Music Trade Review

Issue: 1926 Vol. 83 N. 26

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
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The Music Trade Review
Ferdinand A. Winter
Passes Away in Altoona
Founder of F. A. Winter & Son, Prominent
Music House, Was Eighty-two Years O l d -
Was Bandsman During Civil War
PITTSBURGH, PA., December 18.—Musical circles
here were much grieved over the news of the
passing of Ferdinand A. Winter, founder of the
F. A. Winter & Son music house of Altoona,
Pa., at his home in that city yesterday, aged
eighty-two years. Mr. Winter contracted a
cold about two months ago and he gradually
grew worse until death ensued. He was a
native of Monaco, a small town on the Ohio
River above Pittsburgh. When but a youth he
became a member of a band at New Brighton,
playing the cymbals, and when the Civil War
broke out Mr. Winter enlisted as a second-
class musician in the regimental band of the
Sixty-third Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry.
In the battle of Williamsburg he was stricken
with fever and was confined to a hospital at
Yorktown, Va. While a patient at the army
hospital, the government dismissed all regi-
mental bands, and after his discharge from the
hospital in September of 1862 Mr. Winter re-
turned to Pittsburgh and soon afterwards
joined a band in a three-month militia regiment
which was sent into West Virginia.
Bandmaster at Nineteen
Mr. Winter was acknowledged as one of the
youngest bandmasters in the Civil War, being
aged nineteen years. In his interesting career
through the strife, one feature that stands out
as a bandmaster was his setting to bandscore
the famous war melody, "Matching Through
Georgia," for which he is known nationally.
At the close of the war Mr. Winter returned
to Pittsburgh and took an advanced course in
the violin and at the age of twenty-one made
his formal debut as a violinist at the Academy
of Music in Pittsburgh. He was also an accom-
plished cornet player.
Look
For This Label
It Guarantees
Quality
DECEMBER 25, 1926
He later entered the employ of Mellor &
Hoehne, now the C. C. Mellor Co., and in 1878
was sent to Altoona to perform some work at
an Altoona branch of the company. In the
Spring of 1879 he became a permanent resident
of Altoona.
Mr. Winter was married in 1875 to Miss
Emma Buhl and both he and his wife located
here, making their home at 1914 Twelfth ave-
nue, the present Winter home. His wife died
March of this year. To this union eight chil-
dren were born, seven of whom survive:
Arthur E. Winter, a partner in the firm; Paul
T. Winter, associated with the store; Dr. Harry
B. Winter, of Punxsutawney; Mrs. Edith Jones,
of Altoona; Louis C. Winter of Pittsburgh; Mrs.
Marie Montgomery, of Altoona, and Mrs.
Christine Bashore, of Altoona.
Mr. Winter was one of the organizers of
the Altoona Chamber of Commerce and was a
member of the Altoona Kiwanis Club.
Milton Upright Chosen by
Prominent Cabinet Maker
George W. Allen, president of the Milton
Piano Co., New York, was particularly gratified
recently, when M. Campbell Lorini, president of
the Lorini Cabinet Co., New York, selected a
Milton Peter Pan model upright. Mr. Lorini is
well-known to the piano trade and served for
many years as a technical official in various New-
York piano factories. He stated to Mr. Allen
that he admired the Milton especially for its
handsome case work and compact size. In a
letter to Mr. Allen, following the delivery of
the piano to his home, Mr. Lorini wrote: "I
was more than agreeably surprised at the tone
volume vou have concealed in such a small
Maypole Heads Radio Station
For Your 1927
Requirements Specify
PFRIEMER
HAMMERS
Their use in the pianos
you sell signifies quality
in every respect
fiDrfQinatotg of ttyt
l£e GHAS. PFRIEMER, Inc.
Wales Ave. and 142d St.
Lytton Building
(EST.
