Music Trade Review

Issue: 1927 Vol. 84 N. 6

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
38
The Music Trade Review
FEBRUARY 5, 1927
The Technical and Supply Department—(Continued from page 37)
opportunity as well as a responsibility, E. A. ing of thJt body held here recently in the Cham-
Public Must Accept
Sherman, associate forester of the Forest Ser- ber of Commerce building. Other officers
Forestry as Responsibility vice, Department of Agriculture, told the Ameri- chosen were David B. Evans, first vice-presi-
can Forestry Association at the annual meeting
in New Haven to-day.
Mr. Sherman emphasized the fact that the
fight for conservation has in no wise ended.
Viewing the forestry situation to-day, Mr.
Sherman declared the people of the nation
NKW HAVEN, CONN., January 29.—As long as
conservation is a dominant factor in the per- must realize expenditures for forest protection
peluation of the country's forests, the people of and production, increase our national wealth and
the United States must accept forestry as an tend to reduce the national burden upon indus-
try, and that such expenditures are an exceed-
ingly safe and profitable investment.
Conservation and Expenditures for Forestry
Work Necessary for the Public Good Declares
E. A. Sherman of the Forestry Service
DavidH.SchmidtCo.
Piano Hammers
of Quality
POUGHKEEPSIE
NEW YORK
Mullenix Heads the
Georgia Tuners' Division
dent; W. H. Childs, second vice-president and
W. E. Tillison, secretary-treasurer. Mr. Evans
succeeds F. T. Evans.
Several interesting communications from the
delegates from the State-at-large were read and
many other matters of importance were dis-
posed of. A motion to suspend the by-laws in
an effort to remove the rigid examination and
five-year previous service for applicants for
membership failed in passage. Many interesting
and instructive talks were made, looking to the
protection of the piano-owning public.
Consult the Universal Want Directory of
The Review.
D. B. Evans and W. H. Childs, Vice-presidents
and W. E. Tillison, Secretary and Treasurer
Are Other Officers
fTNS
ATLANTA, GA., January 29.—C. S. Mullenix was
elected president of the Georgia division of the
National Association of Piano Tuners at a meet-
[EATHERST
Leather Specially
Tanned for Player
Pianos and Orgam
Also Chamois
Sheepskins, Indias
and Skivers
A Specialty of
WESSELL, NICKEL & GROSS
Pneumatic and
Pouch Skin Leathers
MANUFACTURERS OF
PIANO
ACTIONS
HIGHEST GRADE
ONE GRADE ONLY
OFFICE
457 WEST FORTY-FIFTH ST.
FACTORIES-WEST FORTY-FIFTH ST.
Tenth Arenne and West Forty-Sixth Street
NEW YORK
Worcester Wind Motor Co.
WORCESTER, MASS.
Makers of Absolutely Satisfactory
WIND MOTORS for PLAYER PIANOS §
Also all kinds of Pneumatics and Supplies
REWINDS — PUMPS
Special Equipment
forCoinOperatedlnttrumentt
Monarch Tool & Mfg. Co.
120 Opsra Place
Cincinnati, O.
Designers and Builders of
PIANO BASS STRINGS
213 East 19th Street, New York
SOLE ACENTS FOR
WEICKERT
Hammer and Damper Felts
Manufacturers of Soinding Boards, Bars, Backs, Bridges, Mandolin and Giitar Tcps, Etc.
F. RAMACCIOTTI, Inc. PIANO ACTION MACHINERY
421-423 W. 28th St. n e a r Ninth Ave.
NEW YORK
PHILIP W. OETTING & SON, Inc.
JULIUS BRECKWOLDT & SON, Inc.,
ELECTRIC-PIANO-HARDWARE
Consult the Universal Want Directory of
The Review. In it advertisements are inserted
free of charge for men who desire positions.
T.L.LUTKINSInc
4 0 SPRUCE ST.. NEW YORK.N.Y.
Special Machines for Special Purposes
THE OHIO VENEER
COMPANY
Quality Selections in
Foreign and Domestic Veneers
and
Hardwood Lumber
THE A. H. NILSON MACHINE CO.
BRIDGEPORT
CONN.
IHPOKTUS AMD MAKUFACTUint
Mills and Main Officf:
Cincinnati, Ohio
Rmstem Ofiet: 405 Lexington
Are., at 42d St., Ntw York
0. S. KELLY CO.
PIANO PLATES
The Highest Grade ot Workmanship
Service
Price
For Quality
Reliability
FAIRBANKS
PIANO
PLATES
Foundries: SPRINGFIELD, OHIO
Continuous Hinges
Grand Hinges
Pedals and Rods
Bearing Bars
Casters, etc., etc.
CHAS. RAMSEY
CORP.
KINGSTON, N.Y.
A QUALITY PRODUCT
THE F A I R B A N K S CO
THE C 0 M S T 0 C K , CHENEY & CO.
SPRINGFIELD, O.
1V0RYT0N C0NN
-
Irorj Cutters sine* 1834.
MANUFACTURERS OF GRAND KEYS, ACTIONS AND HAMMERS, UPRIGHT KEYS,
ACTIONS AND HAMMERS, PIPE ORGAN KEYS, PIANOFORTE IVORY FOR THE TRADE
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
IN THE WORLD OF MUSIC PUBLISHING
Conducted By V. D. Walsh
Group Advertising in National Media
Advocated for Sheet Music Publishers
SONGS THAT SELL
Monthly Advertising, Centered on the Leading Selling Numbers, Held to Be a Big
Asset in Increasing Demand for Sheet Music Prints Today
A PUBLISHER has again made the sugges--
