Music Trade Review

Issue: 1923 Vol. 77 N. 26

THE
4
MUSIC
TRADE
(Registered in the U. S. Patent Office)
PUBLISHED BY EDWARD LYMAN BILL, Inc.
President and Treasurer, C. L . Bill, 383 Madison Ave., New York; Vice-President,
J. B. Spillane, 383 Madison Ave., New York; Second Vice-President, Raymond Bill, 383
Madison Ave., New York; Secretary, Edward Lyman Bill, 383 Madison Ave., New York;
Assistant Secretary, L . E. Bowers; Assistant Treasure r , \Vm. A. Low.
J. B. SPILLANE, Editor
RAY BILL, B. B. WILSON, BRAID, WHITE, Associate Editors
WM. H. McCLEARY, Managing Editor
CARLETON CHACE, Business Manager
FREDERICK G. SANDBLOM, Circulation Manager
Executive and Reportorial Staff
E.
B. MUNCH, V. D . WALSH, EDWARD VAN HARI.INGEN, LEE RODINSON,
rHOS. W. BRESNAHAN, E.
NEALY, C. R. TI GUE, FREDERICK B. DIEHL, A.
NICKLIN ,
A. FREDERICK CARTER
J.
J.
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TELEPHONES-V ANDERBILT 2642-2648-2644-2646-2647-2648
Cable Address: "Elblll, New York"
Vol. LXXVII
NEW YORK, DECEMBER 29, 1923
No. 26
I MASON & HAMLIN AND THE AMERICAN PIANO CO.,
HE announcement las t week of the affiliation of the MasO'n &
Hamlin Co. with the American Piano Co. ha s, natural1y, caused
little shor t of a sensation in the trade, due not alon e to the promi­
nence of the contracting parties, but to the possibilities uf future
development that lie in the move.
The standing of the Mason & Hamlin piano in both the trade
and among the musical public of the world is very high, for it has
won and held a recognized and unassailable position on the concert
stage.
In its building tht: highest ideals in American piano cons tru c­
tion have been studied and followed and the result has been a n
instrument and a name to conjure with.
A particularly pleasan t fea ture of the affiliation announcement
is the statement to the effect that, as is the case with the other
prominent piano manufacturing companies affiliated under the
American Piano Co., the individuality of th e Mason & Hamlin will
be maintained rigidly. In other wurds, it will remai n distinctly an
affiliated rather than a subsidiary concern.
With the organization and facilities of the ;\merican PianO' Co.
back6f it the Mason & Hamlin piano should enjoy a futurt: of
unusual success, for there wi ll be offered opportunities for exploita­
tion that will, without question, get impressive results.
From the angle of the American Piano Co., likewise, the new
move is full of import, for it provides a new field for the development
of the activities of th at company along lines recognized as hi gh
class and in no small measure ideali stic.
Much interest is naturally manifested in what the future holds
for the new affiliation, but the move is accepted as one upon which
both the American Piano Co. and the Mason & Hamlin Co. are to
be congratulated. It is pregnant with possibilities.
T
HANDLING THE POST-HOLIDAY COLLECTIONS
I
T would perhaps be unfai r to refe r to the morning of December
26 as the "cold, gray dawn of the morning after" for the music
merchant, but it is fair to comment upon the responsibilities that
exist after the rush of holiday buying ha s passed its peak. It is to
REVIEW
DECEMBER
29, 1923
be hoped that every music merchant in th e country will be able to
total up hi s holiday business with a full measure of sa tisfaction,
but he must not lose sight of the fact that some of that satisfaction
is not going to be fully realized until the payments have been com­
pleted on th e instalment paper th at has accumul att:d in his safe.
During the next si x months, and for that matter the next year,
the probl em that has grown out of a big volume of Chri stmas trade
is th e problem of collecting. Collections under all conditions should
be watched carefully, if only as a matter of self-protection, but col­
lections for the holiday business shou ld be' given particular attention
for the rea son th at many individuals are inclined to overreach
th emselv es slightly in an excess of Christmas spiri t and then regret
the move when they la ter return to normal.
The main idea is to beg in the training of the new customer prop­
erly and that training must be done when the first few payments
are due . If some customers find the se cond or third payment may
be allowed to slide by with impugnity it will not be long before they
get the habit and make forgetting I?ayments a regular practice. If,
how ever, the customer is impressed immediately with the fact that
he is under con tra ct to meet definite obligations to the music mer­
chant, he is not so liabl e to default and the merchant will ac tually
realize profits instead of unpaid accounts for hi s holiday time sales.
