Music Trade Review

Issue: 1926 Vol. 82 N. 15

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
The Music Trade Review
pleasure of those about them, who can express themselves on the
keyboard in a way that will meet their requirements.
The future American artist can take care of himself. The Amer-
ican amateur pianist needs encouragement, aid and facilities.
We have probably completed the cycle of mechanical devices for
playing the piano. The piano player, the player-piano and the repro-
ducing piano are a wonderful sequence of inventive genius and a
monument of achievement of which the industry can well be proud.
They present a simpler merchandising problem than the straight
instrument; they have a wider appeal and to-day a wider market.
But the straight instrument remains as important an element as
it ever was, and it is the straight instrument upon which we must
concentrate to a greater degree, if we are going to solve the problems
which are confronting us to-day.
Why are not more pianos sold to American homes than there are ?
Because there are fewer piano players comparatively than in the
past.
Why has there been this relative decrease? Because playing
the piano has been made a long and difficult process, wearying to
the child and family alike.
How can we expect enthusiasm for the piano if it is too often
bound up in long practice hours of meaningless scales in a child's
mind, an impression which he or she carries into their adult life?
There is the repercussion that makes every piano sale a difficult
one, that makes a condition where, with a New York piano house
having one of the most efficient sales organizations in the country,
prospects have remained on its lists as long as nine years before
they were eventually closed.
And the worst of all this at the present time is that it is so un-
necessary. We teach every child the piano as if he OF she was to .
be a future virtuoso; we make it too much a matter of technic in-
stead of a matter of pleasure. It is to-day, as if in teaching a child
to read, we considered that he was going to be a future Walter
Hampden, and we taught elocution at the same time we were trying
to teach plain, ordinary enunciation.
Recently The Review published a program given by New Orleans
school children who had been studying the piano only six weeks.
Everyone who played, played tunes. They were doing something
that they could understand. They had achieved something, and they
had an opportunity to show what they achieved.
Is it not common sense to consider that they were future, if not
immediate, prospects for the piano merchant ? It was a piano mer-
chant who made them so, and that is work that every piano merchant
in the country should be doing to-day.
What we need is a new orientation in the entire merchandising
problem of the piano. Instead of going after a woman until she
nags her husband into buying an instrument, which is the basis of
far too great a proportion of retail piano sales at the present day,
we need to make piano players, players who take a pleasure in their
playing instead of considering it a drudgery.
Co-operation between the piano merchant and the American child
is what must be had, and it will be mutually advantageous.
Co-operation between the piano merchant and the American grade
and high school authorities is what is needed and, what is more, it
can be had if the industry will go out and get it.
"Sketches in Miniature
of Present Day Artists"
Interesting Booklet Just Issued by the Mason
& Hamlin Co. Contains Much Biographical
Matter of General Musical Interest
A little volume that should prove of real in-
terest to every musician and music lover has
just been issued by the Mason & Hamlin Co.
under the title "Sketches in Miniature of Pres-
ent Day Artists." The booklet, prepared in
elaborate
style, gives
brief
biographical
sketches of over a score of the prominent
artists of the day, including Harold Bauer,
Gabrilowitsch, John Gregory Mason, Tina
Lerner, Dame Nellie Melba, Benno Moisei-
witsch, E. Robert Schmitz, Jacques Thibaud and
others who use the Mason & Hamlin piano,
either as solo or accompanying instrument.
Under each of the biographical sketches ap-
pears a brief line of commendation for the
APRIL 10, 1026
Leave aside the three traditional Rs of education, and music has
as great a standing as any other of the cultural subjects. For if a
person can read, write and figure, his education is done. After that
comes his culture. Culture is a necessity, too, for it teaches the
appreciation of the good things of life and to take pleasure therein.
There are no educational authorities worthy of the name who dis-
pute this fact; curricula of grade and high schools become more
widely cultural every year.
There is the fertile ground that is prepared for the work of the
industry. What seed is it sowing to reap an eventual crop?
These are the unvarnished facts that confront the piano industry
to-day. To overcome them requires more than a disposition to de-
preciate them, more than a feeling of self-sufficiency and compla-
cency. Making more piano players is the only remedy which can be
tested by every one of these facts and that will stand the test. It is
the simple and obvious remedy, and, despite its simplicity and ob-
viousness, it is the true one.
It is going to cost money. Of course it is.
It is working for the dim and distant future. Only in part.
Every child that is taught the piano in school makes one family
an immediate prospect for a piano, and becomes a future prospect
for another in its maturity. The argument about the future does
not hold water, for it is working simultaneously for the present and
the future, a characteristic of every intelligent merchandising plan.
As for the money, could money be better spent ?
