Music Trade Review

Issue: 1926 Vol. 82 N. 17

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
The Music Trade Review
But that provides no answer. If the automobile developed as
a formidable competitor to the piano, the player-piano entered the
field, making every family a direct prospect for the product of the
piano factory. This alone offset trie so-called new competitive
elements and invalidates the piano man's immediate reaction to those
figures.
The piano industry during those years developed the widest
market that it has ever possessed in its history and, despite that fact,
it showed this startling relative decline. The player-piano made
music available to the great masses of the people; yet the piano in-
dustry failed to sell it to them.
The average family is worth more than twice as much in money
to-day as it was in 1900. These figures are, of course, slightly de-
ceiving, as the cost of living has showed a great advance during that
period as well. But despite this fact, real income, that is income
measured in purchasing power, has also shown a marked advance.
The increase in wealth figured in money has been faster than the
increase in expense figured in real purchasing power. There is a
greater margin to-day than there has ever been in the history of the
country. Yet, despite this fact, the piano industry has shown a rel-
ative decline. The answer is not to be found in the alleged inability
of the average family to pay the price for an instrument.
Conditions have very little to do with this entire situation.
Methods have everything to do with it. That is a fact that must be
constantly carried in mind. The fault must be found inside the
industry, for it does not exist outside of it.
What was the trouble ? First of all, it may be found, in a cer-
tain degree, but in a relatively minor one, in the manufacturing
problems of the industry. It was a transitional period, one that is
not completed as yet. At the opening of the century piano making
was largely a bench industry. Ever since 1900 it has gradually been
becoming what may be termed, in the full sense of the word, a mod-
ern factory industry. It was one of the last of American industries
to undergo this change, and like all of them, while undergoing it, it
has suffered from a certain period of stagnation. But, as has been
said above, that is only a relatively minor cause and may largely be
disregarded in consideration of the problem.
The problem was primarily a merchandising one. The industry
has not kept pace with modern merchandising methods. It has not,
with but few exceptions, sold the American people in the way they
want to be sold, in the way they have been taught to expect to be
sold, in the way in which the main currents of merchandising prac-
tice have developed during the past twenty-five years. It has too
often stemmed the current instead of swimming with it. And stem-
ming the current invariably means slow progress, or none at all.
Basically, the industry has not created a broad fundamental
market for its product. It has sold pianos as such, not what a per-
son gets from a piano. It has lacked imagination, with the result
that its prospective purchasers have similarly suffered from that
lack and have failed to buy. The competing merchandiser, who
worked upon his prospect's imagination, who visualized with him
the pleasure and profit that he would derive from the product, was
the man who got the business.
Before the automobile could become popular that industry itself
had to sell the idea of good roads. In 1901 there were twenty miles
of concrete road in the entire United States. To-day such roads
are found in every section of the country. No problem ever faced
the piano industry which had such complexity and required so
Mason & Hamlin in Concert
The schedule of concerts and recitals in which
the Mason & Hamlin concert grand is being
used during April in the vicinity of New York
City was released this week as follows: April
1, Victor Prahl at Aeolian Hall; April 5, Oskon
Onoton (a Mohawk Indian) at Town Hall; April
6, New York Historical Society at New York His-
torical Hall; April 7, Rudko-Morrini at Carnegie
Hall; April 7, Louise Stalliings at Aeolian Hall;
April 8, Boston Symphony at Carnegie Hall; April
9, Harriet Seymour at Aeolian Hall School;
much ingenuity to solve it, for to sell automobiles good roads had
to be sold, while the piano man had but to sell music. Which was
the more difficult problem of the two?
To-day the piano industry's problem is to make piano players.
The only direct way of selling the piano in the proper ratio to its
natural market is to cultivate among the children of the country the
desire to play, to make it easy for them to learn, to make it possible
for every child to study at low cost or gratuitously, and thus to
bring selling pressure to bear on the family of that child through the
most direct approach.
