Music Trade Review

Issue: 1930 Vol. 89 N. 3

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
Spanish 7bwn
* New Brunswick
Old Spain Set Into a Music Store.
1.—Just Beyond the Entrance. 2.— The Attractive Wall Booths.
the Record and Sheet Music Section
N unusual but highly pleasing store may
prove an expensive proposition at the
outset, but its value in attracting and
holding attention and impressing cus-
tomers can be made to pay dividends if the
job is done properly. Quite frequently in the
music trade we have occasion to comment upon
some unusually effective store treatment for a
large number of concerns have managed to get
distinctly out of the rut and away from the
commonplace in their interior decorating plans.
A particularly interesting store arrangement
is that of the new establishment of Raymond
Montalvo, in New Brunswick, N. J., for here the
decorator managed to create an entire Spanish
village in miniature, yet admirably adapted to the
needs of business. The opening of the new
store recently at 354 George street marked the
twenty-ninth anniversary of Mr. Montalvo's
entrance into the music business, he having
started when hardly more than a boy with one
second-hand piano and then spread out with
a stock of new pianos and phonographs and
later with a comprehensive line of radio re-
ceivers. These latter he features particularly
in his present store, which has attracted wide
attention on the part of both press and public.
As one crosses the threshold from the busy and
A
modern New Brunswick street he enters a most
natural-looking garden typical of old Spain
with its peace and quiet. There are patches of
grass here and there, vases of flowers resting
on stone walls, a fountain, and a general atmos-
phere that reflects the spirit of Old Seville.
At one side is the courtyard, at the left is a
booth for the sale of radio tubes and accessories
with window br.rred by imitation wrought iron
spears. Larger spears are used to support the
canopy of another booth in which modern radio
sets are shown. Elsewhere about the floor and
facing the courtyard are garden temples and
little Spanish houses with heavy oak doors,
tiled roofs, balconies and awnings. Even the
lighting effects are of the Spanish type. These
booths on the courtyard are all used for the
display and sale of radio including Victor, At-
water Kent, Majestic and Philco lines.
The small goods department contains strings
and other musical accessories, and next to it is
the sheet music department with counter re-
sembling a garden wall with a natural oak top.
The sheet music department has been enlarged
and all the latest popular hits and theme songs
are carried in stock. There is also a full line
of sheet music especially adapted for instruction.
The record department is alongside the sheet
3.—General View of Store.
4.—Showing
music counter, and latest song hits and other
music may be obtained here. This department,
as well as the sheet music section has always
been very well patronized, as has the player
roll department.
Separate booths are provided where records
or player rolls may be tried out so that the cus-
tomer may select the music at leisure. There
is one audition room reserved for the playing
of foreign classical music and there is also one
where popular selections may be played.
A stairway just before these booths are
reached leads to the private offices and a door-
way at this spot opens into a bargain basement
where all shopworn and used sets will be sold at
low prices.
The floor is in brick effect, and an awning,
str'ped in red, orange, green, and black stretches
overhead. Between this awning and the tile
roofs may be seen glimpses of the sky outside
the courtyard. Radiators are enclosed so that
they represent stone walls and there will be
brightly colored garden seats. Every possible
detail has been attended to, even to blowing rust
about the crevices on the balconies to give the
effect of age.
The new store represents a distinct tribute to
(Please turn to page 21)
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
The Music Trade Review
REVIEW
(Registered in the U. S. Patent Office)
Published on the First of the Month by
Federated Business Publications, Inc.
at 420 Lexington Avenue, New York
Publishers of Antiquarian, Automotive Electricity, India Rubber World, Materials
Handling & Distribution, Music Trade Review, Novelty News, Rug Profits, Sales Man-
agement, Soda Fountain, Talking Machine World & Radio-Music Merchant, Tires; and
operates in association with Building Investment, Draperies and Tire Rate-Book.
President, Raymond Bill; Vice-Presidents, J. B. Spillane, Randolph Brown; Secretary
and Treasurer, Edward Lyman Bill; Comptroller, T. J. Kelly; Assistant Treasurer,
Wm. A. Low.
B. BRITTAIN WILSON, Editor
CAHLETON CHACE, Business Manager
F. L. AVERY, Circulation Manager
RAY BILL, Associate Editor
E. B. MUNCH, Eastern Representative
WESTERN DIVISION: FRANK W. KIRK, Manager
333 No. Michigan Ave., Chicago. Telephone: State 1266
Telephone:
Lexington 1760-71
Cable:
Elbill New York
In order to insure proper attention all communications should
be addressed to the publication and not to individuals.
MARCH, 1930
Vol. 89
1
i
Not for Jack of All Trades
HE general music store idea is logical and has been
proven so, for the dealer who gets most out of his
territory is the one who can supply practically every
musical need of his community and who makes his store the recog-
nized headquarters for musical instruments and accessories. How-
ever, the general music store must be operated on a sound basis and
it cannot be expected to prove successful if one or two men en-