New York
Chicago
1870)
DKTROIT, MICH., December 20.—Detroit has a
new radio broadcasting station, which made its
first public announcement last week and has
already become popular. Roy A. Maypole,
head of the Artonian Piano Co. here and widely
known in the trade as manager of the Detroit
public school piano contest held this year, is
the director of the new radio station, which
has the letters WDXL and has a wave length
of 296.9 meters. The studio is located at 5769
Stanton avenue and the broadcasting hours are
from 7 p. m. to 8:30 p. m. Mr. Maypole an-
nounces that his programs will be of the highest
class.
Takes Tout-Miller Lease
TURLOCK, CAL., December 17.—New quarters
have been taken by A. Ruby, local music mer-
chant, who has taken over the lease of the
Tout-Miller store here. Mr. Ruby's business
has grown consistently of late and now includes
the agency for Hardman and Baldwin pianos,
phonographs, radio and small goods. With
the move to new quarters, Mr. Ruby will be
afforded more commodious display space for
his stock of instruments.
Buys Into Bemidji Co.
BEMIDJI, MINN., December 18.—F. S. Ebert has
purchased the interest of Oren D. Cason in the
Bemidji Music Co., which they have operated
on a partnership basis for more than two years.
Both men have had a wide experience in the
music field, Mr. Ebert having been identified
with the trade for about twenty years. He
operated a store in Thief River Falls for seven
years before coming to Bemidji five years ago.
Frank A. D. Andrea, president of the Fada
Radio Corp. and one of the outstanding figures
in the radio industry, recently installed a Weber
Duo-Art piano in oerioH rase in his hnmf. at
Pelham, N. Y.
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
The Technical Aspect of the Problem
of Light Pumping Players
A Question Which Has Always Divided the Manufacturers and Merchants of Player-Pianos Into Two
Opposing Camps—What Light Pumping Is—Keeping the Music Roll Going the Basis of Any
Discussion of This Problem — Non-Pneumatic Motors — Preventable Friction in Contact
f T T ^ H E question of light pumping, as it has
I been somewhat roughly called, has always
•*• divided player manufacturers and player
salesmen into two opposing camps. The first
players, of course, were decidedly "heavy" pump-
ers, because the technical requirements of "easy"
pumping had not even been visualized save in
the most fragmentary manner. It took years of
steady experimenting with designs and materials
to produce a combination which should deliver
plenty of playing power without imposing too
much physical effort upon the operator of the
bellows. When, however, technical experiment
had produced a combination of materials and de-
sign that did permit easy pumping there came
a reaction, for it was said that the buying pub-
lic did not want to be troubled with any effort
not purely mechanical and would rather pump
steadily, if mechanically, than learn to pump
selectively and artistically. And there has al-
ways been a marked difference of opinion in
regard to which system does in fact produce
the better-selling instrument.
Of late years, however, the tendency has been
in the direction of light, easy pumping, and it is
therefore in order to say a few words of the
technical problems involved. To what extent
the foot player will be revived by such work as
is contemplated by the Chicago Piano & Organ
Association, according to its announcements
to the trade press, cannot be discussed here;
but at least some effect will be wielded upon
design, by any attempt to revive fine demonstra-
tion of the foot-player on a large scale. Hence,
again, the value of some technical discussion on
the question of design in relation to responsive-
ness.
What is called "easy pumping" refers of
course to that condition in which the required
power for playing is obtained with a minimum
of physical effort. On the other hand, it also
means that condition which enables the player-
pianist to obtain changes in playing power, as
"accents," rapidly and at will, without being
obliged to maintain a large "reserve" of play-
ing power for the purpose of keeping the music
roll going.
The Motor Drag
This matter of keeping the music roll going
is in fact at the bottom of any discussion of
pumping. It has been long since demonstrated
that the amount of power required to keep the
pneumatic motor running, on any ordinary
player action, is not less than 50 per cent of
the whole. One-half, then, of all the energy
which is imparted through the feet of the player-
pianist for the purpose of producing the motions
of the bellows is taken up in supplying run-
ning power to a motor, which, although it is
essential-to the performance of music, has noth-
ing to do with the actual production of sound.
