Music Trade Review

Issue: 1928 Vol. 86 N. 5

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
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The Music Trade Review
REVIEW
(Registered in the U. S. Patent Office)
Published by Federated Business Publications, Inc.
at 420 Lexington Avenue, New York
President, Raymond Bill; Vice-Presidents, 1. B. Spillane, Randolph Brown; Sec re
tary_ and Treasurer, Edward Lyman Bill; Assistant Secretary, L. B. McDonald;
Assistant Treasurer, Wm. A. Low.
B. BRITTAIN WILSON, Editor
RAY BILL, Associate Editor
WM. H. McCLEARY, Managing Editor
CARLETON CHACE, Business Manager
FRANK L. AVERY, Circulation Manager
Executive and Reportorial Staff
E. B. MUNCH, EDWARD VAN HARLINGEN, THOS. W. BRESNAHAN, E. J. NEALII,
FREDERICK B. DIEHL, A. J. NICKLEN
WESTERN DIVISION:
FRANK W. KIRK, Manager
BOSTON OFFICE
JOHN H. WILSON, 324 Washington St.
Republic Bldg., 209 So. State St., Chicago
Telephone, Main 69S0
Telephone, Wabash 5242-5243
LONDON, ENGLAND: 1 Greshara Buildings, Basinghall, St., D. C.
NEWS SERVICE IS SUPPLIED WEEKLY BY OUR CORRESPONDENTS
LOCATED IN THE LEADING CITIES THROUGHOUT AMERICA
Published Every Saturday at 420 Lexington Avenue, New York
Entered as second-class matter September 10, 1892, at the post office at New York, N. Y.,
under the Act of March 3, 1879.
SUBSCRIPTION, United States and Mexico, $2.00 per year; Canada, $3.50; all other
countries, $5.00.
ADVERTISEMENTS, rates on request.
REMITTANCES, should be made payable to Music Trade Review.
Exposition Honors Won by The Review
Grand Prix
Paris Exposition, 1900 Silver Medal. -Charleston Exposition, 1902
Diploma.. ..Pan-American Exposition, 1901 Gold Medal... .St. Louis Exposition, 1904
Gold Medal—Lewis-Clark Exposition, 1905
TELEPHONES—LEXINGTON 1760-1771
Cable Address: "Elblll, New York"
Vol. 86
NEW YORK, FEBRUARY 4, 1928
No. 5
Is the Industry Undermanned?
T T is the opinion of A. G. Gulbransen, president of the Gulbran-
-•• sen Co., as stated at the recent convention of the company's
mid-Western dealers, and also on other occasions, that the public
properly approached will buy pianos in liberal numbers, but that the
retail division of the industry is seriously undermanned and is,
therefore, not capable of covering the field as it should be covered.
This lack of sufficient selling force results in one of two things—
either the dealer spreads his efforts over too wide a territory to
be handled properly and efficiently, or he is forced to concentrate
on certain groups or types of prospects and, therefore, loses out
with the general run of possible customers.
It is a noteworthy fact that dealers who consistently operate
with large sales staffs, and particularly with plenty of outside
men, seem to get a very substantial portion of the business in
their respective territories, which is proof of the oft-repeated
statement that volume of sales depends in many cases on volume
of contacts. If the individual salesman, for instance, increases
J^is number of calls by 50 per cent, he may be expected to in-
crease his percentage of sales in a relatively like proportion.
I National advertising and widespread promotion work are
ljjiecessary and helpful to the trade, but the real success of any-
such campaign depends upon the force with which the arguments
and the appeals are brought directly to the attention of the public
by the men on the firing-line. Certainly the retail piano field is
not in any sense overcrowded. It is true that warerooms may be
grouped together in a way that would seem to indicate a large
number, but when the territory covered by these groups of ware-
rooms is considered, they are in many cases all too few.
According to the Government census of distribution covering
a score or more cities throughout the country, Seattle, the best-
equipped city, has only one music store to every 9,286 of the
population; Chicago, one store to every 10,363; Kansas City, one
to every 20,416, and Syracuse only one music store to every 23,214
of the population, and according to the Government definition,
classification as music stores does not mean that establishments
rriust of necessity provide outlets for pianos. Even Cincinnati,
FEBRUARY 4, 1928
particularly well equipped in the matter of music stores, has only
one to something like 5,300 of the population.
