Music Trade Review

Issue: 1928 Vol. 86 N. 26

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
The Music Trade Review
The Uplifters' Club, a branch of the Los
Angeles Athletic Club, situated in Santa Monica
canyon, west of Los Angeles, was the scene on
Tuesday night of a dinner and entertainment
given by the Atwater Kent Radio Mfg. Co., to
which all delegates and their wives were invited.
Delegates Visit Pageant and Exposition
During the afternoons, those delegates who
were not engaged in business transactions or in
attendance at the special meetings visited the
International Music Pageant and Exposition,
given in the Ambassador Auditorium, situated
nearby the convention hall. The exposition was
Philip T. Clay
declared the most complete display of musical
instruments ever held. While one of the Asso-
ciation convention sessions was in progress the
pageantry was staged to reveal to the public
the effect and beneficial power of music. Actors,
pantomimists and scenery carried out the theme
of the pageant, which was declared by the dele-
gates to be a huge merchandising force.
Second Day Session
T * H E second of the Western Music Trades'
•*• Convention yesterday, Wednesday, was
given over entirely to discussions of various
phases of radio and of (he radio trade, and there
were many illuminating facts presented by
authorities for the consideration of the dealers.
Uhl Urges Higher Markup
Ed. H. Uhl, president of the association, in-
troduced the subject by declaring a higher
markup on radio instruments was an urgent
need for the dealer. He declared that with
more profit available in pianos, many of the
dealers were likely to devote the better sales-
men to the bulkier instruments, and to neglect
the radio end of their business. He further
pointed out that when instalment merchants
discounted their paper, sometimes at twenty
per cent, there was little profit left in radio
sales.
Servicing Still a Problem
C. H. Mansfield, of Los Angeles, manager of
the radio department of the Platt Music Co.,
declared service constituted one of the consid-
erable menaces to the radio industry. He said
with many firms promising what he charac-
terized as "wild performances," in other words
declaring their sets would work wonders and
would bring in stations so far remote that such
performance actually would be an impossibility,
the customer, on trying the instrument, would
discover its inability and would demand service
call after service call, thereby running up tre-
mendous losses for the dealer.
The one way to obviate this needless dif-
ficulty, he said, is to promise only a thirty-day
service period after the method of the automo-
bile dealer and to instruct salesmen empha-
tically to make no "wild statements" pertaining
to the product. Cut service costs further, he
recommended, by handling only recognized and
thoroughly tried radio sets. The better sets,
he pointed out, will require but little servicing.
Cooperation of Manufacturers Needed
Without the cooperation of the manufac-
turer, Mr. Mansfield said, the dealer has little
chance to succeed. One of the most necessary
cooperative moves, he declared, constitutes the
manner in which new models are introduced,
for premature announcement of these models
invariably halts sales, and the fact that many
manufacturers do not sufficiently guard against
and do not take steps to curb rumors puts
the dealer at a distinct disadvantage.
"I frequently have had my customers," he
continued, "advise me of models of which 1
had no knowledge either definite or remote.
When these stories became widely circulated, it
sometimes was found they were without founda-
tion or were baseless. However, they had their
disastrous effect on business.
"Some manufacturers give a guarantee against
price drops, but to iny knowledge none of them
give any kind of guarantee against issuance of
new models. One manufacturer to my knowl-
edge has changed models three times within
the past nine months, each time coming out
with practically the same set at a lower price."
Television Still Distant, Says Lambert
Announcement of television was character-
ized as premature both by Mr. Mansfield and
by I. E. Lambert, assistant general attorney of
the Radio Corp. of America, New York.
"Television," said Mr. Lambert, "of course is
r.n assured fact, but it is as yet in the labora-
tory stage. Just as is the phonograph which
runs a motion picture of the band, singer or
raconteur as the record is played, television is
not yet ready for handling by the unskilled lay-
man.