It is therefore obvious that if this eternal drag
upon the feet of the player-pianist could be
eliminated the problem of "easy" and respon-
sive pedaling would be solved at once, almost
irrespective of any other change.
A few years ago a proposal to furnish power
for the motor in any other than the usual way
would have been met by a storm of objections;
but to-day it is all very simple. It is only neces-
sary to connect up with the pneumatic motor
an electric-driven fan, cutting off the connec-
tion between pneumatic motor and bellows. If
this is done, the power-fan exhausts the air
from the motor and leaves the latter under the
control of the ordinary tempo and rewind levers.
It is evident that here is a simple solution of
the whole matter.
Moreover, one is justified in remarking that if
ever the foot-player comes back into general
favor it will be because it is just so easy to pedal
and just so responsive as has here been sug-
gested. As for the actual cost, the electric motor
of small size driving a small vaccum fan presents
the only important item. Built in quantities, such
an outfit would cost no more to make than an
ordinary electric ventilating fan of small size,
while its consumption of current is quite negligi-
ble. It should be understood that ideas based
upon the size and weight of the pumping plant
used in a reproducing piano have no meaning
in the present case. The outfit described for the
special purpose outlined here need be no larger
than an old-fashioned plug-hat.
This is an electric age, and it seems that there
should be very little objection, mechamcal or
commercial, to the introduction of a method
which would do so much to make the player-
piano an enjoyable instrument to play person-
ally.
Non-Pneumatic Motors
On the other hand, there is the possibility
of using a motor driven directly by electric
current; in other words, a straight electric mo-
tor, geared down, and controlled in speed by
some system of variable gearing. Probably
the only practical method of controlling the
speed of such a motor would be by use of the
well-known disk and wheel, contacting at an an-
gle of 90 degrees, and obtaining driving power
entirely through friction. The control, of
course, in this case comes by varying the posi-
tion of the leather rim of the wheel upon the
driven disk. The closer the rim comes to the
center of the disk the slower is the speed, and
conversely.
Considering everything, however, it should
seem that the first-named method would be
both cheaper and simpler.
If now we, for any reason, wish to go further
still and to inquire what changes in design
as respects the pneumatic stack and the bel-
lows might give us easier pedaling and better
response to pedal attack, we must say that there
is still something to be done in these depart-
ments, although the present state of the art is
one of high efficiency and it would be whol-
ly wrong to indulge in any growls in discussing
it. Nevertheless there are one or two points
worth considering.
The first of these relates to preventable fric-
tion in the contact between the pneumatic stack
and the piano action. There is still a good
deal of work to be done at this point. Pneu-
matic actions are made of wood, wire and
leather. Bushings around moving parts are of
bushing cloth surrounded by wood. Most of
the causes of friction and of sluggishness which
develop in the piano action, but which in the
best action making have been virtually elimi-
nated, are present here also. It must be evident,
too, that in the case of grand player actions
the contact of the pneumatic with the underside
of the piano key at its rear or action end is
heavy, clumsy and mechanically inefficient.
What is really needed is a practical manner of
connecting with the piano action direct, elimi-
nating the keys altogether. This can probably be
done without attempting to place the pneumatics
above the key-bed. In fact, it is plain that a
direct connection by means of wooden or wire
stems between the stack beneath the key-bed
and the action above the key-bed is quite prac-
(Continued on page 14)
KIMBALL PIANOS
"Easiest
to Sell" comes as a trib-
ute to the Kimball from many success-
ful dealers who speak from long ex-
perience.
The demand has been created through
the years for Kimball Instruments—
a prestige of quality, reliability, right
prices and fair dealing.
The Kimball agency franchise is a valuable asset for the
Dealer. Perhaps your territory is open. Write or Wire.
W. W. KIMBALL CO., 306 S. Wabash Ave.
Established 1857
CHICAGO
Makers Grand, Upright, Players, Reproducing Grands, Phonographs, Pipe Organs
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