Music Trade Review

Issue: 1926 Vol. 83 N. 3

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
REVIEW
THE
VOL. LXXXIII. No. 3
PMblUhed Every Satirday. Edward Lyman Bill, Inc., 383 Madison Aye., New York, N. Y., July 17, 1926
s
""fe<£
10 Cant*
Year
A Window Display of a Small Upright
That Sold the Instrument
How Hardman, Peck & Co., in Their New York Retail Branch Store, Made a Direct Appeal to the Child
Prospect in Featuring the Small Upright in a Nursery Setting in Their Show Window and
How the Instrument Itself Was Sold Directly From the Display
N any nation-wide campaign to expand the
market for pianos the cultivation of the
idea of placing more than one piano in a
home is certainly a happy corollary and a no-
tion worthy of much consideration. It was
partly with this in view that Hardman, Peck &
Co., New York, decided this Spring to make a
"play" to the nurseries of the more wealthy
Fifth avenue promenaders by showing a small
Harrington upright with a nursery setting in
their show window at 433 Fifth avenue.
The idea was really that of Stephen Czukor,
manager of the artists department
of the company, according to Calvin
T. Purdy, manager of the Hardman
warerooras. While talking over a
suitable window display for the
music industries' convention week,
Mr. Czukor recalled the success met
by the company with the display of
a Harrington junior upright during
the Christmas holidays. The piano
had been placed in one corner of the
window with a view to inducing
some particularly generous daddy to
purchase it. for his youngster as a
Christmas present. Mr. Czukor sug-
gested an entire display to show the
adaptability of this small instru-
ment for a child's nursery or play-
room.
Although there had been a large
Hardman art model grand used in
the Christmas window, the small
piano with its baby-pink enameled
case dominated the window and attracted much
attention on the avenue. To the piano was
attached a large colored tag with the message:
"To Baby Peggy—From Her Daddy." The whole
effect was striking and succeeded in drawing
three or four sales for duplicate instruments as
well as the one in the window.
The idea of devoting a whole window to a
small upright with children as prospects was
a radical one, departing from the usual practice
of Hardman, Peck & Co. of showing Hardman
period grands in drawing-room settings. Noth-
ing better suggested itself at the time, however,
and the novelty of the plan recommended it
sufficiently for a trial. The decorators were in-
formed of the scheme for the nursery window
I
and work was started at once to construct it.
Arrangements were made with the toy depart-
ment of R. H. Macy & Co. to provide certain
"properties" for the setting and a load of minia-
ture chairs, tables and dishes, to say nothing of
several very attractive "dollies" of the popular,
old-fashioned variety, arrived in a Macy truck
a few days later. A Harrington, Style 10, junior
upright, this time with a robin's-egg blue enam-
eled case, was placed in one corner and the
dolls, looking for all the world like kiddies,
were placed around a table as though in the
A Unique Display of the Small Upright
midst of a meal. A box of blocks was scat-
tered about the floor to add a slight note of dis-
order, so often present in a playroom.
From a publicity standpoint the window was
a winner from the start, according to Mr. Purdy.
Groups of passersby of all ages stopped to take
in the amusing details of the window. Those
who lingered longest were the "prospects"
themselves, tots of the kindergarten age, con-
versing animatedly with their "govies" about
the window and the tiny piano.
Not content with suggesting the idea for the
setting, Mr. Czukor determined to add a
stronger personal touch to the display, and ar-
ranged one afternoon to have his own two
children, aged two and four years, playing in
the window for over an hour. The children
entered fully into the spirit of the affair and
found plenty of ways of amusing themselves,
one of them playing one-fingered selections on
the piano from time to time. The best part of
it was that the tots were completely oblivious
of the sensation they were creating outside t{ie
glass window, where a crowd gathered almost
out to the curb.
Proof of the broad sweep of publicity from
this display was secured a morning or two
after the appearance of the children in the win-
dow, when the editorial departments
of two magazines, Art and Decora-
tion and Toyland, wrote to request
photographs of the nursery window.
These have been since provided by
Mr. Besserman, of Hardman-Peck's
advertising department, and will
appear in early issues of the per-
iodicals with appropriate acknowl-
edgment to Hardman, Peck & Co.
The climax of every show window
story is usually contained in the
anecdote of "who bought the piano."
Hardman-Peck have an enviable
record of selling at least one model
of every instrument displayed right
out of the window, and this case
proved to be no exception. Early
one morning toward the end of the
nursery display, a little girl marched
into the warerooms from an expen-
sive limousine, drawn up at the curb.
She was accompanied by her mother
and governess and the former asked to be
shown the small upright which had attracted
her attention.
An alert salesman demonstrated the instru-
ment and a contract was quickly drawn up and
signed. The mother stated that she was leav-
ing for Europe on the following day, and left
a substantial deposit with instructions to deliver
the instrument to her Park avenue home early
in September. She stated that she had noticed
the baby window from her car on several oc-
casions and was so impressed with the idea of
providing music for the nursery that she wanted
that particular piano for her little daughter.
After leaving her check she followed the gov-