The official of a prominent finance company said someth ing­
recently when h e declared that, if certain types of dealers would cut
down materially on the time devoted to se lling and spent that time
in collecting, they would actually be better off financially. In other
words, there is such a thing as ove r- selling, particularly when busi­
n ess is done largely on an instalment basis.
THE MODERN TYPE OF MUSIC MERCHANT
N his report on hi s visits to 1,SOO music merchants during the
past few months the Fidd Editor of The Review comments
particu larl y on the fact that he found a distinct improvement in the
type of music merchant generally. The introd uction of new bl ood
into th e business and the competition of other lines of trade have
resulted in increased efficiency in piano selling methods on the part
of those who are wise enough to see the li ght and who are not con ­
tent to go down with the olel flag of "precedent " nailed to the mast.
This comment is significant and affords the answer to the ques­
tion as to why the piano trade ha s been ab le to maintain such a
solid foundation and keep going in the face of strong cOll)pe tition
both within and without its own ranks. The development of th e
automobile, for instance, reflects that competition. The trade,
it may be said, has not been deve loped an d maintained through
the sale of cheap pianos exclu~ively. .'\s a matter of fact, it has
been the tendency of dealers and salesmen to go a fter hi gh-cl ass
prospects-those who can and do buy reproducing and grand pianos
- that has resulted in an increased vo lum e of bu siness from a
dollars and cents angle, even though the turnovt:r in units may
have been smaller than during some previous years.
Tht: modern store, together with modern adve rti si ng and sa les
methods, has found a ve ry necessary place in the piano business.
It may mean heavier overhead expense, but it will also mean in­
creased rev en ue. The main thought, however, is that antiquated
methods mean anti qu ated and decaying business. This necess ity
of keeping in touch with the newest developments in trade practice
offers the best reason for the exi sten ce and growth 0 f trad e assoc ia­
tions. P erhaps some of the discussions and resolutions may mean
little to the individual merchant, but he will find in many of the
papers read, and particularly in hi s contact with dealers from other
sec tions of th e country, a wealth of good merchandising id eas that
may be put to profitable use in his own locality and hi s own stOre.
It is significant, too, that the most progressive of th e mllsic
merchants are regular readers of the trade papers and keep in
touch with what the industry is doing by that means.
I
CONTINUED PRESSURE IS NECESSARY
S
CORES of organizations, manufacturers, of retail and whole­
sa le merchants, managers, credit men, etc., have joiI)ed with
the Music Industries Chamber of Commerce in endo rsing ·the plan
of Secretary of the Treasury 1\-1el1 on for a reduc tion in war taxes
during the present session of Congress, and the effect of this pres­
sure is evident in the tendency of the national legislators again to
give consideration to the tax redu ction bill which for a time was
being sidetracked in favor of the burdensome bonus legislation.

DECE MBER 29, 1923'
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
5
The Critical Time for the Reproducer

With This Latest Development of the Trade Come to Its Own, the Big Problem of Properly Merchandising
It in the Future Confronts Its Manufacturers-Lessons That May Be Applied With Profit From
the History of the Development of Merchandising the Player-Piano
The year which is now brou ght to a close
has been the fir s t during which the reprodu c­
ing piano may be sai d to have com e into it s
own. Preliminary work of high character had
been done durin g severa l previou s yea rs: but
the past twelve months have seen th e general
idea of the rep roducin g piano secure a hold upon
th e interes ts of th e trade to such an ex tent that
we may now say of it that it has definitely
arrived.
'W ell, now that it has arrived, what are
we goi ng to do with it? The ans wer to this
question is likel y to be difficult, and will cer­
tainly be irritatin g to some good people; yet,
some how o r other, it m us t be mad e. Let us try
to make it in a way whic h will brin g no hurt
to anyone 's feelings.
The hi s tory of busine ss is th e hi sto ry of
th e qu a rrel, eternal and inev itable, be tw een
righteousness a nd gree d. Th e hi sto ry of mer­
c hand isi ng is the hi story of the fight between
the old theory of cavea t emptor and the ne w
theory that h e gains most who giv es most. The
history of the piano business ha s always been
the hi sto ry of th e fight between na rrow-mind­
edness o n the one hand, and, on the other,
bread th of vision and the spir it of se rvice. All
of which is ju s t a nother way of saying that
every bi g improvement, refinement or modifica­
tion of conditions in the piano bu siness during
its whole hi s tory has ha d to fight against a spirit
apparently determined to dra g it ea rthwards,
with all th e ima ginat io n squ eezed ou t of it and
eve ry chance of doing a nyth in g big with it
de s troyed forever.
