Music Trade Review

Issue: 1926 Vol. 82 N. 20

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
The Music Trade Review
National Music Week in San Francisco
Carried Out in Mammoth Proportions
Event Surpasses All City's Previous Celebrations—Duo-Art Appears in Many Recitals—Warren
C. Whitney a Visitor to City—Wiley B. Allen Team Wins in Golf
C AN FRANCISCO, CAL., May 7.—The mam-
moth program of Music Week is being car-
ried out in a spirit of splendid co-operation.
Young and old, rich and poor, native and for-
eign-born all seem to be giving heed to the Mu-
sic Week slogan: "Give More Thought to Mu-
sic."
All the important music houses of the city
stand behind Music Week financially and sev-
eral of them have given officers to work on
Music Week Committees. Sherman, Clay & Co.,
however, are also assisting with Duo-Art per-
formances, which are splendid features of the
week's musical activities. On May 4 and again
to-day, at the New Mission Theatre, an Houi
of Music was given under the auspices of the
Mission Merchants' Association, with the Duo-
Art in the leading role. On May 5, at the Alex-
andria Theatre, the Duo-Art appeared under the
auspices of the Geary Street Merchants' Asso-
ciation, and on May 7, at the New Fillmore
Theatre, an hour of music will be given under
the auspices of the Fillmore Street Merchants'
Association. At these performances in theatres
the music was first heard, then the curtain went
up, revealing the Duo-Art in operation. Many
of those present had never heard concerts of
such a nature before and their enthusiasm ran
high.
Duo-Art in Schools and Churches
At the Laguna Honda School, Sherman, Clay
& Co. gave the students an opportunity of
hearing a Duo-Art recital in connection with a
lecture on music. Students were also given an
opportunity of hearing the Steinway Duo-Art
at the Grant School Auditorium, the Mission
High School, the Galileo High School and the
Y. M. C. A. Auditorium. To-day there was the
Duo-Art at the First Congregational Church, at
the Y. M. C. A. Auditorium, and to-night at
the Emporium Auditorium. A concert by Sher-
man, Clay & Co. will be given on Friday in
California Hall with the Duo-Art and several
local artists and on Saturday the Emporium Au-
ditorium will be the scene of a concert by Sher-
man, Clay & Co., under the direction of John
G. Vogel, with a lecture by Rena Lazelle:
"Things Parents Should Know About Voices."
School Children Score in Music Week
Public School Day of Music was the 4th inst.,
and among the thousands of instrumentalists and
singers there were many who entered into the
spirit of the thing with such enthusiasm that
the premier music critic of the city was moved
to say: "Here are young people who take mu-
sic seriously and give their minds to it with as
much earnestness as lads of their age give to a
ball game. And a game it is to them, a deli-
cious and exhilarating game in which they do
themselves credit." It was the playing of the
"Carmen" overture by the orchestra of the Gali-
leo High School and the "Oberon" overture,
played by the boys of the Polytechnic High,
that inspired the critic's remarks, though many
of the other numbers were rendered in a way
that shows the musical advantages public
schools arc now giving. On the following day
the pupils of the parochial schools had a chance
to show their musical mettle.
Good Music Goes Like Hot Cakes
As a contribution to Music Week, Sherman,
Clay & Co. are holding a special sale of classi-
cal and semi-classical rolls, at special prices.
There is pot one jazz number in the lot, and
they are selling like the proverbial hot cakes,
many of them standard classics.
Visit the City via Santa Fe Trail
Mr. and Mrs. Warren C. Whitney have been
out here on their vacation, coming by auto over
the old Santa Fe trail to Los Angeles, and
thence to San Francisco. Mrs. Whitney is
Blanche da Costa, the singer. They visited
Sherman, Clay & Co. prior to leaving for home
via Nevada. Whitney is well-known to the mu-
sic trade here.
Mrs. A. L. Bretzfelder, wife of the treasurer
of Krakauer Bros., has left for New York, after
visiting relatives in California.
Vice-President of Schumann Piano Co. Pays
Visit
In the course of a Pacific Coast trip, Charles
B. Mclntosh, vice-president of the Schumann
Piano Co., spent a few days in this city and
called at the Hauschildt music house, which car-
ries the Schumann pianos. He has left for the
Northwest, from whence he will return to Chi-
cago.
