Music Trade Review

Issue: 1926 Vol. 82 N. 22

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE
flUJIC TRADE
VOL. LXXXII. No. 22 Published Every Saturday. Edward Lyman Bill, Inc., 383 Madison Ave., New York, N. Y., May 29, 1926
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National Music Industries Convention
Annual Meetings of the Music Industries Chamber of Commerce and Di-
visional Unit Associations to Be Held in New York, at the Hotel Com-
modore, During the Week of June 7 to June 12—Resume of Program
NCE again a year has sped around and the trade again faces
the annual convention of the music industries of the coun-
try to be held at the Hotel Commodore, New York, during
the week of June 7. According to reports that have come in to
local headquarters there is every reason to believe that the attend-
ance of dealers will be most satisfactory and perhaps break previous
records for convention attendance in the metropolis.
bitious plan for co-operative advertising promotion designed to
arouse a more general public interest in pianos as well as in correct
merchandising methods. There is no question but that this plan
will arouse wide interest regardless of what disposal may be made
of it during the convention or afterwards.
An Anniversary Convention
Those who have had charge of planning the convention pro-
gram came out early with the announcement that it would be
strictly a business convention and that for once at least the serious
affairs of the trade would take precedence over ordinary entertain-
ment. This promise has been made on other occasions, but this
year there actually appears to be more earnestness of purpose in
the schedules of meetings as laid out, for they are designed to per-
mit of concentration on trade problems without danger of inter-
ference from outside interests.
O
From an historical standpoint, the meetings will be particularly
significant, for they come during the year that marks the two
hundredth anniversary of the successful development of the first
piano by Cristofori, represent the twenty-fifth anniversary of the
organization of the National Association of Music Merchants,
which, by the way, first saw light of day in New York at the old
Hoffman House, and also the tenth anniversary of the organization
of the Music Industries Chamber of Commerce. There is every
reason, therefore, for entitling the forthcoming gathering an
anniversary convention.
Constructive Programs
The sessions promise to be noteworthy for a number of reasons,
first and foremost because the discussions will not be confined to
the question of eliminating or checking the evils of the trade, but
will be devoted to ways and means for developing future business,
following the realization on the part of the trade that, although the
industry is sound, various divisions have not in any sense made
gains in annual turnover commensurate with the growth of the
nation or the general spread of music appreciation among the
people.
More Intensive Promotion
The directors of the Music Industries Chamber of Com-
merce, in selecting as the keynote of the convention "More Inten-
sive Direct Promotion of Musical Instruments," have sensed prop-
erly the existent feeling in the industry, and is is believed that the
keynote will be conspicuous throughout the various sessions held
during convention week following its emphasis at the opening
session on Monday noon, when a mass meeting of the members of
all branches of the music industry will be held. .
A Co-operative Plan
Then, too, the National Piano Manufacturers' Association,
through its president, Max J. deRochemont, will present an am-
A Business Meeting
Sessions in Morning
The plan to confine the business sessions to the morning hours
is interesting and its working out will be watched closely. The
thought is that by devoting the mornings to Association affairs, thus
leaving the afternoons and evenings free for the inspection of the
many exhibits and for direct communication between manufacturers
and dealers, there would not exist that confusion that has followed
where exhibits and meetings were open at the same time. The
success of the morning sessions depends on two factors—first,
whether the exhibitors will enter into the spirit of the occasion and
actually keep their displays closed during that time, and, secondly,
whether the night sessions of entertainment will be sufficiently
moderate to permit of delegates getting out early in the morning
for the business meetings. Only actual experience will prove the
value of the new idea.
Endorses Exhibits
For the first time in several years the Music Industries
Chamber of Commerce and allied associations have come out
strongly in favor of exhibits and have urged manufacturers and
wholesalers not only to display their lines but to exhibit also such
advertising and selling material as is available and is calculated
to help retailers at large to develop a bigger and better business.
As a result of this encouraging attitude a hundred or more
manufacturers have arranged for exhibit space in the Commodore
alone and it is understood that many of them will supplement
their displays of instruments with business-building material. It is
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
The Music Trade Review
likely, too, that this attitude will serve to arouse the interest of
dealers and bring about a larger attendance of those who feel that,
although the attendance at the business sessions is of importance,
they can also receive benefit by inspecting the new products that
have been put on the market during the year.
Advertising
Exhibit
The Chamber itself has arranged for the regular displays of
musical instrument advertising and of window arrangements for
which suitable awards will be made at the time of the convention.
