Music Trade Review

Issue: 1929 Vol. 88 N. 14

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
News Number
THE
VOL. 88. No. 14
REVIEW
Published Weekly. Federated Business Publications, Inc., 420 Lexington Aye., New York, N. Y. April 6 , 1 9 2 9
Single Copies 10 Cent*
$3.00 Per Year
All Piano Teaching Will Be
Done in Group Glasses
Dr. J. Lewis Browne, Noted Music Educator, Predicts This in Five So. California Radio Men
Work to Improve Trade
Years—Gives Important Message in Address
Discuss Demonstration, Trade-in and Service
Before Chicago Piano Club
Problems at Local Chapter Meetings Held at
Regular Intervals
^
HICAGO, ILL., April 1.—"In five years from now I believe all elementary piano lessons
will be class taught," declared Dr. J. Lewis Browne, director of music in the Chicago
Public Schools, in addressing the members of the local trade at to-day's meeting of the
Chicago Piano Club. An important message concerning the progress that has been made in
group piano class instruction in the Chicago schools was delivered to a representative body
of the local trade by Dr. Browne.
"You cannot drive children to practice, for ceeded in making plans to co-operate with
they must be encouraged to play through com- Dr. Frederick A. Stock, of the Chicago Sym-
petition and other means of stimulation," -he phony Orchestra, to give a musical apprecia-
pointed out. "In carrying on this work, we tion course to the high school students for
are using three courses, namely, the Miessner the next five years. If this movement started
System, the Curtis plan and the Oxford method twenty years ago, it would be necessary now
of instruction, representing the following to have three symphony orchestras. And the
music schools: The American Conservatory of development of appreciation in grand opera can
Music, the Sherwood School and the Bush also be accomplished in this way.
"Since the advent of the radio, the small
Conservatory of Music."
Dr. Browne emphatically stated that the idea apartment, and the automobile, the only hope
of this promotional work in the Chicago schools to bring the piano back is through the child.
is to put music back into the home by teaching If this work continues for the next ten years
children to read music so that they will find the situation will be entirely changed. In fact,
themselves, and have greater appreciation of by next Christmas, the piano should receive a
music. In pointing out the progress that has legitimate impetus which it could not possibly
been made he said that several thousand new have attained without the help of our children."
students had enrolled in the work since the
first of the year, with a total now of 9,800
children studying piano, 90 teachers teaching
violin classes, and plans for classes in voice
under way. He announced that on May 23, at
the Stud-ebaker Theatre, an exhibition will be
given demonstrating what the schools are doing
to develop piano class work. The program will
begin with a group of students that have never
had lessons, who will be given the principles
of instruction. This will be followed by the
various steps in instruction.
"The reason that there is no demand in Chi-
cago for grand opera is because we are not
MUSIC TRADES
starting right," Dr. Browne continued. "With
CONVENTION
530,000 children in the public schools, we should
DRAKE HOTEL
commence in the high schools and encourage
JUNE 3 TO 6 1929
the students to go to the opera. In a few
CHICAGO
years this would create musical atmosphere
among our citizens which would enable the
opera to continue all year. In Berlin, for in-
The Official Sticker of the 1929 Music-
stance, there are three operas giving perfor-
Conventions in Chicago Next June
mances the entire year.
"The Board of Education has recently sue-
C
Will You Be There?
Los ANGELES, CAL., March 30.—The various
chapters of the Radio Trades Association of
Southern California are setting a new standard
for earnestness of purpose and co-operation.
Last week two of these chapters, Long Beach
and the Valley, respectively, met and discussed
problems and passed resolutions for the better-
ment of trade conditions. The Long Beach
chapter are now holding regular monthly meet-
ings at 8 a. m. on the second Thursday of each
month. The place of their meeting is at the
"Breakers Club," in front of which the great
breakers of the Pacific roll and boom inces-
santly. At last week's meeting inspiration and
instruction was afforded through a talk by J. T.
