Music Trade Review

Issue: 1924 Vol. 79 N. 26

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
DECKMBER 27, 1924
THE
MUSIC TRADE
REVIEW
15
Increasing the Demand for the Player
Piano Industry Represents the Remarkable Economic Phenomenon of Being a Static in Its Relation to the
Wealth and Population of the Market — Some of the Considerations Underlying This
Condition as They Relate to the Merchandising of the Player-Piano
NY one who has ever given his serious
thought to the problems of the player
business knows that one of the most im-
portant among them is the problem of increas-
ing consumption, the problem of forcing up the
..ales figures, of increasing the volume of busi-
ness. It is, of course, a commonplace to say
that in some sense just this is the problem of
every industry; yet in the present case there are
elements of special urgency which are to a large
extent peculiar, and not to be solved by any
process of reasoning from analogies presented
by other trades. In fact, there are really no
analogies" worth considering between the lead-
ing aspects of the sales problems in the piano
business and the same features of other indus-
tries.
The player end of the piano business, which
we shall here specially consider, differs from
the straight piano end chiefly in being more
attractive in one way and less attractive in
another. The player is more attractive in that
anyone can use it, and less attractive in that
it costs more money. We may, however, as-
sume for the present purpose that the two
factors cancel each other and that the ques-
tion of sales and of volume of business in the
player industry is on much the same level as
in all others within the same general field.
A Static Industry
It is one of the most curious facts of in-
dustrial history, and a constant wonder to the
statistician, that the sales of pianos and player-
pianos remain so nearly constant from year
to year. If we take the average of these sales
for the past twenty years we shall find that,
while the ratio of players to pianos has con-
stantly been approaching unity, the total sales
in numbers of instruments have never been far
below or far above the one average figure of
three hundred thousand per annum. During
the whole of this period there has only been
one year during which the number of items
made and sold has dropped below two hundred
thousand, and that was during the recent post-
war depression. On the other hand the num-
ber has never yet risen above four hundred
thousand, and the maximum was reached dur-
ing one twelve-month some fifteen years ago,
although the corrected figures for 1923 may
alter the statement.
In other words, the piano business has dif-
fered from most others in showing neither a
progressive decline nor a steady increase. It
has managed to continue in something like a
nearly stabilized condition year after year,
never falling as low as more active trades do
in the worst years or rising as high as these
others in years of great prosperity.
Now the player-piano is the piano of the
future, or rather it may be said more accurately
that the player-piano in its various forms will
divide the field with the grand piano, through
the next few years at least. It is therefore
of the utmost importance to gain some clear
notion of why, in spite of the undoubted
growth in the numbers of player-pianos as
compared with their "straight" fellows, the
total figures of the output of pianos are so
astonishingly stable. If the ordinary progress
were being registered, the number of player-
pianos sold should increase relatively to the
increase of population year by year as well as
relatively to the numbers of other pianos sold.
Why is it then that the player-piano, active
as its sales have been, does not sell much
more readily?
In cases like these one is usually safe in turn-
A
ing to history and trying to read from its pages
some valuable lesson to apply to present con-
ditions. Now history tells us that the player-
piano in its first days was "put upon the map"
of the piano trade and also impressed upon
the mentality of the people everywhere by the
elaborate and systematic efforts of the manu-
facturers, who, at first alone and in the face
of almost open hostility, demonstrated that
there was a genuine market for the new instru-
ment, and that this market could be expanded
by wise methods to almost any imaginable ex-
tent. No one who knows the history of the
period 1898-1908 will attempt to deny the truth
of this statement.
It was the work of the manufacturers that
ploughed and cultivated the ground in the first
place and when these men felt that they could
safely turn over the results of .their work to
the dealers they left a ground well tilled and
sown, showing all signs of being ready to bear
a fine crop. This too cannot be denied.
On the other hand, if we consider the his-
tory of the following ten years we cannot help
seeing that the slowness of the growth of the
player business during that time is to be at-
tributed to the fact that for the campaign of
exploitation was substituted a campaign of bar-
gain offerings. Instead of continuing to labor
to build up a quality idea in the public mind,
the trade believed that the best way to large
production and corresponding sales volume was
to be found in assuming that the public was
sufficiently sold on the whole idea of the
player to be ready to come into the market with
its money in great quantities if only prices
could be cut to something like moderate di-
mensions, nearer to the prices of ordinary
pianos. There can be no doubt that the trend
of invention and of mechanical progress within
the player trade, which permitted the quantity
production of player actions suited for any
make of piano, did much to bring about the
state of mind which favored the policy we
have described. Nor can it be denied that the
immediate result was to boost up the volume
of player business. The figures show the facts
beyond any doubt.
On the other hand, it has equally to be ad-
mitted that when the novelty had worn off,
the public did not continue to come into the
market with the early eagerness. There came
a slackening of volume, relatively to the growth
in population, and by degrees the trade found
it necessary to resort to new schemes to stimu-
late sales. All these newer schemes, however,
depended in one way or another upon the idea
of low prices as the principal magnetizing ele-
ment. All the contest schemes and other sales
stimulators have depended upon this bait.
