Music Trade Review

Issue: 1930 Vol. 89 N. 11

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
WmBtaid White
Technical Editor
Comments on the Tuners' Convention
and the Future of the Profession
T F the recent convention of the tuners at
Toledo showed anything at all, it showed
that the fight is to the fighter. No one, of
course, could have expected this year, in the
circumstances, the great crowds that filled the
hotels at Chicago and New York in 1926 and
1927; but it would have been by no means
foolish, on the other hand, to have expected
that 1930 would witness a condition of affairs
like unto that which so unhappily characterized
the meeting of the M. I. C. C. at New York
this summer. In actual and happy fact, the
Tuners' Association is living on; and one may
properly ask, after tendering due congratula-
tions to the men whose devotion and courage
have thus been vindicated, what its members
are likely to accomplish during the next year
or so.
The Way of the Counselor
More than once I have been very sharply
citicized for venturing to utter warnings and
to tender advice in this field; but the way of
the counselor is proverbially as hard as that
of the transgressor, unless indeed it turns out
that his counsel comes to be both adopted and
successful. Usually he who ventures to warn
or to advise has to be satisfied with seeing his
warnings ignored and his advice spurned. Since,
however, I have been in the position of un-
official and altogether not suppressible adviser
to this interesting body, of which the fortunes
have always been so much a matter of interest
to me, its sire, I shall venture again a few-
words, promising to avoid, with such dexterity
as I possess, whatever missiles may be hurled
at me by indignant gentlemen in the way of
reprisal.
Any body of men who meet to consider grave
questions affecting their professional prospects
and even their immediate status as earners of
money are, necessarily, .as it were, caught
between two fires. On the one hand they havt
to think of the immediate and pressing need,
which is, of course, how to get more business
now, without delay. The- temptation is, there-
fore, great to sacrifice everything else to th<_
snlution of this ( >ne problem. So we hear oi
Badger Brand Plates
are far more than
merely good plates.
They are built cor-
rectly of the best
material and finish.
and are specified by builders of quality
pianos.
American Piano Plate Co.
Manufacturer! BADGER BRAND Grand and
Upright Piano Plates
Racine, Wisconsin
tuners going into other lines of work and com-
pletely dropping their tuning work. Others
again propose to cut their prices and thereby
to attract custom which they have been unable
to obtain in any other way. The temptation to
gain immediate results and to leave the future
to take care of itself is thus always very great;
nor must we be astonished if we find that there
is always a large number of even the best
tuners looking at their problems from this
point of view.
Nb one can afford to sneer at the conduct of
men who are facing a state of affairs like this;
yet every thinking man will agree that nothing
was ever gained yet by offering to perform
services at prices too low. Nothing can pos-
sibly be plainer than that what ails the tuning
business is neither a surplus of tuners nor a
lack of pianos. Everybody who has ever thought
twice about the matter knows that even in the
so-called palmy days of the piano business most
pianos went untuned from one year's end to
the other. It was always a very small minor-
ity which supported the tuners, even in the few
big cities which have boasted, and continue to
boast, a musical coterie. Certainly, if my own
experiences, backed up by years of contact with
the best masters of the craft, counts for any-
thing at all, the truth is that tuners have never
been able to make a good living out of the
masses from piano tuning and piano regulating
alone. The employed tuner has been in a some-
what different position, but even he has al-
ways had to work at low wages, simply be-
cause he has, with some justice from the busi
ness point of view, been regarded as a neces-
sary evil, as an addition to the overhead ex-
pense, and, therefore, to be kept down as much
as possible.
Tuners or Player Mechanics
1 am thus rather skeptical about the idea that
radio or anything else has killed the tuning
business. What has happened is that radio has
inflicted a very severe defeat of the player
business, which is quite a different matter. The
player business lias been very nearly killed,
without a doubt, but when tuners complain oi
having lost their customers, they really mean
that they are no longer loaded down with player
work, as they were until, say, three years ago.
Welte Mignon Experts
We install the original Welte-
Mignon Reproducing Actions
in all makes of pianos. Also
general renovating and re-
pairing of all types of player
actions.
WELTE-MIGNON PIANO CORP.
704 St. Ann's Ave.
28
New York
For the tuner had been becoming, during the
past twenty years, more and more a player
man and less and less a tuner. This was not
his fault. It was not the fault of anyone. It
was the result of a powerful movement in the
music industries of the country, brought about
by • the inventors of player mechanisms. This
movement enriched many manufacturers and
dealers. It did not enrich many of the in-
ventors; but that is the way of things in this
world. So long as this movement was meet-
ing no serious competition in the way of musi-
making devices entailing even less of effort or
intelligence to make them work, the player-pi-
ano was the favorite instrument of the masses.
Put the masses neither are nor ever were musi-
cal. I frankly confess to having made myself be-
lieve, during a good many years, that the player-
piano could be sold to the masses as a true
musical instrument; and I did my share to en-
courage tuners to become player men. At the
time, indeed, no advice could have been better.
Well, we have passed through that phase.
What now are the tuners to do?
Back to Music
Nothing, I suspect, save just' go back to tun-
ing pianos. Is it not true, after all, that the