deavor to divide their efforts among pianos, band and orchestra
instruments, radios and sheet music. As a rule there is nothing
more painful than to hear an experienced piano salesman trying
to sell a trap drummer's outfit intelligently, or expound upon the
mechanical details of radio, and it is quite as funny to hear the
average band instrument man put forth the selling arguments for
the piano.
The general music store problem is not one for the jack of
all trades, and dealers who have attempted to make it so have
come to grief. Generally they refuse to admit their part, but blame
their troubles upon declining interest in the piano, the orchestra
instrument or what not. We have heard dealers report loss of
piano sales which when analyzed proved to be due not to a lack
of a market, but rather to the fact that the salesman's time had
been divided and he could put only half his effort into piano selling.
Naturally the results were halved.
We find these same men declaring that their businesses are of
a size that does not permit of the hiring of specialists for each
department, yet the very hiring of those specialists would in most
cases produce a volume of departmental business that would show
a distinct profit on the investment. In fact, where the course is
followed out, it has shown a profit.
When a man sells pianos he must be able to talk pianos.
When he sells band instruments he must be able to understand
that line and its ramifications. When he sells radio he must know
something besides the fact that the instrument has seven tubes and
a pretty cabinet. The individual who is able to talk intelligently
and enthusiastically in all of those lines is indeed a rarity.
The general music business is not a one-man business, nor is
it a business wherein a salesman in one department can pinch-hit
in another. If the community warrants a general music store,
then that community should be able to support the necessary num-
ber of specialists to operate such a store properly. It is not a
business for a jack of all trades. If the dealer is piano-minded
MARCH, 1930
let him concentrate on pianos and get results in that direction, for
when he divides his efforts he simply loses out. The same holds
good for those who are particularly experienced in other lines. It
is the department that receives the undivided and best attention
that produces the best results.
Yes! Pianos Can Be Sold
OR Lincoln's Birthday, Hardman, Peck & Co., in New
York, spent $800 in advertising a special offering of
pianos, with the result that on February 12 and the fol-
lowing day sixty-two pianos were disposed of at retail at an average
price of $450 each. This is just another example to prove the
oft-repeated statement that, properly approached, the public will
buy pianos, and in this case the approach was strong enough to
persuade sixty-two customers to sign on the dotted line. On an-
other day small advertisements were carried in some foreign-lan-
guage newspapers, with the result that five player-pianos were sold
in addition to other instruments. It is little things like these that
answer the plaints of those of the trade who declare that piano
business is incurably sick and the player business is dead.
A -prominent New York department store last year enjoyed an
increase of over 100 per cent in piano business as compared with
the year before, and under none too favorable conditions, for the
piano department was then in immediate proximity to the radio
section, which handles about as much radio business as any single
retail outlet in the metropolitan district. This would seem to prove
that interest in the piano in blase New York is not entirely dead,
providing the experiences of several other piano houses during the
year did not convince the skeptic of this fact. Why, therefore,
should there not be piano business of considerable volume outside
the metropolitan districts where even today there still exists the
spirit of home life.
A „
/
$8,000,000 in Time Sales
„ „,„„,
^
Bureau instalment sales in the United States reached
a high peak of $8,000,000 during 1929, which seemed
to indicate that the public went into 1930 with between four and
five million dollars of instalment obligations to be met. To the
piano man these figures should be significant, for they indicate
most clearly the present-day competition for the American dollar.
It is generally admitted that the piano man was one of the first,
if not the first, to introduce the practice of buying on the instal-
ment and could arrange his selling methods accordingly. Now
he is facing the instalment competition of scores of other industries.
It means that the race for the instalment dollar is getting hotter
each year and the merchant or his representative who first gets
into the home and gets a hold on that dollar is the one who will
build up business volume. If the piano trade in 1930 can capture
only one per cent of this instalment money it would mean highly
prosperous business. This means only one cent out of each dollar.
Simple, isn't it?
W
There's Still Interest in Music
ITHIN the past six weeks there have come to our
attention seven offers of prizes for musical com-
positions, the offers being made by newspapers
national organizations and individual concerns. It is not beyond
the realms of possibility that pianos will be used to some extent
for the original demonstration if not the future playing of the com-
positions that are entered in the contests, and those who carry off
the awards. It emphasizes the fact that there remains enough in-
ierest in music to produce prizes running into thousands of dollars.

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