Music Trade Review

Issue: 1931 Vol. 90 N. 11

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
GROUP PRACTICING IN
WAREROOMS OF GLEN
BROS.
MUSIC
CO.,
OGDEN, UTAH
Throw Open Piano Stores to
Piano Students—
Says John Erskine
T is the young piano student who does his studying and
practicing in company with fellow students, preferably
in the warerooms of a piano dealer, who gets most pleas-
ure and profit out of the instruction and finds it least
irksome. This is the declaration made by John Erskine,
president of the Juilliard Musical Foundation and a member
of the board of control of the National Bureau for the Ad-
vancement of Music, in an illuminating' article in the Sunday
magazine of the New York Herald Tribune of October 18.
On previous occasions Mr. Erskine has seen fit to cham-
pion the cause of the piano and piano study for the masses
in no uncertain terms, but unquestionably the most construc-
tive of his suggestions appears in the Herald Tribune article
when he shows the way by which piano dealers can lend
their assistance to the cause in a manner to help both them-
selves and the student.
Mr. Erskine heads his article, "Play for Your Aunt," and
draws a picture of the terror experienced by the average
youngster upon receiving such a request. He brands the
practice of giving individual instruction to youngsters and
forcing them to practice by themselves as being a little short
of barbarous, and calculated to make the child dread rather
than enjoy his lessons. The answer is in starting the student
off at once under a system of public study and practice. In
this connection, the writer says:
"How long would he enjoy baseball if you compelled him
to practice the game alone, as a kind of solitaire? Half the
fun of any sport is contact with one's fellows. The vitality
of an art is in its contact with an audience. You don't
know how to express yourself in words until you can reach
hearers or readers; you can't really paint until your design
and color say something to others; you haven't learned to
sing or play unless, without the collapse of your nervous
system, you can permit someone to hear you. Aunt Martha
is Tommy's public. In what way has he been trained to
make use of her presence or to enjoy it? * * *
"Tommy, I take it, belongs with the majority of young
piano students—he has a private teacher, his talent is modest,
THE
MUSIC
TRADE
REVIEW,
November,
1931
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE
MUSIC
TRADE
REVIEW,
November, 1931
he has no thought of becoming a professional. If his talent wishers, and plays the selection before his audience.
"If Tommy has this opportunity he will then understand
were very great you probably would send him to some well-
established teacher or conservatory, and in either case an that the object of his practicing is to prepare for a perform-
important part of his training would be playing in public. ance. As soon as he is ready he will exhibit his piece in
In the conservatory he would play frequently before the public, and if he becomes accustomed to this procedure from
other students and the faculty, perhaps before some invited the beginning of his studies his nervousness will be but slight
for the first time and less with each
guests. The well-established private
succeeding ordeal, provided that he
teacher would require all the students
plays frequently. A public perform-
to play before each other, perhaps
ance of this kind will teach him
before their parents and friends. It
more about the piece than he ever
is this opportunity, among other
can learn in solitary practice. If he
things, which attracts the talented
plays well before children of his own
student to conservatories or to the
age Aunt Martha will never again
classes of a teacher who is so suc-
embarrass him."
cessful that he has many students,
perhaps several assistants with their
After referring some results noted
pupils, and a large room in which
personally, in cases where private
to bring them all together, with at
teahers brought their pupils together
least two pianos, so that they can
for Juvenile piano recitals, and em-
do concerted work. The private
phasizing the fact that there should
teacher who is just starting out is
hi no public criticism of the playing,
rarely equipped to supply room, the
.Mr. Erskine goes on to say—and this
pianos or the audience. It follows
is particularly important to the
quite naturally that the students of
piano dealer—
average talent, though they need
"There are by-products of these
this opportunity more than most
children's recitals which ought to be
others, are the least likely to get it.
mentioned in order.
"In the first place, I said that the
"Yet the opportunity can easily
advantage of holding these meetings
be made available if the music
in the piano dealer's warerooms is
teachers will co-operate with each
JOHN ERSKINE
that good pianos are found there and
other and if the parents will help
the music teachers. In any community where piano lessons they are likely to be in tune. There is no article of furniture
are given the children could meet weekly or fortnightly to about which the average household is more ignorant than the
perform in each other's presence the new piece they have piano. We expect the instrument to function perfectly for
just learned. The parents ought to be there, too, and any seveial years, like the dining room table, without repairs.
other friends who can be persuaded to come. They might Only in the rarest of homes is the piano kept in tune. The
meet in the home of the children themselves. The most violinist tunes his instrument every few minutes, and the
convenient place, hoiuever, would be the ivareroom of the guitar player, even the ukulele player. For some reason we
local piano dealer. There are few dealers who would not expect the piano to stay in tune for years, or at most we
co-operate in such a program, and the advantage of the ivare- concede a tuning every three or four months. I have heard
room over the private home is that good pianos can always some people speak as though to tune a piano more often
would be to humor the instrument in a bad habit. But
be found there and they are likely to be in tune.*
"Semi-public recitals of this kind for the average child pianos get out of tune on the slightest excuse. You can put
need only the simplest organization, but they presuppose what yours out of tune, within a few minutes after the departure
I admit is sometimes hard to find, a spirit of confidence of the tuner, by opening a window and changing the tem-
among the teachers themselves. For some strange reason perature of the room. The point is that the piano will
music teachers are more distrustful of each other than any always be either in tune or out, and to play it out of tune
other kind of artist. Yet these children's recitals are so is torture for the player, or if it isn't torture there's some-
obviously innocent that even temperamental teachers will thing wrong with him musically.
experiment with them. If the teachers, then, will agree on
"In the second place, pianos need more than tuning. With
a committee to have charge of the program there need be constant use the felts on the hammers become hard and pro-
no other machinery. Each teacher sends to the committee duce a sound which is metallic and nerve-racking. The
the name of the pupil who is ready to play a piece. The tuner, if he knows his business, can soften the felts and
child appears, with his teachers, his relatives or other well
{Please turn to page 12)
* Italics are ours.
Head of Juilliard Musical Foundation
outlines the many advantages of group
piano study and practice in holding
youthful interest, and tells what piano
dealers can do to assist young piano
students and their teachers.

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