Music Trade Review

Issue: 1928 Vol. 86 N. 20

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
News Number
THE
RE™
fflJJIC TIRADE
VOL. 86. No. 20
Published Weekly.
Federated Business Publications, Inc., 420 Lexington Aye., New York, N. Y., May 19,1928
8ln
10 Cents
*J|.& o g lea
er Tear
San Francisco Piano Contest
Eighth Annual Music Week There Culminates in Finals of the
Annual Piano-Playing Contest in Auditorium Before
Enthusiastic Audience of Over 5,000 People
AN FRANCISCO, CAL., May 10.—The finals of the piano-playing contest, held in connec-
tion with the city's eighth annual Music Week, took place yesterday evening in the Munici-
pal Auditorium. An audience of between 5,000 and 0,000 people stayed till the last note had
been played, which was about fifteen minutes after midnight. The people had been asked by
Chester Rosekrans, director of the contest, and of Music Week activities, not to applaud, and
the audience tried to comply with this request, but the applause was too spontaneous. Again
and again they hushed it, only to have it break
-
•_
and other music firms which have mven time
out again.
Winners of the three principal prizes offered and money.
When the daily newspaper that last year
were: first, Piroska Pinter who won the first
award, a $300 cash prize, donated by Sherman, sponsored the piano-playing tournament of San
Francisco's Municipal Music Week found that
Clay & Co.; second, Mary Steiner, a prize of
$100, donated by Kohler & Chase; third, Irene this year it would take more time and moncv
than the paper felt it could afford, there was a
Heindl, a winner of the silver cup, donated by
time when it looked as if the city would have
the Baldwin Piano Co.; Piroska Pinter was in
to forego this event. The California Teachers'
the ten to fourteen-year group; Mary Steiner
Association, however, urged that this feature
in the fourteen to eighteen-year group, and
of Music Week be not abandoned, so Chester
Irene Heindl is the six to ten-years of age-
Rosekrans took general direction of the piano-
group.
playing contest, with leading musicians as
About 848 students registered for the piano-
judges.
playing contest. Preliminary contests reduced
Formulating Plans For Next Year
this number to fifty-four, and further elimina-
The success of the piano-playing contest, the
tion reduced the contestants to the twenty who
appeared in the Auditorium yesterday evening. choral contest and the widespread interest in
There were three groups, according to age and the school band contests have all contributed
two were selected from each group as a result to the formulation of plans for added contests
of last night's tests. Of these six, one was during the 1929 Music Week in tlii^ city.
selected from each group and the final grading
of the remaining three players was made
according to promise of future success, taking
age into account. Piroska Pinter was consid-
I Properly Approached
ered to give most promise and was awarded
the grand prize.
5 the Public wilt buy
Public Interest is Outstanding Feature
i
Speaking of the piano playing contest, Chester
Rosekrans said today that the most interesting
feature of Music Week, in his opinion, is the
increased attendance throughout the week at
the Civic Auditorium. Never have the citizens
*
Attend the
followed Music Week activities so closely as
this year. Another outstanding feature has been
the interest taken by the children themselves
and their willingness to take part in the vari-
ous Music Week contests. From the first to
HOTEL COMMODORE
the present eighth annual Music Week, Chester
JUNE 4 TO 7
Rosekrans, of the San Francisco Civic Associa-
tion, and Mrs. H. Roy Stovel, Music Week
NEW YORK CITY
secretary, have been in charge for the city.
They also recall the loyal help Music Week has
had from Sherman, Clay & Co., Wiley B. Allen
Co., Kohler & Chase, the Baldwin Piano Co.,
S
I
MUSICAL
!INSTRUMENTS
I
]
1928
j CONVENTION
Chester W. Rosekrans and Mrs. H. Roy Stovel
said today that plans call for additional state-
wide contests for 1929 in the following sub-
jects: voice, flute, clarinet, oboe, bassoon, saxo-
phone, trumpet or cornet, trombone, French
horn, baritone, tuba, harp, xylophone, violin,
and violoncello. The finals of the school band
contest take place in the Civic Auditorium on
Saturday evening. Twenty school bands are
already here for the preliminary contests. Mem-
bers of the music trades on the band contest
committee are Chairman E. J. Delano, Sher-
man, Clay & Co.; Daniel Miller, Conn San
Francisco Co.; William Ringen, H. C. Hanson
Music House, and Dewey C. Waters, of Waters
& Ross.