This feature has been offered for several years and has aroused
much favorable comment in all branches of the industry. It may
be said right here that the advertising that has been entered in the
competition this year is of a most admirable character and should
offer a real inspiration to those who seek to supplement their direct
selling campaigns through the medium of the printed message.
The Outstanding Problem
The outstanding problem before the trade to-day is that of
creating a future market for the piano. It has been realized that
the industry has been going along in a more or less haphazard man-
ner, developing such sales as were found available through ordinary
channels, but giving little thought to the development of an interest
in and a demand for pianos that would serve to bring about a larger
turnover.
Music appreciation throughout the nation has never been
at so high a level as it is to-day, the widespread observance of the
National Music Week celebration recently offering proof positive
of this fact. Likewise, the population of the country is showing a
steady annual growth, and various other industries are expanding
not abnormally but in proper ratio to the growth of the country and
its resources.
Facts Are Facts
Leaders of the industry have come to a realization of the
fact that the piano trade is one of the few that has seen a de-
creasing annual unit output in relation to increasing population,
musical interest and prosperity. There are still those in the trade,
however, who lament the fact that the true condition is being
brought out into the light, declaring that the proper attitude should
be to emphasize the fact that business is good for the purpose of
maintaining the confidence of those retailers who are inclined to
give up when they undergo a pessimistic streak.
As a matter of fact, there has been too much of this ostrich-
like dodging of the issue in the industry which is largely responsible
for the situation in which the piano trade finds itself to-day. The
fact that the annual turnover in dollars and cents may equal that
of many previous years, due to the tendency of the public to buy
higher-priced grands, players and reproducers, does not in any
sense offset the argument that this high-class business should repre-
sent so much gained for the trade rather than a balancing factor
and that the output of the ordinary class of pianos should show
an annual increase if only large enough to keep step with the
growth in population and the potential market.
MAY 29, 1926
It is likely that the question of amending the constitution and
by-laws of the National Association of Music Merchants in order
to provide for the affiliation of local trade organizations with the
national body on an equitable basis will occupy much attention in
the sessions of the National Association of Music Merchants, for
there are a number of points in the proposed amendments that
have already been discussed to a considerable extent throughout
the entire trade.
There is no question but that, properly handled and explained,
these amendments should be passed without many very radical
changes, though it would be well for the national officers to listen
to such criticisms as may be forthcoming and offer explanations in
answer thereto so that there may be complete harmony in whatever
move is finally made.
Financial Questions
Another question that will receive due prominence will be
that of providing adequate funds to carry on the work of the
Music Industries Chamber of Commerce and its various bureaus.
It goes without saying that the various methods evolved for financ-
ing this central organization during the past few years have not
in any sense proven satisfactory, and it is time that some method
should be decided upon that will insure to the organization adequate
and consistent support, provided, of course, that the members of
the affiliated organizations feel that the work of the Chamber has
proven itself and is worth carrying on.
Good Attendance Expected
From present indications there will be a well-diversified at-
tendance at the New York meeting, and although it is natural to
assume that the great majority of the delegates will come from
Eastern points owing to the convenience of the location, special
arrangements have been made for the transporting of delegations
from a number of Western points as far away as the Pacific Coast
and Texas with Chicago and the Middle West, of course, sending a
special trainload of representatives from the various sections of
that producing and selling district.
Entertainment Program
Those who consider the entertainment program as a partic-
ularly important feature of the convention can rest assured that
there will be little, if anything, lacking to make their stay in New
York thoroughly pleasant. The official events this year are con-
fined to a combined banquet and frolic on Thursday evening and an
all-day picnic at Briarcliff Lodge in the Westchester hills on Friday.
But in addition to these official affairs there will also be the usual
number of private entertainments, and although the schedule of
these is not fully announced there will unquestionably be enough
of them to keep the dealers so inclined very busy every evening
during the week. These private entertainments run anywhere from
banquets to theatre parties and most of them will have appealing
trimmings.
On the whole, the forthcoming convention should mean a great
deal to the member of the trade who is seriously interested in the
future development of his business along sound lines. It will be
a business convention in every sense of the word, but nevertheless
there will be enough play to keep Jack from getting dull.

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