And Yet It Has Not Worked!
Still, the volume of business has not increased
in accord with the registered increases either in
population or in public purchasing power. It
ought to be evident by now that the trade
has in reality been barking up the wrong tree
for some years.
It ought to be evident, that is to say, that
the trade has forgotten that the player-piano
was too revolutionary an invention to be taken
up by the public mind within four or five years.
Ten or fifteen years of steady exploitation
would have done the trick. But the player-
piano never had so much. Tt had only five
years of worth-while exploitation, and during
these it made for itself whatever position it
has since maintained. If it is to be built up
into the bigger, better position one expects for
it, then the sound, even if elderly, policy of
exploitation must again be brought forward.
That, one thinks, is the lesson of history.
A lot of time consumed and space occupied
in telling a very simple story, perhaps! Yet
if simplicity and even obviousness were guaran-
tees of attention and interest, there would be
no need to write this article, which indeed could
not have been written, for there would not
have been the present state of affairs to deal
with. It is because the plain lesson has gone
unheeded that one must speak in words, as it
were, of one syllable.
Let us get back, at the beginning of a new
year, to the old policy, to the old principle.
The field is white to the harvest, but the har-
vesters must use the appropriate tools if they
are to cut down the wheat cleanly and gather
it up neatly. The player business is crying out
once more for competent retail exploitation.
Its salvation will be there and nowhere else.
And exploitation means what it meant a quar-
ter century ago. It means selling the idea of
the player-piano as the one great music-bringcr
again to the people. It is an idea which no
event, inventions or development of the past
two decades has done aught to weaken. The
musical appeal of the player-piano is as power-
ful as ever; but even the most powerful weapon
rusts if it be disused, not to say misused.
Let us get back to the musical exploitation
of the player-piano.
New Organ Manufacturers
to Move to Portland, Ore.
William Wood Organ Co., Inc., Formerly Lo-
cated in Hillsboro, Ore., to Move Plant to
Portland and Expand Its Activities
PORTLAND, ORE., December 20.—The William
Wood Organ Co., Inc., with William Wood as
president, which was organized recently with
headquarters in Hillsboro, two miles from here,
has decided to move to Portland and has
leased a factory site at 101 Thirteenth street
and will move to its new location after the
first of the new year, and will be in a position
to construct organs of all sizes. The company
since starting in business has installed a num-
ber of organs in various parts of the Pacific
northwest and recently installed four instru-
ments in Hillsboro and in Portland at the Nob
Hill and Ideal Theatres. They are now instal-
ling a $14,000 organ at the new theatre at
Twenty-first and Hoyt streets, in Portland.
New Store in Woburn, Mass.
WOBURN, MASS., December 20.—A general music
store, called the Music & Novelty Shop, has
just been opened here by James J. Costello at
516 Main street. Mr. Costello is known to local
patrons as an actor, having appeared here last
season on the Keith circuit. His popularity as
an entertainer has drawn a consistent patronage
to his fnusic store.
Fox in New Quarters
SOUTH NORWALK, CONN., December 22.—New
quarters are to be taken soon by the Alfred
Fox Piano Co. at Marshall and North Main
streets. The new warerooms are being remod-
eled and will be ready for occupancy some time
in January.
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE
16
MUSIC TRADE
REVIEW
Special Window Displays Mark Holiday
Drive of Salt Lake City Merchants
Display of Beesley Music Co. Especially Notable Among the Windows of the City—Prospects
for the Coming Year Reported to Be Very Good
CALT LAKE CITY, UTAH., December 19.—
It is too early yet to say anything definite
regarding the volume of Christmas business
which the music merchants of the city will en-
joy this year. Christmas day is a week away
and the last two or three days are usually the
busiest ones—worth more than the preceding
six or seven days, as a rule. Band and or-
chestra instruments are selling well, according
to some of the firms which are pushing them
most. Phonographs appear to be normal for
the season, if not a little better. Records are
selling well with Christmas numbers in rather
good demand on the whole. Pianos are not
moving very fast. Here and there one is told
il is very much alive. The sheet music busi-
ness is normal, at least.