•**• tion that the popular music industry should
arouse more intense interest in its prints and
lure purchasers who have already been sold on
melodies into music stores through the aid of
national publicity. It is his contention that
nothing is done by popular publishers in the
way of advertising other than through their
usual exploitation channels, this supplemented
by publicity matter along lines that have not
changed in recent years.
It is the present contention that a number of
the leaders of the industry could carry on
monthly activities as a group that would re-
sult in concentrating attention on some of the
outstanding issues of the month. He points out
that many industries, including the electrical
and the jewelry trade, are carrying on such pro-
grarns. The latest of these group plans which
is particularly interesting to the music indus-
try is the campaign of the National Piano
Manufacturers Association.
It is thought that the group activities of popu-
lar publishers in national media which might be
co-operated in by the player roll manufacturers
and the talking machine interests should re-
sult in bringing more purchasers into music
stores. It is now a well-known fact that
through the various means of present-day song
exploitation thousands of customers are sold on
melodies, but, through delay in closing the sale
and later through the overemphasis given these
popular and winning melodies, many of the
sales are not brought to completion. In other
words, popular songs are getting enough, and
sometimes too much, of certain types of pub-
licity. More concentration on fewer numbers
in monthly allotments might be worth trying
out, particularly if every channel of the indus-
try were to co-operate.
Owing to the great volume of popular prints
the merchant hesitates to stock heavily other
than a very few numbers. This great amount of
popular material has also brought the merchant
to a stage where he does not concentrate on any
of the releases. Rather he waits and supplies
the customers' calls. A monthly program, be-
sides concentrating attention of possible pur-
chasers on a grouped list, would have the added
value of inducing the merchant to give his very
best co-operation in advancing the interest of
these well-advertised numbers. This would be
a group of selections of meritorious character
which, through this national publicity, would be
t'^e, inducement that brought the customer into
tfi%"store. Therefore, the merchant could hardly
do other than to show interest and co-operation
lor the added sales so procured.
Any suggestion coming from authoritative
sources and which has the nucleus of an idea
which "might add considerably to sales volume
should be, and probably would be, looked upon
;is worthy of attention. Songs are reaching a
great height of popularity without a commen-
surate volume of sales. There is no question
about the fact that present-day issues in both
song and dance form are alluring. There is
hardly any question about the ability of the
public to buy such music at present-day prices.
That they have not been making such purchases
in normal volume is not due to the lack of merit
of the offerings. It is the result of too many
numbers to choose from and too much publicity
on others.
The suggestion outlined here has the merit
of getting people- into music stores. Bringing
a larger number of people into retail establish-
ments as monthly visitors should run up gross
sales and profits. Granted that popular songs
have sufficient exploitation, the newer program
could be looked up then as an educational meas-
ure, a measure that would bring the desire to
completion in sales form before the interest had
waned.
Blue Skies (New) (Irving Berlin)
Because I Love You (Irving Berlin)
(I'm Tellin' the Birds—Tellin' the Bees)
How I Love You
Put Your Arms Where They Belong-
Just a Little Longer (Irving Berlin)
I Never See Mag-pie Alone
Here or There as Long as I'm With You
My Baby Knows How
How Many Times (Irving Berlin)
Rags
Some Day
I'm on My Way Home (Irving Berlin)
When the Red, Red Robin Comes Bob, Bob,
Bobbin' Along
Wait'll We're Married
Carolina Mine
That's What I Call a l'al
Song of Shanghai
Yankee Rose
I Never Knew What the Moonlight Could Do
That's a Good Girl (Irving Berlin)
At Peace With the World
Oh! How She Could Play a Ukulele
Susie's Feller
When I'm in Your Arms
Klsie Shultz-en-Heim
So Will I
I'd Climb the Highest Mountain (If I Knew
I'd Find You)
I'd Love to Meet That Old Sweetheart of
Mine
Remember
Always
Let's Make Up
In the Middle of the Night
Roses Remind Me of You
Tonight's My Night With Baby
Pretty Cinderella