One Phonograph Fills Vast Store
The music department of the Emporium took
what is believed to be an original way of fill-
ing the vast building with music twice a day
during music week. A power amplifier was sus-
pended under the great central dome and this
was connected with a Brunswick Panatrope,
model P-13. For twenty minutes in the morn-
ing, just before the store opens at 9 a. m., the
employes have a concert, and for twenty
minutes in the noon hour the public enjoys a
concert. Hearing what sounds like a band,
people look up to the dome in astonishment.
However, members of the public now seem to
know, and many people come in for the noon-
day concert, made by one phonograph and an
amplifier.
The Concord Piano Co., dealer in Starr pianos
and other lines, has opened a piano school
which is using what is known as the Concord
Method of Piano Playing. George Braun, op-
crating manager for the company, states that
the system was evolved by an English lady
who is here now and is teaching in the school
which is on Mission street, but will shortly be
moved to a location adjoining the Concord
Piano Co. in the Marshall Square Building. The
Concord Piano Co. has just sold a Hazelton
grand piano to the Hayes street church of the
Latter Day Saints, in competition with other
pianos.
C. H. Hurlbut, formerly with the H. C. Han-
son Music Co., has joined the Union Music Co.,
taking the place of Ralph Stine who is still
busy developing his gold mine in Trinity
County. D. A. Hennessey, proprietor of the
Union Music Co., says that the piano business
is fair at present.
The J. K. Ward Music Shop, adjoining the
Oakford Theatre, Main street, Clarksburg, W.
Va., was a heavy loser in a recent fire originat-
ing in the theatre building.
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
The Music Trade Review
MAY 19, 1928
sistant branch manager in Dallas, Tex., follow-
ing which he served as first lieutenant in the
World War. After the war he returned to the
Columbia service, and later formed the E. B.
Shiddell Co. in Boston for distributing Okeh
records.
New Howard Grand Four Feet, Seven
Inches, Announced by Baldwin Co.
Instrument, in Addition to Standard Case Design, Is to Be Had in Three Periods,
Queen Anne, Sheraton and William and Mary
A NEW Howard small grand, Style 450,
"^^ having a length of 4 feet, 7 inches, has just
been placed on the market by the Baldwin
Piano Co., Cincinnati. The piano is to be na-
tionally priced at $685 for the standard model
Merchants' Directors to
Meet on Monday, June 4
the leaflet a full-page reproduction of the
standard model in the new Style 450 is shown
in brown and white, facing the description of
the instrument and three smaller reproductions
of the period styles. A full-page advertisement,
President Roberts Selects That Time With a
View to Insuring Large Attendance to Dis-
cuss the Many Important Matters
It is announced that the meeting of the Board
of Control of the National Association of Music
Merchants will be held on Monday morning,
June 4, at 10 a. m., at the Hotel Commodore,
New York, instead of the preceding Sunday as
has been the practice in the past. President
C. J. Roberts of the association scheduled the
meeting for Monday in order to insure as large
an attendance as possible to discuss the many
important matters that are to come before the
organization during the convention. The meet-
ing will adjourn in time for the opening get-
to get her luncheon at- 12^30 p. in.
Annual Meeting of Chamber
to Be Held on June 7
The annual meeting of the Music Industries
Chamber of Commerce, at which officers will
be elected, and various resolutions adopted, will
be held at the Hotel Commodore, New York,
on Thursday, June 7, at 1:30 p. in.