There were some interesting window adver-
tisements this year. The one which attracted
the most attention, perhaps, was that of the
Beesley Music Co. It consisted of a toy train
driven by electricity and loaded with pianos,
Victrolas and other musical merchandise headed
for the Beesley company. One carriage was
filled with tiny Victor dogs and looked very
quaint and amusing. There was a regular depot
and siding in miniature with telegraph and
telephone lines and everything that goes with
a railroad industry. Tiny bells were ringing
to represent the bells on a train. The mer-
chandise on the trucks was supposed to be for
use at a Victor carnival going on at the store,
and there were gaily dressed couples in a f erris
wheel which actually revolved and which was
propelled by a small steam engine. This win-
dow attracted large crowds during the busy
parts of the day. It was gotten up by George
Barzee, the company's mechanician, who in-
tended it originally for the amusement of his
small children, but the management of the
store thought it so good he was persuaded to
show it to the public through the company's
window. The south window of Daynes-Becbe
Music Co. had a turntable tilled with merchan-
dise representing every department of the big
store, or representative of it, where the articles
were too large. A piano and phonograph were
in the background. In the north window was
ji night scene with an animated window with
stars blinking and clouds passing over the
moon. At the Consolidated Music Co. there
was a married couple listening to a son play a
Conn cornet. It was a homelike atmosphere
and a few large instruments in addition to band
1880
1924
Quality—Service
You will realize a
Greater Profit in 1924
on
Our Dependable Quality
Pianos and Player-Pianos
Write for Prices, Terms and Calalop. also
The New Detailed Feature* Concerning Our Make
WEYDIG PIANO CORP.
133rd St. and Brown PI.
New York City
A REPUTABLE PIANO LINE!
BOARDMAN & GRAY
UPRIGHT, GRAND, PLAYER, REPRODUCING
"Piano Makers 87 Years"
Catalogue ftn j Open
Albany, N. Y.
Territory on Request
and orchestra instruments were on view. The
Glen Bros.-Roberts Co. had an attractive win-
dow devoted to band and orchestra instruments
chiefly.
The industrial outlook is good. Better than
it was a year ago at this time. The metal
mining industry is showing signs of renewed
vigor, while the heavy snow falls of recent date
are believed to be a guarantee that the farmers
will have a good crop next Fall. Last year
the crops were light on account of a water
shortage due to a light snow fall during the
preceding Winter, largely. The outlook for the
tourist business, too, is exceptionally good.
Everyone is agreed on this.
Testing Twelve Baldwin
Grands on Stage
CINCINNATI, ()., Decemher 20.— Recently twelve
Baldwin concert g.and pianos, selected at ran-
DECEMBER 27,
1924
R. F. I'erry, of the Brunswick Co., of this
city, had his Essex coach stolen from in front
of the Brunswick offices the other day. At this
writing the police have not succeeded in finding
it.
Harry O'Loughlin, of O'Loughlin's, on South
Main street, has returned from Oakland, Cal.,
whither he went recently on the death of his
brother, manager of an optical firm in that
city.
Manager Ray* Carlson, of the Thatcher Mu-
sic Co., of Logan, is an enterprising gentleman.
The other day he got permission to give a
street dance at night and furnished the music
via radio. There arc to be more of these con-
certs, he said.
Florence Jepperson Madscn, sister of Mr.
Jepperson, one of the proprietors of the Glove
Music and Photo Co., of 1'rovo, has been
selected to sing the contralto role at the Mes-
siah here on New Year's Day. Mrs. Madsen
is one of the most prominent women vocalists
in tlic State.
Buying of pig iron has now subsided in such
piano manufacturing centers as New York,
Philadelphia and Cincinnati, but continues on a
large scale in Chicago, Boston and Cleveland.
During the past week foundry iron has ad-
vanced half a dollar to $23.05 Cincinnati, and
Testing Baldwin Grands
dom from stock in the factory, were installed basic iron is up a dollar to $22.50 delivered
on the stage of the Emery Auditorium, the lead- eastern Pennsylvania.
ing recital hall in Cincinnati. The arrangement
is shown by the accompanying illustration.
Each of these instruments was played sepa-
rately by an experienced musician, and the tone
HAWTHORNE, CAL., December 18.—O. E. Carr, of
was.judged by a group of twenty-five experts
in tone production, these being from the Bald- El Segundo, has taken a lease on the new build-
win factories. This was done in order that the ing at 321 North Hawthorne avenue and will
pianos might be heard under precisely the same open a music store here shortly. Mr. Carr will
condition as that under which they are played handle the Brunswick line of phonographs and
in concerts, for which service they are primarily records, and is planning toi make use of the ex-
intended. This is an excellent illustration of cellent show window in the store for displaying
the extreme care which the Baldwin factories this line of merchandise. He was formerly a
exercise to insure that every instrument con- partner in the music house of Carr & Brady,
forms to the highest standards and reaches ar- of El Segundo.
Plans are under way to exploit the line in
tistic perfection.
an intensive fashion.
To Handle Brunswick Line
Strong Buying Movement
in the Pig Iron Market
Flood of Orders Booked for Iron During the
Fall Reflects the Improvement in Industrial
Conditions Generally—Prices Advance
The buying movement in pig iron, according
to recent market reports, has been the largest
in years. It has about run its course, but fur-
naces now have such a backlog of orders that
they are increasing production and continue to
advance prices. It is thought that 1,500,000
tons of iron have been booked since the first
of November, which compares with a volume
of business of 1,000,000 tons during the bulge
in buying a year ago.
Consult the Universal Want Directory of
teview. In it advertisements are inserted
free of charge for men who desire positions.
Jf lorep
MAKERS OF
SUPERIOR QUALITY
<&ranb |3tanos
WASHINGTON, NEW JERSEY

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