It is by no means as big a problem as appears at first glance.
The preliminary steps have already been taken. Instrumental in-
struction, including the piano, is already available in many of the
grade and high schools. More and more are making it available
every year.
But the piano industry, including both merchants and manu-
facturers, cannot afford to wait for the natural growth of this de-
velopment. It needs stimulation and co-operation. It needs the
work and support of the industry as a whole through its associated
activities, and more than that, it needs the aid and support of every
retail piano merchant in his own territory.
"Make America a Nation of Music-Makers" is simply carrying
"Make America Musical" one step further.
The Review has already told of the work that is being done by
some individual piano merchants in all sections of the country in
providing gratuitous instruction on the piano for children through
systems that hold their interest and attention, and by which they
make rapid and direct progress. The mystery surrounding the art
of manipulating the keyboard is gradually being stripped away by
this work. More of it must be and will be done, and the results, in
an increased unit output, will be directly proportionate to the amount
of work that is accomplished.
If the piano industry had held its own during the past twenty-
five years, if it had not made a single clear advance in output over
the natural increase that should have come from the increase in its
market—and this is disregarding the much wider market which it
possessed through the development of the player-piano—it would be
making a good many more instruments to-day than it actually is.
And it would not be in a position where the total value of its
annual output is not equal to the amount of invested capital which
it has.
In other words, it would not be confronted with the problem
of idle factory space, a problem that creates a tax in increased over-
head on every piano and player-piano that is sold.
In all this situation there is no cause for pessimism. Rather it
is a cause for stimulation, for self-analysis, for examination, for
thought and for resolution.
The application of modern selling methods by certain producing
units in the industry has shown what can be achieved in greater out-
puts. Every piano man knows those houses.
But what is needed is not a transfer of business from one pro-
ducing unit to another. What is needed is an advance in the total
output and this can only be had by going out and making a funda-
mental market for the instrument, by developing the amateur musi-
cian, by making the coming generation a generation of music-
makers. Work and brains are needed and the piano industry has
them in sufficient quantities to do the job and do it right. The
sooner it starts the better.
April 11, Alba Nardone at Aeolian Hall; April
11, Yourge Bilstin at Aeolian Hall; April 12,
Harold Bauer, Beethoven Association, at Town
Hall; April 13, Carolyn Le Fevre at Aeolian
Hall; April 14, Walter Hansen, Banks Glee Club,
at Carnegie Hall; April 15, Frank Sheridan, Re-
cital, at First Presbyterian Church, Brooklyn;
April 16, Combined University Choral Clubs at
Aeolian Hall; April 17, Harold Bauer, Harvard
Glee Club, at Town Hall; April 18, Junior Mu-
sical League at Aeolian Hall; April 20, Ossip
Gabrilowitsch, Lenox String Quartet, at Town
Hall; April 21, Harvard Glee Club at Summit,
PIANO
APRIL 24, 1926
SCARFS
N. J.; April 22, Harvard Glee Club at Passaic,
N. J.; April 24, Bauer-Gabrilowitsch at Carnegie
Hall; April 26, Philomelelia Society at Academy
of Music, Brooklyn; April 27, Paul Van Vleet at
Town Hall.
Waltamath Canton Manager
CANTON, O., April 18.—Al Waltamath, for sev-
eral years identified with the Alford & Fryar
Piano Co., in management of branch stores in
different eastern Ohio cities, has been placed in
charge of the new Fourth street store.