And the cost will not be so great. Merchants who have already
spent money on teaching children to play the piano, either gratu-
itously or at a nominal charge per lesson, have found the expense
low and the results good. In several cases this has resulted in the
schools taking up the work through co-operation with the mer-
chants; surely a handsome dividend upon the investment made.
Look at the possible results, and they are more than possible, and
then consider the expense involved.
The American people have been taught an appreciation of music.
There still remains work to be done in this direction, but the great-
est part of it has been accomplished.
What is necessary now is to turn the passivity of appreciation into
the activity of an active organism—the amateur player. The band
instrument manufacturers and dealers are in a fair way to doing it,
with the result that this is probably the fastest-growing section
in the entire music industries. Manufacturers and dealers there
have worked shoulder to shoulder.
The piano manufacturer and the piano dealer must do the same
thing. They must make amateur pianists if the piano industry is
to advance in a proper relation to the increased population and
wealth of the country and therefore the market to which it caters.
Once more it needs to be said that it is not a question of whether
the production of pianos is 200,000, 300,000 or 400,000 annually.
The question is that the piano industry must grow both in unit
output and in value output as the country grows, and that the indus-
try itself will no longer be in a position where the invested capital
exceeds the total value of the factories' outputs.
If it is satisfied, it can probably go along making approximately
300,000 instruments per year. If it is dissatisfied, it must go out
and create a fundamental market for its product.
Mason & Hamlin piano from the artist featured.
The idea is most effective in presenting worth-
while testimonials in a manner that is attrac-
tive and interesting.
Stewart-Warner in Chamber
The latest radio manufacturing concern to
apply for membership in the Music Industries
Chamber of Commerce is the Stewart-Warner
Speedometer Corp. of Chicago. Other radio
concerns which are members of the Chamber
include: The Atwater Kent Mfg. Co., the
Thermiodyne Radio Corp. and the Zenith
Radio Corp. It is expected that a number of
radio exhibits will be shown at the forthcom-
ing national convention at the Hotel Commo-
dore in June.
Consult the Universal Want Directory of
The Review. In it advertisements are inserted
free of charge for men who desire positions.
M. K. Bretzfelder Attends
State College of Forestry
Representative of Krakauer Bros., New York,
the Only Piano Manufacturer Taking Course
in Dry Kiln Engineering at Syracuse
Maurice K. Bretzfelder, of Krakauer Bros.,
piano manufacturers, has just returned from the
New York State College of Forestry at the Uni-
versity of Syracuse, Syracuse, N. Y., where he
spent some time taking a course in dry-kiln
engineering and lumber handling and its general
factory practice.
Mr. Bretzfelder reports that the course was
very interesting and worthy. He has come back
loaded with ideas for drying lumber better and
cheaper. He says that anyone connected with
lumber, either directly or indirectly, can gain
much valuable information by attending one of
these courses which are given in the Spring of
each year.
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
Eight St. Louis Piano Dealers Begin
Go-operative Advertising
St. Louis Piano Merchants Use Series of Full Page Advertisements in the St. Louis Post-Dispatch to
Counteract Effect of Campaign Against the Stencil Piano and in an Endeavor to Restore Public
Confidence in the Piano Warerooms of That City — Campaign Based on Music
T
H E R E are those of the piano trade in St.
Louis who while endorsing the thought
back of the campaign carried on in that
city by the Better Business Bureau to protect
First
the period of poor business that has faced the
piano houses for some weeks past. The higher
priced and better known instruments sold with
fair regularity, but prospects for medium and
j
Advertisement
|
. _
I
.
in Co-operative
Advertising
|
|
=
Campaign
j
Appearing
|
JKu&lc
HREE great and far-reaching in-
fluences are exerted in every
home where there is music—
T;
EASTER PROGRAM
1
An early and lasting apprecia-
tion of beauty in art.
Press of
|
Afellowship placing friendships
on the highest plane.
St. Louis
I
- in the Local
Piano Prognm
in F
Of. 24
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5
.
Popular Song Program
A love home never to he lost
through the passing years.
These are the elements making for the finer man-
hood and womanhood that all fathers and all
mothers desire to see develop in their children.
The home with music is happier There you will
find culture understanding, contentment. And at
that ant when youth must have its fling, however
innoctntlv thoughts of home restrain
The musical instrument thai accomplishes so much
is the Piano To play a Piano is universally taught:
for those who do not play there is the Player-Piano.
There is also the Reproducing Piano, with author-
ized recordings by master musicians.
If there be any one of these instruments in your
home that may happen, for one reason or another,
to be only occasionally played, the accompanying
little programs may contain something to remind
you that in the comradeship of your Piano lies sym-
pathy with every mood and entertainment for any
occasion.
If you have no Piano at all, call at a Piano store
where the sale of Pianos is a business and a service.
You will find there Pianos of various grades and at
an appropriate range of prices.