Win by Margin of Five Points
The fourth annual golf tournament between
the players of the Wiley B. Allen Co. and Sher-
man, Clay & Co.'s golf teams was won by the
Allen men by a margin of five points. Law-
rence Lindsey and his partner, James J. Black,
of the Wiley B. Allen forces, were more than
a match for Shirley Walker and G. W. Bates,
the Sherman, Clay & Co.'s members of the four-
some. The best gross score was made by Ar-
thur Duclos, of Sherman, Clay & Co., but his
partner, Ed. Little, made one of the two high
gross scores. The winners in this foursome
were Harald Pracht and Wm. Lawrence, of the
Wiley B. Allen Co.
Well-known Instrument Man to Wed
Wedding announcements have been sent out
by Michael Howard Hernan, of this city, an-
nouncing the coming marriage of his daughter,
Kathryn Maurine, to Kurken Gagos, at Calvary
Presbyterian Church, May 18. Mr. Gagos, who
is sales manager of the H. C. Hanson Music
House, is known to every Buescher band instru-
ment man in this territory and is one of the
best-liked young men in the business.
Song Shop Goes Into Bankruptcy
It is announced that the Shapiro Song Shop,
1461 Polk street, has filed a voluntary petition
in bankruptcy. Assets are listed at $5,856 and
liabilities at $17,475.
Conn Bandsmen in School Organizations
During Music Week it has been giving much
satisfaction to G. E. Willats, who instructs the
Conn Saxophone band for the Conn San Fran-
cisco Co., to single out the boys in the school
bands who belong to the Conn band. He said
that Music Week has been doing a good deal
to make boys, and girls, too, want to play in-
struments.
Some Reasons Why Piano
Sales Are Not Larger
(Continued from page 3)
cally thrust on them over their own doorstep
they, as a rule, do not have a very impressive
balance left with which to go shopping in the
stores of those merchants who wait for the
trade to come in.
Over in Newark
The Armstrong Piano Co. is located in New-
ark, N. J., a city of some 350,000, that also in-
cludes in its population thousands of home
owners in neighboring communities, and is
within twenty minutes' ride of New York City
proper. Metropolitan stores look upon this sec-
tion of northern New Jersey as an excellent
field for sales and comb it thoroughly. Then
come the New Jersey concerns themselves, who
naturally go after things in their own bailiwicks.
In the face of this competition the Armstrong
Co. has for years consistently followed the door-
bell ringing or canvassing plan of selling and
each year has realized a very substantial turn-
over of pianos and talking machines by this
MAY 15, 1926
method. That the company has recently moved
to larger quarters in a measure offers proof of
the success of this system.
There has been much said, and rightly, upon
the necessity for the creation of a future market
for pianos.through the education of school chil-
dren in playing those instruments, but it is
pertinent to remark here that there is a real
need also for cultivating as intensively as pos-
sible the market that actually exists at present.
That cultivation, in the face of the present
strong bid for business in all lines, can best be
accomplished by taking a sales argument direct
to the home.
There are some of us who are still young
enough to hark back to our boyhood days, when
sanitary laws were not strictly enforced and
the accepted method for dividing a piece of
candy was for each kid to bite off his share.
The first youngster that called for a division
by existent rules got half the original piece.
He in turn divided on a fifty-fifty basis with
No. 2, and so on down the line until the kid
who was sixth or seventh was lucky to get even
a taste of the sweet. The youngster who was
not present at all when the division took place
was absolutely out of luck.
Much the same rule 'holds good in the sel^ng
of many commodities to-day. The first sales-
man in line whose argument is convincing
enough gets the major share of available money.
Detroit Piano Playing
Contest Still Interests
Elementary and Intermediate Grades Complete
Preliminary Trials With High Schools to
Come Next—Thousands Are Interested
DETROIT, MICH., May 8.—The Elementary and
Intermediate grades in the Greater Detroit
Piano Playing Contest have nearly all the past
week held the preliminary contests to be fol-
lowed this week in the High Schools, which
gives some line on the general success. In a
general survey it was estimated that there must
be at least 15,000 children who would be eligi-
ble to a school piano-playing contest and it was
thought that somewhere between one and a
possible 3,000 could be induced to enter, so with
more than 5,000 entered to date, the Detroit
Music Trades Association and the Detroit
Times feel that from a standpoint of numbers
it is a great success.
As the contest has progressed it has acquired
great momentum and public interest, the De-
troit Times concedes it to be one of the most
successful from these points of view ever run
in Detroit and has given more and more prom-
inence and space to the daily articles and Sun-
day spreads with numerous pictures of contest-
ants. The various winners will now be featured
over WJ R and W G H P once a week for the
next month.