"Overenthusiastic newspaper stories telling
of television's accomplishment and the an-
nouncement of the movie phonograph have had
their disastrous influence in slowing sales all
over the country. Positive knowledge has come
to us on repeated occasions wherein prospec-
tive customers have hesitated or have actually
refused to buy because they expected immedi-
ate introduction of these two new marvels."
Richard E. Smiley, assistant sales manager
of tlie Atwater Kent Mfg. Co., of Philadelphia,
said: "The radio industry is going through its
usual 'spring season,' with attendant rumors
flying thick and fast. We hear of companies
that are going to revolutionize the industry,
until one wonders if the plans of all will be
successful. Of course, all of this is ridiculous
because many of the companies which have an-
nounced extremely ambitious programs are
most certainly not in position to finance them."
"Is radio a specialty or a commodity," he asked,
declaring that many firms were forcing radio
into the latter class of merchandising. After
many millions of dollars have been expended
in placing a manufacturer's name before the
public, he said, radio should be exploited from
that basis.
Competition among music and radio mer-
chants, Mr. Smiley continued, is being con-
siderably sweetened by better understanding
and the influence of trades associations. If the
radio and the phonograph were once competi-
tors, he said, that competition no longer exists,
as to-day any broad-minded merchant realizes
that both are travelling hand in hand, with the
phonograph giving permanently recorded music
and the radio the current music, news and
concerts.
The Importance of Trade Journals
Trade journals were paid a great compliment
by Mr. Smiley, who declared they were de-
cidedly important factors in bringing the mod-
ern viewpoints to the industry simultaneously
in all parts of the country, The trade journal,
he said, stands as a common meeting place for
men of an industry and the value of this in-
fluence cannot be over-estimated.
Royal W. Daynes, of Salt Lake City, presi-
dent of the Consolidated Music Co., declared
JUNE 30, 1928
jazz music soon will go through a refining proc-
ess and that after this transition, which will
eliminate crazed antics of drummers and shrill
squeaks of clarinets, jazz will be recognized and
accepted by the finest musicians of all nations.
Third Day Session
A T I he final session of the convention, fol-
•^^ lowing the recommendation of President
Uhl at the first session and the attention given
to radio problems on Tuesday, it was voted to
change the name of the organization to the
Western Music & Radio Trades' Association.
The vote was unanimous and the move was en-
dorsed by many prominent members of the
association.
Royal W. Daynes the New President
i
Royal W. Daynes, of the Consolidated Music
Co., Salt Lake City, was elected president, and
his city was chosen as the next meeting place
ol the convention. Other new officers are Ellis
Marx, of the Ellis Marx Music Co., Sacra-
mento, first vice-president; Shirley Walker, of
Sherman, Clay & Co., San Francisco, second
vice-president, and John Elliott Clark, of Salt
Lake City, secretary.
It was left to Mr. Daynes to appoint his own
treasurer, and executive secretary from Salt
Lake City musical instrument men, thereby
swinging the control of the western association
lor the coming year into the intermountain
region.
In his address of acceptance, Mr. Daynes
devoted himself to an invitation to all members
of the Association to attend the next conven-
tion, and refrained from outlining his official
policies other than pledging himself to serve
the industry to his best ability.
Radio Men Appreciative
After the change in name of the organization
was effected, Walter Pagan, Los Angeles radio
dealer and a leader in the industry in the south-
west, was called by E. H. Uhl, still presiding
as president, to describe the radio dealers' reac-
tion to the alteration.
He characterized the move as "more than a
sound one," declaring that great changes in the
distribution of musical instruments were com-
ing from within the industry itself.
"Radio and music are identical," he said, "and
vou will never divorce them. Radio is enter-
C. H. Mansfield
tainment, like a piano. Hut the adoption of a
resolution and the change of an association
name means little other than a reflection of an
internal condition. To make it mean something
real to the industry, radio must be adopted as a
business, a thoroughly recognized and respected
one, by all musical instrument houses."