PIANO
COVERS and BENCH-CUSHIONS
0. SIMMS MFfi. CO.. 103-5 Weit 14th St.
OSCO
DlaaoM
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
The Field for the Player Piano Is As
Large As Ever It Has Been
Campaign to Make Piano Players in No Way Reacts Against the Player and Reproducing Piano—Player-
Piano To-day the Piano Industry's Most Powerful Weapon for Cultivating Musical Feeling Among
the Adults of the Nation—Why the Industry Must Hark Back to First Principles
T
H E piano trade is responding to the very freakish music), the reproducing piano will not
strong gospel which is being preached in of itself supply the vacancy; for the reproducing
The Review and which takes for its text piano can be used by any one who has the
the present uncertainties and difficulties of piano money to buy it, which means that those whose
selling. There is of course no escape from the taste is bad will use it to satisfy that taste, or
logic of the situation. If piano sales have re- will not use it at all.
mained depressingly stationary, year by year for
What then about the pedal player-piano?
decades, while the population has increased by
This is pre-eminently the player-piano of the
scores of millions (250 per cent in 50 years), masses and it is also pre-eminently the most
and the national wealth has been multiplied to definite and obvious medium for the conveyance
an extent which shows material prosperity to be of musical ideas into homes which have never
enjoyed by the mass of the inhabitants such enjoyed their possession. It is even better in
perhaps as has never before in history been heard this respect, for the masses, than the great re-
of, it is certain that the cause is to be found in producing piano, for the latter is at its best
something not at all connected with the price when it is supplying to the already musical
or the bulk or the functions of this musical in- home additional musical atmosphere, something
strument. If, moreover, as we know to be true, which does not exist among the masses, but
piano sales do not increase even in proportion which the piano trade, if it is to survive, not to
to the annual growth of national expenditures say expand, must somehow contrive to awaken.
on music, it is evident that we must look pretty
What the Player Does
far beneath the surface for a satisfactory ex-
The pedal player-piano does seem here to
planation.
occupy a very important middle ground. It is
This has now been furnished, adequately and automatic, in the sense that sounds can be pro-
completely. It was set forth two weeks ago in duced from it at the cost merely of mechanical
the form of an editorial in The Review which actions, by the human user. On the other hand,
has been read throughout the industry and the it lends itself to such remarkable artistic de-
retail trade with the interest and attention it velopment, it can in fact be played so extremely
merits. And the gist of it is simply this: that satisfactorily and well, that although it does not
Americans have been for the last thirty years impart the same theoretical and practical knowl-
educated, in the mass, to be listeners and not edge of music which is to be obtained by actual
makers of music.
study at the keyboard, it does do something
And the remedy is to reverse the process and else very nearly as good, and in some ways
to take up the simple but eminently sound prac- even better. For those adults who can no longer
tice of bringing before the children of the land begin the study of practical piano playing with
during those years when mind and body most any hope of success, the pedal player-piano gives
readily respond to musical prompting the beauty a great power of musical command. It enables
and the opportunity of learning to play the an intelligent person to acquire a quite uncanny
piano. To get the piano into education, into the ability to phrase, accentuate, color and generally
schoolroom, to get piano-playing recognized as interpret piano music. It affords the means to
a cultural study, with its place in educational an education in music appreciation which is
credits; in a word to bring piano-playing back simply not surpassed by any other, and possibly
to the place it once occupied (though only for not even equaled. No other in the whole list
a short time) as the universal accomplishment, of musical instruments so completely possesses
and to bring the sales of pianos back along these powers.
with it.
If then the piano trade should take into se-
All of which is admirable; but we have now rious consideration any practical project for
to consider this question: what effect will all enlarging the present practice of piano playing
this have on the player-piano?
among the younger people of the nation it also
Weakness of Passive Attitude
should try to realize that the pedal player-piano
One thing is certain, that we are developing is its most powerful weapon for cultivating the
too much of a passive attitude among the boys musical feelings of the adults. It is musical
and girls of the present age. The automatic feeling, musical atmosphere, which the nation
in the piano has been overdone. That does not lacks and from the nation's lack of which the
mean to say that the genuine reproducing piano piano trade is suffering. The pedal player-piano
is not a valuable element in our present-day helps wonderfully to produce and then improve
culture. On the contrary, the reproducing piano this atmosphere.