All contests have been held in the various
school auditoriums open to the public, many of
the evening affairs having an attendance of a
thousand and fifteen hundred. A marked awak-
ening is already noticed in interest of children
learning the piano and the enthusiasm is re-
flected in the interest and enthusiasm of school
and.music teachers. Mr. Lewis, a judge of three
contests, asserts that he has booked fourteen
new pupils on the piano as a result of his con-
tact, others have had gratifying experiences with
the result that they are holding the contests
with great dignity. It is estimated that more
than thirty thousand have attended the nearly
200 contests so far held and the dealers are
commencing to report real business.
Many letters of inquiry and commendation
have been received from all over the country,
but it is suggested that all interested attend the
Michigan Music Merchants Convention in De-
troit August 16-17-18-19, at which time the
Grand Championship will take place, when it
can be studied first-hand and all details cheer-
fully given by the Detroit Association.
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
Answering the Question "What's the
Matter With the Piano?"
C. F. Cowan of the Hockett-Cowan Music Co., Fresno, Cal., and E. Bennett Fox Chicago Retail Music Mer-
chant, Contribute to the Discussion — See Need for Greater Degree of Support and Co-
operation From Manufacturers — Eleven Things Needed to Remedy the Present Situation
T
H E question of "What is the matter with
the piano trade" that has been asked so
frequently and insistently by The Review
in recent months has been successful in stirring
up the retailers of the country, as well as the
manufacturers, to a point where earnest consid-
eration is being given to the actual situation in
the industry, what it signifies and how it can be
improved.
Not so long ago it was the custom for piano
men to endeavor to hide the real trade condi-
tions, being apparently fearful of arousing criti-
cism if they talked frankly about a situation that
was very real and not at all visionary. There is
no question but that this centering of thought
on the problem of trade development is bound
to have a beneficial effect.
That the retailers are really in earnest in
their efforts to find ways and means for increas-
ing the piano market in a legitimate manner is
evidenced by the numerous letters being re-
ceived by The Review in commendation of its
editorial policy in the matter of throwing light
on conditions as they actually exist. Some few
merchants disagree with us in the matter of de-
tail, but in the principle of the thing they are all
of one accord.
C. F. Cowan, of the Hockett-Cowan Music
Co., Fresno, Cal., in a recent letter to The Re-
view, offers some interesting comments on what
the trade really needs. He says:
Unification of Effort Necessary
"The writer has been exceedingly interested
in your articles on the present condition of the
piano market. Your articles indicate a careful
study of the situation and I agree fundamentally
with your conclusions. However, it seems to
me that your proposed remedy starts from en-
tirely the wrong end of the industry and, per-
sonally, I cannot see where any great advance-
ment will ever be made if the pressure is con-
tinued in that direction only.
"While undoubtedly the retailer should co-
operate fully in every effort to put the piano in-
dustry back in the place it belongs, the prime
move and the greatest effort should be from a
more unified control. That is, the manufacturers.
"The only way we can get away from theory
is to find parallels. For this purpose, it is well
to take any business or merchandise that has at-
tained any large standing nationally and as far
as I can observe the largest efforts are by the
manufacturers. Of course, advertising is the
great key to distribution and by referring to
national advertising you will find that manu-
facturers of automobiles, radios, home conven-
iences, including vacuum cleaners and washers,
and even insurance companies, are the large ad-
vertisers and are the ones who have received a
large part of the public's money.
"The piano retailer is too scattered and va-
rious minded to assume the leadership needed
in the present movement. That he will back a
manufacturer's effort is shown in the few lines
that have dared national publicity. For instance,
the Ampico, Gulbransen, Victrola and Atwater
Kent. We believe you will find that any careful
check of local advertising on these lines will
show a great preponderance over any lines not
nationally advertised, which will confirm my
stand.
"This may not appear to be in accord with
the manufacturers' interests, but in a large way
it certainly must be, if it is in the interests of
the retailer, for in this business these two inter-
ests appear to me inseparable from each other.
"I will certainly appreciate your consideration
of the phase of the situation given in this letter
and if there is a logical argument against it I
am sure that other retailers than ourselves will
be very much interested in learning the same."
Some Logical Remedies Suggested
Another retailer who has seen fit to give
earnest thought to the matter and to express his
opinion thereon is E. Bennett Fox, for a num-
ber of years a piano traveler and retail manager,
and at present operating a music store in Chi-
cago. Mr. Fox has some valuable suggestions
to offer on the broad subject of bettering the
piano market and says:
"There is a great deal being written to-day
on 'What is the matter with the piano trade.'
There are many meritorious articles coming
from your own pen and those of others in the
trade, but it seems to me that there are two or
three points that are being passed over and
though I do not set myself up as an oracle I am
adding my bit, trusting it will help some.