(Continued on page 4)
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
The Music Trade Review
22,000 Spectators Hear Twenty-Four
Pianos Presented in a Single Concert
Piano Ensemble Achieves Striking Success in Hollywood Bowl, in Concert Under the Direction
of Adolph Tandler, Director of the Little Symphony
T OS ANGELES, CAL., July 8.—One of the
•*—' most spectacular and novel events held at
the opening of the Hollywood Bowl, on the
night of J u n e 22, was the ensemble of twenty-
four pianists playing on the stage at the same
which was placed on wheels, and after the Con-
certo with the orchestra of nearly 100 pieces in
which two pianos were used had finished, the
platform on which the orchestra was playing
moved to one side and the platform on which
JULY 17, 1926
graph, Inc., has arrived in New York from S\.
Louis, Mo. He is away from his desk at the
St. Louis branch of the Columbia Phonograph
Co. on a well-earned vacation which he will
spend in the East.
W. H. Swartz, vice-president of Columbia
Wholesalers, Inc., in Baltimore, Md., also visited
the New York offices last week on a short busi-
ness trip.
Knabe Ampico Featured in
Asheville, N. C , Theatre
Series of Concerts Given Daily for a Week
Under the Auspices of Dunham's Music
House, Ampico Representative in That City
The Knabe Ampico was featured most effec-
tively recently by Dunham's Music House, which
for a week conducted a series of Ampico con-
certs at the Imperial Theatre in Asheville, N. C.
Miss Frances Burr Mitchell, dramatic soprano,
well known as soloist with the Boston Sym-
phony and other orchestras, Miss Maria-Elise
Johnson, violinist, and Walter Bischoff, pianist
and accompanist, appeared with the Ampico
three times daily in the theatre.
The Ampico aroused particular enthusiasm
in several solo numbers, although it was also
used as accompanying instrument. The concerts
attracted wide attention, were well attended and
received generous comment in the local news-
papers.
time. The ensemble
Tandler, conductor of
was selected by Abby
The performance of
Twenty-four Pianos in a Single Concert
was directed by Adolph the twenty-four pianos were placed was moved
the Little Symphony, and
in its place, all of which took one minute to ac-
De Avirett.
complish. In all, at the Hollywood Bowl that
Schubert's "Marche Mili- evening, there were twenty-six grand pianos
A Window Display That
Sold the Instrument
(Continued from page 3)
erness and the triumphant youngster out of
the warerooms.
All of which shows what can be done to help
create a vogue for new styles in pianos. We
have had the revived small upright with us for
about two years and its popularity is on the
increase. The innovation of enameled cases in
pastel shades for these instruments was a happy
thought on the part of the manufacturers to
supply a touch of novelty to their lines. The
piano industry, of course, needs plenty of sta-
bility, cleaving to the unchanging tastes of the
public at large, but to avoid fallling into a
groove it can also supply an occasional novelty
as well. And if novelties are to be provided
let us hope they are presented as novelties with
all the trimming that befit them so that the
message will be carried.
Story & Clark in Brooklyn
The Hollywood Bowl
taire" and MacDowell's "To a Water Lily," was used, thirteen of which were Knabes, six Chick-
given, and rewarded by the enthusiastic plau- erings, three Mason & Hamlins, two Steinways
dits of the 22,000 spectators who filled the Bowl and two Sohmers.
to capacity.
The piano ensemble had experienced a sen-
sational success in New York City and San
Francisco, but the Hollywood Bowl had the
honor of presenting the first great American
"Chorus" of pianos given out of doors.
W. J. Brown, of Atlanta; George Fuhri, of St.
The artists who participated were selected
Louis, and W. H. Swartz, of Baltimore, Call
from the leading pianists of Los Angeles and
at New York Headquarters
vicinity and included Alice Batchelder, Ger-
trude Cleophas, Bess Daniels, Pauline Farquhar,
A vacationist in and around tropical New
Will Garroway, Homer Grunn, Hague Kinsey, York last week was W. J. Brown, assistant
Alexander Kosloff, Adelaide Lee, Helen Lewyn, manager of the Atlanta branch of Columbia
Francis Martin, Ann McDowell, Raymond Mc- Phonograph, Inc. While in town Mr. Brown
Feeters, Claire Mellonino, Elizabeth O'Neil, visited the executive offices of the company at
Gertrude Riese, Adelaide Perry, Oscar Rasbach, 1819 Broadway and made a trip to the factory
Homer Simmons, Harold Smyth, Violet Stall- at Bridgeport. Mr. Brown- returned to Atlanta
cup, Toska Tolces, Phillip Tronitz and Morris on Tuesday, July 13.
Wolfson.
George Fuhri, son of W. C. Fuhri, vice-presi-
The pianos were placed on a huge platform, dent and general manager of Columbia Phono-
Columbia Visitors From
the Out-of-Town Branches
SCARFS
plANo
COVERS and BENCH-CUSHIONS
0. SIMMS MFfi. CO.. 103-5 We«t 14th St.
Announcement was made this week by John
L. Stenger, New York district manager of the
Story & Clark Piano Co., that a new Brooklyn
branch has been opened at 216 Livingston street
with Maynard Allen in charge. Mr. Allen was
formerly manager of the Story & Clark branch
at 25 Flatbush avenue, Brooklyn, which was
closed last season. The quarters have been
remodeled completely for the piano store and
a complete line of Story & Clark pianos has
been placed on display.
Files Bankruptcy Petition
Albert E. Thompson, proprietor of Thomp-
son's Music Store, Portland, Me., has recently
filed a voluntary petition in bankruptcy, listing
his liabilities at $7,853 and his assets at $4,075.
Consult the Universal Want Directory of
The Review. In it advertisements are inserted
free of charge for men who desire positions.

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