With this limited number of outlets liberally manned, there
would be little danger of exhausting the field of prospects, but
referring to the Federal census again, in eight leading cities there
were listed 495 music store, 289 of them being in Chicago alone,
and for all these stores there were only 2,984 employes, of which
barely 50 per cent were classified as sales people. In other words,
there were last year, according to the census, only about three
individuals per store engaged in selling musical instruments, in-
cluding pianos. Certainly on that basis it cannot be expected that
persistent and effective contact with the public can be maintained
at all times.
It takes considerable courage for the average dealer to in-
crease his sales staff under conditions such as have existed in the
trade during the past year or so, particularly if he seeks to build
up a permanent organization of the right caliber and is willing to
carry the proper kind of men financially until they can produce
profitable results. Yet that is a matter which will have to be
considered seriously by dealers as a whole if the retail distribution
of pianos is to be increased in any big way. Pianos are sold
through contact and not by telepathy. It takes sales people to make
contact.
& X X
They Came to the Front When Needed
O more laudable action resulted from the meetings of the
executive bodies of the several trade organizations last week
than was taken at the meeting of the Board of Directors of the
Music Industries Chamber of Commerce when the National Piano
Manufacturers' Association and the National Association of Music
Merchants took upon themselves the burden of meeting any defi-
cit in revenue that might be experienced by the Chamber during
the year. The action was taken primarily to insure the continuance,
without curtailment, of the widespread and important activities of
the National Bureau for the Advancement of Music.
Fortunately the anticipated deficit represents a comparatively
modest amount, but large enough, nevertheless, to threaten some
of the important functions of the Bureau were necessary funds
not made available. The action of the piano men was, no doubt,
influenced in no small measure by the declarations of a number of
prominent educators and musical authorities who took occasion to
attend the meeting of the Music Advancement Committee and
emphasize most strongly the great importance of the Bureau's
work for the cause of musical education and appreciation. It
brought before the trade members most forcibly the wide scope
of the Bureau's work and the many contacts that it has estab-
lished. Certainly under existing conditions the industry cannot
•afford to suffer the discontinuance of any part of this work be-
cause of the lack of a few thousand dollars.
n
$ w
Piano First — Then the Style Name
piano man in discussing trade promotion activ-
A VETERAN
ities recently saw fit to decry the practice of devising fancy
names for new types of instruments. "We see trade announce-
ments and newspaper advertisements featuring names for pianos
that are fanciful and perhaps clever, but they give no indica-
tion of the type of products presented. There may be a cut
of a piano in the advertisement, or the descriptive matter may lead
the reader to suspect what is being offered, but in many cases to
the uninitiated the new instrument remains more or less of a mys-
tery. Why not tack the word 'piano' to every such fancy name?
That is what we are selling. It is the basic instrument, and no
special title, whether it represents a new type of reproducing piano,
or some other type of product, should be of a character to over-
shadow the fact that it is really a piano with trimmings."
Perhaps our friend is a bit pessimistic, for in the great ma-
jority of cases, regardless of the descriptive terms used, it is made
quite evident that what is being offered is a piano, in a new form
perhaps, but, nevertheless, a piano. There are just a sufficient num-
ber of cases, however, where the special titles have been featured
in a way as to perhaps cause confusion, to make the warning worth
while. Let the piano be featured by its right name in every in-
stance, and let the special name be subordinated. That is one way
to realize the most from promotion work.
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
FEBRUARY 4, 1928
13
The Music Trade Review
Plans Announced for the
Chicago Piano Tournament
Hardman Agents in Uruguay
Occupy New Building
The piano house of Gioscia Hermanos, Hard-
man representatives in Montevideo, Uruguay,
has recently celebrated the formal opening of
Herald & Examiner, of That City, Gives First Information Re-
garding the Second Annual Greater Chicago Piano Playing
Tournament — $5,000 in Awards Offered
HE second Annual Greater Chicago Children's Piano-Playing Tournament, which is being
sponsored by the local piano trade in co-operation with the Chicago Herald & Examiner,
was announced to the public through its Sunday edition this week.
The selection of the winner will be made by contests similar in nature to those conducted
last year. Five thousand dollars in awards will be given to the boys and girls who are selected.
Rules for the 1928 tournament will be similar to those of the previous year, with such changes
as new selections of music and a better dis-
"
tribution of prizes. Any boy or girl of school "I'm Cryin' 'Cause I Know I'm Losing You."
age living in Chicago or its suburbs can take Mr. Edwards is at present on a twenty-six-week
part in the tournament except those who won tour of the Orpheum Circuit on the Pacific
Coast.
cash awards in the 1927 event.