French of the Richfield Oil Co., whose subject,
"Know Your Oil," was applicable to the sale of
all kinds of merchandise. The Valley Chapter
of the Radio Trades Association of Southern
California, which includes the towns of Azusa,
Covina, La Verne, Ontario, Pomona, San
Dimas, Upland, etc., has been meeting each
week in the various towns and this week fore-
gathered fifty strong at Upland for dinner.
The Riverside and Santa Ana chapters of the
Radio Trades Association of Southern Califor-
nia have also been holding regular meetings,
the former monthly and the latter weekly.
Among the various resolutions passed are in-
cluded: Limiting the time of approval demon-
strations in homes to forty-eight hours with the
further recommendation that one dealer at a
time should give such demonstration; trade-in
values for old battery-operated sets given a
maximum amount of ten per cent of the price
of the new set about to be purchased, guar-
antee of sets and tubes following the rules as
set by the manufacturers only, together with
not more than three free service calls within
90 days of purchase.
Strong activity in the elimination of radio
interference has also been waged in co-opera-
tion with the public utility companies. Also
there has been excellent work effected in in-
creasing publicity in the local newspapers
through supplying news items of real human
interest appeal.
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
The Music Trade Review
>'
A P R I L 6, 192$
•'••<„••.
Two New Sonora Models Are Popular
instead of at harps is beyond me. I suppose
the freight rates to Paradise are too heavy.
These ideas arc not the emanations of my
own brilliant mind. I am simply passing on
to you the well grounded and positive convic-
tions of the men of thought and experience in
cur piano trade.
So let us keep plugging and hammering at
it, and we will soon pass out of the fog we
are now in—into clear weather, and to partici-
pate in some of this prosperity that Washing-
ton tells us is lying around loose all over the
land.
-- - - ; .
Yours,
'
E. Bennett Fox
Sherman, Clay & Go. Give
Figures on 1928 Business
The Sonora A-30 Console Model
*T*WO of the most popular models in the
line of the Sonora Phonograph Co., Inc.,
are the radio receivers A-32, in an attractive
highboy casing, and the A-30, an effective con-
sole style. Both models are selling well in
every part of the country, which indicates the
full acceptance by the public.
The recent downward division of prices on
the various models in the Sonora line has served
to further increase an already substantial de-
mand for the company's products, according to
A. J. Kendrick, vice-president and general sales
manager.
The A-32 in Attractive Highboy Cabinet.
The Voice of a Piano Traveler
U* DITOR, The Music Trade Review:—
^
In these times of stress and uncertainty
in our piano trade, we are often given to medi-
tating on current conditions, and the devils
of doubt often creep in as to what, if any, is
the future in the piano business.
For some time the hue and cry was "What
is the matter with the piano business." After
many of us had taken a crack at guessing what
that matter was, time, as it generally does, dis-
closed what it was. The changing life in the
country had had much to do with causing the
let down in the piano buying, and the atten-
tion of the people has temporarily been turned
to other things. Yes, the much hammered at
radio and autmobiles are having their influence.
But it cannot be emphasized too strongly that
this present condition of the trade is only tem-
porary.
In traveling about in the trade, I have naturally
had opportunity to discuss conditions with
many of the most able, experienced, and far-
sighted men in the business, such as H. H.
MacDonald, MacDonald & Schwartz, Boston;
Charles E. Jackson, Cable Co., Chicago; Ed-
ward Keiselhorst and Phillip Lehman, St.
Louis; Eugene Whclan, Fred S. Moffet, and
James V. Sill, of W. W. Kimball Co., Chicago,
and others.
It has been a great source of encouragement
to realize that these men are united in an un-
shaken faith in the excellent future for the
piano business.
They also universally agree on these salient
points: that piano playing instruction classes
in the various methods now in use, both among
the dealers and in public schools, such as Curtis
System, Melody Way, Fun Method, etc., com-
bined with piano playing contests, are building
a firm and solid foundation for a steady and
perpetual market for pianos, checking the per-
iodic (for that is all the present condition is)
reaction in the business, operating much as
the Federal Reserve System does in checking
financial depressions.
•These influences should naturally, in a time,
have their effect on the foreign piano business and
so-build up a substantial export trade for those
of our factories which cater to this feature.