.
Consider History
These may seem hars h words; but in reality
t hey are only the simple truth.
Consider the
history of the pl ayer-p iano from the day of it s
be gi nnin g, more than a quarter century since.
The ca binet instrument be ga n as a high -priced
attachment (it cos t $250) se para te from th e
piano. It was sold on the highest pretensions,
with advertising planned upon th e most elab­
orate scale and written in a delib e ratel y dign i­
fiedtone . All th e promotion was of the highest
cla ss. Recitals were give n by expert demon­
strators and the attempt was steadily made to
appeal to the lat en t musical fe eling of th e mil­
lion s of music lo·v ers who are not music pro ­
ducers . The attempt was successful. The cab­
inet player took a di s tin ct position in th e trad e
and for perhaps five years it retai ned it.
The Parting Ways
When, however, it became possible to pro­
duce a player action to go into any piano the
commercial
manufacturer
found
himself
la unched into the player game almost without
wishing it. Finding his competitors going int o
the new scheme, he went into it also, and soon
began to see that he must make his choice
betwee n two alternati ve methods of doing busi­
ne ss. Either he mu st deliberately try to keep
the player-piano upon a high level, as a more
or less exclusive and limited hi gh-grade piece
of merchandi se (which meant practi cally dictat­
ing the policy of his dealers), or else he must
abandon any attempt to do anything of the kind
and fore go any distinct advantage which might
accrue to him from the introduction of the
player mecryanism into the pia no, simply taking
upon himself the added burden of player in­
stallation, without any additional net gain per
unit of money investe d. The alternatives were
plain; but the action of the manufacturers was
not in doubt for a moment. The few high­
grade men stuck to the first plan, th e commer­
cial men took the second path. And the player
bu sin ess started down the hill.
Now, one is not concerned to deny that the
result of the commercialization was to increase
largely th e output of. players and to popul ar ize
the se lf-p layin g instrument througho ut the
len g th and bread th o f th e la nd . The fa ct, how­
ever, remains that just as soo n as the player
was thrown into the heap with the rest of th e
pianos, to be dealt with as each individual d ealer
thought be st, all a tt empt at intelli gent, system ­
a tic promotion was from that moment n eces ­
sarily abandon ed. The r es ult we all know. It
was said that " the public must be cater ed to."
Tha t meant that all intelli gen t demonstr a ti o n
must be given up. The music must be "pop­
ula r" and popular only. Then the player-piano
mus t be built s o that a nyone could m~ke some
so rt of music with it, althou gh to make very
good music with it would thu s become very
di ffi cul t, if not impossible, to a ny save a very
sk ill ed manipulator. Delicate d evices mu st be
taboo. I ntelligence mu st disappear; a nd the
public must have what the public wa nts.
A ll of which has led th e player-piano to the
pass where, when the reproducing piano came
along, the principal energy for its promotion
was to be found in an inten se d esire for some­
thing which would give any kind of mu sic tol­
erably well without human interve ntion, s in ce
th a t las t had become s o into lerable as serio us ly
to prejudi ce th e sa le of the ordinary player­
piano, owing to public dislik e of its perform­
ances.
I s it a ny wonder that one of the wise st
and cl ea rest-h eaded ma nufa c tur ers of th e ordi­
na ry player-piano has undertaken a vast scheme
of public educational promotio n for his in s tru­
ments? And is it not sad to think that after
twenty-five years it should now be necessary
to be g in all over again?
Along Which Road?
Well, if all th is be the case, it is evident tha t
th e reproducing piano is doom ed to go the same
road and tre ad the same pat h towa rds det e ri o ra­
tion, unless we do something to corre ct the
de s tructive tendency befo re it becomes too
s trong for us. Duri ng the pas t two years th e
reproducing piano has shown wonderful vi tality,
and has been the most consp ic uou s element in
the whole trade, attracting the major share of
public attention, mostly friendly, if not ent hu­
s iastic. It is !low in a position where we ca n
do with it a lm os t anyth ing we wish. We can
ca rry it on and make it th e biggest influence
for the expans ion of musical culture and of
music buyin g among the America n peopl e : o r
we can let it slide, com mercialize it and aban­
don it to the individual eccentricities of the
indi vidu a l dealers. If we do the one thing we
sha ll prese rve it and gradually carry it up to
unh eard-of prosperity. If we do the other we
shall have a few s hort bursts of prosperity,
followed inevitably by a steady and ever faster
decline.