The contestants will be divided into three
divisions to insure every participant a fair New York Conditional Sales
chance in the competition; first is the elementary
Law Reprinted for Dealers
division, which includes pupils from the first to
the sixth school grades, inclusive, with the first
prize of $300; second prize $200, and third New York State Music Merchants' Association
Issues Copy of Measure in Convenient Form
prize $100.
—Making Plans for Convention
The second division is the intermediate for
boys and girls in the seventh, eighth and ninth
The New York State Music Merchants' Asso-
school grades. In this division there will be
a first prize of $400; a second prize of $300 and ciation, through the secretary, Glenn L. Chesbro,
of Syracuse, has had printed and distributed to
the third $200.
Those in- the tenth, eleventh and twelfth its membership a special booklet containing the
grades of school will be included in the high Uniform Conditional Sales Law of the State of
division. The first prize in this division will New York as revised in 1927. The presentation
be $500; the second prize $400, and the- third of the law in booklet form will prove of great
convenience to dealers, who of necessity must be
prize $300.
The pianist who, in the opinion of the judges, acquainted with its various provisions for their
is the best of the three first-prize division win- own protection.
Plans are now being made for the next State
ners, will be given an additional award of $500
and the title of "Champion Amateur Junior convention, which will be held somewhere in the
Pianist of Greater Chicago, and Grand Prize central part of the State toward the end of April.
Winner of the Annual Greater Chicago Chil- A program of the meeting, together with dates,
will be announced in the near future, states
dren's Piano-Playing Tournament for 1928."
Gold certificates will be given every entrant the Association.
participating in the tournament; silver medals
will be presented to the winners of prelimi-
naries; gold medals to the winners of district
tests, and diamond medals for semi-final win-
ners. Silver loving cups will be awarded to the
teachers of prize-winning contestants to be
selected in the grand finals.
All contestants will be required to play two
compositions, one which they will select and
another which every pupil in the various classi-
fications will be required to play. The rules and
regulations were compiled by an advisory com-
mittee consisting of Frederick Stock, conductor
of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra; Marx E.
Moran and
Oberndorfer, president of the Society of Ameri-
Mack With
can Musicians, and Howard Wells, director of
contests for the Society of American Musicians.
Other Artists in
None of these men will serve as a judge during
a Recent Gala
the tournament; they will merely act in an ad-
visory capacity because of their ability as mu-
Broadcast
sicians.
In the new arrangement of rules the advisory
committee plans to have all judges screened so
that they cannot see the contestants. Interna-
tionally known pianists from outside Chicago
will judge the grand finals.
T
I
Gioscia Hermanos
|
its new building at Avenido de 18 de Julio 958.
Gioscia Hermanos have been handling the Hard-
man line for some time and are very enthu-
siastic over the new Hardman and Harrington
period models.
Featuring Columbia Viva-
Tonal in Vaudeville Act
Dale Wimbrow, Columbia artist, is featuring
the Viva-tonal Columbia phonograph as an ac-
tive stage property in a tour of the Keith vaude-
ville circuit. The popular comedian, who is ap-
pearing with Blanche Franklin, song-writer and
singer, has a new act for which he needs a
phonograph. What happens to him, and how
Columbia saves the day, is Dale's own story.
Consult the Universal Want Directory of
The Review.
Moran and Mack With Other Columbia
Stars Broadcast From Station WOR
Cliff Edwards Makes
First Columbia Record
Cliff Edwards ("Ukulele Ike") well known
and popular for his crooning of sentimental bal-
lads with ukulele accompaniment in vaudeville
and musical comedy circles, has been added to
the list of artists recording exclusively for Co-
lumbia, his first release on Columbia records
being: "After My Laughter Came Tears," and
/^vNE of the most successful of the programs
^--' broadcast by the Columbia Phonograph Co.
through Station WOR and the Columbia chain
of stations was that presenting the popular, and
it might be said famous, "Two Black Crows,"
Moran and Mack, who were on the air for an
hour in company with Leo Reisman and His
Watch Ludwig
Orchestra, and James Melton, tenor, all ex-
clusive Columbia artists. That the program
made a particular hit was evident from the re-
sponse of listeners-in, who were generous in
their praise. At the conclusion of the program
the artists were photographed as in the above
illustration.
That's All!!

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