is doing an invaluable work for musical culture,
Realize the Facts
simply by bringing into the home the best of
Therefore the piano trade should realize facts,
music done by the best musicians in the best look the situation in the face, and cease making
way. There can be no doubt of the value of the pedal player-piano the bait of bargain sales
an instrument which will do this.
or the cheap stuff for cheap people which to
On the other hand, the same mechanism which so alarming an extent it has become. If indeed
will give us the interpretations of great music the case is hopeless, if the pedal player-piano
by a great musician will give us equally well has lost forever its once great position, then of
the cheapest and the silliest of music; so that . course nothing can be done. But is this so?
the reproducing piano does not furnish, merely It may be; but is it?
by reason of its existence, any guarantee that
We think it is not so. We think that though
the musical atmosphere of the nation, which is the piano trade has been blind and stupid, its
what we must improve if piano sales, and thus blindness has only come from the refusal to
the whole industry, are to be enlarged per- open its eyes. Unless one is hopelessly in error,
manently into a healthy condition is to be per- the piano trade can go back to intelligence, and
ceptibly refined. In other words, if the musical to selling by teaching the prospect how to play.
feeling is not there, if there is not the love for There of course is the one secret which the
the piano and for piano music already (which trade has always imagined to be so terribly
means at least the love for healthy and not for obscure; yet it is the simplest of secrets. More-
over, there is no other than this. No other pos-
sible selling method is worth talking about. For
every other one, every patent evasion of prin-
ciple, has been tried and found wanting.
This then is one corollary to the undoubted
truth that the piano industry must hark back to
first principles.
Bent Co. Announces
New Concord Line
Includes a Grand, Four Feet Ten Inches, a
Player-Piano and Two Styles of Uprights
LOUISVILLE, KY., April 19.—The Geo. P. Bent
Piano Co. has added to its line of instruments
four pianos bearing the name Concord, which
was formerly used by the Bent Co. for a number
of years for the designation of instruments that
met with wide favor in the trade.
The new Concord line has been produced in
response to the demand from Bent dealers for
an instrument that might be offered to the public
at a slightly lower price than that asked for
the Crown, and the company officials feel that
they have accomplished a real feat in producing
for the new line instruments that measure up in
every particular to the company's standards for
structural and tonal qualities, the lower price
being made possible through economies effected
in production methods and confined primarily to
details of case work.
The new Concord line includes a grand meas-
uring four feet ten inches, a player-piano and
two uprights, all of which will be illustrated and
described in detail in a new catalog now in
preparation. A new Crown catalog is also in
the hands of the printer and will include descrip-
tive matter relative to recent additions to that
line in the form of a new player and a new
upright.
It is significant that the company has en-
joyed a particularly satisfactory first quarter
with sufficient volume of orders on hand to in-
sure the continued activity of the factory until
Midsummer at least, in fact, in certain depart-
ments it has been found necessary to operate
night shifts temporarily.
During the past nine months the sales organi-
zation of the company, under the direction of
Charles McConville, has been developing on a
sound basis, with a result that there has been
established a substantial chain of Crown repre-
sentatives throughout the country and particu-
larly east of the Mississippi. The company is
also rapidly gaining ground in the West and this
spreading of representation is reflected in the
amount of business that is coming to the Bent
factorv.
Irving Dover Lovett Dies
CANTON, O., April 19.—Word has been received
in Canton of the death of Irving Dover Lovett,
aged seventy-two. Mr. Lovett, a former resi-
dent of Canton, engaged in the piano business,
died from pneumonia and a complication of dis-
eases in Mercy Hospital, Fort Dodge, la. Fu-
neral services were held at the Young funeral
parlors in Fort Dodge, and interment was in
Oakland Cemetery. The deceased is survived
by his widow, and one daughter, Mrs. Karl
King, wife of the noted bandmaster, now in
cliargj of leading bands in that city.

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