All this will naturally take tiine, possibly a
couple of years, as it will not spring up over-
night. Anything permanent and worth while,
as we all know, is not passed around on silver
platters, but takes much planning and work,
such as the Music Industries Chamber of Com-
merce is doing continuously.
It is pretty hard for many in the retail trade
to see this yet, of course. The poor old dealer
has been much railed at for not working hard
enough, selling too much radio, etc., but in his
defense I tell you \n his daily grind, whether
he be in a fine piano salon on Wabash avenue,
or Fifth avenue, or on Main street, South
Applesauce, Ohio, the repeated rebuffs he re-
ceives at the hands of his prospects gets under
the skin, eventually, of the best man.
It's the same old story in all localities—"We
never use our old pianos, so why buy a new
one," "My brother's family never play theirs
and I can have it any time I want it," "We
are seldom home, and when we are we turn
en the radio and get all the music we want,"
and ad infinitum. It takes strong arguments to
leap these hurdles, and we are not all strong
salesmen.
If general business conditions in a town are
at low ebb, it swings the piano to near the last
among the necessities. But if we can just keep
plugging at it a little while longer the tide will
commence to turn.
There will always be radio business in vol-
ume, but a receiving set in the home will be
taken as a matter of course and not an ob-
jective. Incidentally, improvements in con-
struction and merchandising methods of sets
will stabilize the radio business to permit bet-
ter profits to the dealers.
Meanwhile we will be resuscitating the piano
and putting it back on its pedestal as the
greatest and most glorious musical instrument
that God ordained man to make. Why our
artists have never put the angels at keyboards
SAN FRANCISCO, CAL., March 29.—Figures were
given out yesterday regarding Sherman, Clay &
Co.'s 1928 operations, although net results for
the year were not announced. The company's
total revenue in 1928 was reported as $7,547,809
which compares with $8,111,570 for 1927. The
current position of the business as indicated by
the annual balance sheet will show ratio of 4'A
to 1, it was stated, against approximately 5 to 1
the previous year.
Profits for 1928 were affected by develop-
ments in" the radio field and the consequent
necessity the company was under of having to
close out large quantities of battery sets at re-
duced prices to make room for the new elec-
trically-operated sets. The company's piano
business was nearly normal, and total prospects
for 1929 are considered excellent.
Pittsburgh Dealers Pass
Resolution on New Radios
Strongly Oppose Practice of Introducing New
Lines of Instruments Immediately Following
Fall and Holiday Selling Season
PITTSBURGH, PA., April 1.—The executive
committee of the Radio Council of the Pitts-
burgh Chamber of Commerce, A. A. Buelin,
chairman, adopted the following recommenda-
tion, which is self-explanatory:
"Upon motion made and duly seconded, it is
the action of this council that it recommend as
a matter of record, its wish to strongly oppose
the practice of introducing new radio sets di-
rectly following the large retail selling season
of the late Fall and holiday season, because of
the disturbing influence of such practice on
existing and newly negotiated leases, on which
very small payments have been made; and
further, that copies of this resolution be sent
to all radio associations, including the Feder-
ated Radio Trade Association, the Radio Manu-
facturers Association, a,nd Associated Manufac-
turers of Electrical Supplies, encouraging that
these organizations lend their influence and sup-
port to carry out the procedure set forth in this
recommendation."
Breakfast Glub Formed
SAN FRANCISCO, CAI.., March 30.—A breakfast
club of radio retailers was organized here re-
cently and E. Roy Nash, president of the retail-
ers' group of the Pacific Radio Trade Associa-
tion, was in general charge of the meeting in
the roof garden of the Hotel Whitcomb. The
chief speaker was Ray Brouillot, who gave out
a lot of rapid-fire sales energy, a,s becomes one
who is conducting sales campaigns for several
companies, and is editor of several books on
salesmanship.
Wesit rwlt Terhune, district manager for the
Columbia Phonograph Co., was in New Orleans
for f wo days last week and visited William
Stundki, president of the Standke Music Co.,
as well as other local Columbia dealers.

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