Committee to Confer With Radio Men
He concluded with recommending that a com-
mittee be appointed at once to confer with the
radio trades associations in all sections of the
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
The Music Trade Review
JUNE 30, 1928
west, relative to their being absorbed into the
larger and more comprehensive "Music and
Radio Trades Association."
"Radio manufacturers will find the musical
instrument house a natural outlet for their
product," Ed. A. Geissler, vice-president and
secretary of the Birkel Music Co., Los Angeles,
stated from the floor of the convention. "The
music store is the place for all home entertain-
ment, and a separation of music and radio
should not even be implied."
Philip T. Clay, president Sherman, Clay &
Co., San Francisco, recommended adoption of
the change in name on grounds that manufac-
turers and the public should have notice served
on them that radio and music are one. He also
pointed out that by the amalgamation of organ-
izations, one convention yearly could be held,
with all members of the allied industries pres-
ent, and there would be an elimination of dues
and other upkeep of a needless Association.
The only change in the board of directors
was the election of W. W. Bradford, Knight-
Campbell Music Co., Denver, and Ernest In-
gold of Ernest Ingold, Inc., San Francisco, to
the places formerly occupied by E. B. Hyatt,
of Portland, Ore., and Ellis Marx.
Warns Against "Vocational Selfishness"
Orra E. Monettc, Los Angeles banker, ad-
dressed the meeting on financial subjects, con-
cluding with a warning against "vocational sel-
fishness," which he characterized as a too often
encountered condition into which any business
man may fall, when he places his own vocation
and his immediate business activity above that
of his community interests.
Take part in civic and community activities,
Mr. Monette advised, pointing out that a busi-
ness man is only part of his own community
and the community and individual prosperity in-
variably are proportionate.
Shirley Walker, prior to being elected to
office, told the complete story of the piano con-
test conducted in San Francisco two years ago,
under auspices of the San Francisco Call, de-
claring it obtained for the piano industry thou-
sands of dollars' worth of publicity which could
never have been secured otherwise and saying
the contest created innumerable young pianists.
He advised . tying up with one newspaper,
making the event a part of that newspaper's in-
terests, thereby obtaining a much more whole-
hearted editorial co-operation than could have
been engendered if the subject were placed as
an open news story for all papers.
"1 bring greetings to the Western Music
Trades Convention from the National Associa-
tion of Music Merchants. It was the hope of
President Roberts to attend this convention,
but responsibilities connected with the National
Association, as well as his own business, pre-
vented him from being here. The recent Na-
tional convention honored the Pacific Coast in
selecting one of its vice-presidents from this
territory. As I happen to be the victim, Presi-
dent Roberts asked me to extend for him his
greetings. In order to bring the East and the
West in closer contact, President Roberts is
planning to send Delbert L. Loomis, secretary
of the National Association of Music Merchants,
to the Pacific Coast in October to meet with
the Trade Associations in the cities up and
down the Pacific Coast, and to call upon the
trade to discuss trade problems and to secure
first-hand information.
"In closing I will state that the National con-
vention recently held in New York was one of
the greatest ever held. The attendance was
extraordinary—in fact, it reminded us of the
West, of our own Western Music Trades Con-
vention. Over 300 attended each session. The
programs at these sessions were more construc-
tive than they have been in the past. There
was evidence everywhere of an intense desire
for the music trade to get together in an en-
deavor to solve some of its problems.
"1 regret that President Roberts himself could
not be here to give you his message. President
Roberts is a forceful speaker and keenly feels
the need of organization work. So constructive
was his administration that the Convention
unanimously reelected him for the ensuing year,
and I hope it will be your pleasure to meet
President Roberts, either here on the Coast or
in Chicago next June where the next annual
convention will take place."
Mr. Walker's talk followed the reading of a
telegram of greeting sent to President Edward
H. L T hl of the Western Music Trades' Associa-
tion by President C. J. Roberts of the national
body.