Irving Berlin Issues
First Saxophone Folio
No.
1 Includes Fifteen Numbers, Including
Many of the Most Popular in the Berlin Cata-
log
BOOKS THAT SELL
X
New Universal Dance Folio No. 12
Special Kdltion for 1927
Peterson's Ukulele Method
World's Favorite Bongs
Tiddle De Ukes
Strum It With Orumlt

Irving Berlin, Inc., 1607 Broadway, New York
City, will shortly release its first saxophone
folio. This will be known as Saxophone Folio
No. 1 and will embody fifteen of the most suc-
Irving Berlin's Song Gems
cessful songs in the Berlin catalog, including
From the Musical Comedy Sensation
"Because I Love You," "Always," "Tellin' the
"THE COCOANUTS"
Birds, Tellin' the Bees,' "How Many Times,"
Tlng-aling the Bell'll Ring
and "I'm On My Way Home." This is the first
Why Do Yon Want to Know Why?
of this type of publication issued by the Berlin
Florida By the Sea
Co. and it will carry arrangements for three
The Monkey Doodle Doo
keys, K-flat, C melody and B-flat alto with piano
Lucky Boy
accompaniment.
We Should Caro
Harry Engel, sales manager of Irving Berlin,
Inc., promises that this new release in the Ber-
lin offices will carry several innovations that will
IRVING BERLIN, Inc.
be of particular interest to saxophone enthusi-
asts and to the trade. The publication is now
1607 Broadway, New York
on the press and copies will be forwarded to
ballad
fox-trot; "(.'lu-rit/a," a Viennese waltz, and
retailers shortly. It is understood that the Ber-
"Oh!
Lizzie,"
a novelty fox-trot. The com-
lin Co. will follow its first saxophone folio with
pany also announces that it will release a "sur-
a series of later releases at appropriate times.
prise" melody early in February, the title of
which is "Underneath the Weeping Willow."
Three New Numbers
Bibo, Bloedon & Lang, Inc., publishers of
"Am I Wasting My Time On You" and other
successes, have just announced three new num-
bers, all of which have been placed in an imme-
diate exploitation campaign. The songs include
"If Tears Could Bring You Back to Me," a
39
The ranks of coining composers and music
lovers were somewhat augmented recently
through the announcement of Mr. and Mrs.
Joseph M. Davis of the arrival of Lucille Joan
Davis on January 17. Joe Davis, who is known
ever the radio as the Melody Man, is also head
of the Triangle Music Publishing Co.

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