There is reall y no third possi bili ty. Th e alter­
natives here presented exclude a ny other con­
tingency. It is this or nothing: a nd th e entire
d ecision is up to us, to our intelligence, to our
fore sight.
Salesmanship: Wise and Unwise
There are influ e nc es in the trade which think
of nothing save immediate output and imme­
diate possible volume of sales. Now, vo lum e
of sales is of the essence of s uccessful bu sin ess.
We all want sales, and as many sales as pos­
sible. But that is one thing : and to concentrate
upon selling, to anybody, at any price and on
any term s, whate ve r type or sty le of instru­
lJ1ent happens to present at the m oment th e
most plausible appeal, is simply to destroy any
exclusive qualities that ins trument may ever
have had, and any advantage in selling appeal
wh ich may eve r have been assoc iate d w ith it ..
In a word, the moment one p uts the repro duc­
ing piano on a commercia l level wi th the o ther
types one des troys a ll the adva nt ages which
have bee n pai nfully and expensively won by
cos tl y advertising and promotion work of all
kinds.
We sho uld not wish to be called pessimistic,
but it is necessar y to look a t facts straigh t.
The piano trade, or at leas t a large part Qf it,
has s ho wn a lam en ta bl e lack of foresightedness
an d of keen bu s in ess sense in its handling of
the regular player-piano. ' I s th ere any guar­
antee th at it will show any be tt er sense with
t he r eprod uce r ?
Of co urse, ther e is no way to g ua ran tee goo d
sense and int elli ge nce on the part of the retail
trade. It is, th erefore, all the more necessary
for manufacturers to preserve the reproducing
pia no's exclus iveness and its immense selling
appea l by refusing the temptation to cheapen it
or to let it ge t unre servedly into th e hand s of
persons who are tot ally in capa ble of ha ndling
it as it deserves.
Th e past year has been a great reproducing
piano year. 1924 ough t by a ll principl es to be
a bett er one. But it will not, becau se it can ­
not, be a better one unless the wisdom which
has hith erto chara cterize d the policy of the
ma nufa ct ure rs be s teadily ma intai ned. If, in a
wo rd, th e manufacturers insist o n keeping the
merch a ndising policies in their own hands, t hey
will certainly g-et back all their pa st expe ndi­
tUI'es on promotion with a profit. If th ey relax,
they will as surely suffer.
SKLAREVSKI RECORDS FOR AMPICO
Noted Russian Pianist Also to Use Knabe Piano
on Forthcomin.g Recital Tour
Alexa nd er Sk larevsk i, latest of the not ed Rus­
s ia n pianists to announc e a con cert to ur of the
Cnited States, has been . added to the list of
exc lu sive Ampico artis ts.
NIl'. Sklarevski was formerly dire cto r of the
Imperia l Co ns ervato ry of Music at Sa ratov,
Ru ssia. H e made hi s first New York appear­
a nce in 192 1, returning th ereafter to Eu rope,
an d now comes back to Amer ica for an exte nded
tour.
Few pianists wh o have visited this co untr y
have bee n received wit h suc h un animo us ap­
proval, both by audiences and critics, as was
recorded in Mr. Sklar evski's bri ef to ur two
yea rs ago and his name is a notable add iti o n
to the di s tin gui she d list of artists reco rdin g
for the Ampico as well as th ose who use the
Knabe p iano.
SUPERINTENDENTS TO MEET LATER
Owing to th e heav y demand upon piano fac­
tories. durin g th e holiday season and the co n­
se qu ent activity of th e wo rkin g for ces, the De­
cemb~r mee tin g of the Superintendents' Club
of the New Yo rk Pi a no Manufacturers' Asso­
ciat ion was postpon ed. The next meeting wi ll
be held in January.
DIGGLES MUSIC CO. OPENS
SACRAMF.NTO, CAL., December 21. .. The.: H. E .
Diggle s Mu s ic Co. h eld its formal opening re­
ce nt ly in the new sto re in the Pub li c Market
Build tng a t Thirteenth a nd J streets. The firm
wi ll ope ra te as a piano exchange.

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