learned
the technique of the latter—it is absurd to sup-
pose that when this fact of better playing is
established the merchandising problem is
thereby solved. The merchandising problem is
solved when, and only when, the people are
educated to want music in the home and to
want it in steadily increasing quantities.
Merely selling expensive instruments which no-
body uses after six months will never build up
the trade. To build up the trade we must
build up the fertility of the soil in which our
goods are distributed if we want to reap crops
of steadily increasing business. The biggest
merchandising problem we have is the problem
of selling the people on the idea of music in
the home; not of selling them music, but of
selling them the idea that music is worth hav-
ing, is desirable, is needed and ought to be cul-
tivated because it affords the most delightful
recreation in the world. That is the problem
which confronts us.
PATENTS CONTROLLING DEVICE
WASHINGTON, D. C, August 21.—The Aeolian
Co., New York, N. Y., is the owner through
assignment by Robert Head, same place, of
Patent No. 1,424,903 for an automatic musical
instrument, which comprises means controlled
from the front-end or tab of the music-sheet
to operate any desired mechanism in the instru-
ment, such as an automatic rewind mechanism.
THE
I
Get HIM a copy today
It's funny-of course
PEERLESS PNEUMATIC ACTION CO. ACQUIRES NEW HOME
New Concern Completes Negotiations Whereby Splendid Plant in Bronx Will House Future
Activities—Roy P. Cheek Enthusiastic Over Demand for Peerless Player Action
Announcement was made this week by Roy
P. Cheek, vice-president and general manager
they will move next week. The company, al-
though yoiing, have found that the demand for
the new Peerless
player action lias
g r e a t l y exceeded
their
expectations,
with the result that
thev have
been
compelled to move
into larger quar-
ters where a great-
er production is as-
sured.
The new
factory affords 2,-
000
square
feet
more of floor space
than where
they
are
now
located
and is admirably
arranged for the ef-
ficient manufacture
of player t acti6ns,
having once been
occupied as a piano
action
plant
and
.ator as a piano fac-
tory.
When seen by a
representative
o f
The Review t h i s
week Mr. Cheek
was
enthusiastic
with the reception
which the I'cerlcss
New Peerless Headquarters, 133d Street and Brown Place
action has received
of the Peerless Pneumatic Action Co., that they
so far. "We certainly feei very much encour-
have acquired a new factory at Brown Place aged," he said, "as we have had inquiries from
and East 133rd street, New York, into which
all over the country regarding the Peerless."
"You can't &o wrong,
With am/FEISTson&"
If HE Golfs
H E will enjoy thisNEW"Sportson£

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