Swedish Composer Awarded
Grand Schubert Prize
Kurt Atterberg Captures $10,000 Grand Prize
in Schubert Contest Conducted by Columbia
Phonograph Co. On International Basis
Word has come from Vienna that Kurt Atter-
berg, of Sweden, the well-known composer,
conductor of the Stockholm Orchestra and
president of the Swedish Society of Composers,
has been awarded the Columbia Phonograph
Co.'s $10,000 grand prize for a musical composi-
tion best recapturing the melodic spirit of Franz
Schubert. The prize work is an original sym-
phony in C major and won a majority of votes
from ten noted judges representing as many
different nations.
Immediately following the verdict of the jury,
the Columbia Co. announced that in the near
future it will both record and broadcast the
prize score as well as all first prize winning
scores in the nine other international zones
against which Sweden competed for the grand
prize. Walter Damrosch was chairman of the
international jury.
The Schubert prize contest merely completes
the first phase of Columbia's Schubert Centen-
nial. Educational and musical programs are
being given in hundreds of towns and cities in
the United States and elsewhere which will
culminate in the celebration of Schubert Week
from November 18 to 25 in commemoration of
the centennial of the composer's death, No-
vember 19, 1828.
An important development of the prize con-
test is the announcement of the Columbia Co.,
made at a dinner in Vienna on June 23, that
it will sponsor a permanent International Par-
liament for the Advancement of Music.
Through this parliament, Columbia establishes
a $50,000 prize fund, for the years covered from
1929 to 1938 inclusive, to be spent in yearly
prizes of $5,000 each, for "the greatest service
to the cause of music." Under the details of
this fund a unique feature is that award will
be possible each year either to an individual,
tor creative work, or to an institution, for serv-
ice rendered the advancement of music inter-
nationally.
All delegates to the present Congress enthu-
Said to Be First Appearance of Symphony in
American Market in Record Form—Recorded siastically endorsed this plan as a logical out-
growth of Columbia's service in sponsoring the
by Halle Orchestra
Beethoven and Schubert years of 1927 and 1928,
The latest Columbia Masterworks release is and added that the plan fills an important gap
Schubert's Ninth Symphony, in C Major, the in the Nobel Prizes, which do not cover music.
Administration will be by a permanent council
next Schubert work in importance to the "Un-
of
thirty members, three each from each of the
finished Symphony" (No. 8). It was Schubert's
last symphonic work, written just before his present ten international zones. The function
of the council will be advisory, Columbia re-
death. He never heard it played.
This is said to be the symphony's first ap- serving the right to make the yearly awards
Shirley Walker, Vice-President of National
Association of Music Merchants, Represents pearance on the American market. Owing to from recommendations furnished by the council.
Vienna is proposed as the meeting place for
its importance, Columbia has provided a special
That Body Officially at Los Angeles
leather album for it, the third leather holder the council in 1929, but the decision of place is
Los ANGEI.KS, CAI.., June 28.—The official to be issued for Masterworks Sets, the others not vet definitely fixed.
having been for Beethoven's Ninth Symphony
representative of the National Association of
Music Merchants at the convention of the and the Wagner Bayreuth records. Sir Ham-
Western Music Trades' Association was Shirley ilton Harty and the Halle Orchestra are the
Walker, of Sherman, Clay & Co., San Francisco, recording artists.
Taylor C. White has assumed charge of the
who, as vice-president of the National body,
Fitzgerald Music Co. store, at 337 North Brand
presented the greetings of that organization at
Ernest Masi, of New Castle, Pa., has opened street, Glendale, Cal., succeeding former Man-
the opening session of the convention here a new music store on West Pine street, Grove ager Sawhill, who has been transferred to the
saying:
City, handling pianos, etc.
company's headquarters in Los Angeles
Columbia Masterworks of
Schubert's Ninth Symphony
Greetings From National
to Western Association
White Succeeds Sawhill
ESTABLISHED 1862
L^UTER
ONE OF AMERICA'S
NEWARK N J.
FINE PIANOS
UPRIGHTS
GRANDS
THE LAUTER-HUMANA

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