You need not, however, worry about price. All es-
tablished Piano stores sell Pianos on convenient
terms, and if you have any sort of a musical instru-
ment of which you would like to dispose, a suitable
allowance will be made for it and acreDted as part
payment.
Buy a Piano—the favorite musical instrument in
millions of homes.
cinci
the general public against bait piano advertis-
ing and the overvaluation of stencil instruments,
believe that this campaign which took the form
of display advertising in the local newspapers
and developed to a point where the Better Busi-
ness Bureau gave personal advice to prospec-
tive piano buyers, has worked to the disadvan-
tage of the trade.
That there is some basis for the belief that the
reform movement hindered sales is evident from
low priced lines appear to be affected by a
spirit of cautiousness that was evident in in-
creased sales resistance.
In an effort to overcome the inertia among
prospective piano buyers eight Olive street
piano houses have combined in a co-operative
advertising campaign using full pages in the
Post-Dispatch, the first of which appeared last
week. The newspaper has aided the merchants
in the preparation of their copy, which is of an
Tariff Commission to
Make No Casein Change
change in the rate of the duty on casein are
warranted by the data which it has been found
possible to secure in its investigation of the
cost of production in the domestic and foreign
fields.
"While the conversion costs in the United
States and in Argentina, which appears to be
the principal competing country, may be re-
garded as ascertained with reasonable accuracy,
it was impossible to obtain in Argentina data
which would establish or permit a satisfactory
computation of the cost of the primary raw
material, skimmed milk, of which casein is
made."
Supplemental reports were also made public
by the commission this week, among them being
the recommendation to reduce the tariff of 3.3
cents per pound on linseed oil to 2.7 cents per
pound. The reports have been in the hands of
the President for nearly a year.
States No Changes in Rates Are Warranted by
Data Submitted to It During Its Investi-
gation
WASHINGTON, D. C, April 3.—The Tariff Com-
mission, after making an extensive investigation
of the casein industry of the United States and
Argentina, failed to find any facts pointing to
any change in the tariff being warranted, it was
indicated in the report of the commission made
public to-day by Senator Robinson, of Arkansas,
chairman of the select committee of the Senate,
which is probing the activities of the commis-
sion. The report is summarized as follows:
"The Tariff Commission reports that, in its
judgment, no findings of fact pointing to any
impressive character and designed to emphasize
the general appeal of music in the home.
The first of these full page advertisements,
reproduced herewith, carried the caption "Play
More Music," and there were offered a half
dozen "little programs for pleasant hours with
your piano," or player-piano or reproducing
piano, with the suggestion:
"If there be any one of these instruments in
your home that may happen, for one reason or
another, to be only occasionally played, the
accompanying little programs may contain
something to remind you that in the comrade-
ship of your Piano lies sympathy with every
mood and entertainment for any occasion.
"If you have no Piano at all, call at a Piano
store where the sale of Pianos is a business and
a service. You will find there pianos of vari-
ous grades and at an appropriate range of
prices.
"You need not, however, worry about price.
All established Piano stores sell Pianos on con-
venient terms, and if you have any sort of a
musical instrument of which you would like to
dispose a suitable allowance will be made for it
and accepted as part payment.
"Buy a Piano—the favorite musical instru-
ment in millions of homes."
A number of other imposing advertisements
will be run as a part of the co-operative cam-
paign, and, although the piano men frankly
admit they that cannot expect immediate results
from their efforts, it is significant that business
began to pick up immediately after the first co-
operative advertisement had appeared.
One piano man in commenting upon the
effects of the Better Business Bureau campaign
and of the co-operative advertising that has fol-
lowed declared, "It is much the same as clear-
ing out the system of a sick man by drastic
remedies and leaving him in a weakened con-
dition, then building him up according to a
schedule that will insure his healthiness. The
piano manufacturers believe that, if advertising
will make piano prospects cautious, it is quite
possible to use the same medium for rebuilding
their confidence in the reputable piano houses of
the city and in the goods they have to offer.
Co-operative advertising has been successful
to some degree in the retail music trade, as
shown by the national campaign conducted by
the Bureau for the Advancement of Music and
individual campaigns as well.
Free Lessons in Youngstown
YOUNGSTOWN, O., April 5.—Whole classes learn
simultaneously to play the piano by means of
dummy instruments with cardboard keys at the
Yahrling-Rayner Music Co. here. Miss Bethel
Bailey is the instructress. A four-column pic-
ture of the class in session was reproduced this
week in the Youngstown papers, giving the local
music concern quite a nice bit of publicity.
To Exhibit at Outdoor Show
AKRON, O., April 6.—The George S. Dales Co.,
well-known local music house, will have an ex-
hibit of radio and portable phonographs at the
annual Outdoor Life Exhibition to be held at
Summit Beach Park for seven days, starting
Monday, April 5.

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