good tuner has always had to depend, so far as
his piano work proper was concerned, upon the
small, intelligent, cultured minority, sometimes
professionally, more often amateurly musical,
whose pianos are the best, who have a sense of
tonal value, and who love music whether as a
life work or as a hobby. By no means all these
nice people are rich. Many of them are aca-
demic men and women on the usual small aca-
demic scale of pay. Others are the wealthy
leaders of local culture, women mostly, with
time, inclination and means to cultivate the
best in life. These are the persons who have
supported piano tuning proper; and these are
the persons who are supporting it now. They
will continue to support it. There need be no
apprehension on that score.
It may sound like a counsel of perfection,
but I am persuaded that both the present and
the future of the tuning business lie in cultivat-
ing the classes and leaving the masses alone.
Tlu- masses will support tuners just precisely
a- they have in the past, although doubtless
at a still slower rate. They will not do any
PFRIEMER HAMMERS
Always Found in Pianos
of the Highest Quality
Originators of the Re-enforced Tone
Producing Hammer
CHAS. PFRIEMER, INC.
Wales Ave. A 142nd St., New York
Lytton Bulldlne, Chicago
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
The Music Trade Review
NOVEMBER, 1930
more than this, nor is there any use in expect-
ing them to. They never were musical and they
never will be; at least until the day when public
education considers the ear as it now considers
the eye, and when to children are taught the
wonders of the audible tonal, as well as of the
visible, world.
The future then is certainly not to the mere
mechanic who can fix up a player action and
do a bit of repairing. Men of this kind will
doubtless be practicing their art for years to
come; but they will be survivals. On the other
hand, the future is decidedly to the artist who
Knows tone and tune, who can make a beautiful
piano still more beautiful, and who can keep
the favorite pianos of his tonally alive patrons
in beautiful touch, tone and tune for years on
end. To him is the future.
Science Calls Again
This is only to say in other words that the
need is greater to-day than ever it was for a
race of tuners technically, scientifically and
aesthetically skilled. The science of acoustics is
being driven rapidly along paths which but a
few years ago were wholly unknown to it. At
the bidding of great commercial interests, engi-
neers and physicists are building a new and
very large art of recording and reproducing
music. These men are approaching their prob-
lems from their own standpoint. Musicians and
PIANO ACTION
MACHINERY
Designers and Builders of
Special Machines
for
Special Purposes
THE A. H. NILSON
MACHINE CO.
BRIDGEPORT
the state of the musical art by them are being
taken as they exist, without criticism or discus-
sion. On the other hand, musicians are in gen-
eial too interested in themselves and too nar-
rowly educated in other things to be able to
take any positive action in the matter. The re-
sults anyone can hear from himself in any movie
theatre. Broadcasting, too, is still giving us sec-
ond-rate for first-rate performances. The tun-
ers have always been mediators between musi-
cians and the music industry. Perhaps their
chance will come again. Certainly the need
was never greater than it is now for men
technically educated in the science of music and
in the production of musical tone.
I do not despair of tuning; but I shall despair
of the tuners, unless they arouse themselves.
Their place to-day is less with the music indus-
tries than with the music teachers and the
other professional musicians. The man among
them who can lead them into this, for them the
only right, camp will be a Moses indeed. In
my own small way I have been crying, as
loudly as I could, the way of the right path.
The tuner ought to be fighting side by side
with the professional musician for his corporate
life and for the future of the craft. If and when
the mass of tuners can throw off the workman
obsession and see themselves for what they
really are perhaps this dream of mine will come
true.
Philip W. (letting & Son
Several Changes Among
Philadelphia Managers
INC.
213 East 19th Street
NEW YORK
Sole Agents for
WEICKERT
Hammer and Damper
Felts
Continuous Hinges
Grand Hinges
Pedals and Rods
Bearing Bars
Casters, etc., etc.
Service
Priee
IN
For Quality
Reliability
CONN.
29
PMM.ADK.U'HIA, PA. -O. P. Suttle, for many
years connected witli the wholesale department
of Charles M. Stieff, Inc., has been appointed
manager of the company's local store to suc-
ceed Irwin G. King, who resigned recently to
become manager of the branch of the P. A.
Starck Co. in this city. George Williams, for-
merly Starck manager, has joined the sales or-
ganization of G. Hcrzberg & Son.
CHAS. RAMSEY CORP.
KINGSTON, N. Y.
THE SELPO PIANO TRUCKS
The End Truck is very convenient where there is not
much stair work and can be easily carried in a small
amount of space. A board is used when piano is on the
stairs. The frame of the SelPo trucks are made of
crucible spring steel, cross braced and riveted. The hard
maple boards are padded with heavy felt.
SelFo C—Plain bearing rollers iron wheel casters, shipping-
weight 95 lbs., $44.00.
SelPo B—Plain bearing roller rubber tired casters, $47.00.
SelPo E—Roller bearing rollers iron wheel casters, $49.00.
SelPo I>—Roller bearing rollers rubber tired casters, $52.00.
Ask for a catalogue of our complete line of TRUCKS,
HOISTS, light weight trucks, SKIDS, DOLLYS, Concert
Grand Trucks and Special Straps.
Manufactured by
SELF LIFTING PIANO TRUCK COMPANY
415 N. Main St.
Findlay, Ohio
JULIUS BRECKWOLDT & SON, Inc.,
Y.
Manufacturers of Sounding Boards, Bars, Backs, Bridges, Mandolin and Guitar Tops, Etc.
O. S. KELLY CO
The Highest Grade of Workmanship
PIANO PLATES
Foundries: SPRINGFIELD, OHIO
THE COMSTOCK, CHENEY & CO
IVORYTON, CONN.
Ivory Cutters since 1834
MANUFACTURERS OF GRAND KEYS, ACTIONS, AND HAMMERS, UPRIGHT KEYS,
ACTIONS AND HAMMERS, PIPE ORGAN KEYS, PIANOFORTE IVORY FOR THE TRADE

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