Steinway Dealers Dined
PHILADELPHIA, PA., May 14.—The Eastern
Pennsylvania Steinway dealers who attended the
annual convention of the Pennsylvania Associa-
tion of Music Merchants, were entertained at a
dinner given at Janssen's Hof Brau Haus here
last week by the local distributors, N. Stetson
& Co. Those who were present at the dinner
were A. Z. Moore, Kirk-Johnson Co., Lancaster;
George Schaeffer, Zigler Piano Co., Harrisburg;
Carl Wittich, Wittich Music House, Reading;
Charles E. Goodenough, Bethlehem, and Charles
Duftield, Chambersburg, Pa. Most of these
members of the State trade were elected to
offices in the State Association.
New Howard Small Grand, Style 450
in mahogany finish, and an extensive campaign
co-operating with dealers' local advertising has
been worked out by the Baldwin publicity de-
partment. In addition, to the standard model,
the new Style 450 is obtainable in throe period
designs, Queen Anne, Sheraton and William and
Mary.
Special efforts have been made by the Bald-
win acoustic engineers, supervising the crea-
tion of the new Howard instrument, to design
and build a grand to meet the requirements of
modern home conditions, and at the same time
satisfy the most critical musical taste. Work
on the Style 450 was actually started four years
ago in the Baldwin factory and several new
principals of scale construction were developed
in order to maintain Baldwin standards of tone
quality. As a result the new Howard instru-
ment possesses a mellow and resonant base as
well as a brilliant, singing treble register.
By a careful supervision, the three period
models in which the Style 450 is available have
been given graceful and authentic designs. The
Queen Anne case is furnished in brown mahog-
any and walnut, the Sheraton in brown mahog-
any only, and the William and Mary in brown
mahogany and walnut. Each is equipped with
a specially designed music rack, appropriate to
the respective periods.
A folder, describing the new Howard instru-
ment, has been prepared by the Baldwin pub-
licity department and is being sent out to the
trade for quantity distribution by dealers. In
used by the Baldwin retail warerooms in the
Cincinnati Enquirer on Monday, May 7, is now
New Grinnell Bros. Branch
available to dealers in mat form for initial an-
nouncements in their local papers. In addition,
OKTROIT, MICH., May 14.—Grinnell Bros, recent-
mats of smaller advertisements have also been ly opened another local retail piano and music
prepared, and other details in the national cam- store at 8021 Vernor Highway West. This gives
paign are being worked out.
Grinnell Bros, a total of nine retail stores in
Detroit, which are so situated that they are
represented
in every neighborhood section oi
Shiddell Becomes Assistant
the city.
Manager of Nipponophone
i
Columbia Co. Veteran Appointed to Important
Post With Japanese Company and Will Sail
for the Far East on June 8
E. B. Shiddell, for twenty years associated
with the Columbia Phonograph Co., and at
present in the general sales department, New
York, has been appointed assistant to L. H.
White, managing director of the Nipponophone
Co., Columbia subsidiary in Japan, and with
Mrs. Shiddell will sail from San Francisco for
his new post on June 8.
Mr. Shiddell, while comparatively young in
years, has had a varied experience with the
Columbia Co., starting as a collector of instal-
ment accounts in Kansas City in 1905. He ad-
vanced steadily in the Columbia branch organ-
ization, and in 1913 was sent to the West Indies,
where he built up a wholesale and retail busi-
ness, which was handled by the Frank E.
Robins Co., in Havana. He then became as-
Death of Caleb S. Spencer
BOSTON,
MASS.,
May 16.—Caleb S. Spencer,
father of Harry L. Spencer, well-known in the
talking machine trade of New England, and
himself at one time a partner in the old firm
of Kraft, Bates & Spencer, which operated a
factory and store here before being taken over
by the Brunswick-Balke-Collender Co., died at
the Peter Bent Brigham Hospital here today.
He was 71 years old.
Paul Ash on Broadway
Paul Ash, prominent orchestra leader and
Columbia record artist, who has built up a wide
reputation for himself in Chicago and the West
as "the Rajah of Jazz," made his debut on
Broadway on May 12, when he began an indefi-
nite engagement as Master of Ceremonies and
stage band leader at; the Paramount Theatre.

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