Music Trade Review

Issue: 1931 Vol. 90 N. 2

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
Walter Damrosch Broadcasting One of His Lecture Recitals. Standing, President M. H.
Aylesworth of the National Broadcasting Company
500,000 NEW PIANO STUDENTS
CREATED BY RADIO
O
N January 10, as intimated in The Review last
month, there was launched the greatest campaign in
history for the development of a nation-wide inter-
est in the piano and particularly in the playing of that
instrument, with a national radio hook-up over the two great
NBC networks as the medium.
The plan calls for the
broadcasting of two programs every week. One, entitled
"Music on the Air," will be broadcast over W J Z , New
York, and the NBC blue network every Tuesday afternoon
from three to three-thirty, Eastern Standard Time, and is
designed to develop general interest in piano music, its pro-
duction and its value in the home. The other program is
entitled "Keys to Happiness," and will be broadcast on Sat-
urday morning from eleven-thirty to noon over WEAF, New
York, and the NBC red network. This program will be
designed to develop interest in the playing of the piano
through the medium of a series of ten easy piano lessons given
over the air. For the lessons, special books of the "Look and
Play" style, familiar to the trade, will be distributed without
charge to the public either direct from the broadcasting sta-
tion or through local music dealers.
It is the particular
desire of those sponsoring the programs to have the dealers-
tie-up to the extent, at least, of having the lesson booklets
available for distribution on request.
This campaign in the interest of the piano, which will be
continued throughout 1931, has the earnest endorsement of
M. H. Aylesworth, president of the National Broadcasting
Co., which is evident in the fact that the company itself is
donating the time without any outside remuneration, this
time being estimated at regular station service rates to be
worth nearly $300,000 for the year. The plan itself was
conceived by E. C. Mills, president of the Radio Music Co.,
a subsidiary of the National Broadcasting Co., who discussed
the matter over a period of several months with many dif-
ferent factors in the music field, including piano manufac-
turers and dealers. When the plan finally reached the point
THE
MUSIC
TRADE
REVIEW,
February, 1931
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
Here is a $300,000 series of free
piano lessons and programs that
will go into nearly 20,000,000
homes each week via radio. See
to it that local effort capitalizes
this tremendous prospect list.
of development where the broadcasting company officials felt
free to guarantee the time, meetings were called of those
most interested with a view to securing suggestions and win-
ning support. It was felt that the members of the piano
trade, being so directly interested in the programs and the
plans back of them, would be only too anxious to support
the movement to the extent at least of acting as intermediaries
for the distribution of the booklets or giving advice to stu-
dents taking the course, locally, and standing the expense
of the lesson books, which, though nominal, will run into
large figures if the response is anything like that expected.
At a meeting held in New York on December 29, at which
final details of the programs were whipped into shape, and
the support of the trade assured, those present included:—
E. F. Bitner, Leo Feist, Inc.; Harry Meixell, Music In-
dustries Chamber of Commerce; Walter Fischer, Radio
Music Co.; Keith McLeod, National Broadcasting Co.; Al
S. Zeisler and Arthur I. Hahn, Krakauer Bros.; Richard W .
Lawrence, Bankers' Commercial Security Co.; W . G. Heller,
Winter & Co.; Delbert L. Loomis, National Association
Music Merchants; H. C. Rice, C. Kurtzmann & Co.; H. F.
Ricca and A. R Farmer, Ricca & Son; E B. Bogart, Bogart
Piano Co.; Jacob Schiller, Lester Piano Co.; F. E. Edgar,
Ludwig & Co.; C. W . Fraleigh, Outlook Co., Providence ;
Eugene A. Schmitt, Hardman, Peck & Co.; H. J. Sohmer,
Sohmer & Co.; G. H. Dickinson, Weeks & Dickinson, Bing-
hamton, N Y.; M . A. Alfred, Gallup & Alfred, Inc., Hart-
ford ; C. Albert Jacob, Jr., Mathushek Piano Mfg. Co.;
Gordon
Campbell,
Kohler - Brambach
Piano Co; Max B.
Leichter, Loomis Tem-
ple of Music, New
Haven; Wm. G. Fred-
erick, Marcellus Paper
Co., Worcester; A. P.
McCoy, McCoy's Inc.,
Hartford; L. Schoene-
wald, the Aeolian Co.;
Charles A. Reid, C. A.
Reid Piano Co., Plain-
field, N. J.; C. Alfred
Wagner, the Aeolian
Co.; Henry Schiebel,
Bloomingdale
Bros.;
P. R. Griffith, Griffith
Piano Co., Newark;
CARL FRIEDBERG, Pianist
C. M . Tremaine, Na-
THE
MUSIC
TRADE
REVIEW,
February, 1931
tional
Bureau
for
the Advancement of
Music, and E. C.
Mills, of the Radio
Music Co.
Subsequently, Mr.
Mills went to Chi-
cago, where on Janu-
ary 14 he outlined
the plan before a
large gathering of
piano manufacturers
and dealers of the
midwest section of
the country gathered
at the Hotel Drake.
It is pointed out by
M r . Mills that there
were several million
E. C. MILLS.
pianos in the homes
President, Radio Music Co.
of the country not in
use, the figure being given as close to seven million. These
instruments are of little value to the owners because they are
not used, nor to the piano dealers because there were no
replacements, nor to the publishers of music because, not
being used, there was no need to buy music. In the latter
case it has been noticed that the sales of song successes have
been diminishing in volume during the past few years.
"Ramona" sold over two million copies a couple of years
ago, and "It Happened in Monterey" sold close to two
million copies, yet the big hit of last year, the "Maine Stein
Song," sold considerably less than one million, despite the fact
that it was the outstanding success of the season. It is all
affected by the lack of use of the piano.
Judging from the results accomplished by campaigns sim-
ilar to that launched for the piano, broadcasting officials are
of the opinion that at least a half-million people will become
students in the short piano course, particularly as the materials
are furnished to them free. These figures are based on the
idea that the Tuesday broadcast will reach between twelve
and fifteen million people regularly, and the Saturday pro-
gram between fifteen and twenty million.
In short, the
half-million figure will be reached if only three per cent of
the listeners will take advantage of the offer.
Inasmuch
as
the
course is not for chil-
dren only but is also
designed for adults, it
is believed it will bring
back to the piano ma •
of those who have
given it up through
lack of practice, or
who felt lack of inter-
est in their early les-
sons. In such cases it
will mean the return
of many thousands of
pianos to use, and
where the instruments
are obsolete or none
available, it will lead
to the purchase of new
(Turn to page 18)
ALOIS HAVRILLA, Announcer

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