"Though money causes have been blamed for
the inertia in buying chiefly automobiles and
radio, the principal reason is a general decline
in prices as I see it, no doubt, coming from
other causes.
"Though many remedies are spoken of I
think the list below might possibly draw some
thought:
"1. Greater national publicity.
"2. Greater local publicity.
"3. Emphasizing piano education among pub-
lic.
"A. Piano education of children.
"5. Greater number of piano concerts.
"6. Greater publicityon reproducers and their
reduction in price.
"7. Recital halls and studios in piano ware-
raoms.
"8. Better window displays.
"9. Improvement in player rolls—less jazz.
"10. Emphasizing trading in old pianos.
"11. Last, and chiefly, real hard training of
salesmen.
"I am one of those optimistic souls who can-
not be made to believe that the piano business
has gone to the damnation bow-wows. Noi
can I lay the blame at the door of the retail
trade. True, many methods used are pretty bad,
but then we younger men in the trade cannot
hark back twenty-five years and compare the
methods of those days with present methods.
Though we seem prone to lay the blame on the
retail trade we all have to admit that it is an
increasingly hard fight to interest prospects in
the piano. The call of both automobile and
radio is much stronger than any we have ever
had in pianos. The pleasure of being able to
drive anywhere you want to, or tuning in on the
South Pole or any sort of a local talk or con-
cert you want is a strong competitor for us.
"The love of music is deeper in many for-
eigners, Latins particularly, than in us Ameri-
cans. The thrill in us is of a different sort and
hard to overcome. Of course many of us are
given to sitting around cogitating over how rot-
ten business is. This attitude is no new one.
Wasn't it ever thus? Were we ever satisfied
with results? The problem has taken a differ-
ent turn and we of the piano trade, in a body,
must change and improve our methods.
"The efforts of Dr. Spaeth and Alex MacDon-
ald are excellent and sure to bear fruit as are
also those of the great reproducer manufactur-
ers, and the Gulbransen Co. and others.
"The national publicity methods used by au-
tomobile and radio manufacturers would be of
great assistance, but the size of the profits in
our manufacturing and retailing makes this seem-
ingly prohibitive. As stated above, I claim to
be no physician to our trade; these are simply
the meditations of an humble observer, who has
seen the game played in both branches of the
trade. I absolutely refuse to believe that 'taps'
has been sounded or ever will be sounded for
the piano. Our truly glorious instrument of
the immortals will rise to greater heights than
ever before—only we of the trade to-day hope
to see this ere we are toddling 'round on
crutches and wheel chairs."
The letters quoted, together with others re-
ceived, indicate that retailers are not accepting
this campaign for better business as simply a
flash in the pan, but are considering it as an
earnest endeavor to improve their own condi-
tions, by increasing the turnover of pianos and
thereby increasing directly the net profits of
the individual dealer.
Ampico in Music Memory
Contest in Massachusetts
Instrument Used for Playing Test Selections in
Contest Sponsored by State Federation of
Women's Clubs
A Music Memory Contest for the State of
Massachusetts, sponsored by the Music Com-
mittee of the Massachusetts State Federation of
Women's Clubs, was held in Horticultural Hall,
Boston, on April 13.
Last November a list of fifty standard com-
positions was sent to the music chairman of
every club in the State, asking that the school
children under sixteen years of age be made
familiar with these compositions preparatory to
this Music Memory Contest.
One of the outstanding features was the fact
that nearly all of the fifty compositions chosen
for this contest were available on the Ampico.
In this contest there were twenty-nine entries.
The examination consisted of a selection of
twelve of the fifty prescribed numbers. These
were played by the Ampico and in some in-
stances were accompanied by soloists—includ-
ing voice, violin and 'cello. After listening to
the composition the student was required to
write the name, source and type of the compo-
sition and the name and nationality of the com-
poser. The following compositions were played:
1. Prelude, Rachmaninoff; 2. Morning, Grieg
(violin); 3. Song of India, Rimsky-Korsakoff;
4. Hungarian Dance 5, Brahms; 5. Minuet,
Beethoven; 6. The Swan, Saint-Saens; 7. To a
Water Lily, MacDowell; 8. Polonaise Militaire,
Chopin; 9. March Slav, Tschaikowsky; 10. Aida,
Verdi; 11. Rosamunde; 12 Kammenoi-Ostrow,
Rubinstein.
The Ampico in the Chickering used on this
occasion was supplied by the Chickering Ware-
rooms in Boston.
The two-story brick building at 1344 South
Flower street, Los Angeles, Cal., has been pur-
chased recently by the Starr Piano Co., which
will open an up-to-date music store there in the
near future.

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